Archive for the ‘Technology Related Articles’ Category

WIFI Cafe’s – easy for thieves to steal passwords & info from secure public wireless zones

Sunday, November 5th, 2006

NET SECURITY I That mysterious someone can steal your personal data by duplicating the networks you find at local hot spots

Gillian Shaw
Sun

Ryan Purita of Totally Connected Security says it’s easy for thieves to steal passwords and confidential information in public wireless zones. Photograph by : Peter Battistoni, Vancouver Sun

If you use your laptop at your local coffee shop to catch up on banking or shopping online, your financial secrets could be going straight to the latte-sipper with a laptop open at the next table.

“Give me an encrypted wireless network and in 10 minutes I will give you the password,” said Ryan Purita, a senior security consultant with Totally Connected Security.

Purita is among security experts who warn wireless hotspots can be minefields for unsuspecting computer users. Even legitimate security-enabled sites can be cracked with hacker software that’s freely available on the Internet.

Free short-range wireless Internet access is sweeping across North American cities, but it’s coming with a security cost. That’s the risk of signing on to a free WiFi network or one purporting to be from a legitimate carrier and instead ending up on a so-called “evil twin” network where identity thieves can pick off personal data.

Combine that with the risk of running into a “man-in-the-middle” wireless scam and enterprising identity thieves can turn wireless hotspots into their own little profit-making centres.

“Sharing information via the Internet is a positive thing and doing so can reap a great deal of positive benefits,” said Staff Sergeant Bruce Imrie, Pacific regional coordinator for the RCMP’s integrated technological crime unit. “But people need to be aware there are also risks involved.

“Many people consider WEP or wireless encryption programs to be secure when in fact they are relatively easily broken.”

WEP, a wireless encryption protocol for wireless local area networks, is typically used on wireless networks identified as “security enabled” and requires a WEP key to sign on. There is more stringent security available; including WPA2, for WiFi Protected Access 2 but WEP is still the most common.

Punching in a WEP key or a password can lull users into thinking their data transmissions are safe.

That isn’t necessarily the case.

“Technology is always one step behind the bad guys,” said Christopher Faulkner, president and chief executive of CI Host, a Web hosting and data management centre with 300,000 customers around the globe. “WEP is junk encryption. … All you have to do is intercept one packet and you know the password.”

That leaves security experts warning users to limit their public wireless computing to non-critical tasks such as Web surfing or checking e-mail that they wouldn’t mind sharing with strangers.

“People should be aware that what they are doing could be captured by a third party,” said Faulkner. “They have to ask themselves, would it be okay if they saw it published in a newspaper, or a copy given to their wife, or would their banker approve of them sending those confidential documents where they could be read by a third party.

“It is like having someone standing over your shoulder looking at your computer and they could be yards away from you in the coffee shop.”

Faulkner points out that since wireless networks don’t have to have unique names, identity thieves can easily masquerade as legitimate WiFi providers.

“It is no wonder hackers set up evil twins and name them T-Mobile or Linksys or D-Link,” said Faulkner. “If you are a hacker and you want to broadcast an evil twin, you’ll mimic a legitimate or real SSID [the public name of a wireless network].”

So if your home wireless network is called Linksys, your computer will log on if it finds a network of the same name, whether that’s at home, at the local coffee shop or in an airport in another country.

“You could think you are on a trusted network and that Linksys could be a rogue access point with somebody logging everything you are typing in your keyboard,” said Faulkner.

An “evil twin” operates by duplicating a legitimate WiFi hotspot provider. The hacker gives the network a feasible-sounding name and a log in page that looks like the real thing. When you type in the required password or credit card information, the hacker has scored and likely you’ll find the wireless connection ends there.

In the case of the “man-in-the-middle” scheme. a hacker can get between your computer and the legitimate wireless access point, scooping all the information that you transmit while you are online.

“He can log into a real access point and pay five bucks or whatever it is to get a day pass, then he turns on Internet sharing on his laptop,”Faulkner said. “He has a $50 wireless access point and he broadcasts an SSID called Rogers, or he could call it ‘free Starbucks Internet.’

“Your computer scans and says, ‘free Starbucks Internet — cool,’ and it will connect.”

Meanwhile, everything you punch into your computer is being logged by the interceptor so passwords, credit card information or inflammatory e-mails about your boss are available for the hacker’s perusal.

“Using your laptop in public over a wireless connection, particularly when it is free, is the same as letting someone look over your shoulder while you are punching in your banking PIN,” said Ron O’Brien, senior security analyst for North America for Sophos, an Internet security company. “Keep in mind if you are using your laptop in a public place over what may not be a secure network, do not conduct any kind of transaction where the information you are exchanging with a third party may fall into the wrong hands.”

It’s not only free wireless access that poses the risks. Even if you have a paid account with a WiFi provider for its hotspots, you could fall victim to a pirate of the airwaves. There are measures such as VPNs — virtual private networks — that safeguard wireless computing but for the most part these are steps taken by corporations, not consumers just hoping to do a little Christmas shopping while they have a coffee.

“We are seeing an increase in this type of incident,” Telus spokesman Shawn Hall said of schemes such as evil twin networks and man-in-the-middle interceptions.

Hall said people often let their computers default to the strongest wireless signal and that may not necessarily be the one they trust, or a hacker could fake a network to fool users.

“If you are not 100-per-cent confident about what you are doing, don’t do anything sensitive like banking or business,” said Hall. “Don’t just do that in a random cafe, do that somewhere you trust on a network you know.”

Michael Kuhlmann is a co-founder of FatPort who left that wireless hotspot company to start another company, Colony Networks, that delivers managed wireless services to small and mid-sized customers. He said he has been using public access points for five years and has never installed extra security software on his laptop.

