stargeek
PHP news website logo.
home    PHP scripts    articles    seo tools    links    search    contact    shop    realtors


BEDTIME-STORY CLASSIC - Addendum: Alice's Adventures under Ground







BEDTIME-STORY CLASSIC - Addendum:
Alice's Adventures under Ground

BEDTIME-STORY CLASSIC - Addendum:
Alice's Adventures under Ground
07/16/2004 04:57 PM

full scan of the very first Alice book ever .. Alice's Adventures under Ground

the-office.com/bedtime-story/aliceunderground.htm
track this site | 3 links




This is a GrokNews Entry: (what is grok?)





Similar Items

BEDTIME-STORY CLASSIC - Addendum: Alice's Adventures under Ground

Grok Headline matches for BEDTIME-STORY CLASSIC - Addendum: Alice's Adventures under Ground

A bedtime story......


A bedtime story...... 03/20/2003 08:29 AM
Today I had a meeting. It lasted 15 minutes. In that 15 minutes I was judged on my conversational skills,...

Smarty Jones' story has all the makings
of a Derby classic


Smarty Jones' story has all the makings
of a Derby classic
05/02/2004 08:25 AM
smarty jones' story kills me as well .. cracked his skull .. a

seattlepi.nwsource.com/othersports/171534_smarty01.html
track this site | 4 links


Fatman Adventures 2: Underground
Adventures Has Been Released


Fatman Adventures 2: Underground
Adventures Has Been Released
03/14/2005 05:55 PM
Highly addictive exciting platform arcade. [PRWEB Mar 12, 2005]

Display Classic icon in dock only when
Classic runs


Display Classic icon in dock only when
Classic runs
07/12/2004 07:29 AM
I run Classic apps very rarely and often forget to quit the Classic Environment when I quit the Classic application. I didn't want to add a permanent icon to the menu bar or dock to indicate Classic status; I only wanted som...

Fantasy Bedtime Hour


Fantasy Bedtime Hour 06/24/2005 05:55 PM
Speaking of Stephen R. Donaldson .. "Fantasy Bedtime Hour" .. online

fantasybedtimehour.com
track this site | 3 links


A Scary Bedtime Fable for the Future


A Scary Bedtime Fable for the Future 06/22/2005 01:49 AM
Dayana Yochim tells a bedtime retirement story for kids and their freaked-out parents.

Graphics32 Addendum


Graphics32 Addendum 08/10/2004 04:54 AM
Important: Project Closed!

Addendum dictionary


Addendum dictionary 03/19/2003 10:28 PM
Due to persista nt prodding by Dare, I've created an addendum dictionary.  Leave comments here if there are particularly troublesome words that you would like included.

Addendum to Our RSS Presentation


Addendum to Our RSS Presentation 11/05/2003 01:14 PM

A quick note for those who attended yesterday's presentation about RSS. Unfortunately, when Steven and I were putting together the presentation, we lost a slide, perhaps the most important slide - the one that told you how to get started. We didn't realize this until it was too late, so in an attempt to rectify this omission, here is what you should do now that RSS is on your radar.

  1. Go to BlogLines at http://www.bloglines.com/
     
  2. Sign up for a free account.
     
  3. Find 5-6 feeds that interest you and subscribe to them in BlogLines. If you're looking for library feeds to help you stay current, try LISFeeds, Peter Scott's List of Library Weblogs, LIS Blogsource, or the ODP List of Library Weblogs. If you're looking for the fun, non-library feeds (cats, knitting, recipes, etc.), try typing in a subject at Syndic8 or NewsIsFree. You can also try this at Technorati and Feedster, but they don't specifically highlight RSS feeds so you'll probably have to go to the blog itself to get that once you find a blog you like.
     
  4. Once you've found a couple of blogs you'd like to read regularly, find the link to the RSS feed on their home page and subscribe to them in BlogLines.
     
  5. Track a handful of sites in BlogLines to get a sense of how RSS and aggregators work. If you get to a point where you need a more powerful aggregator with more features, then you can start looking at some of the other ones we highlighted during the presentation

And I would second Liz Lawley's method of reading magazines in a news aggregator (like BlogLines). Keep up with Salon, Wired News, etc. this way instead of going to their web sites every day looking for new content. And as always, if you have questions about any of this, please don't hesitate to contact Steven or me.


