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  • NTK 2007
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  • NTK 2005
  • NTK 2004
  • NTK 2003
  • NTK 2002
  • NTK 2001
  • 2000-12-22
    #180
    Naughty, nice, on drugs, or at party
  • 2000-12-15
    #179
    Baa sucks, filters up, bunker down
  • 2000-12-08
    #178
    that ageofconsent address, audiogalaxy
  • 2000-12-01
    #177
    Broken thumbs, MP faxotron, T-shirts to go
  • 2000-11-24
    #176
    Mah-lah RIP la-may Falco, bunkoo Lan-par-tay
  • 2000-11-17
    #175
    ICANN but uk.not, performing goats
  • 2000-11-10
    #174
    Gridlock, Antitrust, Adpop
  • 2000-11-03
    #173
    BMG make BFD, anti-RIP goodies, and the Autumn chocolate assortment
  • 2000-10-27
    #172
    Microsoft SourceNotSoSafe, Blitzkriegs and Vint C
  • 2000-10-20
    #171
    Demons of the present, Demons of our past, and the Devil's Gameboy Music
  • 2000-10-13
    #170
    Hot swapping, Christianity mocking, hats made of bread
  • 2000-10-06
    #169
    Rights, wrongs, and Meiji Choco Baby
  • 2000-09-29
    #168
    iPoint, you Barley
  • 2000-09-22
    #167
    Demonic protectors, Future unattractions, Teutonic hip-hop
  • 2000-09-15
    #166
    Another riot, another Perl conference, another bloody browser
  • 2000-09-08
    #165
    Exciting new redesign, same old battles, consume.net
  • 2000-09-01
    MiniNTK #8
    same length, more self-indulgent
  • 2000-08-25
    MiniNTK #7
    going back to our roots
  • 2000-08-18
    MiniNTK #6
    Yog-Soggoth Summer Special
  • 2000-08-11
    #164
    TheirNameHere.com, Demonic Possession, DNScon
  • 2000-08-04
    #163
    Bango, NetSol-io, All around my Barley-o
  • 2000-07-28
    #162
    RIP, MP3s, Klingon - are we seeing a pattern yet?
  • 2000-07-21
    #161
    MAPS vs ORBS vs GOD vs SATAN
  • 2000-07-14
    #160
    RIP vs. Free Speech, Hellfire, Galeon
  • 2000-07-07
    #159
    Free as in beer, borag thungg rebels, mad pride
  • 2000-06-30
    #158
    Slack genes, fake Tates, transhuman vamps
  • 2000-06-23
    #157
    Monopoly Dot Net, Gremlins in the 'froups, more Tech Nicks
  • 2000-06-16
    #156
    RIP tide turns, bizarre bounces, everybuddy!
  • 2000-06-09
    #155
    Forking Microsoft, Kinakuta near Southend, the continuity continuum
  • 2000-06-02
    #154
    BT's CUT pasting, Divas(TM), and Palm Elite
  • 2000-05-26
    #153
    Cix and stones, Onion cloning, BASIC for Perl
  • 2000-05-19
    #152
    Missing Boo, AboveNet not above it, our own mail trojan
  • 2000-05-12
    #151
    More ILOVEYOU, more Microsoft, but no "Webbies", thank God
  • 2000-05-05
    #150
    Tough love, Napster clonez. Paul.
  • 2000-04-28
    #149
    BT0wnedworld, RIPpy no-mates, and Mayday alerts
  • 2000-04-21
    #148
    Napster with Attitude, ICANN can't, and the usual Easter sacrilege
  • 2000-04-14
    #147
    Info insecurity, Sigue Sigue Sputnik - and Yoz
  • 2000-04-07
    #146
    Pitying the fools, sticking it to Linux, consuming Nurishment
  • 2000-03-31
    #145
    The usual retro-shit
  • 2000-03-24
    #144
    RIPping the mickey, Observer redux, and the Opera show
  • 2000-03-17
    #143
    The Telehouse Blob, Lastminute doubts, and an exit West
  • 2000-03-10
    #142
    Spooks, lawyers and the cute one from Zero
  • 2000-03-03
    #141
    RIPping yarns, Microsoft warez, and free as in speech
  • 2000-02-25
    #140
    Microsoft and the Dept of Injustice
  • 2000-02-18
    #135
    Virgin removals, Kevin of Warwick, boner bonanza
  • 2000-02-11
    #134
    Plausible denials, and a nice day for a QUAKE wedding
  • 2000-02-04
    #133
    DeCSS suss, digifreebies, and a one LAN clan shebang
  • 2000-01-28
    #132
    Spam, Sex, Students and the Conservative Party
  • 2000-01-21
    #132
    Crusoe on Friday, Linx, Lynx and Links
  • 2000-01-14
    #131
    there is no "Steve conspiracy"
  • 2000-01-07
    #130
    answers to the 20th century's most pressing problems
  • NTK 1999
  • NTK 1998
  • NTK 1997
  • HARD NEWS
  • ANTI-NEWS
  • EVENT QUEUE
  • TRACKING
  • MEMEPOOL
  • GEEK MEDIA
  • SMALL PRINT
 _   _ _____ _  __ <*the* weekly high-tech sarcastic update for the uk>
| \ | |_   _| |/ / _ __   __2000-01-21_ o join! mail an empty message to
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|_| \_| |_| |_|\_\|_| |_|\___/ \_/\_/   o     http://www.ntk.net/

