We support Microsoft .NET Framework 2.0 & 1.1, all versions of Access, SQL 2000, SQL 7.0, SQL 2005 Express, SOAP, FrontPage 2002, 2003, Visual Studio 2005, Index Server, XML, UDDI, & Mobile device support. We also offer great third party tools like SmarterMail, Merak Mail, SmarterStats, PHP, Perl, MySql, DeepMetrix Livestats XSP 8.0.   We support Microsoft .NET Framework 2.0 & 1.1, all versions of Access, SQL 2000, SQL 7.0, SQL 2005 Express, SOAP, FrontPage 2002, 2003, Visual Studio 2005, Index Server, XML, UDDI, & Mobile device support. We also offer great third party tools like SmarterMail, Merak Mail, SmarterStats, PHP, Perl, MySql, DeepMetrix Livestats XSP 8.0.
 Thursday, March 09, 2006
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WhoisThisDomain

domain lookup tool

Our Rating: 3.5 stars (Good!)

WhoisThisDomain enables you to view owner and registration information for any domain name. It supports generic domains as well as country code domains, and you can look up multiple domain names at once by pasting the domain names or URLs into the input window. The results can be saved to text files or exported as HTML report. Standalone program, no install needed.

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3/9/2006 7:26:36 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Makers of new blue laser optical disk technology said this week that they have their sights firmly set on enterprise archiving applications currently handled by magnetic tape and even some nearline disk storage arrays.

But those same vendors are quick to admit that consumers must first warm up to the higher-capacity DVD formats before enterprises will accept them as products with enough longevity for their infrastructures.

Pioneer Electronics plans to release its first Blu-ray Disk in three weeks, Sony Corp. plans to ship its media by the end of this month, and Dell Inc. plans to launch its first Blu-ray-compatible desktop computer by midyear. Pioneer’s Blu-ray DVD disk drive will sell for $995 for a single platter disk with 25GB capacity. 

Sony Europe’s Recording Media and Energy division announced yesterday that its first Blu-ray Disk media will ship in Europe this month. The single-layer BD-RE (Blu-ray Disc Rewritable) media will be available next week and single-layer write-once BD-R (Blu-ray Disc Recordable) media will be available in April. Sony will launch dual-layer discs later this year. The single-layer BD-R and BD-RE discs offer a storage capacity of 25GB.

The new-generation media support 2X speed, which equates to a data transfer rate of 72Mbit/sec., making the discs suitable for video recording as well as data storage and file backup.

Toshiba Corp. also said yesterday that it is planning to launch its first laptop computer with an HD-DVD drive in Europe next month (See "Toshiba plans HD-DVD laptop for April").

HD-DVD and Blu-ray are two formats vying to replace current DVDs for high-definition content such as movies. Today’s DVDs can hold about 4.7GB of data, while Blu-ray Disk has a capacity of 25GB and HD-DVD can hold 15GB.

3/9/2006 7:17:38 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Microsoft Corp. is launching a revamped Internet search engine it says will help computer users find information faster, view it more easily and organize it better.

Debuting in test form Wednesday, Windows Live Search is Microsoft's latest move in a major strategy shift that has the world's largest software company focusing more heavily on Internet-based software and services.

The goal of the shift, which includes initiatives dubbed Windows Live and Office Live, is to create online products to complement its main cash cows: the Windows operating system and Office business software.

Windows Live Search will power queries on live.com, Microsoft's Windows Live Web site, beginning Wednesday. Once the technology has been fully tested, Windows Live Search will replace the existing search engine that powers MSN.com. MSN spokesman Adam Sohn said the company has not determined how long it will run Windows Live Search as a test.

A key goal with the new search engine will be to give people more control over how they search for information and how they put it to use once they get it, said Yusuf Mehdi, senior vice president of information services at MSN, the division that's working on Windows Live.

"A lot of people think, 'Hey, ... Didn't Google become the popular search engine? And don't they just do a great job? And there's no room for improvement.'" Mehdi said. Once people get a feel for Windows Live Search, Mehdi said, "They're going to say, 'Holy cow, I had no idea that search could get this much better!'"

The new search engine includes features such as support for tabbed Web browsing, which lets people keep several search panes open in a single window. Microsoft said other features will include:

_A search slider bar that offers previews of data in various forms, perhaps just the Internet address of a Web site, or maybe a snippet of text. As the slider is adjusted, more or less information appears.

_A "smart scroll" function that displays all search results at once rather than on separate pages.

_Various ways to view pictures, say, as small "thumbnail" shots or full-sized images, without leaving the search page.

_An ability for users to save their search parameters as macros that can be run to perform the same search in the future. Microsoft said people will also be able to publish their search macros so people with similar interests can use them.

SEO
3/9/2006 6:58:22 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Hoping to leap ahead of smaller rival Advanced Micro Devices Inc., Intel Corp. unveiled details of a next-generation computer chip design that it claims will perform better — and consume less power — than its current offerings.

Intel's troubles have mounted over the past year as the Santa Clara-based company has shuffled product plans, managed inventory build ups and supply shortages, and competed against AMD products that many observers say deliver performance that's superior to Intel chips.

