Do you think that employers should be allowed to read the e-mails of their employees sent from or received by the computers of the company? |
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Classrooms look more like hi-tech offices, with clusters of flat-screen display computers and lessons taught using touch-screen whiteboards. |
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Some printers and digital cameras can connect to computers wirelessly using Bluetooth. |
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Newspapers, magazines, television and computers all fight to attract and hold our attention. |
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A natural result of this growth is a resultant increase in the desire and need for computers to communicate with each other. |
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The whirrs and clicks of several computers filled the room, revealing that there was probably more in it than one would think. |
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Handheld and smaller computers offer ample advantages in mobility and compatibility and offer an alternative to laptops and ruggedized boxes. |
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Lynch and others have pointed out that the estimate of 64,000 computers was a serious undercount. |
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All he had done was to change the ownership of computers without wiping the hard disks. |
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All through my working life I tried to avoid using computers and was rather a technophobe. |
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A few months ago we installed computers and Internet dial-up connections for public access at the arcade and in some of the houses. |
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Criminals who infect computers with spyware can be jailed for up to five years under the bill. |
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The light pens are compatible with any DOS or Windows application and IBM computers in general. |
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The tutorial is ancient as computers go, so it ignores cursor keys and other modern conveniences. |
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Both have been fascinated by maths, computers and programming from an early age. |
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All subjects reported having familiarity with computers and 16 of the 20 subjects reported familiarity with shipboard equipment. |
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In both cases the exercise was completed in under 20 minutes, and the computers were bootable with their respectively new drives immediately. |
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Correlated targets are various types of space junk tracked and kept in Air Force computers while uncorrelated targets are unknowns. |
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The search for solutions to this problem led to the development of mobile computers mounted on mobile or movable facilities. |
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We want to enable the caching DNS server on our router but make it available only to computers on our local area network. |
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Many people found their inboxes clogged with alarming messages that their computers were infected, even though they were not. |
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Both computers have now been rebooted, and the back-up machine is running in contingency mode. |
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The library is a wonderland of books, tapes, talking books and computers and is also a marvellous place to browse or just sit and read the paper. |
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Researchers have found that small, Internet-linked computers in the hands of airport workers may help unclog the nation's air terminals. |
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Despite the proliferation of computers of every size, mainframes still house most of the world's data. |
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That means notebook computers could immediately retrieve any images captured at checkout counters or inside stores. |
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Otherwise, I'll convert a slim box closet into a server rack and chain together rescued computers that I'll rebadge as data servers. |
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We had a lot of computers in the building, several hundred wired devices for people to use. |
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The course will run over six weeks in May and June and will teach people to upgrade and repair computers and configure their operating systems. |
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Because it takes our time and effort to recompile and reinstall kernels, we modified only four computers needed to cluster seven processors. |
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A usage log within the practice computers recorded when the guidelines were used and by whom. |
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Will computers close the final gap, and find in their own depths, abysmal or otherwise, an instinctual feel for the wrong move at the right time? |
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In addition to binary and decimal, computers can also speak in octal and hex. |
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Electronic computers are today machines based on binary arithmetic but this was not so for the ENIAC computer. |
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But it's clearly not just a matter of putting a few computers in a schoolroom. |
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The statements also force government bodies to note costs to maintain or replace big-ticket items such as vehicles, computers and buildings. |
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More recently, however, computer scientists have begun to extend the techniques of artificial life to computers with real bodies. |
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He was a pioneer in the use of computers and is considered a father of artificial intelligence. |
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It only infected and destroyed computers that had particular versions of this software running. |
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Conspiracy theorists at Brunel say academics have logged on to their computers to vote only to find someone else has already done so for them. |
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Inside computers artificial life forms have already evolved that can locomote, chase prey, evade predators and compete for limited resources. |
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The great thing about computers is you can retrieve and reassemble, like rejigging the archive and coming up with new works. |
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Children addicted to computers are being sent on camping holidays designed to help them kick the habit. |
