| Popular Webhost Unveils New Promotion To Significantly Drop Prices
February 24, 2008 ( http://www.eWebGuru.com ) Renowned webhost eWebGuru.com recently announced a cost-cutting coupon that has the web hosting community buzzing. The webhost offers plans on a yearly basis- which already saves consumers money from purchasing plans in bulk. The savings were compounded when the webhost decided to offer the limited time offer for the Silver plan. The website states, Use Promotional Code 295off to get Silver plan in Rs 700/- yearly (Limited time offer)- Using the 295off code will make their popular Silver plan almost 300 Rs cheaper- dropping the price to around a third of the original price of $26.18. Note that the plans are yearly- meaning the actual price for a years worth of service would be under $2 a month.
CoreSpeed Announces the Creation of a Webinar Series for Leveraging ...
ATLANTA, Oct. 8 /PRNewswire/ -- CoreSpeed, LLC, an Atlanta-based provider of branded online community and enterprise social media platforms, is hosting a series of online webinars specifically focused on sharing best practices for online community and enterprise social media. This webinar series, Leveraging Community, is being developed in conjunction with domain subject matter experts and will be focused on introducing the advantages and best practices advice for leveraging online community and enterprise social media for Interactive Marketing, Sales Process Optimization, Customer Support, Interdisciplinary Team Management, Human Resources and Recruiting, Partner and Channel Management, Industry Community Development, as well as, Financial Management. According to John Linss, President and CEO of CoreSpeed, "The business class online community is about enabling internal employee productivity and empowering the ecosystem of business relationships around the enterprise.
Peach Buzz
This was a wedding for couples who don't mind sharing the spotlight on a wedding day and whose idea of romance is the more the merrier. "You know it's not for everyone," Stephen Palmer, a wedding planner and organizer of the event, told Buzz. "But halfway through the ceremony, all eyes were on these couples and weddings are so emotional and when you multiply that by 18, it's really, really cool." And Palmer, married himself about 11 years, surprised his wife, Jennifer, with renewing their vows. "It really took us back to the day we got married on the beach in Hawaii, and we've had a very cuddly weekend ever since." Plans are already on their way for the next event. They will call it "Tie the Knot on Tybee 3 —Third Time's a Charm." Heidi Klum opens arms to Britney Heidi Klum wants to help Britney Spears.
Posted by: Peter Burrows on January 28
And more than ever, it proposes a vision in which data centers are defined not by a computer architecture, be it mainframe or PC server farm, but around the network itself. That makes sense. After all, almost every kind of software is evolving from something that was written for a particular computing platform, into something that is written to be delivered as a service via the Internet. And not static services, either, but ones that can be adapted at a moment's notice on a users' whim—say, by adding a new widget to Facebook, or a new customer order on Salesforce.com. These days, the communication of information—not just the processing of information—is where the action is. Specifically, the company announced the Nexus 7000, its biggest upgrade of the basic corporate network switch since Cisco started selling its now-ubiquitous Catalyst line in the mid-1990s.
Wild Card/Vacation Day 11 of 12
Only two more shopping days until I return to the final days of the City Council campaigns. Then, we'll have fun taking apart the campaigns. Any dirt yet? Any mudslinging. You know, the good stuff. Or is everyone behaving? My wife is now looking over my shoulder -- literally -- so I have to pretend that I'm just checking ball scores. See ya in two days. Here's Wild Card ... .
The Futureheads vs The Maccabees, part two
He was in control, he was like the leader wasn't he – without being a tosser about it, he was like ‘if you want to do something it's gotta come through me'. Or ‘you've got an idea for a song, let's hear it – no, I'm not gonna start mic'ing that one yet ‘cause it hasn't got a big hook'. BH: They were awesome 12-, 13-hour days and then he'd bugger off to Greece at the weekend to play a trance festival or play bass with The Orb in front of 30,000 people. And we'd be on the beach eating sandwiches… (laughter) J: But you wouldn't pick what vocals were used would you, he'd pick them. That's quite important… BH: He can hear it from a different perspective to me – listening back to your voice it's not nice. You kind of hate it, all the little habits and inflections you don't want them to be in there, but actually those are the things that give you the magic.
