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Search results 951 - 960 of 1519 matching essays
- 951: The Computer Underground
- ... underground." Paper presented at the Society for the Study of Social Problems annual meetings, Berkeley, August. Michalowski, Raymond J. and Erdwin H. Pfuhl. 1990 (forthcoming). "Technology, Property, and Law: The Case of Computer Crime." Contemporary Crisis. Milovanovic, Dragan, and Jim Thomas. 1989. "Overcoming the Absurd: Prisoner Litigation as Primitive Rebellion." Social Problems 36(February): 48-60. Newman, Charles. 1985. The Post-Modern Aura: The Act of Fiction in an age of ...
- 952: The Bulgarian and Soviet Virus Factories
- ... of sport or entertainment in Bulgaria. 4.1.4) The next reason is the very weak organization of the fight against computer viruses in Bulgaria. Just now our country is in a very deep economical crisis. We lack funds for everything, including such basic goods as food and gasoline. At the same time, the organization of the virus fight would require money --- for the establishment of a network of virus test ...
- 953: Computer Viruses: Infection Vectors, and Feasibility of Complete Protection
- ... world. B. Must write own programs. C. Propose alternative of damage control. Sources Cited Burger, Ralf. Computer Viruses and Data Protection. Grand Rapids: Abacus, 1991. Fites, Philip, Peter Johnston, and Martin Kratz. The Computer Virus Crisis. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1989: 6-81. McAfee, John, and Colin Haynes. Computer Viruses, Worms, Data Diddlers, Killer Programs, and Other Threats to Your System. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1989: i-195 ...
- 954: Romanticism in Jude the Obscure
- ... most distinctly 'modern' work, for it rests upon a cluster of assumptions central to modernist literature: that in our time men wishing to be more than dumb clods must live in permanent doubt and intellectual crisis; that for such men, to whom traditional beliefs are no longer available, life has become inherently problematic
and that courage, if it is to be found at all, consists in readiness to accept pain while ...
- 955: Don Quixote
- ... but upon recovering the clarity of his mind, he loses his life. This idea is very realistic because of its modern day implications. It tells who becomes bored with his life and experiences a midlife crisis. He enjoys reading about chivalry and finds the idea so fascinating that he decides that he wants to experience it himself. Don Quixote is a character that is a part of all of us. Everybody ...
- 956: Sandra Street: Home
- ... relatives had to endure in the Philippines. They also learn why many of the people immigrated to the U.S., specifically California. The article goes on to talk about how Filipinos are the second-largest Asian group in California. Many of them moved to California in search of better opportunities in life and for safety. Numerous Filipinos also feel they live better lifestyles in their new home than in their old ...
- 957: The Joy Luck Club: The Gap between Mother and Daughter
- ... Ying-Ying was born in China. She was educated in the traditional Chinese culture. Lena, a half-Chinese girl, was born in the United States; she was educated in the western culture. Lena is an Asian girl, and in her mind there is almost only Americanized thinking. According to this, some Americans call these Americanized Asians "BANANA". (Banana symbolize that the skin is yellow, and the inside is white) There must ...
- 958: Savage Inequalities: Conditions of Poor Schools
- ... no playground. This school is ninety- percent black and Hispanic. Only a few minutes north of that school Kozol visits another school in a more affluent part of the Bronx with an overwhelmingly white and Asian population. Flowering trees, two playing fields, and a playground surround this public school. The school has a planetarium and a library with over eight thousand books. Kozol comments that, nearly forty years after Brown vs ...
- 959: Book Review: Changing Concepts of Race in Britain and the United States between the World Wars.
- ... the social groups we identify as races did not constitute genetic or biological units. Part III on politics argues that although racism in science may have been weakening in the 1930s, it took the political crisis of Nazism to mobilize the scientists. This need was brought home by the plight of refugee scientists, many of them Jews, whose presence and ideas were no longer acceptable in the new Germany. Although the ...
- 960: Computer Ethics: A Review
- ... no obvious answer to this conundrum and no consensus as to what constitutes ethical practice."(1) This reader believes Computer Ethics covers all aspects of computer ethics and provides enough for one to understand the crisis the information technology is in today. The use of real life events and examples help to show the that law is too sparse today and some guidelines must be drawn up to avoid crime caused ...
Search results 951 - 960 of 1519 matching essays
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