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At least, among teen-age girls. Because we know that before Facebook, teen-age girls never got depressed or moody.
The Baltimore Sun reports on a setup that lets your plant Twitter you to know when it needs watering - or, presumably, when it's dying
Look what's on Google Maps there.
Via.
WhiteHouse.gov has a bit of a different look today.
Because they're doing it on Facebook, which means many teachers and students can't watch it because so many schools block Facebook, Jeff Cutler reports.
Highlight a word or phrase in the paragraphs below, then click one of the following, depending on which browser you're using:
That's the basic premise behind an online game that will attempt to crowdsource the future this month. Brady Forrest explains.
Wow, rendering of pages is way fast.
Another in a series of celebrity IT endorsements. More here.
Another in a series of celebrity IT endorsements. More here.
Another in a series of celebrity IT endorsements. More here.
Another in a series of celebrity IT endorsements. More here.
Another in a series of celebrity IT endorsements. More here.
Another in a series of celebrity IT endorsements. More here.
Another in a series of celebrity IT endorsements. More here.
Another in a series of celebrity IT endorsements. More here.
Avery Brooks pushes IBM. Another in a series of celebrity IT endorsements. More here.
Another in a series of celebrity IT endorsements. More here.
Another in a series of celebrity IT endorsements. More here.
Jerry Seinfeld? Pfft. Check out this celebrity endorsement for Hitachi Data Systems: