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AOL: Fee up 20 pct for some plans with phone help
If you're still paying for AOL, your bill may be going up 20 percent this month. AOL's cheapest dial-up Internet access plan is going from $9.99 to $11.99 to offset costs of round-the-clock help by telephone. Subscribers can keep the $9.99 rate if they forgo...
San Francisco Chronicle |
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Murdoch: No deals for News Corp. in Sun Valley
News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch plans to forgo making deals at this year's Allen & Co. media retreat, dampening the five-day event renowned as an incubator for big-time media and Web combinations.
AP via Yahoo! News |
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Flickr turns to Getty to sell amateur photos
Flickr, a popular online photo-sharing site owned by Yahoo Inc., is teaming up with Getty Images to offer shutterbugs a chance to turn their hobby into a moneymaking endeavor. Under a partnership announced this week, Getty's editors will peruse Flickr to find...
San Francisco Chronicle |
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Broadband Indiscretions
Ad company NebuAd defends itself, even as Congress and privacy advocates charge it violates consumers' privacy
Forbes |
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posted by Doug M. Swain on Sat 3rd Apr 2004 23:17 UTC
Doug Swain takes a look at the Gentoo Linux installation and offers a quicker guide than the available online documentation of the distro. Any Gentoo user knows how great this distro is.
OS News |
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posted by Eugenia Loli-Queru on Wed 22nd Aug 2001 04:55 UTC
Carsten "The Rasterman" Haitzler, the man behind Enlightenment (E), the extremely configurable window manager for X, speaks about the new, highly anticipated, version 0.17 . Already more than a year of development, the new E, will not just be a window manager, but a desktop shell, battling for its place to our desktops, between KDE, Gnome and WindowMaker.
OS News |
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Gmail allowing remote log-off in case you forget
One of the benefits of Web-based e-mail is the ability to log on from just about anywhere - at home, at work, a friend's house, a mobile device or even a public library or cybercafe. But what if you forget to log off? Someone else who encounters an active session not only can read your personal correspondences, but they also can use that account to grab your passwords from many online services ...
The State |
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Recent Original Stories
"Free software is great, and corporate America loves it. It's often high-quality stuff that can be downloaded free off the Internet and then copied at will. It's versatile - it can be customized to perform almost any large-scale computing task - and it's blessedly crash-resistant.
OS News |
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AOL: Fee up 20 pct for some plans with phone help
If you're still paying for AOL, your bill may be going up 20 percent this month. AOL's cheapest dial-up Internet access plan is going from $9.99 to $11.99 to offset costs of round-the-clock help by telephone. Subscribers can keep the $9.99 rate if they forgo full phone support, but they must actively change their plans to avoid an automatic price increase. Millions of AOL users have already ...
The State |
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AOL: Fee up 20 pct for some plans with phone help
(AP) -- If you're still paying for AOL, your bill may be going up 20 percent this month. AOL's cheapest dial-up Internet access plan is going from $9.99 to $11.99 to offset costs of round-the-clock help by telephone. Subscribers can keep the $9.99 rate if they forgo full phone support, but they must actively change their plans to avoid an automatic price increase.
PhysOrg |
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OTOY Developing Server-Side 3D Rendering Technology
Imagine you could play video games - and immerse yourself in virtual worlds - with 3D graphics comparable to those found in blockbuster films like Transformers or WALL•E. And then imagine you could experience and control those graphics in real-time from any internet-enabled device, whether it be a desktop computer, set-top box or even iPhone. Sound [...]
TechCrunch |
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myAWOL: A Music Label For The Digital Age
The big music labels have made it patently obvious that they don’t know how to deal with the internet. Revenues are down, the market is fragmented, and indie artists that manage to gain a following find that they have little need for the labels in the first place - they can sell their music online [...]
TechCrunch |
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KOREA: Ad boycott campaigners face summons
About 20 Internet users have been restricted from overseas travel following their postings calling for a boycott of companies running advertisements in conservative newspapers that were critical of candlelit vigils protesting the resumption of American beef imports.
AsiaMedia |
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Miss Washington embarrassed by Internet photos
Associated Press - July 9, 2008 5:05 PM ET TACOMA, Wash. (AP) - The Miss Washington Scholarship Organization has called a news conference in Tacoma to respond to photos posted on the...
KPAX Missoula |
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State computers for child support, welfare crash
INDIANAPOLIS — A computer crash has shut down the state’s processing of child support payments, welfare applications and other programs.
The Star Press |
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July’s Supercharged Skies
If, like me, you’ve been watching the skies, you’ve seen as much lightning as fireworks. The heavenly flashes bring to mind a classic television program.
Bay Weekly |
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Google, Microsoft Testify About Privacy, Behavioral Advertising
A Senate committee wants to know if current practices jeopardize Internet users' privacy, and if older communications and privacy laws make some behavioral advertising practices illegal.
InformationWeek |
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Flickr turns to Getty to sell amateur photos
Flickr, a popular online photo-sharing site owned by Yahoo Inc., is teaming up with Getty Images to offer shutterbugs a chance to turn their hobby into a moneymaking endeavor. Under a partnership announced this week, Getty's editors will peruse Flickr to find...
San Francisco Chronicle |
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Laptops for the law
The Public Service Company of Oklahoma donated two laptops to the Grove Police Department last week.
Grove Sun Daily |
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Gmail allowing remote log-off in case you forget
One of the benefits of Web-based e-mail is the ability to log on from just about anywhere - at home, at work, a friend's house, a mobile device or even a public library or cybercafe.
Miami Herald |
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AOL: Fee up 20 pct for some plans with phone help
If you're still paying for AOL, your bill may be going up 20 percent this month.
Miami Herald |
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3 reasons why mobile analytics matter
As mobile technology improves, more people will access the Internet from their smartphones more often. Here's why Web companies should start paying attention.
CNET |
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AOL: Fee up 20 pct for some plans with phone help
(AP:NEW YORK) If you're still paying for AOL, your bill may be going up 20 percent this month. AOL's cheapest dial-up Internet access plan is going from $9.99 to $11.99 to offset costs of round-the-clock help by telephone.
INO News |
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Only 30% correctly understood warning of Tohoku killer quake
Only 30 percent of the people who were aware of the warning for the June 14 deadly earthquake in the Tohoku region correctly understood the meaning, a survey conducted by a private research firm showed Wednesday. Survey Research Center Co. said a poll it conducted via the Internet between June 27 and July 1 found only 39 percent of 683 adult respondents in the cities of Morioka, Sendai and ...
The Japan Times |
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Gmail allowing remote log-off in case you forget
One of the benefits of Web-based e-mail is the ability to log on from just about anywhere - at home, at work, a friend's house, a mobile device or even a public library or cybercafe.
Centre Daily Times |
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