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Editorial overview
Schools have changed quite a bit since I was a pupil in the early 1980s. Of course, we did have so-called computing classes - a pioneering concept then, and mainly the result of one teacher's infatuation with new technologies. But these classes, originally intended to teach us how to write useful programs, soon turned into little more than a forum for exchanging computer games Read
Educating Europe
image The classless society
Eighty per cent of Europe's schools are online, thanks to local, national, EU and private sector projects that have cost billions of euros. Students can send in homework by e-mail, contact tutors by mobile phone - and even take exams on their computer screens. And that is just the beginning
Internet portals
image The latin armada
Latin American sites launching in Spain believed a common language guaranteed success. But cultural affinities proved illusory and the advertising cake had already been sliced up
Application service providers
image Have you got mail?
E-mail has surpassed letters and faxes in the business world, which means it can overload and be subject to breakdowns. Too many people try to fix it themselves. Others hire an ASP
Online trading
image Deals at your desktop
Peer-to-peer technology lives on after Napster in the wholesale financial markets, allowing fund managers to trade directly with each other and cut the broker out of the loop