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Southbridge, Mass., now has a way for citizens to submit crime tips anonymously and receive police notifications by downloading the free "Southbridge PD" app. Officials say crimes in progress still require a call to 911.
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Two-way communication during an emergency event is what public safety officials are advocating for with the so-called CodeRed program.
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Patrol officers will soon be able to issue citations and quickly file them with district courts from their cruisers.
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November ballots mark the most widespread use of electronic voting technology ever.
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The town, first to be sold on EBay, received 250 bids over the month it was on the auction block.
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Improvements in technology make wireless an attractive tool for health-care agencies.
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New York launches a $400 Million Wireless Network.
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This Nebraska city is aggressively deploying wireless applications in many agencies.
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Kids playing hooky may have met their match: truancy officers with Web-enabled phones and mobile code scanners.
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New online service in Idaho simplifies interstate fuel-tax filing for truckers and state tax agencies.
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Americans expect the Web to give them news and information on health care and government services.
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The GOP said it will be more careful about what links are on its site.
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Momentum is still building to amend laws in 30 states to help complete the Streamlined Sales Tax Project.
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The Net is 20 years old; though some say it's more like 33.
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More than one million students at all levels of the education system, teachers and staff can download Sun's office suite for free.
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The site is Bush's latest outreach to Hispanics.
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Governors and mayors may join forces to appeal to the U.S. government for federal financial help.
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The first round of PennFIRS data was transmitted successfully, and the state will begin work this month on rolling the program to counties.
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The volume of spam clogging Internet e-mail jumped to 40 percent during 2002, up from only 8 percent in 2001.
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