"Karl Rove, Secretary Veneman Read
Holiday Bedtime Stories"


"Karl Rove, Secretary Veneman Read
Holiday Bedtime Stories"
12/28/2003 03:00 PM

Tablet PC Platform SDK Addendum


Tablet PC Platform SDK Addendum 09/08/2004 01:29 AM
This addendum extends the Microsoft® Tablet PC Platform SDK. It includes details about the OleInk control and the extensibility features of Microsoft Windows® Journal.

An addendum to a definition of Social
Software


An addendum to a definition of Social
Software
01/05/2005 08:45 AM

I'm loath to wake the old evil beastie of definitions of social software, but I came across some old notes that I sent off to someone in October and I'd like to keep track of it for later. Basically the question was could you produce a short and pithy, mostly accurate short-hand description of social software that mostly worked. I came up with:

Social Software can be loosely defined as software which supports, extends, or derives added value from, human social behaviour - message-boards, musical taste-sharing, photo-sharing, instant messaging, mailing lists, social networking.

I slapped a lot of examples in there because it seemed to clarify the issue a bit. Note, this is a shorthand, and nothing more - my fuller posts on the subject include: My working definition of social software but I think maybe I prefer this shorter, rotted-down and composted version.

Read the comments


Contract addendum could enforce software
security


Contract addendum could enforce software
security
09/07/2004 02:38 PM

How to deal with packages and laptop
installation –Addendum


How to deal with packages and laptop
installation –Addendum
09/20/2004 08:52 AM

Java XSLT security advisory addendum


Java XSLT security advisory addendum 08/09/2004 12:55 PM
Marc Schoenefeld (Aug 08 2004)

Micah Wright Comes Clean, Ranger Story A
Hoax (This Is Apparently A Big Story In
The Blogosphere, But To Be Honest, I
Haven't Even Heard Of This Clown)


Micah Wright Comes Clean, Ranger Story A
Hoax (This Is Apparently A Big Story In
The Blogosphere, But To Be Honest, I
Haven't Even Heard Of This Clown)
05/03/2004 03:57 AM
Comic Book Resources has the full scoop

comicbookresources.com/news/newsitem.cgi?id=3613
track this site | 4 links


"REMEMBER WHEN MOQTADA AL-SADR was going
to lead a popular uprising across Iraq?
(That was April's we're-losing story).
Well, he didn't, and here's the story of
how we won. I wonder how much attention
it'll get..."


"REMEMBER WHEN MOQTADA AL-SADR was going
to lead a popular uprising across Iraq?
(That was April's we're-losing story).
Well, he didn't, and here's the story of
how we won. I wonder how much attention
it'll get..."
06/24/2004 11:11 AM

The Raw Story | A rational voice »
Exclusive: Print document of Republican
Schiavo talking points leaked to Raw
Story


The Raw Story | A rational voice »
Exclusive: Print document of Republican
Schiavo talking points leaked to Raw
Story
03/24/2005 05:02 PM
that clumsy Republican talking points memo .. proper perspective .. Raw Story

rawstory.com/news/2005/index.php?p=202
track this site | 4 links


Underworld Adventures 0.9


Underworld Adventures 0.9 04/10/2004 03:18 PM
A project to recreate Ultima Underworld 1.

Adventures in redesigns


Adventures in redesigns 03/13/2003 10:22 AM

So after keeping the same design around for a little over 2 years, I decided it was time for a change. My goals with this design was to accommodate more stuff, but still aim for simple and clean (and also, I was looking for a reason to use Travis Beckham's insanely cool patterns -- background images have been dorky for so long they're cool again).

A couple months ago, I noticed I was writing less than usual, hiking less often, and not taking all that many photos. To force myself to spend more time on those things I decided the next design would reduce the importance of daily blogging, and give other features more prominence. The features area to the right is the same size as the blog area for that reason, and while at the moment there is nothing new there, I'm aiming to either write an article, post a photo essay, interview someone, or do some other feature-sized thing once a week from here on out. I also wanted to get myself back into taking daily photos. I did it through most of the year 2000, and I learned a lot by forcing myself to just do it everyday.

The redesign is only on the front page and the weblog archives for now (which are now Movable Type powered, to boot), but eventually everything else will get converted over, and I might add more stuff to the right side, but I'll try not to make it too portal-like. The whole design is liquid, and I used some CSS tricks to have the photos on the right fill their areas -- the smaller or wider your browser, the less or more you see of the images. The daily photo image is the actual full size photo, just positioned centered as a background (yes, a pointless waste of bandwidth, but easier than thumbnaling and clicking on it to see the full sized version is faster).

