Word: using
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Dates: during 2000-2000
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Companies pay for this tailored service, which helps them cut human-resources costs, but eHealthclaim is making parts of its site free to individuals and expects those most likely to use it will be caregivers, senior citizens and those who suffer from chronic illnesses. These users won't have access to the full suite of tools unless their health insurer offers the service. But they will be able to use several tools on the site, including a medical-procedure fee estimator. Users can enter a question like "How much does a liver biopsy cost in Glendale, Calif.?" and be armed...
...voters, implicitly criticizing McCain for wanting to change the G.O.P's abortion plank to include exceptions for rape and incest--exceptions Bush also supports, though Hyde didn't mention that. The National Right to Life Committee issued a mass mailing warning that McCain "voted repeatedly to use tax dollars for experiments that use body parts from aborted babies." On the front of the leaflet was a photograph of a baby with the words, "This little guy wants you to vote for George W. Bush...
...desperately wanted to respond to an ad John McCain was airing in which McCain accused Bush of "twisting the truth like Clinton." The ad gave Bush an opportunity, a chance to take McCain's biggest selling point--his image as an outsider who was above politics as usual--and use it against...
...quietly abandoned. Last month came strict regulations on Internet content and encryption technology. Members of the cyberelite in China yawned. They've perfected the art of finding ways around the government's lockdowns on particular sites, and most companies think the requirement to reveal the encryption codes they use to protect commercial secrets and online merchandising will not be enforced. But after trailing behind the e-curve for so long, Beijing has finally worked out where the Net is most vulnerable: in its voracious appetite for capital...
...still have a long way to go, of course, to get to the use-anywhere, anytime-you-like dream machine. When that device arrives, I predict it will inherit the best genes of the Palm line: the readable color of the IIIc, the thinness of the V and the built-in wireless connectivity of the VII (although at broadband speeds, so you can pull down video and audio). And if I have my druthers, it will run on Palm's elegant, easy-to-use operating system, which with the IIIc is upgraded to version...