|
Site-seeing
By Jules Allen, Times Correspondent
© St. Petersburg Times, published July 9, 2001
Police line: www.BuyPoliceSupplies.com My
idle curiosity will be the death of me. I set out to find the strangest
commerce sites, and I'm not sure if this one is the winner or not. If
you've ever hankered for a roll of Police Line -- Do Not Cross tape, this
is your store, baby. Load up on body bags, fingerprint lifting tape and
Miranda warning cards.
zLaptop zgone: www.zTrace.com Having a
laptop lifted could be a disaster if you're lax on security and never back
the thing up. The irony is that the expensive hardware is usually the
least expensive item when you figure out the cost of inconvenience. Here's
a seemingly Windows-only solution for mobile users. It works on the
premise that most laptop nappers aren't too bright and they'll just plug
the machine into any old network and start using it. As soon as that
happens, the zTrace software kicks in and notifies the monitoring center.
This center is, apparently, staffed with ex-cops with names such as Tom
and Bud who are really ticked off that somebody would wander off with your
computer. My guess is they don't go to the thieves' premises with
nightsticks but work with local law enforcement to get the box back.
ZTrace comes in $49 a year or free versions, but I couldn't find much
about the free version on the site.
Books, glorious books: www.BookSaleFinder.com Hello,
my name is Jules and I am a book junkie. Mostly thick, technical, quickly
out-of-date books, but we all have our vices. Should you find your shelves
in need of refreshment, fire up a browser and head over to this site. It
lists oodles of upcoming library book sales and has plenty of dirt on the
local opportunities for inexpensive bibliographical enrichment.
Banking on ignorance: www.PrivacyRightsNow.com Politics
should be insanely interesting to the average Joe or Jane, but we all tend
to nod off at the most inappropriate times, such as when the
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Financial Services Modernization Act was passed,
perhaps. Maybe politicians have a similar aural tone to middle management
and that's why we tend to doze off in long meetings. Anyway, while we were
asleep, it seems that our loving, caring financial institutions of choice
have decided to band together and share personal information about us with
telemarketing outfits. By default and without your explicit consent. Your
only choice is to opt out of this Orwellian scheme and cuddly presidential
wanna-be Ralph Nader has a prewritten letter that's just a mouse click
away.
Broadband everywhere: www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/pulpit20010628.html Most
likely it's everywhere that you are not. We're all teased by the lure of
always-on, modemless connections, but the reality is often wildly
different from the marketing fluff. If DSL means Don't Service your Line
in your area, there is hope. You'll have to scare up a couple of old
Primestar satellite dishes, void your Apple AirPort warranty and find
somebody who has DSL with a line sight to your roof. It's a geeky way to
pacify the need for online speed, largely impractical but a good read
anyway.
Back
to Tech Times
 © Copyright 2001
St. Petersburg
Times. All rights reserved.
|