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Only a small minority use the highly promoted ability of the computers to link to TV sets and sound systems for use in family rooms. |
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He said computers had been put in place for the inputting of data and that this would deal with the backlog. |
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The sport of geocaching is perhaps best described as a high-tech scavenger hunt in which computers and the Great Outdoors come together. |
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During his free time, my husband loves working on computers and audiovisual systems. |
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Since most computers do not yet possess faces or bodies, they cannot manifest this behaviour. |
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This is not the first time that research computers have been misused for mining digital currency. |
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Many of today's fantasies are connected to the role of computers in our lives, in literature and literary criticism. |
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Makers of hand-held computers and office automation equipment are buying the chips, he said. |
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People sit in their cubicles on the phone or typing away at their computers amid the chaos. |
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Photography is now about computers as much as it is about cameras and lenses. |
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For certain kinds of mathematical problem, computers have no short cuts to the right answer. |
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In the library that has no computers the librarian is a lot friendlier and knows me and my family well. |
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What was really tricky was magnetizing the computers without messing them up. |
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They all have their place in today's world, but unfortunately computers cannot repair and maintain homes. |
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Insomnia is also a common trait of anyone who uses computers for more than a few hours a day. |
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Thirdly, it was decided to replace existing aged computers with a new integrated computer system. |
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The answer is 609,000 and this is the number of lines of code in the software for the computers and avionics systems. |
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That computers still can't fathom some of the Tartar's famous combinations will come as a relief to many. |
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The virus would have been pretty awful if it had taken control of a large number of computers and started replicating itself. |
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It uses networked computers and multi-channel speaker playback to more closely approximate the different instruments and their ranges. |
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On the ground floor, some surf the Web, check their e-mail, burn CDs or simply use the computers for word processing. |
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The software means that computers can treat voice in the same way as text, or any other form of data. |
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So it supplemented the existing database on telephones with a profile of computers and modems. |
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As part of the settlement, the company is to donate its software and reconditioned computers to 14,000 low-income schools. |
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The only way that I can get the computers to recognize the domain again is by unjoining and rejoining the domain. |
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Built-in computers analyze the person's heart rhythm and interpret the rhythms that require defibrillation shocks. |
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In the lounge was the navigator console, various computers hidden in the walls for research, sofas, tables, and reading material. |
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She said their computers were down and that they would be up and running at the earliest by noon. |
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The idea is to use Linux to not only sell expensive computers but also high-margin software and big-ticket support and consulting services. |
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Joel noted that the ship's computers did not seem to be in a useable condition. |
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The infected computers can then be used to attack a Web site without their owners' knowledge. |
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Along with a facility for languages, the fledgling student quickly demonstrated an aptitude for computers and taught himself programming. |
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The competition has been organised to promote cybernetics, the study of the interaction between computers and humans. |
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Her research interests are in educational uses of computers and in interactive multimedia. |
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Well, with the dawn of computers and cable, some say the nightly newscasts are old news. |
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When you use today's computers you are constantly thinking about what you have to do next. |
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A Brentwood health club is spearheading a campaign to encourage children to shutdown their computers and get fit. |
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As prices drop and adoption increases, all computers will include ADSL modems. |
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Air conditioning means sixty degree offices, and until I move my computers outdoors I'll be enjoying the benefits of the space heater. |
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Every time we go on an aeroplane for instance, we are trusting our lives to computers in the cockpit and at air traffic control centres. |
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General purpose home computers will gather dust as special purpose machines with cool designs and unbreakable software take over. |
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We work on our computers every single day never sparing a thought for all those millions of chunks of data spread all over our hard disks. |
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Thelwall hopes that in the future sentiment analysis could help computers detect their users' moods so they can react accordingly. |
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I've noticed more and more Americanisms sneaking into the English language and I blame computers and spellchecks for that. |
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These reports expanded the analysis to include not only computers and modems but also Internet connectivity. |