While this site isn't quite validating as xhtml strict (the stock Flash code is causing the errors), and I did have to use a table to get a consistent layout of the two sides (floated columns refused to work), I've found a really odd bug. If you're viewing this site in a newer version of Mozilla or mac/IE, you should see a nifty Flash map of the US/World (coded brilliantly by Bryan) showing the places I've been recently, where I am currently, and where I'm heading soon. If you're using Opera, Safari, or win/IE, you won't see anything at all. The map works by itself on a page, and inside a table in all browsers, but for some reason, half the browsers I point at this page don't like it and ignore it. I suppose I'll figure out the problem eventually. If anyone is confused, here is what is supposed to look like (screensh ot 1, screensh ot 2)

One thing's certain: after the past couple days of work on this, I could really use some Extreme, Totally-In-Your-Face, Milk Products™


Adventures in Thinking


Adventures in Thinking 12/19/2004 03:41 PM
Two new articles on big thinkers have turned up. First is an Investor's Business Daily article on Alan Turing's life and imagination. It covers some of the historical aspects of his life as well as touching on cryptography, artificial intelligence, robotics, and brain-mind metaphysics. The summary of Turing's life also conveniently leaves out the more controversial bits and the cause of his death. For a more complete look at Turing's life, see the Wikipedia article. A more recent thinker on similar problems, Ray Kurzweil, is intereviewed by DevSource. Kruzweil discusses reverse-engineering the brain, embedded intelligence, and even has a comment or two about synthesizers.

Adventures in Linux


Adventures in Linux 12/18/2002 03:10 PM
About a month ago, I started whipping my VMWare'd Debian GNU/Linux 3.0 into shape for Python / PyQt / Zaurus...

Adventures in being a bandwidthaholic


Adventures in being a bandwidthaholic 04/15/2004 02:34 AM

I've been sharing a remotely hosted server at Rackshack.net (which became EV1) with friends for over a year now and it's run amazingly well. The account started with 700Gb of montly bandwidth and after the unfortunate SCO license flap, we got upped to 1 terabyte of monthly bandwidth, with seemingly no network speed cap. For the past year, the server's pushed out a couple Gb of bandwidth a day, tops, from all the sites it hosts. Even when I put a bunch of music online last spring, it hardly made a dent.

This month I figured I'd see just how much a terabyte was. It started when I offered to host the Beatallica songs. After a day the bandwidth jumped to 10-15Gb and it was humming along nicely. Then it hit Pitc hfork's news page, and the bandwidth skyrocketed. The box was pushing out 20Mbit/sec and after a a couple days I had to tell the gang to de-link songs as my monthly bandwidth total reached 100Gb just a few days into April.

I was pretty impressed that the box held up ok (after Chris limited the site to 1 download per user) and was amazed at the traffic a site like Pitchfork could generate from a tiny news blurb. I thought to myself "wow, aside from slashdot I couldn't imagine a blog ever generating this kind of traffic and demand for files."

Then Cory linked my 66Mb file of a Jon Stewart interview over at BoingBoing, and it completely blew away the previous bandwidth numbers. In about 12 hours of the link being directed at the box, the network throughput jumped to almost 60Mbit/sec, and it pushed out 131Gb of data in half a day. The box served up all the other sites fine but as I watched my monthly bandwidth allottment reach 40% of the total before the first half of the month was even over, I took it offline and Andy put it up on his tracker, where it is being downloaded like crazy, but off-loaded to everyone's personal connection sharing the load.

Here's a cool graph of the network utilization on a weekly, 30-minute moving average (click to see the full image):

You can see the initial rise from a bunch of blogs linking to Beatallica, then the peak is the pitchfork hit, which subsided after song links were eliminated. Then a few days of relative calm and Boingboing is the huge peak, which only lasted half a day. I grabbed this right after I started redirecting folks to the torrent.

I've learned a few things from these large bandwidth experiments:

- Ridiculous amounts of bandwidth is out there for a cheap price (the server is only $100/month, shared among people using it). If you're paying $30 a month and getting hit with bandwidth overage bills that go into the hundreds of dollars, find a friend that knows some linux server administration, get one of these leased boxes, and never worry about bandwidth again.

