Surfing is safer -- and smarter -- with flotation devices

User rating: 3 / 5 after 8 vote(s)

Wikipedia gets a lot of its facts wrong cautions SIMS professor Paul Duguid who learned first-hand the frustrations of engaging in the online encyclopedias collaborative editorial process.
"Wikipedia gets a lot of its facts wrong," cautions SIMS professor Paul Duguid, who learned first-hand the frustrations of engaging in the online encyclopedia's collaborative editorial process.

It's a truism that the Internet puts the world at its users' fingertips. But it's fast becoming clear that while some parts of the World Wide Web rest on solid ground, much of the information to be found there is about as substantial as fairy dust.


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All News summaries for January 20, 2006

NebuAd to come under spotlight at Senate hearing

Jul 08, 2008 | User rating: not rated yet
(AP) -- Executives from major Internet players - Microsoft Corp., Google Inc. and Facebook Inc. - are due for a grilling about online privacy in a Senate committee Wednesday, but the company likely to get the most scrutiny ...

Google ventures into virtual reality with 'Lively'

Jul 08, 2008 | User rating: not rated yet
(AP) -- In the latest expansion beyond its main mission of organizing the world's information, Internet search leader Google Inc. hopes to orchestrate more virtual socializing on the Web.

UW-Madison zero-gravity team finds spray cooling works in space

Jul 08, 2008 | User rating: not rated yet
For the 10th consecutive year, University of Wisconsin-Madison students have found themselves floating upside down over the Gulf of Mexico.

Toshiba Introduces High Power, High Flux 90 Lumen White LED

Jul 08, 2008 | User rating: not rated yet
Toshiba today announced TL12W02-D, a new high power, high brightness white LED for commercial, residential and industrial lighting applications that can provide a typical flux of 90 lumens (lm) when driven ...

Internet flaw could let hackers take over the Web (Update)

Jul 08, 2008 | User rating: not rated yet
Computer industry heavyweights are hustling to fix a flaw in the foundation of the Internet that would let hackers control traffic on the World Wide Web.