telecommunication service
- Since the Baltimore Tattoo Arts Convention started five years ago, technology has changed how people behave while they are tattooed — and how artists go about doing business and creating designs, said attendees of the 2012 event, which ends Sunday.
- A 65-year-old Linthicum man who molested a 9-year-old girl and exchanged more than 200 text messages with an undercover detective he thought was her pleaded guilty Thursday to using a cell phone to coerce a minor to engage in sexual activity, according to U.S. Attorney Rod Rosenstein.
- Hopkins researchers aim to uncover which mobile health applications work
- Defense begins case after prosecution questions friends of George Huguely V
- Man charged with stealing, texting pictures of woman's underwear
- Yes, our gadgets our addictive and potentially dangerous, but let he who is without fingers cast the first iPhone out the car window
- Regulations to allow Maryland campaign contributions by text message are winding their way though a state approval process, and the system is expected to be in place early next year. The new method of giving is intended to encourage younger, tech-savvy donors to get involved in campaigns.
- Editorial: A towering question: Where the cell do we put them all?
- During an emotional hearing Friday, the Maryland Public Service Commission adopted new regulations intended to prevent accidental electrocutions, like the one that killed 14-year-old Deanna Green at a church softball game in Druid Hill Park five years ago.
- The mobile app economy is real – and it's brewing in Baltimore.
- A 21-year-old Baltimore man was indicted Tuesday on 15 child pornography counts
- Catonsville business group presents annual awards to local businesses Oct. 12
- Glancing at a text message or an e-mail from behind the wheel will cost $500 in fines starting Saturday, when a new law goes into effect clarifying Maryland's muddled driving-while-texting rules.
- Glancing at a text message or an e-mail from behind the wheel will cost $500 in fines starting Saturday, when a new law goes into effect clarifying Maryland's muddled driving-while-texting rules.
- Phoenix-based Altius Broadband to build wireless broadband network in four rural Kentucky counties.
- Harford and Cecil County departments are preparing for the potential impact of Hurricane Irene.
- Smartphones and security apps are starting to hit college campuses. The University of Maryland developed its own app that broadcasts live video and audio, plus a user's location, if they become a crime victim.
- Coverage of impact of Virginia earthquake on north Baltimore
- Regulations under review by the Maryland Department of Natural Resources should curb rockfish poaching problem
- As work begins on a statewide fiber-optic network that will connect every Maryland school, college, hospital, police and fire station, senior center and library, businesspeople are hoping to get involved
- Baltimore police officers were caught in colorful and disturbing conversations on wiretaps as the FBI investigated alleged kickbacks in a towing scheme.
- Federal authorities charge 17 city police officers in a corruption scheme in which they allegedly steered accident victims to a towing company which then gave them kickbacks in exchange
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