TidBITS#661/06-Jan-03
=====================
Happy New Year! Most of the staff is en route to Macworld Expo,
and we have some updated appearance schedules. Also in this issue,
Adam looks at what's ahead in the computer industry for 2003, and
also starts employing Habeas headers to thwart spam. Contributing
Editor Mark Anbinder looks at Virtual PC 6, and we note the
releases (and a few snags) of Mac OS X 10.2.3, iCal 1.0.2,
and iSync 1.0. We hope to see you at Macworld!
Topics:
MailBITS/06-Jan-03
TidBITS Using Habeas Headers
Virtual PC 6 Fits In and Performs
Back to 2002, Forward to 2003
<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-661.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/2003/TidBITS#661_06-Jan-03.etx>
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MailBITS/06-Jan-03
------------------
**Apple Releases Mac OS X 10.2.3 Update** -- Apple wrapped up 2002
with the release of Mac OS X 10.2.3, a hefty update that rolls a
number of improvements and bug fixes in to Jaguar. Some changes
include compatibility fixes between the Mac and certain digital
cameras or external CD burners, as well as enhancements to
applications such as iPhoto, iChat, Mail, Disk Utility, and Disk
Copy. Mac OS X 10.2.3 also offers better iDisk performance over
slow or busy network connections, updates Rendezvous networking,
and makes the changes necessary for the improvements in
Connectix's Virtual PC 6. The update is available as a mammoth
51 MB download via Software Update; stand-alone installers
have also been posted for updating from Mac OS X 10.2.2 or from
versions 10.2 or 10.2.1 (59 MB). Prompted by discussion on TidBITS
Talk and some personal experience, we recommend running Disk First
Aid on your hard disk before installing the update, particularly
if you've updated all the way from Mac OS X 10.0. [JLC]
<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=107263>
<http://www.info.apple.com/kbnum/n120165>
<http://www.info.apple.com/kbnum/n120164>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=1815>
**Apple Updates iCal, iSync** -- Two of Apple's flashier
announcements at the July 2002 Macworld Expo have finally become
more usable, just in time for the January 2003 Expo. iCal 1.0.2
brings sorely needed performance improvements to the calendar
application, including speedier launch times and better importing
capabilities (meaning, at least in our case, iCal now correctly
imports vCal and Microsoft Entourage files). iCal 1.0.1, released
earlier last week, didn't work properly for users in time zones
10 hours or more from Greenwich Mean Time. Although the release
notes for version 1.0.2 do not specifically mention this
particular fix, Apple removed a notice from the iCal download
page about the problem, so we assume this was a reason for
releasing another update so quickly. iCal 1.0.2 is a free
10.4 MB download.
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06880>
<http://www.apple.com/ical/>
Apple also posted iSync 1.0, the release version of its
synchronization utility that has been in beta since 30-Sep-02.
iSync now boasts faster syncing with Palm OS devices, better
Palm configuration options within iSync (you need the HotSync
component of Palm Desktop 4.0), automatic synchronization with
a .Mac account, .Mac Address Book synchronization, and an iSync
menu bar icon. (In our testing, iSync has been remarkably slow
and processor intensive.) Beginning 07-Jan-02, .Mac account
holders will be able to access their Address Book information
via the Web. iSync 1.0 is a 5.1 MB download. [JLC]
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06946>
<http://www.apple.com/isync/>
**More Macworld Events** -- This is why I take my iBook with me on
vacation: things happen! First Creo contacted me to renew their
TidBITS sponsorship for Six Degrees, and then a flurry of email
resulted in more Expo events. So, for those looking to chat with
Glenn and me about The Wireless Networking Starter Kit or any
other wireless networking related topic, you can drop by the
DevDepot booth (#3761) at 3:00 PM on Wednesday, 08-Jan-03. They'll
be selling copies of the book that we're happy to sign, and if
you miss us there (or are just shy, even though we don't bite),
both DevDepot and the Macintosh-savvy wireless networking vendor
MacWireless (booth #1646) will have signed copies of the book.
