Updated:03:04 PM CEST Jun,20
(new)
66 lottery login
91 club
okwin
bdg game
55 club
(c) 1998-2026 Gameguru Mania
Privacy Policy statement
|
Nightly Tech Reading - tech
|
| (hx) 01:32 AM CET - Mar,14 2004 |
- FBI adds to wiretap wish list - The FBI's request to the Federal
Communications Commission aims
to give police ready access to any form of Internet-based communications.
If approved as drafted, the proposal could dramatically expand the scope of
the agency's wiretap powers, raise costs for cable broadband companies and
complicate Internet product development. Legal experts said the 85-page filing
includes language that could be interpreted as forcing companies to build back
doors into everything from instant messaging and voice over Internet Protocol
(VoIP) programs to Microsoft's Xbox Live game service. The introduction of new
services that did not support a back door for police would be outlawed, and
companies would be given 15 months to make sure that existing services comply.
- US hosting company reveals hacks, citing disclosure law - Citing
California's security breach disclosure law, Texas-based Allegiance Telecom
notified 4,000 Web hosting customers this week of a recent computer
intrusion that exposed their usernames and passwords, in a case that
experts say illustrates the security sunshine law's national influence.
- Office XP Patch Gives Anti-Spam Software Fits - The recent patch
offered up by Microsoft to plug vulnerabilities in Outlook 2002 and Office XP
causes problems for users of a pair of spam filtering products, both
Cloudmark and Sunbelt Software said Thursday. After installing Office XP
Service Pack 3 (SP3), users of Cloudmark's SpamNet and Sunbelt Software's
iHateSpam began seeing security alert pop-ups with each message they received.
Both Sunbelt and Cloudmark acknowledge the problem and have posted support
bulletins on their websites. Sunbelt has released an update to its software to
fix the problem while Cloudmark said it is working with Microsoft to solve the
issue.
- S2 "mystery man" Anderer speaks on MS, SCO, and licensing - Mike
Anderer was the author of the S2-to-SCO Group memo that comprises the "Halloween
X" document that was released to the press by Eric Raymond last week.
Anderer, the CEO of S2 and the middleman in the SCO Group's $50 million
PIPE transaction of last October 16 contacted us today, and while he is
under a non-disclosure agreement and can't say very much about the $50 million
PIPE deal, what follows are some of the thoughts he can share. ->Read
more
-
MySQL addresses open-source license problem - The rift
divided MySQL and PHP, software that lets computers construct customized Web
pages on the fly. The two packages are found alongside each other so often,
along with the Linux operating system and the Apache Web server, that there's
an acronym, LAMP, to label the software combination. On Thursday night,
MySQL published a license exception that, the company said, permits PHP to
resume its previous practice of bundling MySQL components called libraries,
said Zack Urlocker, MySQL's vice president of marketing.
-
Off-topic: Prenatal choline supplements make baby's brain
cells bigger, faster -
The important nutrient choline "super-charged" the brains of animals that
received supplements in utero, making their cells larger and faster at firing
electrical "signals" that release memory-forming chemicals, according to a new
study. These marked brain changes could explain earlier behavioral studies in
which choline improved learning and memory in animals, say the researchers
from the departments of pharmacology and psychiatry at Duke University Medical
Center and from the Durham VA Medical Center. The implications for humans are
profound, said the researchers, because the collective data on choline
suggests that simply augmenting the diets of pregnant women with this one
nutrient could affect their children's lifelong learning and memory. In
theory, choline could boost cognitive function, diminish age-related memory
decline, and reduce the brain's vulnerability toxic insults.
-
Off-topic: 100-metre nanotube thread pulled from furnace -
A thread of carbon nanotubes more than 100 metres long has been pulled
from a fiery furnace. The previous record holder was a mere 30 centimetres
long. Carbon nanotubes are stronger than steel and better conductors than
copper, but are often just a thousandth of a millimetre in length. By bundling
the nanotubes together into much longer fibres, scientists hope to harness
their properties on a larger scale. For example, embedding long carbon
nanotube threads in plastic would give tougher composites for airplane hulls.
