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IP: ACM TechNews - Monday, April 9, 2001
From: David Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Mon, 09 Apr 2001 18:08:37 -0400
Dear ACM TechNews Subscriber: Welcome to the April 9, 2001 edition of ACM TechNews, providing timely information for IT professionals three times a week. For instructions on how to unsubscribe from this service, please see below. Remember to check out our hot new online essay and opinion magazine, Ubiquity, at http://www.acm.org/ubiquity ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ACM TechNews Volume 3, Number 187 Date: April 9, 2001 Site Sponsored by Gateway (http://www.gateway.com) Top Stories for Monday, April 9, 2001: http://www.acm.org/technews/current/homepage.html "Tech Industry's Job Loss Expected to Get Worse" "Tears in the Valley Send Shiver Through the Street" "Democrats Counter Bush on Tech" "IT Shines in March Job Picture" "Rivals Say VeriSign Still Has Advantage" "Counting the Human Toll Among the Internet Carnage" "An Internet Critic Who Is Not Shy About Ruffling the Big Names in High Technology" "META Group Ranks States by IT-Friendliness" "Fine Print Not Necessarily in Ink" "Hired Hands Corral Corrupters of Company Data" "U.S.: E-Commerce Is Key to Free Trade in Latin America" "Tech Employers Look Beyond Stock Options to Lure Workers" "IBM and Detroit's Compuware See Rebound in Demand for Mainframe Computers" "Spam Under Attack" "Linux Web Hosting Market Set to Boom" "Hiring Gets Sane" "Is the World Finally Ready for Tablets?" "Patent Reform Pending" "Paradise Lost?" ******************* News Stories *********************** "Tech Industry's Job Loss Expected to Get Worse" Job layoffs in the tech sector will get worse in the future, say many analysts, signaling trouble for the overall U.S. economy. The tech sector has cut 38,000 jobs from January through March, according to new statistics from the Department of Labor. . . . http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2001-3/0409m.html#item1 "Tears in the Valley Send Shiver Through the Street" The downturn of the tech economy, with the tech-heavy Nasdaq market having fallen 66 percent in the past year, has had a devastating impact on the Silicon Valley area. The once booming property market in the Valley and in San Francisco has crashed, . . . http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2001-3/0409m.html#item2 "Democrats Counter Bush on Tech" Broadband access will be the focus of the Democrats' technology agenda, the party's leaders said on Thursday. Democratic leaders on the Hill held an online news conference in which House Democratic Minority Leader Richard Gephardt (D-Mo.) said the . . . http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2001-3/0409m.html#item3 "IT Shines in March Job Picture" Although layoffs in the overall economy reached a 10-year high last month, hiring remains strong in the IT sector, according to new statistics from the Labor Department. Hirings by computer and data-services firms increased by 11,000 from February to . . . http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2001-3/0409m.html#item4 "Rivals Say VeriSign Still Has Advantage" ICANN's decision to extend VeriSign's monopoly control of the .com database through 2007 is coming under increased criticism as VeriSign's selling and reselling practices have blocked domain name buyers from a predictable purchase of expired domain names. . . . http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2001-3/0409m.html#item5 "Counting the Human Toll Among the Internet Carnage" Tech experts at last week's World Economic Forum expressed dismay at the impact the current tech downturn is having on some of the sector's brightest talent but displayed some optimism that the sector will turn around--and sooner rather than later. Although . . . http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2001-3/0409m.html#item6 "An Internet Critic Who Is Not Shy About Ruffling the Big Names in High Technology" Software pioneer David Winer says Microsoft is abusing its industry dominance in creating standards and protocols that give the company an unfair advantage. On his DaveNet Web site, widely read in high-tech circles, Winer contends that Microsoft's . . . http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2001-3/0409m.html#item7 "META Group Ranks States by IT-Friendliness" A new report from META Group ranks Massachusetts, California, Maryland, Colorado, and Washington as the most IT-friendly and digitally competent of all 50 states. Howard Rubin, executive vice president of META Group, says traditional standards used to . . . http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2001-3/0409m.html#item8 "Fine Print Not Necessarily in Ink" Legal experts say many of the "terms-of-service" agreements that Web sites post may not prove sturdy enough to pass a stormy lawsuit. Businesses, lawyers, and the public are starting to pay more attention to exactly what is entailed in terms-of-service . . . http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2001-3/0409m.html#item9 "Hired Hands Corral Corrupters of Company Data" Kris Haworth, manager of Deloitte & Touche's computer forensic office in San Francisco, recently had to rummage through a company's computers in search of deleted emails to find if the business had illegally inflated its revenues. Using software so . . . http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2001-3/0409m.html#item10 "U.S.: E-Commerce Is Key to Free Trade in Latin America" U.S. Commerce Secretary Don Evans, addressing members of the Free Trade Areas of the Americans (FTAA) in Argentina, urged that smaller Latin American companies and economies must be allowed to benefit from e-commerce if free trade is to prosper in that part . . . http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2001-3/0409m.html#item11 "Tech Employers Look Beyond Stock Options to Lure Workers" Tech companies that offered employees stock options as an incentive when the market was skyrocketing are searching for new methods to motivate and retain workers now that stocks are foundering. Dave Pace, I2 Technologies senior vice president for . . . http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2001-3/0409m.html#item12 "IBM and Detroit's Compuware See Rebound in Demand for Mainframe Computers" Increasing levels of e-commerce, consistently high performance standards, new units capable of running on multiple languages, and greater access among consumers will lead to a resurgence for larger mainframe systems by mid-2001, according to analysts. . . . http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2001-3/0409m.html#item13 "Spam Under Attack" Regulatory attempts meant to halt the progress of spam have thus far proved unsuccessful. Experts point out that even if one country passes a specifically anti-spam law, junk emailers will send spam from offshore locations. "We're going to find people . . . http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2001-3/0409m.html#item14 "Linux Web Hosting Market Set to Boom" Software firm Idaya says that the Linux platform is poised to take over the Web hosting market by mid 2002. Idaya conducted a survey of 1,000 ISPs and found that two-thirds believed Linux robust enough for enterprise-level applications and 45 percent . . . http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2001-3/0409m.html#item15 "Hiring Gets Sane" IT hiring managers say the employment market has definitely turned to their advantage in recent months, with dot-com layoffs and other factors having added more qualified applicants to the labor pool and prompting many prospective workers to seek stable . . . http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2001-3/0409m.html#item16 "Is the World Finally Ready for Tablets?" After failing miserably a decade ago, the tablet PC may have new life. Last week, Microsoft said it is bringing back the full-size writing tablet, a device that market researchers saw as holding such promise years ago that Dataquest Gartner once . . . http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2001-3/0409m.html#item17 "Patent Reform Pending" The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has come under severe criticism in recent years for giving business-method patents to high-tech companies for such "pedestrian" techniques as pop-up advertising and one-click shopping systems. However, the office . . . http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2001-3/0409m.html#item18 "Paradise Lost?" NEC Research Institute (NECI), located in Princeton, N.J, is shifting its focus in accordance with the wishes of corporate headquarters back in Japan. NECI President David Waltz is taking steps to speed the development of technological discoveries with . . . http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2001-3/0409m.html#item19 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -- To review Friday's issue, please visit http://www.acm.org/technews/articles/2001-3/0406f.html -- To visit the TechNews home page, point your browser to: http://www.acm.org/technews/ -- To unsubscribe from the ACM TechNews Early Alert Service: Please send a separate email to listserv () listserv2 acm org with the line signoff technews in the body of your message. -- Please note that replying directly to this message does not automatically unsubscribe you from the TechNews list. -- To submit feedback about ACM TechNews, contact: technews () hq acm org -- ACM may have a different email address on file for you, so if you're unable to "unsubscribe" yourself, please direct your request to: technews-request () acm org We will remove your name from the TechNews list on your behalf. -- For help with technical problems, including problems with leaving the list, please write to: technews-request () acm org ---- ACM TechNews is sponsored by Gateway For archives see: http://www.interesting-people.org/
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- IP: ACM TechNews - Monday, April 9, 2001 David Farber (Apr 09)