 
         "'We made the buttons on the screen look so good you'll want 
         to lick them', says Steve."
                        - STEVE JOBS on the jellybean-licious MacOS X
                http://www.pathfinder.com/fortune/2000/01/24/app.html         
                ...watch out for the brown "Application Quit" dialogs
         
 
                                >> HARD NEWS <<
                                crusoe carusos 

         TRANSMETA announced its new range of chips this week
         (spoiling our prediction that they were unveiling a new set
         of amusing meta-tags for their Website: names count for
         nothing in this business). The low-power chips for mobiles,
         in case you don't get in much, are called Crusoes (which, of
         course, connates lack of mobility and powerlessness. qv
         previous parens). Fuddled hacks have so far been vague on
         the ramifications - extra marks for Wired News on their
         trenchant analysis of the menu served to journos at the
         launch - so we'll leave it to Ars Technica to give you the
         real run-down. Best observation so far goes to NTK sub Nick
         Sweeney who noted that the webcast Torvalds vs Dave Taylor
         Quake deathmatch gave a powerful message out to the Linux
         weenies: "he may be a god to you, but to us, he's another
         chubby engineer who needs to practice his plasma gun skills."
         http://arstechnica.com/cpu/1q00/crusoe/crusoe-1.html
                                       - for the hungry for knowledge
         http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,33778,00.html
                                                     - for the hungry

         Our obsession with JONATHAN UNGOED-THOMAS's coverage of the
         thyber-crime scene continues unabated, even if his latest
         work: "Hacker gang blackmails firms with stolen files",
         actually contains a germ of truth in it. VISA UK genuinely
         did receive a ransom demand, and the James Grant arrest is
         connected. But what about those eleven other companies?
         Would one hacker "gang" really try to draw that much
         attention to itself? And what of those "source codes", and
         the fiendish tricks of "sophisticated" cyberterrorists who
         use the dreaded tools of the scoundrel, "Internet mail and
         chat"? And would the appearence of this story - with its
         implication of an organised hacker fronthave *anything* to
         do with the announcement of a "cybercrime" squad by the
         NCIS, just days later?
http://www.the-times.co.uk/news/pages/Sunday-Times/stinwenws01028.html?999
                                   - and he's a hit on talk.guns too!
         http://www.the-times.co.uk/interface/
                        - feast on those "Spirit of '94" button GIFs!
         http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/oicd/conslist2.htm
         - then tap into the Home Office's IOCA consultation exercise