Between the fourth quarter of 2005 and the same period of 2004, Intel lost 5.3 percentage points of market share to AMD, according to Mercury Research. It remains — by far — the largest microprocessor maker with 76.9 percent of the worldwide market at the end of 2005.

On Friday, Intel lowered its revenue forecast for the current quarter after seeing weaker-than-expected demand and a "slight" share loss to rivals.

During the semi-annual Intel Developer Forum, Gelsinger demonstrated a desktop chip based on the new microarchitecture. The processor, code-named Conroe, delivers 40 percent better performance while consuming 40 percent less power than today's Pentium, he said. It will be available in the third quarter.

Intel also gave details about a new chip for computer servers based on the new design. Dubbed Woodcrest, it will boost performance by 80 percent while consuming 35 percent less power, compared with a 2.8 gigahertz Xeon processor. It will be available in the third quarter.

Intel, which in years past focused on building faster processors, has increasingly invested in chips that consume less power. That's because today's faster chips generally use more watts than in years past, creating servers and desktops that are expensive to keep cool and laptops that burn through battery reserves.

The Core microarchitecture builds on the design of Intel's Pentium M processor for laptop computers, which debuted 2003. Intel generally overhauls its chip design every five or six years. A new architecture is usually applied to desktop processors first and gradually migrates to servers and laptops. This is the first time a new design has started with the notebook chip and moved to desktops and servers.

3/9/2006 6:52:45 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Tuesday, March 07, 2006

At New York's Kennedy airport today, an individual later discovered to be a public school teacher, was arrested trying to board a flight while in possession of a ruler, a protractor, a compass, a slide rule, and a calculator.

At a morning press conference, Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez said he believes the man is a member of the notorious al-gebra movement. The FBI is charging him with carrying weapons of math instruction. Al-gebra is a fearsome cult," Gonzalez said. "They desire average solutions by means and extremes, and sometimes go off on tangents in a search of absolute value. They use secret code names like 'x' and 'y' and refer to themselves as 'unknowns', but we have determined they belong to a common denominator of the axis of medieval with coordinates in every country. As the Greek philanderer Isosceles used to say, 'there are 3 sides to every triangle'."

When asked to comment on the arrest, President Bush said, "If God had wanted us to have better weapons of math instruction, He would have given us more fingers and toes".

3/7/2006 6:14:11 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

The complex development of the reseller hosting business, and the relative ease with which just about anyone can create private-labeled hosting company has created a great deal of healthy competition within the industry - a situation that tends to benefit the average hosting customer. Unfortunately for that average customer, the ease of setting up a Web hosting business means that there is also no shortage of pretenders.

And for every unqualified or unreliable Web hosting company, there are dozens - at least - of dissatisfied customers, many of them inclined to believe that Web hosts are thieves, guilty of false advertising, poor performance and unreliable support.

Many of those customers are guilty, too, of failing to research before making their purchases, or being sucked in by low prices. The "buyer beware" principle applies in Web hosting as much as in any other business.

But as buyers do become more aware, even well-meaning Web hosts may discover that they set off alarms for some of those researching customers, coming close to making claims that are becoming more commonly recognized as literally too good to be true. If someone offers everything but the kitchen sink for $4.95 per month you will get exactly what you pay for.  Just take a moment to think how much time this company can provide for $4.95 per month.  Full story

3/7/2006 5:49:56 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

After several years of what some considered VeriSign's (verisign.com) bullying of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (icann.org) through lawsuits, the two reached a settlement this week.

The deal, which ICANN passed in a 9-5 vote, allows VeriSign to raise the cost of .com domain by 7 percent per year through to 2012. Critics say the deal, which was negotiated as part of a settlement regarding legal action between the two companies, essentially gives VeriSign a monopoly over the domain name market.

This overrides VeriSign and ICANN's former contract that would have maintained the current pricing on .com domain name registration until it expired in November 2007.

The settlement has sparked an outcry from much of the Internet community, particularly from domain registrars like BulkRegister (bulkregister.com) and Godaddy (godaddy.com). Both companies made announcements voicing their indignation over the passing of the .com agreement.

Leading the opposition is the Coalition for ICANN Transparency (cfit.info), a group of individuals, organizations and companies concerned about the lack of visibility into the activities and operations of the Internet governing body.

"CFIT played an extraordinary role and continues to play an extraordinarily important role as an organizing influence," says CFIT spokesperson John Berard. "We consider ourselves the whiteboard for the industry in thinking through its concerns and potential solutions."

CFIT has criticized the .com agreement since its proposal last September, calling it just one of the many clear-cut reasons why ICANN cannot operate fairly on behalf of consumers and other intranet stakeholders.

We think that the contract should run its course, that the contract should be put up to bid, and that there should be no linkage between settling litigation and assigning the .com registry name."

The only people who didn't have any objection to [the .com] agreement were the other registries like .info and .uk and .us," says Berard. "They figured that if VeriSign got these sweetheart arrangements, they would get them as well."

Despite the passing of the .com deal, Berard says that CFIT is not finished fighting. It will continue its efforts against the agreement on Capitol Hill and at the Department of Commerce and the Department of Justice.