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Attacking both personal computers and network servers, the Nimda worm has already seriously affected one local business. |
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I realise that these days, computers have spellchecks, which often cannot differentiate between meanings of words. |
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At your end, you will need a desktop computer or a networked group of desktop computers that can link to the black box. |
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Burglars were caught red-handed surrounded by computers that they were intending to steal from a business. |
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Now most high-end computers cost only two thousand dollars, and these computers have all the bells and whistles. |
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While computers have thrown up many seemingly ideal jobs for the visually impaired, he cautions employers against typecasting blind employees. |
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The scientists put several computers in the monkey house of the local zoo to test their theory. |
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Prices may rise and consumption may fall as individuals refrain from purchasing new cars, computers and other non-essentials. |
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In those days computers consisted mainly of transistors, resistors, diodes, capacitors and miles of wiring. |
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Nearly two dozen employees and relatives sealed computers in garbage bags with twist ties. |
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In the twenty-first century computers make complex structures and irregular component assemblies easier and cheaper. |
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Three on-board computers must adjust the plane's pitch and roll 40 times a second. |
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Of course, nearly half a century later, none of us really believe computers are running the show. |
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I also run servers on that machine and each of the other four computers on the network. |
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These lists of vulnerable computers are often traded or sold over the Internet and help virus writers plant their viruses quickly. |
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That's been true ever since personal computers started being able to use lower-case letters more than 20 years ago. |
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It also includes information about ferries, simple machines, whales, and computers among other scientific ideas. |
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The problem was corrected when a mechanic reset the computers that control the components, according to the log. |
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Electronic albums can be great for that, the computers enforcing a level of detail and lucidity. |
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There might be some retrospective legislation and one day they'll come around and take your computers away and name you in the paper. |
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This is definitely not video, we are using computers to manipulate images in real time by analysing audio input. |
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It spread via e-mail attachments, infected webpages and other computers linked on a network. |
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There was a pool table, a small bank of computers and a corpulent Italian speaking loudly into a mobile phone. |
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Current miniaturized off-the-shelf computers cannot handle that computational load. |
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This results in the average person being able to do things with computers they've never been able to do before. |
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The microprocessors at the heart of computers employ sets of tiny transistors in silicon chips to represent information. |
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Residents and users of the day centre in Browns Road have had lessons on their own computers and set up the web pages. |
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This process functions much like early computers that used data tape to give yes or no responses. |
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In those days, mainframe computers were coming into usage and electronic calculators were also just appearing. |
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She said computers were built, tested and shipped within three days of being ordered, and the company also offered free aftersales support. |
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Today, myriad inexpensive quality postscript alphabets are easily accessible on home computers for free or as shareware on the Internet. |
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Spammers sometimes use this form of malware to commandeer computers and turn them into spam-sending drones. |
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This repository allowed locally connected computers to retrieve updates significantly faster while offering greater package management. |
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Photographers now use digital cameras, reporters use mobile phones, and computers are used in story writing and page layout. |
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The digital currency is mined using specialized super computers which discover them by solving highly complex mathematical equations. |
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It should be the sort of manly thing I get my man to do, but he leaves computers to me. |
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We did have several electric typewriters, and we used the better of the two computers to keyboard accepted manuscripts. |
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Bitcoins are mined by a decentralized network of computers that guess solutions to a mathematical puzzle. |
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The very theory of quantum computers already forces upon us a view of physical reality as a multiverse. |
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He said the festival also encouraged young artistes to play musical instruments instead of relying on computers to spice up their sounds. |
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Employees don't give a stuff about using their computers at work to access the Net. |
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With the Internet, an explosion in the demand for home computers was triggered. |
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Now Hon Hai makes unbranded laptop computers for microchip giant Intel Corp, she said. |
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Many Greeks write emails in Latin characters even though computers are sold with Greek language software. |
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Dedicated multiprocessor rackmount computers are easily the cheapest way to add processing power to a cluster. |
