Send Medianews mailing list submissions to
        medianews@twiar.org

To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit
        http://twiar.org/mailman/listinfo/medianews_twiar.org
or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to
        [EMAIL PROTECTED]

You can reach the person managing the list at
        [EMAIL PROTECTED]

When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific
than "Re: Contents of Medianews digest..."


Today's Topics:

   1. AACS DRM tentacles reach far into operating systems
      (Monty Solomon)
   2. Microsoft Disputes FCC's Rejection of TV White-Space      Devices
      (George Antunes)
   3. Upkeep Of Security Devices A Burden For 1st Responders
      (George Antunes)
   4. Aluminum and glass: A review of the new iMac (Monty Solomon)
   5. 100% Proof Google is Keeping Alternative Media Sites      Down (Rob)
   6. Students in US state of Virginia want to carry guns to    class (Rob)
   7. National ID? How about a global ID? (Rob)
   8. FCC Rules Allow One Bidder To Buy More Than Half of       Spectrum
      (George Antunes)
   9. In Defense of Gadgetry (George Antunes)
  10. FCC Tested Defective Prototype Device (George Antunes)
  11. Ariane 5 / Spaceway 3 & B-SAT 3A Upcoming Launch Coverage
      Tuesday (8-14) @ 7:15pm ET. Galaxy-10R (12146.5 V) SR: 6.111 DVB
      (Dishnut)
  12. Artists, promote thyself (Greg Williams)


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1
Date: Mon, 13 Aug 2007 09:06:14 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] AACS DRM tentacles reach far into operating
        systems
To: undisclosed-recipient:;
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"


AACS DRM tentacles reach far into operating systems

By Ken Fisher | Published: August 12, 2007 - 11:03PM CT
Introduction

"The biggest trick the devil ever pulled was in getting folks to 
blame someone other than Hollywood for video DRM." -not Keyser S?ze

Peter Gutmann, author of a well-known and fascinating paper 
describing the tradeoffs of Microsoft's content protection system in 
Windows Vista, is on the hunt again. Last year, his paper "Cost 
Analysis of Windows Vista Content Protection" painted a grim picture 
of the lengths Microsoft went to in order to gain full compliance 
with AACS, the next-gen copy control system for Blu-ray and HD DVD 
(and they did go far). Now Gutmann is reiterating his claims but also 
reportedly digging deep in his attacks on Microsoft. While Microsoft 
deserves some of the blame, the bigger story here is the technical 
nightmare created by AACS and how its tentacles are reaching into the 
consumer technology we all use daily. It's a shame that this is 
getting lost in the mix, but after discussing the issue with a 
journalist this weekend, I decided to delve a little more into it 
here.

Gutmann's presentation at this year's USENIX Security Symposium in 
Boston has been profiled at Network World. Gutmann's thesis is fairly 
basic and unchanged from last year: Microsoft spent way too many 
resources appeasing Hollywood when it should have been making Windows 
Vista better. Gutmann is essentially correct; any time a consumer 
electronics manufacturer or other technology company has to waste 
time with DRM, that company is wasting resources that could be better 
spent elsewhere if DRM wasn't a sad fact of life. Let no one doubt 
that. All of this attention focused on Microsoft is missing the 
bigger story, however.

...

http://arstechnica.com/articles/culture/aacs-tentacles.ars




------------------------------

Message: 2
Date: Mon, 13 Aug 2007 13:26:01 -0500
From: George Antunes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] Microsoft Disputes FCC's Rejection of TV
        White-Space     Devices
To: medianews@twiar.org
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed

Microsoft Disputes FCC's Rejection of Web Devices That Use TV Airwaves

By Kim Hart
Washington Post Staff Writer

Monday, August 13, 2007; A02

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/12/AR2007081201084_pf.html


Today Microsoft plans to try to convince regulators that it can connect 
consumers to high-speed Internet over unused television airwaves without 
interfering with existing broadcasts.

In a document that it plans to file today with the Federal Communications 
Commission, Microsoft disputes the agency's recent findings that prototype 
devices either interfered with TV signals or could not detect them to avoid 
interference. Microsoft's first prototype was defective, but the firm said 
another model worked successfully in a demonstration it gave to the FCC 
last week.

The filing is Microsoft's latest attempt to get FCC commissioners to 
approve a plan that would let a new generation of portable wireless devices 
connect to the Internet without relying on existing wireless carriers. The 
devices in question, which were designed and made by Microsoft, would use 
vacant TV airwaves, known as white space, to carry Internet service to 
homes and offices, including those in rural areas. The airwaves will be 
available when TV broadcasters move to digital signals in early 2009.

The FCC plans to hold a meeting Thursday to discuss testing options for 
white-space devices.

Microsoft is part of a coalition of high-tech companies, including Intel, 
Google and Dell, that sees white space as a way to connect such products as 
digital cameras and music players to the Web. Proponents of the technology 
argue that TV-spectrum-based Internet service could be less expensive and 
more accessible than current phone and fiber-optic lines, forcing other 
high-speed Web service providers to lower their prices.

But the FCC must balance those companies' interests with those of 
broadcasters, sports leagues, cable operators and phone companies that 
worry their signals might cross, causing poor reception, static and dropped 
calls.

