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Is Internet Changing Politics

Internet and Politics

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Question by : How can i get windows to boot from a disk if changing the BIOS didn’t help?
I recently installed windows 7 on an old desktop, but it’s apparently not capable of that OS, as it has significantly slowed down. Now I just want to wipe it and reinstall XP, but when i try to follow every guide and boot from the disc, the computer just brings me to a menu with the options, “Earlier version of windows”, “Windows 7″, and “Microsoft Windows Recovery Console”. It doesn’t immediately boot from the disc like most guides say it will. Lastly, I cannot choose the first nor the third option because i do not know the administrator password. Attempts to reset it have also failed, as the programs required to do so require me to boot from a disc.

Best answer:

Answer by Timbuck
just put in the XP cd assuming you have it or you can get a SP3 xp iso with XP AND SP3 from sources i am not going to list — Microsoft is a MONOPOLY — I DO NOT CARE ONE BIT if they lose $ 100 OK they have about let me check editing ? after i find out how much money MS has
ok editing now this link may have info from 2007 but well you can take about 5 billion off point is they are fucking money theives

http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_much_money_does_Microsoft_make_per_year

yeah so just pick um install Windows — THE FIRST TOP CHOICE idk what the exact words are i use linux most of the time and haven’t installed XP in a few months um then just delete all the partitions and install in the Unallocated space btw if your computer can’t handle Windows 7 have you tried Linux mint it’s really nice and it KEEPS GETTING BETTER oh and it’s free here is some more info

http://linuxmint.com/rel_maya_xfce_whatsnew.php

and here is the User Guide http://www.linuxmint.com/documentation/user-guide/english_13.0.pdf
hope this helps your computer

BTW what is so bad about a monopoly ? well just look at Walmart do you shop at Walmart — if so then STOP NOW no more purchasing ANYTHING at walmart unless it is an EMERGENCY if you have netflix they may have a documentary on Walmart and a LOT of other things and here is a link to what could be so bad about microsoft they are a good company right http://www.kmfms.com/whatsbad.html

also when you install Windows try this program — Wubi
it lets you run another program without loading windows
http://www.ubuntu.com/download/desktop/w… BTW it is a small file so it won’t take but 10 seconds to download

and here is what you should do with it
open it
select 7 or more for the install size
select — X – ubuntu from the list — its the one under Ubuntu i just emphasized the X
ok now enter a password and click install now it will take about 40 minutes to download just wait
go watch tv or something
now when it says restart — do so BUT be sure to select Xubuntu from the list that comes up meaning do not boot into Windows (yet)
now wait for Xubuntu to install its all automatic and you don’t have to do anything at this point
now when it finishes installing just reboot but this time go into Windows one more time and DEFRAGMENT the hard drive very important — thats NTFS < the Windows file system then you can reboot into Xubuntu and enjoy a virus free environment and have a fast computer

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Your Facebook Profile Page is Changing: What You Should Know
Not only does more data mean more targeted ads, The Wall Street Journal wonders, for example, if Google could notify you that you are late for a meeting because it can get your location from your Android phone and can see an appointment scheduled on …
Read more on Techlicious (blog)

Hands-On: Asus Eee Pad Transformer Prime with Ice Cream Sandwich
The new Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) OS update makes the Asus Eee Pad Transformer Prime even more compelling than before. By Jamie Lendino It's already here. Just over a month after the quad-core Asus Eee Pad Transformer Prime hit the market, …
Read more on PC Magazine

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by sklar

Question by : Is changing the desktop background even possible on my version of Windows 7 ?
I have a version of windows 7 that apparently makes it impossible to change my desktop background/wallpaper. When I look at “how to” videos or articles it says go to the control panel and click personalization, or click change desktop backgorund, and these options are non-existant in my control panel. If i go to the search engine in my control panel and type these words nothing comes up. If i right click a picture in my folder “set as background image” or whatever doesnt even come up. HELP??

Best answer:

Answer by arou42
http://www.instructables.com/id/Windows-7-Starter-Easy-way-to-change-wallpaper/ ☺

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Soap.com and Diapers.com are changing the way people buy their everyday essentials by giving them the convenience of online shopping, fast free, delivery and above and beyond customer service. Hear EVP of Operations Scott Hilton explain how these companies are changing the rules of e-commerce with their innovative back-end technology.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

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Retailers adapt to changing technology

Retailers adapt to changing technology
As retailers turn to an ever-increasing arsenal of technological weapons to lure customers away from competitors, shoppers will find in the next several years that the process of buying is going to get a lot more personalized.
Read more on The Nelson County Times

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‘Doe Network’ works to give names to the dead
Medical Internet Technology

Image by Renegade98
* Story Highlights
* Todd Matthews, 37, says identifying the "Does" is a "calling"
* The Doe Network has volunteers and chapters in every state.
* More than 40,000 unnamed bodies exist in the U.S., law enforcement reports say
* About 100,000 people are formally listed as missing, according to reports

LIVINGSTON, Tennessee (AP) — Their faces seem to float from Todd Matthews’ computer — morgue photographs, artist sketches, forensic reconstructions — thousands of dead eyes staring from endless Web sites as though crying out for recognition. John and Jane and Baby "Does" whose nameless bodies have never been identified.

