Tech Spec: A dying breed
Looking back over the past few decades, anyone can see how fads with music technology have arrived into our culture and later fallen off the map. There’s always something new—a replacement.
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Looking back over the past few decades, anyone can see how fads with music technology have arrived into our culture and later fallen off the map. There’s always something new—a replacement.
Many college students utilize websites for everything in their lives: chatting with friends on Facebook and Twitter, ordering textbooks through Amazon, checking your email in your Gmail and so on. When they (including myself) sign up, they frequently use the same information, email accounts, passwords and security questions. This is not a good idea.
As students across the ASU campuses settle in to their first week back, many receive phone calls from family members. Not all of these phone calls are because of separation anxiety; quite a few phone calls are plagued with questions regarding technology problems.
My childhood revolved around giveaways; if my mom heard on the radio that you could pick up free tickets to see movies like "Flubber" before they were released to theaters, she would corral the family into the minivan and quickly drive to wherever the radio crew was located that day.
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