The New York Times 2000 Catherine Greenman - Abstracts

The New York Times 2000 Catherine Greenman
TitleSubjectAuthors
A way to talk on a cell phone without a word being spoken.(Bell Labs and Bell Atlantic Mobile add tele-typewriter, or TTY, capability to mobile communications)(Statistical Data Included)News, opinion and commentaryCatherine Greenman
Down on the farm, up on technology; computers roll into the field as satellites peer from the sky.(farmers are using precision agriculture technology that relies on Global Positioning System to help them manage for land for the same cost)News, opinion and commentaryCatherine Greenman
Enjoy your new software, and check out the advertisements.(Industry Trend or Event)(Statistical Data Included)News, opinion and commentaryCatherine Greenman
Life in the slow lane; rural residents are frustrated by sluggish Web access and a scarcity of local information online.(Industry Trend or Event)(Statistical Data Included)News, opinion and commentaryCatherine Greenman
New help for disabled math students; software puts math within reach of people who cannot see or cannot type.(programs developed by Professor Henry Gray include MathTalk for the Visually Impaired and MathTalk Scientific Notebook; includes e-mail address and contact information)News, opinion and commentaryCatherine Greenman
Opening doors at a hotel with a Palm in the hand; hotels embrace wireless services but worry about losing personal touches.(Technology Information)News, opinion and commentaryCatherine Greenman
Plasma televisions: like works of art and just as costly.(Technology Information)(Statistical Data Included)News, opinion and commentaryCatherine Greenman
Taking sides in the Napster war; with copyright law at issue, sites battle for the ears and minds of music lovers.(a look at anti-Napster sites that advocate and tell how to thwart the music file-sharing service; includes addresses of pro-Napster, anti-Napster and other related Web sites)News, opinion and commentaryCatherine Greenman
Web surfing, at the sound of your own voice; new portals let users talk to the Net by phone, but will voice edge out keyboards and keypads?(Internet/Web/Online Service Information)News, opinion and commentaryCatherine Greenman
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