- A thousand gigabytes is a ton of bandwidth and it's nice to have around when you want to share large files with friends or the general public. I host my ten years site there and don't really care about the size of photos or the number of people pulling down the RSS feeds with large images embedded.

- That said, when you get hit with a huge amount of traffic, bandwidth is still going to be a problem. Most colocation hosts cap your line at 10Mbit/sec and I was surprised to see the box creeping up near 60Mbit/sec yesterday. It's still a problem to host one giant file for a ton of people, even with an absurd amount of bandwidth available to you. Bittorrent is the savior here, Andy tells me even though he seeds all the files on his server (which means the original file's still on his server being downloaded if no one else is sharing it), his bandwidth is a fraction of what it'd be if it was just a direct download. The best part is the more popular the file (like the boingboing traffic hit), the more people download it from each other instead of your server.

- Setting up your own bittorrent server still a pain in the butt. This needs to be as difficult as setting up apache on a windows desktop. I want to see a BT server exe I click, install, then seed files easily using a web or desktop front-end (yay! Andy sent this and this). Or make an apache module. Also, build BT support into Mozilla, right now. BT is a great technology that solves a fundamental problem we all face everyday, but we have to walk people through how to download the clients first. In some of the data I saw on the Lessig book downloads, only about 5% of users opted to use BT to download, the rest just got it off the server directly. We need more regular folks using BT, by having it built into browsers.


Adventures in Cream


Adventures in Cream 11/11/2003 08:07 PM
Ack! Every other pint of heavy whipping cream has this crap called Carrageenan. For some reason, it gives me a headache. Clover could be counted on to deliver a quality product, but it's only available at local Whole Foods stores - one around the corner from my apartment, and the other sits further down the 101. Either they're temporarily out of stock, or they're just not interested in keeping my store in stock. When I went back this afternoon, they had Alta Dena cartons on the shelf - which were previously known to have carried icky preservatives. When I inspected the label, the only ingredient was pure cream. I brewed a pot of coffee to give 'er the taste test, and this is just disgusting. I'm gonna "have to" drive down the road and pray that my brand can be found at the next possible grocery location. I may have to wait until later this evening to leave in order to avoid traffic congestion. I suppose I could call ahead, but... where's the fun in that?...

"adventures of Pete & Rob are here"


"adventures of Pete & Rob are here" 07/05/2004 02:41 PM

The Adventures of Brandywine &
Baldwin 0-0-3


The Adventures of Brandywine &
Baldwin 0-0-3
08/05/2004 08:29 AM
An adventure game of two heroes.

Adventures in Garbage Collecting


Adventures in Garbage Collecting 04/09/2004 04:10 PM
One of the nice things about being within driving distance of people who're phenomenally smarter than you are is that you sometimes get the benefits of their research. (Though Citeseer's darned nice too) For the interested, there's a seminar on garbage collection at MIT on Monday April 5th 2004. The announcement follows: "A (Grand?) Unified Theory of Storage Reclamation"Speaker: David F. BaconHost: Professor Martin RinardHost Affiliation: Computer Architecture Group Date: 4-5-2004Time: 3:30 PM - 5:00 PMRefreshments: 3:15 PMLocation: Gates 7th Floor Lounge The two basic forms of automatic storage reclamation, tracing and reference counting, were invented at the dawn of...

Yahoo's Adventures In Search


Yahoo's Adventures In Search 04/10/2005 07:26 AM
San Jose Mercury News Apr 10 2005 11:35AM GMT

Mike and Daniel's Adventures in C#


Mike and Daniel's Adventures in C# 03/13/2003 10:22 AM
"Daniel" and I get some good programming done last night. We have been pairing up the past few weeks to work on some type of project. After a few weeks of what can only be called "Spikes", we settled in and are beginning to get some real user stories mapped out and some code written to fulfill them. Daniel chronicled the session below. Daniel and I are a good Pairing team and we go back a long way which helps. But it can also lead to unwanted sidetracks. Last night we stayed focused and didn't stray too far from the chosen path. Onward!
[Mike and Daniel's Adventures in C#]*
Source: Archipelago

3G: Adventures In Compelling Content -
Pt 3


3G: Adventures In Compelling Content -
Pt 3
03/19/2005 03:02 AM
Digital Lifestyles Mar 18 2005 8:35PM GMT

Teddy Adventures 3D has been released!


