Tuesday, December 11, 2012

The Homeless Approach High Techs

Many of the people feared before the poor can not buy computers and Web access, but now idea is not entirely correct. Charles Pitts, 37-year-old San Franciscan is powered by Twitter account , Facebook as well as MySpace, an Internet forum on Yahoo, reads news online contacts and friends through e-mail while he was living only under a highway bridge for two years. Peter Brown, 47, finished his Asus netbook everywhere since losing his apartment in July this year. Two men typical of those that are still high techs beyond their homelessness. They also prove that the digital life is not just for rich people, but all have the same right to modern technology strategy .
Charles Pitts is a laptop
Another mirror
Paul Weston, 29 years old. He had his Macintosh PowerBook as a "lifeboat" since it was released in December and moved into a shelter. Weston is a store full Foods with free wireless access in the search.
is an effective way for the house to find work with a laptop (see photo)

Lisa Stringer, who runs a computer programming job and skills training home and low-income residents said, some people will still buy the laptop, even if it t 'can read, write and even to "save money" the words.
The homeless man with a laptop wifi (describe images)

To Skip Schreiber, an amateur philosopher who spent his monthly disability check buying a laptop, and shared that he liked Internet 's concept for unlimited source of opinions and thoughts.
Skip Schreiber

Michael Ross, the house is about 15 years ago an HP laptop with 17-inch screen and 320 gigabytes of data storage as well as four additional hard drive may have another 1,000 gigabytes, the equivalent of 200 DVDs.
The old homeless man with a laptop (describe images)

Daniel Goodreau, 50, has a Gateway laptop, even though he was home and no job. This computer will help him to do research about the services online, download movies and chat with his mother's life in Baltimore. He is now friends with 100 people on Facebook and goes to the Santa Fe Public Library for the free use of computers within 60 minutes.