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Internet w Kanadzie !!!

10.10.05, 19:04
AOL Back-to-School Survey


Drugie doroczne badanie Back-to-School wykonane na zlecenie firmy AOL Canada
Inc. przez Maritz Research wykazało, że 78 proc. dzieci w Kanadzie w wieku od
8 do 12 lat używa Internetu do wykonywania zadań domowych i przygotowywania
się do szkoły.

45 proc. młodych osób w tym wieku spędza albo tyle samo albo więcej czasu
korzystając z Internetu dla celów szkolnych jak dla własnej rozrywki.

73 proc. uczniów korzysta zarówno z Internetu jak i z książek przy
wykonywaniu zadań domowych.
Obserwuj wątek
    • polonus5 Re: Internet w Kanadzie !!! 10.10.05, 19:14
      Satelita w kosmosie, internet w Kanadzie
      W nocy z soboty na niedzielę europejska rakieta Ariane wyniosła w kosmos
      kanadyjskiego satelitę. Ma on zapewnić dostęp do szybkich połączeń
      internetowych w odległych północnych rejonach Kanady.
      Rakietę wystrzelono z kosmodromu Europejskiej Agencji Kosmicznej w Gujanie
      Francuskiej. Wyniesiony przez nią satelita (ANIK F2) uważany jest za
      największego na świecie satelitę komunikacyjnego. Urządzenie waży 5,9 t.

      • kaganowski Re: Internet w Kanadzie !!! 11.10.05, 07:46
        To nie mata tamuj w ty Kandzie wlasny rakiety, jeno lod Francozuf musita jom
        porzyczac?
    • artur666 Re: Internet w Kanadzie !!! 10.10.05, 19:15

      Lekarze tez lataja do pacjentow samolotami. Jest to konieczne ze wzgledu na
      duze odleglosci do szkoly i czesto zlymi warunkami pogodowymi. Nie wiem tylko
      jaki poziom takie nauczanie daje, chyba duzo looserow musi sie w takim systemie
      wyksztalcac.
      U nas sie tego wogole nie praktykuje.
      • grafiti_lives Re: Internet w Kanadzie !!! 10.10.05, 20:01
        artur666 napisał:

        > U nas sie tego wogole nie praktykuje.

        hehehe, wiemy juz ze w Polsce tego sie nie praktykuje bo w Polsce szpitale
        musza placic wysokie grzywny za to ze ....."marnuja lekarstwa na tych starych
        powyzej 65 lat"


        • _czosnek_ Mam pytanko. 10.10.05, 22:37
          > hehehe, wiemy juz ze w Polsce

          Kto jest: my?
          Twoja partia?
      • kaganowski Re: Internet w Kanadzie !!! 11.10.05, 07:47
        Ci, co mieszkaja tak daleko, ze musza do nich lekarze latac samolotami powinni
        sami placic za te loty! Czemu maja do nich dokladac ci, co mieszkaja w
        rozsadnych miejscach?
    • swiatlo Naprawdę w Kanadzie jest internet??? /nt 10.10.05, 19:44

    • salsa-verde Re: Internet w Kanadzie !!! 11.10.05, 05:30
      rosnie kolejne pokolenie gamoni i analfabetow umiejacych tylko klikac
    • kaganowski Re: Internet w Kanadzie to SMIETNIK !!! 11.10.05, 07:45
      I co z tego? Internet to jeden wielki smietnik. Zobacz co najbardzoiej
      intwresuje internautow w US of A:
      Select a Category: Most Emailed News
      1. Maddison Harder, 3, climbs on Joel Holland's prize-winning-record,
      1,229-pound Atlantic Giant pumpkin at the annual Safeway World Championship
      Pumpkin Weigh-Off in Half Moon Bay, Calif., Monday, Oct. 10, 2005. Holland tied
      the record with 1,229 with his own pumpkin from last year. The pumpkin is 3
      feet, 9 inches high. He wins $6,145 for his efforts, at $5 per pound. (AP
      Photo/Paul Sakuma) Prize Pumpkin Weighs in at 1,229 Pounds AP - Mon Oct 10, 7:40
      PM ET Sent 524 times
      HALF MOON BAY, Calif. - A retired Washington firefighter won the annual Safeway
      World Championship Pumpkin Weigh-Off on Monday, presenting a gigantic pumpkin
      that weighed 1,229 pounds.
      2. Eating fish regularly delays dementia: study Reuters - Mon Oct 10, 4:06 PM ET
      Sent 284 times

      CHICAGO (Reuters) - Eating fish at least once a week slows the toll aging
      takes on the brain, while obesity at midlife doubles the risk of dementia, a
      pair of studies concluded on Monday.
      3.
      Nineteen-month-old Russell Watson prepares to eat a hot chili pepper at
      home in Denver, Aug. 24, 2005. As research increasingly suggests a child's first
      experiences with food shape later eating habits, doctors say battling obesity
      and improving the American diet may mean debunking the myths and broadening
      babies' palates. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)
      Experts Seek to Debunk Baby Food Myths AP - Sun Oct 9, 5:55 PM ET Sent 267
      times

      Ditch the rice cereal and mashed peas, and make way for enchiladas, curry
      and even — gasp! — hot peppers. It's time to discard everything you think you
      know about feeding babies. It turns out most advice parents get about weaning
      infants onto solid foods — even from pediatricians — is more myth than science.
      4.
      Johnny Wilson, 9, swims in San Francisco Bay from Alcatraz Island Monday,
      Oct. 10, 2005, in San Francisco. Wilson made the trip in one hour and eight
      minutes, arriving to a crowd of school mates and well wishers after completing
      the 1.4 mile swim. Wilson's efforts raised about $30,000 for Hurricane Katrina
      relief. (AP Photo/Don Feria)
      Boy, 9, Swims From Alcatraz to San Fran AP - Mon Oct 10, 4:49 PM ET Sent
      231 times