Two weeks ago, FCC engineers found that the original prototype caused 
static on existing broadcasts.

But the new prototype "reliably detected occupied television channels," the 
company said in the filing it plans to submit today. Microsoft also 
discussed potential improvements to the device to eliminate interference 
with wireless microphones, such as those used at sports games and concerts.

Dennis Wharton, spokesman for the National Association of Broadcasters, an 
opponent of Microsoft's plan, said he is confident the FCC's report is 
accurate and that Microsoft's "self-serving" agenda may jeopardize 
"America's access to interference-free television reception."


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu




------------------------------

Message: 3
Date: Mon, 13 Aug 2007 13:29:45 -0500
From: George Antunes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] Upkeep Of Security Devices A Burden For 1st
        Responders
To: medianews@twiar.org
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
        [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed

Upkeep Of Security Devices A Burden

By Mary Beth Sheridan
Washington Post Staff Writer

Monday, August 13, 2007; A01

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/12/AR2007081201244_pf.html


In 2003, the FBI used a $25 million grant to give bomb squads across the 
nation state-of-the-art computer kits, enabling them to instantly share 
information about suspected explosives, including weapons of mass destruction.

Four years later, half of the Washington area's squads can't communicate 
via the $12,000 kits, meant to be taken to the scene of potential 
catastrophes, because they didn't pick up the monthly wireless bills and 
maintenance costs initially paid by the FBI. Other squads across the 
country also have given up using them.

"They worked, and it was a good idea -- until the subscription ran out," 
said Mike Love, who oversees the bomb squad in Montgomery County's fire 
department. At the local level, he said, "there is not budget money for it."

Since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the area has received more 
than $1 billion in federal money to strengthen first responders and secure 
the region. That money has bought satellite phones, radios, protective 
suits, water-security monitors and a host of other items.

But local officials are grappling with how to maintain the huge infusion of 
equipment. Like a driver whose 5-year-old luxury sedan has worn-out brakes, 
cracked tires and engine problems, local governments are facing hefty bills 
to keep their gear working.

The region has a long list of terrorism-fighting items that need parts and 
service. Officials recently set aside nearly one-fifth of the area's latest 
federal homeland security grant -- about $12 million -- to cover 
maintenance over the next two years.

The shopping list includes $120,000 in new batteries for emergency radios; 
$400,000 to maintain chemical and radiation monitors for rivers; and 
$250,000 in replacement equipment for top officials' videoconferencing system.

Wanting to avoid a maintenance time bomb, governments are starting to plan 
for the end of the decade, when state and local jurisdictions will probably 
be forced to shoulder most of the costs.

"There's an agreement we're going to start weaning ourselves, such that 
more and more, we'll pick up" the maintenance costs, said Fairfax County 
Executive Anthony H. Griffin, who heads a committee of local government 
administrators working on the grants.

In some cases, officials are slowing homeland security projects while the 
question of upkeep is worked out.

This year, for example, the region asked the U.S. Department of Homeland 
Security for more than $13 million to build a broadband wireless network 
for emergency workers. In the end, officials decided to spend just $1 
million -- on plans that will determine the maintenance costs.

Behind such caution is concern that the anti-terrorism dollars that have 
rained down on the D.C. area in recent years might begin to dry up. Michael 
Chertoff, the homeland security secretary, warned cities recently that the 
grants were not like Social Security checks that would arrive year after year.

"In fact, as communities begin to build their capabilities, we should see 
them getting less money," Chertoff said at a news conference.

The FBI bomb-kit program shows how even the best-intentioned plans to equip 
first responders can go awry over the simple question of maintenance.

The program was requested in 1999 by Congress, which had been alarmed by a 
nerve-gas attack on a Tokyo subway that killed 12 people and sickened 
thousands. Legislators set aside $25 million for the FBI to prepare state 
and local bomb squads to deal with weapons of mass destruction.

The FBI developed a special suitcase of tools that bomb squads could take 
to scenes. The core of the kit was a rugged wireless laptop loaded with 
files describing explosives and chemical and biological agents.

The kit also included a digital camera so technicians could snap a picture 
of any strange device and e-mail it to FBI bomb experts for quick advice.

"It was a unique communication tool," said FBI Special Agent Barbara 
Martinez, a top official in the agency's Critical Incident Response Group.

The "Cobra kits" were handed out to nearly 400 state and local bomb squads 
across the country in 2003. Each came with a prepaid three-year service 
agreement and a one-year wireless card.

But apparently, no one realized that the squads might not have the cash to 
maintain the wireless subscription.

Local officials said it could run $60 a month per kit, totaling a few 
hundred dollars for a squad with several kits. Also, the kits needed 
periodic updates, which could run into the hundreds or thousands of 
dollars, they said.

"It was quite expensive for the local jurisdictions to absorb the cost," 
said Jerry Swain, bomb-squad commander for Loudoun County.

Montgomery's Love said his department had to stop paying for the system in 
2005, just two years after getting it.

"Basically, we're still dealing with the same budget we had 10 years ago, 
except for personnel costs," he said.

