TidBITS#590/30-Jul-01
=====================

  Wondering what the future holds for Mac OS X? Jeff Carlson
  examines Mac OS X 10.1 as shown during the Macworld Expo keynote.
  Adam and Mark Anbinder continue the Macworld Expo coverage with
  looks at the most interesting products at the show, and we report
  on Mac OS 9.2's quiet appearance. Finally, Jamie McCarthy
  editorializes about SirCam, the Windows email worm that can annoy
  even Mac users by bombarding them with futile infection attempts.

Topics:
    MailBITS/30-Jul-01
    The SirCam Worm: Email Exhibitionism
    Mac OS X 10.1 Previewed At Macworld Expo
    Macworld Expo NY 2001 Superlatives

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-590.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/2001/TidBITS#590_30-Jul-01.etx>

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MailBITS/30-Jul-01
------------------

**Mac OS 9.2 Slides Onto New Power Mac G4s** -- With nary a
  mention in Steve Jobs's Macworld Expo keynote address, Apple last
  week began shipping computers with Mac OS 9.2 installed. The new
  version of the operating system is reportedly a minor enough
  upgrade that it could have been called "9.1.1" if not for the
  likelihood it would prompt jokes about "911" (an emergency phone
  number in most of the U.S.). Although Apple has provided no
  release notes about what changed in Mac OS 9.2, reports indicate
  that it contains some bug fixes, support for the latest Power Mac
  G4 (QuickSilver) machines, and improvements that will be required
  for use with Mac OS X 10.1, slated for release in September 2001.
  It's a moot point for most people right now, since Mac OS 9.2 is
  currently available only with the new Power Mac G4 (QuickSilver).
  [MHA]

<http://til.info.apple.com/techinfo.nsf/artnum/n58840>


**Eudora Welty Dead at 92** -- Pulitzer Prize-winning author
  Eudora Welty died last Monday at age 92. Welty was a lifelong
  resident of Jackson, Mississippi, and an icon of American
  literature. Among her best known works are the short story
  collection The Golden Apples and the novels Losing Battles and The
  Optimist's Daughter; two of her works (The Ponder Heart and The
  Robber Bridegroom) also became Broadway plays. Her stories tended
  to focus on the lives of sheltered characters in southern America,
  but also quietly contradict easy categorization into any
  particular genre. Welty is also noted for her photographs,
  particularly images of the South during the Great Depression taken
  when she was working as a "junior publicity agent" for the Works
  Progress Administration.

<http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/english/ms-writers/dir/welty_eudora/>

  In relation to the Macintosh world, the popular email program
  Eudora is named for Eudora Welty, specifically because of her
  famous short story "Why I Live At The P.O.," published in her
  first collection in 1941. Programmer Steve Dorner read the story
  in college, and it was still with him years later when it came
  time to name the first version of his new email program. [GD]

<http://www.eudora.com/presskit/backgrounder.html>


The SirCam Worm: Email Exhibitionism
------------------------------------
  by Jamie McCarthy <jamie@mccarthy.vg>

  The SirCam email worm has been pestering me - and vast numbers of
  other people around the world - all week. Luckily, it has been
  only an annoyance since I use Mailsmith on Mac OS X and SirCam
  infects only PCs running Microsoft Windows. Even so, over the last
  ten days it has managed to coerce infected machines into sending
  me 250 copies of itself attached to innocuous-sounding documents.
  At about 200K apiece (with some documents being much larger),
  we're talking some serious wasted bandwidth and disk space.

<http://wtc.trendmicro.com/wtc/>


**How It Works** -- SirCam is a bit more clever than earlier
  viruses or worms that exploit weaknesses in Windows or specific
  Windows programs. SirCam uses its own SMTP engine to spam itself
  not just to contacts in its victims' Windows Address Books, but to
  any email addresses found in their Internet Explorer cache as
  well. So I've been getting mail from total strangers who just
  happened to have visited my Web site recently.

