Is the Internet Making Us Dumber? - 0 views
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Has the Internet made us dumber and simply become an external storage device for our brains? Larry Greenemeir, writing in a Scientific American article, speculates that "with Google, Internet Movie Database and Wikipedia at beck and call via smartphones, tablets and laptops, the once essential function of committing facts to memory has become little more than a flashback to flashcards."
HowStuffWorks "How Cloud Computing Works" - 0 views
What Is Cloud Computing? - For Dummies - 0 views
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The “cloud” in cloud computing can be defined as the set of hardware, networks, storage, services, and interfaces that combine to deliver aspects of computing as a service.
BBC News - The future is fidgetal - 2 views
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Technology, and the hype that surrounds it, is changing the way we speak. But we don't have to turn into drones, all spouting the latest i-word. Chris Bowlby says it's time for the techno-bullied to fight back with their own subversive speak.
BBC News - Hackers take control of 300,000 home routers - 2 views
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more than 300,000 routers in homes and small businesses that have been taken over through loopholes in their core software.
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These first victims had been in Eastern Europe, but now most of the machines were in Vietnam with the rest scattered around Europe as well as a couple of other countries, said Team Cymru.
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Shoppers cheated by supermarket scanners - National - NZ Herald News - 0 views
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It's worth knowing that these machines aren't infallible."
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"I think it should be of real concern to consumers. If you translate it into monetary terms, it has to be in the millions of dollars. "The implications from a study like this are massive. Consumers in New Zealand are not making enough noise about it yet," he said. In one case, a supermarket offered bottles of coke for 99c, but displayed the wrong size bottles under the sign, and charged the shopper $3.
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In another, a cooked chicken was advertised on sale for $6.99, but the original price of $11.99 was charged at the checkout. In this case, Pickering said, the mistake was spotted and the customer was given the chicken for free. But more often, retailers respond badly when errors are pointed out. Shoppers who took part in the study reported sales people "rolling their eyes" when asked for a refund, having to fill out forms to get a $2 overcharge returned, and being offered cash refunds only when the original purchase was by credit card. "The errors are happening right across the retail area, particularly large-scale stores," Pickering said. "When you're pumping 100 items through a till, it's much easier to make a mistake and much more difficult for the customer to keep up with the things flying through the scanner."
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BBC - GCSE Bitesize: LANs and WANs - 0 views
What is Networking Technology? - 0 views
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