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Word: spam (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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SPAMARAMA: AUSTIN, TX Rick "The Locust" LeFevre set a record this month, gobbling 6 lbs. of Spam in 12 min. His wife cheered him on in a Spam-hued outfit...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Marriage Of Gluttony And Sport | 4/26/2004 | See Source »

...stodginess is compounded by the Senator's public performances. In an effort to seem positive, he has removed the "Bring It On" red meat from his stump speech and replaced it with Spam. It is not uncommon to see audiences leaving his fund-raising events in droves while he is still speaking. Often he'll talk about the need for a new style of campaigning, a "conversation" with the American people, and then he'll proceed to relaunder a list of Democratic nostrums ("Health care is a right, not a privilege") that were cliches when Dukakis slogged the trail. There...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: John Kerry's Silent Spring | 4/26/2004 | See Source »

...based e-mail service, a lot of tech types assumed it was an April Fool's prank: One gigabyte of storage memory per account, for free? Yahoo charges $10 a year for a tenth of that space. Yet Gmail is for real. It sorts, searches and spam-filters your e-mail. Just two catches: it won't be widely available for up to six months (test accounts are being offered only to employees' friends and families right now). Also, every message is sponsored, often based on your text. If the e-mail server spots, say, the word camera in your...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Tech Watch | 4/19/2004 | See Source »

...students from what appeared to be “Harvard.edu Technical Support,” explaining that the attached file was for antivirus protection. But instead, the Bagle virus opened up a backdoor in computers it infected. The virus’ creators and others use this backdoor for sending spam, serving files or even further infecting your system with more viruses...

Author: By Alex Slack, | Title: Byting Bagles | 4/13/2004 | See Source »

...based e-mail service, a lot of tech types assumed it was an April Fool's prank: One gigabyte of storage memory per account, for free? Yahoo charges $10 a year for a tenth of that space. Yet Gmail is for real. It sorts, searches and spam-filters your e-mail. Just two catches: it won't be widely available for up to six months (test accounts are being offered only to employees' friends and families right now). Also, every message is sponsored, often based on your text. If the e-mail server spots, say, the word camera in your...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Money: Here Comes Gmail--and a Sales Pitch to Boot | 4/12/2004 | See Source »

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