His wife, Lori, complains that Matthews, a 37-year-old auto parts supplier, spends more time with the dead than he does with the living, including his two sons, Dillan, 16, and Devin, 6.

You need a hobby, she says, or a goal.

I have a goal, he replies, though he describes it as a "calling."

He wants to give "Does" back their names.

His obsession began two decades ago, when Lori told him about the unidentified young woman wrapped in canvas whose body her father had stumbled on in Georgetown, Kentucky, in 1968. She had reddish-brown hair and a gap-toothed smile. And no one knew her name.

So locals blessed her with one. They buried her under an apple tree with a pink granite tombstone engraved with the words "Tent Girl."

Tent Girl haunted him. Who were her siblings? What was her name?

Matthews began searching library records and police reports, not even sure what he was seeking. He scraped together the money to buy a computer. He started scouring message boards on the nascent Internet.

In the process, Matthews discovered something extraordinary. All over the country, people just like him were gingerly tapping into the new technology, creating a movement — a network of amateur sleuths as curious and impassioned as Matthews.

Today the Doe Network has volunteers and chapters in every state. Bank managers and waitresses, factory workers and farmers, computer technicians and grandmothers, all believing that with enough time and effort, modern technology can solve the mysteries of the missing dead.

Increasingly, they are succeeding.

The unnamed dead are everywhere — buried in unmarked graves, tagged in county morgues, dumped in rivers and under bridges, interred in potter’s fields and all manner of makeshift tombs. There are more than 40,000 unnamed bodies in the U.S., according to national law enforcement reports, and about 100,000 people formally listed as missing.

The premise of the Doe Network is simple. If the correct information — dental records, DNA, police reports, photographs — is properly entered into the right databases, many of the unidentified can be matched with the missing. Law enforcement agencies and medical examiners offices simply don’t have the time or manpower. Using the Internet and other tools, volunteers can do the job.

And so, in the suburbs of Chicago, bank executive Barbara Lamacki spends her nights searching for clues that might identify toddler Johnny "Dupage" Doe, whose body was wrapped in a blue laundry bag and dumped in the woods of rural Dupage County, Illinois, in 2005.

In Kettering, Ohio, Rocky Wells, a 47-year-old manager of a package delivery company, scoots his teenage daughters from the living room computer and scours the Internet for anything that might crack the case of the red-haired Jane Doe found strangled near Route 55 in 1981. "Buckskin Girl," she was called, because of the cowboy-style suede jacket she was wearing when she was found.

And in Penn Hills, Pennsylvania, Nancy Monahan, 54, who creates floor displays for a discount chain, says her "real job" begins in the evening when she returns to her creaky yellow house and her black cat, Maxine, turns on her computer and starts sleuthing.

Monahan’s cases include that of "Beth Doe," a young pregnant woman strangled, shot and dismembered, her remains stuffed into three suitcases and flung off a bridge along Interstate 80 near White Haven in December 1976. And "Homestead Doe," whose mummified body was found in an abandoned railroad tunnel in Pittsburgh in 2000. Her toenails were painted silver.

Monahan was so moved that last year she sought out the tunnel, climbed down the embankment and offered a silent prayer for the young woman whose life ended in such a pitiful place.

"It’s like they become family," Monahan says. "You feel a responsibility to bring them home."

The stories of Doe Network members are as individual as the cases they are trying to solve. Bobby Lingoes got involved through his connection with law enforcement — he’s a civilian dispatcher with the Quincy, Massachusetts, police department. Traycie Sherwood of Richmond, Missouri, joined when her adoptive mother died and she went on line searching for her birth mother. Daphne Owings, a 45-year-old mother of two in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, needed something to take her mind off the war when her husband was sent to Iraq.

Matches can be triggered by a single detail — a tattoo, a piece of clothing, a broken bone. It’s just a question of the right person spotting the right piece of information and piecing together the puzzle. The process can be tedious and frustrating.

And it can take its toll. Lori Matthews once left her husband for six months because of his obsession with Tent Girl. "He didn’t talk about anything else," she said. "It wasn’t normal."

They reconciled after Matthews agreed to limit the amount of time — and money — he spent on "Does."

Still, Matthews and others say the rewards of cracking a case make the time worthwhile. The Doe Network claims to have assisted in solving more than 40 cases and ruling out hundreds more.

"They do God’s work," says Mark Czworniak, 50, a veteran homicide detective in Chicago.

