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Hacking Posse (Mostly) Leaves Web in Peace - The Enforcers, who count the notorious Analyzer among their ranks, say they will stop defacing commercial Web sites. But critics say little will really change. [Wired News]
 
Hacking the Power Grid - Given the increasing number of high-profile attacks on networks hooked to the Internet, what are the chances of a crack on energy plants? By Gene Koprowski. [Wired News]
 
Have Crackers Found Military's Achilles' Heel? - In what may be the first legitimate taste of potential cyberwar, a group of crackers claims it has stolen the software that is used to control US military computer networks and systems, including GPS satellites. [Wired News]
 
Having a Ball With Chips - Cheaper cost and easier integration are two of the reasons Ball Semiconductor wants to start making integrated circuits out of spheres instead of chips. By Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
 
Hazy Future for New Web Standard - The Document Object Model holds the promise of adding interactivity to Web pages. But only if it can get uniform support in browser software. By Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
 
Hello, Microsoft Calling... - A consumer pushes a button on her cordless, tells it to "Call Brat-face," and the phone dials her little brother in Omaha. It sounds like something from the Jetsons, but it's coming to you from Microsoft. [Wired News]
 
Helping the Web Grow Up - New technologies will make the Web a more efficient system, setting all that information out there into action. While the goals are high, there's a way to go before the Web can become more than just a mechanism for browsing. By Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
 
Hey -- That's Private - Users want privacy and the bennies of personalized sites. Collaborative filtering coupled with a technology-based privacy standard may be the answer to protecting user data. From Webmonkey.com. [Wired News]
 
High Vacancy Rate for Rentware - Renting the latest business software is cheap and hassle-free. Analysts wonder why rentware is so slow to win acceptance among small companies. By Claudia Graziano. [Wired News]
 
High-Speed Access Leaps Hurdle - The International Telecommunication Union approves a "consumer" version of a technology for speeding Internet access 30 times faster than today's fastest modems. By Chris Oakes and Sean Donahue. [Wired News]
 
High-Speed Data Up in the Air - New developments in spread spectrum and Local Multipoint Distribution Services move the world closer to high-speed Net without the wires. [Wired News]
 
Home Is Anywhere You Hang Your Session File - NetDesk aims to help users jump from one Java-hip platform to another, picking up their work right where they left it. [Wired News]
 
Hospitals Stare Down Millennium - A group of Y2K watchers gather in Washington to make sure the nation's hospitals don't end up on life support in the wee hours of 2000. By Spencer E. Ante. [Wired News]
 
Hotline Reinvents the BBS - A new Windows version of a server and file transfer system is generating big buzz among Christians, pornographers, and software pirates alike. By Leander Kahney. [Wired News]
 
Hotmail Bug, Still an Open Book? - Hotmail remains vulnerable to a two-week-old security problem, says the man who discovered the bug. But the company's fix, successful or not, is making some people nervous. By Michael Stutz. [Wired News]
 
Hotmail Has a Hole - and a Fix - A Danish government official reports a method by which unauthorized visitors could read private email over accountholders' shoulders. The company says it will patch the hole right away. [Wired News]
 
Hotmail Open to Script Attacks - Until it's fixed, a vulnerability in Microsoft's Hotmail service puts sensitive information at risk by leaving the door open to attacks by Trojan horses. By Michael Stutz. [Wired News]
 
How PalmPilot Became a Hacker Cult - Developers are so in love with the PalmPilot, the little personal information manager designed to quickly handle your names and dates, that they are trying to push it in surprising directions. [Wired News]
 
How Will PDAs Paint Pictures? - A series of recent proposals are tackling the problem of how to display graphics on PDAs, cell phones, and other "small footprint" devices. The answer may lie in vector graphics and XML. [Wired News]
 
How Will PDAs Paint Pictures? - A series of recent proposals are tackling the problem of how to display graphics on PDAs, cell phones, and other "small footprint" devices. The answer may lie in vector graphics and XML. [Wired News]
 
 

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