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Microsoft has "released" Service Pack 1 for Windows2000.
You can get it from Connexion SanJose,
Chicago
or Herdon
(wtf is Herdon?). It's only 85MB so don't let anyone accuse
Microsoft of creating bloat. SP1 hasn't been officially
released, so install at your own risk (which is what you've
already agreed to if you run any MS software anyway ).
Related Links:
Ars breaks news about
Betanews breaking
news about stuff like this.
NOTE: Ars has a new-look! Go check it out. Then tell them
how much like every other site it looks now .
Betanews breaks the news about stuff like this
Microsoft
Windows2000 site

ZDNews is reporting in it's Mac/Scoop(age) section that Apple
has been working on a technology called Rosetta Stone and
InkWell that could incorporate handwriting recognition and
replace the keyboard and mouse. "According to sources,
InkWell will ship alongside Mac OS X, which is currently due
to arrive early in 2001; a version may also be available to
users of Mac OS 9." Definitely worth a read.
I personally think the keyboard and mouse should be replaced.
The keyboard is ancient and the mouse has been around since
the sixties - it's time for a change. But what would replace
them? Speech-recognition would be cool, but imagine a whole
office full of people talking to their PC's. It will be interesting
to see what comes of this technology. Let's just hope Jobs
doesn't pull another "Apple" and give Bill gates
another set of "keys to the kingdom."
I shamelessly stole this link from Ars
and I don't plan to give them credit for it!

In this article, the author gives the most in-depth and revealing
explanation of ECHELON I've ever seen. If you didn't know,
ECHELON is the code-name of the US government's covert espionage
program run by the NSA. The NSA denies the existence of such
a program and will not answer questions pertaining to ECHELON
citing national security concerns. The explanation goes into
great depths explaining the origin of ECHELON, the methods
it uses and locations of information collecting sites.
Who knows if this stuff is real, but this article, instead
of alarming me, actually put me somewhat at-ease. Now I feel
as though I understand what ECHELON does, and it's realistic
and believable. Before I had thought it was some super-secret
wire-tapping that listened to all private phone-calls and
all private email traffic.
This article does mention things I've heard before, such as
its purpose being to "level the playing field for US
companies competing abroad" and the "airliner purchasing"
scenario where US companies believe they lose contracts in
foreign countries due to corruption.
I stole this link from slashdot
- It seems that not only can I not write interesting articles,
I can't even come up with links to interesting articles myself.
Related Links:
Echelon watch: not-for-profit
site run by the ACLU to inform the public
NSA.gov - go see for yourself

Well duh, don't these eggheads watch Star
Trek?
CNN is reporting that some scientists made a light beam "...traveled
310 times the distance it would have covered if the chamber
had contained a vacuum." I saw something on TV a few
months ago about a different scientist who did something similar.

There were rumblings about this for a while now, but Intel
today came out and acknowledged that it was indeed planning
a PC133-SDRAM (SDR not DDR) option for their upcoming Pentium4
(codenamed Willamette) CPU. It is widely held that
Intel's contract with RAMBUS
prohibits them from producing a DDR (non-RAMBUS) chipset for
the P4. Intel had been steadfast until this point in stating
that P4 will be a RAMBUS only processor. VIA,
a third-party chipset manufacturer has stated that it will
go ahead with with plans to produce a DDR SDRAM solution for
P4 even though Intel has not granted them a license to do
so. At least with this announcement (if
implemented correclty) users will have a low(er) cost
option for the Pentium4.
Related links:
EBN
story on same subject

Sharky has a great look at what to expect from AMD
and VIA. If you didn't know,
AMD competes with Intel making processors and VIA is a chipset
manufacturer that makes supporting chips for both Intel and
AMD processors.

In an update to a story I saw
a few days back, The
Register is reporting that RealNetworks has admitted and
removed a "bug" that tracks individual users and
their activities while using RealNetworks' RealDownload product.
Related links:
Steve Gibson's (Gibson
Research) original article about "SPYWARE"

InsaneHardware does a good job of introducing Intel
and HP's upcoming IA-64 initiative
and their push to introduce Intel's first 64-bit processor.
Itanium, (codenamed Merced) but called Itanic by some,
has experienced numerous delays and is rumored to become simply
a test platform for its successor, the eagerly anticipated
McKinely chip. Intel had hoped to introduce the processor
earlier this year at speeds of 800MHz+, but rumors also abound
that it hasn't been able to produce the chip at speeds greater
than about 500Mhz.
