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Animation Tutorial: Lesson 4
- This introduction to Macromedia's Flash is no Mickey Mouse. Whether you're an old hand at animating or your dexterity stops at stick figures, this intro will have you drawing online in no time. From Webmonkey. [Wired News]
Animation Tutorial: Lesson 5
- This lesson in animation and design theory draws the base line, then invites you to break all the rules of the game. From Webmonkey.com. [Wired News]
Animation Tutorial: Lesson 6
- Skillfully incorporating sound into your animation can guarantee your project's success. Conversely, a lousy sound job can sink that project, and fast. Here are some tips on achieving the former, and avoiding the latter. [Wired News]
Animation Tutorial: Lesson 7
- Take a good look at this moving issue -- how traditional styles of animation work and the ways in which they adapt to the digital realm. Plus a few tips. By Anna McMillan. [Wired News]
Annotated Reality
- Look at a restaurant and read the reviews beamed to your smart glasses before you sit down. Welcome to the future, where wearable computers "augment" reality. By Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
Another Freemail Security Flaw
- The security of free email services has come under scrutiny in light of several serious holes discovered during the past week. By Michael Stutz. [Wired News]
Another JavaOS, This One for Business
- Sun and IBM get together to try and unify the Java operating environment for network computers. [Wired News]
Another Network Associates U-Turn on Key Recovery?
- Having acquired a company with close ties to the Defense Department, the steward of Pretty Good Privacy has changed course in a direction that has civil liberties activists worried. [Wired News]
Anti-Nuke Cracker Strikes Again
- A teenage member of the group that last month broke into computers at an Indian atomic research lab has scrawled anti-nuclear graffiti across more than 300 Web sites. By James Glave. [Wired News]
Anti-Spam Boycott Faces Fragmented Ranks
- Last week, some were predicting that a moratorium on "spam canceling" would cause many Usenet servers to crash and burn. But while a few machines clogged up, there's still no sign of the intended meltdown. [Wired News]
AntiOnline Founder Under Fire
- A Defense Department contractor emailed the founder of a computer security news and information Web site, warning him that he "may be culpable" for promoting the hacking of government networks. [Wired News]
Apple OS Searches Anew
- Sherlock, a metasearch engine in Apple's newest operating system, can search the Web and local drives. Users are sure to like the feature -- but Web portals may take pause. By Michael Stutz. [Wired News]
Apprenticechip
- A Mesa, Arizona, start-up has found an efficient way of training semiconductor plant workers. Its system uses virtual reality to simulate the entire manufacturing process -- from puttin' on the bunny suit to workin' the assembly line. [Wired News]
Are Net Weather Reports A Snow Job?
- A handful of sites purport to track the speedups and slowdowns of the entire Internet. But critics say the cool graphs just don't add up. [Wired News]
Ariane Sheds Light on Launch Race
- Now that Iridium is up in the sky, launch-pad operators and rocket developers are focusing on Motorola's other projects and Teledesic - seriously. By Kristi Coale. [Wired News]
Asteroid Flap Reveals Astronomy's Gaps
- Earth may be safe from one asteroid, but astronomers must combine efforts and methods to make sightings and predictions more reliable. [Wired News]
Aussies Out to Give Mozilla Crypto Punch
- The US Commerce Department barred Netscape from using strong crypto in its exportable Communicator browser - but clever Australian cypherpunks are about to put it back in. [Wired News]
Back Orifice Goes Forth
- The latest, greatest hacker program is spreading fast, and ISPs have now confirmed exploits. While security firms develop detection tools, Microsoft still has little to say. By Michael Stutz. [Wired News]
Back Orifice Surfaces Down Under
- The notorious cracker program that can watch and listen in on Windows users has been discovered on approximately 1,400 Australian Internet accounts. By Christopher Jones. [Wired News]
Back Orifice a Pain in the ...?
- An underground computer security group says it is about to release a program that will allegedly grant deep access into the machine of any Windows user unfortunate enough to run it. By James Glave. [Wired News]
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