CFIT's suit against ICANN and VeriSign will certainly continue especially in light of the fact that the judge in the case has upheld our antitrust claims.

The organization may have a long road of litigation ahead of it, but things are looking somewhat hopeful. US District Court Judge Whyte issued his final order on Tuesday supporting CFIT's antitrust claims and dismissing VeriSign's motion to dismiss for lack of venue. 

Increasing prices without justification, allowing a monopoly to expand without review and giving VeriSign perpetual ownership of the .COM registry were wrong when they was first proposed and they're still wrong!!!

3/7/2006 5:41:22 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Monday, March 06, 2006

The .COM money scam. A monopoly for VeriSign. What to do when $450 million is not enough?

Here’s a quick and light .COM registry economics lesson.
This article will help you understand the enormity of the scam about to be pulled off by VeriSign – the .COM registry operator.

First, there are four players involved here:

1. ICANN. This acronym stands for the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers. They approve registry and registrar deals. The have the ability to approve or disapprove the pending .COM deal.
2. Registry. For each type of domain name (i.e. .COM, .NET, .ORG, etc.) a registry exists and it’s operated by a company like VeriSign. VeriSign operates .COM and .NET. The registry maintains the Internet routing systems, domain availability lookups and basic records. They have no end user (i.e. registrant) contact and deal only with registrars and ICANN.
3. Registrars. These companies (GoDaddy.com is a registrar) act as a go between with the various registries and the registrants. They provide registrants with customer service and also other products that enable the use of their domain names.
4. Registrants. That’s you. You’re the user of the domain name and it’s your money that pays for all of the above. It’s really important that you read this. Unless we get this turned around, you’re about to be taken – again!

The economics lesson starts here.
It’s important to first realize that it costs VeriSign, the .COM registry operator, next to nothing to add each new .COM name to the registry, because unlike registrars, VeriSign:

• Does not have to provide customer service to registrants — that’s provided by registrars like GoDaddy.com.
• Is not under any competitive pressures whatsoever to reduce prices – each registry has a monopoly until the registry contract is re-bid.
• Has everything handled by an automated process. The costs of operating these automated processes (i.e. bandwidth, storage, etc.) have been and are expected to continue to decline. Click on the link here to see historical charts.       "Full Article here"

3/6/2006 8:52:19 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

AT&T Inc. said on Sunday it would buy BellSouth Corp. for $67 billion to expand its reach into the southeastern United States and acquire the rest of Cingular Wireless it does not already own.

Together, AT&T and BellSouth would have a national long-distance telephone and data network, residential customers stretching from Florida to California and business customers comprising more than half of the Fortune 1000, analysts have said.

BellSouth shareholders will receive 1.325 shares of AT&T common stock for each common share of BellSouth. Based on AT&T's closing stock price on March 3, that equals $37.09 per BellSouth common share, a 17.9-percent premium.

The new AT&T, which was formed in November when SBC Communications Inc. completed its acquisition of AT&T Corp., also said it would repurchase at least $10 billion of its common shares over the next 22 months.

The companies have a combined market capitalization of $165 billion and annual revenue of about $64 billion. The next largest telephone company, Verizon Communications, which bought MCI Inc. last year, has a market capitalization of $99 billion and 2005 annual revenues of about $75 billion.

The deal would bring ownership of Cingular Wireless, the No. 1 U.S. wireless telephone company, under one roof, which Wall Street analysts have said would streamline management and allow one parent company to enjoy all of the financial benefits.

AT&T currently owns 60 percent of Cingular, while BellSouth owns the remaining 40 percent. Despite its heft, Cingular has been losing marketshare of the most lucrative, post-paid customers to its main rival, Verizon Wireless.

At the completion of the deal, which is expected to close within a year, all the landline and wireless businesses will exist under the sole brand name of AT&T, the companies said.

A purchase of BellSouth would recombine the former "Ma Bell" with four of the seven original Baby Bells regional telephone companies. AT&T was broken up in 1984, with the parent controlling the long-distance assets and its seven offspring controlling regional local telephone services.

As traditional landline phone businesses have been hurt by a shift to e-mail and wireless phones, telephone carriers have shifted their focus to faster growing businesses such as wireless and data services.

AT&T and other major telephone companies also have been upgrading their networks to offer subscription-television services to thwart competition from cable TV operators, which are offering phone services. AT&T in January began offering video in Texas and plans to expand service to 21 cities in its home territory this year.

3/6/2006 6:16:24 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Sunday, March 05, 2006

Recently, Skype and Intel have announced a deal that would limit Skype's functionality on all but specific Intel processors. Currently, Skype 2.0 offers 10-way conference calls only on Intel's latest dual-core CPUs, while other chips, including all AMD chips, will only allow for 5-way conference calls. Maxxus.com now has posted an version of Skype that integrates a patch and allows users with non-Intel dual-core processors to engage in conference calls with up to 10 participants.

Details about the pathc as well as the doanload can be found here.

3/5/2006 9:52:51 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

The company's original plan would have required all bulk e-mailers to pay a small fee — ranging from 1/4 cent to 1 cent per message — to route their e-mail directly to a user's mailbox without first passing through junk mail filters.

