His business plan: create an antivirus program
and give it away on bulletin boards. McAfee didn't expect
users to pay. His real aim was to get them to think the software
was so necessary that they would install it on their computers
at work. They did. Within five years, half of the Fortune
100 companies were running it, and they felt compelled to pay
a licence fee. By 1990, McAfee was making $5 million (£3.2 million)
a year with few overheads and little investment.
http://ettcweb.lr.k12.nj.us/forms/poemlist.htm - 73 views
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Until your students are ready to use their own artistic licence you may want to use this poem template site to get them started. Just input words as prompted to make intriguing poetry. http://ictmagic.wikispaces.com/English
Google Terms of Service - 4 views
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About your content Google does not assert any ownership rights in your content. What belongs to you, stays yours. We do require that you give us a licence to the content you post so that we can host it and, if you ask us to, make it available to others. Content on our services usually isn't ours. We may not monitor what we host or link to, although in some limited cases we might. Don't be surprised if you see something you don't like. You can always tell us about it or stop looking.
Dangerous: an in-depth investigation into the life of John McAfee (Wired UK) - 0 views
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His success was due in part to his ability to spread his own paranoia, the fear that there was always somebody about to attack.
Kids today need a licence to tinker | Technology | The Observer - 2 views
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