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Search results 2921 - 2930 of 4688 matching essays
- 2921: Hackers: Information Warefare
- ... of foreign computers. Then, upon having gained access, gave any and all information obtained to American corporations and the Federal government. What laws would be broken? Federal Computer Crime Statutes specifically target so-called "Federal Interest Computers."(6:133) (i.e.: banks, telecommunications, military, etc.) Since these attacks would involve foreign systems, those statutes would not apply. If all calls and network connections were promptly paid for, no toll-fraud or ...
- 2922: Government Intervention on the Internet
- ... able to use powerful cryptography to send and receive uncrackable communications across the Internet. Devices set up to filter certain communications cannot filter that which cannot be read, which leads to my other topic of interest: data encryption. By nature, the Internet is an insecure method of transferring data. A single E-mail packet may pass through hundreds of computers between its source and destination. At each computer, there is a ...
- 2923: The Internet
- ... a naked woman with big hooters playing on the stock market with her left hand, and shopping for panties with her right one. This is what you get when, on the basis of the common interest pattern, you try to teach what is important. The third stage is called "immersing individuals into the net" and consists, in short, of wearing an easy- to-handle helmet or other sophisticated brain-to-network ...
- 2924: Romanticism’ in Jude the Obscure
- ... relationship between Sue and Jude is further elaborated by the fact that she frankly tells Jude that she is going to be married to Phillotson after two years. The companionship is based upon sensitivity, literary interest and similarity of character possessed by them. Jude is always amused by her knowledge of literature. She too, praises him as, “I think it is noble to see a man’s hands subdue to what ...
- 2925: “I Won’t Learn From You” And Other Thoughts on Creative Maladjustment
- ... adapt multiculturally. Kohl offers advice on how to stay ethical in such inequitable settings. I found Kohl’s insight as to why children chose not to learn, in his first essay, to be of great interest. I wouldn’t have come up with that theory on my own and I know that it will help me in dealing with lazy and beligerent children in my future classrooms. I felt that the ...
- 2926: “William’s Wife”
- ... II daughter. She loved her father very much and had sun-filled childhood with her sister Anna. She was torn from her loving family and sent to the Hague, when she married William, whose only interest was in the crown she could bring him. The main characters were: Mary-is innocent, unworldly princess, who had carefree childhood. She was very smart, beautiful and brave. Her mom died when she was about ...
- 2927: The Stranger - Immersed in Sensuality: A Contemptible Trait
- ... sun 1. Sun in Mersault’s eyes 2. Wanted to get out of sun Immersed in Sensuality: A Contemptible Trait “The man [Mersault] is, indeed, a derelict; he has no intellectual life, no friendship, no interest in anyone or faith in anything. His life is limited to physical sensations...” (Girard 95). In The Stranger, Mersault goes through life being “dictated by externals” (Parker) until it ultimately causes his downfall when he ...
- 2928: Candide: Women’s Roles In Society
- Candide: Women’s Roles In Society In Voltaire’s Candide, Cunegund serves as the main character as Candide’s love interest in the story. Cunegund transforms throughout the story from a beautiful princess to an ugly woman that has been taken advantage of by many men at the end of the story. In this transition of ...
- 2929: The Pardoner's Prologue and Tale
- ... a dispute that the Knight has to resolve, by forcing the Host and the Pardoner to kiss so that an atmosphere of harmony and mirth ('let us laugh and play') can be restored. The main interest of the Pardoner's Prologue and Tale, taken as a whole, is the complexity of the irony. In the overall exploration of the functions of sentence and solas in the Canterbury Tales, we see here ...
- 2930: Property Of
- ... to touch him he was cold. But still his chest moved and the liquid in his veins still flowed."(213). I thoroughly enjoyed this well written book. The plot was strong enough to keep my interest, and her style of writing allowed me to get into the book as if I were really there. I felt as though I could relate to the narrator in some mixed up way. I also ...
Search results 2921 - 2930 of 4688 matching essays
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