Finally, for people not at the show, Glenn and I will be on the
ScreenSavers show on TechTV on Friday. We're taping from 4:00 PM
to 5:00 PM, but I'm not sure what that means for when it will be
on your cable system. Check local listings. [ACE]
<http://www.devdepot.com/>
<http://www.macwireless.com/>
TidBITS Using Habeas Headers
----------------------------
by Adam C. Engst <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
The spam pandemic has grown to epic proportions. In 2002, I
received over 23,000 spam messages (about 35 percent of my mail),
and that's even after employing the Mail Abuse Prevention System
RBL+ realtime blackhole list and a handful of other conservative
server-side spam filters on our primary mail server. There's no
question that my address is both older (it hasn't changed since
I switched away from the UUCP style <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) and more
widely published than most, but my exposure generally means I'm
just ahead of the curve. If you're not getting a lot of spam now,
you're both lucky and living on borrowed time.
<http://mail-abuse.org/rbl/>
<http://www.eudora.co.nz/eimsfilters.html>
**Think Positive** -- Nevertheless, although I don't see the
amount of spam dropping for a while yet, I think we've turned
the corner in developing the basic concepts that will eliminate
most spam from our lives - at least when those concepts are
intelligently combined and implemented. These concepts include
so-called Bayesian filtering, which attempts to predict the
likelihood that a message is spam by the frequencies with which
certain words occur; whitelists, which allow mail through only
when it comes from people from whom you've received legitimate
mail in the past; and challenge/response systems, which require
that new senders authenticate themselves before their mail reaches
you. Also potentially useful deterrents are the various U.S.
state anti-spam laws and the lawsuits against spammers they make
possible; well-run blackhole lists that let mail servers refuse
to accept connections from other mail servers that have been
compromised by spammers; and the combination of proper default
settings and network administrator education that has cut down
on the number of open relays for spammers to exploit.
<http://www.paulgraham.com/spam.html>
<http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/linux/library/l-spamf.html>
Note that I explicitly do not include arbitrary server-side
content filtering in that list of potentially useful approaches
to controlling spam. Creating server-side filters that reject
mail based on the inclusion of a word or two merely because the
administrator has seen those words in spam is more damaging
to the overall utility of email than spam itself. Geoff Duncan
brought this problem to light with "Email Filtering: Killing
the Killer App" back in TidBITS-637_; that article triggered
widespread coverage in mainstream media outlets such as the
New York Times, the Newhouse News Service, and more.
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06866>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06869>
<http://www.nytimes.com/2002/07/15/technology/15SPAM.html>
Our efforts at educating the public to the dangers of arbitrary
content filters certainly don't hurt, but the problem continues.
Our recent gift issue was rejected by one mail server (which will
undoubtedly do so again with this issue) because the word "cows"
appeared in the text. (Ironically, it wasn't even in relation to
the worthy Heifer Project charity, but to a comment about the game
Tropico.) In an effort to avoid losing subscribers when these
content filter rejections trigger our bounce automation, we've
taken to trying to switch impacted subscribers to the announcement
version of TidBITS, which is much more likely to slip past content
filters purely on the basis of containing many fewer words.
**Cue Habeas** -- There's one more new tool that we've just
started to employ. A new company called Habeas, started by TidBITS
author Dan Kohn, has come up with "sender warranted email." The
idea is that, with the addition of nine specific header lines to
your messages, you can warrant that your outgoing email is not
spam. ISPs, email providers, spam filters, and even individual
recipients can then trust that any incoming message that contains
Habeas headers is legitimate.
<http://www.habeas.com/>
Here's what the Habeas headers look like.
X-Habeas-SWE-1: winter into spring
X-Habeas-SWE-2: brightly anticipated
X-Habeas-SWE-3: like Habeas SWE (tm)
X-Habeas-SWE-4: Copyright 2002 Habeas (tm)
X-Habeas-SWE-5: Sender Warranted Email (SWE) (tm). The sender of this
X-Habeas-SWE-6: email in exchange for a license for this Habeas
X-Habeas-SWE-7: warrant mark warrants that this is a Habeas Compliant
X-Habeas-SWE-8: Message (HCM) and not spam. Please report use of this
X-Habeas-SWE-9: mark in spam to <http://www.habeas.com/report/>.
"But but but...," I can hear you saying. "What prevents spammers
from simply adding the Habeas headers to spam as well?" Nothing.