AOL, a unit of Time Warner Inc., said the system would reduce help reduce spam because only legitimate groups would be likely to pay the fee.

But on Monday, a consortium of nonprofit groups, including the AFL-CIO labor union and political group MoveOn.org Civic Action, blasted plans to charge for the service, claiming it would stifle communication from organizations that couldn't afford to pay.

On Friday, the DearAOL.com Coalition again criticized AOL's latest move, saying it would "create a two-tiered Internet with one standard of e-mail reliability for the big guy and an inferior standard for the little guy."

AOL spokesman Nicholas Graham said the service offered to nonprofit groups would have the same reliability as the commercial service. AOL plans to contract with a third-party e-mail accreditation service within the next two months, he said.

Call it anything you want it changes the way the web functions and adds a hook that simply not necessary. It seems that putting a white-list and black-list feature to all AOL users is clearly a better approach. 

Also they clearly cannot tell a spoofed or forged header any better than anyone else. So there is no new black magic being applied here. We know this as we have signed up to AOL's list and can confirm the emails never transited our email servers. No problem we are keeping the server transcripts in case they are ever necessary in a court case. Yeah the headers would indicate they have. Yet the server logs tell the truth and are valid in any court. Offering a service which cannot give the truth about the true path a mail is transiting is nothing new.

3/5/2006 8:46:56 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Saturday, March 04, 2006

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) filed a class-action lawsuit against AT&T on January 31, 2006, accusing the telecom giant of violating the law and the privacy of its customers by collaborating with the National Security Agency (NSA) in its massive and illegal program to wiretap and data-mine Americans' communications.

In December of 2005, the press revealed that the government had instituted a comprehensive and warrantless electronic surveillance program that ignored the careful safeguards set forth by Congress. This surveillance program, purportedly authorized by the President at least as early as 2001 and primarily undertaken by the NSA, intercepts and analyzes the communications of millions of ordinary Americans.

In the largest "fishing expedition" ever devised, the NSA uses powerful computers to "data-mine" the contents of these Internet and telephone communications for suspicious names, numbers, and words, and to analyze traffic data indicating who is calling and emailing whom in order to identify persons who may be "linked" to "suspicious activities," suspected terrorists or other investigatory targets, whether directly or indirectly.

But the government did not act-and is not acting-alone. The government requires the collaboration of major telecommunications companies to implement its unprecedented and illegal domestic spying program.

AT&T Corp. (which was recently acquired by the new AT&T, Inc,. formerly known as SBC Communications) maintains domestic telecommunications facilities over which millions of Americans' telephone and Internet communications pass every day. It also manages some of the largest databases in the world, containing records of most or all communications made through its myriad telecommunications services. Full Article

3/4/2006 7:00:03 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

We wish to express our serious concern with AOL's adoption of Goodmail's CertifiedEmail, which is a threat to the free and open Internet.

This system would create a two-tiered Internet in which affluent mass emailers could pay AOL a fee that amounts to an "email tax" for every email sent, in return for a guarantee that such messages would bypass spam filters and go directly to AOL members' inboxes. Those who did not pay the "email tax" would increasingly be left behind with unreliable service. Your customers expect that your first obligation is to deliver all of their wanted mail, and this plan is a step away from that obligation.

AOL's "email tax" is the first step down a slippery slope that will harm the Internet itself. The Internet is a revolutionary force for free speech, civic organizing, and economic innovation precisely because it is open and accessible to all Internet users equally. On a free and open Internet, small ideas can become big ideas overnight. As Internet advocacy groups, charities, non-profits, businesses, civic organizing groups, and email experts, we ask you to reconsider your pay-to-send proposal and to keep the Internet free.

http://www.dearaol.com/

3/4/2006 6:53:16 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

NAME:
WSR-3800 Combo Kit
SUMMARY:

The WSR-3800 is EnGenius Technologies answer for operators who wish to deploy Internet accessibility with an integrated billing system open to the general public without any subscriptions. The WSR-3800 runs on an 802.11g 200mW high powered connectivity and is backwards compatible with 802.11b devices. The WSR-3800's robust features include internal firewalls, traffic control, bandwidth control, and industry leading AAA technology. Along with the WSR-3800 is the WSR-3800TP, the included ticket printer with multiple settings, an industry first. No longer will the cashier need to have extensive PC experience while dispensing tickets to customers; with a simple press of a button, a ticket will print out with an individualized User and Password information for the customer.

PRODUCT
FEATURES:
  • Complete evaluation kit for extended range around corners or other obstacles
  • Total 802.11g with 200mW high powered solution
  • Includes WSR-3800TP multi-setting ticket printer, an industry first!

3/4/2006 5:43:28 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Thursday, March 02, 2006

Redline AN-100 is a scalable carrier-class broadband wireless solution for point-to-point and multipoint backhaul networks. The AN-100 uses OFDM optical line-of-sight and non line-of-sight technology to overcome typical urban obstacles such as trees and buildings. The long-range capabilities and high-capacity of the AN-100 allow wireless connectivity to remote locations with a minimum number of repeater stations.

