"A new kind of tennis has been served online. Called Photoshop
tennis the players are graphic designers, the balls are
images, and the racquets are stored in your computer..."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_1613000/1613145.stm
...and your BBC sports-tech correspondent remains: ALAN PARTRIDGE. Ah-haaaa!
>> HARD NEWS <<
forgotten untruths
There we were, thinking we'd *really* scared Demetron,
makers of the Sunday Times' WORDMAKER kid-surveillance
program. Last week's damning criticisms of their product,
as you'll recall, were: it broke child market research
guidelines; violated what creditcard/password security your
home PC ever had by storing plaintext versions of everything
you type *including its own master password*; and it offered
the less salubrious Times reader the chance for even
creepier activities than silently monitoring their kids.
Like monitoring other people (or we can rabble-rouse too:
other people's *kids*) at cybercafes. But then we spotted
Demetron's mass spamming of members of rec.arts.competitions
back in June. Damn. Looks like they just don't care about
marketing guidelines (where'd they get this mailing list
from again?), security (the spam purports to be a
"accidental" leak of their new product, with password), or
having WordWatcher retooled for other uses. Or is it just us
who thinks that last sentence, "You-know-who was on the net
till 2:00 this morning, wonder what he'll say when he finds
out I know his every move?!?" surely ought to set a few
data-protection alarm bells ringing?
http://groups.google.com/groups?selm=3b2623e8.850174%40news.freeserve.co.uk
- "exclusive deal with the Mirror"
http://www.wordwatcher.com/internetcafesmain.htm
- they know about cybercafes too. And they want your *product keys*?
"3 of them use illegal software. 1 of them is a hacker. 1 of
them spends 2 hours a day playing online games," says the new
poster ad on the London Underground for NetIntelligence from
IOMART. And what's more: "2 of them download and distribute
'Dubious Material'" - while, in a cubicle just across the way,
"1 of them is sending confidential info to a competitor". Now,
assuming there's no duplication here (our money would be on
that guy who's "a hacker"), that comes to a grand total of 8 -
and there's only 10 people in the picture. No wonder it takes
so long to get any work done round here. Iomart of course hit
the headlines a couple of weeks ago with their unsubstantiated
claims of "Arabic text and dates" steganographically concealed
in image files [NTK 2001-10-12] - intelligence partially
obtained by employing former hackers to download "dubious
material". Perhaps their time might have been better spent
securing the http://webmail.thinkmail.com/ interface to the
email address "sales@iomart.com" - which, for at least the
last two weeks, has had a slightly too literal interpretation
of the phrase "Enter 'password'".
http://www.ntk.net/2001/10/26/iomart.jpg
- "I took them away from all that. And now, they work for me."
http://www.iomart.com/
- "Secure Internet. Secure Email. Secure Desktop."
http://www.ntk.net/2001/10/26/dohio.gif
- probably not their official contact address. But still...
For those who asked if we will still criticise THE REGISTER
now they're reselling our T-shirts: please, you misremember.
NTK is not at war with The Register. NTK has never been at
war with The Register. The Register is a fine, notoriously
reliable periodical. We'd *never* consider running a mocking
piece on, say, Kieran McCarthy, who this week spent 380
words out of a 660 word Register story recounting in detail
the plot of Snow White. Instead we have always been at war
with Mike Magee's THE INQUIRER - a website that's exactly
like The Register, except with more CPU articles, and an
almost unique tendency to feel we're insufficiently biased
against The Register. Not that that this war is easy. Take
when someone mails to say check out tech journalist Andrew
Thomas on Mastermind soon, answering questions on the
History of Computing; given how much he hates Unix, they
ask, how is he going to deal with anything before 1975? Claim
Bill Gates invented it just after he came up with the time
machine? Now, do we ditch a piece like that because Thomas
used to hate Unix at The Register, or run it in all caps
because he now works at The Inquirer? Or do we try to care
just a *little* bit less?
