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Posted: 5/28/2013 12:55:19 PM EST
A man pushes a trolley full of Dell computers through a company factory in Sriperumbudur Taluk, in the Kancheepuram district of the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu, in this June 2, 2011 file photograph. REUTERS/Babu/Files
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Posted: 5/23/2013 12:21:13 PM EST
In this May 2013 photo provided by Google, Daniel Orellana of the Charles Darwin Foundation is shown crossing a field of ferns to reach some naturallyoccurring sulfur mines on the top of Sierra Negra, an active volcano on Isabela Island in the Galapagos. The Google Maps team traveled for over hours, hiking and on horseback, to reach this remote location. Few have laid eyes on many of the volcanic islands of the Galapagos archipelago that remain closed to tourists. But soon the curious will be able to explore these places that inspired Charles Darwin's theory of evolution from their computers or mobile devices. Google Maps sent crews armed with backpack-mounted Street View cameras and underwater gear to the Galapagos, and will be bringing the islands' natural wonders to the Internet. (AP Photo/Google)
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Posted: 5/23/2013 12:21:13 PM EST
In this May 2013 photo provided by Google, Daniel Orellana of the Charles Darwin Foundation climbs out of an Isabela island where he was collecting imagery on the Galapagos. The lava landscapes found on the island help tell the story of the formation of the Galapagos. Few have laid eyes on many of the volcanic islands of the Galapagos archipelago that remain closed to tourists. But soon the curious will be able to explore these places that inspired Charles Darwin's theory of evolution from their computers or mobile devices. Google Maps sent crews armed with backpack-mounted Street View cameras and underwater gear to the Galapagos, and will be bringing the islands' natural wonders to the Internet. (AP Photo/Google)
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Posted: 5/23/2013 12:21:13 PM EST
In this May 2013 photo provided by Google, a giant tortoise crawls along the path near Googler Karin TuxenBettman while she collects imagery with the Street View Trekker in Galapaguera, a tortoise breeding center, which is managed by the Galapagos National Park Service, in Ecuador. Few have laid eyes on many of the volcanic islands of the Galapagos archipelago that remain closed to tourists. But soon the curious will be able to explore these places that inspired Charles Darwin's theory of evolution from their computers or mobile devices. Google Maps sent crews armed with backpack-mounted Street View cameras and underwater gear to the Galapagos, and will be bringing the islands' natural wonders to the Internet. (AP Photo/Google)
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Posted: 5/23/2013 12:21:13 PM EST
In this May 2013 photo provided by Google, Daniel Orellana of the Charles Darwin Foundation crosses a rocky lava field to reach a land iguana restoration area in Bahia Cartago, Isabela Island in the Galapagos. Bahia Cartago is a protected area not accessible to tourists but the Street View Trekker was invited to collect imagery there. Few have laid eyes on many of the volcanic islands of the Galapagos archipelago that remain closed to tourists. But soon the curious will be able to explore these places that inspired Charles Darwin's theory of evolution from their computers or mobile devices. Google Maps sent crews armed with backpack-mounted Street View cameras and underwater gear to the Galapagos, and will be bringing the islands' natural wonders to the Internet. (AP Photo/Google)
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Posted: 5/23/2013 12:21:13 PM EST
In this May 2013 photo provided by Catlin Seaview Survey, Christophe Bailhache navigates an SVII camera through a large group of sea lions during a survey dive at Champion Island in Galapagos. Few have laid eyes on many of the volcanic islands of the Galapagos archipelago that remain closed to tourists. But soon the curious will be able to explore these places that inspired Charles Darwin's theory of evolution from their computers or mobile devices. Google Maps sent crews armed with backpack-mounted Street View cameras and underwater gear to the Galapagos, and will be bringing the islands' natural wonders to the Internet. (AP Photo/Catlin Seaview Survey)
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Posted: 5/23/2013 12:21:13 PM EST
In this May 2013 photo provided by Catlin Seaview Survey, Christophe Bailhache with an SVII camera is escorted underwater by a Spotted Eagle Ray during a survey dive in the Galapagos Islands. Few have laid eyes on many of the volcanic islands of the Galapagos archipelago that remain closed to tourists. But soon the curious will be able to explore these places that inspired Charles Darwin's theory of evolution from their computers or mobile devices. Google Maps sent crews armed with backpack-mounted Street View cameras and underwater gear to the Galapagos, and will be bringing the islands' natural wonders to the Internet. (AP Photo/Catlin Seaview Survey)
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Posted: 5/23/2013 12:21:13 PM EST
In this May 2013 photo provided by Google, Daniel Orellana of the Charles Darwin Foundation collects seashore imagery with the Street View Trekker at the Los Humedales wetland area on Isabela Island in the Galapagos. Few have laid eyes on many of the volcanic islands of the Galapagos archipelago that remain closed to tourists. But soon the curious will be able to explore these places that inspired Charles Darwin's theory of evolution from their computers or mobile devices. Google Maps sent crews armed with backpack-mounted Street View cameras and underwater gear to the Galapagos, and will be bringing the islands' natural wonders to the Internet. (AP Photo/Google)
