Word: gmails
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...them. One young man, in a remote town I will not name lest I get him in trouble, confided that he and his friends had organized a study group to debate the merits of electoral politics. (One of the participants also runs a free class called "The Secrets of Gmail: a Pre-Advanced Course.") In northern Burma, where minorities recall that ethnic-based parties came in second and third in the 1990 polls - the army's party finished fourth - former insurgent groups often bogged down by infighting are now considering electoral alliances. A strategic show of unity could easily fracture...
...house list is about as bland as they come. Threads are almost exclusively event postings, and even when someone posts things worth commenting on, no one responds. Trust FlyBy, though, this is a positive: no house list heroes that post their inane thoughts. And thanks to Gmail, all you have to do is throw up that filter. Set it, and forget...
Those annoying-ass tinyurl messages have been linked to some rando in San Francisco named Hoan Ton-That. No indication yet of who he is or what he has against your gmail account, but we did find his Twitter account. Excerpts after the jump...
...clearly did it anyway. I should know better by now,” Arshad said. “It’s never happened [to me] before, but it’s common sense not to put your password and login on a site that’s not Gmail.” Nicholas A. Smith ’09—who received the worm’s message from Arshad—said he clicked the link and entered his login information without thinking because she often sends him video links and because the site looked...
...Granted, it's mostly the small stuff that has gone wrong. As of Thursday, some smartly dressed press staffers were working without login access to their computers, without Blackberries and with only Gmail addresses to connect them to the world. Several names were misspelled on the signs that identified staff desks. It took the press office until about 10 a.m. on Wednesday to figure out how to send reporters an official White House press release. "That's great news," said deputy press secretary Bill Burton, when a reporter announced that the first e-mail had been received. "Ready...