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 Nightly Tech Madness - tech
(hx) 02:28 AM CEST - Apr,21 2004
  • Internet Technology Vulnerable to Hackers - Researchers uncovered a serious flaw (advisory) in the underlying technology for nearly all Internet traffic, a discovery that led to an urgent and secretive international effort to prevent global disruptions of Web surfing, e-mails and instant messages. The British government announced the vulnerability in core Internet technology on Tuesday. Left unaddressed, experts said, it could allow hackers to knock computers offline and broadly disrupt vital traffic-directing devices, called routers, that coordinate the flow of data among distant groups of computers.
  • Passwords revealed by sweet deal - More than 70% of people would reveal their computer password in exchange for a bar of chocolate, a survey has found. It also showed that 34% of respondents volunteered their password when asked without even needing to be bribed. A second survey found that 79% of people unwittingly gave away information that could be used to steal their identity when questioned. Security firms predict that the lax security practices will fuel a British boom in online identity theft.
  • Microsoft Questioned on XP SP2 - Executives from Microsoft's security group demonstrated some of the new security features planned for the next major Windows XP software update, known as Service Pack 2, and faced persistent questions Tuesday from customers about whether the new features will interfere with other security technology
  • Researchers break Internet speed record - Data was transmitted over Internet2 at an average speed of 6.25 gigabits per second. This is nearly 10,000 times faster than a typical home broadband connection.
  • Particle physicists rescue rare vinyl recordings - Classic audio recordings preserved on a warped and damaged records could yet be rescued for future generations using an optical analysis technique originally developed to keep track of subatomic particles. Many rare vinyl recordings exist in libraries around the world. In the British Library's National Sound Archive there are more than a million old vinyl records. But even running a needle across some of these old records can damage them severely. So researchers at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California, US, adapted a sensitive instrument used to build a colossal particle accelerator as a highly sensitive optical recording method.
  • RIAA drops amnesty program - The Recording Industry Association of America has pulled the plug on a controversial program that offered file sharers amnesty from the group's legal campaign to stop the unauthorized swapping of music files over the Internet..
  • AMD Begins 90nm Chip Production - AMD announced it had begun production of chips using 90nm Silicon-on-Insulator process technology at its Fab 30 in Dresden, Germany. Despite of some information available from unofficial sources, AMD promises to deliver commercial products using this fabrication process next quarter.
  • AMD Opteron 150, 250, 850 out in June - AMD will roll out Opteron 150, 250 and 850 chips running at 2.4GHz in June. The 130nm Socket 940 parts will continue to support 333MHz and 400MHz DDR SDRAM on registered ECC DIMMs using their integrated dual-channel memory controller.
  • New Serial ATA specs completed  - Serial ATA Working Group has announced new specifications that double signaling speed and introduce new cable and connector solutions. The specification for the second generation Serial ATA signaling speed - 3Gbps - has been completed and the release candidate of that specification has started its ratification process. The second-generation speed of 3Gbps (300MB/s) is double that of the first-generation Serial ATA speed which is 1.5Gbps (150MB/s).
  • Gigabyte GV-R98P128D Radeon 9800 Pro 128 MB - The GV-R98P128D is no doubt an excellent card and has proven to be a great success. It's quality and performance is like a built-by ATI video card. The only problem we had with the video card was when testing the s-video out, the image output experienced some interference.
  • Flexiglow FX GamePad review - FlexiGlow have created a visually appealing pad (assuming you like flashy lights) and have made the correct choice of giving you, the end user a choice in the colouring you might want. Not many companies give you this flexibility, as you are usually restricted to one colour and that colour is more often than not blue. Even when unlit the pad is appealing for its clear bubbled base alone. Flexiglow even go so far as to include spare feet for the pad, just incase. 
  • Elby's CloneDVD v2.0.7.3 - CloneDVD has been updated to version 2.0.7.3. This new version fixed:File 4 error on Windows NT 4; fixed proper handling of duplicated start codes ; added RC handling of video material with very low bit rates; added new translation: indonesia; fixed IFOFormat 15 (Panasonic recorder specific problem) and fixed synchronised transcoder log output.
  • ICQ Lite Edition with Xtras 4.0 Final - A final version of ICQ Lite is available for download. In related news, this non-official mirror has ICQ v4.0
  • Total Commander 6.03 -  A new version of Total Commnader (download) is available for download. This minor update corrects some problems (mainly with the new functions introduced with Total Commander 6.0), corrects an incompatibility between the big file copy mode (in Configuration - Options - Copy/Delete) and certain Adaptec RAID5 controllers which can cause data corruption.

Comments from UK Commissionerposted - 05:55 AM CEST - Apr,21 2004
Internet Technology Vulnerable to Hackers... yes, don't tell the hackers it's weakness is DoS attacks... *shhhhh*... :-)

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