         An *exceptionally* mild winter is probably high up on the
         forthcoming excuses made by TELEHOUSE about their
         increasingly crowded server piles. Still, if it's still too
         chilly for you outside, maybe you'd like to pop by to the
         all-too-popular co-location house, where temperatures in
         some cages have hit up to 37 degrees centigrade recently.
         While Telehouse ops staff say that there isn't a
         problem, the fact that they're now leaving doors open (to
         let the hot air escape, and to fit a standalone
         heat-exchanger in) should make it a lot easier to sneak in
         and toast yourself in front of nice blazing, mission-critical
         Webserver.
         http://www.telehouse.net/ 
                                                - companies mentioned
         http://www.linx.net/
                                                 - ...in this article

                                >> ANTI-NEWS << 
                             berating the obvious

         more Y2K hubris: http://members.aol.com/jesprognyc/y2000.htm
         ... you'd at least LUCENT would know better than to run IIS:
         http://www.ntk.net/2000/01/21/lucentuk.gif ... New Media Age
         Online gives full cc: list to e-mail subscribers, prompting
         imminent net marketing spam meltdown ... "does 50% of the
         virgin.com staff resigning in a week count as a Falco?": not
         yet, but you're getting there ... KEVIN WARWICK watch: "it
         could be one day possible to hack into someone's brain and
         corrupt what they're sensing." - NEW SCIENTIST, 2000-01-22
         ... THE GUARDIAN, as part of its weeklong festival of
         anti-news, claims "Public enemy were the first to download a
         whole album" ... ONION STORIES in the real world:
         http://www.ntk.net/2000/01/21/redirsfgateonion.html 
         vs http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/000120/ny_agency__1.html  ...
         SEGA DREAMCAST features "individual floating shaving heads,
         with 90 omni-directional slots to catch and cut all hairs":
         http://195.224.53.206/comet/default.asp?page=PP&product=358851&site=GNG


                               >> EVENT QUEUE << 
                         goto's considered non-harmful

         Another couple of years go by [see NTK 1998-01-30], another
         Namco TIME CRISIS sequel lures you to the AMUSEMENT TRADE
         EXHIBITION INTERNATIONAL (Tue-Thu 2000-01-25/27, Earls Court,
         London). We must admit, we're not too sure about this one (the
         Namco Time Crisis sequel, that is - ATEI's the same every
         year): CRISIS ZONE has the same "press pedal to duck" action,
         but the recoiling plastic pistol has been replaced with a H&K
         MP5K-style submachine gun, which destroys both the on-screen
         terrain and much of the subtlety and pacing of the original.
         http://www.atei.co.uk/
         - we *still* like the idea of a "Parks And Attractions" show

         And for those who prefer their huntin' and shootin' rather
         more "off the rails", London games cybercaff THE PLAYING
         FIELDS proclaims that it's the "only" UK qualifying centre for
         this year's CPL $100,000 Quake 3 playoffs. The heats don't
         actually start till Sun 2000-02-20 but, because the UK winner
         gets UKP1000, free entry to the Dallas finals, free flights,
         free accommodation, UKP500 in spending money and "Gameplay
         freebies" (presumably a baseball cap with the old Wireplay
         logo on it), competition is likely to be *fierce*.
         http://www.playingfields.co.uk/content/cpl_about.shtml
         - "Players may dress in jeans, shorts, slacks, skirts, shoes,
                         T-shirts or dress shirts. Hats can be worn."