Well, except for the thousandweight of lawyers that Habeas plans
to drop on anyone who does so, basing such lawsuits on both
copyright and trademark law. Habeas can do this because the
Habeas headers include a copyrighted three-line haiku and several
trademarks. In addition, Habeas will add any infringers to a
DNS-based blacklist that doesn't suffer from some of the legal
problems that have plagued other blacklists.
I'm waiting with bated breath to see how Habeas handles the
first infringers. My experience with suing a spammer under the
Washington State anti-spam law wasn't great because I couldn't
expend the money, time, and effort to carry the suit through to
the most satisfactory conclusion. In contrast, Habeas has venture
capital and significant incentive to make examples of infringers,
so they're likely to have a better chance of running the spammers
to ground and extracting financial penalties from them. By basing
the protection on copyright and trademark law, Habeas avoids the
many variations on state anti-spam laws and doesn't have to wait
for federal legislation that may be too little and is already too
late. Plus, international copyright law offers similar protections
everywhere but Afghanistan, Bhutan, Ethiopia, Iran, Iraq, Nepal,
Oman, San Marino, Tonga, and Yemen. On the collection side, Habeas
plans to turn spammers over to the collection agency Dun &
Bradstreet for maximum extraction.
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1167>
Although there are some high-profile spammers who are making very
real money at spam (but are stupid enough to give their real names
in interviews, opening themselves up to real world harassment from
furious spam victims), I doubt Habeas will end up making
significant money from successful lawsuits. Most spammers simply
don't have deep pockets. However, Habeas does earn money from
licensing the Habeas headers to businesses. Licenses are free for
individuals and ISPs that warrant that all their email is not
spam; other companies pay $200 per year for a license unless their
business revolves around sending verified opt-in commercial email,
at which point the license is based on the number of recipients.
<http://www.habeas.com/services/swe.htm>
**Practical Habeas** -- From a user's standpoint, you need to know
two things about Habeas: how to add Habeas headers to your email
messages (remember, it's free for individuals) and how to filter
Habeas warranted messages. The details vary significantly with the
software you use for email, but Habeas has developed instructions
and plug-ins for many common pieces of email software (it's just
a matter of dropping a plug-in into the appropriate folder with
Eudora, for instance), and they're happy to post user-submitted
instructions for additional programs. Also, many email programs
hide unusual headers by default, and for those programs that
don't, Habeas also offers instructions for hiding the Habeas
headers so you don't have to look at them in every message.
<http://www.habeas.com/support/install.htm>
What are we hoping to get out of adding Habeas headers to our
mailing lists? Quite simply, less damage due to errant spam
filters. Habeas is working with many of the vendors of server-
side spam filters to encourage them to whitelist Habeas compliant
messages, and we hope that anyone who has gone to the effort of
rolling their own spam filters will do the same to reduce the
incidence of false positive spam identification. I encourage
everyone who's concerned about spam to sign up for a free
individual Habeas license, and for anyone working on anti-spam
tools, make sure your tools whitelist Habeas compliant messages
as well.
There's no question that the use of Habeas headers will not
eliminate the spam problem overnight, but when combined with the
other tools and techniques that have started to appear, it should
make a difference.
PayBITS: Want to support TidBITS in our ongoing fight against
spam? Consider supporting TidBITS by contributing via Kagi!
<http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/contributors.html>
Read more about PayBITS: <http://www.tidbits.com/paybits/>
Virtual PC 6 Fits In and Performs
---------------------------------
by Mark H. Anbinder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
On 18-Dec-02, Connectix Corporation released a new version of
Virtual PC, the company's PC emulation software. Virtual PC 6
focuses on improving the integration between Macintosh and Windows
operating systems, and on boosting performance, especially under
Mac OS X 10.2 Jaguar.
<http://www.connectix.com/products/vpc6m.html>
**Dockworkers Unite** -- Mac OS X users can take advantage of
Virtual PC 6's most obvious features: several ways of interacting
with the Dock. In addition to the Virtual PC application icon
itself appearing when the program's running (like any other),
icons for each Windows application you launch also appear in the
Dock. Windows application icons may be kept in the Dock for ease
of launching Virtual PC when it's not running. Best of all is a
separate icon for the Windows Start menu, which appears in the
Dock whether or not Virtual PC is running. This icon gives you
access to everything in your Start menu, such as Windows
applications, documents, settings, and whatever else you've
got in there. (And yes, you can turn these Dock integration
features off.)
