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Keyword: computer

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  • Computer Program Tracks Woman's Cycle - NFP

    02/09/2006 1:26:04 PM PST · by klossg · 56 replies · 1,089+ views
    Arlington Catholic Herald ^ | 2/9/06 | Angela E. Pometto
    Say goodbye to diaries — those small books with breakable locks that little brothers could easily get their hands on. Today’s women have computer programs that help them track their most cherished secrets. Women practicing Natural Family Planning (NFP) can throw away their paper charts and store that information in their palm pilot. And there is no worry about this sensitive information falling into the wrong hands — with the click of a button, the intimate details of a woman’s life can be protected by a password. Woman Calendar, a program by BEIKS LLC, is a simple program that any...
  • Will you help me with Mozilla Firefox, please? [Vanity]

    02/03/2006 10:09:58 PM PST · by righttackle44 · 39 replies · 602+ views
    I have seen discussions of folks who know about Mozilla Firefox, and I hope some of you will help me, keeping in mind that I am not very well versed in computer related matters, but my son is. But he is stumped, as well. I use Mozilla Firefox as my search engine. I have the moderate SafeSearch feature on. There are a number of web pages that it pulls up, but when I click the item on the search page, everything that I have pulled up on the internet disappears. Nothing else. Any Word or Excel documents or anything else...
  • Can I switch to a "folder" view of an open MS Office file?

    01/25/2006 4:26:39 AM PST · by rudy45 · 12 replies · 201+ views
    self
    I have an open MS Office file (e.g. Word document, Excel spreadsheet, PowerPoint presentation). I would like to see the graphical location of this file, using Windows Explorer. Is there a command I can use within that Office application that brings up, within Explorer, the location of that file? I know I can click on File/Properties, but then I have to remember the sequence of folders, then manually look it up via Explorer (which is a nuisance). I was hoping there's some way of zooming right to that location. I would need this capability, for example, if I wanted to...
  • The Bottom Of The Pay Scale: Wages For H-1B Computer Programmers [long read]

    01/23/2006 7:39:54 AM PST · by doc30 · 38 replies · 1,139+ views
    Immigration Daily ^ | 1/23/06 | John Miano for the Center for Immigration Studies
    Executive Summary The temporary visa program known as H-1B enables U.S. employers to hire professional-level foreign workers for a period of up to six years. According to the law (8 U.S.C. § 1182(n)), employers must pay H-1B workers either the same rate as other employees with similar skills and qualifications or the "prevailing wage" for that occupation and location, whichever is higher. This is to prevent the hiring of foreign workers from depressing U.S. wages and to protect foreign workers from exploitation. This report examines the wage data in Labor Department records for Fiscal Year 2004. It compares wages in...
  • Wireless World: New roaming standard?

    01/20/2006 3:02:38 PM PST · by 2Jim_Brown · 7 replies · 495+ views
    UPI ^ | UPI
    CHICAGO, Jan. 20 (UPI) -- Consumer interest in mobile Internet access continues to climb, and computer industry leaders including Intel Corp. and others are now calling for the creation of a global roaming standard for wireless, experts tell United Press International's Wireless World. Current standards like WiFi and WiMax cannot take wireless to the next level -- international roaming -- because convergence of technologies is creating new demands on networks. By Gene Koprowski
  • FReeper Canteen ~ More Innovative Ideas for 2006 ~ 17 Jan 2006

    01/16/2006 8:00:26 PM PST · by GummyIII · 784 replies · 3,716+ views
    Honor Our Troops | Thank you for your service!!!! | We Support Our Troops
    We Support Our Troops!  For the freedom you enjoyed yesterday... Thank the Veterans who served in The United States Armed Forces "And the test of good technology is that once you use it, you can't go back. "   quote by Intel CEO Paul Otellini We Support Our Troops!!! Apple added Intel processors to an existing Mac desktop and an entirely new laptop, updated Mac OS X and iLife, and introduced an FM tuner/remote control for the iPod.  The new Intel-based iMac will feature Intel's new Centrino Duo processor. On the mobile side, the PowerBook is being retired in favor of...
  • Super-fast quantum search achieved with individual atoms

    01/10/2006 2:03:12 PM PST · by strategofr · 5 replies · 217+ views
    Researchers at the University of Michigan have been able to use a small quantum computer consisting of two atoms to do a super-fast data base search. This same system could someday be scaled to a much larger quantum computer that could outperform any conventional computer for certain applications. Sponsored Links (Ads by Google) Explore Quantum Mechanics - scpd.stanford.edu Stanford Nano Program. 18 courses. Latest research. Leading experts Feynman Rules - www.Kolmogorov.com The Feynman Lectures On Physics: New Complete And Definitive Issue Breaking news: Electronic Devices Apple unveils first Intel computer 53 minutes ago General Science Science journal to retract second...
  • ISP's Intrusion Protection not allowing login to FR