“There is no question people should be vigilant,” he said. “This could be on the rise, especially because there are more wireless users.

“I do think that the future of these networks will include some sort of over-the-air security, but the man-in-the-middle attacks, the evil twin attacks are really tricky to safeguard against.”

© The Vancouver Sun 2006

 

Easy-to-read cellphone aimed at baby boomers

Saturday, November 4th, 2006

COMMUNICATION I New Jitterbug for 55-and-older market works with hearing aids

Shannon Proudfoot
Sun

Martin Cooper, inventor of the cellphone, and Arlene Harris, CEO of Great Call, creator of the Jitterbug, hold their respective inventions.

The latest entry to the cellphone market can’t shoot pictures or video, and it has no customizable wallpapers or voice-dialing capability.

It is, however, hearing aid-compatible.

Meet the Jitterbug — the cellphone named for the swing-dancing era and designed for baby boomers and their parents in the 21st century.

The phone has chunky, easy-to-read keys and a large screen display, straightforward Yes and No command buttons, a “familiar” dial tone that tells you it’s ready to make a call, and a friendly operator who will help out at the touch of a button.

A simplified version of the phone has just three buttons, for making calls to 911, the operator and a pre-programmed frequently called number.

The Jitterbug is the brainchild of Samsung and California-based GreatCall, Inc., whose mission it is “to simplify technology and make it available to everyone.”

The phone launched in the U.S. in mid-October, and should be available to Canadian users within a year.

It is poised to tap a burgeoning market: a Decima Research study commissioned by the Canadian Wireless Telecommunications Association (CWTA) found that cellphone use among Canadians 55 years and older has doubled in the last six years, to 48 per cent from 24 per cent.

User-friendly technology is “a life-stage issue” and until now, cellphone manufacturers have focused on the rapid-fire preferences of consumers under 40, says GreatCall CEO Arlene Harris, who co-founded the company with her husband, Martin Cooper, designer of the first cellular handset in 1973.

“Most marketers, when they think about people over 50, there’s some switch that turns off,” Harris says, adding that “lots of research and probably as much common sense” went into the Jitterbug’s design.

As the postwar generation swells the ranks of the 50-plus, any smart entrepreneur will find a way to cater to their demographic, says Reginald Bibby, a sociology professor at the University of Lethbridge and author of The Boomer Factor.

In addition to sheer numbers, the baby boomers are an “incredibly materialistic crew” that will drive an unprecedented wave of consumer products tailored to aging needs, he says.

“They’re going to be a prime group when it comes to anything of a technological nature,” Bibby says.

“They’ve been readily co-opting things as they’ve been emerging over the last several decades, and it’s just going to continue.”

Already, Ford Motor Company has created a “Third Age Suit” that simulates loss of strength and flexibility so young ergonomics engineers can understand the needs of older drivers, and Black & Decker is producing tools with more comfortable grips and bigger information readouts, says David Cravit, senior vice-president marketing of Toronto-based 50Plus Group, which operates several Internet portals and newsletters.

Home Depot stores in Toronto and Victoria have launched special collections of products designed to assist older people with independent living, he says, while manufacturers are producing helpful goods that are increasingly intuitive and attractive.

Even though most boomers don’t yet need grab bars in the bathtub or a simplified cellphone, Cravit says the estimated five million Canadians caring for a chronically ill loved ones represent a “massive market” for all sorts of aging-friendly products.

“Most of the marketing is aimed at the boomers, because they’re either buying it or influencing the purchase for their parents,” he says.

“They’ll spend heavily to keep their parents safe, in comfort and convenience.”

© The Vancouver Sun 2006

 

Kids have their say on top toys

Friday, November 3rd, 2006

Kids give nod to high-touch as well as high-tech toys

MIRELLA CHRISTOU
Sun

TOM HANSON/CANADIAN PRESS Eva Krzaniak, 12, shows off the Fly Pentop Computer, a learning tool that reads back what you draw or write.

Giant Sequoia Play Set

Casey Cogan, 11, plays with the Fly Pentop computer. — CANWEST NEWS SERVICE/OTTAWA CITIZEN PHOTOS

