Wednesday Wishbone

Wednesday, 26 November 2003, 3:01 pm
Tags: ,

All the news that's fit to rant aboutLast news before Turkey Day.

Mathematician and father of Cybernetics, Norbert Wiener, was born in 1894. Peanuts creator, Charles Schulz, was born in 1922. France became the third space power in 1965 with the launch of the Asterix-1.

  1. A Danish security company is warning users of IE 6 (which is nearly everyone) to turn off Active Scripting or use a different browser. A Chinese security researcher discovered five cross-site scripting vulnerabilities which would allow hackers to compromise affected PCs. The question now is whether Microsoft will break its new monthly update policy to offer a fix. The company is investigating.
  2. Don’t rush to use Opera instead, however. Versions 7 to 7.22 of Opera have two security flaws that could also give hackers access to your PC. The company has released an upgrade to 7.23 and recommends that all users download it. I say stick with open source: Mozilla is looking better all the time.
  3. Some hackers prefer to use social engineering. According to Sophos, a new Trojan, sysbug-A, is being distributed as an attachment to a “saucy” email from a man who apologizes for not using a Trojan. He claims to be sending nude pix of Mary. You know the drill. Don’t open attachments!
  4. The Senate approved the CAN-SPAM act yesterday, now all that remains is for Bush to sign the bill into law, which he has promised to do. It’s not the bill many of us had hoped for, but it’s better than nothing.
  5. The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) and the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) are seeking permanent anti-trust exemption. Senator Orrin Hatch has introduced the EnFORCE Act: Enhancing Federal Obscenity Reporting and Copyright Enforcement Act of 2003 (how much time is wasted by Senate staffers working up these strained acronyms?) which includes a provision to offer permanent immunity to the kind of antitrust lawsuits filed by webcasters against the RIAA two months ago. Hatch says the protection is required by “market realities.” Hunh?
  6. Having cell phone problems? AT&T Wireless’s glitches continue. A software bug has been causing delayed connections and other issues. It prevented customers from switching carriers on Monday when number portability went into effect. How convenient.
  7. Andrew Morton says Linux kernel 2.6.10 is the last beta version. Expect 2.6 final in the second half of December. Commercial distros will incorporate the new kernel in early 2004. (Incidentally, I installed SuSE 9 last night using the 21 MB boot.iso and a network install and it came up beautifully. The YaST installer is the best I’ve used. And it recognized all the hardware that Red Hat 9 did not. It comes with Open Office and Ximian, defaults to KDE 3.1, and recognized all my NTFS partitions, too. Two thumbs up.)
  8. Now that Vivendi has sold the domain name MP3.com to c|net, it plans to destroy all the files on the old MP3.com servers. Michael Robertson, the founder and former owner, is trying to save what he calls “the largest collection of digital works ever assembled.”

Tuesday’s Turkey Dinner

Tuesday, 25 November 2003, 9:44 pm
Tags: ,

All the news that's fit to rant aboutHelp me, I’m newsing and I can’t get up.

The first American patent was issued on this day in 1715. It was for a corn processing technique. Alfred Nobel invented dynamite in 1867. The first football play-by-play was broadcast by WTAW in College Station, Texas in 1920. The general theory of relativity was proven in 1976 by radio signals sent from Viking I on Mars.

  1. Cell phone number portability went into effect yesterday. So far, so good according the the San Jose Mercury-News. The AP says 100,000 consumers applied on the first day, far fewer than expected. Consumers Union has set up a site, escapeCellHell.com, for tips and complaints.

  2. Remember when the .13 micron process was a big deal? Now that IBM has announced a .09 micron process for the G5, Intel has gone them one better, demonstrating a .065 micron (65 nanometer) process that puts the equivalent of 10 million transistors on the head of a pin. Expect 65 nm chips from both companies by 2005 if they can solve the leakage problem.
  3. Eben Moglen, General Counsel for the Free Software Foundation and Columbia University School of Law professor, has released an article that compares SCO to a “shyster” lawyer and calls their claims “irresponsibly inflated.”
  4. The programmer who created DeCSS to crack DVDs has issued a tool to remove copy protection from Apple’s iTunes AAC encoded songs. The resulting file has no DRM but also lacks header information that makes the song playable.
  5. SuSE Linux 9 is now available for free download. The company typically waits one month from the commercial release to make a free version available. The servers are currently slammed.
  6. Apple’s response to the Neistat Brothers’ iPod’s Dirty Secret video: a $99 battery replacement program. Just in time – the iPod was two years old yesterday.
  7. From Slashdot comes this Tale of the Strange but True: the County of Los Angeles has asked computer vendors to stop referring to hard drives as master and slave as part of their committment “to ensure a work environment that is free from any discriminatory influence be it actual or perceived.”
  8. Silicon Valley startup financier Gene Kleiner (of Kleiner Perkins) passed away last Thursday at the age of 80. He was instrumental in getting Fairchild Semiconductor off the ground.