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Hundreds of millions of cheap computers working together as massively parallel computers lead to scientific advances we can't even imagine. |
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But this magic has a tendency to turn to necromancy when computers break down. |
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Understanding natural language allows computers to facilitate human problem solving and decision making. |
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Shoppers are being warned not to be suckered into buying computers and other IT gear just on the back of slick advertising. |
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Indeed, today, all computers are based on Boolean algebra, another example that mathematics is often a hundred years ahead of its time. |
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Finally, I have extensive experience using computers to manage and manipulate images, including type. |
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He became extremely withdrawn and after working with computers all day would spend his nights alone with the one he had at home. |
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Handheld devices and smart cards will have built-in computers relying on boards, ICs, and components. |
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We could soon be taking snaps with our camera phone and transmitting those images to other phones, personal computers or laptops. |
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With increasing use of their personal computers and typing of their own reports and theses men showed symptoms as well. |
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See my previous post for more info on how to keep your computers up and running. |
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In the work we do, computers and other hardware and software are the tools we use. |
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This enables all the computers to share the broadband connection via the network. |
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Some of POL's corporate clients have dozens of computers on their private networks where they need Internet access. |
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All the computers are networked and connected to one Internet cable, so we can all be online at once. |
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The computers where music is stored need not be in the rooms where you're listening. |
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There are six networked computers providing access to the Defweb and online library services. |
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If there are computers there, I'll keep you posted with news of my high jinks and frolics. |
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Telephone lines are tapped, and fax machines, modems, computers and satellite dishes have to be registered with the government. |
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High-speed computers convert imagery into a bar graph that charts the pixels, dots of pure black to pure white and all of the grays. |
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The science of cybernetics has discovered many similarities between computers and the human brain. |
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But if you think they aren't possibilities, you haven't looked lately at the way computers are changing the news-gathering process. |
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The main advantage of the cluster is that the computation power depends on the number of computers one adds to the master machine. |
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The challenge of developing codes for very complex, massively parallel computers has increased the emphasis on programming skills. |
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It wasn't until the vacuum tube and the transistor were invented that true computers became feasible. |
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She has also received computers and 14 computer training facilities for families without the means. |
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Thousands of individuals took to their computers to discuss the issues on their own Internet web pages, or blogs as they are known. |
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Now, at aged 17 he mends, sells and upgrades computers for people in the store in Trowbridge. |
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Kev finished off by yabbering on about brains connecting to computers and thought-control of objects. |
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The mechs replaced both flight-control computers and both stab actuators, which we submitted for an engineering investigation. |
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The General is making his decisions about the war in a war room based upon computers and real time communications, all over the world. |
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In nearly all cases, the equipment comes with no warranties and no guarantees that the computers will even work. |
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To make moletronic computers a reality, the devices had to do more than merely let electrons flow through them. |
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But Middleton points out that most computers are now shipped with pre-installed Ethernet cards, and many can be connected with a plug-in adapter. |
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They were receiving frantic calls regarding accounts and computers crashing all weekend long, and they had no idea why. |
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Overwhelmingly, it's the taxpayer mopping up the mess as obsolete computers are dumped into the municipal waste stream. |
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As a magical black box, computers were portrayed as a source of hope amidst fear. |
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Well of course things like motor cars are black boxes, they're virtually computers on wheels. |
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Network nodes can be notebooks, handheld computers or other devices that accept MeshNetworks' communications card. |
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Development was done using desktop and lab workstations, targeting laptop and embedded computers for field use. |
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Based on Mars, The Mysterons are sentient computers constructed by an alien civilisation. |
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Tim Power, a Kilkenny newsagent who operates a small cybercafe, has reformatted his computers after finding them loaded with Internet worms. |
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It's also very hard to quit cold turkey from the computers and video games that our generation was weaned on. |
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Younger workers, who have used computers their entire lives, are now gaining a toehold in the workplace. |