  This design means that people with high-profile email addresses
  have been hit a lot harder than others. "CmdrTaco" at the popular
  geek news and discussion site Slashdot has received about 3,000
  copies totalling 600 MB. [Here at TidBITS, we're at about 350
  copies so far, but our Web site is read primarily by Mac users who
  can't be infected. -Adam] So my own red badge of courage, 250
  copies, may sound a little lame, but in my defense, that's not
  counting what I've been getting from my biggest fan, a Prodigy DSL
  user who has kindly sent me thirty SirCam-generated messages a day
  since 27-Jul-01.

  I don't count the Prodigy user because I run my own mail server,
  which makes it easy to code up a custom filter (I use the Perl
  module Mail::Audit). So I've not only been ignoring her mail, but
  also sending my helpful commentary on how to stop this flood of
  email directly to the president of Prodigy Communications, thirty
  times a day. Haven't heard back yet.

  [If you don't run your own server and your ISP isn't successfully
  blocking the SirCam worm, you can reduce the annoyance level by
  setting your email program to skip messages over 100K; in some
  programs like Eudora, you can then create filters to look for
  SirCam-generated messages and delete them from the server (as
  with all destructive filters, be very careful - I'd recommend
  invoking them manually until you're certain they're working
  properly). The body of a SirCam-generated message always contains
  fixed first and last lines in either English or Spanish, and the
  attachments always have a .COM, .BAT, .PIF, or .LNK extension
  (see the Web pages below for details). For those like Jamie who
  run their own mail servers with filtering capabilities, it's
  relatively easy to filter out all the SirCam messages because
  of the similarities between each message. Here at TidBITS, we
  decided to reject all messages with attachments using those file
  extensions; however, this approach might create administrative
  hassles for others. -Adam]

<http://www.symantec.com/avcenter/venc/data/w32.sircam.worm@mm.html>
<http://www.f-secure.com/v-descs/sircam.shtml>

  SirCam replicates in part thanks to the way Windows and at least
  some Windows programs (such as older versions of Microsoft Outlook
  and Outlook Express, but possibly others) operate by default.
  Although Windows requires filename extensions on all files, it
  hides those extensions from the user by default, and email
  programs can do the same. When the worm arrives as the batch file
  "COVERAGE OF PEARL HARBOR ATTACK.doc.bat" (an actual example), it
  appears to Outlook users as "COVERAGE OF PEARL HARBOR ATTACK.doc"
  - seemingly a Microsoft Word document. Double-clicking it opens
  the document, but while the user is trying to figure out why
  they've received it, the worm infects the PC.

  Even this allegedly user-friendly extension hiding feature (which
  is slated to appear in Mac OS X 10.1 as well) wouldn't be
  sufficient to allow exploitation on many systems, but for the
  fact that older versions of Microsoft Outlook don't warn users
  that double-clicking an attachment can have serious security
  implications. Many other email programs do, and in both July of
  1999 and June of 2000 Microsoft patched Outlook to warn users of
  potentially dangerous attachments, but downloading and installing
  a security patch requires far more attention to security issues
  than most users are willing to pay.

<http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/Q235/3/09.ASP>


**Email Voyeurism** -- The cool thing about the SirCam worm is
  that it disseminates itself within a random file from its victims'
  desktop or My Documents folder. So every time I receive a copy of
  SirCam, I also get a peek into a stranger's hard disk.

  Normally I'm not the voyeuristic type, but when goodies arrive
  unbidden, I have a hard time throwing them away. I've had splendid
  schadenfreudigen fun all week, opening the attachments in BBEdit
  and reading private files from other people's lives. Some are
  short and dull, others are long and interesting. I've been trading
  excerpts with friends over IRC. SirCam has turned into Pokemon:
  "Gotta catch 'em all!"

  Here are just some of my more interesting finds:

* Form letters and documents detailing job responsibilities for
  various positions at Berne University.

* An excerpt from the poem "Dulce et decorum est."