Related links:
Intel
Itanium site
Register
story: MS Win64 bacon to be saved by Intel downplaying Itanium?

The Good: I received my motherboard today. The ASUS
A7V that I hear is a pretty mean board. Mine indeed has the
multiplier jumpers, but I have yet to see if they will work.
I HIGHLY recommend GamePC
where I bought A7V. Excellent, helpful staff, rock-bottom
prices and I got my board in under a week. Definitely consider
GamePC for your next compute
hardware purchase!
The Bad: I just received an email this afternoon from
the company that I ordered the CPU from. It took them 5 days
to realize I had entered my credit-card number incorrectly.
Which I took to mean they didn't attempt to process my order
until today. I canceled that order. My advice: With hundreds
of retailers nationwide competing for your business, don't
tolerate incompetence (never mind my incompetence in entering
my CC number). It's a buyer's market: If you get treated poorly
shop somewhere else. And tell your friends about your experience!
So I ordered from Multiwave Direct
(mwave.com) - we'll see how that goes...

After almost a year of dragging my feet, I finally updated
the Emergency/DOS bootdisk page.
The bootdisk page should now be
a great resource if you need a bootdisk to install your OS
on a new hard-drive or reinstall your OS on your current drive.
I receive by far the most feedback on the bootdisk
page, so I thought I should at least bring that
page up-to-date. ENJOY!
I also added the file delpart.exe to the bootdisk
page. If you ever have the need for a utility that can
completely wipe a partition or an entire drive, delpart is
what you need.
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Go read what
NSI are doing accroding to ARS. Pretty weak.
But what do you expect when certain corporations
are given so much power without rules or penalties
for violating the rules. Call me cynical, but
just go see
for yourself.
AtomicGuY's unofficial
WindowsME site (down)- AtomicGuYsent me
an email giving me the heads-up on his new site!
WindowsME is microsoft's next consumer Operating
System, so when you need info. on WinME, pay AtomicGuY
a visit.
I'll add a WinME section to my software/OS
links page soon enough.
Related Links:
Microsoft
WindowsME home-page. What's suprisingly hard
to find on this site is the release date. Apparantly,
WinME was released to manufacturers starting June
19, and is scheduled for retail release in mid-September.
1GHz
P3 on the cheaps - source: Thresh's
firing squad
Bob "CalBear" Colayco over at FiringSquad
upgraded to a P3-700 and proceeded to crank-it-up
a notch or two. He "get's it up" to
1001MHz: pretty nice. He does say something I
feel is important. When you hear all these outrageous
overclocking stories and decide to try it for
yourself. For whatever reason (usually bad luck),
you may end up with a chip that simply will not
go as fast as the stories you've heard. So keep
your expectations low, and you're less likely
to be disappointed. I think this is good advice
you can apply to many aspects of your life (are
you women out there paying attention? ).
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Budget:
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P3 700MHz
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$220
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Abit BE6 II motherboard
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$112
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128MB PC133 SDRAM
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$150
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Total:
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$480
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*NOTE: Incase you didn't see it, this is a BX-system,
so the poor AGP bus is overclocked quite a bit
(He's running 143MHz fsb which gives you an AGP
speed of 96MHz instead of it's 66MHz spec). You
will need a high-quality video card in order to
run at such a high AGP clock. You may want to
consider an i815E solution if you want to run
your AGP at a more sane speed. I bet the PCI clcok
is over spec too, so just keep that in-mind.
And don't forget to factor in shipping & "handling"
which can put the hurt on you if you're not a
careful shopper. Yeah, and try to ignore the (tired)
Blair-Witch references.
A note about this site. I just looked at
the site in Netscape (4.72) and Mozilla (M14 I
think) and it looks like garbage. It also looks
like crap in ie5 if your font settings aren't
"small enough." It's mainly due to the
font-size settings in the CSS. I'll look into
this too.
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This article is actually by Van
Smith over at TomsHardware. He basically explains
the whole current situation with regards to Intel
and the whole RAMBUS
vs The World situation. He brings up some
interesting points regarding RAMBUS' conduct concerning
the creation of SDRAM standards and the patents
it owned. It gets complicated, but it appears
as though RAMBUS helped create the "open"
standard, and once the industry was well down
the path, revealed that it "owned" the
patents to many of the technologies that the industry
was using. Huh... And I thought Microsoft
was evil. I think I need to fire-up etrade and
buy some (more) RAMBUS stock. Go
read it for yourself!
