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Slashback: Sidekick Justice, Free WebTV, Office Patent

Slashback tonight brings some clarifications, and updates to previous Slashdot stories including, justice for a stolen sidekick victim, free WebTV test a hit, SUSE 10.1 release postponed, Microsoft loses Office patent appeal, and PayPal fixes their phishing hole -- Read on for details.

Justice for stolen Sidekick victim. chroma writes "Remember the stolen Sidekick from a few days back? When the girl uploaded photos of herself to T-Mobile's service and bragged on IM about having the stolen PDA? Well, after creating a webpage that gathered 400,000 links in less than two weeks, and much runaround from the NYPD, justice has finally been served: the perpetrator has been arrested and the PDA returned. Further information is also available from The New York Times."

Free WebTV test a hit. An anonymous reader writes "Disney has said that their recent ABC free WebTV was a real hit with viewers and advertisers alike. Shows posted on the site received more than 11 million hits in the first month alone. From the article: 'An online exit survey posted the first week of the two-month trial showed that 87 percent of respondents could recall the advertisers that sponsored the episodes they watched. That compares with typical ad recall of about 40 percent for commercials viewed on television, industry sources said.'"

SUSE 10.1 release postponed. An anonymous reader writes "According to a confidential memo, the next release of both the server and desktop versions of SUSE Linux Enterprise 10 will be delayed. The delay is apparently to allow Novell 'to address final issues with our new package management, registration, and update system and also fix the remaining blocker defects.' From the article: 'SUSE has a new update and package management system, which has not worked well in its initial release in the free, community OpenSUSE 10.1 release. Unfortunately, even after a recent set of fixes was released, SUSE's update and new program installation system is still giving many users trouble.'"

Microsoft loses Office patent appeal. xwipeoutx writes to tell us ITNews.com is reporting that Microsoft has lost their appeal in US Federal court over a judgement handed down saying they violated a patent by Guatemalan inventor Carlos Armando Amado. The original judgement stipulated that Micosoft was to pay Amado $6.1 million for violating a patent covering a means to link spreadsheets and databases.

Paypal fixes their phishing hole. Juha-Matti Laurio writes "News.com is providing new information to the previous PayPal XSS hole and reporting that the hole is now fixed." From the article: "By exploiting the flaw, attackers were able to redirect people from a PayPal Web page to an online trap located in South Korea, a representative for the service said. The page actually has a real PayPal URL, but hosts malicious code that presents a message warning members that their account had been compromised. It then redirects them to a 'phishing' Web site."

16 of 88 comments (clear)

  1. Sidekick Justice! by mpathetiq · · Score: 5, Funny

    Finally, Batman gets what's coming to him.

  2. Free WebTV advertiser potential by ThinkingInBinary · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Shows posted on the site received more than 11 million hits in the first month alone. From the article: 'An online exit survey posted the first week of the two-month trial showed that 87 percent of respondents could recall the advertisers that sponsored the episodes they watched. That compares with typical ad recall of about 40 percent for commercials viewed on television, industry sources said.

    This doesn't surprise me one bit. I find that when I have a computer with me while I'm watching TV, I'm much more likely to visit an advertiser's page. I find myself poking at the product pages for products that I'd never buy, like the Toyota Yaris or internet services that compete with my own. This leads me to believe that, if TiVo really wants to fill the gap caused by ad-skipping, they should create interactive ads that viewers can poke and prod.

    1. Re:Free WebTV advertiser potential by Kaenneth · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Perfect couch potato UI, would be a single button to see more about the topic currently (or just previously) on. pushing the button queues the topic link, so that at the next mark in the video stream (so as not to jump-cut) the stream is pushed down a stack, and the sub-stream on the sub-topic starts. when the sub topic is done, pop the last stream off the stack and continue.