    01/09/2006 10:36:03 AM PST · by Muleteam1 · 26 replies · 976+ views
    Self | January 9, 2006 | Muleteam1
    After many months of not being able to login to FR from my west Texas server, everything now seems to be okay. For many months, whenever I typed in my user name and password at FR and clicked on the "Log In" button, I got only a "dead" response from the server. After trying MANY things, i.e., reformatting, changing my op system, and even changing PCs, I finally wrote to my ISP asking if they had the FR site blocked. After checking, my ISP decided the problem was their "Intrusion Detection" (software?) which was blocking perl script access. The problem...
  • Spam, Spam, Spam, and more Spam. ( When is it going to get better Vanity )

    01/08/2006 7:37:18 AM PST · by devane617 · 27 replies · 544+ views
    Me | 01/08/20006 | Me
    Neal Boortz ask the question in his Neal's Nuze section this week: When will Spam be stopped, or become less? http://boortz.com/nuze/200601/01052006.html#spamWith all the tough talk I see no progress and maybe more Spam than ever. I suspect the answer is "money". Follow the money to the companies that combat Spam and you will find an industry that has been built for combating Spam, and Viruses.
  • From babies and Legos comes high tech innovation

    01/01/2006 10:44:06 AM PST · by ddtorquee · 1 replies · 252+ views
    It's doubtful that Las Vegas bettors would have put any money on an ultra-Orthodox Israeli schoolteacher and mother of five taking the city by storm and setting the annual Consumer Electronics Show on its ear. But that's exactly what inventor and super mom Sarah Lipman did, overcoming the odds while casting a whole new light on the way users can interact with their computers, cell phones, and other electronic devices. She's not alone. Indeed, Lipman, who heads her own company - Power2Be Technology - represents part of a new generation of strict religiously observant Israeli women who are finding ways...
  • Connoisseur computer tests wine (Professor trying to build computer tools to make better wine)

    12/31/2005 3:38:18 PM PST · by nickcarraway · 8 replies · 303+ views
    CNN ^ | Thursday, December 29, 2005
    Distinguishing fine wine from plonk is usually left to connoisseurs and winemakers, who rely on their senses, rough chemical measurements and the whims of nature to produce an exceptional tipple. But a Carnegie Mellon University professor, working with industry scientists in Chile, is hoping that computer models will identify the traits of good wine -- eventually helping vintners produce more of it. Lorenz "Larry" Biegler, who teaches chemical engineering at the university, is working on mathematical formulas to automate the fermentation process, adjusting ingredients and conditions to ensure robust flavors and higher yields from grape harvests. Scientists don't fully understand...
  • Cash pours in for student with $1 million Web idea

    12/29/2005 4:18:12 PM PST · by george76 · 32 replies · 1,841+ views
    Reuters ^ | Dec 29, 2005 | Peter Graff
    If you have an envious streak, you probably shouldn't read this. Because chances are, Alex Tew, a 21-year-old student from a small town in England, is cleverer than you. And he is proving it by earning a cool million dollars in four months on the Internet. Selling porn? Dealing prescription drugs? Nope. All he sells are pixels, the tiny dots on the screen that appear when you call up his home page. He had the brainstorm for his million dollar home page, called, logically enough, www.milliondollarhomepage.com, while lying in bed thinking out how he would pay for university. The idea:...
  • Internet Explorer Sucks

    12/26/2005 10:53:58 PM PST · by george76 · 18 replies · 719+ views
    Schneier on Security ^ | December 26, 2005 | Bruce Schneier
    Researchers tracked three browsers (MSIE, Firefox, Opera) in 2004 and counted which days they were "known unsafe." Their definition of "known unsafe": a remotely exploitable security vulnerability had been publicly announced and no patch was yet available. MSIE was 98% unsafe. There were only 7 days in 2004 without an unpatched publicly disclosed security hole. Firefox was 15% unsafe. There were 56 days with an unpatched publicly disclosed security hole. 30 of those days were a Mac hole that only affected Mac users. Windows Firefox was 7% unsafe. Opera was 17% unsafe: 65 days. That number is accidentally a little...
  • Displaying PC output on TV

    12/28/2005 3:54:49 PM PST · by rudy45 · 6 replies · 564+ views
    self
    I have a Dell Inspiron 5100 laptop, and it has an S-video jack and a serial display VGA jack (15 pin D shell female). I would like to display images on a television. The television (it's analog, not digital) has no S video jack, neither does it have a VGA jack. It does have red-white-yellow inputs (?RCA jacks?). What is the best or most economical way of getting images onto the TV? Is there an S-video-to-yellow video adapter cable (would be, I imagine, S video on one end, yellow RCA on the other)? What other alternatives do I have? Thanks.
  • Potential new unpatched IE exploit ? ~ Yes...may affect other Browsers also...

