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...often the case with discoveries like this, Haile-Selassie was not specifically looking for the things he found. He had set out to better understand how the ancient ecosystems worked and evolved. "I didn't even think about finding hominids," he says. "All I wanted to do was collect enough vertebrate bones so that I could write my dissertation." In December 1997, though, at a place called Alayla, he spotted a piece of jawbone lying on the rock-strewn ground. "I picked up the mandible less than five minutes after we got there," he recalls, "but didn't realize...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: One Giant Step For Mankind | 7/23/2001 | See Source »

Most of us blindly followed the Chance card that sent us from high school graduation to Harvard matriculation; Go Directly to College. Do Not Pass Go. Do Not Collect $200. We barely allowed three months to pull ourselves together and really consider the journey...

Author: By Jonelle M. Lonergan, | Title: POSTCARD FROM OXFORD: The Road to Northampton | 7/13/2001 | See Source »

...Spatter might indicate that it was created by a forceful traumatic event. The spatter pattern can reveal a lot about what created it. But the bottom line is they're going in to a scene that hasn't even been established as a crime scene. They have to collect evidence so that later, if they need to, they can go back and make sense...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How to Trick a Polygraph | 7/11/2001 | See Source »

Surfing the internet feels anonymous, like looking through the pages of a magazine in a library. But the websites you visit can look back at you. Many use "cookies" to collect data about your visit--where you go in the site, what links you click on. There was a blowup last year when it appeared that Internet advertising agency Doubleclick would match up its cookies with data from an off-line marketing company that had names, addresses and phone numbers of 88 million Americans. That plan, since abandoned, would have let the company create personal profiles of individuals and their...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Internet Insecurity | 7/2/2001 | See Source »

Websites, particularly e-commerce sites, collect a lot of data from visitors. If you buy a book or a magazine at a bookstore and pay cash, there will be no record linking you to the purchase. But the books, magazines, music and movies you buy online are all linked to you by name. Web retailers are collecting a sizable database of information on individual purchasers. Who's buying pornography, and who's buying extreme political tracts. Who's buying cancer drugs, or contraception...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Internet Insecurity | 7/2/2001 | See Source »

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