NETSURFER DIGEST
More Signal, Less Noise
Volume 09, Issue 46
Friday, November 28, 2003

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BREAKING SURF
US Senate Passes Weakened Anti-Spam Legislation
Deadline Iraq
Why the August Blackout Happened
The Impact of the Blackout on the Net
The Web Is Not an Archive
Vivendi Universal to Pull Plug on MP3.com's Content
Rolling Stone on the Top 500 Albums and Iggy Pop
Talking Turkey
Google Changes Its PageRank Algorithm
Undersea Cable Failure Impacts European Net Traffic
Victoria's Secret Fashion Show
Retooling Slashdot with Web Standards
Publishers Invest in Social Network Service Tribe.net
Internet Grows in China: The Numbers
AT&T Sues eBay for Patent Infringement
ONLINE CULTURE
Hacking for the Mob
iPod Culture
Top Ten Internet Fads
ONLINE TRAVEL
Skyhigh Airlines
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Clever, Very Short Films
The Picture of Everything
Eggshell Sculpture
Bird Poop Art
The '80s Lyrics Quiz
And Now for Something Completely Disney
BOOKS & E-ZINES
Netsurfer Recommendations
The Chap Presents Trouser Semaphore
Cornell Toots Its Own Horn
Baconizing Amazon.com's Suggested Items
"The Time Has Come", the Walrus Said, "Eh?"
SURFING SCIENCE
Estimating the Airspeed Velocity of an Unladen Swallow
Sing This Corrosion
Low-Carb Tech Geeks
SOFTWARE
Emulator Compares P2P Algorithms
OTHER LINKS
BOOK REVIEWS
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Contact and Subscription Information
Credits

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BREAKING SURF

US Senate Passes Weakened Anti-Spam Legislation

The Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography and Marketing (CAN-SPAM) Act, which the US Congress hopes will regulate more....

Deadline Iraq

The CBC's "Deadline Iraq" focuses on the international suite of journalists who covered Gulf War II. This incredible documentary more....

Why the August Blackout Happened

After the massive power blackout Aug. 14 affected 50 million people in eight states and the province of Ontario, President George Bush more....

The Impact of the Blackout on the Net

The August power blackout affected millions of people in many ways and clearly disrupted Net service in major portions of the US and more....

The Web Is Not an Archive

Web sites cited in scientific research sometimes disappear and, worryingly, the rate of disappearance is climbing. As part of its more....

Vivendi Universal to Pull Plug on MP3.com's Content

Some time ago, Vivendi Universal (VU) acquired MP3.com lock, stock, and barrel: the domain name, the site, and the music. Last week, in a more....

Rolling Stone on the Top 500 Albums and Iggy Pop

Rolling Stone presents what it considers the 500 greatest albums of all time. This seems a bit premature, as time, to all appearances, is more....

Talking Turkey

Are Turkey the country and turkey the poultry linguistically related? As you might guess, yes, they are. The Portuguese transported the more....

Google Changes Its PageRank Algorithm

Over time, people have learned how to exploit the Google PageRank algorithm in order to make their Web pages climb up the mountain of more....

Undersea Cable Failure Impacts European Net Traffic

A couple of breaks in an important telecommunications link point out how dependent the Net is on the fiber cables that girdle the globe. more....

Victoria's Secret Fashion Show

Ever since its first netcast caused massive traffic jams, the release of "Victoria's Secret Fashion Show" footage on the Web has been more....

Retooling Slashdot with Web Standards

Slashdot is one of the oldest geek community sites, designed before the age of CSS, XML, and all those other page-layout standards. The more....

Publishers Invest in Social Network Service Tribe.net

One of the newest social-networking Web sites is Tribe.net, with some 48,000 users signed up since it launched last summer. Tribe.net more....

Internet Grows in China: The Numbers

China is now second only to the US in the number of Internet users. A new Markle Foundation study, based on more than 2,000 interviews, more....