      SAN FRANCISCO - A nine-year-old boy has just finished a pretty tough
      morning swim — from Alcatraz to San Francisco.
      5.
      Exercise amount more important than intensity Reuters - Mon Oct 10, 7:32
      PM ET Sent 166 times

      NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - How much you exercise may be more important
      than how hard you exercise in terms of heart health, according to a study of
      sedentary overweight men and women. And, many will be happy to hear, exhaustive
      amounts of exercise are not needed for heart health.
      6.
      Biologist Discovers New Species of Lizard AP - Mon Oct 10, 7:59 PM ET Sent
      164 times

      KANSAS CITY, Mo. - What's black, white, red and green all over? It's
      something Avila University professor Robert Powell will announce sometime in
      December.
      7.
      American Univ. Trustees Oust President AP - 1 hour, 52 minutes ago Sent
      146 times

      WASHINGTON - American University trustees announced Monday night that
      Benjamin Ladner will not return as president after a months-long investigation
      into his spending.
      8.
      US blocks U.N. briefing on atrocities in Sudan Reuters - Mon Oct 10, 7:00
      PM ET Sent 136 times

      UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - U.S. Ambassador John Bolton blocked a U.N.
      envoy on Monday from briefing the Security Council on grave human rights
      violations in Sudan's Darfur region, saying the council had to act against
      atrocities and not just talk about them.
      9.
      Robert Davis talks to the media, Monday, Oct. 10, 2005, during a news
      conference near the intersection of Bourbon and Conti Streets in the French
      Quarter in New Orleans where New Orleans police officers arrested him on
      Saturday night. Davis said he had not been drinking before he was beaten and
      taken into custody Saturday night. His comments contradict police reports that
      allege Davis was publicly intoxicated. (AP photo/Mel Evans)
      Subject of Taped Beating Says He Was Sober AP - 2 hours, 35 minutes ago
      Sent 129 times

      NEW ORLEANS - A retired elementary teacher who was repeatedly punched in
      the head by police in an incident caught on videotape said Monday he was not
      drunk, put up no resistance and was baffled by what happened.
      10.
      Honor guards, rest the coffin containing the remains of Staff Sgt. William
      A. Allers III, 28, of the Army National Guard's 198th Military Police Battalion,
      75th Troop Command, Louisville, Ky. in a Tuesday, Oct. 4, 2005 photo, during a
      funeral ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery, in Arlington, Va. National
      Guard and Reserve troops are suffering a strikingly higher share of casualties
      in Iraq, their percentage of total U.S. military deaths nearly doubling in the
      past year. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
      Death Toll Rises for Military Reservists AP - 2 hours, 35 minutes ago Sent
      123 times

      WASHINGTON - The National Guard and Reserves are suffering a strikingly
      higher share of U.S. casualties in Iraq, their portion of total American
      military deaths nearly doubling since last year.
      11.
      US President George W. Bush (2nd R) rolls up his sleeves as he walks with
      First Lady Laura Bush (2nd L), Plaquemines Parish President Benny Rousselle (R)
      and Lt. General Russell Honore on their arrival at US Naval Air Station, Joint
      Reserve Base in New Orleans. Bush dined in the famed French Quarter of New
      Orleans, to meet with local leaders on rebuilding the city and other communities
      devastated by Hurricane Katrina(AFP/Jim Watson)
      Hurricane Center Has One Name Left: Wilma SPACE.com / LiveScience.com -
      Mon Oct 10,11:00 AM ET Sent 107 times

      With the forming of the 20th tropical storm in the Atlantic Basin, this
      season becomes the second busiest on record. If one more storm forms, as is
      likely, 2005 will tie for the record and the last name on the list will be used.
      12.
      Fees to fuel 'trusted traveler' program USATODAY.com - Mon Oct 10, 7:33 AM
      ET Sent 106 times

      Airports, security companies and the federal government are mobilizing to
      launch the first nationwide program that speeds "trusted travelers" through
      airport security.
      13.
      Former Education Secretary William Bennett discusses Florida Virtual
      Academy at a news conference in Altamonte Springs in this Tuesday, Aug. 19, 2003
      file photo. The White House on Friday, Sept. 30, 2005 criticized Bennett for
      remarks on his radio show, 'Morning in America,' linking the crime rate and the
      abortion of black babies. (AP Photo/Peter Cosgrove)
      Bennett Blames Media for Stir Over Remarks AP - Sun Oct 9, 8:44 AM ET Sent
      100 times

      BAKERSFIELD, Calif. - Former Education Secretary William Bennett on
      Saturday blamed the news media for distorting his remarks about aborting black
      babies, saying he had intended to make "a bad argument in order to put it down."
      14.
      Mistake Leads to 29-Cent Gas Price AP - Mon Oct 10, 7:37 AM ET Sent 92 times

      LINCOLN, Neb. - One gas station manager's mistake paid off for Lincoln
      drivers who were in the right place at the right time Friday.
      15.
      New SIDS Policy Recommends Pacifiers AP - Mon Oct 10, 7:28 PM ET Sent 91 times

      CHICAGO - Babies should be offered pacifiers at bedtime, and they should
      sleep in their parents' room — but not in their beds — in order to lessen the
      risk of sudden infant death syndrome, the nation's largest group of
      pediatricians says.
      16.
      Road to digital drivers' licenses chaotic Reuters - Mon Oct 10, 1:35 PM ET
      Sent 90 times

      WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States has embarked on a mas

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