Patch
Available for “Malformed E-mail Header” Vulnerability
I guess there's a virus going around that you
don't even have to open or read. Anyway. Read
about it here on ABCNews.com and then get
the patch from Microsoft here.
The vulnerability is only in Microsoft
email readers (Outlook and OutlookExpress) or
so I've heard.
(I 'jacked' this link from Ars
- thnx guys!)
Related Links:
Microsoft -
the purveyor of wonderful software that is affordable
and reliable! HA HA HA HA HA!
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ZDNews is reporting on Palm's new Palm-pilot
offerings. The M100 is the new entry-level offering,
coming in a variety of colored face-plates. The
wireless Palm VII will receive an upgrade, becoming
the VIIx and upping the onboard memory from 2MB
to 8MB. The M100 will cost $149 while the Palm
VIIx will cost $449. There are various other modifications
like a 25% smaller screen.
Related links:
Palm - there isn't
any information on the new palms yet.
TweakCentral Project950+
begins. I just ordered an Athlon 700 (SocketA
Thunderbird) CPU and an ASUS A7V motherboard.
I'm going for 950+MHz... I'll keep you informed.
I also ordered a micro-tip
conductive pen from these guys (Hosfelt),
it's the cheapest I was able to find in 3 minutes.
Wtf is the conductive pen for? Go see Anand's
article from a couple days ago...
Related Links:
xxx
GamePC - where
I got my ASUS A7V (motherboard)
Hosfelt - where
I got my conductive-pen, it's like a giant radio-shack
online!
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I figured out you can add more "security-zones"
under windows. I did a little
write-up: go check it out!
In this way, you can assign certain security settings
to specific web-sites.
For example, if you want to (need to - why would
you want to) enable cookies and ActiveX
controls for some web-sites, but only cookies
and NOT ActiveX controls on others, now you can
have separate categories for various sites.
Related links:
my paranoid internet explorer
5 user page.
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I will do a full write-up in a few, but for those
who are interested, I figured out you can add
more "security-zones" under windows.
In this way, you can assign certain security settings
to specific web-sites.
For example, if you want to (need to - why would
you want to) enable cookies and ActiveX
controls for some web-sites, but only cookies
and NOT ActiveX controls on others, now you can
have separate categories for various sites. For
now, see my paranoid internet
explorer5 user page.
"Wonderboy"
aka Anand has an article (less than 40
pages this time) demystifying the art of overclocking
AMD's new processors, the Thunderbird Athlon and
Duron. They successfully overclock the crap out
of various Duron and Tbird chips. I'm basically
>< this far from buying a 700MHz Tbird and
bumping that bad-boy up to 950 (or more?). They're
only $170 so I have the feeling I'll be hiding
out from my landlord next month.
MACWorld:
Apple sets hype-factor to 10 - source:
CNet. Jees-Louise...
iCEO Steve Jobs (ugh) makes all kinds of crazy
claims at this year's MacWorld Expo. You do have
to give Apple credit for creating so much media
and consumer hype considering their products.
Jobs even goes so far as to claim that their new
dual-processor model PowerPC G4's are the first
dual-processor computers, and that G4's are "the
world's fastest computers" - wow! You know
what? If you buy a Mac, you're still stuck with
a Mac.
C|Net
to buy Ziff Davis - source: The
Register. This is too boring for me to waste
time on, but you can read about it yourself if
you're interested. I just put it here so I can
combine my links to CNet
News and ZDNews.
PureNetworking.net
added to links - source: Andrew Smith
via email
A visitor to TweakCentral, Andrew Smith was kind
enough to let me know about a new site called
PureNetworking.net.
They are new so there isn't a ton there, but they
do have a great hints & tips section with
quite a bit of good information. They also have
book-reviews so go take a look!
3DSpotlight:
Tweaking system memory
3DSpotlight has a guide up that shows you how
to do more than just tweak your system memory.
They cover hard-drive and CPU setups as well.
I think it's for Win2k, but it's good information.
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This
article by Steve Gibson (Gibson Research Corp)
describes how downloading software like "RealNetworks
RealDownload, Netscape/AOL Smart Download, or
NetZip Download Demon utilities," send information
about you, your computer and what you're downloading
to a server somewhere without your knowledge or
consent. ("informed consent," what's
that?). He also points out how companies like
Real like to operate: First by denial, then by
threat of legal action (ugh) without even checking
the possibility that Gibson could be right! He
rechecked his findings and guess what? He was
right all along.