The D.C. and Arlington County police bomb squads also dropped the wireless 
subscription. The Prince George's County bomb squad chose to replace that 
system with other technology purchased through federal grants, a spokesman 
said.

Some local squads said they had more pressing needs than maintaining the 
system, which they described as occasionally helpful but not essential.

"To say it's something that's going to make or break us on the scene, I 
would say not," Swain said.

Others said they found the kit valuable because of its wireless connection 
to other bomb experts and its copious reference material.

"We could carry around 10 textbooks, but it's all there" in the computer, 
said Sgt. Thomas Sharkey, Metro's bomb-squad commander. Metro has continued 
to maintain its kits, as have bomb squads run by the Fairfax County police 
and Virginia State Police.

Jeff Fuller, a spokesman for the National Bomb Squad Commanders Advisory 
Board, said that many squads had found the kits too expensive to maintain 
but that he didn't know how many stopped using it. Martinez, the FBI 
official, also said she did not know.

Martinez said the kits were initially successful in teaching bomb 
technicians about weapons of mass destruction. Now, though, some of the 
kits are sitting unused, she acknowledged.

"It is sad -- now you've got that paperweight doorstop out there," she said.

But the FBI made it clear from the start that local and state squads would 
eventually have to pick up the maintenance costs, she said. "Maybe people 
didn't read the fine print," she added.

FBI bomb technicians across the country have continued to maintain their 
kits and can take them to scenes to assist, she said.

Was the project a bad use of $25 million? No, Martinez said, but she added, 
"I wish it came with the maintenance thing."

Because of advances in technology, the 2003 kits would need significant 
upgrades to be effective now, she said.

In this year's application for its homeland security grant, the region's 
bomb squads included a request to upgrade their Cobra kits and pay for 
wireless cards. But local officials say it is not clear whether they would 
use their funding award on the project because they have higher priorities 
for their squads, including protective suits and robots.

"The last thing we want to do is put money into something the grant is not 
going to keep up over time," said Loudoun County Fire Marshal Keith Brower, 
who heads a regional committee overseeing bomb squads. "We're flagging 
those issues right now."


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu




------------------------------

Message: 4
Date: Mon, 13 Aug 2007 14:56:34 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] Aluminum and glass: A review of the new iMac
To: undisclosed-recipient:;
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"


Aluminum and glass: A review of the new iMac
By Eric Bangeman | Published: August 09, 2007 - 01:21AM CT

http://arstechnica.com/reviews/hardware/aluminum-and-glass-a-review-of-the-new-imac.ars




------------------------------

Message: 5
Date: Mon, 13 Aug 2007 17:05:56 -0500
From: Rob <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] 100% Proof Google is Keeping Alternative Media
        Sites   Down
To: Media-News <medianews@twiar.org>,   Tom and Darryl
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

100% Proof Google is Keeping Alternative Media Sites Down

Monday Aug 13, 2007
LUCUS DRADOR
theultimateconspiracy.com

http://www.theultimateconspiracy.com/media_control/proof_google_keeping_conspiracy_sites_down.htm

As if it were not bad enough that we are censored by the main stream 
media, now there's a new type of suppression being implemented upon 
conspiracy related websites and alternative media sources.

It's called Link Relevance Suppression, and it's being used on most of 
the alternative media websites to lower traffic being driven to them by 
the popular search engine Google.

It's also being used in the opposite way to "Promote" Neo-Con supporting 
websites by giving them double the "Link Relevance"

Let me explain how Google indexes sites that go into the search cue when 
someone types in certain keywords relating that site.

Google has many different criteria when it decides how close to the top 
a website gets, but the main and most important one is Link Relevance. 
It simply means in laymen's terms;

The more sites that link to your site, the higher you go on the list.

There is a simple way to check on Google how many other websites are 
linking to your website. You go to Google and type in the word link: 
before the web address, for example;

link:www.theultimateconspiracy.com

Now here is where the proof is that Google has implemented some kind of 
script that is giving all the alternative media sites less that 1/4th of 
the Link Relevance that they deserve.

If you go to Google and simply type in www.yourwebsite.com you will find 
the REAL number of sites that have a link back to your website. This 
does not mean that the sites are being added to the Link Relevance, it 
only shows that they have the link on their website.

Want proof? Let's do some searches of various alternative media related 
websites and see what we get.

Click the links to see results;

link:www.infowars.com
http://www.infowars.com

Now notice that the "Link Search" brings up 2,960 pages that are linked 
back to www.infowars.com, but when you look at the actual numbers of 
sites with links to www.infowars.com the real number is 207,000.

How about;

link:www.prisonplanet.com
www.prisonplanet.com

You get 2,530 "Link Relevance", but the real number is 331,000.

link:www.whatreallyhappened.com
www.whatreallyhappened.com

You get 2,840 "Link Relevance", but the real number is 111,000.

link:www.theultimateconspiracy.com
www.theultimateconspiracy.com

You get 0 "Link Relevance", but the real number is 56.

They are even doing it to popular alternative media sites like 
Huffingtonpost.com

link:www.huffingtonpost.com
www.huffingtonpost.com

You get 47,000 "Link Relevance", but the real number is 851,000.