http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/4/22472.html
- the kind of context you just don't get from silicon.com
http://www.delphi.com/theinquirer/messages?msg=796.1
- Clive Anderson hosting new series on Discovery Channel
http://www.theinquirer.net/21100103.htm
- funnily enough, Magee's still a major Register shareholder,
and no-one accuses *him* of favouritism
>> ANTI-NEWS <<
berating the obvious
future sounds of London - review of next Monday's ELBOW gig:
http://www.dotmusic.com/live/Review/October2001/live22535.asp
... XP lets you "delete data from [your] hard drive", reveals:
http://www.cnn.com/2001/TECH/ptech/10/25/xp.london.launch/ ...
refreshing MS honesty: http://www.ntk.net/2001/10/26/dohxp.gif
... BBC Literal Illustrations Dept really getting stuck in:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/business/newsid_1619000/1619802.stm
... 30% - approx 2/7 - of cars stolen on Fri and Sat, say FBI:
http://www.azcentral.com/offbeat/articles/1022NEWS-CRIME-FBI-DC.html
... "knowledge of Linus" required - in the Biblical sense?:
http://www.it.jobserve.com/jobserve/JobDetail.asp?jobid=15015595
... Interactive BAFTAs go to "Walking With Beasts" TV show
(not shown yet), Black And White, Max Payne, Gran Turismo 3
and, for the fourth year running, BBC News Online... maximum
Widdecombe! http://www.headbalancer.com/?gallery=1&galleryID=main
... liked "America: A Tribute to Heroes"? Then you may also
enjoy "Taken for a Ride (1996)" and "Intimate Portrait: Margot
Kidder (1999)": http://us.imdb.com/Recommendations?0296503 ...
"Vote for the fat bloke" mail urges gullible to "sabotage" ITV
POP IDOL show - by ringing their premium rate phone line...
>> EVENT QUEUE <<
goto's considered non-harmful
"And the moon shall turn the colour of blood" would surely be
a more exciting byline for that Missouri-based writer's now
widely-discredited plans to get everyone to "paint the moon"
with hand-held laser pointers at various times this weekend
(from 8pm local UK time, Sat 2001-10-27). Objections include
the divergence of the beams, diffraction caused by the Earth's
atmosphere, and the fact that the moon isn't a shiny flat
mirror hanging there in space but an imperfectly reflecting
sphere which is incredibly bright already due to ambient
sunlight. Nonetheless, the guy behind the idea is unrepentant,
maintaining that "we need to have dreams that are bigger than
ourselves" - and maybe he has a point. In these troubled
times, perhaps we all need reminding that when we all work
together and really put our minds to something, we still can't
achieve the impossible.
http://www.paintthemoon.org/wont.html
- ye cannae change the laws of physics
http://www.nanowrimo.com/
- speaking of impossible dreams: Nov is National Novel Writing Month
>> TRACKING <<
sufficiently advanced technology : the gathering
Italian hacktivist jaromil, worshipful creator of hasciicam,
has sidled into the higher-res vidcap universe with FREEJ, a
newish GPL'd video effects utility that lets you layer
endless video filters over your footage of Genoa police
atrocities. You'll need the SDL library, video4linux (with a
suitable video source), and - hooray! - the nasm 80x86
assembler to get it working. While already a charming mix of
live video capture and oldsk00l demoscene FX, the program's
currently a bit short on FX plugins. It does feature a great
implementation of the "spinning grid of multiple screens"
rotoscope effect (as seen on '80s Top of The Pops and '90s
Amigas), though, and some de rigeur colourcycling. You
should be able to port the excellent EffectTV collection
(hint hint). Or just use it to ponce around in front of a
videowall in your giant ant costume, you arty fop.
http://lab.dyne.org/
- hello PAL!
http://effectv.sourceforge.net/
- hello NTSC-JP!
http://linart.net/info/guide/
- death to manifestos! viva HOW-TOs!
>> MEMEPOOL <<
that warm bit under the http://www.gagpipe.com/
Windows XP crasher in 5 lines of C++: can *you* do better?
http://tane.cream.org/files/crashxp.cpp ... what Finnish bears
do in woods: http://members.surfeu.fi/kklaine/primebear.html
... anthrax threats in the post? hey, things could be worse:
http://www.record-eagle.com/2001/oct/19postal.htm ... or one
of those times when life imitates this week's Nathan Barley:
http://www.boston.com/news/daily/23/102301_tennis.htm ... at
last, a (Flash) flight-sim that doesn't need a 300-page
manual: http://www2.tell-tale.co.uk/telltale/flightsim.htm ...