* A monthly lease contract for a band rehearsal studio ("The room
  must be left clean, free of damage, and ready to rent to the next
  tenant.")

* A half-finished script for a mediation exercise - it ends with
  the author dropping into first person: "I'm having allergies right
  now, I can't continue. this sucks. My nose is so clogged up."

* A detailed "request for quotation" - with "CONFIDENTIAL" stamped
  proudly on it - regarding one Australian company and sent to me
  from a different Australian company.

* A weekly schedule for Ivanhoe East Primary School (tea and
  coffee are 50 cents a day; good luck to the "boy's" hockey team).

* J____ S____'s contract as a camera operator (eighty bucks an
  hour, not bad).

* The complete screenplay to the film Ferris Bueller's Day Off.

* A power-of-attorney letter ("This is to appoint my sister, D____
  T____, to act on my behalf in arriving at any legal agreement in
  regards to the rental matters of the above mentioned condominium
  unit.")

* The name, street address, phone number, work history, and career
  goals of that Prodigy user who's been spamming me thirty times a
  day.

* A cover letter for a summer internship position at an ironworks.

  I contacted the ironworks applicant and we traded a few email
  messages back and forth. She doesn't use Microsoft products
  herself, but the firm she applied to does.

  Therein lies the most frightening thing about this worm: her cover
  letter has been sitting on the ironworks' hard disks for months,
  and she had no control over its being sent to me. She would never
  have known if I hadn't dropped her a line.

  I honestly don't much mind my inbox being clogged: I have a cable
  modem and I can filter at the server. But despite my best efforts
  to avoid Microsoft products - Linux at the server, OpenBSD for a
  firewall, Mac OS X on my desktop - my privacy may still have been
  compromised. Many of my friends use Windows, and I trust _them_ to
  keep secrets about the private information we've shared. The
  problem is that I can no longer trust their computers. No matter
  how careful we are, the insecure monocultures of Windows and
  Outlook turn us all into exhibitionists.

  SirCam isn't benign - there's a 1 in 20 chance it will delete all
  files on infected hard disks on the 16th of October, and on any
  other day there's a 1 in 50 chance it will fill up infected hard
  disks. There have been significantly more destructive worms: what
  makes SirCam special is the way it randomly exposes our private
  information to the world. Perhaps potential embarrassment will
  encourage individuals to exercise caution in computing, and also
  inspire software companies to produce programs that not only
  protect users but also help them become part of the solution.


Mac OS X 10.1 Previewed At Macworld Expo
----------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>

  More than any other event, Macworld Expo stirs up the excitement
  of Mac users looking for Apple's newest take on thinking
  different. Ironically, the show also tends to temper that
  excitement with an equal dose of patience. At Macworld Expo San
  Francisco 2001, Steve Jobs incited outbreaks of mass techno-lust
  with the introduction of the PowerBook G4 Titanium, but even those
  who ordered their machines wirelessly from the floor of the
  keynote didn't receive them for several weeks. At this year's show
  in New York, Jobs introduced Mac OS X 10.1, Apple's first major
  update to its new operating system - but you won't be able to get
  your hands on it until September. Here's some of what you have to
  look forward to.

<http://www.apple.com/macosx/newversion/>


**The Bouncer at the Door** -- Translucent menus and preemptive
  multitasking quickly lose their luster if essentials like
  selecting menu items or resizing Finder windows don't respond
  quickly. The main improvement in Mac OS X 10.1 is a performance
  boost across the board, with an emphasis on improving application
  launch time, as measured in bounces. Under Mac OS X, a program's
  icon bounces like a caffeinated child in its place on the Dock to
  indicate that the application is loading. Under Mac OS X 10.1,
  Internet Explorer launched in one bounce, and Mac OS X's Mail
  program barely bounced at all. Of course, Jobs was undoubtedly
  running on the fastest possible hardware, but we've heard that
  launch performance is two to three times better even on slower
  Macs.