Now, let's turn the tables and do a link search on a popular Neo-Con 
supporting website called Hotair.com, run by the Fox News Shill Michelle 
Malkin.

link:www.hotair.com
www.hotair.com

You get 11,400 "Link Relevance", and the real number is 526.

How about doing a search on Michelle Malkin's personal site.

link:www.michellemalkin.com
www.michellemalkin.com

You get 38,200 "Link Relevance", and the real number is 15,900.

Notice how the numbers are flipped?

This should have ANY webmaster up in arms. Blatant censorship being 
implemented to keep the alternative media down and promote the Neo-Con 
Draconian agendas.

Did Google not think that somebody would figure this out eventually?

Did they not think that this very noticeable censorship would go 
unchecked forever?

I urge ALL Webmasters, Alternative Media Users, and anybody who cares 
about how sites are indexed on Google to contact them en mass and state 
your dissatisfaction about suppressing "Link Relevance".

If Google gave sites like Infowars.com and Prisonplanet.com the "Link 
Relevance" that they deserve, these alternative media sites would be in 
direct competition with Main Stream Media sites that so dominate the 
Internet as we know it today.

Nothing like beating the competition by eliminating them, right Google?



------------------------------

Message: 6
Date: Mon, 13 Aug 2007 17:07:20 -0500
From: Rob <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] Students in US state of Virginia want to carry
        guns to class
To: Media-News <medianews@twiar.org>,   Tom and Darryl
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

Students in US state of Virginia want to carry guns to class
AFP
Monday Aug 13, 2007

http://rawstory.com/news/afp/Students_in_US_state_of_Virginia_wa_08132007.html

A group of students in the US state of Virginia wants to be allowed to 
carry guns to class, saying it would prevent a repetition of the 
massacre at Virginia Tech in which 33 people died, a press report said 
Monday.

"The students at Tech, they really should have had a chance to defend 
themselves," Andrew Dysart, a former Marine and now final-year student 
at George Mason University in Virginia, was quoted as saying in the 
Express freesheet, published by the Washington Post.

Dysart has set up a chapter of Students for Concealed Carry on Campus 
(SCCC) to press legislators in Virginia to change a state law that 
allows schools and universities to decide whether guns should be allowed 
on campus.

In Virginia, academic institutions can set policies as to whether 
students can carry weapons, but cannot bar non-student, licenced 
gun-owners from bringing their firearms onto school property.

"In a sense, students don't have the same rights to self-defense on 
campus as the general public," Dysart said.

Gun laws in Virginia were slammed as being among the most lax in the 
United States after student Seung-Hui Cho went on a shooting spree on 
the campus of Virginia Tech in April, gunning down 32 fellow students 
and faculty members before taking his own life.

The SCCC is represented at four Virginia campuses, according to its 
website. No chapter was listed for Virginia Tech.



------------------------------

Message: 7
Date: Mon, 13 Aug 2007 17:09:34 -0500
From: Rob <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] National ID? How about a global ID?
To: Media-News <medianews@twiar.org>,   Tom and Darryl
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

National ID? How about a global ID?
Maggie Biggs
InfoWorld

http://computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&taxonomyName=security&articleId=9030038&taxonomyId=17&intsrc=kc_feat

The Federation for Identity and Cross-Credentialing Systems (FiXs) -- a 
little-known group of nonprofits, government contractors, commercial 
entities, and government agencies -- has just unveiled a 
first-of-its-kind global infrastructure to support distributed, 
integrated identity management and cross-credentialing across 
organizations. The implementation combines several existing security 
technologies along with a set of trusted models, policies, and operating 
rules to insure the accurate identity of personnel accessing physical 
sites or logical systems.

Already in a pilot mode at a handful of government agencies and defense 
contractors, the FiXs identity management initiative does not have a 
hard date for broad deployment, although the impediments do not appear 
to be technical. "The cultural gap with the public in general is still 
too wide," said Dr. Mike Mestrovich, president of FiXs. "I think there 
would have to be a public consensus to move us in that direction and I 
don't see that happening until at least 2009 or beyond."

Founded in 2004 and based in Fairfax, Va., FiXs counts among its members 
the Department of Defense, Wells Fargo, Lockheed Martin, EDS, and 
several others. Modeled after secure electronic payment systems and 
initially implemented by the DOD's Defense Manpower Data Center (DMDC), 
the FiXs initiative meets the objectives set forth in the October 2006 
Homeland Security Presidential Directive (HSPD-12).

"Until now, cross-bordering policies between government and industry had 
not been established," said Mary Dixon, director at the DMDC. The FiXs 
implementation does not assign roles, grant or deny access, or otherwise 
act as a gatekeeper. Rather, the mission of FiXs is simply to 
authenticate the identity of participants within its member 
organizations. Once verified by FiXs, individual site managers and 
systems administrators assign or designate access controls based on the 
role of the individual and the policies of a given organization.

FiXs' capabilities allow it to cross between both public and private 
sector organizations using a federated trust model. The implementation 
is available worldwide in local or remote settings via both wireless and 
wired environments. Access is available in real time. An individual's 
specific identity data remains within their vetted source organization.

