CONSUMERS are spending far more than they need to on computers due to a dearth of simple and understandable information, according to research published yesterday. The Which? Guide to Computers says ...
Most office workers find computer jargon as difficult to understand as a foreign language, a survey has found. Three quarters of workers waste more than an hour a week deciphering what a technical ...
This is not a hard question, really: What do the words cookie, scuzzy, mouse, spam, gopher, and RAM have in common? Are they: A) the newest display at the local zoo; B) an Epicurean menu from a new ...
I am somewhat confused by Ray Hatley's request (The Argus Technology, March 25) that we "think what fun it would be to give a new product a sensible name that describes what it does. Like carpet ...
It's a plain fact: Entrepreneurs need a handle on technology--everything from hardware and networking to executing transactions in cyberspace. The following glossary of terms, care of O'Reilly Media, ...
Computer jargon, a “tick box” culture and unimaginative advertising are discouraging Internet users from learning how to protect themselves online. Faced with such gobbledegook, many of the world’s ...
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Computer jargon, a "tick box" culture and unimaginative advertising are discouraging Internet users from learning how to protect themselves online. Faced with such gobbledegook, ...
Computer jargon, a tick box culture and unimaginative advertising are discouraging Internet users from learning how to protect themselves online. Faced with such gobbledegook, many of the world's ...