AT&T Sues eBay for Patent Infringement

AT&T began its Thanksgiving celebrations a week early with shots fired at what it considers to be two turkeys. AT&T filed suits more....

ONLINE CULTURE

Hacking for the Mob

You have the chance to build a state-of-the-art online betting system, with end-to-end encryption, offshore data warehousing, and more....

iPod Culture

Has a stranger come up and offered you the opportunity to jack into their iPod? This article in Wired reports a startling new development more....

Top Ten Internet Fads

If you have been reading NSD regularly, you probably have your own list of the top ten Internet fads. We thought blogs would have to be more....

ONLINE TRAVEL

Skyhigh Airlines

Skyhigh Airlines isn't a real airline, but you'll certainly recognize many of its strong points in the airlines you've flown. The Skyhigh more....

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Clever, Very Short Films

Perhaps the ultimate challenge for a filmmaker is the short short. For some, it's a TV ad. For those who entered the Bristol-based more....

The Picture of Everything

Where can you see Batman, the Wheel of Fortune, and the Titanic all in the same place? These elements of pop culture can be seen in "The more....

Eggshell Sculpture

This site lends credence to the aphorism that says you can't make a sculpture without carving a few eggs. Come here to discover the more....

Bird Poop Art

Every once in a while you'll find a site so well done that you have a hard time telling whether it is serious or not. This Web site devoted more....

The '80s Lyrics Quiz

How well do you remember '80s song lyrics? Test your knowledge at this interactive quiz. It's sure to be a great break from your day, more....

And Now for Something Completely Disney

Disney's timeless animation has enchanted millions for decades. Among the enchanted Disney fanatics, one man stands out from the throng. more....

BOOKS & E-ZINES


Netsurfer Recommendations

Items our staff likes and you might too. Click on the image or title to order at a hefty discount from our affiliate Amazon.com, and send a few pennies our way as well.

Castles of Steel: Britain, Germany, and the Winning of the Great War at Sea
Robert K. Massie
Random House; ISBN: 0679456716

In his earlier history, Dreadnought: Britain, Germany, and the Coming of the Great War, Robert Massie told the tale of how Britain, Germany, and other nations came to develop those massive pinnacles of 19th-century naval technology, the dreadnoughts. Massie continues the story with 800 pages that analyze how the treasury-breaking dreadnoughts fared in naval operations during the Great War. Don't think that this is just a military history only of interest to war buffs. As in his previous book, Massie manages to make what could be a dry military subject come vividly alive. His sense of time and place and the analysis of significant issues of the time are impeccable. His deft portraits of the major characters who shaped the course of naval history bring them to life on the written page - no mean feat when so many of them were larger than life. Those who have read Massie's previous book will know exactly what to expect - a vivid and compelling story told by a masterful historian. Those who have not will want to begin with the earlier Dreadnought before moving on to this book - and rest assured, you will want to keep reading.


Beyond Fear: Thinking Sensibly About Security in an Uncertain World
Bruce Schneier
Copernicus Books; ISBN: 0387026207

Bruce Schneier is one of the most lucid and common-sensical modern thinkers on the subject of security. The problem domains of computer and national security are complex and do not lend themselves to simple solutions. On the other hand, they are not intractable. It's just that the pursuit of security requires some intelligent tradeoffs. One of the key points of this book is that we should all be better security consumers. Schneier writes that only through open and informed national discussion can we arrive at the right balance of security and inconvenience. Schneier seeks to help the reader understand the issues at stake, and touches on a number of concrete examples of security systems such as airline security, national ID cards, and e-commerce. He shows how they work, why they work or don't, and what social trade-offs they entail. Schneier is a gifted writer who has a flair for making what could be an esoteric subject immediate and understandable. Given the pervasive presence of security issues in the modern world, this is a timely and thoughtful book. It's fair to say that reading it will make you a more enlightened security consumer.