"Edelweiss, Edelweiss - my mind is going. I can feel it":
http://www.computing.dundee.ac.uk/staff/irmurray/dectalkf.asp
... TVGH back just in time: http://www.wimn.net/sg/my.shtml
... and still topping patriotic pull-down menus everywhere:
http://www.flagline.com/countries.html ... smaller audience
than *Newton* users? http://download.planetnewton.com/downindex.asp
... new thrill! it's "Separated at Birth", online. This week:
Paul Lassiter, the unloved stumbling buffoon from "Spin City":
http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/Hills/3783/images/paul1-2.jpg
vs Gordon Brown, unloved stumbling buffoon from Spin Parliament:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/olmedia/1570000/images/_1573323_pointing300.jpg
>> GEEK MEDIA <<
the mildly punctual http://www.tvgohome.com/
TV>> as happened a few weeks ago with "The Usual Suspects",
I LOVE 1998 (9pm, Sat, BBC2) provides a free trailer for C4's
showing of shamless Brit gangster nonsense LOCK, STOCK AND TWO
SMOKING BARRELS (10pm, Sun, C4)... the obligatory Parker Posey
pops up in semi-competent domestic-dispute indie comedy THE
DAYTRIPPERS (10pm, Sat, BBC2)... yet film of the week - if not
the last decade - remains self-referential Schwarzenegger
shoot-em-up THE LAST ACTION HERO (10.05pm, Sat, ITV)... Suzy
"The Usual Suspects" Amis reappears in "gratutiously sexual"
lame RoboCop rip-off DEAD BY MIDNIGHT (10.55pm, Sun, BBC1)...
otherwise every night is Anthrax night with a BIOTERROR
Equinox special (8pm, Sun, C4)... PANORAMA examining "Bin
Laden's Biological Threat" (10.15pm, Sun, BBC1)... the
preposterous idea that the military-industrial-entertainment
complex might "create" wars to further their own ends, in Bond
bullshit TOMORROW NEVER DIES (8.30pm, Mon, ITV1)... and, on a
lighter note, scientists attempting "to locate Creation within
the human genome" in URBAN GOTHIC (11pm, Mon, C5)... speaking
of which, someone at the Radio Times still thinks that the
Thylacine (or "Tasmanian tiger"), featured in EXTINCT (10pm,
Tue, C4), had "the head of a wolf and a rear end similar to a
kangaroo" [NTK 1998-03-13]... Frank Black jams with "Kiss" in
the Halloween comedy special of MILLENNIUM (9pm, Tue, Sci-
Fi)... C5's commitment to ground-breaking independent world
cinema continues with LETHAL WEAPON 4 (9pm, Tue, C5)... Wayne
"Newman" Knight's signature scene in BASIC INSTINCT (10.15pm,
Wed, C5)... and UNIVERSAL SOLIDER 2: BROTHERS IN ARMS (9.20pm,
Thu, C5) - not, it appears, based on the Dire Straits song of
the same name... disappointingly, cutting ATTACHMENTS (10pm,
Thu, BBC2) down to 30 minute episodes has only made them
duller: http://www.everyonehatesattachments.com/ ... and we
never really "got" THE SOPRANOS (10.35pm, Thu, C4), though
this season 3 opener does feature an amusing medley between
"Every Breath You Take" by The Police, and "Peter Gunn (Theme
from Spy Hunter)"...
FILM>> sorry - words can't express our outrage over last
week's covered-up low-key release for Tom Green's rawly
personal transgressive masterpiece FREDDY GOT FINGERED
(http://www.screenit.com/movies/2001/freddy_got_fingered.html :
we see a bloody wound with part of the bone sticking out and
then see Gord [Green] licking that wound and bone with his
tongue; Gord tells his mother that if he were her, he'd go out
and have sex with strange men, basketball players etc; Gord
suddenly grabs a huge sausage and holds it to his crotch like
a large, erect penis, and then goes down the assembly line
where he works in that pose, saying that he's a "sexy boy")...