                                >> TRACKING <<
                sufficiently advanced technology: the gathering 

         The browser wars may be over in the land of the Big People,
         but down here in the ASCII trenches, there's still
         everything to play for. Our new favourite (we're so fickle):
         LINKS. As Kragen Sitaker notes, you can't
         search for it, and you can't tell anyone about it without
         them thinking you've just found out about Lynx, but apart
         from the name, it's great. On-the-fly reformatting of
         a downloading page, handles tables well, and the same
         cute xterm mouse handling that made our previous love, w3m,
         such a joy. And at only 300K for the source, how could
         you not give it a go?
         http://artax.karlin.mff.cuni.cz/~mikulas/links
                - at least somebody in .cz isn't running a warez site
         http://mordor.net/~bet/links/ 
                                       - mirror where the shadows lie

                                >> MEMEPOOL << 
                              hasta la altavista

         IRC IRL ROFL: http://www.ircnews.com/mirc.html ... ... whois
         -h whois.nic.uk linuxformat.co.uk ... how the other 0.0001%
         live: http://www.iwantoneofthose.com/mfjet.htm#fjetcus ...
         teletubby Happy Meals! ... Pseuds Corner meets Death Metal:
         http://www.evilmusic.com/bands/entombed.html ... using major
         net outages to get bargains on auction sites ... Web design
         of the future: http://www.toyangel.com/iluvjarjar/ ...
         http://www.its-a-london-thing.com/ vs
         http://its-a-london-thing.nu/ [caution: content advisory]
         ... http://www.unamerican.com staffer, ironically, appears
         to "hate his job": http://www.ntk.net/2000/01/21/redirunamerican.html 
         ... obligatory Star Wars/Lego/Occasional Funny Shuttlecocks link:
         http://www.brunching.com/ratings/rate-starwarslegos.html ...


                                >> GEEK MEDIA <<
                                 get out less 

         TV>> an unofficial cannibalism theme on BBC2 tonight, with 
         mildly disappointing new LEAGUE OF GENTLEMEN (10pm) - hint: 
         the butcher's surname, Briss, is close to the Jewish word for 
         circumcision - plus DELICATESSEN (12.50am, Fri), post-
         apocalyptic French food farce from the makers of Alien 4... 
         TV's finest music format returns in TOP TENS (9pm, Sat, C4), 
         this week on "one hit wonders" - presumably including host 
         Phill Jupitus, who had a minor success with that Buzzcocks 
         quiz game a few years back... but the future belongs to C5 and 
         its annual SCI-FIVE WEEKEND, featuring Rutger Hauer parallel 
         universer CROSSWORLDS (9pm, Sat), bleak Crichton neurosurgery 
         parable THE TERMINAL MAN (10.50pm, Sat), dated '80s Smith & 
         Jones clunker MORONS FROM OUTER SPACE (12.50am, Sat), and - 
         intentionally funnier? - Zsa Zsa Gabor all-female oldie QUEEN 
         OF OUTER SPACE (2.25am, Sat)... then on Sunday, there's no 
         doubt "edited for language" peerless geek blockbuster 
         GHOSTBUSTERS (5.35pm, Sun), plus incomprehensibly odd Marlon 
         Brando remake of ISLAND OF DR MOREAU (9pm, Sun) which, to be 
         fair, has a great title sequence... in the face of which, C4 
         throws up its hands in despair and schedules shockingly 
         unerotic Demi Moore / Burt Reynolds "comedy" STRIPTEASE (10pm, 
         Sun, C4)... nothing on the rest of the week, unless you count 
         double-episode body-swap X FILES (10.20pm, Wed, BBC1), C4 
         devoting an hour-plus to a history of the clitoris - first in  
         a 3-part series on PRIVATE PARTS (10pm, Thu, C4), and Richard 
         Metzger trying to get some sense out of uber '70s-casualty and 
         Illuminatus! creator, Robert Anton Wilson, in DISINFO NATION 
         (12.40am, Thu, C4)...
         