"By its very nature, the federated solution aids in privacy because 
there is no central database and individual data can be stored in only 
one [vetted] place," Dr. Mestrovich said. Yet the distributed design and 
cross-organizational model found in the FiXs implementation does offer 
the possibility of a future national or international identity 
management system that might cross borders and organizational 
boundaries. "The federated approach can actually take the place of a 
mandated National ID system," Dr. Mestrovich stated.

Still, the head of FiXs does not see a national or international 
identity management implementation as a near-term reality for a couple 
of reasons. First, no schedule has been defined to implement such a 
system on the federal, state, or local level, let alone among the 
broader private sector. "We are speaking to a couple of States about 
using FiXs, but no timetable has been set," Dr. Mestrovich said.

More to the point, even though the federated identity management 
approach could power a national or international system, policy and 
implementation agreements would be needed among federal, state, and 
local government agencies as well as corporate governance boards, civil 
libertarians, foreign governments, and the population at large.

The initial DMDC pilot leverages the trust model, operating rules, 
policies, and security defined by FiXs and it can be considered a 
reference implementation. Several technologies underpin this early 
federated identify management and cross-credentialing deployment. Among 
these is the Common Access Card (CAC), which contains individual 
information housed in a barcode and within an integrated circuit chip. 
The card is used to secure both physical sites and for systems access.

In this implementation, CAC is combined with the Defense Biometric 
Identity System (DBIDS) to accurately identify personnel -- whether full 
time employees (FTEs) or contractors. Beyond CAC and the DBIDS, FiXs 
also includes cross reference capabilities that include photographs, 
textual, and fingerprint data. Industry standard encryption is used to 
secure the identity management process.

The FiXs organization currently has just under thirty member 
organizations, but the group is open to additional members. With this 
early implementation, group members can help to shape identity 
management policies and technologies as FiXs begins to be leveraged by a 
broader number of public entities and private sector firms



------------------------------

Message: 8
Date: Mon, 13 Aug 2007 18:09:44 -0500
From: George Antunes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] FCC Rules Allow One Bidder To Buy More Than Half
        of      Spectrum
To: medianews@twiar.org
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset=us-ascii

FCC Rules Allow One Bidder To Buy More Than Half of Spectrum

By COREY BOLES
Wall Street Journal

August 13, 2007 5:45 p.m.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB118703822661296303.html?mod=technology_main_whats_news&apl=y


WASHINGTON -- A single company could bid for more than half the lucrative 
spectrum to be auctioned off by the Federal Communications Commission after 
the final rules for the sale failed to include a provision prohibiting this 
from occurring.

There had been pressure on FCC policymakers to include such a rule to 
ensure that an incumbent wireless carrier such as Verizon Wireless or AT&T 
Inc. wouldn't be able to take the lion's share of the spectrum being sold.

Potential new entrants to the market, such as Google Inc., as well as a 
handful of public interest groups had been pushing the FCC to include the rule.

Two sections make up 32 megahertz of the 62 megahertz of prized airwaves 
being sold off. They include one 22-megahertz swath with so-called 
open-access requirements attached -- which is actually six separate pieces 
that can be added together, and another 10-megahertz chunk that will be 
used to provide wireless broadband service to the emergency services 
community, with any spare capacity able to be used for commercial purposes.

The remaining 30 megahertz has been broken up into several hundred 
licenses. They are likely to be bought by smaller or rural wireless 
carriers that couldn't afford to bid for the larger sections.

Ultimately, the FCC decided not to include such a rule after public safety 
representatives voiced concern that such a rule might limit interest in the 
10 megahertz of airwaves that affects them, according to an FCC official.

The official, who was speaking on the condition of anonymity, said public 
safety representatives said they feared that if large bidders were forced 
to choose between the 22-megahertz chunk and the 10-megahertz one, they 
would choose the former.

The absence of a rule prohibiting a major swoop by a bidder doesn't mean 
such a move is likely. It would cost upward of $7.5 billion if the forecast 
price for the entire 62 megahertz of airwaves is correct.

But Verizon Wireless in particular is known to be keen to acquire 
substantial amounts of spectrum to bolster its development of 
fourth-generation, or 4G, wireless broadband service.

"It would have been very wise to include such a rule, because even if it 
would be unlikely, the fact that a big player would have to choose between 
one strategy or another would have bolstered other potential participants," 
said Harold Roth, senior vice president of Media Access Project, the public 
interest group.

Roth said that without this restriction, an incumbent wireless company 
could decide to buy the 10 megahertz and also aim to pick up one or two of 
the six licenses comprising the 22-megahertz national section.

The auction, which must be completed by the end of January 2008, is widely 
seen as the last chance for a potential new entrant to the wireless 
broadband market to be able to acquire enough spectrum to compete on a 
national basis.

The rules for the much-anticipated auction were published by the Federal 
Communications Commission last week.

Verizon Wireless, jointly owned by Verizon Communications Inc. and the 
U.K.'s Vodafone PLC, declined to comment for this article.


