News and Notes Roundup: Dec. 1
Thanksgiving has come and gone. The weekend is over. The turkey (or tofurkey) is eaten. A full work week is back with a vengeance. But amid all these post-holiday Monday negatives, we’ve got something to make you feel just a bit better: another issue of the critically acclaimed (why not?) NDItech News and Notes Roundup. As always, please tweet at us - @nditech - or email us - [email protected] - with any comments or suggestions for future roundups.
For “this Week in Tech History," we focus on December 1, 1996. On that day, AOL launched a new subscription plan offering its subscribers unlimited dial-up internet access for just under 20 bucks a month. The plan enticed over 1 million news customers, and average usage rates soared to over 32 minuted per day. Of course, this new demand did overload AOL's servers, leading to a bevy of complaints.
And now, time for the links:
Popular Tech News:
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Girls Scouts to start selling cookies online
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European MPs calling for break up of Google
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Is tech coming to the rescue of endangered languages?
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What’s the fastest growing social media platform?
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Supreme Court to consider when a Facebook post breaks the law
ICT and Development:
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Humanitarian Data Exchange’s incredible Ebola open data map
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The data drought in developing countries
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Are big ideas destroying international development?
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Jamaica’s ICT development receives $226m boost
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Ghana sets up commission to oversee cyber crimes
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2014 Measuring the Information Society report released
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Guardian panel on the keys to game-changing health innovation
Mobiles:
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Vodafone to provide reliable service in Uganda
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India's offline mobile internet is going open source
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How mobile is extending education in the Philippines
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New Digital Inclusion report released - est. 48% of planet will still be offline by 2018
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Expecting mothers among first to benefit from mobile access in Myanmar