Asus A7V (VIA KX133/SocketA)
motherboard to include DIP switches after all.
As reported here
and here
and here, Asus,
which removed the DIP switches for a short-time
has stated via email that all shipping A7V motherboards
will indeed have the DIP switches. The DIP switches
allow users to directly manipulate the multiplier
which is by far the easiest way to overclock
a chip. The email from Asus states the fact that
AMD will be clock-locking their chips (not
allowing direct manipulation of the multiplier)
which overrides any settings made by the user
via the DIP switches. This is good news to overclockers
who either have "engineering sample"
(as AMD refers to them) CPUs which do not have
are not clock-locked, or override the clock-lock
by other means (read "soldering iron and
dremel" ).
Related Links:
Overclockers.com discussion on OC'ing the Duron
Tom's
Hardware article discussing OC'ing AMD chips
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My buddy Hans, in a vain attempt to demonstrate
his gratitude for introducing him to the Microsoft
optical mouse, showed me this
site: DigitalBlasphemy.com (I can never speell
it right). It's basically a gallery/archive of
some nice 3D and computer-generated images. What
I like most about this site is that the images
come in a variety of formats, not just the lame
(yeah, lame) 800x600. So if you have a large desktop,
you can find images up to 1600x1200. One caveat
to the site is the lack of naked-chicks, but think
of these as good wallpapers for your desktop for
when your girlfriend or wife is nosing around
your pad .
...and having taken Computer Animation (cs417)
last quarter, I have a new found respect for what
a pain-in-the-ass these things are to make.
GideonTech
added to links: Ed
Chen over at GideonTech emailed me asking to add
them to my links page. I was happy to comply!
His site is a hardware enthusiast site devoted
to providing information that's not so-technical,
that you need a PhD, or at least some time at
your local community college just to understand
it. I dig the philosophy.
He made the mistake of referring to TweakCentral
author(s) as "you guys" - even though
it's just me. I could see how one would think
that such a crappy website would require a team
of jackasses to create, but somehow I manage to
screw everything up just by myself! Go
check them out!
In an update to my
little tirade about the i815E chipset yesterday,
Sharky (SharkyExtreme)
chimes in with
his own review of the Asus CUSL2 motherboard (i815E
chipset). The shark-ster seems to like
it. And he manages to say so in just 9 pages (a
record, I think...)
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CNet
is reporting on "web bugs" or "1-pixel
gifs" that somehow work with or like
cookies (which we all know were sent by the devil.
No, not that devil.)
to track what sites you visit and what you click
on, of course, without your knowledge or consent.
I have no idea how this works. I'm going to look
into it and I'll post more information as I find
out...
*Note: I use 1-pixel gifs on this site, but they're
what's known as "shims." For example,
if you want the time in the little bubble above,
to the right to be a little off of the right-edge,
you stick a 1-pixel gif in there and stretch it
out to 4 pixels wide and now there's a little
space in there.
Microsoft
releases Internet Explorer 5.5 The new
features are too numerous (read trivial) to list
here. I heard that ie5.5 had a lot of bugs and
problems (which is wierd, considering who makes
it...). I hope they got those squared away. I'm
sure they did. Microsoft wouldn't ship a buggy
product. (Ha.. ha ha ha!)
Thresh's
Firing Squad has a review of Intel's new i815
chipset. The skinny on the i815 is this:
Intel released the i810
and i820
chipsets to replace the 2+ year-old work-horse
the BX chipset. The i810
doesn't have an AGP (Accelerated Graphics Port)
slot, so nuts-to-that, and the i820
is RAMBUS (read $$$) only and doesn't allow SDRAM.
The problem with the BX, is that technically,
it doesn't support 133MHz fsb (front-side-bus).
In reality, it does, but running it at 133MHz
requires you to run your AGP port at 89MHz, which
some video cards don't like. So now Intel has
the i815. It supports SDRAM, has an AGP port and
runs at 133MHz fsb with a 1/2 AGP divisor which
gives you a 66MHz AGP - which is spec. for AGP.
Got it?
For the last year or so, VIA has offered an alternative
to the BX chipset they call Apollo Pro133A (and
variants). The Apollo Pro runs at 133 MHz fsb,
but is often slower than a BX board on 100MHz
fsb.
