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Fairbanks processor recalls smoked salmon
FAIRBANKS - A fish processor is recalling about 150 pounds of salmon because of potential contamination. Interior Alaska Fish Processors says its Santa's Smokehouse smoked keta salmon is subject to the recall.
Anchorage Daily News |
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Talend readies open source tool to tackle dirty data
Open source data integration vendor Talend on Wednesday unveiled a tool aimed at scrubbing dirty data from corporate information repositories.
Network World |
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There's No Escaping The Internet
American Airlines Launches Online Services On Some Long, Nonstop Flights One of the few remaining Internet-free havens vanished Wednesday as American Airlines launched airborne e-mail, Web and other online services on some of its longer, nonstop flights.
Hartford Courant |
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42% of Web Users Sneak Onto Other Online Accounts
An anonymous reader writes "In an online survey, 42 percent of Internet users admitted to logging into other people's email and social networking accounts without their knowledge. The poll doesn't ask if passwords were found, granted, or stolen — which would make for further interesting results. The write-up summarizing the results defines the respondents as part of an "educated tech-readership" ...
Slashdot |
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Kalamazoo Silent Observer receives 100th Internet tip
KALAMAZOO COUNTY, Mich. (NEWSCHANNEL 3) - The Silent Observer Program of Kalamazoo County has been in existence for over 30 years. One of the major benefits of the Silent Observer program is its ability to protect the identity of the person reporting a crime.
WWMT 3 Kalamazoo |
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More Changes In Store For eBay Sellers
Company Wants To Boost Sickly Growth In Active Users Some people who sell things on eBay are fed up with new rules the company has been imposing in hopes of making the auction site more attractive to online shoppers. Now even more changes are coming in the next few weeks, but this time eBay Inc. hopes it can cool tempers.
Hartford Courant |
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Overclocking Nehalem “almost as good as having a second graphics card” - Intel
Benchmarking and overclocking the upcoming Intel Nehalem processor is going to be tricky business, but Francois Piednoel says we will see “dramatic” speed increases. At the Intel Developer Forum today in San Francisco, Intel’s Francois Piednoel and Matt Dunford outlined the various issues in benchmarking people will face when testing the new chips. Perhaps the trickiest of them all will be the ...
TG Daily |
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Computer Glitch Causes Big Scare
UK officials say students were worried their schedules for the fall semester had disappeared because they couldn't access them online.
WYMT Mountain News |
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This Site Web Search powered by
YAHOO! search Allyson Dinneen and Rafe Kozaka of Canaan, N.Y., a daughter, Josephine Marie Kozaka, June 8. ... Jessica Dean of Hudson, N.Y., a son, Logan William, July 16. ... Rafe Kozaka and Allyson Dinneen of Canaan, N.Y., a daughter, Josephine Marie, June 8. ... Amanda Davidson of Great Barrington, a son, Carter Michael, July 1. ... Lee Legace of Great Barrington, a son, Layne Gabriel, July ...
Berkshire Eagle |
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Newsletter Subscription
Sign up for our ARN newsletters! The premier provider of daily news to the IT channel, covering business, technology, products, and services. Thieves got away with $140,000 worth of electrical goods after breaking into Dick Smith’s Powerhouse store in Penrith on Tuesday.
ARNnet |
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Inc. Magazine Ranks Bandwidth.com for 3rd Consecutive Year: 4th Fastest Growing Privately Held Company from 2002 to 2007
Inc. Magazine, the premier publication for small- and medium-sized businesses, today ranked Bandwidth.com as one of only 9 companies to make the Inc. 500 list for three consecutive years.
PR Newswire via Yahoo! Finance |
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Future Impact Of Global Warming Is Worse When Grazing Animals Are Considered, Scientists Suggest
The impact of global warming in the Arctic may differ from the predictions of computer models, according to new research, which shows that grazing animals will play a key role in reducing the anticipated expansion of shrub growth in the region, thus limiting the shrubs' predicted and beneficial carbon-absorbing effect.
Science Daily |
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Intel demos quad-core notebooks
Intel's David Perlmutter showed the company's new quad-core laptop computers at the Intel Developer Conference in San Francisco. He demonstrated how video conferencing can be done in HD--even with other applications running in the background--without sacrificing power and performance.
ZDNet Australia |
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New 'Nano-positioners' May Have Atomic-scale Precision
Engineers have created a tiny motorized positioning device that has twice the dexterity of similar devices being developed for applications that include biological sensors and more compact, powerful computer hard drives. The device, called a monolithic comb drive, might be used as a "nanoscale manipulator" that precisely moves or senses movement and forces.
Science Daily |
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Cervical Cancer Prevention Should Focus On Vaccinating Adolescent Girls, Report Says
The cost-effectiveness of vaccination in the US against human papillomavirus, a sexually transmitted virus that causes cervical cancer, will be optimized by achieving universal vaccine coverage in young adolescent girls, by targeting initial "catch-up" efforts to vaccinate women younger than 21 years of age, and by revising current screening policies, according to an analysis by Harvard School ...
Science Daily |
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Intel, Yahoo partnering on Internet TV concept
SAN FRANCISCO - Hoping to plant their flags on the screens of Internet-connected television sets, Intel Corp. and Yahoo Inc. unveiled a new project Wednesday to populate those screens with tiny programs called widgets.
China Daily |
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American Airlines launches in-flight internet access
NEW YORK - One of the few remaining Internet-free havens vanished Wednesday as American Airlines launched airborne e-mail, Web and other online services on some of its longer, nonstop flights.
Long Beach Press-Telegram |
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New Way To Build Data Centers: Use Commodity Network Elements
Computer scientists have proposed a new way to build data centers that could save companies money and deliver more computing capability to end-users.
Science Daily |
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Welcome, Freshmen. Have an iPod.
Taking a step that professors may view as a bit counterproductive, some universities are doling out Apple iPhones and Internet-capable iPods to students.
New York Times |
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Exposed: Australian tech lobbyists
Apple, Google, Telstra, Cisco, Dimension Data, EDS, iiNet, Oracle and Sun are just some of the large technology companies employing external firms to push their agendas with politicians and government workers in Canberra, research into lobbying practices has revealed.
ZDNet Australia |
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Dept. of Consumer Affairs launches Internet Web site
Ways to prevent identity theft and contractor fraud are just some of the topics found on the Ocean County Department of Consumer Affairs Internet Web site. The consumer affairs Web site which was launched this week can be accessed through the Ocean County government homepage at www.co.ocean.nj.us, and clicking on Consumer Affairs, or by going directly to www.co.ocean.nj.
The Hub |
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Comcast plans to slow Web traffic to heavy users to ease congestion
Comcast Corp. plans to slow Internet service to its heaviest users during periods of congestion, after regulators ordered it to devise a new method for managing Web traffic.
Los Angeles Times |
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American Airlines introduces in-flight Internet access
The airline will offer the service on some of its longer flights. One of the few remaining Internet-free havens vanished Wednesday as American Airlines launched airborne e-mail, Web and other online services on some of its longer nonstop flights.
Los Angeles Times |
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HPV cancer shots less cost-effective with age
An expensive vaccine aimed at preventing cervical cancer makes sense for young teens when it comes to cost-effectiveness, but not for women in their 20s, contends a new report.
Minneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune |
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Judge tells peeping Tom that privacy is sacred
The 31-year-old convicted peeping Tom didn't want to agree to random searches of his computer or his cell-phone camera. Nor did he want to abide by a curfew, or submit to random polygraph tests.
The Oregonian |
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