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'BOMB BOY' AND THE HONEYTRAP
EXCLUSIVE Did web girl tell him to blow up restaurant?
Sunday Mirror |
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MormonTimes.com: Technology defines Internet generation
When the bishop of an LDS young single adult ward asked for someone to find a ward clerk, the response was not in person but via a text message.
Deseret Morning News |
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Where are the teens?
Twelve-year-old Page Hayden quickly finds a computer in the youth services room at the Twin Falls Public Library on a quiet Thursday afternoon. Her backpack flops to the floor, and before Hayden is completely seated her hand grasps the mouse and she's clicking her way online.
The Times-News |
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Microsoft: Don't Cut Off That Long Tail
Microsoft has said that it will begin to delete unpopular Xbox games from their digital download service. Haven't they ever heard of the Long Tail?
Wired News |
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Police News: Items worth more than $2,000 stolen from area residence
Burglary — Three cell phones, four swords, a computer, a digital camera, an iPod and miscellaneous accessories, all valued at $2,010, were stolen between 10 a.m. and 8 p.m. Friday in the 300 block of Pascoe Boulevard, according to a Bowling Green Police Department report.
Bowling Green Daily News |
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Baby for a euro on eBay auction
BERLIN: German police are investigating a couple after they offered their eight-month-old son for sale on Internet auction site eBay. Renee Beck, a police spokesman in the Bavarian town of Krumbach west of Munich, said yesterday the 23-year-old woman told them it was only a joke.
Gulf Times |
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Council approves $5.2m
A $10,000 trash compactor, a police dog, public computers for the library, and street and sidewalk improvements are part of the latest $5.2 million capital improvement plan recently approved by the Chelsea City Council.
Boston Globe |
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Arabian Computer News English edition
Software giant Microsoft branded existing hardware-based systems as out-of-date, while re-iterating its pledge to reach 100 million users within the next three years for its unified communication platform.
ITP.net |
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Moody’s error aside, it’s ‘wrong’ to rate CPDOs
LONDON: A report that computer error led Moody’s to give too high a rating to a complex product battered by the credit crisis has overshadowed the fact that the products shouldn’t have been rated at all, a CreditSights analyst said.
Gulf Times |
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Recent Original Stories
"Sometimes, a service pack comes along that really makes a big difference. Take NT. Before SP3, it was garbage; afterwards Microsoft had its first server operating system that was worth anything.
OS News |
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Sport's premier league finally gets out of red
Fred Schreyer, commissioner and CEO of the Professional Bowlers Association, warned last season that the three former Microsoft executives who purchased the PBA in 2000 were growing weary of losing money every year.
Daytona Beach News-Journal |
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Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 13th Nov 2006 11:18 UTC
Last week, Microsoft announced that Windows Vista went gold, and was released to manufacturing. The release has been long coming (five years of work) and was surrounded by controversies, rumours of rewrites, and legal threats by Microsoft's competitors.
New Mobile Computing |
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iProvo started with high hopes and a $39.5M loan
Provo borrowed $39.5 million in 2004 to build the iProvo fiber-optic network to provide television, Internet and phone service to city residents. While the city originally planned to be the system provider, state law restricted it to being a wholesale provider, leasing bandwidth on the system
The Salt Lake Tribune |
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Group working on relief plan
From his computer in Wichita Falls, Bob Horth found himself gripped by images from the other side of the world that hit about as close to home as you can get.
Wichita Falls Times Record News |
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Facebook's site redesign aims for cleaner look
Having nearly tripled its audience and added about 20,000 new applications over the past year, Facebook Inc.' s popular online hangout is about to undergo a housecleaning. Visitors who can't stand the clutter that's been piling up will be glad to see that the site's new look sweeps disparate bits of information into categories marked by tabs at the top of each user's customized home page. The ...
The Wichita Eagle |
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Dealing with teens and the Internet
Raising a teen? Here's some advice on your teen's Internet usage from the book "How to Survive Your Teenager" (Hundreds of Heads Books, www.hundredsofheads.com , $13.95), straight from people who've done it: "I do not censor the Internet or any other part of life. My children have very good judgment and quite a bit of wisdom. I discovered that my daughter had been reading erotica on the Web ...
The Wichita Eagle |
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ON THE MONEY
A corporate BlackBerry -- usually reserved for high-ranking employees -- once gave workers anxiety every time the e-mail notification buzzed. But not anymore, an online survey shows. Nearly 80 percent said they were not stressed by their work phones or handheld devices. But along with that nonchalant attitude comes a case of mobile faux pas -- 18 percent also admitted to being reprimanded for ...
Richmond Times-Dispatch |
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Job seekers have resources available on Web
Dear Propeller Heads: I'm about to be "downsized" and haven't been job-searching since Johnny Carson hosted "The Tonight Show." Do you have any hints or tools to assist with my search? A: Well, you're heading in the right direction. There are so many tools, Web sites and job boards that you should land a new position in no time. So, get out those bifocals and get going!
Richmond Times-Dispatch |
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by Don T. Bothers (4.44) on Thu 21st Sep 2006 23:06 UTC
While I have no doubt that Google might be considering moving to Solaris (afterall, there were talks about mergers/alliances), the whole article sounded like FUD. Why is it that Linux has worked so well for so many companies for so many years and then all of a sudden it is considered a resource hog and unstable?
OS News |
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Linked by Eugenia Loli-Queru on Tue 13th Dec 2005 20:21 UTC
Last week OSNews had the pleasure of meeting with three of the people behind the new Nokia S60 browser sharing with us information about the project. Dig in for more info and lots of screenshots.
New Mobile Computing |
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Sprint Nextel CEO has cleared the decks
Dan Hesse, a former chief executive of AT&T's wireless unit, took the top job at Sprint knowing the wind was in front of him. A gale-force wind.
Houston Chronicle |
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Cornell, HP square off in patent trial
Cornell University, one of the eight Ivy League colleges, is going against Hewlett-Packard Co., the world's largest maker of personal computers.
Houston Chronicle |
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The Natchez Democrat
With all the new hotels, casinos, and new events coming online, Natchez, now more than ever, needs to be marketed to areas where a lack of funds have prevented it from being marketed in the past.
The Natchez Democrat |
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Popular business directory searches
NOC - Tonkawa Northern Oklahoma College campus in Tonkawa is currently seeking an adjunct instructor for the Science, Mathematics and ... >MORE Residential Shelter Worker Applications are now being accepted at Youth & Family Services for full time and part time staff for the 24 hour emergen ...
The Enid News & Eagle |
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Popular business directory searches
Bakery, Counter, Attendants, & Dishwashers Apply in person at western sizzlin’ 4722 W. Garriott, Enid No phone calls please. ... >MORE “You’re at home with Woodward Regional.”
The Enid News & Eagle |
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