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4G brings superfast broadband to everyone |
A new wireless technology to provide rural areas faster broadband speed was experimented at Cornwall. Shoppers went to St Newlyn East, near Newquay, to witness Long-Term Evolution (LTE) project, or called 4G. |
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Maintenance Basics: Delete Internet Files |
The data that accumulates in our Web browser’s history, such as cookies and temp files, is one of the biggest contributors to the "junk" files that slow down our computers. |
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Unifying: Greatest Challenge |
A lack of clear communication limits knowledge, understanding, learning; in short, it limits the world around us. It doesn’t matter if you’re American, European, or Asian. |
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The Benefits of Facebook Marketing |
With more than 800 million active users, Facebook is one of the premiere social networking tools for businesses. Additionally, Facebook indicates that the average user is connected to more than 80 community pages, groups, and events, which means Facebook is a great way to connect with local consumers. |
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Websites & apps at DoS risk |
Security researchers recently revealed a vulnerability in the handling of hash tablets by programming languages that puts sites and apps at risk of a denial of service (DoS) attack. |
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Web porn ban: what does it mean? |
The government recently announced proposals under which ISPs will enable you to ban pornographic sites from web-connected devices, and launched a website to which you can report inappropriate content. |
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Social media and the workplace |
When Socialware surveyed 144 financial advisers this year, 84 percent said they use social networks for business purposes, up from 60 percent in 2010. Another 10 percent said they plan to use social media in the future. |
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How to beat 2012’s web threats (Part 4) |
Many people will be unwrapping their first computer this Christmas. If this Is you, welcome to a whole new chapter. PC ownership Is rewarding, but it requires vigilance to stave off the sort of threats we’ve outlined elsewhere In this feature. |
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How to beat 2012’s web threats (Part 3) |
However much you’ve talked to someone online, and however much you might trust the community of a particular forum, you don’t know who someone is until you’ve met them and their mum. Don’t be fooled into giving away too much information. |
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How to beat 2012’s web threats (Part 2) |
Mobile phones are increasingly being targeted through SMS messages or as they access the web. Parents buying smartphones for their children should also be aware of what their offspring can do with them |
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How to beat 2012’s web threats (Part 1) |
Even the most clued-up user can get into trouble online, and whether you’re inheriting someone’s old machine or setting up a brand-new PC there’s a lot to remember. |
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Web running out of addresses |
Some sites and service are moving to IPv6, but the majority remain wedded to IPv4, after the last of the unclaimed IPv4 addresses were handed over to regional registry bodies. |
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CMS Revolution (Part 2) |
Websites led by database are created with content management systems which provide other advantages compared to static pages: they are ready to work with the next RIA generation. |
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CMS Revolution (Part 1) |
The publication based on static pages has already been the basement for web development since the end of 1980s decade, when Tim Berners-Lee dreamed about information space in common and then realized the only way to achieve that is by using HyperText Markup Language (HTML) based on the document named ASCII |
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Find it online |
ZipList makes grocery shopping and meal planning fun and easy. Sign up for a free ZipList account to organize your grocery lists, create weekly meal plans, receive coupons, and sort your favorite recipes. |
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10 Best products of the past 200 issues (Part 3) |
Asus announced its Eee PC 701 and Eee PC 1001 models in 2007, sending shockwaves around the rest of the computing worl with both their low price and tiny size, almost single-handedly queering the pitch for makers of Ultra-Mobile PCs. |
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10 best products of the past 200 issues (part 2) |
We can’t praise xp without offering a paean to windows’ great rival: apple Mac OS X. Os x is, of course, a series of oses, more fairly compared with windows in general rather than xp as a particular product. |
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10 best products of the past 200 issues (part 1) |
Like the footballer whose team loses when he doesn’t play, Windows XP looks better the longer it’s absent from the front line of desktop oses. During its lifetime as microsoft’s number-one os, XP was respected rather than loved. |
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10 Biggest tech breakthroughs of the past 200 issues (Part 3) |
Search has been around since the early days of the web, but finding useful content was for a long time a complex and unsatisfying business. Domain names and URLs were hugely important, and you never really knew what you were getting until you landed on a page, with often negative results. |
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Our predictions for future tech (Part 2) |
The UK’s broadband provision is shocking. Down among the sick men of connected world, we rely on ageing copper wiring, built to carry a light smattering of phone calls, to quickly deliver large amounts of data. |
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Our predictions for future tech (Part 1) |
Hoverboards, a race of robots that rise up and take over the world, and excellent broadband provision in UK. These are the ridiculously far-fetched concepts Matt Egan rejected in picking out 10 things we’ll see over the next 200 issues… |
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Speed up browsing with a faster DNS |
Most people agree that the highest bandwidth of internet connection decides its overall performance. Wrong. There are many contributing factors, including the speed of the server you are trying to connect, network connection type (wireless or wired), router and network bandwidth, and latency. One of the less well understood factors is server Domain Name System (DNS). |
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IIS 7.0 : Hosting ASP.NET Applications |
To enable ASP.NET integration, we had to rebuild the ASP.NET 2.0 engine from scratch. The new architecture necessitated many design changes regarding how ASP.NET works on IIS 7.0 underneath the covers, and how ASP.NET applications are configured. |
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Understanding IIS 7.0 Architecture : Request Processing in Application Pool |
In IIS 7.0, two modes are available for an application pool: Integrated mode and Classic mode. When you configure an application pool with Integrated mode, IIS 7.0 processes ASP.NET requests using the integrated IIS and ASP.NET request processing pipeline. When you configure an application pool with Classic mode, IIS 7.0 processes ASP.NET requests using the separate IIS and ASP.NET request processing pipelines, as in IIS 6.0. |
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Understanding IIS 7.0 Architecture : IIS 7.0 Core Components |
HTTP.sys is the protocol listener that listens for HTTP and HTTPS requests. HTTP.sys was introduced in IIS 6.0 as an HTTP-specific protocol listener for HTTP requests. In IIS 7.0, HTTP.sys also includes support for Secure Sockets Layer (SSL), which Lsass.exe provided in IIS 6.0. |
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AJAX : Updating Progress |
UpdateProgress controls display during asynchronous postbacks. All UpdateProgress controls on the page become visible when any UpdatePanel control triggers an asynchronous postback. |
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