  "Performance, performance, performance," Jobs chanted, but it's
  not just brute-force processing power that's improved. Under 10.1,
  you'll be able to choose a method of minimizing windows. The
  current scheme, called Genie because of the way windows get sucked
  into the Dock, will be joined by Scale, which resizes the window
  proportionally as it moves to the Dock. The effect is cleaner and
  faster than Genie, and Jobs suggested that Scale will be the
  default behavior when 10.1 is released. (Personally, I'd vote for
  a balloon behavior, where the window splutters around the screen,
  deflates, and drops limply to the Dock.)

  Finder windows will also enjoy resizable columns in the column
  view (hopefully the widths will be remembered, unlike Mac OS X
  10.0.4), and long filenames will run onto multiple lines if needed
  instead of truncating the text. Like Windows, Mac OS X 10.1 will
  offer the capability for users to hide or show filename
  extensions. This feature is disastrously confusing in Windows;
  let's hope Apple somehow avoids similar problems.

  Another improvement to the system's Aqua interface is the
  capability to position the Dock on the left, right, or bottom
  edges of the screen. This is possible in the current version of
  Mac OS X, although the position isn't remembered through restarts.
  To move your Dock now, Control-click the dividing line between
  applications and documents in the Dock to choose an alignment,
  though the new system won't support putting the Dock at the top
  edge of the screen.

  Apple is also addressing Dock overload by pulling some functions
  currently available as Dock extras out of the Dock and into the
  top menu bar. These "system menus," as Jobs called them, will
  display status for battery life and AirPort signal strength, and
  offer controls for changing sound volume, display settings, and a
  modem connection. The concern here is that this area will itself
  immediately be overloaded, much as happens with the Windows system
  tray. The existing Control Strip isn't perfect, but at least it
  can be tucked away off-screen when not needed.

  Finally, applications in the Dock can now have menus, just like
  folders do, though it was unclear from the keynote just what menu
  items would appear there.


**Hub Caps** -- Mac OS X 10.1 catches up on Apple's digital hub
  strategy, adding DVD playback and CD burning (for saving data, not
  just music via iTunes) directly in the Finder, courtesy of a new
  Burn button that can be placed in the toolbar in Finder windows.
  Perhaps the most entertaining moment in the keynote came from Jobs
  when he tried to connect a digital camera via USB; when it didn't
  work, he just tossed (er, threw) it to an Apple employee offstage
  and moved on. Later, he came back to the camera and showed the
  system automatically copying its images to a special folder that
  can also use the photos as the basis for one of Apple's
  screensaver modules.

  Of course, Mac OS X 10.1 couldn't be a digital hub if it weren't
  at the center of things, so Apple has boosted its networking
  capabilities. You will finally be able to configure AirPort base
  stations from within the AirPort Admin Utility under Mac OS X
  10.1. Apple is also adding support for connecting to the machine
  using AFP over AppleTalk, plus SMB networking support to enable
  the Mac to interoperate better on a Windows-dominated network. Mac
  OS X 10.1 will not only support an emerging technology called
  WebDAV (Web-based Distributed Authoring and Versioning; it's a set
  of extensions to the Web's HTTP protocol to enable users to edit
  and manage remote files collaboratively - you can think of it as
  FTP on steroids), it will use WebDAV as the underlying technology
  behind your iDisk. Since WebDAV uses the stateless HTTP to
  transfer data, it can be left on your desktop for long stretches
  of time without having to always check in with Apple's servers.

<http://www.webdav.org/>


**The Future Is Still Here, Still Coming Soon, For $20** -- When
  it becomes available in September, Mac OS X 10.1 will be available
  as a "free" upgrade for current users. However, because so much
  data has changed between this release and previous ones, owners of
  Mac OS 10.0.4 and earlier will find themselves spending $20 (for
  shipping and handling) to order the update on CD. Apple's
  certainly allowed to charge whatever they want, but it's a bit
  annoying to be forced to pay more for an update which feels like a
  fix to make the operating system basically functional for
  mainstream users. Even if a online update was huge, why not give
  users the option of a very long download to head off any
  complaints?