In the market for a new Intel CPU? Rather buy
a house instead of RAMBUS RAM? Check out this
review and see if i815 is right for you.
*NOTE: There's an i815 and i815E.
I think i815E is the one you want. It offers
ATA/100 support as well as 4 USB ports as far
as I can tell...
Related links:
Intel i815/i815E
information pages
Tom's
review of the i815 - He doesn't think
it beats the BX - definitely a difference of opinion
here.
A note about RAMBUS (ugh). Word
on the street the last couple days is that PC133
SDRAM beats RAMBUS (duh) even by Intel's own benchmarks,
but I think RAMBUS needs a faster processor to
really stretch-its-legs. Don't get me wrong, when
DDR SDRAM comes out, it'll whoop even the faster
RAMBUS that's in development. I'm just saying...
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(OC'er = OverClocker) Good
'ol Tom is at it again. In
this litte article, Tom shows you how to overclock
that AMD chip (Tbird Athlon or Duron) regardless
of any multiplier locks. Basically, you burn-out
or cut some tiny litte copper-deals on
the top of the chip and re-write them to give
you whatever settings you want. Yeah, it's locked,
but now you're doin' the locking. And if done
correctly, you can undo it and change your settings
again if you want. Whew! Now we can all go back
to getting something for nothing.
The usual warning applies: if you're a jackass
who isn't any good at electron lithography and
you fry your CPU, don't come crying to Tom or
me about it.
He's been pretty mellow lately - I think if he's
busy, like he has been, he tones down his anti-______
(fill-in the blank with whatever or whoever Tom
hates at the moment, ie 3dfx) rhetoric.
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Tom has
received a letter from AMD stating that all shipping
Thunderbird (Athlon) and Duron processors will
contain a multiplier lock which will prevent overclocking.
You can still overclock it, but upping the multiplier
was way easier, and gave you more speed. Tom says
that the CPUs he has aren't engineering samples
and don't contain the lock, so maybe you should
rush out and buy one? 
Some 'Athlon overclocking' articles like this
one from TweakTown say things like, "Yes
AMD is supporting the overcloker but, no its
not actually Multiplier Locked" -
besides not knowing the difference between its
and it's, guys like
this are a little behind the news, so you may
want to take articles like this with a grain of
salt. You may be sorely disappointed when that
700MHz Athlon you payed $160 for turns out to
be nothing more than a 700MHz Athlon that you
actually paid $160 for. (wtf?).
I heard-the-word from CNEWZ.
That reminds me, SystemLogic.net
has a new ULTIMATE weekly CPU price guide
that's so in-depth, it's like pr0n for accountants!
They're using some kind of automated script (I
hope) cus there's a lot of information there.
In the market for a new CPU? Check
it out!
GamePC
has a technology guide entitled Optimizing your
Windows PC. It's a good place to start
to make sure your PC's got everything in working
order. I've added it to the links
page - it's just that darn good.
I
added TechPhiles.net and DEEZ Tech (not to
be confused with DEEZ NUTS, which, if you represent
the west-side like me, you'd know what I'm
talking about) to the links. Maybe
I'm just ignorant, but I think pedophiles have
given everything ending with philes a bad
name. Now when I hear audiophiles, I'm like, "Dude,
what you do with your 8-tracks is your business
but leave me out of it."
DEEZ
Tech has a review of WindowsME (Millenium Edition)
btw. Worth a look-see if you plan on giving another
$150 to Mr. Gates.
Oh yeah, and I keep typing 'Techpiles' without
the 'h' which would also make a cool name.
One last thing: Not to toot my own
horn (Lord knows, I get enough practice...) but
that last QuickTip about turning
off animated gifs has got to be the best tweak
ever! All those distracting flashing ads used
to drive me nuts! Ugh! And not to condone hate
or anything, but I also hate the person who conducted
the study and revealed that the more flashy and
annoying the web-ad, the more clicks it recieves
and static, pleasant ads get completely ignored
- bastards!
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Brian
Livingston has an article on a program called
98LiteIII (www.98lite.net
- not 98lite.com) that allows you to remove just
about anything you don't want from Windows. I
knew this bit of anti-bloatware didn't come from
Redmond.
Icantbelieveitsadotcom.com
- I've made a little page that looks at (ridicules)
ill-concieved internet domain-names. You could
live your entire life and never hear about these
sites, and you'd be a lucky person, but when you
do hear them - they just make you cringe.
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CNet
News is reporting in this story that management
types are growing weary of tech-related job applicants
forgoing some of the traditional interviewing
practices: like not eating while being interviewed
and keeping your boots off your prospective employers'
desk. I find this amusing, especially since I'm
about to enter the tech-job field and since I
seem to possess about 10 times the arrogance of
the average individual. HA. Did I mention the
part where I'm condescending?
Now I know that "beggars can't be choosers,"
oh wait..
In other news:
Ars
Technica shows you how to make Windows2000 more
secure than LINUX (yeah right) Seriously,
they show you how to make Win2k more secure than
the default install.
SysOpt
takes a look at DDR memory. You probably
won't be able to pick up DDR SDRAM until Q1 2001,
but from the looks of it, DDR SDRAM kicks DRD
RAM's ass*! Oh that was a little confusing. DDR
(Double Data Rate SDRAM) outperforms* DRD RAM
(Direct RAMBUS Dynamic RAM).
*NOTE: by "kicks ass" and "outperforms"
I'm refering to throughput, not FUD, hype, lies
or what marketing says.
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According to this story in Wired,
the European Union (EU) has launched an investigation
to look for the US governments alleged covert
digital espionage network, dubbed "Echelon."
Guess what they're going to find? Nothing. To
quote Spaceballs, "Find
anything yet?! We ain't found sh*t!"
You can't find something that doesn't exist and
to even waste money entertaining these paranoid
fantasies is ludicrous. These europeans are
nuts.
Related links:
Echelon
watch - an information site run by the ACLU
btw "wookin'
pa nub" is from Eddie Murphy doing buckwheat
on SNL.
I hope everyone had a great Fourth of July.
"Any red-blooded, flag-fearing American would
love the M-320. Celebrate the independence of
your nation by blowing up a small part of it."
Yeah! It says something about our country. I just
hung-out with the guys, here's a pic:

me and the guys on the 4th -
that's me on the left
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ActiveWin
has done a nice little write-up of Microsoft's
latest consumer OS offering: WindowsME (Millenium
Edition). It is the latest in the line of consumer
OS's starting with Win95, then Win98, 98SE and
now ME. WindowsME offers multimedia and networking
"enhancements" along with other "enhancements"
to make the computer more "user-friendly."
WinME will do 2000-esque things like hide items
you don't use very often (which can be disabled)
and it has a more "intelligent" auto-update
feature - which we all know works really well
on Win98 and 98SE (um???). Go take a look and
see if it is worth your $90 to upgrade? btw -
this will supposedly be MS's last OS that will
be available to purchase. Future OS's are slated
to have a "rental" system where MS enhances
the amount of your money it gets .
Microsoft
at it again: gives "deinal of service"
a whole new meaning - source: ActiveWin
where it says:
This is a denial of service
vulnerability. It could allow a malicious
web site operator to overwrite a file on the
computer of a visiting user. If certain system
files on the computer were overwritten, it could
render the visitor's computer unusable.
The vulnerability could only be used to overwrite
a file as a means of preventing it from operating
- it could not be used to replace an executable
file with new code of the malicious web site
operator's choice.
I'm sorry, but this is not a "Denial of
Service" (DoS) vulnerability. This is an
ActiveX EXPLOIT.
The only service this is going to deny is you
using your own computer. I suppose if you were
browsing the internet WITH YOUR WEBSERVER COMPUTER,
and went to an unsafe site and you have ActiveX
enabled, you could damage your WEBSERVER and then
a Denial of Service attack will have taken place,
but that's a bit of a stretch...
Here's how various people who know more than
I do, define DoS
MS's own definition of Denail
of Service:
Denial of service A condition in which
users are deliberately prevented from using
network resources.
PC
Magazine defines Denail of Service as:
DoS attacks are aimed at devices and networks
with exposure to the Internet. Their goal is
to cripple a device or network so that external
users no longer have access to your network
resources. Without hacking password files or
stealing sensitive data, a denial-of-service
hacker simply fires up a program that will generate
enough traffic to your site that it denies service
to the site's legitimate users.
Symmantec
has some information on Denial of Service,
but they don't mention overwriting files on a
user's computer? Whatever Bill.
Not to overlook the whole point, if
you run ie5, you probably should get and install
the patch.
Just a side-note: MS also states in the advisory:
If the malicious user’s
web site were running in a Security
Zone in which ActiveX controls are not allowed
to run, the vulnerability could not be
exploited. That's wierd...
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