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None of this would be possible without computers to allow Ryanair to do all their sums, and to allow my lady friend to make the purchase. |
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It is used in personal computers and servers for low-speed system management communications. |
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Using computers and medical scanning techniques, it can reveal the secrets of a mummy without disturbing the wrappings. |
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Dell sold eight million servers, laptops and desktop computers during the quarter. |
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To help with paperwork, grading, and simple communication among teachers and students, computers have an acknowledged place. |
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Central computers could be set up in police stations with satellite computers covering different districts, towns or even single streets. |
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Even computers were not left behind and an entire roomful of youngsters showed their mettle with the gadgets. |
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Incorrectly set clocks on some infected computers explain why the virus is continuing to circulate. |
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The great majority use computers for a variety of business functions and use the Internet and e-mail regularly. |
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And we thought what we'd try and do is use children's interest in the Internet and in computers as a strategy to get them more physically active. |
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I don't think psychologists have to deal with their own computers when they start to act up. |
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Just because armies, empires, chimpanzee troops, and computers operate through top-down hierarchies of control, the church need not. |
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And one final thing, if everything fails, those 30 computers fail, you have one final backstop, right? |
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The ability to share files between any two computers on the network was an explicit goal of the Internet, from day one. |
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Anonymous hubs are special computers on the Internet which relay information between a user and a web site that a user is visiting. |
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Thousands of e-mail users have wiped a legitimate Windows file from their computers in the past week following an elaborate hoax virus alert. |
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Cell phones and video games exploded in popularity as computers remained out of reach. |
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A spammer could then use these infected computers as an anonymous remailer for his wares. |
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Hackers gain secret control of the computers by sending e-mail viruses and worms or by planting software code on web sites. |
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Languages have alphabets, or character repertoires, but computers deal with digits. |
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It collects backup streams from several computers and writes them all to tape together with headers identifying their origins. |
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Tony, an avid collector of spongy penguins given out at various Linux events, now thinks computers were created by penguins, or vice versa. |
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Users infected with a new strain of ransomware found their computers held hostage in exchange for a money transfer demanded by its creators. |
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These workers had their computers confiscated and searched for evidence related to the alleged sick-out. |
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First thing you should know is, all of them will get you online or network your computers together. |
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They used computers to design the complex branching of the veins and arteries that ranged from 10 microns to 3 millimetres wide. |
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I've always wondered why the people I know who are most into computers seem to be the ones who are most likely to swear at them volubly. |
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Keep in mind that most power supplies inside the computers can reliably handle only plus or minus 10 percent in voltage fluctuation. |
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The songs have been recorded live in studios and computers have not been used to arrange the music. |
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Will computers make trains so massively more controllable as to amount almost to a new form of transport? |
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For one thing, computers are a pretty intelligent lot, if the measure of intelligence is the ability to absorb, process and recall vast amounts of information. |
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A handful of young staffers lounged on couches or hunched over their computers at makeshift desks. |
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For many in the counterculture of the early 1960s, computers had represented the epitome of all that was wrong with technology in the service of technocracy. |
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The attacks are often coordinated by a botnet, a web of compromised computers acting at the whim of the hackers behind the attack. |
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Customer service people should not be simply data entry technicians, and gate agents are not just ticket tearers, that is, unless they let the computers be the boss. |
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We've moved from computers with a trillionth of the power of a human brain to computers with a billionth of the power. |
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Most of us conduct ourselves online as if our computers are built like Fort Knox. |
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Labor saving devices such as washing machines, remote controls, computers and power tools have not only saved us time but have prevented us from burning calories. |
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In that time, a variety of advances made by the Linux development community and system vendors has enabled a whole new class of scalable computers running Linux. |
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It gives home computers to students in the 3rd grade and up. |
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Yeonmi was forbidden from using computers in the town center because she was a foreigner. |
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A temporary moratorium on new computers has been imposed by the service. |
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Four computers and chairs, with the keyboards sliding out on a shelf, are housed in a recess along a wall which once held an aquarium of tropical fish. |