-
Intel ready to intro 300MHz Prescott - As Intel appears
to have decided that Megahertz Madness is now a thing of the past, we're
looking forward to when it introduces a
300MHz
Prescott Pentium 4 on its 90 nanometre process.This will run very cool and
get us back to the time when we had to pay for central heating, rather than
have our PC be part of the "Digital Home" and keep us warm on winter nights
and evenings.
-
Athlon FX53 goes up for sale - The forthcoming
Athlon FX53 has started appearing for sale - although according to Chris
Tom at AMD Zone, these are pre-orders and there doesn't seem to be any stock
of the CPUs yet
-
VIA aims latest P4 chipsets at HDTV generation - VIA
today launched
a
pair of integrated chipsets for the Pentium 4, touting the parts' graphics
performance delivered courtesy of an S3 Graphics UniChrome Pro core. The
chipsets, the PM800 and PM880, offer single- and dual-channel 400MHz DDR SDRAM
memory controllers, respectively. That's their only distinguishing feature:
both can handle up to 8GB of RAM and both support the P4's 800MHz effective
bit rate frontside bus.
-
Preparing for PCI-Express - For nearly anyone in this
market,
the
idea of spending $300 or more on the latest and greatest graphics card to
play the newest games is enough to make then cringe. However, these people are
now faced with the potential need to upgrade their motherboards and likely
processors in order to adopt PCI-Express. In a best-case scenario, you are
still talking hundreds of additional dollars. Then again, who is to say that
we will see any immediate benefit from PCI-Express in the first generation of
cards?
-
NVIDIA nForce3 250Gb Performance Preview -
Now NVIDIA is back again with its follow-up to nForce3 150, dubbed nForce3
250. Whereas nForce3 was originally intended to compete in the workstation
segment with nForce3 Pro 150, and eventually adapted to serve the needs of the
consumer in nForce3 150, NVIDIA’s nForce3 250 merges the needs of the
workstation segment (where features and performance often take a back seat to
stability and reliability) with the speed and eye-catching features consumers
want to see in a motherboard.
-
Sapphire The Beast All-In-Wonder 9800 Pro review -
Velocity has posted
a review of the Sapphire The Beast All-In-Wonder 9800 Pro video card.
-
ABIT 9800XT review - HardOCP has posted
a
review of ABIT 9800XT. "In typical ABIT style the box has a dark look to
it with a powerful graphic on the front. ABIT makes sure to point out some
noteworthy features of the video card on the front of the box such as Dual
VGA, TV-Out, DVI and DirectX9. They also let you know the card supports AGP
8X/4X and has 256MB of RAM. Also indicated on the front of the box is the free
Half Life 2 logo. On the back of the box ABIT lists the complete product
features of this video card along with the packaging contents."
-
Video card round-up - Digital-Daily have published
their VGA Roundup with _twenty_ video cards.
-
Ultimate Athlon XP Overclocking: Mobile Athlon XP, DFI,
Corsair - Guru Review has posted
a new article called "Ultimate Athlon XP Overclocking: Mobile Athlon XP,
DFI, Corsair"
-
High-Speed CDROMS - The Hidden Dangers - ExtremeMHz has
posted a
new article called "High-Speed CDROMS - The Hidden Dangers" Here is an
excerpt: "About two weeks ago, a friend of mine had a CD literally explode in
his drive. I've never heard of such a thing and figured this was just an
isolated incident but today, I received an email from one of our readers who
unfortunately encountered the same exact problem. It seems to be a common
issue and is why we decided to write a short article on this hidden danger.
But just how powerful can it be? Can it actually cause serious injury? Our
reader James, has sent in a couple of pictures to prove the magnitude of such
an event."
-
Hidden Space on Hard Drives? - AllHardwareZone has
published
an article on hidden space on hard drives. "With quite a bit of
controversy being stirred by this article at The Inquirer, I was compelled to
examine the claim of free space. Basically, the article claimed that there was
a procedure available which made it possible to "recover unused areas of the
hard drive in the form of hidden partitions". According to the author the the
article, more than 100% of the drive's capacity could be unlocked."