Monday’s Mashed Potatoes

Monday, 24 November 2003, 2:57 pm
Tags: ,

All the news that's fit to rant aboutGood morning. I’m on vacation but the news never sleeps.

Did you see the total solar eclipse this morning? Don’t fret, hardly anyone did. It was in Antarctica.

Charles Darwin’s Origin of Species was published on this day in 1859. AOL ended the browser wars by buying Netscape in 1998.

  1. The US House of Representatives passed an anti-spam bill 392-5 early Saturday. The Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography and Marketing Act (CAN-SPAM) creates a “do not spam” list and bans automated email harvesting. But it invalidates some stronger state laws, including California’s, and makes some forms of spam legal. Spammers can send as many messages as they like as long as they’re obviously ads, with real addresses and unsubscribe links. The Senate is expected to pass it this week and Bush says he will sign the bill.
  2. I don’t like spam either, but a Silicon Valley programmer is facing up to five years in prison for threatening a Canadian spammer with anthrax. He had received just one too many penis enlargement ads. Sounds like he was taking it personally.
  3. IV at 4 in 2004: Intel says its next PIV, the Prescott, will run at 4 GHz by next year.
  4. Linus releases test kernel 2.6.0-Test10, “Stoned Beaver” today.
  5. Friendster fanfare is fading. According to Wired, early users are fed up with the lag time and the “Friendstapo” killing phoney entries. I killed my entry weeks ago.
  6. Coming to a pet store near you in January: genetically modified zebra fish that glow red. Bred to glow in toxic waters, the fish will be the first GM animals to be sold to the public.
  7. I spent the weekend downloading Debian – all seven CDs – only to learn this morning that hackers had compromised the servers last week. Guess I’ll start over. We’re trying to decide which distro to use on TSS now that Red Hat is dumping its free support.
  8. A growing number of tech savvy young people are abandoning land lines and TV for cell phones and the Internet, according to a study from the Pew Internet and American Life Project.

Friday’s Découpage

Saturday, 22 November 2003, 1:51 pm
Tags:

I‘m sorry that I never got around to doing news on Friday, since TSS was dark. I hope you can live a day without it.

We did have a wonderful time Thursday night at the Barnes & Noble in Emeryville. About 50 people showed up – which B&N considered a very nice turnout. I confess I’ve been spoiled by the bigger events in other places (800 in St Louis, 500 in Baltimore, etc.). It just goes to show how little known TechTV is in our own hometown.

It was a pleasant change, however, to be able to take time with everyone. Becky talked about her book, Security Alert, and did a short reading from it. I gassed on about the future of computing, and then Becky, Megan, and I took questions from the audience. I hope I can do more signings like this – it’s great fun.

My mom is flying in from Providence on Sunday, so I’ll be taking Thanksgiving week off to be with her (and work on my new book, and finish the Dial-A-Song machine for They Might Be Giants). My birthday is Saturday, and I’m hoping she’ll make my traditional birthday dinner: home-made ravioli. Haven’t had that in ages. Then I’m off to New York for my regular segments on World News Now and Live with Regis and Kelly. Both should air December 2.

Thursday’s Sabotage

Thursday, 20 November 2003, 3:43 pm
Tags: , ,

All the news that's fit to rant aboutGood morning news hounds. Don’t forget to join Becky Worley, Megan Morrone, and me at the Barnes and Noble in Emeryville, California this evening at 7:30!

I want a robot copter I can call my own. Beats turkey flavored soda.

Happy birthday Benoit Mandelbrot, father of fractals, born on this day in 1924. The crank pedal bicycle was patented on this day in 1866. It’s World Rights of the Child Day, commemorating the 1959 UN Declaration of Children’s Rights. Not in my house.