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Thus, a telnet connection between two computers will almost certainly include two IP addresses, an arbitrary port on the client, and the well-known port 23 on the server. |
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Yet it seemed to target only siemens computers at the Natanz facility involved in enriching uranium. |
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The flight management computers include the navigation data programmed for every flight. |
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Teeth are grinding in front of computers from Bangor to Baltimore, San Diego to San Jose. |
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These old computers are still useful. It seems like such a waste to throw them away. |
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Their papers and computers were confiscated and, although they were released on bail, their telephones were tapped and they had to endure constant surveillance. |
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The computers were sleeker, the machines were less noisy, the lights were more blinding. |
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By and large, the throngs of steelworkers have been retired by computers and automated controls that now watch over every aspect of the steel-making process. |
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Dell argues that while the company hasn't created whiz-bang inventions, it has produced cheap computers for buyers and huge returns for shareholders. |
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Otherwise, I love dismantling old computers or electronic devices and try to make them work. |
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The company's new software allows Owen to quickly take 3D measurements and then transfer the information on to computers before cutting any sailcloth. |
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You don't think of it in this day and age of computers and telephones. |
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Dixons is likely to echo the tough retail environment for brown and white goods and also for electronic items such as personal computers and mobile phones. |
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As computers become more human-like, humans will become more machine-like. |
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They promise to so streamline interactions between people and computers that the mouse, the trackball, the keyboard will surely someday seem quaint and clunky. |
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Later, some people will return to their offices or hotels and transcribe the words onto their computers if they can read them, others may just file away their notes. |
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If you don't secure your computers you could end up with egg on your face. |
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I need you to run the astrogation computers for the descent. |
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The airline last week began court-authorized searches of the home computers of flight attendants whom the airline suspects organized a sick-out over the New Year's holiday. |
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From the dawn of supercomputing to the 2-in-1 PC, this is not so much a history of computers as it is the story of how we compute. |
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Relays are special computers that Tor uses to anonymously transmit traffic across the Internet. |
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They left in a huff, taking all the computers and office equipment as a consolation prize. |
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It is estimated there are around two million computers in use in Scotland. |
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The solution to these problems was to use miniaturized sensors and computers to give individual interceptors the ability to operate without support from a garage. |
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The United Nations was prompted to impose a ban on selling mainframe computers or laptops to North Korea. |
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As usual, Joan Armour was present at center stage or behind the scenes, as necessary, to keep the logistics manageable, the computers humming, and the coffee urns flowing. |
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Here are the four things cognizant people should know about the decade when computers mastered our cognition. |
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She can reorganize her own molecules, make computers with her brain, talk to dinosaurs. |
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Engineers preparing to replace the cables and computers discovered that the cables had degraded so much over the past 50 years that the work needed to be done all at once. |
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These radiation belts surround the Earth with a stormy environment of energetic particles that could affect the electronic systems and computers on board the spacecraft. |
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Emoticons could also be sent to wearable computers embedded in jewellery. |
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The OR gates and AND gates you can read about in books that describe how computers work correspond directly to Boole's algebraic operations of addition and multiplication. |
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The gang plants software bugs in computers that allow it to steal passwords, and it rents out huge networks of computers to others for sending out viruses and spam. |
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What's more, the 3.1 upgrade finally kills the iPhone's ability to be tethered to computers and used as a modem. |
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With a network server, computers can share a single telephone connection. |
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Both spectrometers were interfaced to computers for data analysis. |
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The redefinition of downtown Austin from a space for creative nonconformity into a sterile environment more suited to computers than composers has begun. |
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Parents are sometimes worried about their own lack of knowledge of computer technology and embarrassed to admit that their children know more about computers than they do! |
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It costs less to make a cluster computer out of a group of personal computers or workstations than to buy a supercomputer to perform enormous mathematical tasks. |
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Trowbridge library has two publicly accessible computers equipped with the special software, one in the lending library and one in the reference library. |
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Tram operators are issuing inspectors with new hand-held high-tech computers which can check the name and address of a ticketless passenger in three seconds. |
