Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
MailScanner is an open source email security system for use on Unix email gateways and was first released in 2001. It protects against viruses , spam , malware, and phishing. It is distributed under the GNU General Public License .
Cyberia, London was an internet cafe founded in London in September 1994, which provided desktop computers with full internet access in a café environment. Situated at 39 Whitfield Street in Fitzrovia, the cafe was founded by Eva Pascoe, David Rowe, Keith Teare and Gené Teare, and the space served as an early hub for those with an interest in computing and the Net.
Eva Pascoe (born 1964) is a Polish-born internet entrepreneur and consultant residing in London who co-founded Britain's first internet cafe, Cyberia.She has previously written for The Independent newspaper and is a commentator on technology matters in the media and through her own blog.
Cyberia is a West-Asian ISP that was established in 1995 by Transmog Inc. serving branches in Lebanon, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia. Cyberia offers such as: Cyberia offers such as: ADSL ( Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line ): A combination of phone and data signals on a phone line that allows Internet Connection to reach very high speeds.
Easynet was a managed services provider and delivered integrated networks, hosting and unified communications services to organisations globally. The company was later renamed Easynet Global Services, and a sister company, Easynet Connect, was founded in 2008 which focused on providing internet access connectivity to small-to-medium size companies in the UK.
Cyberia, a 1995 album by Cubanate "Cyberia", a song by the Afro Celt Sound System from the album Seed; Cyberia, a 1994 video game; The penal colony to which Dave Lister was sentenced in the Red Dwarf book Last Human; The techno-rave night club featured in Serial Experiments Lain; Cyberia, a 2008 book by Chris Lynch
Cyberia is a book by Douglas Rushkoff, published in 1994.The book discusses many different ideas revolving around technology, drugs and subcultures. Rushkoff takes a Tom Wolfe Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test style (or roman à clef), as he actively becomes a part of the people and culture that he is writing about.
"The dynamics of gender perception and status in email-mediated group interaction", Transforming Cultures eJournal, vol. 2, no. 2 (2007). Kiley, Dean. "John John and Di Die Live on the Internet: Cyberbullying on Academic Mailing Lists" , Mesh: a Journal of Experimental Media Arts , 13, 1999/2000.