The low latency AN-100 system provides reliable delivery of delay sensitive services including circuit switched voice traffic, voice-over-Internet Protocol (VoIP), optimized transport for video, and prioritized data traffic - all converged over a single robust wireless link. The time division multiplexed (TDM) option can replace expensive leased full and fractional E1/T1 circuits while supporting legacy TDM traffic and increasing network capacity.

AN-100 features include:

  • Industry leading spectral efficiency ensures high data rates
  • Low latency for delay-sensitive traffic
  • Long range capabilities minimize the required number of hops
  • Versatile QoS for multi-services, including voice and video over IP
  • Optional eight port TDM E1/T1 full and fractional (nx64)
  • 2004 SUPERQuest award for “Backbone/Edge Networking Equipment”
3/2/2006 10:03:00 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Designed to be interoperable with a host of emerging, WiMAX-certified base stations, including the RedMAX Base Station (AN-100U), the indoor RedMAX Subscriber Unit (SU-I) contains Intel’s PRO/Wireless 5116 system-on-a-chip, which sets the stage for a new and exciting phase of standardized broadband wireless solutions.

SU-I is an indoor broadband wireless subscriber access product designed to WiMAX Forum Certified Specifications. Compliance to the IEEE 802.16-2004 standard ensures interoperability with an emerging industry-wide base of compatible Point to Multipoint (PMP) equipment. The system is easy and economical to deploy, allowing service providers to quickly provision new services with bandwidth comparable to xDSL. The RedMAX SU-I self-install indoor unit, with fully integrated antenna, includes a LED installation tool for quick and simple alignment.

Features-at-a-glance:

  • Easy and economical to deploy, allowing service providers to quickly provision new services with bandwidth comparable to xDLS (self installable)
  • Intel® PRO/Wireless 5116 ‘system on a chip’
  • Available with fully integrated antenna, and includes LED installation tool for quick, simple alignment
  • Indoor Power-over-Ethernet (PoE) adaptor powers both unit and user’s Ethernet access port
  • 3rd-generation OFDM, NLOS technology operates in 3.4-3.6 GHz band
  • Dynamic Quality of Service (QoS) settings
  • Available with up to three interfaces [Ethernet, Ethernet + POTS, Ethernet + VoIP]
  • WiMAX Forum Certified™ Design

Operating in the 3.4 – 3.6 GHz band, Redline’s built-in, third generation Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) non Line of Sight (NLOS) technology helps overcome common urban obstacles such as building sand trees while maintaining high reliability. Rugged design standards and sophisticated technology, including advanced forward error correction (FEC), combine to deliver wireline-equivalent high availability.

Taking advantage of PMP delivery, the SU-I can accomodate several interfaces with traditional Ethernet; Ethernet + TDM (E1/T1); Ethernet + POTS and Ethernet + VoIP. The RedMAX SU-I also features a signal-strength indicator for easy installation, while providing SOHO businesses and residences with a higher throughput.

3/2/2006 9:52:23 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Designed to be interoperable with a host of emerging, WiMAX-certified base stations, including the RedMAX Base Station (AN-100U), the outdoor RedMAX Subscriber Unit (SU-O) contains Intel’s PRO/Wireless 5116 system-on-a-chip, which sets the stage for a new and exciting phase of standardized broadband wireless solutions.

SU-O is an outdoor broadband wireless subscriber access product designed to WiMAX Forum Certified specifications. Compliance to the IEEE 802.16-2004 standard ensures its interoperability with an emerging industry-wide base of compatible Point to Multipoint (PMP) Equipment.

Features-at-a-glance:

  • Easy and economical outdoor unit featuring flat panel antennae (external antenna optional)
  • Intel® PRO/Wireless 5116 ‘system on a chip’
  • Audible installation tool for quick, simple alignment
  • Indoor Power-over-Ethernet (PoE) adapter powers both unit and user’s Ethernet access port
  • 3rd generation OFDM, NLOS technology operates in 3.4-3.6 GHz band
  • Dynamic Quality of Service (QoS) settings
  • Can come with up to four interfaces
    [Ethernet, Ethernet + TDM (E1/T1), Ethernet + POTS, Ethernet + VoIP]
  • WiMAX Forum Certified™ Design

Easy and economical to deploy, the RedMAX SU-O allows service providers to quickly provision new services with bandwidth comparable to xDSL. This outdoor unit, with fully integrated flat panel antenna, or optional external antenna, includes an audible installation tool for quick and simple alignment. The indoor Power-over-Ethernet (PoE) adapter provides power for the outdoor unit and the user’s Ethernet network access port.

Operating in the 3.4 – 3.6 GHz band, Redline’s built-in, third generation Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) non Line of Sight (NLOS) technology helps overcome common urban obstacles such as buildings and trees while maintaining high reliability. Rugged design standards and sophisticated technology, including advanced forward error correction (FEC), combine to deliver wireline-equivalent high availability.