OTTAWA — A skateboardscooter combination, a smart pen that can read back what it has written and stuffed animals requiring Web attention to stay alive are among the top toys for 2007, according to Canadian Toy Testing Council’s annual report.
   Yet, while tech-savvy toys headlined this year’s report, released Thursday, its low-tech counterparts fared well among the children’s choice awards. Three interactive puppets employing a simple set of rings that allow children to manipulate their movements were among the 14 toys recognized.
   The Fly Pentop computer was awarded the council’s Energizer Battery Operated Toy of the Year. The pen-shaped mini-computer, with an attached video, recognizes messages written on a special piece of paper by reading it back through optical sensor technology, character recognition and speech synthesis. It also functions as a calculator, music maker and task scheduler.
   Sold as an education aid, the Fly Pentop ($100; spelling game program and journal making program sells separately for $35-40) is geared toward the eightto 12-year-old “tech-savvy tween market,” says LeapFrog vicepresident of sales Gord Terry.
   Eleven-year-old Kristi Korycki gave it her stamp of approval, calling it amazing and helpful. But she said she probably would not bring it to her Grade 6 class because of its price.
   Webkinz’s Adopt a Pet ($10-15) was among 14 children’s choice awards. Suited for children eight and up, the stuffed animals come with a special code used to create an online account on the Webkinz website (www.webkinz.com). Children can provide food, shelter and stimulation to help their pet grow, and play games to win points which can be used to buy goodies.
   The Fuzion Asphalt Ultimate Carving Scooter ($90-100), also won a children’s choice award for its skateboard-type design, and collapsible handle for easy storage and carrying.
   “Learning to carve may take a few tries but once you have the knack, you won’t look back! Everyone, even adults, have a blast with this smooth, freerolling, stylish scooter,” says the report, noting some of the child experts spent more than 30 minutes on the scooter and never got bored or tired.
Puppets, games among the runners-up
Other children’s choice awards:
Learn-Around Playground: (nine months to 3): Stand-up learning centre that teaches letters, colours and numbers, plays music and allows older toddlers to push three bright balls through a chute. Leap Frog. Magtastik Primary Deluxe: (3 and up): Magnetic building set includes large rods and balls and extra goofy bits to build structures. Mega Bloks Inc. Magtastik Magnimals: (3 and up): Three different animals built from magnetic parts. All body parts can be attached anywhere on the round body providing the opportunity to create traditional or unusual and bizarre animals. Mega Bloks Inc. Elephant Puppet (3 and up): Children can slip their hands into the soft underbelly, and using an innovative set of two pull rings, move the trunk up and down. Folkmanis Inc.
Peacock Puppet (3 and up): Includes a net comb on its head and a plumage of luxurious fabrics and trimmings. A pocket in his neck is for head movements and a glovelike set of pockets in his wings. Folkmanis Inc. Flamingo Puppet (3 and up): By manoeuvring two rings inside, children can manipulate the flamingo’s neck. Folkmanis Inc. Giant Sequoia Play Set (3 and up): Includes a giant sequoia tree hand puppet and six animal finger puppets that live in the tree, which has several holes and openings for the puppets to pop in and out. Folkmanis Inc.
V.Smile Jammin’ Gym Glass (4 to 7): By jumping on the numbers on the mat, children control and participate in 12 different educational games displayed on the television screen, such as finding healthy food choices, answering math questions and sequencing. Vtech Electronics Canada Ltd.
Paper Stained Glass (8 and up): Includes a book of transparent sheets outlined with designs to make “stainedglass” window art, and 12 numbered markers in a reusable storage pouch, each with a thick end and a thin end. Klutz Inc.
Lego Exo-Force, Sentai Fortress
(8 to 14): This 1,448-piece futuristic battle fortress set includes two large battle robots, three small robots, five warriors, and numerous colourful weapons and accessories. Lego Canada Inc. Zooreka (8 and up): Board game for two to four. Players compete to win food, animal, and habitat cards to build a zoo with four theme areas. Cranium
Luck of the Draw (9 and up): Four to eight players draw pictures as instructed on cards. Gamewright.
The CTTC’s full repor t can be read online at www.toy-testing.org/CTTCmm.htm

How to send a text message to any phone by email

Thursday, November 2nd, 2006

Other

Main Canadian Carriers (must use 10 digits)

[email protected] Rogers Canada – Requires prior registration with PCS Rogers.

[email protected]. – (Telus Canada)

[email protected] (Fido Canada)

[email protected] (Bell mobility – Canada)

“Other World Carriers access” – info from http://www.livejournal.com/tools/textmessage.bml?mode=details

  • Aliant (NBTel, MTT, NewTel, and Island Tel) (from: 11, msg: 140, total: 140) Enter your phone number. Message is sent to [email protected]
  • Alltel (from: 50, msg: 116, total: 116) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected].
  • Ameritech (ACSWireless) (from: 120, msg: 120, total: 120) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • Arch Wireless (from: 15, msg: 240, total: 240) Enter your phone number. Sent via http://www.arch.com/message/ (assumes blank PIN)
  • AU by KDDI (from: 20, msg: 10000, total: 10000) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • BeeLine GSM (from: 50, msg: 255, total: 255) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • Bell Mobility Canada (from: 20, msg: 120, total: 120) Enter your phone number, including the 1 prefix. Goes to [email protected]
  • Bellsouth (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • BellSouth Mobility (from: 15, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • Blue Sky Frog (from: 30, msg: 120, total: 120) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • Boost (from: 30, msg: 120, total: 120) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • Cellular South (from: 50, msg: 155, total: 155) Enter your phone number. Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • CellularOne (Dobson) (from: 20, msg: 120, total: 120) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • CellularOne West (from: 20, msg: 120, total: 120) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • Centennial Wireless (from: 10, msg: 110, total: 110) Enter your phone number. Sent via http://www.centennialwireless.com
  • Cincinnati Bell (from: 20, msg: 50, total: 50) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • Cingular (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • Cingular Blue (formerly AT&T Wireless) (from: 50, msg: 150, total: 150) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • Cingular IM Plus/Bellsouth IPS (from: 100, msg: 16000, total: 16000) Enter 8 digit PIN or user name. Goes to @imcingular.com
  • Cingular IM Plus/Bellsouth IPS Cellphones (from: 100, msg: 16000, total: 16000) Enter phone number. Goes to @mobile.mycingular.com
  • Claro (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • Comviq (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • Dutchtone/Orange-NL (from: 15, msg: 150, total: 150) Enter your phone number. Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • Edge Wireless (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • EinsteinPCS / Airadigm Communications (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • EPlus (from: 20, msg: 480, total: 480) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected].
  • Estonia Mobile Telefon (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Sent via webform.
  • Fido Canada (from: 15, msg: 140, total: 140) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected].
  • Golden Telecom (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number or nickname. Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • Idea Cellular (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • Kyivstar (from: 30, msg: 160, total: 160) Sent by addressing the message to [email protected]
  • LMT (from: 30, msg: 120, total: 120) Enter your username. Goes to [email protected]
  • Manitoba Telecom Systems (from: 20, msg: 120, total: 120) 10-digit phone number. Goes to @text.mtsmobility.com
  • Meteor (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • Metro PCS (from: 20, msg: 120, total: 120) 10-digit phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • Metrocall Pager (from: 120, msg: 120, total: 120) 10-digit phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • MobileOne (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • Mobilfone (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • Mobility Bermuda (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • MTS Primtel (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Sent via web gateway.
  • Aliant (NBTel, MTT, NewTel, and Island Tel) (from: 11, msg: 140, total: 140) Enter your phone number. Message is sent to [email protected]
  • Netcom (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • Nextel (from: 50, msg: 126, total: 126) 10-digit phone number. Goes to [email protected]. Note: do not use dashes in your phone number.
  • NPI Wireless (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected].
  • NTC (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Sent via web gateway.
  • O2 (formerly BTCellnet) (from: 20, msg: 120, total: 120) Enter O2 username – must be enabled first at http://www.o2.co.uk. Goes to [email protected].
  • O2 M-mail (formerly BTCellnet) (from: 20, msg: 120, total: 120) Enter phone number, omitting intial zero – must be enabled first by sending an SMS saying “ON” to phone number “212”. Goes to +44[number]@mmail.co.uk.
  • Optus (from: 20, msg: 114, total: 114) Enter your phone number. Goes to @optusmobile.com.au
  • Orange (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Goes to @orange.net. You will need to create a user account at orange.net first.
  • Oskar (from: 20, msg: 320, total: 320) Enter your phone number. Goes to @mujoskar.cz
  • Other (from: 15, msg: 100, total: 100) If your provider isn’t supported directly, enter the email address that sends you a text message in phone number field. To be safe, the entire message is sent in the body of the message, and the length limit is really short. We’d prefer you give us information about your provider so we can support it directly.
  • Pacific Bell Cingular (from: 20, msg: 120, total: 120) 10-digit phone number. Goes to @mobile.mycingular.com
  • Pagenet (from: 20, msg: 220, total: 240) 10-digit phone number (or gateway and pager number separated by a period). Goes to [email protected].
  • PCS Rogers (from: 20, msg: 125, total: 125) 10-digit phone number. Goes to [email protected]. Requires prior registration with PCS Rogers.
  • Personal Communication (Sonet) (from: 20, msg: 150, total: 150) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected] with your number in the subject line.
  • Plus GSM Poland (from: 20, msg: 620, total: 620) 10-digit phone number. Goes to [email protected].
  • Powertel (from: 20, msg: 120, total: 120) 10-digit phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • Primtel (from: 20, msg: 150, total: 150) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • PSC Wireless (from: 20, msg: 150, total: 150) Enter your phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • Qualcomm (from: 20, msg: 120, total: 120) Enter your username. Goes to [email protected]
  • Qwest (from: 14, msg: 100, total: 100) 10-digit phone number. Goes to @qwestmp.com
  • Safaricom (from: 15, msg: 160, total: 160) Goes to @safaricomsms.com
  • Satelindo GSM (from: 15, msg: 160, total: 160) Goes to @satelindogsm.com
  • SCS-900 (from: 15, msg: 160, total: 160) Goes to @scs-900.ru
  • Simple Freedom (from: 15, msg: 160, total: 160) Goes to @text.simplefreedom.net
  • Skytel – Alphanumeric (from: 15, msg: 240, total: 240) Enter your 7-digit pin number as your number and your message will be mailed to [email protected]
  • Smart Telecom (from: 15, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Goes to @mysmart.mymobile.ph
  • Smarts GSM (from: 11, msg: 70, total: 70) Enter your phone number. Sent via http://www.samara-gsm.ru/scripts/smsgate.exe
  • Southern Linc (from: 15, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your 10-digit phone number. Goes to @page.southernlinc.com
  • Sprint PCS (from: 15, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your 10-digit phone number. Goes to @messaging.sprintpcs.com
  • Sprint PCS – Short Mail (from: 15, msg: 1000, total: 1000) Enter your phone number. Goes to @sprintpcs.com
  • SunCom (from: 18, msg: 110, total: 110) Enter your number. Email will be sent to [email protected].
  • SureWest Communications (from: 20, msg: 200, total: 200) Enter your phone number. Message will be sent to [email protected]
  • SwissCom Mobile (from: 20, msg: 10000, total: 10000) Enter your phone number. Message will be sent to [email protected]
  • T-Mobile Germany (from: 15, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your number. Email will be sent to [email protected]
  • T-Mobile Netherlands (from: 15, msg: 160, total: 160) Send “EMAIL ON” to 555 from your phone, then enter your number starting with 316. Email will be sent to [email protected]
  • T-Mobile UK (from: 30, msg: 160, total: 160) Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • T-Mobile USA (from: 30, msg: 160, total: 160) Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • T-Mobile USA (Sidekick) (from: 30, msg: 10000, total: 10000) Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • Tele2 Latvia (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) 10-digit phone number. Goes to [email protected].
  • Telefonica Movistar (from: 20, msg: 120, total: 120) 10-digit phone number. Goes to [email protected]
  • Telenor (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) 10-digit phone number. Goes to [email protected].
  • Telia Denmark (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) 8-digit phone number. Goes to [email protected].
  • Telus Mobility (from: 30, msg: 120, total: 120) 10-digit phone number. Goes to [email protected].
  • The Phone House (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) 10-digit phone number. Goes to [email protected].
  • TIM (from: 30, msg: 350, total: 350) 10-digit phone number. Goes to [email protected].
  • UMC (from: 10, msg: 120, total: 120) Sent by addressing the message to [email protected]
  • Unicel (from: 10, msg: 120, total: 120) Sent by addressing the message to [email protected]
  • US Cellular (from: , msg: 150, total: 150) Enter a 10 digit USCC Phone Number. Messages are sent via http://usc.ztango.com/uscwmss
  • Verizon Wireless (from: 34, msg: 140, total: 140) Enter your 10-digit phone number. Messages are sent via email to [email protected].
  • Verizon Wireless (formerly Airtouch) (from: 20, msg: 120, total: 120) Enter your phone number. Messages are sent to [email protected]. This is ONLY for former AirTouch customers. Verizon Wireless customers should use Verizon Wireless instead.
  • Verizon Wireless (myairmail.com) (from: 34, msg: 140, total: 140) Enter your phone number. Messages are sent via to [email protected].
  • Vessotel (from: 20, msg: 800, total: 800) Enter your phone number. Messages are sent to [email protected].
  • Virgin Mobile Canada (from: 20, msg: 140, total: 140) Enter your phone number. Messages are sent to [email protected].
  • Virgin Mobile USA (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Messages are sent to [email protected].
  • Vodafone Italy (from: 20, msg: 132, total: 132) Enter your phone number. Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • Vodafone Japan (Chuugoku/Western) (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • Vodafone Japan (Hokkaido) (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • Vodafone Japan (Hokuriko/Central North) (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • Vodafone Japan (Kansai/West — including Osaka) (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • Vodafone Japan (Kanto/Koushin/East — including Tokyo) (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • Vodafone Japan (Kyuushu/Okinawa) (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • Vodafone Japan (Shikoku) (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • Vodafone Japan (Touhoku/Niigata/North) (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • Vodafone Japan (Toukai/Central) (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • Vodafone Spain (from: 20, msg: 90, total: 90) Enter your username. Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • Vodafone UK (from: 20, msg: 70, total: 90) Enter your username. Messages are sent to [email protected]
  • Voicestream (from: 15, msg: 140, total: 140) Enter your 10-digit phone number. Message is sent via the email gateway, since they changed their web gateway and we have not gotten it working with the new one yet.
  • Weblink Wireless (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Goes to @airmessage.net
  • WellCom (from: 20, msg: 160, total: 160) Enter your phone number. Goes to @sms.welcome2well.com
  • WyndTell (from: 20, msg: 480, total: 500) Enter username/phone number. Goes to @wyndtell.com

