Internet Communication essay topics

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  • Nodes In The Network
    839 words
    The Evolution of the Internet So you believe Al Gore created the Internet? Well that's not possible, because I did. Yes, it's true, a few years ago I was sitting in my basement with nothing to do and suddenly the idea came to me: why not create an inter-connected network of networks that will allow users to send mail instantly, download copyrighted songs, and order pizza, all from the comfort of their own living room? OK, so maybe I didn't exactly invent the Internet, but neither did Al Gore. So...
  • Communication Through Mobile Phones
    1,648 words
    'Watson, come here; I want you. ' This was the first sentence which was transferred by Alexander Graham Bell to his assistant (Reiman). When Graham succeeded in transferring a human voice throw a machine, he realized that he invented a new instrument which will make communication between people easier and faster. Day by Day, scientists started to improve and develop what Bell started and tried to make matters of communication easy to use and available to all people. Recently, mobile phones, shor...
  • Virtuality Of Internet
    1,012 words
    ... more subtle metaphorical figuration -- a virtual topography in which speed, motion, and direction become possible. Internet becomes a simulated territory we traverse via computer / modem roadster in which the computer screen replaces the windscreen. The scene / screen of simulation is a 'depth less surface' which allows for no play of images between metaphor and the world it (re) presents. No longer a metaphor for change, the simulated highway of Internet becomes a form of virtual reality. (...
  • Internet Users As The Cda
    1,396 words
    The Communications Decency Act The Communications Decency Act that was signed into law by President Clinton over a year ago is clearly in need of serious revisions due, not only to its vagueness, but mostly due to the fact that the government is infringing on our freedom of speech, may it be indecent or not. The Communications Decency Act, also know by Internet users as the CDA, is an Act that aims to remove indecent or dangerous text, lewd images, and other things deemed inappropriate from publ...
  • Internet As A New Source For Communication
    1,333 words
    Telephony, the Next Wave of Communication Calling China isn t cheap. With today's long distant rates it seems that it costs an arm and a leg just to communicate with a loved one. Shouldn t there be a way where to communicate without worrying about the cost Now there is a way to communicate across the world with paying a single cent. The only hardware needed is your own personal computer and a connection to the World Wide Web. The name of this technology is called Telephony. With it you can simpl...
  • Opponents Of The Communications Decency Act
    601 words
    During the past decade, society has become increasingly dependent upon computers, which have the ability to move large amounts of information across large distances quickly. Computerization has influenced everyone's life. The forced evolution of computers, and the need for ultra-fast communications, has caused a global network of interconnected computers to develop. The problem with so much information being accessible to the public is that some of it is deemed inappropriate for minors. The gove...
  • Communications Decency Act And The V Chip
    630 words
    The Telecommunications Act of 1996 was the biggest overhaul of telecommunications regulation since the original Communications Act of 1934. This act drastically changed modern communications laws. The Telecommunications Bill was proposed by Senator James Exon, of Nebraska, and Senator Slade Gorton, of Washington, on February 1, 1995. Included in this bill was the controversial communications Decency Act, which was designed to make obscene or offensive material on the internet illegal. Another co...
  • Internet Communication
    834 words
    Bob Bingham What a Wonderful World We Live In By technological standards, the Internet is still new; it has been a mere 30 years since it was first introduced in the form of a primitive network of four computers called ARPANET (1969). It wasnt until 1982, with the creation of USENET, that the Internet (still not referred to as such) became even remotely known to the then elite computer-literate public, seven years more before the first commercial dial-up Internet access provider was introduced (...
  • Future Of Multimedia
    506 words
    Multimedia future... There seems to be a rising flourish of enthusiasm about Internet courseware and multimedia. Additional individuals learn, the more they want to learn. For example, once their essential classes Web pages are complete, instructors often decide that they want pictures, then perhaps some audio, then animation, then. There are a number of advantages to using audio over the Internet. Professors are able to create archived lectures or live broadcasts, allowing for asynchronous or s...
  • Communication Technologies
    937 words
    Communication In the Millenium: 2000 and Beyond The Year 2000. The Millenium. With these phrases come the thoughts of the future and futuristic living. Although the lifestyle of the Jetson's, with moon shot apartment complexes and flying cars, is more science fiction and entertainment than science fact, how many of their fantasy inventions might someday be a fact? With the new century less than 3 months away, the year 2000 quickly brings to mind the inventions we once thought of as children watc...