Our immediate thought, upon seeing the new Dock integration
features, was that a future version of Virtual PC should take the
next step and run individual Windows applications in their own
windows, just as individual Classic applications run in their own
windows with their own distinctive menu bars. (A good intermediate
step would be for the Dock icons to let you change which
application is frontmost within VPC's Windows environment, which
doesn't work now.) Obviously, there are times when it makes more
sense to emulate the full Windows environment, but for those
Virtual PC users who use a single Windows application, it could be
far more convenient to avoid using Windows entirely. Such a change
would require a significant development effort from Connectix, so
if you would find such a feature helpful in your use of Virtual
PC, make sure to let them know.
Connectix says the overall performance of Virtual PC 6 is about
25 percent faster, thanks partly to changes Apple made in Jaguar.
(The speed boost requires Mac OS X 10.2.3.)
We're delighted to see the return of the capability to mount
Virtual PC drive images in the Finder. However, it's unfortunate
that drives cannot be mounted if they are part of either an active
or saved PC environment. The "save state" feature of Virtual PC,
which lets you pause your Windows environment at any time and
return to it later without having to wait for Windows to start
up all over again, is one of its strongest capabilities -
discouraging users from the habit of saving their PC's state
every time they're ready to quit Virtual PC seems a shame.
(To mount a drive image that's part of a saved state, the user
must first restore the PC from its saved state, and shut down
Windows.)
TidBITS readers often remind us that, while the vast majority of
new product announcements focus on Mac OS X compatibility, there's
still a large installed base of Mac OS 9 users. Such folks will be
happy to note that Virtual PC still supports Mac OS 9. The
capability to use the same PC configuration, drive images, and
even saved states, whether you're in Mac OS 9 or Mac OS X at any
given moment, is a wonderful boon to those who often switch their
computers between the two operating systems. (At least Virtual PC
won't be the application forcing you to switch!)
Lastly, Virtual PC is famous for supporting many more monitor
resolutions than that of average video card drivers, including the
wide-format screens of the PowerBook G4 with its 1280 by 854 LCD.
Virtual PC 6 adds support for newer displays like the Apple 23-
inch HD Cinema Display, at 1920 by 1200 pixels.
**Buying and Upgrading** -- Virtual PC 6 costs $130 for the PC DOS
edition, $220 for the Windows XP Home or Windows 98 editions, $250
for the Windows 2000 and Windows XP Pro editions, or $100 for an
upgrade-only package (with no DOS or Windows OS included). The
upgrade and DOS editions are available immediately; packages with
various Windows operating systems should be starting to reach
resellers soon.
Virtual PC users who purchased Virtual PC 5.0 on 01-Nov-02 or
later (through 31-Mar-03) are eligible for a discounted upgrade
upon faxing or mailing an eligibility form along with appropriate
documentation. The upgrade costs $5 for an electronic download,
$10 for physical shipment within the U.S. or Canada, or $20 for
shipment to other parts of the world.
<http://www.connectix.com/products/vpc6m_specialupgrade.html>
PayBITS: Considering a VPC upgrade? If Mark's article helped
you decide, consider tipping him a buck or three via PayPal!
<https://www.paypal.com/xclick/business=mha%4014850.com>
Back to 2002, Forward to 2003
-----------------------------
by Adam C. Engst <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Last year at about this time, I made a few predictions about what
I thought the top stories of 2002 would be (see "Peering Into
2002's Tea Leaves" in TidBITS-612_). Overall, I did pretty well,
particularly in saying that the battle over digital content would
rage throughout 2002 and that wireless networking would continue
its ascendence. Open for argument are whether I was right in
saying that 2002 wouldn't bring much of interest in the PDA world
and whether my lukewarm prediction that broadband Internet access
might recover in 2002. More interesting is the fact that I think
some of last year's top stories will continue to dominate our
attention this year.
