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COMPUTERS - Online Services (General)
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By Lane Strauss
Imagine e-mailing a priest asking for spiritual guidance and support because you had killed thousands of bugs on your windshield one muggy summer night. Or e-mailing a cigarette shop asking if they would like to carry a new line of cigarettes that grow longer as you smoke them. Or e-mailing a detective agent asking for help because you had reason to believe that someone was stealing your front lawn. Well, someone didn’t just imagine it. They actually had the stupidity to do it. That’s Sincerely, Scott Neumann, a compilation of dozens of vitally important e-mails and their responses from all over world. From large corporations, to dream analysts, to porn site webmasters, Scott Neumann has many, many issues on his mind, and thanks to e-mail, he can now get his answers quickly, safely and in the privacy of his own modem. Sincerely, Scott Neumann is a book that anyone with a computer and half a brain can relate to. Not necessarily in that order.
FORMAT: Softcover
By Maryam Kamrani
In the Industrial Age, citizens thrived by buying private property and engaging in commerce. In today's Information Age, people need access to city public services in order to ensure their welfare. In Electronic cities & Web-based urbanization integrated systems, Maryam Kamrani and Amir Alikhanzadeh, experts in their respective fields, lay out a plan for cities to build an informational infrastructure that is essential for every individual's well-being. The authors argue that building e-cities based on broad strategies and master plans is necessary so that everyone will have equal access to public services. Moreover, designing such cities would enable areas to move quickly into a fully networked environment that would improve public services. Creating such e-cities, however, is no easy task. This kind of development requires master plans and broad strategies. Web sites must be created to provide online services through a city portal, paperless municipal services must become the norm, and all kinds of new management infrastructure must be designed and carefully set in place. Kamrani and Alikhanzadeh envision a new future and lay out the necessary steps municipal governments must take in order to serve their residents and change with the times.
FORMAT: Hardcover
By Maryam Kamrani
In the Industrial Age, citizens thrived by buying private property and engaging in commerce. In today's Information Age, people need access to city public services in order to ensure their welfare. In Electronic cities & Web-based urbanization integrated systems, Maryam Kamrani and Amir Alikhanzadeh, experts in their respective fields, lay out a plan for cities to build an informational infrastructure that is essential for every individual's well-being. The authors argue that building e-cities based on broad strategies and master plans is necessary so that everyone will have equal access to public services. Moreover, designing such cities would enable areas to move quickly into a fully networked environment that would improve public services. Creating such e-cities, however, is no easy task. This kind of development requires master plans and broad strategies. Web sites must be created to provide online services through a city portal, paperless municipal services must become the norm, and all kinds of new management infrastructure must be designed and carefully set in place. Kamrani and Alikhanzadeh envision a new future and lay out the necessary steps municipal governments must take in order to serve their residents and change with the times.
FORMAT: Softcover
By Maryam Kamrani
In the Industrial Age, citizens thrived by buying private property and engaging in commerce. In today's Information Age, people need access to city public services in order to ensure their welfare. In Electronic cities & Web-based urbanization integrated systems, Maryam Kamrani and Amir Alikhanzadeh, experts in their respective fields, lay out a plan for cities to build an informational infrastructure that is essential for every individual's well-being. The authors argue that building e-cities based on broad strategies and master plans is necessary so that everyone will have equal access to public services. Moreover, designing such cities would enable areas to move quickly into a fully networked environment that would improve public services. Creating such e-cities, however, is no easy task. This kind of development requires master plans and broad strategies. Web sites must be created to provide online services through a city portal, paperless municipal services must become the norm, and all kinds of new management infrastructure must be designed and carefully set in place. Kamrani and Alikhanzadeh envision a new future and lay out the necessary steps municipal governments must take in order to serve their residents and change with the times.
FORMAT: E-Book
By Lane Strauss
Imagine e-mailing a priest asking for spiritual guidance and support because you had killed thousands of bugs on your windshield one muggy summer night. Or e-mailing a cigarette shop asking if they would like to carry a new line of cigarettes that grow longer as you smoke them. Or e-mailing a detective agent asking for help because you had reason to believe that someone was stealing your front lawn. Well, someone didn’t just imagine it. They actually had the stupidity to do it. That’s Sincerely, Scott Neumann, a compilation of dozens of vitally important e-mails and their responses from all over world. From large corporations, to dream analysts, to porn site webmasters, Scott Neumann has many, many issues on his mind, and thanks to e-mail, he can now get his answers quickly, safely and in the privacy of his own modem. Sincerely, Scott Neumann is a book that anyone with a computer and half a brain can relate to. Not necessarily in that order.
FORMAT: E-Book
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