Word: keyword
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Since 2004, authorities have rounded up at least 20 writers for posting subversive material online, handing them jail terms ranging from a few days to 14 years. Last June, following Ahmadinejad's surprise election, the government launched a fresh onslaught, this time against the websites and blogs themselves. Using keyword filters and censorship software pirated from U.S. firms, the government blocked thousands of websites containing news, political content and satire. It even blocked the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM). The crude filters make it impossible to look up suggestive words such as women, so a Google search...
...lovemaking sounds that would make Paris Hilton blush. More than 50,000 people simultaneously tried to download the 25-minute podcast, crashing the host server. Despite government attempts to censor it, the sex diary is so popular that Li's pen name is intermittently the most searched keyword on China's top search engine. "I express my freedom through sex," says Li, unapologetically. "It's my life, and I can do what I want...
...user-friendly, inviting environment, Google sacrificed millions of dollars in profit. Googlers have always been the founders’ primary focus. As Vise explains, Brin and Page aimed to create a free search engine of fast, reliable information, one constantly improving the web-surfing experience. Features such as keyword-targeted ads, Google Images, and 115 language translations satisfy a growing global audience. (And intentional quirks—such as the fact that an “I’m Feeling Lucky” search for “miserable failure” links to George W. Bush?...
EVERNOTE Unlike most other organizing programs, which are modeled on a binder or file cabinet, Evernote mimics a long paper scroll. It's easy to learn and can replace the random scraps of paper distributed around your desk with digital notes that are searchable by date, keyword, category...
Then there are the more in-depth features, chief among which is the cross search, which lets you select multiple resources by name, category, or keyword and then search them all simultaneously. It’s like having a JSTOR search for Harvard’s entire e-resources collection. And the results are quite stunning—within seconds you can find what you are looking for, either in full-text online or a “Find it @ Harvard” button that tells you exactly where in Harvard’s huge library system to look...