-
Unattended XP CD Guide - Microsoft Software Forum
Network has updated their
Unattended XP CD Guide.
Have you ever wanted a Windows XP CD that would install Windows XP by
automatically putting in your name, product key, timezone and regional
settings? Followed by silently installing all your favourite applications
along with DirectX 9, .Net Framework and then all the Pre-SP2 hotfixes,
updated drivers, registry tweaks, and a readily patched UXTheme.dll without
any user interaction whatsoever? Then
this guide will show you
how you can do just that.
-
Windows Server 2003 Terminal Server security -
Microsoft has published
a guide about making Terminal Server more secure.
-
Registry Edits for Windows XP: Tweaks and Tips -
Looking for some
Windows XP tweaks and tips? then head this way to Kellys-korner-xp for
hundreds of tweaks for XP.
-
CoDBench -
CoDBench is a Guru3D.com freeware application for automatic Call of Duty
benchmarks.
-
MultiEx Commander v3.9.70 - The worlds best multi game
resource archiver
MultiEx
Commander has been updated. Version 3.9.70 is now operating solely on
online resources for maximum performance. Dubbed "The Ultimate Mod Tool" by PC
Extreme (UK) and with more than 150 game resource archives supported for
extraction, MultiEx Commander is steadfast in user-requested game support.
-
K9 1.27 -
K9 is an email filtering
program that works in conjunction with most popular email applications that
use the standard POP3 email protocol. Messages pass through K9 on their way to
your email program and as K9 processes them it can learn to identify the
difference between Spam and Good emails, marking Spam emails so that your
email application can file them away or delete them.
-
FFDShow MPEG-4 Video Decoder 12-03-2004 -
FFDSHOW is a DirectShow decoding filter for decompressing DivX, XviD, WMV,
MPEG-1 and MPEG-2 movies.
-
RadLinker 1.005 -
RadLinker (download)
is new tweaker/linker for ATI Radeon based graphics cards.
| |
| Comments from xxxx | posted - 05:20 AM CET - Mar,14 2004 | | http://www.digital-daily.com/video/vga-roundup/, wow that shitty nvidia company sure has some decent scores. | |
| Comments from asd | posted - 01:50 PM CET - Mar,14 2004 | | dont call nvidia a shiity company | |
| Comments from spank-the-monkey | posted - 03:58 PM CET - Mar,14 2004 | | xxxx is pro-nVidia... he was being sarcastic. Nobody with a decent IQ can seriously be pro-ATI. It's all teenagers or old married guys who bitch like their wives | |
| Comments from alicia037 | posted - 07:02 PM CET - Mar,14 2004 | | These graphics card fanboys are just boring now. Why do they defend either company with so much passion? Do they think the companies actually give a shit about what they think? | |
| Comments from fyi@localhost | posted - 08:23 PM CET - Mar,14 2004 | | the hidden harddrive thing is bogus, it tries to get you to overlap sectors so it looks like you have more space than you really do and screw up your harddrive | |
| Comments from Sargos | posted - 09:25 PM CET - Mar,14 2004 | | No comments on the FBI trying to put a backdoor in EVERYTHING?!
Who the hell cares about nvidia cards when you don't have the freedom to choose between one or the other. | |
| Comments from | posted - 11:18 PM CET - Mar,14 2004 | | well for sure if the FBI to get backdoors in the differant softwares.. it will unlock a new level of power for hackers... not smart fbi. | |
| Comments from TheFeebs | posted - 01:36 AM CET - Mar,15 2004 | | ERRM...->"Baker agrees that the FBI's proposal means that IP-based services such as chat programs and videoconferencing "that are 'switched' in any fashion would be treated as telephony." Baker also stated "It's basically a fucking phone tap on an internet scale, With these rules in place they could 'tap your internet' for the same reasons they would tap your phone, and you would usually have to be a suspect of somthing for them to do that."
(Translation -> police Phone tap for mIRC)
Read the FBI's proposal before you go bitching about your freedom. Just because the FBI come up with an idea does'nt mean that they out to crush some of your civil liberty bullshit. | | The old comment system has been replaced. Use the regular FORUMS!
|
|