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Mosaic Redux, Part II
- Having turned the one-time desktop browser into an HTML engine for the set-top age, Spyglass makes a browser proper available to the same folks. [Wired News]
Mozilla Source, Revision 1
- Netscape's newly freed source code reaches its initial evolutionary milestone as mozilla.org posts the first version of the code modified by outside developers. [Wired News]
Mozilla.org: We Are Not Netscape
- One of the coordinators of the Mozilla open-source browser project sounds off on the AOL-Netscape merger. By Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
Msoft Bug Opens Site Secrets
- A new security hole affecting a Microsoft server scripting language leaves sensitive and hidden Web site info, such as passwords, exposed to malicious users. By Michael Stutz and James Glave. [Wired News]
MySpace Crowds Windows' Turf
- Windows may have control of the desktop, but the Pixel Company doesn't see why it can't stake its own claim to the screen space that surrounds it. By Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
NASA Greets Beowulf
- The space agency's Computer Crimes Division has jacked up its analysis toolkit with a DIY supercomputer that can track cracker trails with unprecedented speed. By Michael Stutz. [Wired News]
NASA's 'Deep Impact' Mission
- The space agency is considering a proposal to blast a large copper ball into a comet in an effort to determine the origins of life. By Niall McKay. [Wired News]
NASA's 'Deep Impact' Mission
- The space agency is considering a proposal to blast a large copper ball into a comet in an effort to determine the origins of life. By Niall McKay. [Wired News]
NSA Frees Secret Crypto Schemes
- Facing an economic crunch, America's code-breaking spy agency has released two long-secret algorithms that were once the basis of a controversial evesdropping scheme. By James Glave. [Wired News]
NSF Sets Up Smart-Infrastructure Shop
- The National Science Foundation's new think tank, the Institute for Civil Infrastructure Systems, will come up with designs for smart transportation, water supply, electric power, and communications. [Wired News]
NT Attacks Raise Questions, Provide No Answers
- One computer security expert says the vulnerabilities in Windows NT make attacks like Monday's on servers nationwide almost routine as the system becomes more popular. How coordinated or targeted they may have been, he says, is impossible to determine without an investigation. [Wired News]
Nader Takes Biotech Patent to Task
- Ralph Nader wants the biotech industry to grow a conscience, so he's asking the Clinton administration to investigate Amgen's control of a synthetic blood protein that could potentially be made accessible to more patients. [Wired News]
Navy Software Dead in the Water
- The US Navy recently confirmed that software upgrade problems have put two of its prize battle cruisers out of action until further notice. By Michael Stutz. [Wired News]
Net Forecast: Cloudy, but Clearing
- Efforts to plumb the health of the Internet may perk up with distributed ping sampling and open source software licensing. By James Glave. [Wired News]
Net Messaging Called 'Catastrophic'
- ICQ, an Internet-based 'instant-messaging' program used by millions, is flagged by experts as being riddled with security holes that allow users to impersonate other users and alter messages sent over the system. By James Glave. [Wired News]
Net Religious Groups Besieged
- A three-day spam attack against some online newsgroups is halted when an ISP pulls the plug on the perpetrators. But the damage may not be over. By Michael Stutz. [Wired News]
Net Survives Starr Supernova
- Some sites timed out, but the Internet didn't melt. In fact, it thrived under what may prove to be the single greatest event in the medium's history. By Niall McKay. [Wired News]
Netcom Escapes Anti-Spam Blackhole
- Until last week, many Netcom subscribers found their mail bouncing with a cryptic error. They had Paul Vixie's Realtime Blackhole List to thank. [Wired News]
Netcom Issued 'Death Penalty'
- Starting tomorrow, those who hold accounts with the national Internet service provider may find their news posts vanish, claims an anti-spam cabal . [Wired News]
Netcom Spared Anti-Spam Punishment
- The ISP reaches an understanding on policing spam with Usenet activists who had threatened to impose a "death penalty" against the service. [Wired News]
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