      Navigation would be the way web sites should have been, instead of next/back, next/back/up/deeper.

      but please, no sound effects for the button pushes =P

    2. Re:Free WebTV advertiser potential by stunt_penguin · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I agree, if you had a selection of things that could be done - for example an event such as an exhibition or a festivel could be automatically added to your calendar, a new car commercial could have an email sent to you giving product information and maybe details of a test drive in your area.. a short movie trailer could let you book tickets or see a longer trailer. There are loads of possibilities, none of which the advertisers seem to be aspiring towards...... especially when they start talking about the illegality of not watching ads, and about locking hardware into forcing you to watch advertising. One teeny step towards this kind of interactivity in the UK and Ireland is how Sky (a digital satellite provider) now allow you to press the green button to set a reminder to watch a particular programme, and occasionally you see a 'press the red button' advert for a big-budget campaign that will give you extended information on a product or service.

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    3. Re:Free WebTV advertiser potential by Wiseleo · · Score: 5, Funny

      Cue Starship Troopers

      "Service guarantees citizenship" - would you like to know more?

      --
      Leonid S. Knyshov
      Find me on Quora :)
  3. Good advertising campaign for a superhero by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 4, Funny

    Our trusty sidekick will recover your trusty Sidekick!

  4. Re:Honest Question by Poppler · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'm in the same boat as you (I don't use Suse), however I'd like to point out that it is still at number 2 on Distrowatch. Apparantly someone's still interested.

    --
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  5. Re:Honest Answer by BootNinja · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Suse's Killer App is YaST. In my experience, Yast is by far the simplest, most intuitive system configuration tool of any linux distro. I myself use gentoo these days, but SuSe was my first linux distro, and will always hold a soft spot in my heart. If you want a simple linux, then SuSe is probably the closest you'll get. They also ship with a large assortment of wireless drivers, making it very simple to configure your wireless card.

  6. ABC's shows online done well... by posterlogo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ABC's use of the web to stream their most popular shows online worked out well because it was done well. It offers what it promises -- the latest shows, soon after they air, with minimally intrusive advertising. I found myself watching shows that I had missed and forgotten to tape, shows while I was staying late at work waiting for stuff to finish up, or shows that I wanted to rewatch parts of (remember the accidental boob-grope of evangeline lilly in the last episode of lost...that was wierd). I would not go there exclusively because 1) The quality is better on TV, or even better, on HDTV and 2) The website design is still a bit sluggish. I think there is plenty of room for improvement, but it appears atleast one network is on the right track.

  7. SuSE is extremely viable by arete · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We use it, but we're not a terrific data point. We haven't moved to 10 yet at all. But here are some basics:

    I'm an Apple fan, and in my opinion SuSE is the Apple of Linux. (Of course, Apple is itself the Apple of *nix-like OSes.) They are not the earliest adopters of new technology, but they do a good job of integrating it. But moreover they make it easy to use and administer.*

    Big business wants a Vendor, not a community. In the giant world that's pretty much RH and SuSE, or IBM selling someone else's.

    Novell also makes a good business selling networking solutions for you whole office, not making you put them together youself.

    SuSE will happily ship with the best available drivers and software, even if those are proprietary. For some people this is a reason not to use SuSE - zealots have their place, and I would not want the strictly OSS distros to go away - but if you are more interested in Linux-as-a-current-tool than Linux-as-a-political-statement to force vendors to open drivers, this is the right choice philosophy for you.

    *Let me define "easy to use and administer" more: YaST puts a nice front end on whatever you're doing (package management and basically all other system administration) - with enough power to configure whatever you want however you want and enough guidance that you can do it even if it's not your speciality and you've been awake too long. It's the perfect kind of system that LETS you be knowledgeable but does not REQUIRE you to be knowledgeable. You can seamlessly escalate simple point and click management to advanced point and click management to tweaking files by hand that it then won't screw up.

    So to me, "easy to use" means that I can use, in each instance, a system that is as automatic or as manual as I want, based on how much expertise I have in that area, and how much time and attention I have for the issue "right now"

    Configuration entirely by manually touching files/registries/whatever is a little like walking through a minefield... get too tired, make a typo and all sorts of stuff might explode, and you've making a large number of changes. But I'd take it any day over a Windows GUI-only system where IF it explodes and, say, doesn't boot you have a much harder time putting it back together than you do with a text editor. But YaST is the ideal hybrid - it reduces your chances of stupid mistakes without limiting your power. You edit what you want, let YaST edit what you don't. It's not by far the only piece of software to do this, but I think it's a good example.

    ( I think much of OS X is similar. Can you enter complex firewall and packet forwarding configurations in their little GUI? No. Does their GUI work for most people? Yep. Does their GUI still use the standard BSD firewall, which you can configure however you want? Yep. )

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    1. Re:SuSE is extremely viable by houghi · · Score: 4, Informative
      For some people this is a reason not to use SuSE - zealots have their place, and I would not want the strictly OSS distros to go away


      You can now have SUSE and be completely OSS. Just download CD 1-5. CD 6 holds the non-OSS stuff as does the various DVDs.
      http://en.opensuse.org/Released_Version

      If you want those as a DVD, you can use makeSUSEdvd to make a DVD. (You can even add your own RPMs, like MPlayer or libdvdcss to your own DVD with makeSUSEdvd)
      http://en.opensuse.org/Making_a_DVD_from_CDs
      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  8. Sigh... Pathetic mother by technoextreme · · Score: 4, Insightful
    "They told him to come pick it up," said Ms. Gomez, speaking in the apartment of her building's superintendent last Thursday. She said she had bought the phone for $50 on a subway platform in Queens and had given it to her daughter. "We said he could have it if he gave the money we paid for it," she added.

    Why? It's his property. He has every right to get back because it's his!!!!!!!! Not yours. You have no right to charge anyone money because YOU GOT RIPPED OFF.
    --
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    1. Re:Sigh... Pathetic mother by porkThreeWays · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Common sense, ethics, and the law are completely lost on these trashy people. I visit our PD sometimes (I work in municipal gov't), and there are actually people who believe if they paid 50 bucks for a stolen sidekick from a guy on a subway they should get their money back. At the same time, this girl was pregnant at 15 (maybe 14), writes like a bumbling idiot, and probably won't graduate high school. No, Evan doesn't need the law, this girl's real life has been punishment enough.

      --
      If an officer ever threatens to taze you, say you have a pacemaker.
  9. SIDEKICK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This bad publicity is really going to cut into my business of selling Sidekicks off of subway platforms! ;-) *JK*

    ~

    Actually, here's another recent story. My girlfriend, who works as a cashier at a local Dollar General, just got interviewed by the police and FBI for selling 25 cellphones to some customer. I assume they were Tracphones or such pay as you go things.

    The question is, why would they be interested in such things. Maybe he needs them as a contractor for his business, maybe he resells them to imigrants who can't speak English (and he can, say for example, speak spanish), maybe they were at a great deal and he's going to resell them elsewhere. Since when is it illegal to buy cell phones?

    I told her not to tell them anything. For one, its none of their business. For two, Dollar General hired her to ring up merchandice they sold and that's what she did, her job. There is no policy about how many of anything to sell to anybody, or anything singling out cell phones. She said they were all sweet and so and called her sweetheart and sweetie... I told her the only person that has any business doing that is me, her boyfriend, and that they are two faced scumbags looking for anything to prosecute her who has nothing to do with anything, just is just a cashier like a dozen others there.

  10. Long live the new flesh... by MsGeek · · Score: 4, Informative

    I think Paul Verhoeven and JMS both have to give propers to David Cronenburg, who came up with the idea of very interactive TV in the '80s with Videodrome.

    --
    Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
  11. Alternative Sidekick Source by gihan_ripper · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you want to read the Sidekick story without having to log in at the NY Times, the same reporter (Nicholas Confessore) has written another article, delivered up by the good folks over at the International Herald Tribune.

    Support login-free reading on the Internet!

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