Aug 06

T-Mobile Sidekick II video – Smartphones – CNET Reviews

Aug 05

Fine-Tune Your Web Site for Windows XP Service Pack 2

Aug 05

Paul Thurrott’s SuperSite for Windows: Microsoft Office OneNote 2003 Preview

Aug 03

Yahoo! Mail – eh_track@yahoo.com: “Induced to break the law

A bill currently before the U.S. Senate may make it illegal for me to tell you about software that can make copies of copyrighted files. Though it’s aimed at file-sharing networks, Senator Hatch’s Induce Act would make anyone who induces another person to commit copyright infringement liable for the same penalties.

If I were to recommend a really good CD ripper, such as, say, CDex or iTunes, any record company could say I induced people to make illegal copies of copyrighted material, and get the law on me. Remember–this isn’t a civil matter, it’s criminal, possibly involving jail time. The real problem is that inducement, as mentioned in the bill, could cover a broad range of activities, such as writing and talking. Looks like a conflict with the First Amendment to me.

The act tries to define ‘intentionally induces,’ but it comes off as vague, which means all sorts of people could get hauled before the courts by the FBI at the behest of corporations. I’m pretty disappointed one of my representatives, Senator Barbara Boxer, signed on to introduce the Induce Act. I hope you all get a chance to tell your representatives to defeat this poorly written bill.

Wayne Cunningham

Senior Editor, CNET Download.com”

Aug 03

Induced to break the law

A bill currently before the U.S. Senate may make it illegal for me to tell you about software that can make copies of copyrighted files. Though it’s aimed at file-sharing networks, Senator Hatch’s Induce Act would make anyone who induces another person to commit copyright infringement liable for the same penalties.

If I were to recommend a really good CD ripper, such as, say, CDex or iTunes, any record company could say I induced people to make illegal copies of copyrighted material, and get the law on me. Remember–this isn’t a civil matter, it’s criminal, possibly involving jail time. The real problem is that inducement, as mentioned in the bill, could cover a broad range of activities, such as writing and talking. Looks like a conflict with the First Amendment to me.

The act tries to define ‘intentionally induces,’ but it comes off as vague, which means all sorts of people could get hauled before the courts by the FBI at the behest of corporations. I’m pretty disappointed one of my representatives, Senator Barbara Boxer, signed on to introduce the Induce Act. I hope you all get a chance to tell your representatives to defeat this poorly written bill.Wayne Cunningham

Senior Editor, CNET Download.com

Aug 03

AIM Away Messages – Funny Away Messages for every occasion, Yahoo Status Messages, IM Away Messages, Picture, Art, Away Message

Aug 02

I use Microsoft Outlook and maintain a distribution list for a group I belong to so that I can send a weekly newsletter. Lately I’ve run into a problem, though. My ISP rejects the e-mail going to the list, apparently because of the number of recipients (about 50). According to Comcast, the only way I can get around this is to send to just a few names at a time, which certainly defeats the purpose of a distribution list! Are there any other workarounds so I don’t have to spend an hour typing in a few names at a time?

Jim Traxler

In Word 2002 and 2003, the mail-merge feature includes a Merge to E-Mail option. When used this way, it sends individual e-mails to the list of people you select. Word can merge directly from your Outlook Contacts list, but it doesn’t handle distribution lists. Create a new folder within Contacts to hold your list, then copy the members from the list to this folder.

Launch Microsoft Word 2002 or 2003 and select Tools Letters and Mailings Mail Merge to bring up the mail-merge wizard. Choose E-mail messages and click on Next: Starting document, then click on Next: Select recipients. Click on the option Select from Outlook contacts and click on the Choose Contacts Folder link. Select the folder you just created and click on OK. You’ll see a list of recipients; click on OK again. Proceed through the remaining steps of the wizard, creating your e-mail, possibly adding a personal greeting, and previewing the results. When you’re ready, click on the Electronic Mail link on the wizard’s last page. Word will e-mail a separate message to each recipient.

Jul 27

Detecting Spam

Jul 19

Digitize Your Home Movies

Jul 14

Iconoid – Hide and show desktop icons, maketransparent backgrounds