...been addressed. But our position is that any and all information (transmitted on a company computer) is property of the company. Our advice is that those who are conducting private business ought to get their own Internet account.''
...long-term contract with a particular Internet service provider at $20 to $25 a month. If you don't have an Internet account, this may not be a bad deal, but it locks you in if the service is bad in your area or you want to upgrade to high-speed...
...don't get is individual mailboxes, although many providers, including Verizon, offer more than one mailbox per Internet account. Advantage: Cheap or free, if you decide to use Windows 98 Second Edition's built-in connection sharing...
...at set intervals, a solution that doesn't require special software on your remote PC. If you have a dial-up Internet account, XRay Vision can automatically dial up and log on for you. If you're using the XCam2 in an office with a network...
...buggy; I declined its offer to make AOL my default Internet connection, and it refrained from disabling my other Internet account. But it did change browser preferences, resetting the home page in my copy of Netscape without asking or telling...
...Cidco Web site -- with a PC. The Mivo itself cannot access the Web at all, so forget about replacing an existing Internet account with this. There are some convenient features. It fits just about anywhere, and you can unhook it from the phone...
...and outgoing mail server, your user ID, and password. Conversely, you can take your regular mail program and Internet account, and use it to read Yahoo e-mail, then save and store it right on your PC. You end up with something even better...
...computers. If your needs are modest and your budget is tight, the best free service may be the one that comes with your Internet account. Many offer a Web site and 20 megabytes of storage. But usually you can store any kind of file in that space...
...national technology magazine this week suggested was ''the upgrade of death'' -- sometimes cripples existing Internet accounts with rival companies and prevents current AOL users from signing for service with competitors. ''You're faced...
...been addressed. But our position is that any and all information (transmitted on a company computer) is property of the company. Our advice is that those who are conducting private business ought to get their own Internet account.''
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