computer conferencing उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- "I must admit we're immune to it, " said Sanyakhu Amare, 43, owner of a computer conferencing company based in his home on Franklin Avenue in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn.
- In chapter ten of In the Age of the Smart Machine, Zuboff provides the example of DIALOG, a computer conferencing system used at a pharmaceutical corporation in the 1970s.
- There is a group of computer conferencing programs whose designs were derived from CONFER which are sometimes called " WELL-style " systems, because The WELL has been very influential in spreading this design.
- Still, Elfman-- who owns four computers-- said he will give live computer conferencing another chance in an upcoming edition of " CyberTalk, " an on-line talk show prepared for America Online by Warner Bros.
- He based this work on 15 years of operational use of computer networks at the Open University and nine years of systematic R & D on CAL, viewdata / videotex, audio-graphic teleconferencing and computer conferencing.
- Van Gelder reported a famous incident occurring on a computer conferencing system during the early 80s where a male psychiatrist posed as Julie, a female psychologist with multiple disabilities including deafness, blindness, and serious facial disfigurement.
- The centerpiece of this effort was the School of Management and Strategic Studies, a network of senior executives from 26 countries who joined a distinguished faculty to deliberate, via computer conferencing, on the new requirements of leadership.
- Attempting to recapture the sense of community that once typified the increasingly commercial Bay Area-based bulletin board called WELL, several of its members created their own computer conferencing system, The River ( telnet river . org ).
- The indicators described represent a template or tool for researchers to analyze written transcripts as well as a heuristic guide to educators for the optimal use of computer conferencing as a medium to facilitate an educational transaction.
- PARTICIPATE provided what it called " many to many " communications, or computer conferencing, and hosted " Electures " on The Source, such as Paul Levinson's " Space : Humanizing the Universe " in the spring of 1985.