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WEEK IN REVIEW
Friday
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Cost of dispute falls on Monroe
Thursday


Nursed to health by volunteers in Lynnwood, sea...
Everett boy left with brain damage; father face...
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Wednesday


81 veterans' names, 81 meaningful lives honored...
USO singer's voice still charms them in Edmonds
Monroe honking case makes it to state Supreme C...
Tuesday


Fire destroys Emory's restaurant
Peggy Pritchard Olson always put Edmonds first
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Monday


Tree clearing, mud slide angers Everett neighbor
Later start for school day unlikely in Marysville
Hopes for Snohomish excursion train may hinge o...
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Glacier Peak freshman overcomes jitters to win ...
Gay marriage issue can wait, say Referendum 71 ...
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Saturday


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Mike Benbow, Business Editor
benbow@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Sunday, October 12, 2008

Technology Notebook

Endure ads with the pain at your dentist's office

Talk about your captive audience.

Advertising is coming to the dentist's chair in the form of video goggles that patients wear while getting their cleaning or root canal.

The company behind InChairTV figures advertisers for toothpaste, toothbrushes, mouthwash and other dental products will be willing to pay higher rates to reach people seeking a diversion from dental procedures. Companies selling travel packages and other stress-relief services might also find the dentist's chair prime time to make their pitches.

Willing patients put on a special headset to watch movies or television shows licensed from The Walt Disney Co. and its ABC network. The programs and infomercials are sent to dentists on DVDs, but soon they will be downloadable over the Internet.

MySpace, HP hook up on photo printing

Among all the profiles on MySpace, the social networking site's users have uploaded almost 4 billion photos. Now through an agreement with Hewlett-Packard Co., MySpace hopes people will increasingly print these images and, eventually, buy photo-embellished merchandise, too.

MySpace and HP said this week that they are starting a business relationship that will put Web-based printing software from HP into the photo sections of MySpace.

This means MySpace pages will display HP-branded click-to-print buttons. The buttons are meant to make it easier for users to print content stored on their MySpace profiles -- like photos and blog postings -- than it would be to do so through their Web browsers.

The buttons are expected to appear in November on MySpace in the U.S., Australia, Western Europe and Canada.

Cyber-peril lurks in fake YouTube pages

Savvy Internet users know that downloading unsolicited computer programs is one of the most dangerous things you can do online. It puts you at great risk for a virus or another time bomb from a hacker.

But even some sophisticated surfers could get snookered by a sneaky new attack in which criminals create fake YouTube pages -- dead-on replicas of the real site -- to push their malicious software and make it look like it's safe stuff coming from a trusted source.

A program circulating online helps hackers build those fake pages. Users who follow an e-mail pointing them to one of the pages would see an error message that claims the video they want won't play without installing new software first. That error message includes a link the hacker has provided to a malicious program, which delivers a virus.

Even worse: once the computer is infected, it's simple for the hacker to silently redirect the victims to a real YouTube page to see videos they were hoping to see -- and hide the crime.

"It's spot-on accurate, and that is scary," said Jamz Yaneza, threat research manager for security software company Trend Micro Inc. "If I were watching YouTube videos all day I would probably click on this one."

The Associated Press

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1. Lawsuit blames county and weed inspector in man’s death
2. Cost of dispute falls on Monroe
3. Salish Sea: Huge body of water now has common name
4. Mind if I smoke?
5. Boeing says 787 fixes are done
6. Worker dies after falling 4 stories from Lynnwood building
7. FOOTBALL FORECAST: Battle of unbeatens highlights first week of state-playoff action
8. Granite Falls-area fire chief placed on paid leave
9. Everett dentist travels world to help
10. Benefit to help injured soldier, his family
Enterprise Newspaper Snohomish County Business Journal
Memorial for Peggy Pritchard Olson set
Bazaar Fever
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Olson always put Edmonds first
Honoring student veterans
‘Wheedle' author comes to Lynnwood bookshop
Mavs build early lead en route to easy win
Prep football games of the week (state playoffs)
Tears of laughter, tears of grief
The Enterprise Online Newspaper


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