He first encountered the Doe Network when he was approached by Lamacki, the Chicago bank executive, about potential matches. Unlike some officers, Czworniak has no hesitation about working with civilian volunteers, especially those willing to devote endless hours to cold cases that he cannot get to.

Czworniak says there are hundreds of "Does" in the department files. He is assigned five, including a tall, 30-something man found at the Navy Pier in 2003. Czworniak hopes that the man’s height will help Lamacki or another Network volunteer eventually make an identification.

"She’s like a little bloodhound," says Czworniak, who exchanges e-mails with Lamacki on cases every week and has introduced her to other detectives. "She has the wherewithal and interest and time and she searches these sites I’m not even aware of."

In another sign of the network’s influence, Matthews was asked to serve on a government task force involved in creating the first national online data bank for missing and unidentified.

The National Missing and Unidentified Persons System, NamUS, launched last year, is made up of two databases, one for the missing and one for the unidentified. The goal is to have medical examiners and law enforcement agencies around the country constantly update information on both sites. Next year the sites will be linked and made available for public searching.

No one believes NamUS will put the Doe Network out of business — there will always be a need for people with their expertise to make the necessary connections.

And so, families of the missing will no doubt continue to rely on people like Todd Matthews.

At his house in Livingston, Matthews has built a little nook next to the living room — his "Doe office," he calls it. His desk is laden with pictures of dead bodies. He says he gets many e-mails about cases every week. Every night he scrolls down the lists, searching for new information:

Unidentified White Female. Wore a necklace of silver beads and three small turquoise stones, one resembling a bird. Found in a Calendonia cornfield in New York state in 1979. …

Unidentified White female. Strawberry-blonde hair and 12 infant teeth. Wearing a pink and white dress that buttoned in the back and a disposable diaper. Found Jackson County, Mississippi, 1982. …

Unidentified Black Female. Gunshot wound to the skull. Found next to highway ramp in Campbell County, Tennessee, in 1998…

The last case is close to Matthews’ heart. Sally, he named her, after a Campbell County police officer entrusted him with her skull in 2001.

The police didn’t have the time or means to pay for a clay reconstruction, and so — with the approval of the local coroner — Matthews took the skull to a Doe Network forensic artist. A picture of the reconstructed head was placed on the Network site. The skull sat on Matthews’ desk for over a year, and even Lori, who was at first so horrified she couldn’t look at it, grew fond of Sally. She remains unidentified.

But even Sally cannot take the place of the first Doe, the one who changed Matthews’ life. He still regularly drives to Kentucky, to a lonely plot in Georgetown to visit her.

"She’s family now," he says.

Standing by her grave, he tells of the night in 1998 when, scouring chat rooms for the missing, he stumbled upon a message from Rosemary Westbrook of Benton, Arkansas.

Westbrook sought information about her sister, Bobbie, who was 24 when she went missing 30 years earlier. Bobbie had married a man who worked in a carnival, and she was last seen in Lexington. She had reddish-brown hair and a gap-toothed smile.

Over and over Matthews stared at the message. And in his heart he knew.

Lori, he cried, racing into the bedroom and shaking awake his wife

"I’ve found her. I found Tent Girl."

Weeks later the remains were exhumed. The match was confirmed by DNA.

The family decided to re-inter her in the place that had been her resting spot for so many years. Beneath the stone etched "Tent Girl" they placed a small gray one engraved with her real name, the name that Matthews had restored.

She is Barbara Ann Hackmann, now and for eternity.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

‘Doe Network’ works to give names to the dead
www.cnn.com/2008/CRIME/03/25/doe.network.ap/index.html

The Doenetwork
www.doenetwork.org/

Project EDAN – Everyone Deserves A Name
www.projectedan.us/

Raising the Dead – Wired
www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.08/matthews.html

Tent Girl – Barbara Ann Hackmann
www.angelfire.com/tn3/masterdetective2/

Sketches express softer side of missing women
www.missingpeople.net/sketches_express_softer_side_of.htm

If the bins need emptying, just press a button…how the app era is changing the way we get things done
If talking to someone in a call centre has ever had you grinding a pen into the desk or chewing the telephone cord with frustration, then it may have occurred to you that sometimes when you need help, information doesn’t always get where it needs to go.
Read more on Independent

Elsevier is the New Publisher of Value in Health, the Official Journal of the International Society for …
OXFORD, England, January 5, 2011 /PRNewswire/ Elsevier, the world´s leading publisher of scientific, technical and medical information, announced today that it has become the new publisher of the International Society for Pharmacoeconomics …
Read more on wallstreet:online AG

DELAWARE CRIME: Wheeler’s final hours still a puzzle
Newark police reported Wednesday that John P. Wheeler III was spotted at 8:30 p.m. Dec. 30 as he wandered through a DuPont Co. building, apparently confused and disoriented — filling in five more hours leading up to the discovery of his body in a Wilmington landfill.
Read more on The Daily Times

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