Sanyo’s new hybrid camera is tiny

Sunday, October 29th, 2006

Jim Jamieson
Province

What is it? Sanyo Xacti HD1A hybrid digital camera

Price: $899

Why you need it: For those tech-lovers who want to consolidate the number (and size) of toys they carry around.

Why you don’t: Combo devices always come with compromises.

Our rating: (three stars out of five)

– – –

High-definition camcorders have been on the market for a couple years and devices that allow you to take both video and still photos are commonplace these days, as any cell-phone or digital-camera owner can attest.

But we’re just beginning to see combinations of HD video recording with still photography. Sanyo didn’t waste any time building this capability into its small footprint Xacti line of hybrid cams.

HD television is a technology that is only slowly gaining marketshare in North America, but it’s natural to want to shoot amazingly crisp video for showing on computer screens and video players such as Apple’s iPod as well as those who want to display their work on their own HDTVs.

The 235-gram Xacti HD1A shoots HD digital video and high-resolution five-megapixel stills, housed in a tiny body — 7.9 centimetres wide by 11.9 cm high by 3.5 cm deep — and designed for one-handed operation.

The camcorder in this device can shoot at 30 frames per second, similar to TV, while the

3.8-megapixel still-camera function delivers photos in the widescreen format.

With memory cards continuously expanding in size, video length isn’t a problem. The HD1A can record up to 21 minutes of HD video per gigabyte on a standard SD or SDHC memory card.

Available at CompuSmart.

© The Vancouver Province 2006

 

LG delivers what Canadians want — an MP3 player you can use with gloves

Thursday, October 26th, 2006

Company’s lineup for Christmas also includes its 50-inch plasma TV

Peter Wilson
Sun

When it comes to its new MP3 players, LG Electronics — which prides itself on marrying technology with design — is giving Canadians the finger.

Okay, it’s the finger inside a glove because it does get cold up here and operating an MP3 player isn’t that easy as you skate across that frozen pond.

It came about because Canadian consumers were looking for something different in the way of an MP3 player, said LG Canada’s manager of public affairs.

“So we went to our design teams and we said, look, we need to do something for Canada, something that’s unique,” said Lee. “And one of the things that came out in our focus groups was something that could be operated, even if you had gloves on.”

After all, said Lee, they wanted to hand the design team a challenge.

What they came up with — on MP3 players, particularly the FM20 (with the dewdrop design) along with their larger FM30 and JM53 designs — was a set of controls on the top of the player around which a single gloved finger could be wrapped.

“One way to hold this unit is actually in such a way that the index finger rests on the top,” said Lee.

“So you have forward, reverse, up, down and select to allow you to navigate,” said Lee. “Once you memorize the menu system, it’s actually quite easy to operate, even if you have a pair of gloves on.”

Another thing Canadians are truly concerned about, said Lee, is the up-time of the MP3 players, That’s why the JM53, with an eight-gigabyte hard drive, plays for as long as 30 hours and the FM30 delivers 60 hours.

Lee was in Vancouver Tuesday to demonstrate LG’s lineup for this Christmas, including its 50-inch plasma TVs. The company hopes buyers of big, high-definition TVs will also look as its theatre in a box. The LG LH-T9654MB model, with a single disc DVD player and a 1,000-watt amplifier (about $500), allow users with tricky rooms to connect their speaker wirelessly so that they don’t get caught up looking like a set of LED lights themselves as they set up to entertain the family over the holiday.