The Abuse of Man: An Illustrated History of Dubious Medical Experimentation
Wolfgang Weyers
Ardor Scribendi; ISBN: 189335721X

The history of medicine is rife with questionable medical experiments on human beings. This book comprehensively reviews the subject from roughly the mid-18th century to modern times. Beyond simply cataloguing the many shocking instances of unethical research, this book delves deeper to describe the slow evolution of the modern ethical and legal codes that govern human medical experiments. What struck us is that until late in the 20th century, there was little resistance to human experimentation, particularly when the subjects did not know they were serving as guinea pigs. Weyers covers many of the well known misuses of medical research, such as the infamous Nazi experiments on prisoners and the Tuskegee syphilis study, but also a vast array of other lesser known medical travesties. While this is indeed a profusely illustrated book, most of the illustrations are not of medical atrocities but are portraits of the doctors who perpetrated them. This is an exceptionally powerful book on the subject of bio-ethics, and certainly timely at the dawn of what many think will be the age of bioscience.


Let It Be... Naked
The Beatles
Capitol; ASIN: B0000DJZA5

It's hard to find a dispassionate opinion about this album, which took the Beatles tapes recorded for Let It Be, their last original album, and used them to construct the experience of being in the studio with the Fab Four as they recorded. Producer/accused murder Phil Spector's lush wall-of-sound production was to be stripped away, leaving just the naked Beatles sound. "Let it Be" itself was famously controversial, recorded as the band was breaking up and working under less than ideal conditions. The Beatles were being filmed for a TV special while they tried to come up with the album's original material; stress bubbled to the surface and finally tore the band apart. The Beatles ended with a last, famous, live rooftop concert and the in-studio masterpiece that became "Abbey Road". All this is in the liner notes, but what of the music? Here's where the fans are divided. This is indeed the Beatles in a raw musical mode. Some people, including us, think the remix works - it's a different and frequently better album. Others think the tracks here are nothing special, stuff that already was better covered on Anthology. Either way, audiophiles should grab this rare opportunity to judge the effect of a producer on an album's final sound. For Beatles fans, this is just another step closer to the soul of their music.




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The Chap Presents Trouser Semaphore

The Chap Magazine was founded in 1998 by a pair of rum coves (a practically untranslatable English expression from a lost era, more....

Cornell Toots Its Own Horn

Someone at Cornell University is thinking. What better way to attract contributions and applicants than a slick multimedia showcase on the more....

Baconizing Amazon.com's Suggested Items

You may have noticed, as you've been browsing Amazon.com, that the site tells you that "Customers who bought this title also bought:", more....

"The Time Has Come", the Walrus Said, "Eh?"

The Walrus has hauled out on the shores of Canada with high hopes of becoming the Great White North's answer to American publications such more....

SURFING SCIENCE

Estimating the Airspeed Velocity of an Unladen Swallow

Jonathan Corum finally answers the question posed by the keeper of the Bridge of Death to King Arthur in the famous sequence from "Monty more....

Sing This Corrosion

Terrorist attack may be the latest threat to landmarks, but time has defaced landmarks since humans raised their first. Rain, wind, and more....

Low-Carb Tech Geeks

You've heard of the Atkins diet, but there's a different take to be found: geeks look at it as body-reengineering. Salon reports that more....

SOFTWARE

Emulator Compares P2P Algorithms

Since so many people are developing peer-to-peer (P2P) applications these days, researchers have developed p2psim software, which helps more....

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CREDITS
Publisher: Arthur Bebak
Editor: Lawrence Nyveen
Contributing Editor:
Production Manager: Bill Woodcock
Copy Editor: Elvi Dalgaard

Netsurfer Communications, Inc.

  • President: Arthur Bebak
  • Vice President: S.M. Lieu

Writers and Netsurfers:
  • Regan Avery
  • Steven Bobker
  • Michael Aaron Dennis
  • Jay Haight
  • Stephen Heath
  • Michael Luke
  • Kenneth Schulze
  • Melissa Story
  • Grace Tierney

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