=================================================
George Antunes                    Voice (713) 743-3923
Associate Professor               Fax   (713) 743-3927
Political Science                    Internet: antunes at uh dot edu
University of Houston
Houston, TX 77204-3011         




------------------------------

Message: 9
Date: Mon, 13 Aug 2007 18:11:10 -0500
From: George Antunes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] In Defense of Gadgetry
To: medianews@twiar.org
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset=iso-8859-1

In Defense of Gadgetry
Forget Critiques of Our Love of Tech Toys:
The Truth Is That Technology's a Lot of Fun

By Jason Fry
Wall Street Journal

August 13, 2007

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB118675395788594279.html?mod=technology_featured_stories_hs



Not long ago I spent a few days in Maine with my folks in their house in 
the woods. It's an annual trip that gives my son a chance to see 
hummingbirds, chipmunks and other forest critters and gives me a period of 
withdrawal from connection addiction -- cellphone reception is poor at the 
house, and dial-up's the rule for the Net. (I wrote about the annual Maine 
trip in more detail last summer.)

I often find myself talking about the Maine trip as an enforced vacation 
from all things digital -- a mildly disorienting but not-unwelcome time-out 
from the care and feeding of gadgets, the summons of little envelope icons 
and the ceaseless checking and rechecking of Web sites to see if anything's 
changed. It's an easy thing to say, and saying it almost invariably gets 
nods and clucks of empathy from friends who feel similarly over-connected.

There's just one problem: I'm not sure it's true.

It's not that I don't appreciate hummingbirds and quiet woods and long 
books -- I do. But at least this year, my wannabe Thoreauism was nonsense. 
I wanted to spend time futzing with my favorite Web sites and gadgets, and 
it wasn't just the pull of habit -- after all, I happily abandoned plenty 
of other routines up in Maine. But I genuinely missed being connected.

Which got me wondering about the rest of our technological poor-mouthing. 
It's almost automatic to survey the endless march of gadgetry and conclude 
that we're slaves to our stuff, that having more makes us want more, and as 
a result we're never happy. But for many of us, this is a pose. It's a 
defense mechanism we can easily do without -- because in fact, it's the 
defense mechanism that makes us unhappy.

Ready to escape this digital dissatisfaction? It's easy. Just repeat after 
me: Playing with this stuff is fun. Staying connected is fun.

It's another hallmark of our times that adults are increasingly happy 
acting nowhere near their age, whether they're nodding along with their 
Nanos, dressing like just-fell-outta-bed college kids or playing Xbox. 
(Here's the definitive essay on so-called grups, by New York's Adam 
Sternbergh.) For many of these Peter Pans -- and I admit to being one of 
them -- the digital world and its associated gadgets are the stuff of 
grown-up play.

And why shouldn't they be? The slow creep of technology can obscure the 
fact that our world would have been unimaginable not so long ago. Life is 
fundamentally different than it was before Google, before widespread email 
and IM, before cellphones, before TiVo, before digital music. Increasingly, 
we get most any question we can put into words answered, communicate with 
friends and family across the globe any time and from anywhere, watch TV 
and movies on our schedules and carry gigantic libraries of every 
conceivable genre of music in our pockets. If you're still sore about the 
fact that moonbases and flying cars haven't materialized, look closer to 
home at the wonders that have arrived. I can't imagine going back to the 
way life was before those inventions found their way into my life. I'd be 
miserable if I had to.

This isn't to say any of these life-changing technologies are perfect, or 
to deny their unwelcome and unforeseen side effects. Not every answer found 
through Google is correct, much of the world's email is spam, our 
cellphones drop calls, getting the cable company to send out CableCards for 
your new TiVo can be infuriating, and we digital-music fans miss our album 
covers. More generally, new technologies are too hard to use -- it's no fun 
paying companies to beta-test their products. And even when gadgets do work 
as advertised, we worry about being tracked and stalked, about identity 
theft, about how to keep our kids safe, about social bonds and decorum in 
the digital age.

But few people I know would turn their backs on new technologies because of 
such misgivings. By now we understand that some or many of the new things 
we see and want won't be perfect, and that we'll wind up maintaining them. 
And we know that in finding new ways of doing things, we'll inevitably 
regret some of the ways things used to be. But by and large we accept this 
? because technology is worth it.

We want to be connected, and we want to have new things. Sure, we sometimes 
get starry-eyed about gadgets as status symbols, or hunger to keep up with 
whomever we think we're competing with. But writing off gadgetry and 
connection addiction as mere consumerism or product churn misses much of 
its appeal. We have seen again and again that today's science fiction is 
tomorrow's normal life, and we've come to enjoy playing with technology as 
it's transformed from one to the other. We're part of that transformation, 
and we want to see what will happen.

We see something new or new to us -- whether it's an iPhone, the revamped 
iMovie, satellite radio, a location-based "friend finder" service, 
text-messaging Google for a sports score or someone finding their voice on 
a blog -- and we think, "I want to do that." Does that go hand in hand with 
consumerism, or conspicuous consumption, or whatever derisive label you 
want to give it? Of course it does. But does it tell the whole story? Of 
course not. We really are embarked on a grand technological adventure. Why 
on earth would we want to miss it?


