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Date: Mon, 16 Feb 2009 08:16:39 GMT
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Subject: [doc-jp 65272] Interesting Substance Facilitation
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Mon, 16 Feb 2009 08:16:39 GMT
Re: Splendid Narcotic Joy

http://duelkind.com?uHVLy
























--
Ignore all Below This Line Random Gibberish :)
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But the problem is that it's not offered by any major carrier in the U.S. And the $800 price tag for an unlocked and unsubsidized phone is way too high for consumers who can get an iPhone 3G from AT&T, a BlackBerry Storm from Verizon Wireless, or a Google Android G1 from T-Mobile USA for the subsidized price of $200 with a two-year contract.

That has not discouraged the Stanford engineers who say they are on a mission to "reinvent the Internet." They argue that their new strategy is intended to allow new ideas to emerge in an evolutionary fashion, making it possible to move data traffic seamlessly to a new networking world. Like the existing Internet, the new network will almost certainly have no one central point of control and no one organization will run it. It is most likely to emerge as new hardware and software are built in to the router computers that run today's network and are adopted as Internet standards.