© The Vancouver Sun 2006

Program & software www.pcmover.com allows to transfer data from one computer to another without any problems while upgrading to new operating systems incl. Windows Vista – developed by local Vancouver company

Tuesday, October 24th, 2006

Software developed in Vancouver a boon for small business looking to upgrade computers

Peter Wilson
Sun

Emir Aboulhosn (front) is Laplink’s global marketing vice-president and general manager of Laplink Canada, whose team developed the graphic interface for PCmover. Photograph by : Ian Lindsay, Vancouver Sun

The imminent arrival of Windows Vista can mean problems for small businesses looking to upgrade their computers to the new operating system, but it’s meant a sales surge for PCmover, software developed, in part, in Vancouver.

Along with that, the Gastown-based sales and development arm of U.S.-based Laplink, has also seen PCmover, which sells for $49.95, adapted by new Intel Mac users.

They, too, want to transfer their old PC set ups — including all their applications — but this time over to their recently-purchased Apple products like the new iMacs.

“The word of mouth thing is really starting to take off,” said Emir Aboulhosn, Laplink’s global marketing vice-president and general manager of Laplink Canada, whose team developed the graphic interface for PCmover.

One of the reasons for this, said Aboulhosn, is that buyers of Dell computers for the home or small business can also purchase PCmover when they buy a new unit.

“And 30 per cent of new business owners actually come back and purchase more multiple licences,” said Aboulhosn. “So suddenly we’ve got this great spinoff effect.”

Even though Vista itself has ways of transferring files from one PC to another, applications are another matter, said Aboulhosn, who joined Laplink in 2004 when his old Vancouver company, SynerDrive Technologies — where he was CEO — was bought by the U.S. firm.

“What we’ve done is actually come up with a way to transfer applications. The myth is that once you install an application on your PC the only way to get it on another one is to go back and reinstall it, but with our technology you can actually migrate the files, the settings and the applications.”

Laplink only discovered that PCmover could be used with Macs — which can run Windows with such programs as Boot Camp and Parallels — through its users.

“When Parallels launched their version and Boot Camp came out we actually had a customer in Toronto who gave it a shot and it worked flawlessly.”

The word spread among Mac and PCmover users and Laplink decided it would also sell PCmover on that basis as well.

The next thing in PCmover, said Aboulhosn, will be the ability to allow individual applications to be moved from one PC to another, something that was always a tough trick before.

“The demand for selectivity just became overwhelming and we couldn’t ignore it anymore.”

The three-person development team at Laplink in Vancouver is now wholly developing a peer-to-peer application that will allow users to share files and work on them together.

“People will have instant work spaces where they can collect all their files in one location and drag and drop folders. It tells you what files have been updated, which are new and what files are temporarily available. It’s a great way to get off e-mail for sharing.”

Aboulhosn said that he’s leading an expansion into Canada with PCmover, which is now available only at Office Depot, but will be sold by Staples, Best Buy and Future Shop by mid-November.

And Aboulhosn adds that PCmover is also now “a huge hit in Japan.”

© The Vancouver Sun 2006

 

iPod at 5: It’s the first cultural icon of the 21st century

Tuesday, October 24th, 2006

Province

Apple CEO Steve Jobs introduces the iPod on Oct. 23, 2001. — AP

WASHINGTON — Apple’s popular iPod brand of MP3 player marked its fifth anniversary yesterday as a cultural phenomenon that helped bring music into the digital age and reap billions of dollars in sales for the U.S. company.
   The California-based computer maker launched its mini music player on Oct. 23, 2001, and has never looked back as sales of the trendy gadget have continued to skyrocket.
   Apple shipped more than eight million iPods during its fiscal fourth quarter, marking a 35-percent increase over the year-ago quarter, according to the company’s latest earnings statement.
   “This strong quarter caps an extraordinary year for Apple,” the company’s chief executive Steve Jobs said last week, noting that the group had sold more than 39 million iPods during the past year.
   And the sleek little music player has already become the “first cultural icon of the 21st century,” according to Michael Bull, a media lecturer at Britain’s University of Sussex, who is researching the social influence of the iPod.
   Apple has shored up the diminutive music player’s popularity and ease of use by making it compatible with Windows PCs. In 2003, the company launched its iTunes online music store, enabling iPod devotees to download their favourite hits.
   Current visitors to the iTunes store can also download films and popular television programs.
   However, industry competition is mounting, and software giant Microsoft announced in September that its Zune MP3 music player will hit U.S. stores on Nov. 14 as it seeks to challenge iPod’s grip on the lucrative market.
   South Korean electronics giant Samsung has also started marketing its own MP3 player called the YP-Z5 in a bid to challenge Apple’s dominance over the music-player market.
   Part of the iPod’s success can be attributed to its small size — the smallest model easily fits in a shirt pocket — and its hefty memory that allows owners of the larger models to store up to 20,000 songs.
   Indeed, the iPod has become so ubiquitous that Mazda, General Motors and Ford recently teamed up with Apple to provide iPodcompatible equipment in their cars.

Livin’ la vida loca in a virtual world

Saturday, October 21st, 2006

GAMING I The Vancouver Sun joins the up to 12,000 people that are gathered at any given moment to live, work, chat, design and sell wares, develop real estate and work at a website that is just like The Matrix, but voluntary

Randy Shore
Sun

My name is Silas Leroux and I am one of more than one million citizens of Second Life. For those of you who are as unhip and out of it as I used to be, Second Life is a three-dimensional virtual world where 8,000 to 12,000 people are gathered at any given moment to live, work, chat, design and sell their wares, develop real estate, work as prostitutes and shopkeepers or rent cars.

On my first day in-world I found a motorcycle dirt track, a gorgeous Asian market, a red light district and high fashion outlets. I also chatted with people from all over the world.

Some people work there full time as game characters, earning virtual money that they can convert into cash to pay their rent and grocery bills in RL (that’s Real Life, you poor thing).

