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Revived Fervor for Smart Monitors Linked to a Server
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Instead of having a big, loud and complex computer on your desk, what if you could have a quiet, thin machine that rarely needed an upgrade or a fix?
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Korean Star’s Suicide Reignites Debate on Web Regulation
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When movie star Choi Jin-sil was found dead, South Korean police, the media and members of Parliament immediately pointed fingers at the Internet.
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Advertising: Newspapers’ Web Revenue Is Stalling
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Newspapers, already facing a grim economic forecast, are digesting another piece of bad news.
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Mainstream News Outlets Start Linking to Other Sites
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By embracing the hyperlink ethos of the Web to a degree not seen before, news organizations are acting in effect like aggregators.
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Amid the Gloom, an E-Commerce War
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Seven years ago, eBay was an online juggernaut and Amazon.com its weaker rival. How times have changed.
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Overfeeding on Information
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It's hard not to watch the news, with the financial markets in meltdown and the presidential campaign entering the homestretch. But how much is too much?
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Novelties: Keeping Your Own Health Chart, Online
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New tools are being developed that may help harried patients monitor their medications, home tests and other details.
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Study Warns of Hearing Loss From Music Players
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A scientific study for the European Union found that listening to personal music players at high volume can threaten permanent hearing loss.
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Verizon Wireless Plans to Charge Companies Sending Text Messages
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Verizon told companies that send out text messages that starting Nov. 1 it will impose a fee of 3 cents for each message it delivers to the phones of its subscribers.
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YouTube to Offer TV Shows With Ads Strewn Through
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YouTube said it would start offering full-length episodes of some television shows on its sprawling Web site.
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Memory Maker Reduces Work Force
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Falling prices for the flash memory used in a wide range of consumer electronics have forced Micron Technology to shut down most of a factory it shares with Intel and lay off close to 3,000 workers.
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Math Skills Suffer in U.S., Study Finds
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While the study suggests many girls have exceptional talent in math, they are rarely identified in the U.S. because culture discourages girls — and boys — from excelling.
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