Word: passworded
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...sound amazing through the Sync's hidden speaker. No, what I like best about the phone is its e-mail program. Easier to use than anything pre-loaded on the Treo 680 or the BlackJack, the Sync's e-mail manager requires nothing but your e-mail address and password for set up, and manages most major webmail providers, including the trickier ones like MSN's Hotmail and AOL's AIM Mail. You can even manage multiple e-mail accounts simultaneously. The interface is smooth and simple; in truth, I have never seen a better looking e-mail program...
...e.guides also make short work of tourist spots, focusing instead on how to live like a native in busy capitals like Paris, London and New York City. The printed editions list everything from the chicest restaurant to the best bookshop. They also provide a password that lets you log on to a frequently updated website so you don't have to worry about getting there to find your spot closed. Or worse, no longer cool...
...Class Marshal elections and signing up for yearbook sittings. “I had intended to run for Class Marshal but kind of missed the vote,” Kathryn C. Gluckman ’07 said yesterday. “I was never even provided with the password in order to vote.” “I am missing out on senior events because I am not on the right e-mail lists,” said Ekua K. Nkyekyer ’07, an Economics concentrator in Lowell House. She added that she was not aware...
...fair to the Sidekick, the Mylo can?t make standard cell calls, nor does it handle e-mail at all, but it does have a web browser, several instant messaging programs and Skype phone service. If you have a free Skype account, you can just enter your username and password, and it will bring up your contacts list. You can add any additional contacts on the fly. Many Skype users pay for credits to allow them to call standard phone numbers, and you can use those credits with Mylo. Because it has a browser, you can even...
...more than necessary--to let you access accounts over the phone or online, for instance. Some banks use just the last four digits. "It's not totally safe, but it's safer," says Robert Ellis Smith, publisher of Privacy Journal. He suggests calling the bank and requesting a different password altogether...