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Posted: 5/13/2013 4:19:57 AM EST
In this photo taken on Dec. 13, 2012, a National Intelligence Service agent covered her face with a mask sits in front of her computers as officers from police and national election commission visit her to collect evidence from her computers at her home in Seoul, South Korea. The scandal shaking up South Korea’s main spy agency is not cloak-and-dagger stuff, but the kind of low-grade trickery anyone with an Internet connection could pull off. And the target was not Seoul’s opaque rival to the north, but the country’s own people. Internet postings ostensibly from ordinary South Koreas, but actually from National Intelligence Service agents, allegedly boosted President Park Geun-hye while she was running for the job as the ruling party’s nominee. She was reportedly dubbed “the best,” while her opponent, in a play on his name, was called “criminal.” (AP Photo/Yonhap, Im Hun-jung) KOREA OUT
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Posted: 5/1/2013 11:35:45 AM EST
People use computers at an internet cafe in Taiyuan, Shanxi province, November 13, 2009.REUSTERS/Stringer
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Posted: 5/1/2013 10:29:40 AM EST
People use computers at an internet cafe in Taiyuan, Shanxi province, November 13, 2009.REUSTERS/Stringer
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Posted: 4/26/2013 4:43:27 AM EST
In this Feb. 20, 2013 photo, cadets work at computers inside a classroom at the Center for Cyberspace Research, where cyber warfare is taught, at the U.S. Air Force Academy, in Colorado Springs, Colo. The U.S. service academies are ramping up efforts to groom a new breed of cyberspace warriors to confront increasing threats to the nation’s military and civilian computer networks that control everything from electrical power grids to the banking system. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)
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Posted: 4/18/2013 9:13:27 PM EST
FILE- This April 12, 2012, photo shows a Google logo on a window at the company's headquarters in Mountain View, Calif. Google's latest quarterly results reported Thursday, April 18, 2013 provided further proof that the Internet search leader is figuring out how to make more money as Web surfers migrate from personal computers to mobile devices. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, File)
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Posted: 4/17/2013 4:29:55 PM EST
A model poses with the new SanDisk pSSD modular solid state drive storage (L) and the third generation solid state drive used in notebook computers during the 2009 Computex exhibition in Taipei June 2, 2009. REUTERS/Nicky Loh
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Posted: 4/17/2013 10:08:17 AM EST
Employees work on computers at Exalt Technologies, a company which deals in research and development outsourcing from Cisco and French-American group Lucent-Alcatel, in the West Bank city of Ramallah April 7, 2013. REUTERS/Mohamad Torokman
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Posted: 4/17/2013 10:08:17 AM EST
Employees work on computers at Exalt Technologies, a company which deals in research and development outsourcing from Cisco and French-American group Lucent-Alcatel, in the West Bank city of Ramallah April 7, 2013. REUTERS/Mohamad Torokman
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Posted: 4/17/2013 3:08:48 AM EST
FILE - In this file photo taken Monday, Oct. 25, 2010, students work at their computers learning the Cherokee language in a classroom at the Cherokee Nation Immersion School in Tahlequah, Okla. Experts say a growing number of tribes are trying to revitalize their languages, which in some cases are used by only a small handful of people. And increasingly, they’re enlisting technology in the effort. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki, File)
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Posted: 4/16/2013 3:07:13 PM EST
A user demonstrates a new motion-control sensor in this undated handout photo provided by Leap Motion April 15, 2013. Computers controlled by a swipe of the hand - a staple of science fiction flicks like "Minority Report" - could soon hit the mass market as the result of a new deal between Hewlett-Packard Co and a San Francisco startup called Leap Motion. REUTERS/Leap Motion/Handout
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Posted: 4/16/2013 3:03:36 PM EST
A user demonstrates a new motion-control sensor in this undated handout photo provided by Leap Motion April 15, 2013. Computers controlled by a swipe of the hand - a staple of science fiction flicks like "Minority Report" - could soon hit the mass market as the result of a new deal between Hewlett-Packard Co and a San Francisco startup called Leap Motion. REUTERS/Leap Motion/Handout
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Posted: 4/13/2013 8:13:35 AM EST
FILE - In this Nov. 8, 2006, file photo, confiscated computers and child-oriented pornographic tapes fill the storeroom shelves in the Florida Attorney General's Child Predator CyberCrime Unit office in Jacksonville, Fla. If a purse with $900 is stolen, the victim probably would call the police. If a computer hacker steals $900 from that same person's bank account, what then? Call the police? Could they even help? As it is now, local police don't have widespread know-how to investigate cybercrimes. They rely heavily on the expertise of the federal government, which focuses on large, often international cybercrimes. What's missing is the first response role, typically the preserve of local police departments that respond to calls for help from individuals and communities. They're looking to boost their expertise to be able to respond to high-tech crimes that are expected to only get worse. (AP Photo/Oscar Sosa)