Reese "Election" Witherspoon, Selma "Cruel Intentions" Blair,
Ali "Varsity Blues" Larter and a near-unrecognisable cameo
from Linda "Freaks and Geeks" Cardellini transplant "Clueless"
into reverse-nerd-makeover courtroom "comedy" LEGALLY BLONDE
(http://www.capalert.com/capreports/legallyblonde.htm : much
talk of sexual body fluids; suggestive eye movements; girls in
skimpy underwear; calling The Cosmopolitan magazine "Your
Bible")... or, for all you arthouse fans, the Coen brothers
are back with another interminable period pastiche THE MAN WHO
WASN'T THERE (imdb: neo-noir)... oddly, there's only 3 songs
in subtitled Bollywood epic ASOKA (http://www.bbfc.co.uk/ :
rated 12 for "some moderate violence and horror")... and,
rounding off this week's trio of directors who'll never be
picked to helm a Bond film, Jan Svankmajer brings a tree stump
to life in part-animated Czech-version-of-"AI" LITTLE OTIK
(imdb: black-comedy / surreal)...
RED BOOK AUDIO: SONGS ON TV ADS THAT SOUND LIKE POP SONGS THAT
SOUND LIKE RETRO VIDEOGAMES - AND THE VIEWERS THAT LOVE THEM>>
after last month's allegations that Vodafone hadn't realised
the DANDY WARHOLS' "Bohemian Like You" is supposed to be
sarcastic, TIM BANNISTER similarly highlighted "Smile" by THE
SUPERNATURALS, as showcased in the TV campaign for smile.co.uk
- with lyrics like "Your life's a mess, you've been cut
adrift", "Smile, cause that's all you've got left", and "I
feel like a Dalek inside" among the more "irony-tinged":
http://www.thesupernaturalsofficialwebsite.com/music.htm ...
ADRIAN FURBY named Vodafone as "repeat offenders" in the
field, citing an Australian ad which features "bright young
things standing in front of a white tarpaulin" and "a
soundtrack that sounds suspiciously like the Stereo MC's
'Connected', but isn't"... while "You are Burger King", began
GRAEME VIRTUE - rhetorically, as it turned out. "You are trying
to punt your limp-looking, three-patty triple melt on the
telly," he continues. "What music do you put put through the
sonic copyright-blender?" BLUR's "talkie-talk knees-up classic
'Parklife'", apparently - "except it's a harrowing, chromatic
version that sounds like it's being played underwater. Say
what you like about McDonald's, at least they cough up for the
original songs"... ADRIAN MOULDER argued that "the music from
the ad for Heat Magazine, with women running round a maze, is
presumably supposed to be 'Sabotage' by the Beastie Boys", and
then ranted, at some length, about the claim that "the higher
the IQ, the greater the need for gossip" reproduced therein,
without substantiation, as scientific fact. "Can I complain
about it to the ASA?", he reasonably inquired, noting also
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter's "93% of communication is non-
verbal" slogan for credit cards - a factoid which is,
ironically, "impossible to express without using words"...
Usenet consensus is that the girl in the Gap ad with the
electric guitar is playing "Back In Black" by AC/DC, though
one dissenter argues "I wish the riffs were in synch with what
her hands are doing"... and, finally, ALEX TEA strongly
objected to last week's frame-by-frame analysis of the new AOL
ad, asking "Who in their right mind would want to see Connie's
breasts?". More to the point: "Anyway, what about the new
naturist Freeserve advert?" he muses. "Can any of your Tivo-
owning friends test that out too?"...
>> SMALL PRINT <<
Need to Know is a useful and interesting UK digest of things that
happened last week or might happen next week. You can read it
on Friday afternoon or print it out then take it home if you have
nothing better to do. It is compiled by NTK from stuff they get sent.
Registered at the Post Office as
"now available in Avant-Go"
http://nobodynet.ddts.net/palmntk.htm
NEED TO KNOW
THEY STOLE OUR REVOLUTION. NOW WE'RE STEALING IT BACK.
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