Please Find Person
Last edited 7 September 2008
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Please Find Person!


Please Find Person


















































































One example of a common use of these concepts is a Mail User Please Find Person Agent that can be instructed to be in either "on-line" or "off-line" states. One such MUA is Microsoft Outlook. When it is "on-line" it will attempt to connect to mail servers (to check for new Find Mills Supply Inc mail at Please Find Person regular intervals, for example), and when it is "off-line" it will not attempt Please Find Person to make any Please Find Person such connections. The "on-line" or "off-line" state of Please Find Person the MUA does not necessarily reflect the Please Find Person connection status between the computer on Please Find Person which it is Please Find Person running and Internet. The user may have the computer itself on-line, connected to Internet via a cable modem or an ADSL connection, but may wish for Outlook to be off-line, so that it makes no attempt to Find Jewish Last Names send or to Please Find Person receive messages. Or the computer may be configured to employ a dial-up connection Please Find Person on demand (whenever an application such as Outlook Please Find Person attempts to make connection to a server), but the connection may be an expensive telephone Please Find Person call from the particular location in which the computer currently happens to be (such as a hotel room) and the user may not wish Outlook to trigger making that

Please Find Person

call every 5 or 10 minutes to check for mail. Another example of the use of these concepts is in Please Find Person the world Please Find Person of digital audio technology. A tape recorder, digital editor, or other device that is "on-line" is one whose clock Please Find Person is under the control of the clock of a "synchronization master" device. When the sync master commences playback, the "on-line" device automatically synchronizes itself to the master and Please Find Person commences playing Please Find Person from the

Please Find Person

same point in the recording. Whereas a device that is "off-line" uses no external clock reference and relies Please Find Person upon its own internal clock. When a large number of devices Please Find Person are connected to a Please Find Person Can T Find My Modem Windows sync master, it is often convenient, if Please Find Person one wants to hear Please Find Person just the output of one single device, to take it off-line, because if the device is played back on-line all synchronized devices Please Find Person have to locate the playback point and wait for each other to be in synchronization.[2] (For further related discussion, Please Find Person see Please Find Person MIDI timecode, word sync, and recording system synchronization.) A third example of a common use of these concepts is a web browser that Please Find Person can Please Find Person be instructed to be in either "on-line" or "off-line" states. The Please Find Person browser Please Find Person only attempts to fetch pages from servers whilst in the "on-line" state. In the "off-line" state, users can perform offline browsing, where pages can be browsed using local copies of those pages that have previously been downloaded whilst in the "on-line" state. This can be useful when the computer itself is also off-line, with connection to Internet expensive or impossible. The pages are either downloaded implicitly into the web browser's own cache, as a result of prior on-line browsing by the user, or explicitly by the browser being configured to keep local copies of certain web pages, which it keeps updated when the browser is in the on-line state, either by checking that the local copies are up-to-date at regular intervals Find Person By Email or by checking that Please Find Person the local Please Find Person copies are up-to-date whenever the browser is switched to the on-line state. One such web browser capable of Please Find Person being explicitly configured to download pages for offline browsing is Internet Explorer. When pages Please Find Person are added to Please Find Person the "Favourites" list, they can be marked for being made "available for offline browsing". Internet Explorer Please Find Person will download to local copies both the marked page and, optionally, all of the pages that Please Find Person it

Please Find Person

links to. In Internet Explorer Please Find Person version 6, the level of direct and indirect links, the maximum amount Please Find Person of local disc space allowed to be consumed, and the Search Engine To Find Profiles schedule Please Find Person on which local Please Find Person copies are Please Find Person checked to see Please Find Person whether they are up-to-date, are configurable for each
The ideas of "on-line" and "off-line" have Please Find Person been generalized from computing and telecommunication into the Please Find Person field of human interpersonal relationships. The distinction between what is considered "on-line" Please Find Person and what is considered "off-line" has become Please Find Person a subject Please Find Person of study in the field of sociology.[7] The distinction between "on-line" and Please Find Person "off-line" is conventionally Please Find Person seen as the distinction between computer-mediated communication and face-to-face communication (e.g. face time), respectively. "On-line" is virtuality, and "off-line" is reality (e.g. real life or meatspace). Slater states that this distinction is "obviously far too simple". To support his argument that the Please Find Person distinctions in relationships are more complex than Please Find Person a simple "on-line"/"off-line" dichotomy, he observes that some people Please Find Person draw no distinction between Please Find Person an "on-line" relationship, such as indulging in Please Find Person cybersex, and an Please Find Person "off-line" relationship, such as Please Find Person being pen-pals. He also argues that even the telephone can be regarded as an "on-line" experience Please Find Person in some circumstances, and that the blurring of the distinctions between the uses of various technologies (such as PDA and mobile Please Find Person telephone, television and Internet, and telephone and voice-over-IP) has made it "impossible to use the term 'on-line' meaningfully in the sense that was Please Find Person employed Please Find Person by the first generation of Internet research".[7] Slater asserts Please Find Person that there are legal and regulatory pressures to reduce the distinction between "on-line" and Please Find Person "off-line", with Please Find Person a "general tendency to assimilate online to offline and erase the distinction", stressing, however, Please Find Person that this does not mean that on-line relationships are being reduced to pre-existing off-line relationships. He conjectures that greater legal status may be assigned to on-line relationships (pointing out Where Can You Find Kangaroos that Find Someone Who Looks Like Me contractual relationships, such as business transactions, on-line are already seen as just as "real" as their off-line counterparts), although he states it to be hard to imagine courts awarding palimony to people who have had a Please Find Person purely on-line sexual Please Find Person relationship. He also conjectures Please Find Person that

Please Find Person

an Please Find Person "on-line"/"off-line" distinction Please Find Person may be seen by people Please Find Person as "rather Please Find Person quaint and not quite comprehensible" within 10 years The distinction where "on-line" is Please Find Person seen as virtuality Please Find Person and "off-line" as reality is sometimes inverted, with "on-line" concepts Please Find Person being used to define

Please Find Person

and to explain "off-line" activities, rather than (as Please Find Person per the conventions of the desktop metaphor with its Please Find Person desktops, trash cans, folders, Please Find Person and Please Find Person so forth) the other way around. Several cartoons by The New Yorker have satirized this. One Please Find Person includes Saint Peter asking for a user name and a password before admitting a man into Heaven. Another illustrates "the off-line store" where "All items are actual size!", where shoppers may "Take Please Find Person it home as soon as you pay for it!", and where "Merchandise may be handled prior to purchase!".


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