Sony continues the fight against PS2 mod chips
Posted by 3nd3r on 08 February 2002 - 15:11 · 7 comments & 372 views
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#1 Posted by WindowsXP on 08 Feb 2002 - 22:28
- Go australia!
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#2 Posted by DJ^TuRKiYe on 09 Feb 2002 - 01:36
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#3 Posted by Dclanz on 09 Feb 2002 - 12:58
- Strike 1 for the chip makers!

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#4 Posted by Dessimat0r on 09 Feb 2002 - 20:28
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#5 Posted by iconman on 10 Feb 2002 - 03:40
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#6 Posted by mariusu on 10 Feb 2002 - 14:32
- well done

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#7 Posted by TriplexDread on 10 Feb 2002 - 20:35
- Yeah bout time this happened, SONY are in my opinion manipulative and and should enable people to buy their software in otother countries without bother. Lets face it the software is over priced anyway!! I hear the Word MICROSOFT all over again.
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Sony is seeking to have the use of modification chips for the PS2 stopped in Australia, but a government agency has stepped in on behalf of the consumer
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has stepped into a Federal Court case to challenge the international agreement on regional coding of DVDs
It has described regional coding as an anti-competitive practice that disadvantages Australian consumers
The commission this morning announced it was intervening as 'a friend of the court' in an important Federal Court copyright case mounted by Sony Computer Entertainment Australia, "because it feared if Sony was successful consumers stood to lose money on PlayStation2 games purchased overseas at significantly cheaper prices by being denied the right to use them in Australia."
SCEA managing director Michael Ephraim was this morning meeting with Sony lawyers and advisors and is expected to respond to the ACCC later in the day.
However, Sony is expected to vigorously oppose the commission's intervention.
Palm OS 5 is being hailed by PalmSource executives as the version of the company's operating system that will "fuse personal and professional users." For network executives, the new operating system promises vastly improved security and built-in support for IEEE 802.11b wireless LANs. A doubling of screen resolution, to 320 by 320 pixels, will make the Palm more suitable for an array of enterprise applications.
But many of the advanced features will be missing from the first release of OS 5, due this [northern] summer. They'll be included later, possibly by the end of 2002.
For example, the OS 5 security enhancements include support for certificate management and software code signing, which allows software to run only if it has been digitally signed by a known and trusted entity. The technology is designed to prevent rogue software from running. But neither of these changes will be available until some time in the next two years, explained Sakoman.
The initial OS 5 release will offer a VPN option for licensees. Using this option, enterprises could create a secure, encrypted connection between a Palm OS 5 client and a corporate net. This option will be included in a distribution to licensees early in the summer.
Support for the Java Virtual Machine, which will let Palm OS 5 handhelds natively run any Java application, will be available in the operating system later in 2002.
Also missing will be support for the emerging IEEE 802.11a wireless LAN standard, up to 54M bytes/sec over 5 GHz bandwidth, because of a lack of demand from users, said Sakoman. "Almost all product deployment [now] is on 802.11b, which is support by a lot of established chips," he said. PalmSource will wait for market demand for 802.11a before it is included in a later version of the platform.
The new operating system will feature a built-in emulator, so users can run current Palm OS 4 applications on new OS 5 devices. If developers have followed Palm's published set of application programming interfaces for OS 4, applications should run unmodified, said Sakoman. Palm executives estimated 80 percent of existing programs will run on devices using the new operating system.
Some developers have applauded the new operating system. "Moving to OS 5 will be a quantum leap in functionality," said Jeff Musa, president of Cutting Edge Software, which makes a range of office productivity tools. "I expect the first version to be directed toward compatibility with existing apps - so for users, OS 5 will not be hugely different from OS 4. But once the operating system is out there, we will be in a better position to enhance our software."
Cutting Edge Software has had an OS 5 simulator running on a PC for two months and has converted its software to be compatible with OS 5. Based on the experience, Musa said that users initially "will see a hybrid operating system with an updated look and feel, with the added advantage of running existing applications."
After that, users can expect to see changes that will have a more noticeable impact, such as multimedia support. PalmSource is adding these features in OS 5 by drawing from multimedia functionality offered from Palm's acquisition of Be OS software from Be, Inc. But, again, some users expect these to arrive later rather than sooner, in what's coming to be known as version 5.5.
"You have to get to OS 5.5 before the OS really takes off," said Michael Ashby, director of the International Palm Users Group. "5.0 is more of a transition stage - moving from chip to chip... I believe 5.5 will be out later this year."