3/2/2006 9:48:05 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

This carrier-class, high-reliability product can serve as either a base station or a premium-grade subscriber unit, and is designed to be completely interoperable with WiMAX- compatible equipment including the Red MAX SU-O and RedMAX SU-I subscriber units. RedMAX Base Station provides a scalable solution for any WiMAX access network. It delivers PMP enterprise access and residential/SOHO services. The RedMAX Base Station also delivers point-to-point backhaul services to the RedMAX Backhaul subscriber station.

Features-at-a-glance:

  • Can act as a powerful PMP base station or a ‘premium grade’ subscriber unit
  • Carrier-class, highly-reliable unit with solid security (including AES encryption)
  • Field upgradeable via software download to accommodate future enhancements
  • Compliant with IEEE 802.16-2004 and 802.16e (mobility) – ready
  • WiMAX Forum Certified™ Design

Easy and cost-effective to deploy, the RedMAX Base Station system facilitates the rapid provision of new services by service providers, while its very low latency ensures reliable delivery of data-sensitive services, including circuit-switched voice traffic, voice-over-Internet Protocol (VoIP), video and prioritized data traffic. Individual Quality of Service (QoS) settings can be set dynamically, according to the service level agreement (SLA).

The RedMAX Base Station can be deployed in clusters of up to six (60 degree) sectors, supporting up to 4,000 unique user-data flows. The GPS time synchronization feature ensures efficient use of available spectrum and channels, providing scalable and reliable cell deployment when operating Time Division Duplexing (TDD) radios in close proximity.

The hardware is fully upgradeable in the field by software download, to accommodate such future enhancements as IPv6 support, scalability, additional classifiers, alternative encryption standards, and the continued development of the 802.16 standard. Adherence to stringent carrier-class NEBS Level 3 specifications provides high reliability for mission critical deployments. The indoor unit has a selection of radios for operation in licensed and unlicensed bands using the 802.16-2004 specified 3.5 MHz and 7 MHz channel profiles.

3/2/2006 9:37:33 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

The AN-30e is a carrier-grade TDM backhaul solution for mobility network and enterprise network operators. Operating in the 5.4 and 5.8 GHz unlicensed bands, the system is capable of long-range links exceeding 80 km (50 mi) in clear LOS conditions. Redline’s proven AN-30e system is the ideal platform for migration to VoIP - capable of supporting up to eight T1/E1 circuits and mixed TDM/IP traffic applications. Enterprise operators and MUSH can benefit by using the AN-30e as an inexpensive alternative to leasing circuits and installing new wired services.

 

AN-30e features include:

  • Up to eight E1/T1 full and fractional (nx64) TDM ports
  • Simultaneous transport of mixed IP and TDM traffic
  • Up to 44 Mbps average data rate
  • Very low TDM round-trip delay (RTD)
  • High availability operation
  • Full loop-back capability
  • DFS and ATPC
3/2/2006 9:24:33 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Despite being faced with logistical complications caused by Hurricane Wilma, Florida-based xG Technology twice demonstrated last month the long-range capability of its xMAX solution, transmitting a data stream capable of high-quality video 18 miles using low power levels.

In the Nov. 10 demonstration, xG transmitted a 3.57 MB/s data stream on 10 MHz of spectrum in the unlicensed ISM 900 MHz band using just 35.8 mW of power from its omnidirectional whip antenna on an 850-foot tower to a patch antenna on a 12-foot mast. The off-the-shelf antennas combined for 14 dB gain.

“The message is: It's real,” Chris Whiteley, xG Technology's vice president of business development, said. “It really works, and it's so big that we can't get our brain around it.”

Indeed, the notion that an entity could become a broadband wireless provider without investing in any spectrum is compelling, especially when xG officials say the company's receiver — the key to the solution — is “simple” and can be built “dirt cheap.” As a result, an xMAX system can be deployed much more cheaply than networks using other technologies.

“It reduces the costs of deploying broadband services; it finally makes it affordable,” Whiteley said. “It changes the economics, and it's been the economics that have slowed the deployment of broadband services.”

And the data rates achieved in the demonstration are “as bad as it gets” for xMAX, said Joe Bobier, xG Technology's president of operations and inventor of xMAX. No carrier signal — which would have required 6 kHz of dedicated spectrum — was used, reducing the data rate by about 25%, he said. In addition, many common techniques to improve performance were not used in an effort to keep the demonstration as simple as possible, he said.

Whiteley noted that xG used just 10 MHz of the 26 MHz of spectrum available in the ISM 900 MHz band; using the entire band would result in a commensurately faster data rate. In addition, Schwartz said there is no reason that xG should be compelled to operate at such low power levels.

“It's true, they covered 18 miles of swampland, and it was essentially line-of-sight,” Schwartz said. “But, don't forget, they [used less than] 50 milliwatts. They can use up to 1000 milliwatts [without violating FCC rules]. So, if you are in an urban area, and you want to send it toward Miami, you boost up your power. And, because you're using lower frequencies, it goes through buildings better.”

No in-building demonstrations were conducted, but Bobier said xG has run in-building tests with a rudimentary receive antenna on the interior of hotels and other buildings along the beach in Fort Lauderdale about 7 miles from the tower. “When we were testing, we were in the middle of those buildings at the ground level and were getting an incredibly strong signal … [with a power level of] close to 200 milliwatts,” he said. “We almost had too much signal; it was almost saturating the receiver, there was so much signal.”

