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...computer room--to be furnished with two Hewlett Packard Vectra 386/25 computers, one Scan Jet IIC and a Laser Jet II--may open as soon as the end of March, according to John Sindall, assistant to the senior tutor...

Author: By Tamar A. Shapiro, CONTRIBUTING REPORTER | Title: Hewlett Donates Computers, Fax, Printers to Dunster | 3/3/1992 | See Source »

Miguel: They've got this groovy map of the world painted on the dance floor. Saudi Arabia is definitely the hot spot on this lukewarm planet. From here, you can scan the crowd on four continents...

Author: By June Shih, | Title: Metropolis' Middle-Age Mix | 2/20/1992 | See Source »

Each ScanFone unit, which can also function as a regular telephone, features a magnetic-stripe credit card reader and a light pen to scan bar codes. After selecting groceries, customers punch in a delivery time, run a credit card through the magnetic reader and await delivery. On the retailer's end, a computer registers the order and professional shoppers hit the aisles, instructed to select the best cuts of meat and the freshest vegetables and fruits for ScanFoners. If successful, the system is expected to serve 16 cities by June...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Technology: Bellying Up to The Bar Code | 1/20/1992 | See Source »

...problem seemed to be self-inflicted -- a bleeding stomach wound caused by his habit of chewing up and swallowing every splintery stick he could get his teeth on. But first the vet had to rule out rat poison and cancer with a blood test ($45) and a liver scan ($140). Then there was the emergency work-up ($45), followed by a catheter ($30), urinalysis ($22), a steroid injection and lab work to check organ function ($71); anesthesia ($345); an IV attached to a leg ($110); a biopsy ($45); upper and lower gastrointestinal endoscopy for fiber-optic images of his stomach...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Case for Mutticare | 12/30/1991 | See Source »

...employers would regard as too prone to cancer, heart disease or other ailments. Into this volatile mix of half-formed attitudes and sharply felt anxieties, technology has arrived with a host of unprecedented temptations. Many new answering machines are equipped to surreptitiously tape whole conversations. Video-surveillance cameras quietly scan many workplaces. Neighborhood retailers now stock hardware that used to be the stuff of spy novels. But by far the most important high-tech threat to privacy is not an exotic surveillance device but a familiar storage system: the computer. Computers permit nimble feats of data manipulation, including high-speed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Assaulting Our Privacy: Nowhere to Hide | 11/11/1991 | See Source »

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