And it’s not just bleary-eyed gamers flocking to Second Life. The corporate world is rushing to stake a claim in this online meta-verse. IBM is holding virtual meetings in Second Life, according to News.com. Reuters has purchased virtual real estate, opened a virtual news bureau and staffs it with a real reporter. Wired Magazine contracted virtual architects to design its in-world offices and opened last month. Toyota is offering test drives of a virtual version of its Scion Xb automobile.

Second Life is just like The Matrix, except it’s voluntary, and on Wednesday about 30,000 new citizens signed on.

GETTING INSIDE

The software you need to join the game downloads with the click of a button from the Second Life website, run by game creators Linden Labs of San Francisco. Another click unpacks and sets up the client for you. And as long as you have a relatively recent name brand PC or a Mac, and a high-speed Internet connection, you have everything you need. My Dell Dimension 3000 did the trick.

A premium membership will set you back $72 US for a year or $9.95 US a month. That gives you full access and a steady income, which you will want because there is plenty to buy. Don’t want to pay? No problem, you can still play but without Linden Dollars you are limited to drifting around just chatting. Linden says its citizens are spending close to $500,000 US a day.

Before you get into the game environment, you must select a name and an appearance for your avatar, your virtual self. Once you get to the orientation Island you can customize your appearance to your heart’s delight, selecting from extensive menus that will make your hair bushier, eyes bluer and legs as long as you like.

I decided to be a fat guy with big pants, a bright red sweatshirt and a Cajun name. Oddly, no one else chose to do that, but I did see a small red monkey, a girl with the head of a fox and heaps of anime types, uniformly slim with razor-cut forward-swooped hair.

Linden Labs set up nine new Initiation Islands on Wednesday bringing their total to 45; each can handle over 2,000 users. It was so busy that Linden put up a message on its log-in screen warning users that heavy press coverage has attracted so many new visitors that game play was being affected. Indeed, my initial experience was choppy and anatomical menus to customize my look very slow to download.

On the island you learn to walk, chat, manipulate objects and fly. Yes, fly.

Any time you want you can press a button and soar into the air and off to whatever destination you like, provided it is built from pixels. I bonked my head a few times and dropped into the ocean, though not fatally, before I got the hang of it. Server lag — delays in game response due to the heavy user traffic — made movement tricky and frustrating. “Are all 10,000 of us sitting around fuming at our keyboards?” I thought. “And why are we doing this instead of RL?”

The answer is: freedom.

ON THE INSIDE

If you are an overweight, frail loser with a mind-numbing job and no real friends or hobbies — and let’s face it, many of us are — in Second Life the world really is your oyster. You can look as cool as you want and spend as much time fine-tuning your wardrobe as you want. Got a flare for design, but no real opportunities to leverage it in RL? No problem. Set up shop in your own virtual workspace and sell your amazing clothes, jewelry or whatever to virtual customers.

If you are great at it, you can make Real Money. Linden dollars are convertible to U.S. dollars at an exchange rate it controls.

Wired in February profiled a Michigan woman who quit her job as a truck dispatcher to pursue a career as a designer in Second Life, creating clothes and skin textures for sale in-world. Sales were booming at last report.

With nothing to guide my first game experience, I landed in a place called Barcola. It is rated Mature. Other areas have a PG rating, so you can navigate according to your personal proclivities.

Most everyone there was texting in Italian, but I noticed a nude woman lounging next to a fountain, clearly looking for a conversation. As I approached her, game play slowed and the simulation crashed and kicked me off the system. Just a bit too much like RL.

On re-entering the simulation, I landed in a little plaza called Miramare, between two fashion outlets, LoLo and Girlkultur.

It must be an easy place to get to because nOObs (newbies, novices) kept dropping from the sky and saying “Hey, what’s going on?”

As Girlkultur did a brisk business in fishnet stockings, I chatted with Hope Alderich whose real self is Canadian, but whose avatar dresses like a Parisian hooker. The skimpy bikini-like top is an outfit that she picked up from an in-world friend, she explained.

“I love that I can wear this here,” she said. “I love looking at myself.”

I could hear other avatars yawning and making smoochy noises as we talked about a virtual affair Hope had engaged in; conversations are “audible” to other gamers in the immediate area, through the text chat field on-screen.

As I tried to be more interesting to other people, at least enough to quiet the yawning, a madman arrived and started shouting nonsense, which made it hard to follow the thread of my own conversation. Again, a bit too much like RL.

On the road

I drifted from neighbourhood to neighbourhood checking out shops and public art in parks until I ran into Zarchary Milton, whose real self resides in Britain.

He, too, was a first timer and found the long-time members cliquish. We practised flying together until I turned the wrong way and left the scene like Superman (or Neo, if you are still thinking Matrix).

As though to prove us wrong about snobby experienced users, Barnesworth Anubis stepped up and welcomed me to wherever-the-heck I was at that moment. (Read the Linden Lifestyles interview with Anubis at http://lindenlifestyles.com/?p=207.)

Anubis runs several successful Second Life businesses including Barnes Boutique, a men’s clothing shop, a furniture design house and prefab buildings. He is wearing a nifty silver-grey suit and pants. I am not. When I introduce myself as a reporter it all becomes painfully clear to him why I look so bad.

Still clad in the offerings that I selected back on the initiation island, Anubis declares me a “nOOb,” but gives me a very dapper black suit complete with shoes and fedora.

I explain that my editors suggested that I join Second Life and become a real estate mogul, in say, a month at one hour a day. Anubis, and our conversation-mate SteveR Whiplash, howl with laughter. Becoming rich in SL is almost as time-consuming as it is in RL, they explain. Set aside years, they advise.

I have been in-world for 10 hours now and RL, in the form of my wife and two children, beckon. They are deeply suspicious of this assignment, especially since it violates the house gaming rules. I sign off.