  • Way Of The Internet
    1,019 words
    Critique of Vote. Com By Dick Morris Christine Belden POS 4932 November 13, 2001 Being required to read books is not always something you look forward to in a class. Actually it's probably one the worst things you dread. Especially this assignment, I was honestly not looking forward to anything about this book when I was preparing to read it. And though the premise of the book is actually very relevant in today's day in age, I still felt like the information just could not be that important to m...
  • Restrictions On Internet Access And Content
    1,765 words
    The freedom of speech that was possible on the Internet could now be subjected to governmental approvals. For example, China is attempting to restrict political expression, in the name of security and social stability. It requires users of the Internet and electronic mail (e-mail) to register, so that it may monitor their activities. In the United Kingdom, state secrets and personal attacks are off limits on the Internet. Laws are strict and the government is extremely interested in regulating t...
  • Two State Internet Laws
    1,271 words
    Internet Laws Who has that right to make them The Internet is an international network of interconnected computers. It is the outgrowth of what began in 1969 as a military program called "ARPANET", which was designed to enable computers operated by the military, defense contractors, and universities conducting defense-related research to communicate with one another by redundant channels even if some portions of the network were damaged in a war. While the ARPANET no longer exists, it provided a...
  • Public Journalism And Investigative Journalism Need
    905 words
    Merriam Webster defines objectivity as expressing or dealing with facts or conditions as perceived without distortion by personal feelings, prejudices, or interpretations. Objectivity, as defined by the school of media ethics, means standing so far from the community that you see all events and all viewpoints as equally distant and important, or unimportant for that matter. It is employed by giving equal weight to all viewpoints-or, if not, giving all an interesting twist, within taste. The resu...
  • Ontological Shift Fashioned By The Internet
    1,881 words
    Ontological Shift In Michael Heim's essay "The Cyber Space Dialectic", he discusses how our culture is going through an ontological shift fashioned by the Internet. Heim articulates his theory of what dialectic is and how this ontological shift is creating a new dialectic. The Internet is the main place today where people from all over the world exchange and communicate their ideas and feelings. The Internet is a new community in itself. The ontological shift into the cyberspace times will chang...
  • Use Of The Internet
    1,481 words
    The Internet, or Net, is a vast network of computers that connect many of the world's businesses, institutions, and individuals. The computers that form the Internet range from a various number of huge mainframes in research used to span Internet access to PCs all over the world. Despite the recent publicity, the Internet is not a new thing. Its' roots lie in a collection of computers that were linked together in the 1970's to form the US Department of Defense's communications systems. Fearing t...
  • Internet With Outspoken Words
    2,118 words
    Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances. (Wallace: 3) A statement from a document that a group of individuals put together to ensure their own ideas and beliefs would never change. The group of people was the forefathers of the United States of America and that documen...
  • Gender Swapping On The Internet
    1,468 words
    English 112 February 17, 2000 Hiding behind a Computer Are computers and the Internet redefining human identity as people explore the boundaries of their personalities, adopt multiple selves, and form online relationships that can be more intense than real ones Is the World Wide Web redefining our sense of community and where we find our peers The answer is simple. An individual should not use a false identity to produce a life on the Internet. They should also avoid using an online life to infl...
  • Online Interactions While Critical Cyberculture Studies Scholars
    6,399 words
    Contents 1. GROWING CYBERCULTURES 3 1.1 INTRODUCING CYBERCULTURE 4 2. ETHICS AND PRIVACY RESPONSIBILITY IN KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT 20 2.1 DEALING WITH ETHICAL DILEMMAS WHILE COMPETING GLOBALLY 21 3. MONITORING OUR SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL SYSTEMS WITH TECHNOLOGY 30 3.1 WEATHER MONITORING IN ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES 31 4. GLOBALISATION AND THE DIGITAL DIVIDE 35 4.1 ACROSS THE DIGITAL DIVIDE 36 5. INTRODUCING INNOVATION 39 5.1 INTERACTIONS FOR INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION IN FEDERAL STATISTICAL WOR...
  • Topic For A Writing Assignment
    731 words
    No Net In Room Information. We all need it to carry on with life. Imagine living without having any idea as to what is going on in the rest of the world. Would you be able to write a report if you could not conduct research as you normally do? What would you do if you were no longer able to communicate with your close friends and family? This is what it has been like for many residents of Bowman House for the last couple of days. Somehow, our internet connection has ceased to function properly. ...

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