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No 'Right' to Crypto Export?
- The US deputy secretary of defense tells Fortune 500 company officials that no one has a god-given right to use powerful American encryption technology. By Michael Stutz. [Wired News]
No Explanation Yet for Amazon's Crash
- The cause of the online bookseller's "simple" problem may not be revealed, company says. [Wired News]
No Java in IE5's Base-Level Download?
- Microsoft intends to leave out Java support in the minimum installation for the next version of Internet Explorer, a source says. Although Microsoft won't confirm the plan, it says that allowing components like Java support to be downloaded later is one way to balance size and features. [Wired News]
No Java in IE5's Base-Level Download?
- Microsoft intends to leave out Java support in the minimum installation for the next version of Internet Explorer, a source says. Although Microsoft won't confirm the plan, it says that allowing components like Java support to be downloaded later is one way to balance size and features. [Wired News]
No More GIF Text!
- You can now embed fonts right into your Web pages to make your site good lookin', searchable, and structurally beautiful. [Wired News]
Novell Spam Report Boomerangs
- The UK office of Novell released a report that the company commissioned to uncover the true cost of spam. But anti-spam activists say there's more here than meets the eye. [Wired News]
Nuke Research Begets Cancer Care
- Using computer algorithms developed during the Manhattan Project, a group of California scientists has developed a software system that refines radiation treatment of cancer. By Heidi Kriz. [Wired News]
Object-Oriented Education?
- An eclectic group of private and public organizations hope to lower the costs of online learning with a set of standards for educational "content objects." By Burck Smith. [Wired News]
Of Fish and Fuselage
- Material sciences may not have quite the pizazz of astrophysics or marine biology, but recent applications may strike a lot closer to home. By Steven Brody. [Wired News]
Olympic Data Crunching
- In weeding through a trillion bytes of data from the Nagano Winter Olympics, IBM engineers have found some curious results. Now they must analyze the data and prepare for the 2 billion hits expected in Sydney 2000. By Stewart Taggart. [Wired News]
On the Razor's Edge
- 3Com this week will give developers a peak at its newest version of the PalmPilot and its plans for the wireless frontier. By Christopher Jones. [Wired News]
One Big Beta
- Broadcasters venturing into DTV territory this fall are walking a very thin line. Folks in TV land won't be impressed unless the show goes on -- and stays on. By Kristi Coale. [Wired News]
One Day, Airplanes Might Heal Themselves
- What if building materials were self-aware enough to indicate when fatigue was beginning to destroy them? A researcher has found a clue to this end, in a material as near as your hall closet. [Wired News]
One Man's Vision of the Web's Future
- Tim Berners-Lee, father of the World Wide Web, maps out his vision of the medium's future at the World Wide Web 7 conference in Brisbane, Australia. He spells that future X-M-L. [Wired News]
One Processor Fits All
- A patent issued to one of Silicon Valley's most secretive start-ups may herald a new kind of microprocessor -- one previously thought to be impossible. By Chris Oakes and Christopher Jones. [Wired News]
Open Java: Variation on a Theme
- Sun converted Java to an open source model Tuesday. But the move also brings what may be the open source movement's greatest test yet: licensing fees. By Chris Oakes and Polly Sprenger. [Wired News]
Open-Source Java at Last?
- Developers have heard it before: Sun Microsystems says it will release a more open version of its standards next month. By Niall McKay. [Wired News]
Opera 3.0 - Browser to Beat the Band
- There are things that upstart browser Opera 3.0 can't do, but it whoops the Big Two browsers in speed. [Wired News]
Opera Aims to Fill Netscape Gap
- Will a newly upgraded Opera Web browser speak to alienated Netscape fans? Its tiny Norwegian developer hopes so. By Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
Opera Scores a Browser Coup
- What do you really want in a browser? An upstart called Opera is banking on speed and is getting noticed. [Wired News]
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