Gloucester Goings On, part 1
Performances are at 7 p.m. on Dec. 20, 21 and 22, and at 3 p.m. on Dec. 22 and 23. Tickets are $12 for adults, $10 for seniors, $6 for students and $4 for children under 12. For tickets, call 978-281-4433 or visit www.gloucesterstage.org. Constituent service visit State Sen. Bruce Tarr will hold a constituent service visit Friday, Dec. 28, 11:30 a.m., at the Rose Baker Senior Center. All are welcome. Call the Council on Aging at 978-281-9765 to schedule an appointment, or just stop in. Brown bag program Brown bag food packages will be available Friday, Dec. 28, 10:15 to 11:15 a.m., at the Rose Baker Senior Center, for those who have registered to participate in the program. Call the Council on Aging at 978-281-9765. The Open Door Food Pantry, SeniorCare Inc.
AIT Domains VR Program Generates Unrivaled Profits
In the years since AITDomains.com introduced its Virtual Domain Registrar program, it has become a cash cow for hundreds of Internet entrepreneurs and resellers. Fayetteville, NC, March 05,2008--In the years since AITDomains.com introduced its Virtual Domain Registrar program (http://aitdomains.com/vrprogram/?pdkw=pr-domainsvr-prp-03042008), it has become a cash cow for hundreds of Internet entrepreneurs and resellers. Many have used it to register, renew, or transfer hundreds of domains, and some enterprising customers have more than 5,000 domains under their accounts. The user creates the pricing structure, controls the registration process, and owns the customer in every substantive way, says Jamie Moore, Product Manager for the program. The program is white-labeled, so AITDomains.com is invisible to the end user, though there is a support system for virtual registrars.
What do you think?
It is time for our state legislators to back off on the attack on the initiative process.http://www.chronline.com/storyviews.php?subaction=showfull&id=1201289066&archive=&start_from=&ucat=13&SEATTLE TIMES EDITORIAL BOARD, Thursday, January 24, 2008, Another attack on initiative rights: This sounds like it is protecting the public, but it is not. There is no great problem of fraudulent signatures. The Office of the Secretary of State checks signatures, and if the signatures are not valid, it doesn't count them. No measure has gotten onto the ballot by the use of phony names. Why make the citizen who signed the petition the one to lose his rights because of something the signature gatherer did years before?These bills are not aimed at making democracy better. They are aimed at infecting it with rigmarole and risk, and thereby restricting it, so that certain measures never reach the ballot.
Jotspot Returns As Google Sites: Wiki-Style Collaboration
Ever since Google bought the wiki-based online application startup Jotspot in late 2006, people have been wondering if it had disappeared forever inside the bowels of the search giant. Tonight, Google's launching Google Sites, using Jotspot's technology to create a free group collaboration service that will be part of its online software suite Google Apps. Google characterizes Sites, which had been hinted at in late 2007, as the biggest Apps launch since Apps Premier Edition a year ago, and it may be right. The new service lets people in an organization instantly create a wiki-style group workspace, where they can post text, videos, calendars, and various attachments for their group or department to view and edit. Scott Johnston, Google's senior product manager on Sites, has more in a blog post and video.
Economic gurus: Counseling the candidates
The first thing the economics adviser brings to any campaign staff is a hip coolness and bling," he wrote in the New York Times Freakonomics blog. "Economists want to be valued for their minds and respected for their command of policy proposals ... but it just doesn't work that way," he wrote. Nevertheless, Holtz-Eakin, a former director of the Congressional Budget Office and former chief economist on President Bush's Council of Economic Advisers, is well-respected among deficit hawks for his positions on less-than-hip issues like entitlement reform, for which he's advocated early and often. In his view, the sooner the long-term shortfalls in Medicare and Social Security are addressed, the better for the economy. Shoring up both programs would involve tough choices when it comes to spending cuts, Holtz-Eakin has said, a route he believes would be more effective than tax increases.
New on Amazon's Shelves: Storage for Startups
EC2 lets its customers quickly start up a virtual computer in the "cloud" -- industry slang for data centers around the world -- then use it as a Web server or for crunching data and shut it down just as fast. "I don't need to have a systems administrator or a network administrator," said Chief Executive Chris Gay. "I don't have to worry about hardware becoming irrelevant." Gay said he also uses Amazon's online payments service and is evaluating its data storage and simple database services. During the first dot-com boom, he said, "It was a badge of strength to have as much as possible in house. "Now, unless that is your core business...it's a liability." Adam Selipsky, vice president of product management and developer relations for Amazon Web Services, said Amazon wants entrepreneurs to focus on their ideas, not on hardware leases and crashing servers.
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