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06688>
**The Copyright Wars** -- The copyright wars continued unabated
throughout all of 2002, with the Content Cartel fighting tooth
and nail to preserve their existing business models against the
reality that, for better or worse, sharing of digital content has
become a way of life for a vast number of people. It's safe to say
that copyright and peer-to-peer file sharing will remain in the
news throughout 2003. There's no way the Content Cartel will
suddenly convince millions of people to stop sharing files, but
it's equally unlikely that big media companies will admit defeat
and start giving away their content online.
And as far as the legal part of the equation goes, I also don't
see major changes being applied to the DMCA and its brethren.
There may be a few minor victories, such as happened recently when
a jury acquitted the Russian firm Elcomsoft in one of the first
cases brought under the anti-circumvention provisions of the DMCA.
Also interesting reading were the comments submitted to the
Library of Congress in that body's search for possible classes
of works that should be made exempt from DMCA's prohibition on
circumvention of copy-prevention technologies. But one way or
another, the world of politics moves slowly.
<http://www.eff.org/IP/DMCA/US_v_Elcomsoft/20021217_eff_pr.html>
<http://www.copyright.gov/1201/2003/comments/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06997>
**It's a Wireless World** -- Wireless networking came a long way
in 2002, with precipitous price drops, progress on faster
standards, and an ever-increasing number of community networks.
If anything, the rate of change is going to increase in the
wireless world in 2003. Right now, 802.11b is essentially just
a liberating replacement for Ethernet cables, but it's in many
ways just the first step.
802.11a and 802.11g are likely to make their appearance in multi-
band access points that work with any flavor of 802.11, and as the
cost of chipsets comes down, we'll start seeing wireless network
access being built into less common devices. It's easy to imagine
a wireless-enabled MP3 stereo component (we're not far off with
the SliMP3 from Slim Devices), or a wireless-enabled car MP3
player that can download songs from your Mac while you're parked
in the driveway (an engineer friend patched one of these together
a while back, but she has serious hardware and software hacking
skills). I could also imagine wireless-enabled digital cameras
that sport their own Web servers or that can upload or email
pictures directly from the camera without the need for a computer
(Sanyo claims they're developing a prototype of something
similar). Memory card full while you're on vacation? Visit
a wireless-enabled Internet cafe and off-load all those pictures
to your server at home.
<http://www.slimdevices.com/>
<http://www.dpreview.com/news/0207/02070401sanyowificam.asp>
I'm looking to see Apple making some significant moves with regard
to wireless in 2003. Although Apple kickstarted the wireless
revolution by selling the AirPort Base Station and AirPort cards
cheaply at first, Apple's prices aren't competitive any more, and
apart from an integrated modem and support for AOL, AirPort simply
no longer stands out. If Apple were to make the AirPort Base
Station support both 802.11a and 802.11g (which itself is backward
compatible with today's 802.11b) simultaneously, and do the same
for AirPort cards, the Mac would once again clearly be the
preeminent platform for wireless networking. Apple might even
benefit from upgrade revenue as existing AirPort users replace
their current cards and access points in search of better
performance.
Bluetooth will also be taking off in 2003 as a wireless cable
replacement, and I wouldn't be at all surprised to see Apple
building it into every Mac. Steve Jobs can't be happy about the
aesthetic mess of cables emanating from the back of every Mac
(or when it trails from the bottom of the Power Mac G4 Cube), and
Bluetooth support would set Apple on track for eliminating many
of those messy cables.
**PDAs Evolve?** As much as 2002 was a ho-hum year for PDAs, 2003
could be the year that new form factors for digital devices take
off. Apple's success with the iPod, which remains one of the
best-selling MP3 players despite its hefty price tag, shows that
people are willing to spend money on digital devices that aren't
strictly necessary as long as the overall package is sufficiently
attractive.
As far as what we'll see in 2003, the likely products will
approach from two directions - the cell phone and the tablet
computer. The cell phone market has slowed as manufacturers have
struggled to find compelling ways to differentiate new phones
from the previous generation, but there's no question that anyone
developing a portable digital device would do well to consider
adding cell phone capabilities, much as the Handspring Treo and
the Danger hiptop (marketed by T-Mobile as the Sidekick) have
in 2002.
