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Word: san (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Usage:

...global positioning due to hardware reasons. The older phone triangulates a user's position via cell-phone towers. The new one has a GPS receiver that can track a user in real time. Jobs showed off the GPS capabilities with a recording that showed a 3G user driving down San Francisco's winding Lombard Street. As a tiny dot appeared on a Google map and slowly wended its way down the street, the crowd roared its approval...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Cheaper, Faster iPhone | 6/9/2008 | See Source »

...Stuff starts to overwhelm you," says Dave Bruno, 37, an online entrepreneur who looked around his San Diego home one day last summer and realized how much his family's belongings were weighing him down. Thus began what he calls the 100 Thing Challenge. (Apparently, Bruno is so averse to excess he can't refer to 100 things in the plural.) In a country where clutter has given rise not only to professional organizers but also to professional organizers with their own reality series (TLC's Clean Sweep), Bruno's online musings about his slow and steady purge have developed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How to Live With Just 100 Things | 6/5/2008 | See Source »

What does Hillary Clinton want [June 2]? She wants to win--in spite of you all! Neida Rodriguez, SAN JUAN, PUERTO RICO...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Inbox | 6/5/2008 | See Source »

...there things you miss about the U.S.? Matthew Machado SAN FRANCISCO...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 10 Questions for David Sedaris | 6/5/2008 | See Source »

...meantime, Von Ahn has figured out a way to take advantage of all the spare brainpower hundreds of millions of people expend deciphering wiggly letters. He has teamed up with the Internet Archive, a San Francisco nonprofit that uses computers to digitally scan books and put the text online, where it can be accessed for free. When its scanners find a word they can't read, they automatically turn it into a CAPTCHA that gets exported to a website in need of one. A human reads it and transcribes it, and the results get sent back to the scanner...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Computer Literacy Tests: Are You Human? | 6/5/2008 | See Source »

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