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Coupures de Presse [ le 25 octobre, 2002 ]
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Articles à la "Une" : www.netsurf.ch
Disney sur MSN
Microsoft et Disney lancent un service internet en commun
Walt Disney et Microsoft ont lancé un service internet en commun, appelé Disney on MSN ("Disney sur MSN"), amalgamant le contenu Disney destiné au public familial et la nouvelle version, MSN 8, du bouquet de services internet du géant de l'informatique. (Yahoo Actualités) |
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Hacker Meeting
Hacker attitude
Dans toute l'Europe, les hackers organisent de grands rassemblements pour faire la démonstration qu'ils ne sont pas des pirates informatiques mais des militants du Réseau. Retour sur l'expérience italienne. (Le Monde)
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| Press clippings [ October 25 2002 ] |
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Featured Articles : www.netsurf.ch
E-Mail
E-Mail Response Time Lags
E-businesses looking for a competitive edge, customer loyalty and high satisfaction scores may want to pay closer attention to their inboxes. Research is finding that e-mail response rates among online companies leaves a lot to be desired. An August 2002 report from Jupiter Research revealed that of the 227 U.S. companies that were surveyed, only 38 percent responded to e-mail within 6 hours, and 23 percent of the companies took three days or longer, or didn't respond at all. (Cyberatlas)
Flaws in Laws
No Easy Money Suing Spammers
Think deleting junk e-mail is a pain? Try taking a spammer to court. Some activists are making money pursuing spam cases in small claims court, but few say the profits are worth the hassle. (Wired)
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E-Commerce
Dot-com Diamonds
Shopping for engagement rings is not limited to stores anymore; a growing number of men are buying online. (MSNBC)
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Good Technology
Technology helps blind 'see' computer images
A simple touch display for the visually impaired, to be tested by the National Federation of the Blind, soon could provide access to computer-generated images, federal researchers said Thursday. (Nando Times) |
Wireless World
Wireless phone sales ringing slower
A new report shows that owners of mobile phones are slow to upgrade, despite a drop in prices. Fancy features seem to be the real carrot on a stick. Wireless subscribers are replacing phones every 18 months on average, compared with a average replacement rate of every 16 months in 2000, according to a study by J.D. Power and Associates. The study surveyed more than 5,000 households. (News.com) |
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