<http://www.handspring.com/products/communicators/>
<http://www.danger.com/>
Tablet PCs made their appearance in 2002, and although the reviews
weren't stellar, success will be a matter of finding the sweet
spot. Apple stands a better chance at doing that than any of the
PC manufacturers (with the possible exception of Sony), given
Apple's strong design sense, emphasis on digital media, and
customer base that's willing to pay more for quality hardware.
The trick, I think, is that a tablet Mac must not attempt to
compete with an iBook, but should be focused on playing digital
media - DVD movies and MP3 music - and Web browsing (via AirPort,
of course). That's not to say it can't have a full version of
Mac OS X under the hood, with a version of the Finder that's
appropriate to whatever controller devices are available. At that
point, the addition of a keyboard and trackpad via Bluetooth turns
it into a perfectly useful portable computer for the relatively
simple tasks most of us perform while traveling; but, the device
would emphasize sitting on the couch browsing the Web while
listening to MP3s over being a no-compromises laptop like the
Titanium PowerBook G4.
Will some sort of Apple PDA really appear in 2003, whether it's on
the cell phone or the tablet end of the spectrum? I have no inside
knowledge, but Apple is the sort of company that can grow only
through constant innovation, and the iPod has proven that the
company can extend its efforts to digital media devices
successfully. And of course, rumors of Apple developing a PDA have
been swirling since the demise of the Newton, so it could be just
collective wishful thinking.
**Extreme LuCiDity** -- Lastly, although I'm not sure it's going
to be in the news all that much in 2003, look for LCD displays to
be dropping significantly in price as the year goes on. That's not
terribly interesting in itself - all technology gets cheaper - but
in the case of LCD displays, I'm fascinated by some of the
possibilities a cheap display presents. I started down this line
of thinking a few months back when my old NEC 3FGe 15-inch utility
monitor died. I didn't want to pay much for a new monitor, and
since it's the sort of thing I use on my PCs every few months,
or on servers when remote control isn't sufficient, I decided
that a svelte LCD monitor would be ideal. Thanks to dealmac,
I was shocked (and gratified) to find a 14-inch LCD monitor
for $150. The display quality stinks for normal use, but it's
perfect for a few hours of use every couple of weeks.
<http://dealmac.com/search.html?search=LCD+monitor>
The LCD display was a necessary aspect of enabling the creation
of laptop computers that let us escape the tyranny of the desk,
and we may also start to see people exploiting the size and
flexibility of LCDs in other ways. The concept of hanging a
monitor on the wall to save desk space or enable a standing
workstation is obvious, but you can go further.
With the cost dropping so low, you don't have to be Bill Gates to
buy an LCD monitor and hang it on your wall as art. Photo slide
shows, screensaver patterns, iTunes visualizer displays, or even
SereneScreen's Marine Aquarium (since I never had the guts to
venture beyond freshwater tropical fish) would all be welcome on
my walls. I love the concept of the Ceiva digital picture frame,
but it's small, expensive, and requires a monthly service. Putting
an older Mac to work running a digital picture certainly wouldn't
be cheaper than a Ceiva, but the picture could be much larger and
using .Mac shared slideshows beats using Ceiva's mind-boggingly
awful Web interface.
<http://www.serenescreen.com/product/maquariumx/>
<http://www.ceiva.com/>
Of course, there are far more exciting advances in display
technology coming down the pike, such as massive LCD displays like
Samsung's recently announced 54 inch (137 cm) display, organic LED
displays that can be laid down using inkjet printing technology,
LCD paint that could turn a wall or a piece of clothing into a
display, and electronic paper that could provide the tactile
sensation of reading a book along with the flexibility of being
a digital display device. Will any of these technologies make a
difference in our lives in 2003? Probably not, but hopefully the
early products using them will give us something more to look
forward to in 2004.
<http://www.infoworld.com/articles/hn/xml/02/12/30/021230hnsamsung.xml>
<http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1103-936001.html>
<http://www.nature.com/nsu/020429/020429-7.html>
<http://directory.google.com/Top/Computers/Hardware/Peripherals/Displays/
Flat_Panel/E-Ink/?tc=1>
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