Teddy Adventures 3D has been released! 09/26/2004 05:30 AM
A 3D remake of the classic arcade game. [PRWEB Sep 26, 2004]

SXSW 2005 adventures


SXSW 2005 adventures 03/19/2005 02:37 AM

I'm on the plane back to NYC from what was my fifth SXSW. I hadn't been for a couple of years and it was good (and a little weird) to be back. Some thoughts, in rough chronological order:

Best panels I attended: tie between Jason Fried's How to Make Big Things Happen with Small Teams and Malcolm Gladwell's keynote. Having read Blink and seen him speak on it twice before, there was nothing much new in Malcolm's talk, but he's a fantastic speaker...knows his shit cold, didn't utter a single "um" or "like", could make the phone book seem interesting, but doesn't have to caper about the stage to be compelling.

Everyone was nice. Well, there was that one guy who was an asshole, but I think everyone pretty much ignored him. But everyone else, so nice to get to meet you or see you again.

Overheard in the hallway: "no woman who knows that much about CSS should be that good looking", "here's how I met Marc Canter for the first time: I'm standing outside at a conference, he comes up beside me and farts", "I have no idea who you are", "surf the glue", "no one will get naked in the hot tub with me", and "Ima gine Malcolm Gladwell...with breasts. That's how busy it will be."

My two panels sandwiched the keynote conversation between Bruce Sterling and Alex Steffen, so I was only able to catch about 20 minutes of it. But that was long enough to hear Bruce talking about smoking his shoes. LOL for reals.

Stubbs BBQ menuBBQ! BBQ! In what could be a record for a bunch of folks who can't pay attention to any particular thing for more than 10 minutes at a time, fifteen of us waited an hour and a half for a table at Stubb's (cool menu pictured at right). I can't speak for the rest, but my beef brisket was worth the wait. As a bonus, Kathryn accidentally walked away with the primary object of our obsession during our 90 minute wait, the buzzing/blinking table-readiness notification coaster. I'm sure said coaster will be a treasured guest at many SXSWs to come.

Bruce Sterling's not-house party didn't really get crackin' until the geeks descended on the Zoob toys. The photo evidence pretty much speaks for itself here.

Ben Brown, because he asked me to. Many, many times. Ben, I expect you to comply with the terms of the restraining order from this point forward.

And finally, I'm at the airport ready to leave just after getting through security and I hear, "your attention please, Jason Kottke to security check 3 for a lost item pickup". Bag, check; rollie, check; coat, check; phone and wallet, safely stowed in the zipper pocket of my bag. What the heck could they have found and how on earth do they know it's mine? I zipped over the security check point and was waved over by a friendly/stern police officer. "You Jason?" "Yep." He holds up my wallet, which I swear on a stack of The Origin of Species was in my bag. "Holy crap," I said. "And that's not the worst part," he says with the most serious look I've ever seen on anyone's face.

Uh oh, I feel a full body cavity search coming on.

He pulls out my social security card and lectures me for two minutes on how I shouldn't be carrying it because it's all someone needs to steal my identity. Relieved that I'm not about to be hauled into a tiny windowless room for interrogation, I'm sort of chuckling at this point, which he takes to mean I don't believe him about the SS card. "Do you see me looking you right in the eye, son? That's how serious I am about this." Mr. Sir, as soon as I'm home, I'm taking my SS card out of my wallet and putting it in the safest place I can...right after I change into some clean underwear.


Yet more adventures in court for Novell


Yet more adventures in court for Novell 06/24/2005 08:54 PM
Is the glass half empty or half full? Nowhere was this better illustrated than in the news stories about Novell's adventures in court last week. U.S. District Judge Frederick Motz ruled on motions in the company's suit against Microsoft concerning Novell's anti-trust claims related to its ownership of WordPerfect between June 1994 and March 1996.

Fatman Adventures Has Been Released


Fatman Adventures Has Been Released 02/01/2005 10:01 PM
Highly addictive exciting platform arcade. [PRWEB Jan 8, 2005]

Adventures In Broadband Video


Adventures In Broadband Video 10/28/2003 11:06 PM
If most of your remote workers use Macs, then look no further [than iSight]. However, on a mixed network, the camera will work well for the Mac users, but quality will decline a bit when they use other software to videoconference. By Keith Shaw (NWFusion via MyAppleMenu)

The Adventures of Accordion Guy in the
21st Century


The Adventures of Accordion Guy in the
21st Century
12/24/2003 06:32 AM
The Adventures of Accordion Guy in the 21st Century .. Accordion Guy (Joey De Villa) .. accordian dude .. Joey

accordionguy.blogware.com/blog
track this site | 5 links


Stories of Krishna: The Adventures of a
Hindu God


Stories of Krishna: The Adventures of a
Hindu God
11/14/2003 08:04 AM
Stories of Krishna: The Adventures of a Hindu God is a lovely interactive Flash presentation from the Seattle Art Museum: Click an image and hear the accompanying tale (or read the transcript), then click "close the story" and mouse over the image icons to explore the characters and view details. After you are finished you can test what you've learned with a drag and drop card game. No broadband? View images of Krishna here and he re, and read some background.