         FILM>> with Gabriel Byrne in the opposite of his usual role, 
         STIGMATA (http://www.capalert.com/capreports/ : severe 
         distortion of reality; constant sinister flavor; tattoos of 
         nudity; placement of Jesus in a setting of sinister darkness; 
         mumbo-jumbo about God's sovereignty; a full meal of violence 
         to the non-believer) is to "The Exorcist" what "End Of Days" 
         is to "The Omen", though sadly not as good as any of them. The 
         plot explores the ancient prophecy that, when Christ returns 
         to earth, he will take the form of one of the Arquette 
         siblings and, since you ask, doesn't appear to be based around 
         the Ministry song of the same name... Chris Columbus reteams 
         with Robin Williams to give the world the appropriately 
         interminable Mrs Robot Doubtfire weepie BICENTENNIAL MAN 
         (http://www.capalert.com/capreports/ : teen and preteen 
         arrogance against fair parental authority; assisted suicide; 
         flatulence; detailed discussion of sexual intercourse and 
         orgasm; a romp into the world of Kevorkianism and Clintonics) 
         - enough to make Asimov fans modify the First Law: "injure a 
         human being, or, through inaction, allow a human being to come 
         to harm - unless it's fricking *Robin Williams*"... otherwise 
         you take your chances with sci-fi-free Aussie ensemble STRANGE 
         PLANET (imdb: comedy / romance), curiously unreviewed Brit 
         crime caper RANCID ALUMINIUM (imdb comment: "the most 
         convincing performance came from Dani Behr of all people"), or 
         arguably Wes "Nightmare On Elm St" Craven's most terrifying 
         creation yet - Meryl Streep in violin-teaching feelgooder 
         MUSIC OF THE HEART (http://www.capalert.com/capreports/ : 
         marital breakdown horrors; violent attitude; inviting 
         cohabitation; overall cheapening of marriage; drive-by murder 
         [unseen])...

         COMPO CORNER>> yes, perhaps we should have specified that you
         didn't have to enter *all* the rounds in our soul-destroyingly
         epic end-of-year quiz [NTK 1899-12-31 ho ho]; we regret to
         report that none of the remixes of the phrases "Need To Know"
         from the extensive list of pop tunes provided has yet been
         deemed adequate for use as a "theme tune" for NTK personnel at
         their (irregular) public appearances. Still, commendations to
         both BEN at cam.ac.uk for his "Windowsian Crapsody" -
         "Mozilla! We will not let you code (Let him code!)" etc - and
         ELLIOTT NOEL for "Baby Got Stack" (to the tune of "Baby Got
         Back", by Sir Mix-a-lot, obviously). Sadly, both were
         disqualified for not submitting MIDI accompaniments as per the
         contest rules; Elliott's claim that "he actually began a IT
         module of it a while ago" but doesn't "really have the
         tracking skills anymore" is good - *but not good enough*. So,
         at last, we are pleased to announce that the overall winner of
         our Y19100 no-prize is none other than BEN LAURIE who, safe in
         his server-bunker http://www.thebunker.net/hosting.htm ,
         cheerfully corrected even our official competition answers
         (specifically "Q. What status response should be sent back by
         a HTTP/1.1 server to a HTTP/0.9 GET request? A. Trick
         question! The HTTP/0.9 protocol doesn't support a status
         response") with "Tch. HTTP/0.9 is recognisable by the fact it
         doesn't send a version number (incidentally, the flag that
         indicates this in Apache is called 'assbackwards'. Honest)".
         Well done Ben, and comiserations to the rest of you: next
         year, we promise not to make the quiz so difficult that the 
         only only right answers come from co-authors of Apache... 
         

                               >> SMALL PRINT <<

       Need to Know is a useful and interesting UK digest of things that
         happened last week or might happen next week. You can read it
       on Friday afternoon or print it out then take it home if you have
     nothing better to do. It is compiled by NTK from stuff they get sent.
             Registered at the Post Office as "somewhat skeptical"
                http://www.deja.com/=dnc/getdoc.xp?AN=572872131

                                 NEED TO KNOW
            THEY STOLE OUR REVOLUTION. NOW WE'RE STEALING IT BACK.
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