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CIO August 15, 2002 Alice Dragoon |
Point, Click -- and Save a Frog Thanks to a plethora of virtual dissection websites, students who want to be kind to their web-footed friends can learn all about frog anatomy without having to wield a scalpel  |
Salon.com August 8, 2002 Farhad Manjoo |
Gnutella bandwidth bandits The file-trading network's developers are discovering that even their wide-open, free-for-all technology might need a little policing.  |
Salon.com August 7, 2002 Katharine Mieszkowski |
The bot who loved me Are those secret-admirer e-mails real -- or just the latest excrescence of an Internet marketing machine grown unfathomably sleazy?  |
PC World September 2002 Anne Kandra |
Such a Deal? The Best & Worst Places to Buy on the Web From big names to cheap no-names, we rate today's PC gear sites for price, selection, and service.  |
PC World September 2002 Brad Grimes |
Give Your Browser Special Powers Miniature JavaScripts can enhance Web surfing -- if you're careful.  |
CIO July 15, 2002 Meridith Levinson |
Robo-Patient Hits the Web Physiologically accurate models are being used more frequently by medical schools to provide practical training on how to diagnose and treat patients in emergency situations without the risk. Now isolated, rural physicians can have access to the simulators over the web.  |
Inc. July 1, 2002 Ron Feemster |
Best of the Net: Setting Policy If a dangerous and insecure world raises questions about your insurance coverage, these sites can help you reexamine your options -- up to a point.  |
PC World July 8, 2002 Stacy Cowley |
Will Web Music Ever Play? Jupiter's Plug In conference ponders cures for the digital music slump.  |
PC World August 2002 Andrew Brandt |
Privacy Watch: Online Investigators Know All About You How accuarate are the background checks provided by online investigative services? Plus advice on protecting your privacy.  |
CIO July 1, 2002 Stephanie Overby |
Calling All Strangers www.payphone-project.com catalogs pay phone numbers from around the world. You can reach out and touch people passing by any number of interesting phone booths, from the two telephones in Antarctica's McMurdo Station to the pay phone at the top of the Eiffel Tower in Paris.  |
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