3/2/2006 8:49:41 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Wednesday, March 01, 2006

I did not know anything or even care about Goodmail one way or the other until the earlier article. Then I went and read their poorly written rebut.

GoodMail Quote FACT: Small business and non-profits will not have to pay for something that used to be free.
First of all, no one has to pay. The service is optional. First class email has not suffered with the introduction of priority and Express Mail. With CertifiedEmail there is literally no change in the ability of Internet users to participate however they desire, nor will any user incur any new charges. Optional offerings, such as CertifiedEmail, allow ISPs to provide better and better services to those who chose them, and in turn provide a higher degree of safety to their members.   

This was taken right from their site and one has to question their own ability to proof read. I have read all their points and it sounds so much like the garbage brought to you by the ad-aware companies. I never had any intent in bringing goodmail in the fight it is they who are joining this fight which honestly they could have stood outside of easily as they are focusing on a completely different line of business than AOL and Yahoo.

This all reminds me of the days when Piss tests were optional. Thats right no one can force you to take the test, just do not apply for the job. You have your rights so what is the problem? In the case of any of these companies they do and can do what ever they want. Why on earth anyone cares whether AOL goes broke with this logic is beyond me. As for Yahoo well the name says it all. AOL can spout this stuff for years, and no matter how long they talk is just babble and another way to make a buck! By not simply putting a white-listing ability to their users is nothing short of ransom.

3/1/2006 9:57:18 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Remember the famous email rumor that made the rounds in the 1990s: "Congress is trying to tax your Internet connection, write in now!"

Well what wasn't true in the 1990s is apparently coming true in 2006, only the beneficiaries won't be Uncle Sam -- it will be Yahoo, AOL, and a company ironically called Goodmail. Yahoo and AOL have announced that they will guarantee access to your email inbox for email senders who pay $.0025 per message. They will override their own spam filters and webbug-strippers, and deliver the mail directly with a "certified" notice. In the process, they will treat more of your email as spam, and email you're expecting won't be delivered.

The justification is that if people have to pay to send email, they won't send junk email. Apparently AOL and Yahoo believe that if we "tax" speech then only desirable speech happens. We all know how well that works for postal mail -- that's why no one gets any "free" AOL starter disks, right?

More seriously, as we discuss below, this isn't really an anti-spam measure as much as a "pay to speak" email measure, and it won't end spam or phishing. Prominent anti-spammer Richard Cox of Spamhaus agrees: "an e-mail charge will destroy the spirit of the Internet."

Full Article

3/1/2006 9:34:29 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

British telecommunications firm Cable and Wireless (C&W) said it would axe 2,000 to 3,000 of its British workers by 2010 in a radical restructuring that will slash customer numbers by 90.0 percent.

C&W currently employs a total of 5,500 workers in Britain, of which 350 are to leave the group before the end of March 2006, the group said in an official statement. The group, which is suffering from fierce competition from the likes of BT, also said it would cut its customer base from 30,000 to just 3,000 customers as it sought to concentrate on simplified products for larger companies and institutions.

"Cable and Wireless expects that, by concentrating on fewer, larger customers and reducing complexity in its products, systems and processes, it can set new standards for customers' service experience while, at the same time, reducing costs," C&W said Tuesday.

"As part of the reduction in costs, the company expects that UK headcount will fall from more than 5,500 to between 2,500 and 3,500 over the next four to five years." By the end of September this year, the measures would result in a 9.0-percent reduction in monthly operating expenses, while customer numbers in Britain would drop to around 18,000, the group added Tuesday.

C&W also repeated its long-term goal of generating annual revenues of 2.0 billion pounds and "double-digit" operating profit margins. In reaction to Tuesday's news, the share price of C&W was showing a fall of 1.38 percent in early afternoon London trading as analysts questioned whether the long-term targets could be achieved. The British capital's FTSE 100 index, on which the group is quoted, fell by 0.44 percent to 5,850.20 points.

3/1/2006 9:27:54 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

America Online said on Tuesday it had filed lawsuits this week against three identity theft gangs, seeking combined damages of $18 million and using a new law against so-called "phishers."

The online division of Time Warner Inc. said it had filed three civil suits in Alexandria's U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, charging phishing gangs with tricking its members with fake Web sites of legitimate companies to fool them into giving up personal information.

The suits were filed under Virginia's new anti-phishing statute, the Federal Lanham Act, a trademark law, and the Federal Computer Fraud & Abuse Act, an anti-spam, or junk mail law. AOL said they were the first suits filed by an Internet service provider under the Virginia law passed in July 2005.

The company is targeting gangs that they believe reside in the U.S., Germany and Romania that created "hundreds and hundreds of Web sites to mislead consumers." AOL also said it has stored "tens of thousands" of phish e-mails sent by these gangs. I am sure they are scared to tears over this civil case.

Today AOL kicks off their pay to send them commercial email program. I think at AOL you can have it their way no matter what.