Macworld Expo NY 2001 Superlatives
----------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst and Mark H. Anbinder <editors@tidbits.com>

  This year's Macworld Expo in New York City may have been an odd
  show with no spectacular announcements, but that doesn't mean
  nothing caught our eyes while wandering the show floor. The main
  liability this year? As with so many other announcements at the
  show, a number of these products simply aren't shipping yet. I'm
  looking for the last few months of 2001 to boast a flurry of
  releases, and I'm sure you'll be able to see many of these
  products at January's Macworld Expo in San Francisco.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06502>


**Shake Hands With Your Mac** -- The first thing I saw upon
  walking into the Macworld Expo show floor was Essential Reality's
  P5 glove-like controller. It's a USB device that fits over your
  hand and enables you to use hand and finger motions to control 3-D
  graphics programs, games, and more. It definitely wins the
  futuristic interface award, though it's not entirely clear to me
  how well it will work for many types of applications, and it
  looked as though your arm would get tired if you were using the P5
  for a long time. Still, the P5 will be cheap (as in $130) when it
  ships in a few months - let's hope Essential Reality comes up with
  a better name between then and now. [ACE]

<http://www.essentialreality.com/products.html>


**Tantalizing Test Drive** -- One of the handful of reasons I
  don't use Mac OS X full-time on my laptop is that Virtual PC
  doesn't yet work in Mac OS X. Connectix has improved that
  situation by introducing the Virtual PC Test Drive for Mac OS X,
  a free download for owners of Virtual PC 4. Due largely to
  limitations in Mac OS X itself, the test drive doesn't support
  USB devices, can't use a unique IP address within Windows, and
  can't display the virtual PC full screen, but the software is
  otherwise quite functional. We were delighted to hear that
  Virtual PC can share drive image files and saved states between
  the Mac OS 9 and X versions of the software. Connectix can't say
  when a final version of Virtual PC for Mac OS X will be available,
  but promises that a final version (or another test drive version)
  will appear before this test drive expires on 31-Jan-02. [MHA]

<http://preview.connectix.com/testdrive/>


**Don't Forget Your Wallet** -- You're going on vacation with your
  digital camera, but you don't want to bring a laptop to store
  photos after your camera's Compact Flash card fills up. Minds@Work
  has the solution, with the palm-sized Digital Wallet, a 12 ounce
  battery-powered hard disk with a PC Card slot that operates
  independently of a computer. The Digital Wallet supports Compact
  Flash, SmartMedia, Sony MemoryStick, Panasonic SD Memory Card, IBM
  Microdrive, Intel StrataFlash, and MultiMedia Cards; simply put
  your camera's memory card into a PC Card adapter, plug it into the
  Digital Wallet, and transfer the files from the memory card onto
  the Digital Wallet's 2.5-inch hard disk, which is available in 3
  GB ($350), 10 GB ($450), and 20 GB ($550) sizes. The NiMH battery
  lasts for up to 120 minutes of use, and can be recharged about 500
  times. When you get home, plug the Digital Wallet into your Mac
  (or PC, or Linux box) via USB and transfer the files to your
  computer. The Digital Wallet also features a small monochrome LCD
  screen, not for previewing pictures, but for seeing directory
  listings, file transfer status, and so on. The main downside is
  price, given that you can get a 256 MB Compact Flash card for
  between $150 and $250, it might be possible to get by on vacation
  with a couple minuscule memory cards. [ACE]

<http://mindsatwork.net/>


**Smallest Media** -- While we're on the subject of tiny media,
  look for the new DataPlay digital media to appear before the end
  of the year. Manufactured by Imation, DataPlay's long-lived
  optical disks store 500 MB in a package about the size of a U.S.
  quarter and will be available in five colors. Joining the DataPlay
  media will be Imation's DiscGO, a device similar to the Digital
  Wallet that lets you copy the contents of memory cards to and from
  DataPlay disks, which you can then copy back to your computer via
  USB. A number of devices are using DataPlay media, most notably
  portable music players but also PDAs, an electrocardiogram
  recorder, and digital cameras. I'll be curious to see real-world
  impressions of how well DataPlay media works, since it seems to
  combine a great form factor with decent capacity (twice the size
  of large Compact Flash cards) and the promise of archival storage.
  [ACE]