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Mr Frost said the school had chosen an integrated approach to IT, which sees computers incorporated into every lesson, rather than segregated off into a separate suite. |
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The reason that our computers are built with a Politburo architecture is that it is efficient at doing very boring tasks. |
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The computers will shoot a text to a predefined list of experts, learning more about the subject over time. |
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In that film, war dialing is the act of using a modem attached to a computer to dial an entire exchange of phone numbers to locate any computers with modems attached to them. |
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Many computers include recovery features in their BIOS that allow them to recover from an interrupted BIOS flash that would normally brick the device. |
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Officers from Farnworth police station will be seconded to the mobile unit which will be fitted out with offices and equipped with computers and telephones. |
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Nowadays, the trend is to make computers as user-friendly as possible. |
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Then the infected floppy disks may infect other computers that boot from them, and the virus copy on the hard disk will try to infect still more floppies. |
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From the pre-historic days of aborigines to the present day of robots and computers the ideas of managing available resources have been in existence in some form or other. |
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Unlike conventional electrical appliances, which are simply plugged into a wall socket, computers and their peripherals are connected by any number of lines. |
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Terry Barker, the Services to the Unemployed Worker at CANDO, had a particular interest in computers as a mechanism for upskilling the unemployed. |
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A handsome nerd, he loves computers and gadgets, but also obsessively fills tattered scrapbooks with sketches, old postcards and sentimental family snaps. |
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Before computers entered the mainstream, talented programmers were rare. |
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The dream of computers being able to understand our spoken requests has been part of the artificial intelligence and natural language processing research mythos for decades. |
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It was when cheap sound cards and computers hit Australia, and collided smack bang with a dance music industry on the upswing, that the revolution really began. |
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Researchers believe that by putting microcomputers into every manmade object in the world, computers could, in a manner of speaking, sense the real world. |
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This the neighborhood bindery I imagined back in the eighties, when I suddenly realized what computers could do to free and distribute information. |
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They might have cleaner computers come fall, but they're still vulnerable because their operating systems tend to be unpatched and their antivirus software out-of-date. |
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The biochips, used in biological computers will be capable of working in tandem with electronic circuits and perform tasks beyond the capability of present genre of computers. |
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The worm has programmed infected computers to bombard the web site with corrupt data from this Saturday with the intention of forcing it to crash. |
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We now accept cell phones and laptop computers as commonplaces of everyday life. |
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Today's computers can recognize faces, human speech and handwriting. |
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If computers come with CD drives 50 years from now, I'll eat my hat. |
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It is a paradox that computers need maintenance so often, since they are meant to save people time. |
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Until the early 1990s, teachers in most kindergartens in Hong Kong had no official curriculum guidelines for integrating computers into the early childhood curriculum. |
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It's ironic that computers break down so often, since they're meant to save people time. |
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The computer lab in which I work, housing 10 computers in a small, box-like room, becomes like a sauna, with 30-plus degree temperatures and an unbreathable air supply. |
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It used to be that personal computers were rather underpowered and memory-poor, enough so that they placed artificial limits on a hacker's learning process. |
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Connect computers in an office, and you've got a local area network. |
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Getting computers to recognise faces is notoriously difficult. |
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Makers of handphones, TVs and computers are rolling out low-priced ware for China's rural poor, in an attempt to tap a huge potential market for electronic goods. |
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Stationary and mobile monitoring of the scope required would generate so much sensor data that it could only be done if artificially intelligent computers were doing the work. |
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I have a police scanner and a tap on the police computers and phone lines. |
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And we could make copies of these digital files on our computers and transcribe anywhere anytime we wanted. |
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The militants are believed to have executed the victims, stolen computers and other property from the consulate, before detonating a bomb to blow it up. |
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And as evening sets in, those same brainiacs, wedged three to six per office, huddle in quiet conference or patter away at their computers in unblinking concentration. |
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That compares to 18 years for personal computers and color TV, 15 years for cell phones and 14 years for video cassette recorders. |
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A VAN driver delivering pounds 30,000 worth of laptop computers was threatened at knifepoint as he stopped at a Midland junction. |
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He has been programming computers since 1965, once repaired pinball machines, and now makes Klein Bottles, which are 4-dimensional Moebius loops. |
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