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Addressed Copy Information Intended Message
 Children's Journeys Through the Information Age by Sandra L. Calvert, Children's Journeys Through the Information Age by Sandra Calvert addresses many of the issues surrounding our culture's continuing immersion into technology, looking particularly at the current and emerging information technologies influencing children. Calvert poses questions about the effects of these technologies and discusses their meaning for parents, teachers, and policymakers. For instance, Calvert looks at specific software designs and mediums (i.e. TV, Diskette, CD-ROM) to explore how gender role, ethnic, and racial stereotypes are carried to intended audiences through implicit messages in these programs.
 Internet Direct Mail: The Complete Guide to Successful E-Campaigns by Robert W. Bly, The Internet has changed the way we do business. Customers expect websites, information links, one-stop-shopping online--and businesses are scrambling to meet their demands. "Be proactive. Embrace the Internet as a powerful marketing tool, and you'll reap the rewards of this new medium," say the authors of "Internet Direct Mail." Their practical, step-by-step guide shows you how to maximize the unique features of the Internet to create low-cost, highly effective direct-marketing campaigns. If your company is networked and has a website, nothing should stop you from marketing directly to your online customers and prospects. E-mail campaigns are not only less costly and more effective than paper mailings but also bring you instantaneous results and help you make lasting links with customers in a way that's impossible using "bricks-and-mortar" techniques. "Internet Direct Mail" is written for those who need to know how to create, send, and track the results of an e-mail campaign. It's also a valuable reference for those who are already marketing online and want to find out how to improve results while avoiding the mistakes that can cost you sales or customer goodwill. "Internet Direct Mail" addresses the questions and concerns of serious, legitimate marketers, including: How do I avoid the appearance of "spam"? Will my prospects expect free products? Do I need to use fancy graphics? How will I get my busy, surfing prospects to stop and open my message? Here are the tips you need to write simple yet sizzling body copy, create a subject line that's impossible to ignore, and build a strong house e-mail list that may, over time, outperform your current postal list. You'll find that much ofwhat you already know about direct marketing translates easily to the Internet. "Internet Direct Mail" reviews these basics thoroughly yet never lets you forget that you're dealing with a fast-changing, highly technical medium.
Atari Message Information System - Atari Message Information System Redundancy (information theory) - Redundancy in information theory is the number of bits used to transmit a message minus the number of bits of actual information in the message. Data compression is a way to eliminate such redundancy, while checksums are a way of adding redundancy. Analog hole - The analog hole (sometimes analog reconversion problem or analog reconversion issue) is a fundamental vulnerability in copy prevention schemes for noninteractive digital content which is intended to be played back using analog means. When the information is converted to a perceptible analog form, there are no restrictions on the resulting analog signal, and the content can be captured back into digital form with no restrictions. Figure-ground in map design - An effectively designed map is one in which the intended message is clearly communicated to the percipient, or map user. By employing the concept of figure-ground, a viewer can easily distinguish between the main figure on a map and the background information.
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