<http://www.dataplay.com/>


**Best Traveler Gizmo** -- We already knew Battery Technology,
  Inc. (BTI) was great for laptop and cell phone batteries and power
  adapters, but a new product at the BTI booth combined these two
  areas nicely. An inexpensive USB cell phone charger provides power
  to charge your wireless phone via the USB port on your laptop or
  desktop computer. (A full phone charge drains around a fifth of
  your laptop's battery charge, a reasonable trade-off if you need
  your cell phone charged!) I've kept mine in my laptop bag since I
  bought it several days ago, and have used it at the office while
  my laptop's plugged in, as well as while traveling. [MHA]

<http://www.batterytech.com/>


**Smallest Hard Disk** -- If you're in the market for small media
  that holds more than the 500 MB DataPlay disks, check out
  SmartDisk's sleek new FireLite 5 GB hard disk. It measures a mere
  2.4" x .5" x 4", weighs 5 ounces, and is powered from the FireWire
  bus so no additional power adapters are necessary. The magic
  behind this minuscule drive comes from a new 1.8-inch mechanism
  from Toshiba, and once Toshiba provides mechanisms in other
  capacities, SmartDisk will introduce more options. The FireLite
  will be priced at $400 when it ships (SmartDisk is saying only
  "Available soon") so the size does command a premium price, but if
  size is of paramount importance, you won't find a single 5 GB
  package any smaller than the FireLite. [ACE]

<http://www.smartdisk.com/Products/Storage%20Products/Hard%20Drives/FWFL.asp>


**Spider's Eye View** -- As Web sites have grown, it's become ever
  more difficult for site authors to see just what pages they have,
  how they link to one another, and how coherently they follow site
  guidelines. There are a variety of utilities that will give you a
  list of files with broken links, or let you search across a set of
  HTML files. But the Java-based (so it runs on Mac OS X, but not
  Mac OS 9) Funnel Web Profiler from Quest Software goes well beyond
  that by letting you look at your entire Web site at once in a
  graphical map view that you can customize to reveal different bits
  of information about each page. Funnel Web Profiler can apply
  different colors to pages to indicate how well they match your
  desired level of HTML quality, change the size of the page dot to
  indicate how linked that page is, and so on. The $600 Funnel Web
  Profiler also works with the flexible Funnel Web Analyzer log
  analysis tool. If you're responsible for serious Web sites, take a
  look when Funnel Web Profiler ships later this quarter. [ACE]

<http://www.quest.com/funnel_web/profiler/>


**Input Device Stars** -- Apple somewhat dried up the market for
  third-party keyboards and other input devices with last July's
  introduction of the Apple Pro Keyboard and Apple Pro Mouse, but
  some vendors are still successfully offering alternatives.
  Adesso's multimedia ergonomic keyboard, tiny portable USB numeric
  keypad, and Lilliputian two-button optical mouse with scroll wheel
  are great examples. [MHA]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06049>
<http://www.adessoinc.com/>


