links for 2010-03-20
21 March 2010
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The internet is changing the way we mourn, with new sites springing up where we can share our grief and allow others to post tributes, too. Here four women tell Mary Greene how creating memorial websites has helped them with bereavement
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Austin Heap, the programmer from California, explains how he created Haystack, the software that broke the grip of Iran's censors after the disputed 2009 election
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Listing holiday plans online alerts burglars to a potential target
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The social networking site is taking the internet back to its roots
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Charles Arthur investigates how the ways in which we watch sport, read magazines and do business with each other could change for ever
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Around 500 protesters marched through the town of Bideford, north Devon to "reclaim" it from antisocial behaviour. Friends and supporters of a man who remains in hospital after he was seriously assaulted last month led the demonstration.
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From in-depth how-tos, to app lists, to valuable business guides, browse below for a veritable smorgasbord of value you may have passed over.
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If you’ve missed out on the ongoing PR pickle Rentokil is snarled up in, close the curtains, make a sandwich and settle down – here it is in a nutshell:
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The consumers' association Which? is warning that people going abroad with smartphones can still face huge bills if they connect to the internet.
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Looking for some trends or stats for your next presentation? Here’s the latest on the state of the news media.
The 2010 State of the News Media, the eighth annual report on American journalism, published by the Pew Project for Excellence in Journalism notes six major trends:
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