=================================================
George Antunes                    Voice (713) 743-3923
Associate Professor               Fax   (713) 743-3927
Political Science                    Internet: antunes at uh dot edu
University of Houston
Houston, TX 77204-3011         




------------------------------

Message: 10
Date: Mon, 13 Aug 2007 18:39:46 -0500
From: George Antunes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] FCC Tested Defective Prototype Device
To: medianews@twiar.org
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset=us-ascii

FCC Tested Defective Prototype Device

Aug 13, 2007  6:23 PM (ET)

By DIBYA SARKAR
Associated Press

http://apnews.myway.com//article/20070813/D8R0DKF00.html



WASHINGTON (AP) - Microsoft Corp. on Monday gave a simple reason why its 
prototype for beaming high-speed Internet service over unused television 
airways failed a government test: the device was broken.

The Federal Communications Commission said on July 31 that the device did 
not reliably detect unoccupied spectrum and could interfere with other TV 
programming and wireless microphone signals.

On Monday, Microsoft sent the agency a letter explaining that a subsequent 
test determined the equipment was defective.

Representatives for Microsoft and other technology companies met with FCC 
engineers last week and determined the device "was working improperly and 
an internal component was broken," Microsoft's managing director for 
government affairs, Jack Krumholtz, said in a statement on Monday.

"This accounted for the FCC's aberrant test results," Krumholtz said.

An FCC spokesman declined to comment on the matter.

Microsoft said in an FCC filing that it sent a duplicate device that was 
functioning properly, but that the agency never tested it.

Microsoft is part of a coalition of companies that wants to beam high-speed 
Internet service through unoccupied TV channels, also known as "white spaces."

The coalition submitted two prototype devices, one developed by Microsoft 
and another developed by Phillips Electronics North America Corp., a 
division of Netherlands-based Royal Philips Electronics NV.

The coalition said the Philips device was able to detect both TV and 
wireless microphone signals in a laboratory setting.

The FCC's engineering office plans to hold a hearing Thursday to provide an 
overview of the tests and consider suggestions for further evaluation of 
the devices.

While FCC Chairman Kevin Martin said he wants the white spaces to be 
utilized, he's facing resistance from TV broadcasters, who fear that it 
won't work and would cause problems with TV programming and with a 
federally mandated transition from analog to digital signals in early 2009.

The coalition said it's confident the FCC will be able to designate the 
white spaces for high-speed Internet service, which would be accessible and 
affordable especially in rural areas.

According to its timetable, the FCC could adopt rules for operating 
unlicensed devices in the white-space spectrum by October and start 
certifying similar devices that meets its technical requirement. In any 
case, no devices would go on sale before the digital TV transition in 
February 2009.

In addition to Microsoft and Philips, the technology coalition includes 
Google Inc., Dell Inc., Hewlett-Packard Co., Intel Corp. and EarthLink Inc.


=================================================
George Antunes                    Voice (713) 743-3923
Associate Professor               Fax   (713) 743-3927
Political Science                    Internet: antunes at uh dot edu
University of Houston
Houston, TX 77204-3011         




------------------------------

Message: 11
Date: Mon, 13 Aug 2007 19:10:38 -0700
From: Dishnut <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] Ariane 5 / Spaceway 3 & B-SAT 3A Upcoming Launch
        Coverage Tuesday (8-14) @ 7:15pm ET. Galaxy-10R (12146.5 V) SR: 6.111
        DVB
To: Medianews <medianews@twiar.org>,    Satellite TV Wild Feeds List
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,    Tom & Darryl Mail List
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,    TVRO Newsgroup <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
        TVRO Talk Newsgroup <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,        WildFeeds List
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

Tuesday (8-14) Arianespace is set to launch, a Ariane 5 ECA (v.177) 
with Spaceway 3  for Hughes Network Systems, LLC. and B-SAT 3A  for 
Japan's B-SAT Corporation, , from ELA-3, Kourou, French Guiana, South 
America.

Launch is set for 7:44 p.m. EDT. with a window extending to 8:21 p.m. EDT.

Spacecraft separation for Spaceway 3  is expected 27 minutes after lift 
off and 34 minutes after liftoff for B-SAT 3A.

Spaceway 3, is a BSS 702 - 2000 platform, built by Boeing Satellite 
Systems, Inc. in El Segundo, California equipped with a digital signal 
processor with 10Gbps router,includes onboard dynamic multi-beam 
switching to deliver bandwidth-on-demand, as well as direct site-to-site 
mesh networking. Spaceway 3 will be located at 95? West.

B-SAT 3A is a  A2100 A platform  built by Lockheed Martin Commercial 
Space Systems in Newtown, Pennsylvania, has 12 130-watt Ku-band channels 
(with eight operating at one time). B-SAT 3A will be located 110? East.

DVB Broadcast coverage:

Galaxy 10R at 123?W transponder 23Ku (12146.5 V)  SR: 6.111

Test feed starts at 4:45 to 5:15 pm EDT.

Broadcast starts around 7:15 p.m. EDT.