Calpundit: Adventures in Forensic
Journalism


Calpundit: Adventures in Forensic
Journalism
02/16/2004 04:08 PM
Calpundit's excellent post on the Col. Burkett allegations .. Kevin Drum .. defense

calpundit.com/archives/003280.html
track this site | 4 links


Clone Wars Adventures Interview


Clone Wars Adventures Interview 02/12/2004 10:01 AM
Dark Horse has added an interview with Clone Wars Adventures writer Haden Blackman, revealing details on the animated-style comic book series. Check out the secrets behind the upcoming series by clicking here.
Grok Description matches for BEDTIME-STORY CLASSIC - Addendum: Alice's Adventures under Ground
GrokA matches for BEDTIME-STORY CLASSIC - Addendum: Alice's Adventures under Ground

BEDTIME-STORY CLASSIC - Addendum: Alice's Adventures under Ground

The following phrases have been identified by the grok system as matching this entry:

















Also check out:


Grok

Ipod Porn on the
Rise

Brief Abstract of
Wikipedia's
Mesothelioma Cancer
page

Get first aid
instructions in your
cell phone

IE is crap
JSPWiki gains
podcasting support

Victor Davis Hanson
on Iraq and World
War II on National
Review Online

New York Times
apologizes for not
protesting
Bush’s WMD
claims

Activision Catches
Ride on 'American
Chopper' (Reuters)

Netflix Shares
Plunge on Rising
Cost Fears (Reuters)

Disk ARchive 2.1.4
Virtual Universe
0.49 (Universe
Server)

mod_scheme 0.3.3
LinCAN 0.2.8
MultiTail 3.2.2
Avenir 1.0.3
Wmconfig 1.1.9
RawView 1.0
OSSP uuid 1.0.1
13.1
MagicMap v2.00
Accused Software
Pirate of
'DrinkOrDie' Group
May Be Extradited

Oracle Injects 10g
Technologies Into
Applications

PNC Financial to Buy
Riggs in $779M Deal

Nurses Say IT
Efforts Ignore Their
Needs

Intel delays launch
of Sonoma chipset

Review: WiFi Seeker
/ WiFi Spy

RIP Internet
Explorer?

New Microsoft
Business Solutions
Community site

Motorola (MOT)
(Telecom) New
Products, Strong
Performance

HEEEE'S
BACK: WHAT'S COMING
UP ON HOW TO SAVE
THE WORLD

Briefly: IBM expands
role of Linux
executive

Chocks away for
in-flight cell phone
test

Network General back
in business

VoIP Signs Agreement
with VOIP-4U; Lucent
Announces Contract
with Verizon
Wireless and AT&T to
Launch Internet

Airplane 3G mobile
phone test
successful

DoCoMo 3G FOMA
service for the
Athens Olympics

Consumers are
shifting from
wireline to wireless
for their internet
and telephone needs.
Companies smart
enoug

DoCoMo Takes FOMA On
The Road

Golf Fans Flock To
New British Open Web
Site

No Fees At Freecycle
Auction Site

Tech Superpowers
posts Macworld Edit
On the Fly winners

Macworld: MacKiev
previews World Book
2005

Human Development
Reports

Michelle Malkin has
continued to
research the story
about the Syrian
terrorists/musicians

Sun desktop software
exec goes Linux

Dell: Great
expectations for
Rollins

Microsoft Rings Up
Spammer for $4
Million

New sleeper worm has
al-Qaida sympathy

Two high-tech
aircraft join in the
search

Commoditized
software: fact of
fiction?

I, Robot No Deep
Thinker

Qualcomm Tests Cell
Phones Aboard Plane

Farm sets stage for
new video game

Athens Olympics
steps up
cybersecurity

Accused software
pirate may be
extradited

what is grok?