Online

Chabaso Bakery

Chabaso Bakery

This site showcases Chabaso Bakery's many products, and includes recipes for their use.

Exitthree

Exitthree

Exitthree.com serves as a portfolio for the work of Daniel Holevoet. It has been recently rewritten using Ruby on Rails.

Jonathan Edwards

Jonathan Edwards

This is the digital home of Jonathan Edwards residential college at Yale.

New Haven County Bar Association

New Haven County Bar Association

This is a site featuring the services of the New Haven County Bar Association, as well as providing resources to members of the Bar and the community.

PIROET

PIROET

PIROET Design is a small design firm based in New Haven, CT. Their site serves as a portfolio of their work.

In The Yale Daily News

iTunes offers legal 'sharing'

Yalies have rushed to download the iTunes music player and iTMS since it became available to Windows users two weeks ago. But while an Apple press release says users downloaded one million songs within the first 3.5 days the software was available to Windows users, many Yalies said they use it mainly to "share" others' music, not to buy songs from the iTMS... >>

Wireless network is not completely safe

Close study reveals that Yale's wireless network is not entirely safe - third parties could gain access to users' data... >>

Yalies consider risks of electronic polling

It is once again the time of year when Yalies rush to send out their absentee ballots and prepare for their traditional trips to the polls on the first Tuesday of November. But within the near future, many Yale voters may be voting electronically - either online or with a digital polling machine. This future promises convenience, but comes with uncertainties for voting security and fraud... >>

Profs explore use of MEMS

MEMS are traditional electronic circuits like those found inside a computer, but with added sensors and mechanical components that allow the system to respond intelligently to its environment. And, because they are produced in a manner similar to other circuits, they may be produced at low cost... >>

Spyware is the newest epidemic to hit PCs

Today, a new generation of software sits on the computers of unsuspecting users - but instead of spreading itself in the most obvious fashion, it lies in wait, doing any number of unpleasant things to the user's computer and data. This parasite is called spyware... >>

Tables turn in campus Mac vs. Windows feud

With a reinvented, cutting-edge operating system and a cool, sleek design, Apple is clawing its way to technological equality on campus. Products like the iPod and iTunes have transformed the Apple brand into a status symbol as much as a technological tool, and alternative platforms such as Linux have moved out of the shady realm of hackers and into the public eye. The debate is renewed... >>

Safety of private info on Internet is questionable

The most conscientious Yalies will password-protect their laptops, shred personally identifying documents and be wary of online phishing schemes in order to protect their identity. In a more perfect world, this would be enough. But the harsh reality is that much of the information students seek to keep private is open to prying eyes everywhere - on University Web sites and the popular thefacebook.com... >>

Network troubles usually have a quick fix

Almost every Yalie uses the University network on a daily basis, and every student has probably had problems with it as well. But with a few simple tricks and basic knowledge of the network's structure, most problems can be avoided... >>

Not connected yet? Here's how

For most, getting setup to use the Yale network is easy. Students can connect their computers via Ethernet into the wall jacks of the room - into the red port, not the blue one, if there is a choice - and then visit yale.edu/netreg in a browser. The netreg site is smart enough, in most cases, to automatically detect the computer's Ethernet hardware address which is what Yale uses to identify the computer... >>

With email, sometimes the best is free

Imagine life 20 years ago. No cheap cell phones, no instant messaging and, worst of all, no e-mail. But thankfully, we're not in the past. We live in the present and have more options than ever when it comes communicating via what has become many college students' medium of choice - e-mail... >>

Role-playing games provoke legal concerns

MMORPGs currently attract more than 4 million subscribers worldwide, and the majority of those subscribers are paying subscription rates of $10 to 15 per month. Of course, the real economic interest in MMORPGs does not come from the subscription fees; rather, it comes from all of the peripheral investments players make in the games... >>

Popular alternatives add to software choices

When computers first became available to individuals, most of the cost was in the hardware, and the software that it came with was basically free. But today, with computers available in abundance for a few hundred dollars, most of the computing cost is in the software that users purchase. Fortunately, for the cost-conscious, free or open source alternatives now exist for many popular, or expensive, applications - whether Yalies choose to use Windows, Mac OS X or Linux. Open source projects are programs that provide source code along with the application, allowing users to modify the software to their preference, or run it for free... >>