Oops, it’s midnight and I’m back. I need pictures for the newspaper so I teleport (didn’t I mention that you can instantly teleport to any locale in-world?) to Tehama Asian market. I can hear crickets chirping and snippets of conversation and music in the audio stream as I stroll through the booths and tents.

I pick up a red dragon shirt. It’s important to be well-dressed in-world.

This all very nice, but it’s late and I need pictures. Snap, snap. Off to some remote corner where an entrepreneur has set up a dirt track and created motorcycles, which he rents out for high-speed thrills.

I rent a flashy race car and try the cross-country trails that sprawl across this lightly populated region. I’m a lousy driver, but others here are not. Whoever designed this business is doing a very brisk trade and that’s because, well, it’s really fun.

I ending up spending 11 hours in-world my first day and the first eight were all on the learning curve. I spoke with people from all over the world.

What a place. Silas Leroux will be back.

Randy Shore will be in-world at Second Life between 8 and 10 a.m. Monday to Friday next week. Read his blog online at www.vancouversun.com.

GET GOING FASTER

Randy Shore stumbled around blindly in Second Life, wrestling with computer performance issues and his own ignorance. Here are a few tips that could help you find the fun faster.

– If you are running a PC with Windows XP, use your control panel to choose the system icon. Inside, under advanced, there is a toggle switch that lets you optimize for performance rather than appearance. Choose performance.

– Unless you have a really good video card — and most people don’t — don’t choose fullscreen for game play.

– Don’t waste too much time on your appearance on the initiation island. It takes a long time to get all the menus loaded and you’ll just end up looking like everyone else anyway. Buy new clothes inside the game.

– When you land at an in-world locale, wait for the architecture to fill in before you start to move around. You could get stuck in a wall.

– If you try to move with the arrow keys and nothing happens for 15 or 20 seconds, quit and log in again. You’ll come back to the same spot and usually you can get going right away.

– Use the zoom slide on the map to expand your potential game area.

– Be brave.

© The Vancouver Sun 2006

IMPORTANT: Internet Explorer 7 and MLXchange

Saturday, October 21st, 2006

Other

On October 19, Microsoft released Internet Explorer 7. Unfortunately, there are compatibility issues between Internet Explorer 7 and MLXchange. We strongly recommend that you do not download Internet Explorer 7.

 

At this time, we have received the following information from First American MLS Solutions, the developers of MLXchange.

 

TECHNICAL ADVISORY

MLXchange component installation for residential and commercial

 

On the morning of October 23, your browser will automatically install some new Active X components for both commercial and residential MLXchange. If you don’t have administrative rights on your office computer, your office technician will have to sign in to http://mlslink.mlxchange.com/tools/axinstall/axinstalltool.asp that morning to ensure that all appropriate components are installed on your office computers.

 

As always, call the Help Desk at 604.730.3020 if you have questions regarding the installation.

What’s Happening

Microsoft has unexpectedly moved up the release date of Internet Explorer 7 and, as of now, the new version of the browser is available for download from Microsoft.com.  Microsoft has also just announced it will begin pushing out Internet Explorer 7 through its Automatic Update service to all Windows XP users on November 2nd.

 

First American MLS Solutions is committed to fully supporting IE7 and has been rigorously testing its MLS software against the Beta and Release Candidate versions of IE7 to ensure compatibility.  We have already addressed the majority of issues uncovered by our tests, but it is very important that you be aware of the remaining issues we are still working on and how they may affect you.

Known Issues

If users access MLXchange using IE7, they may experience the following anomalies:

 

  • The CMA Report button does not function.  Users can create a CMA, but clicking the Report button returns an error.

 

  • Radius-based map search does not function.  Users can only select the map area using the “rubberband” method.

 

  • Reports do not display the “multi-image” button.  The button labeled “1/8,” “2/8,” etc., that usually appears on report images and allows additional photos to be viewed is not displayed under IE7.

 

  • Child value group constraints do not function.  When building a search, all child values are available for selection instead of just the appropriate subset.  For example, the “Sub-Area” list will show all values regardless of which “Area” is selected.

 

Known Issues for MLXPro users

 

  • MLX Professional Agent Web Sites display incorrectly.  Some of the Agent Web Sites are not formatted correctly under IE7 and truncate the top menu, hindering navigation.

 

What FAMLS is Doing About It

FAMLS is working on a compatibility HotFix to address these remaining issues that will begin rolling out to customers next week.  A brief downtime will be required, and all customers should be updated by the third week of November.

 

We are continuing to test our MLS software against the new production version of IE7 that has been made available to ensure that no new issues have been introduced.  FAMLS will do whatever it takes to achieve complete compatibility with IE7 in as short a time as possible.

What You Can Do

Windows XP users that are experiencing problems because they have already installed IE7 can revert to IE6 by following these steps:

 

  1. Click “Start,” and then click “Control Panel.”
  2. Click “Add or Remove Programs.”
  3. If necessary, select “Show Updates” at the top of the dialog box.
  4. Scroll down the list and select Internet Explorer 7, and then click “Change/Remove.”
  5. Click “Yes” to confirm the removal.

 

Windows XP users can temporarily disable Automatic Updates and ensure that Internet Explorer 7 is not automatically installed on their computers by following these steps:

 

  1. Click “Start,” and then click “Control Panel.”
  2. Click “Automatic Updates.”
  3. Select “Turn off Automatic Updates.”
  4. Click “Yes.”

 

NOTE: ALTHOUGH FAMLS OFFERS THIS AS A POSSIBLE SOLUTION, BOARD TECHNICAL STAFF DOES NOT RECOMMEND THIS

 

Once the compatibility updated has been applied to your MLS system, users can re-install IE7 and/or re-enable Automatic Updates.