Imagine walking into a meeting 20 years from now with a suit made not of cloth but rather a form of digital fabric running images and text over your entire body, says PCWorld.com.
PRNewswire released this statement: “We are pleased that two
thirds of the schools polled in the survey will allow their students to
participate in the Napster community,” said Hank Barry, CEO of Napster.
The world still runs on paper. Many people even print their email messages. But when you’re on the road, printing is often not an option. From Washington Post.
America Online’s efforts to bolster security for its ICQ instant messaging service are drawing complaints from some
people who say the measures have locked them out of their accounts, according to this CNET.com report.
As reported by Reuters, documents created with some Microsoft Corp software can
be rigged to “phone home” to another computer and report where and how often
a document is read, a privacy organization said on Wednesday.
ComputerWeekly.com reports that security firm Control Risk Group is branching out of its background of
private investigators and protection in world trouble spots to launch a
new generation of cybersleuths fighting internet crime.
PCWorld reports that thirty-four percent of US colleges and universities have banned the music file-trading program Napster for Internet users surfing over campus servers, according to a report from technology market research company Gartner Group.