    12/28/2005 2:55:03 PM PST · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 69 replies · 3,196+ views
    Websense Security Labs ^ | Dec 28 2005 11:19AM | Websense Security Labs Blog Staff
    This alert is a follow-up to a post made yesterday on our blog: http://www.websensesecuritylabs.com/blog/ Websense® Security Labs™ has discovered numerous websites exploiting an unpatched Windows vulnerability in the handling of .WMF image files. The websites which have been uncovered at this point are using the exploit to distribute Spyware applications and other Potentially Unwanted Soware. The user's desktop background is replaced with a message warning of a spyware infection and a "spyware cleaning" application is launched. This application prompts the user to enter credit card information in order to remove the detected spyware. The background image used and the "spyware...
  • Mom Fights Downloading Suit on Her Own

    12/25/2005 3:39:47 PM PST · by Momaw Nadon · 233 replies · 4,662+ views
    AP via Yahoo! ^ | Sunday, December 25, 2005 | JIM FITZGERALD
    WHITE PLAINS, New York - It was Easter Sunday, and Patricia Santangelo was in church with her kids when she says the music recording industry peeked into her computer and decided to take her to court. Santangelo says she has never downloaded a single song on her computer, but the industry didn't see it that way. The woman from Wappingers Falls, about 80 miles north of New York City, is among the more than 16,000 people who have been sued for allegedly pirating music through file-sharing computer networks. "I assumed that when I explained to them who I was and...
  • Critical bug found in anti-virus software

    12/23/2005 9:05:03 AM PST · by george76 · 75 replies · 2,857+ views
    New Scientist news service ^ | 22 December 2005 | Will Knight
    A critical software bug has been discovered in several of the most widely used anti-virus programs. It could be exploited to take control of a computer or to steal information, according to an analysis produced by the independent security analyst who made the discovery. The glitch affects 39 different Symantec products - including both home and enterprise versions of its anti-virus software. It resides within the Symantec anti-virus library, which is used by all of the packages. The analyst, Alex Wheeler, discovered that a critical error occurs when the Symantec anti-virus library decompresses files from "RAR" format for analysis Symantec...
  • Sober Helps Catch Child Porn Offender

    12/20/2005 8:29:42 PM PST · by Cicero · 25 replies · 713+ views
    Beta News ^ | December 20, 2005 | BetaNews Staff
    Sober Helps Catch Child Porn Offender By BetaNews Staff, BetaNews December 20, 2005, 3:13 PM For once the never-ending Sober worm actually did some good. A 20 year-old child porn offender turned himself in earlier this week after mistaking a message generated by the worm as an actual communiqué from Germany's Federal Criminal Police Office. The e-mail said "an investigation was underway," which apparently spooked the man into believing the authorities were aware of his online activities. He was charged after police found pornographic images of children on his computer. A spokesman for the Paderborn, Germany police credited the worm...
  • Web Sites Let Users Send E-Mail to Future

    12/19/2005 1:42:26 PM PST · by Redcitizen · 25 replies · 548+ views
    Associated Press ^ | Mon Dec 19, 8:12 AM ET | NAHAL TOOSI
    NEW YORK - In the year 2009, on the 25th of April, a man named Greg is supposed to get an e-mail. The e-mail will remind Greg that he is his best friend and worst enemy, that he once dated a woman named Michelle, and that he planned to major in computer science. "More importantly," the e-mail says, "are you wearing women's clothing?" The e-mail was sent by none other than Greg himself — through a Web site called FutureMe.org. The site is one of a handful that let people send e-mails to themselves and others years in the future....
  • In computer science, a growing gender gap

    12/18/2005 7:00:11 AM PST · by A. Pole · 91 replies · 1,843+ views
    The Boston Globe ^ | December 18, 2005 | Marcella Bombardieri
    [...] Today, Souvaine chairs the Tufts University computer science department, which has more female professors than male. But few younger women have followed in her generation's footsteps. Next spring, when 22 computer science graduates accept their Tufts diplomas, only four will be women. Born in contemporary times, free of the male-dominated legacy common to other sciences and engineering, computer science could have become a model for gender equality. [...] When Tara Espiritu arrived at Tufts, she was the rare young woman planning to become a computer scientist.[...]The same men always spoke up, often to raise some technical point that meant...