The U.S. government spent at least $2.9 billion in 2002 on information technology related to homeland security and will spend at least that amount again this year, Congress' auditing arm said. In a report released Tuesday, the General Accounting Office also said the two-year, $5.8 billion figure may be low because of potential IT-related costs not captured in the report.

Such costs include multiagency IT infrastructure, new intelligence systems and funding for existing agency missions that seem related to homeland security, such as efforts by the Department of Defense and the Federal Aviation Administration.

The GAO said that for fiscal 2003, roughly $26.3 billion in IT funding has been requested for the Defense Department. That's half of the federal government's overall $52.6 billion IT funding request for the year. Federal spending on IT was $48.6 billion last year, the report said.

Total funding on homeland security is slated to rise to $37.8 billion this year from $30.3 billion in fiscal 2002, according to the report. Fiscal 2002 ended Sept. 30. The GAO report was called for by the Senate's Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, part of the Senate's Committee on Governmental Affairs. The subcommittee's chair is Carl Levin, D-Mich.

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News source: c|net


"My Photos" displays digital pictures stored in your computer and triggers a slide show. A music section accesses digital tunes stored on your hard drive. Live television flows right through this PC as well, and an on-screen television guide makes it easy to record shows.

This computer can be connected to the computer monitor or television set, though you won't be able to effectively see its computer functions from a TV screen.

Unfortunately, you can't get local radio stations or create a mix of your digital music with the Media Center PC. Microsoft, which designed the computer's operating system, said some of these features may be added soon.

Different Media Center PC makers have different visions for this device. Microsoft sees it as the first step in becoming the centerpiece for home entertainment. Gateway, to further that end, has come out with a $4,000 ver sion that includes a 42-inch flat screen television.

Hewlett-Packard, though, sees this as a powerful PC and not a living-room centerpiece.

"I don't want to set people's expectation that this is a DVD on steroids," said Bruce Greenwood, product marketing manager for consumer desktop computers. "This is a PC with extra functionality."

While this computer pushes the edge of innovation by trying to combine the PC, TV, DVD and stereo, it doesn't conform to the will of the living room.

When I first got the com puter, I wanted to place the keyboard and moni tor on a table adjacent to the television. I wanted to connect the television and flat-screen computer monitor to the computer so I could jump on the sofa to use the music and television portions of the computer or sit in a makeshift desk to work on the PC.

It is technically possible to do this, but Hewlett-Packard's Media Center PC doesn't include cords nearly long enough to handle those tasks.

So I wound up putting the computer on my coffee table and making it my sole television. Even with this design I ran into some problems.

The existing cords wound around the floor like vines from a dead houseplant. Because the keyboard and mouse don't work wirelessly, I couldn't sink into my couch, plop the keyboard on my lap and type.

Even if it did accommodate interior design, couples, families and friends wouldn't be able to replace their old computers or televisions with the Media Center PC.

The PC's 17-inch screen isn't big enough to replace many televisions. As a computer, it does too much to be used as a home's lone PC. What happens if someone wants to use the Internet and another wants to watch television? So instead, this expensive, high-powered computer would serve as secondary machine in a den or study.



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