**Two Half Keyboards Equals?** At last January's Macworld Expo in
  San Francisco, we wrote about the Matias Half Keyboard, which was
  literally a QWERTY keyboard sawed in half (well, it's more elegant
  looking than that). By pressing the space bar with your thumb, you
  can type the characters from the other half of the keyboard.
  Although some will want it for desktop use, it's most compelling
  in the $300 Wearable Half Keyboard bundle from Matias, which
  includes a Half Keyboard with five-foot cable, wrist straps, and
  screen rotation software for the Palm OS so you can strap it and
  the Palm to your wrists. Portable data entry becomes a reality,
  and an inexpensive one at that. Anyway, you can imagine my initial
  confusion at Macworld Expo when Edgar Matias proudly showed me his
  new Half Keyboard x2, which looks exactly like a normal keyboard.
  For a moment I thought he was just having some fun with me, but
  then he explained that the Half Keyboard x2 is a normal keyboard,
  but by holding down the space bar, you can use either side of the
  keyboard to type the full range of characters. Without the space
  bar down, it acts like a normal keyboard. Thus, you're not forced
  to use the slower Half Keyboard typing most of the time, but when
  you really need a hand on the mouse for text editing, desktop
  publishing, CAD, or even gaming, you can do so. It's slated for
  release in October for $100. [ACE]

<http://www.halfkeyboard.com/products/whkbinfo.html>
<http://www.halfkeyboard.com/products/hkbx2info.html>


**RTMac Update** -- Matrox, whose RTMac real-time video editing
  card for Final Cut Pro I reviewed in TidBITS-587_, was showing a
  new version of their software, due to ship in September, that will
  extend the RTMac card's real-time editing capabilities to users of
  Adobe Premiere 6. [MHA]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06486>
<http://www.matrox.com/videoweb/products/enduser/rtmac.htm>
<http://www.adobe.com/products/premiere/>


**Best Consumer Audio Devices** -- Griffin Technology easily takes
  this award with a pair of devices. The USB-based $45 PowerMate is
  a elegant knob on a glowing base that you can rotate and press to
  activate a user-defined action. It's most obviously useful for
  controlling audio volume, since it's far easier to turn a physical
  knob than to fiddle with a tiny virtual slider. But it's also
  totally programmable, so you could press it to have it act as a
  power key, mute the sound, or do other things. Then there's the
  $100 PowerWave, which is a USB audio amplifier and interface. It
  provides two RCA line level input connectors, two line RCA line
  level output connectors, a 1/8-inch microphone input jack, a
  1/8-inch headphone output jack, a USB hub, and an Apple Pro
  Speaker connector. Internally it features a 24-bit DSP (Digital
  Signal Processor) chip for high quality sound, though of course it
  was difficult to determine audio quality amidst the cacophony of
  the show floor. Both are set to ship in September. [ACE]

<http://www.griffintechnology.com/audio/pwrmate.html>
<http://www.griffintechnology.com/audio/pwrwave.html>


**Closest Zoom** -- I'm one of those people who's never been able
  to use a microscope comfortably, thanks to a fairly thin face and
  glasses. If only Bodelin's The Scope had been available back when
  I was dissecting worms and counting protists! It's a handheld USB
  digital microscope that can display 640 by 480 images on a
  computer screen at up to 200 times magnification. It can even show
  live video, record movies, or do time-lapse photography at those
  magnifications. The $200 package includes a 50x lens, the
  necessary software, backlighting, and standard tripod mount (also
  for use with The Scope's optional $125 stand). Also available are
  an $85 1x lens that turns The Scope into a standard digital camera
  and $100 100x and $129 200x lenses for increased magnification.
  Plus, a $20 C-Ring lens adapter enables the use of any standard
  C-mount lens. The Scope sounds ideal for schools, since a teacher
  could display magnified images or live video for the entire class
  to see. [ACE]

<http://www.bodelin.com/>


**Server Software Chutzpah** -- 4D's WebSTAR V Server Suite takes
  this award for putting a ton of effort into moving the leading
  suite of Mac OS server to Mac OS X despite the preponderance of
  Unix server programs. But WebSTAR V aims to distinguish itself
  based on easier setup and administration, better performance
  (thanks to advanced caching and a multi-threaded architecture),
  and integrated WebDAV and FTP servers. The software is in public
  beta now, so if you've found configuring Mac OS X's Apache
  difficult, give WebSTAR a try. It's slated for release by the end
  of this quarter, with the price to be announced at ship date.
  [ACE]

<http://www.webstar.com/hottopics/4dwsv_beta.html>



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