3/1/2006 9:22:41 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Tuesday, February 28, 2006

After spending the last decade building its brand around a cartoon character named Jeeves, Ask.com wants everyone to forget the dainty butler and remember its long-overlooked internet search engine as the next best thing to Google.

To make its point, Ask.com is jettisoning Jeeves as its corporate mascot on Monday and unveiling a retooled website that's designed to make it easier to find and use its search technology.

Does anyone really care about the butler? Doubt it! Sorry but that was not the reason at all that people used other alternatives. When will you guys get it? Your behavior in the other side of the business of collecting demograph information and the other side of ad ware was the cause people would typically give for walking away from ASK.com.

This hardly has anything to do with the silly butler images as if that was the reason. Ask.com could argue the point until they run out of air. Most of their arguments sound alot like Clinton saying I did not have sexual relations with that woman. Though it is a bit like Sony saying we did not crash millions of computers. Hey maybe not who knows? Just one opinion which we have for awhile yet.

2/28/2006 8:05:55 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

The competition has been so fierce that they relatively hit a price floor," said Robert Schult, analyst with TeleGeography, which tracks the fiber-optic telecommunications industry. Schult sees indications of further recovery ahead as internet traffic levels increase and operators of telecommunications networks upgrade their capacity.

But, in the beaten-down fiber-optic cable business, the concept of price stabilization should be taken with a grain of salt. Current revenues don't come close to compensating for the billions spent in the late '90s to build out fiber-optic networks. The building boom led to a massive oversupply of fiber capacity and culminated in most builders filing for bankruptcy a few years later.

Today's prices, barely cover the administrative cost of running the network. But while prices remain low, encouraging signs are emerging in the markets for "lit" fiber, which is already equipped to carry internet traffic, and unlit or "dark" fiber, which can be equipped to carry traffic. Chief among these indicators is a recognition that the fiber glut cannot last forever.

We've known for a long time that the opportunity we've had for the last three or four years really was, in essence, an artifact of a very pronounced economic downturn in the telecommunications industry," said Steven Corbato, a managing director at high-speed network Internet2.

FiberCo, a fiber holding company and subsidiary of Internet2, has facilitated the purchase of over 10,000 route miles of dark fiber by the research and higher education community. Though prices were quite low and not likely to stay that way.

Large telecom service providers, have shown seemingly renewed interest in purchasing fiber. Google said it also sees dark fiber factoring in to its long-term plans.

Earlier this month, Broomfield, Colorado-based Level 3 Communications bought an unprecedented 300 GB of transatlantic capacity from the Apollo Submarine Cable System network, and also acquired rival internet network operator WilTel in December.

While today, there is more than enough lit fiber to satisfy the most gluttonous bandwidth users, demand is growing. Internet traffic across the Atlantic, for example, rose by about 40 percent last year.

2/28/2006 7:55:48 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
Nikhil Kothari provides a brief overview of ASP.NET "Atlas", a framework to build rich Web apps on top of ASP.NET 2.0. The demo shows an app that uses the new server controls from the December CTP to incrementally enrich standard ASP.NET pages and an app that shows client-centric app development. "Click for presentation"
 
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2/28/2006 7:42:13 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

Sometimes a photo is worth only a few words--a few very revealing words. That was apparently the case recently when The Washington Post accidentally left clues to the identity of a confidential source in an article about hackers.

The story was about a 21-year-old hacker identified as "0x80" who claimed to have broken into 2,000 PCs around the world and to have used the hacked PCs to send out spam. The article revealed that "0x80" smokes, has a southern accent and lives in a small town in Middle America. "The nearest businesses are a used-car lot, a gas station/convenience store and a strip club," the article said.

Fairly innocuous details unlikely to offer much in leading to the source's identity. But the article ran with a modified photo of 0x80, at which some of the people at Slashdot took a closer look. The metadata inside the photo apparently revealed when and where the photo was taken, who the photographer was and even what kind of camera was used.

According to Slashdot, the photo was taken in December in Roland, Okla., a city of 2.6 square miles and a population of 2,842.

Using the other clues provided in the article makes if awfully easy to narrow down the list of suspects, as Slashdot users pointed out.

2/28/2006 6:46:05 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 

IntelliSense Code Snippets are reusable, task-oriented blocks of code. Visual Studio 2005 includes code snippets covering tasks ranging from creating a custom exception, to sending an e-mail message, to drawing a circle. A set of Visual Basic and Visual C# Code Snippets are included in the Visual Studio 2005 box – additional Code Snippets can be found here.

Dev
2/28/2006 6:37:15 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Sunday, February 26, 2006

What is Advanced IP Address Calculator?

Advanced IP Address Calculator is an easy-to-use IP subnet calculator that lets you to calculate every aspect of your subnet configuration in a few mouse clicks!

You can use it for FREE. Download now!

The calculator generates a color-coded bit map, breaking down the network, subnet, and host portion. It shows you the subnet host address range, the subnet ID, and the subnet broadcast address. The binary representation and hexadecimal representations of IP addresses are supported.

IP Address Calculator is an easy-to-use IP subnet calculator.
Advanced IP Calculator v1.1

2/26/2006 7:17:58 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |