Monday Tech Reading - tech
(hx) 05:07 PM CET - Jan,17 2005
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SECURITY...
- Scots man held over DDoS charges - 27
year-old man suspected of launching denial of service attacks is to appear
in a Scottish court today following his arrest on Friday, 14 January in a
joint operation between Scottish police and the US Secret Service. Police
searched housesin Elgin, north east Scotland and seized some computers.
- Gambling Sites Battle DDoS Attacks -
Many of the gambling sites suffering DDoS attacks are in offshore data and
hosting centres, so any large scale data flood could knock out access to many
more sites than just the one the criminals were targeting, said Mr King. This
overspill effect was only likely to grow as attacks grow in size and scale.
- BREED's game servers vulnerable -
The game server can be easily crashed through the sending of an empty UDP
packet. In fact if the packet size is equal to zero, the game passes a NULL
pointer to the function used to parse the packet's content.
- Apple iTunes Playlist Parsing Buffer Overflow Vulnerability -
Remote exploitation of a buffer overflow vulnerability in Apple Computer
Inc.'s iTunes music player allows attackers to execute arbitrary code. The
problem specifically exists when parsing playlist files that contain long URL
file entries.
OFF-TOPIC...
- Welcome to Titan - After a seven-year, four-million-kilometre
journey, the European Space Agency (ESA)'s Huygens probe is now sitting on
Titan, Saturn's largest moon.
The probe landed on Titan's surface Jan 14, 350 years after it was
discovered. The probe has begun sending data, including first pictures and
audio, which sounds like some celestial heartbeat. ~
Titan's orange squash has scientists gasping /
Color Photos Reveal Details of Titan's Surface
- Religions in World of Warcraft? -
Landover Baptist Church say (thanks
Slashdot) Christian game enthusiasts around the U.S.A. are turning the
world of Azeroth inside the new video game, "World of Warcraft" into a mission
field, where virtual battles are fought and real souls are won to the Lord
Jesus Christ.
- EA Considering Sims TV Show -
Reuters is carrying the news that Electronic Arts is considering creating
a television show based on "The Sims". The show would allow viewers to vote on
what the avatars in the show would do: "One idea could be that you're
controlling a family, telling them when to go to the kitchen and when to go to
the bedroom, and with this mechanism you have gamers all over the world
'playing the show."
- Celebrity Soundboards -
There're various audio clips/quotes from celebrities in TV shows and/or
movies.
- Biology Meets Microchips to Make Tiny Robots - Rat cells grown onto
microscopic silicon chips
worked as tiny robots, perhaps a first step toward a self-assembling
device, researchers working in the United States reported on Sunday. They
described a new method for attaching living cells to silicon chips. They then
and got the combined entities to move like tiny, primitive legs
- One last, long campout for "the Star Wars guy" - Jeff Tweiten lives
on a periwinkle blue, fold-out futon on the sidewalk in front of the Cinerama
Theatre. He is not homeless, but camping out for 139 days. Waiting. For Godot,
you wonder? An organ transplant? The end of the world?
Tweiten is waiting for "Star Wars: Episode III -- Revenge of the Sith," which
opens May 19.
TECHNOLOGY...
- OpenOffice.org Mac OS X Delivery Schedule -
No
engineering work has been performed on Quartz or Aqua development within
the OpenOffice.org project since mid 2003. For the last year and a half all
engineering work focusing on a native Mac OS X OpenOffice.org version has been
concentrated in the NeoOffice/J project, using a combination of Java and
Carbon technologies to replace X11.
- Microsoft, Alcatel team to make calls from the desktop - French
telecommunications company Alcatel Thursday said it has signed a deal with
Microsoft
to help develop applications that allow users to make phone calls from
their computers. Istanbul is the front-end application for Microsoft's
upcoming Live Communications Server 2005 product, which links LCS 2005 with
users' telephones.
- Sony PSP "update" adds office apps, browser, email -
Sony may be preparing to release its first PlayStation Portable (PSP) update,
if a file that briefly appeared on the web this weekend is what it purports to
be: a leaked copy of an early version of the update code. Whatever its
provenance, the software certainly includes some interesting features. In
addition to the usual bug fixes, the update is said to add not only a web
browser and an email program, but a word processor and a spreadsheet. At this
stage, the translations from the original Japanese exploration of the alleged
PSP update file doesn't make it clear whether these are fully functioning
office apps - or simply readers put in place to handled emailed attachments.
Given the device's nature, we suspect that latter, but early talk of a PSP
keyboard accessory has led some observers to suggest they're the real thing.
- Apple hoping music fans follow iPod to Mac mini computers -
The diminutive Mac
mini, available after Jan. 22, is a full-blown computer, complete with a
1.25 GHz PowerPC G4 processor, 256 megabytes of RAM and a 40 gigabyte hard
drive. But the price tag and lunch-box-sized packaging include no room for
peripherals of any kind. Consumers can, however, spend an extra $100 for a
double-sized 80 gigabyte hard drive and a slightly faster 1.42 GHz chip. Or,
as some naysayers are noting, consumers can spend around $599 on an
entry-level Dell or Gateway system, which would include a monitor, keyboard
and mouse.
- Dual-Layer Standard May Disappear Soon - Dual-Layered (DL) DVD
writers may be affordable, but the question of concern is the media prices.
The price per DL media averages out to $10.00, which is shockingly high. We
talked to manufacturers at this year's CES about prices and what they thought
about DL media in general. The replies we received were far from positive and
disappointing.
According to a few blank media providers, DL standard may not have a bright
future ahead of it. The reason is the upcoming Blu-Ray and HD DVD
standards that are supported by world's top most corporations. Due to the
aforementioned standards, DL simply appears to be redundant and more of a
filler in the industry until Blu-Ray and HD DVD emerge in mass quantities. As
far as prices are concerned, you can probably expect them to drop $6.00 to
$4.00 per disc, but not much lower than that.
HARDWARE...
- 754 pin AMD mobile Semprons range complete - Japanase site Akiba PC
Hotline said that
socket 754
mobile Sempron chips at ratings of 2600+, 2800+ and 3000+ are for sale.
These chips, according to site, consume 62W and are for sale at Y10,800
(~$105), Y13,800 (~$135) and Y14,800 (~$145) respectively.
- Logitech
readies top gaming mouse - Logitech is about to change gaming peripherals
once again with a new mouse. One of the things it did not announce at CES was
the new 518 mouse. This successor to
the MX510
gaming mouse combines the best of the older one, the laser technology from
the MX1000, and has a new twist.
The twist
is adjustable DPI, intended for the gamer. The 518 has a hardware switch
that will instantly change the sensitivity from 800 to 1200 to 1600DPI.
-
Abit's Fatal1ty-AA8XE motherboard - At over $220 online,
the Fatal1ty-AA8XE is far from cheap, but it's no more expensive than
other premium 925XE motherboards. With plenty of OTES cooling, a decent cable
bundle, a tweak-filled BIOS, and uGuru delivering the best hardware monitoring
around, the Fatal1ty-AA8XE is definitely a premium board worthy of any Pentium
4 overclocking enthusiast.
- Winfast NF4UK8AA-8ERKS NF4 Ultra Board -
This board, NF4UK8AA-8EKRS supports the Socket 939 for AMD Athlon 64
processor, 4 GB DDR400, USB 2.0, PCI Express 16x, 8 ch audio, 1394, GbE LAN,
NVRAID, SATA. The board also comes built in with overclocking features like
voltage adjustments for VDIMM, VCORE, Vhtt. FSB is adjustable to 300MHz.
-
Sapphire Radeon X800 (R430) - One thing that can be noted on this board
is that
it
features full 2ns GDDR3 RAM, which is the same RAM used on the X800 XL and
numerous other higher end boards. Given that X800's RAM is only running at
350MHz this represents a fairly serious underclock of that RAM and board
vendors could very well just utilise DDR memory closer to those ratings. As
such, while we believe initial board samples will use 2ns GDDR3 RAM this may
not continue further into the lifetime of the board.
- ATI Radeon X800 Pro
- Viper Lair has posted
a review of the ATI Radeon X800 Pro
- Asus Extreme N6800 GeForce 6800 Ultra PCIe - Even in single card
scenarios,
the GeForce 6800 Ultra PCIe proves itself to be a faster overall card
compared to ATI’s Radeon X800 XT, although this may be a hollow victory. ATI’s
next generation Radeon X850 XT cards will be shipping in early February and
will likely give ATI the performance edge to best the 6800 Ultra in single
card systems. When SLI is added to the mix though, there is simply no question
that dual 6800 Ultra PCIe cards perform much faster. Keep in mind though, in
order to truly see the performance benefits of such a high-end SLI system,
resolutions and image quality settings must be set at ultra-high levels.
- LG GSA-4163B Triple Format Double Layer DVD Writer - This
one-of-a-kind triple format DVD writer gained quite a bit of interest since
its release. The successor to the 4120B was the 4160B, which did not bring
enough new features worth an upgrade consideration. LG Electronics has
recently released their latest DVD writer,
the
GSA-4163B. This new drive finally offers 4x double layer writing and
should compete well with all other 4x double layer writers currently on the
market.
- Seagate 5GB Pocket Hard Drive - While it is not as
small as a USB flash drive,
it is
extremely portable and convenient thanks to its retractable USB cable.
- Corsair Flash Voyager Flash Memory Drive - Adrian Rojak take a look
at
the Corsair Flash Voyager USB flash memory drive. In particular, the 512MB
model.
- Arctic Cooling Freezer 7 LGA775 P4 Heatpipe Cooler -
Tweaknews.net has posted
a review
of Arctic Cooling Freezer 7 LGA775 P4 Heatpipe Cooler.
- Arctic Cooling Freezer 64 review -
The Freezer 64 utilizes a patented fan that creates almost no noise.
Hopefully, this heatsink will be just as effective as their VGA Silencers
were.
- Superpower XP03P Gaming Case - Hi-techreviews.com has posted
a review of the Superpower XP03P Gaming Case which looks like something
betwen a Power Mac G5 and a Star Wars battle pack.
- Thermaltake Xpeaker
Panel - MikhailTech
take a look at Thermaltake's bold attempt at a decent built-in speaker
system dubbed the Xpeaker.
- PolarFLO TT AMD, Intel Water Block -
These PolarFLO TT water block kits come with all the necessary fixings &
screws/spacers to install including the necessary 'Y' tube adapter.
-
Buffalo USB WiFi Adapter -
Although the WLI-U2-KG54AI-3 doesn't have any flash storage that you can
make use of, it does have 4MB of storage embedded, and it's here that the
drivers are stored. When you plug the device into your USB port, it recognises
the 4MB storage area as a CD-ROM with an ISO image on it. The WLI-U2-KG54AI-3
then initiates some kind of ISO extraction utility, and loads the drivers
seamlessly.
- BatteryFree Wireless Optical Mouse - PDAToday has posted
a review of the NB-30 BatteryFree Wireless Optical Mouse and EasyGo
Optical Mouse From A4 Tec.
- Lexmark P6250 All-in-One Inkjet printer,
scanner, fax - Being a multifunction device, and a photo-orientated one at
that,
the P6250 comes with quite a bit of software. There's the All-in-One
Centre, which offers easy access to a series of common tasks, such as
transferring images to your PC from the card reader or scanner, sending images
via email and, of course, viewing and printing them.
- Dell Axim X50v PDA
- There are three new Axims in the X50 range - a basic one offering a
416Mhz processor, a QVGA screen, 64MB of ROM and Bluetooth - a 520MHz version
with 128MB of ROM and integrated Wi-Fi - and at the top-of-the-range,
and the X50v, which offers a 620MHz CPU and a 3.7in screen boasting full
VGA (480 x 640) resolution. Dell is also now offering a bundle with a GPS
solution as well.
GUIDES...
- TI-Calculator Turbo Page -
Curently, the TI-81, TI-82, TI-83, TI-85, TI-86, TI-89, TI-92,a nd TI-92 Plus
can be accelerated. The 81, 85 and 86 can be accelerated to approximately 2-3x
their normal speed, about 18 MHz. The TI-82 and TI-83 can also be accelerated
to about 1.5-2x normal speed. They only about double their speed to around 12
MHz. The TI-89 and 92 can be accelerated to around 20 MHz!
- Medium Business Guide for Backup and Recovery v 1.0 -
This guide provides referential guidance on implementing techniques to
protect against data loss due to hardware failures, software corruption, or
accidental deletion.
SOFTWARE...
- Novell offers free SuSE 9.2 download - Novell said it is making
SuSE Linux Professional 9.2 available as
a free download.
Novell said the version differs from the LiveDVD version, is a fully
installable version, and is not time limited. (thanks
DistroWatch)
- Bugzilla 2.18 Goes Gold -
Bugzilla is server
software designed to help you manage software development. It contains many
new features, a huge number of bug fixes, some security updates, and more. It
is also the first Bugzilla version to run
unmodified on Windows. In parallel, security release
2.16.8 and a new development snapshot
2.19.2
have been announced.
- Delete Doctor 1.1 - Delete files that are difficult to delete, such
as some files left by viruses and trojans, or files with corrupted file names.
This program
can also delete files like the "index.dat" files, which store Internet
history, by scheduling them for deletion upon system restart.
- GMail Drive 1.0.5 -
GMail Drive creates a virtual filesystem on top of your Google GMail
account and enables you to save and retrieve files stored on your GMail
account directly from inside Windows Explorer. GMail Drive literally adds a
new drive to your computer under the My Computer folder, where you can create
new folders, copy and drag'n'drop files to.
- CloneDVD v2.6.2.3 - Elby/SlySoft has released
an
updated version of the CloneDVD. This latest version addresses a problem
with the automatic update check, that was introduced in the previous CloneDVD
version.
- SpeedFan 4.20 -
SpeedFan (download)
is a freeware program that monitors fan speeds, temperatures and voltages in
computers with hardware monitoring chips. SpeedFan can even access S.M.A.R.T.
info for those hard disks that support this feature (almost all :-)) and show
hard disk temperatures too, if supported
- Koepi`s XviD Codec 1.1.0 Beta 1 -
XviD (download)
is an ISO MPEG-4 compliant video codec. It`s no product, it`s an open source
project which is developed and maintained by lots of people from all over the
world.
- 3dfx Voodoo 3/4/5 alpha 22 (SFFT) - Did you know it's still
possible to play Half-life 2 and Doom 3 on an old 3dfx card? For the few of
you still running them, there are some
new
3dfx Voodoo 3/4/5 Alpha SFFT drivers. These drivers are Windows 2000/XP
compatible and I've recompressed the archive towards 1,7 MB. The archive has
both Windows 2000/XP drivers for 3dfx Voodoo 3, 4 and 5 graphics cards.
- ForceWare 70.78 Win2000/XP - Originally released as Quadro fx1400
drivers from Dell this is a NVIDIA Forceware driver targeted at the
professional cards. The .inf file has been modified to make
these drivers compatible with all graphics cards. This set is not WHQL, ),
nView comes in a seperate directory with it's own setup file. The drivers are
date stamped on the 23rd of November.
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