If you dont have a dish, there will be a live webcast of the launch 
available at:
http://www.videocorner.tv/index.php?langue=en

Additional coverage at:

http://www.spaceflightnow.com/ariane/v177/status.html
http://www.space.com/missionlaunches/launches/next_launch.html
http://www.arianespace.com/site/news/news_sub_missionupdate_index.html
http://www.arianespace.com/site/news/news_sub_launchkit_index.html

-- 

Dishnut-P

====================================================================
Operator of RadioFree Dishnuts - Producer of The Dishnut News
              heard Saturdays at 10pm ET. on:
RFD, W0KIE Satellite Radio Network Galaxy-26 (Telstar 6) @93? W - 
Transponder 1 / 6.2 & 6.8Mhz (4DTV T6-999) also via Digicipher on AMC 3 
@87? W - Transponder 7 4DTV (DSR-922) W3 958 (Stereo) - WTND-LP 106.3, 
and many micro LPFM stations.
http://dishnuts.net
RFD Listen Links: http://dishnuts.net/#Listen
Show Archives: (Partly Up) http://dishnuts.net/archive/

    **In Loving Memory of Mom (Dishnut Gerry)**



------------------------------

Message: 12
Date: Mon, 13 Aug 2007 22:41:28 -0400
From: Greg Williams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Medianews] Artists, promote thyself
To: medianews@twiar.org
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

Artist, promote thyself
Thanks to new Web businesses, musicians can reach a bigger audience -- 
and keep more of the profits for themselves
http://www.boston.com/business/technology/articles/2007/08/13/artist_promote_thyself?mode=PF

By Jenn Abelson, Globe Staff  |  August 13, 2007

A full-time career in music seemed unlikely for Chris O'Brien, or at 
least one that would pay the bills.

But these days, the 27-year-old Medford musician is selling thousands of 
albums online, along with downloads from his debut CD, "Lighthouse," and 
he soon plans to offer T-shirts, tickets, and other merchandise on his 
MySpace page and personal website.

He credits at least part of his newfound business acumen to nimbit, a 
sales, promotion, and distribution company in Framingham that helps 
emerging artists build careers online.

"This is the era of the independent artist," O'Brien said. "It's easier 
and more doable than it ever has been. People are opting to remain 
independent because there's a lot more money to be had."

Nimbit is one of a growing number of businesses, including CD Baby and 
Musictoday, that have helped make it easier for independent musicians to 
make a living from their work and widely distribute their music.

It is the brainchild of Patrick Faucher and Matt Silbert, who worked for 
a Web firm, Stumpworld Systems, which developed some of the first 
e-commerce sites for bands such as Phish and Aerosmith.

About five years ago, they decided to design a platform to help budding 
bands, so they set out to take some of the features created for the 
major acts and build a suite of Web tools that independent artists could 
use.

Soon after, they merged with Artist Development Associates and added 
direct-to-fan sales, along with production and promotion services, 
creating a one-stop solution for artists to run their businesses.

In June, nimbit introduced its online merchandise table, the first 
portable Web store that lets musicians sell CDs, DVDS, MP3s, 
merchandise, and e-tickets from a single point of purchase, virtually 
anywhere online. The tool can easily be embedded in any website, blog, 
or e-mail that allows widgets.

"Increasingly, recording artists and consumers are uniting and 
circumventing traditional channels for creating and distributing music," 
said Mike Goodman, a media and entertainment analyst at Yankee Group in 
Boston. "These days, musicians can do business directly with consumers. 
They don't need a recording label. They don't need a store. They don't 
need Ticketmaster, the way they used to."

Just a few years ago, Steve Roslonek, of Wethersfield, Conn., was 
getting e-mail orders for his CDs and going to the post office once a 
week to send of the packages. His growing success as a children's 
musician made it almost impossible to keep up with the requests. With 
the help of nimbit over the past several years, he has earned more than 
$100,000 from sales of CDs, tickets, and merchandise.

The most recent service added, selling e-tickets to shows from his 
website, is a huge benefit for artists like Roslonek, who don't play at 
traditional concert venues. He expects to sell 75 percent of his tickets 
that way for a show in Arlington this fall.

Though Roslonek was signed last year to a local independent label, 
Rounder Records, he still uses many of nimbit's services to help sell 
his work, merchandise, and tickets online.

"There's really no barriers anymore for success," Roslonek said. "This 
allows me to spend a lot more time on writing, producing. It takes away 
a lot of the tasks as your career builds."

Artists can get started for free with nimbit's basic service, which 
allows them to sell digital products only, such as MP3 tracks.

Or, for as little as $4.95 a month, musicians can sign up for a plan 
that lets them sell all products and distribute across the Web, 
including to commercial stores like iTunes.

Prices vary for premium services, which offer complete website 
management and e-mail marketing features.

Several artists said nimbit charges $2 to $4 for each CD sold, less than 
rival businesses charge.

"Technology is not only creating a myriad of options for fans to 
discover and buy, but it is also making it possible for more artists to 
get in the game more quickly without any label affiliation," Faucher said.

"There is a rapidly emerging middle class of artists that are building 
fan bases and creating a business directly with them. This creates a 
huge need for better tools that can optimize this process for the artist 
and the teams they employ."

-- 

Gregory S. Williams
gregwilliams(at)knology.net
k4hsm(at)knology.net

http://www.etskywarn.net
http://www.twiar.org
http://www.icebearnation.com





------------------------------

_______________________________________________
Medianews mailing list
Medianews@twiar.org
http://twiar.org/mailman/listinfo/medianews_twiar.org


End of Medianews Digest, Vol 354, Issue 1
*****************************************

Reply via email to