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...Spain. Last year the town opened a new 2,500-sq-m multisports center featuring swimming pools, basketball courts and putting greens. And last month it inaugurated [an error occurred while processing this directive] a new youth center, with a theater, concert hall, workshops and mediatheque, where kids can surf the Internet, watch movies and listen to music. The keys have just been handed over to the first of 5,000 new houses, the bulk of them moderately priced, in La Dehesa Vieja (the Old Meadow). By the time that development is complete next year, the Madrid metro will have...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Can Spain Sustain? | 6/11/2006 | See Source »

Eating well is no longer an issue confined to the kitchen or the grocery store. Today, health-conscious cookers are turning to the web for help in researching, preparing and learning about food. Here are nine tasty sites, as compiled by TIME's Jeremy Caplan, to help you surf the web - the healthy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Web Guide: The Tastiest Food Sites | 6/4/2006 | See Source »

...same high-priced service plans, starting at $80 per month for 450 anytime talk minutes plus unlimited data use. What this means is that unless you are prepared to do a lot of data-intensive activities with the phone like check e-mail 10 times a day, surf the Web or upload photos, this smartphone may not be a smart...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Motorola Q Smartphone | 5/31/2006 | See Source »

...agreement as to which things are best to measure. The old days of TV advertising were simpler. Based on the show's ratings, advertisers paid for a certain number of eyeballs viewing their ads. But avoidance technologies - ranging from simple remotes that make it easy for people to channel surf during ad breaks to dvrs - have raised serious questions about that old formula. "You can count eyeballs, but all that's been demonstrated is an audience has been delivered, not that it's paying attention or is tuned in," says Townsend. Of course, today's highly sophisticated TV commercials evolved...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Ad-Ventures Online | 5/21/2006 | See Source »

Bono has Africa. Coldplay has global poverty. MOBY is fighting for your right to ... surf the Web. Along with like-minded artists such as R.E.M. and some improbable partners like the Gun Owners of America, the techno-musician has joined the SavetheInternet.com Coalition, whose object is to preserve so-called Net neutrality. That would keep broadband providers from charging premiums to content providers (like Google or MySpace) for faster connections, which could limit consumer access to some sites. "If Congress guts Net neutrality," says Moby, "independent sites would be choked off, and the Internet will become a private toll road...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: May 29, 2006 | 5/21/2006 | See Source »

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