  1. A federal judge has denied Wells Fargo’s request to block pop-up advertising for a rival bank, saying that the pop-up ads are unlikely to confuse users. This is the second court victory for WhenU, a pop-up purveyor. They beat U-Haul in a similar case in September.
  2. High demand for LCD screens is pushing prices up. Experts say prices will stay high well into next year thanks to sales of LCD TVs. LCD TV shipments are expected to double next year. If history is any indicator, the increase in prices will trigger increased production that will ultimately reduce prices considerably.
  3. Projecting increased demand for its chips, AMD is breaking ground for a new $2.5 billion chip fab in Dresden. The plant goes online in 2006.
  4. NASA’s new supercomputer is running Linux. It’ll be used to study the oceans.
  5. Support the Free Software Foundation. California residents who purchased Microsoft software between 1995 and 2001 are receiving vouchers as part of the state’s settlement with Microsoft. The FSF is asking Californians to donate those vouchers to support their efforts to promote free software.

Wednesday’s Camouflage

Wednesday, 19 November 2003, 3:09 pm
Tags: ,

All the news that's fit to rant aboutMiddle of the week. Here’s the news.

President Bush is off to Britain. Fortunately, he’ll be moving faster than an unladen swallow.

On this day in 1863 President Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address. The US Senate rejected the Treaty of Versailles and the League of Nations in 1919. Ford cancelled the Edsel in 1959.

Happy birthday Ted Turner, Larry King, Jodie Foster, and Meg Ryan. Happy Anniversary Corbin and Amanda.

  1. President Bush has asked the US Senate to ratify an international cybercrime treaty. Privacy advocates say the treaty goes too far and will force US ISPs to begin collecting information on their customers. It also bans hate speech, which is constitutionally protected in the US. Only Albania, Croatia, and Estonia have ratified the treaty so far.
  2. AT&T has patented a way to trick spam filters. The technique, which randomly changes a spam message each time it is sent, could be used to thwart collaborative filters like Cloudmark’s SpamNet. AT&T says the patent is purely a defensive measure.
  3. Security firm, Internet Security Systems, says Internet attacks are getting worse, up 26% last quarter. The report also noted that the delay is shrinking between the publication of a flaw and the release of a program to exploit that flaw.
  4. Job losses in the tech sector slowed this year. “Only” 234,000 people lost their job this year, compared to 539,000 last year.
  5. In his Comdex keynote, Kevin Knox, director of business development for AMD, slammed Intel’s Centrino products. The CPU itself is good, he said, but “the wireless technology they bundle with the chip is garbage.”
  6. For the first time ever, AOL has opened its instant messenger to third party developers. Early next year, Macromedia Flash programmers will be able to download a Software Development Kit (SDK) for AIM that will let them write programs that can interact with AIM data (although it doesn’t look like they’ll be able to write a stand-alone AIM client).
  7. The man vs. machine chess tournament ended in a tie yesterday, when World Champion Garry Kasparov agreed to a draw with X3D Fritz. Each had won one game and drawn two in the four game match. There’s no question now that computers are as good at chess as humans, despite Kasparov’s denials.

Mod Mania

Tuesday, 18 November 2003, 10:34 pm
Tags:

Yoshi’s book is out! Check out Mod Mania with Yoshi at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Borders, and other stores. Way to go, Yosh!

Tuesday’s Badinage

Tuesday, 18 November 2003, 3:08 pm
Tags: ,

All the news that's fit to rant aboutTime once again for The Screen Savers morning briefing. (If this is too much reading for you, try News-Images.com, all the stories, none of the words.)

Louis-Jacques-Mande Daguerre inventor of the daguerreotype, an early form of photography, was born on this day in 1789. Mickey Mouse debuted in Steamboat Willie in 1928.

    The news from Comdex…

  1. Microsoft has announced it will launch a music service on MSN to compete with iTunes next year.
  2. NVidia announced a new notebook chipset, the GO5700. It suppports DirectX 9. Look for it in laptops from Toshiba and Alienware early next year.
  3. Sun says it will start using AMD’s 64-bit Opteron in two new servers next year.
  4. And HP has announced a line of PCs based on the AMD Athlon 64. The Compaq Presario 8000Z starts at $1200.

    In other news…

  5. Microsoft is publishing the XML schemas for Office 2003. Open source advocates are skeptical, particularly since Microsoft is asserting some patent rights to the schema, making it impossible to use in GPL’d products. Office programs still save into a proprietary binary format by default, but releasing the schema could make it easier for developers to create software that can manipulate files saved in Office XML format.
  6. A San Jose Federal court judge has agreed to hear the EFF’s arguments in the Diebold case. Diebold attorneys have been sending cease and desist letters to web sites posting or linking to allegedly leaked internal documents exposing flaws with Diebold’s electronic voting machines. The company is also going after the sites’ ISPs claiming DMCA violations. The EFF likens it to the leak of the Pentagon Papers.
  7. Australia’s first prosecution for music swapping ends in a suspended sentence for the two defendants. Students cried in the court room and engaged in a group hug. “It felt as if my life was being ripped to bits,” claimed one defendant. Oh please. Maybe they should have sent the stolen music back
  8. C|Net columnist loses free AOL account, proclaims the imminent collapse of the company. Now that’s objective journalism.

Monday’s Persiflage

Monday, 17 November 2003, 2:45 pm
Tags: ,

All the news that's fit to rant aboutGood morning!

Fall Comdex opens in Las Vegas today to a much reduced crowd of 50,000, down from 200,000 three years ago. The Leonid meteor shower is tonight, but don’t expect last year’s fireworks.

Famous stripper Mobius was born on this day in 1790. President Nixon said “I am not a crook” in 1970.

  1. Bill Gates kicked off Comdex with his 20th yearly keynote last night. “Security continues to be a top priority for Microsoft,” he says. He demonstrated security improvements that will ship with XP service pack 2 later this year, saying Microsoft plans to “shift the tide” on security and spam. Looking ahead, the goal for Microsoft is seamless computing. “The changes users will see in the technology they use will be gradual, but the difference between the computing experience of today and the experiences that will be possible a few years from now will be like night and day” with Longhorn, the next version of Windows, at the center, of course. He pointed out that Microsoft spend $6.8 billion dollars on R&D this year, and denied that they had ever had acquisition talks with Google. This years Gates/Ballmer video production featured the duo as Morpheus and Neo, with Gates offering Ballmer an “integrated innovation pill.”
  2. The SEC has charged three former Gateway execs with fraud for cooking the books to meet analysts expectations in 2000. The management team was replaced in 2001 and the company restated the fraudulent results.
  3. H&R Block has filed a lawsuit against an unknown “John Doe” for defamatory statements on a Yahoo message board. The company believes the poster is an employee. This isn’t the first time Block has subpoenaed Yahoo for the names of its users. In 2000 the company obtained the names of nine posters. In some cases the courts have upheld the free speech rights of anonymous posters on message boards, but in at least one case last year, a California court held that such postings were “commercial speech” and not protected.
  4. Both Qwest and Cablevision are launching voice over IP (VoIP) service. Qwest’s Minnesota offering will be the first ever from a Baby Bell. Cablevision will be offering the service to its 1 million New York City customers.
  5. A Federal judge in Illinois has ruled that the DMCA doesn’t protect garage door openers from being reverse engineered. But Best Buy is attempting to use the law to prevent Fat Wallet from posting its Thanksgiving sale prices.
  6. Garry Kasparov has evened the score in the man vs. machine chess championship. The fourth and final game is tomorrow.

Friday’s Fish Wrap

Friday, 14 November 2003, 3:49 pm
Tags: ,

All the news that's fit to rant aboutIt’s Friday!

Apollo 12 left on the second manned mission to the moon on this day in 1969. The Dow Jones broke 1000 for the first time in 1972. Fall Comdex 2003 opens in Vegas on Sunday. Yawn.

At least I know how Lego is made. And now the news…

  1. The FCC has approved 255 MHz of additional unlicensed spectrum in the 5 GHz band for use in wireless networking. The move is designed to encourage manufacturers to create new wireless products.
  2. Microsoft is fixing the fix. An Internet Explorer fix issued in September 2002 apparently didn’t take. Windows 2000 users should run Windows Update or download the patch from Microsoft.
  3. A new worm is targeting PayPal accounts. MiMail I arrives in your inbox, advises you not to give out credit card numbers by mail, then directs you to a bogus PayPal “site” (ww.paypal.com.scr) that’s really a program running on your computer. The program forwards your credit card and other information to the hacker.
  4. I was just looking officer, honest. Shortly after Apple added music sharing to iTunes for the Mac, folks figured out how to capture the shared files and keep them for themselves. Apple patched that hole. Now the same thing has happened with iTunes for Windows. MyTunes cracks the copy protection in iTunes for Windows. The site disingenuously avows, “If you plan on stealing music, do not download this software.”
  5. I’m not dead yet. A new service lets you send a farewell email after you die. For $10 for three years, LifeTouch will keep track of your vital signs, and send off your last missive shortly after your last breath. Two other services were created to do the same during the dot-com boom, but they’re both… dead.

Next Page »