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Posh And Becks Top Chart In 'Cool For Kids' Poll
Motorola's i-generation youth survey reveals what's hot and what's not in teenage Britain
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Girls Just Wanna Have Phones
Motorola's i-generation youth poll reveals what's hot and what's not in teenage Britain
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DVD Set To Become Most Popular Form Of Recorded Home Entertainment
British public believe DVD will replace VHS as source of entertainment in the home
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British Attitudes To Technology - Now And In The Future
The British public wants maintenance free cars, self cleaning kitchens, calorie free food and electronic access to community information, according to the 1999 Motorola report on the British and Technology, published today, 20 July.
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Home Internet Penetration Takes Off
Penetration of the internet is now higher at home than at work in countries with the highest overall access, according to the most recent wave of the IriS Network Internet Usage Survey. The traditional preference for usage at work has been overturned in Denmark, Sweden, Australia, Canada and the Netherlands.
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Have-a-Go Plumbers Could Land in Deep Water!
If your plumbing sprung a leak, would you reach for the telephone or the toolbox?
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As New HIV Diagnoses Increase, MORI Poll Shows A Long Way To Go On Safer Sex Message
Around one in 14 adults are having unsafe sex when entering a new relationship according to a MORI opinion poll published for the Terrence Higgins Trust
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Sir Cliff Richard Beats Blair, Hague and Darling in Money Advice Poll
More people would trust Sir Cliff Richard than either Tony Blair or William Hague to sell them a decent pension, and virtually no one would choose Alastair Darling, the Government Minister in charge of pensions - according to a new MORI survey for i.e. group, a UK new financial services group.
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ICL calls for Year 2000 Glasnost and an end to complacency
Feeling threatened? You're not alone. Confusion and mistrust reigns in the countdown to the millennium
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Crisis Provides Christmas Cheer For Lonely And Excluded
Crisis today opens its nationwide network of Christmas services, which seek to help combat the exclusion and isolation of homeless people, as new MORI research reveals that unemployed people, state pensioners and low-income earners are more likely to spend Christmas alone.