julezdahat

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internet guide online uk

internet guide online uk

When buying a T1 or T3 line the first thing that probably comes to mind is, "what will it cost?" Second thought is probably, "who can I trust for service?" These thoughts amongst the various available providers can very well cripple your move to a crawl towards such a purchase. This is where a bandwidth broker already begins to make sense.

A bandwidth broker is very valuable towards your service reliability and cost when considering a T1/T3 line. Here we will explain the logic behind the use of a broker for dedicated services.

A bandwidth broker essentially represents many different bandwidth providers. Don’t be afraid though, these providers are usually heavily scrutinized before ever being offered. A broker’s business is your satisfaction so it wouldn’t make sense to allow low grade providers into the equation. Most brokers offering provider services are not fortune 500 companies that can afford to loose your business. This quest for your satisfaction is the drive that alone already makes a broker a wise decision.

Next of the broker’s pro attributes is the broker’s buying power. Now this buying power is not the power of the broker’s money but rather that of it’s accumulated client base. A broker, because of it’s number of clients is given more consideration when it comes to price negotiating. Depending on your desired service, the savings a broker can offer you can amount to a lot.

Quality of service is always going to be of most importance to you and again that is where the broker comes in again. After a purchase through a broker you are not left to fend for yourself. A broker receives a commission for the life of your contract including the extension. If there ever is a problem with your services a broker is your advocate and that literally speaks volumes. Again, customer volume comes into play.

When a broker makes a call to the provider regarding a service issue it is not just one company making the complaint but the broker who represents many of the same provider’s clients. Providers do not want to tarnish the relationship with a broker. A broker can easily recommend another provider to a large base of clientele and a provider would suffer a much harsher blow than if losing only one customer.

A broker is technically proficient in the aspects of bandwidth implementation and acts as a friendly consultant to the newest of clients. No question is ever too small or stupid so you can be assured to be comfortable in getting to know new technologies and how to get your company with the times.

In short a broker can be your cost reducer, your customer service, and your I.T. consultant all in one without any additional cost to you. There really is no reason not to use a broker.

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July 19, 2007 Posted by julezdahat | Blogroll | | No Comments

Can Bamboo Flooring Really Help Save The Worlds Environment?

A. Smith Probably not on its own, but its an excellent example of how consumers can vote with their buying dollars to sway market demand to bring more environmentally friendly products into the marketplace.

Bamboo flooring is a rising trend in home flooring and a great alternative to traditional hardwood floors. It is the most environmentally friendly natural hardwood flooring alternative you can select for your home, it is a renewable resource, is stronger than steel, and has a greater resistance to expansion and contraction problems associated with temperature and humidity changes.

The bamboo grass is one of the fasted growing plants on the planet, only takes 5 years to grow to maturity, and can provide 25 times the bio mass of a comparable stand of trees. Bamboo is harvested every 5 years, and starts to re-grow immediately with new shoots when harvested. Bamboo is also strong and has a tensile strength exceeding mild steel. It can withstand up to 50,000 pounds of pressure per square inch versus some steels 50,000 psi ratings.

Bamboo flooring is also become a very trendy interior design statement with its rich and beautiful golden earth tones. It is important to shop around for a quality bamboo flooring product that contains no formaldehydes in its binding compounds. Many offshore brands use cheaper binding agents that may contain formaldehydes, and this can cause indoor air pollution problems down the road as all chemical compounds will slowly release their toxins into the air.

So why look to bamboo to save the environment? Bamboo is an excellent replacement product for much of the hardwood species that are being harvested in our global equatorial rainforests. Once harvested, these hardwood species often never grow back due to the thin layers of soil and lack of sunlight under the jungle canopies, and if they do grow back it can take up to 200 years! Our global rainforests are the lungs of our planet and provide a significant contribution to our global oxygen production, second only to the ocean.

By selecting bamboo flooring you reduce the consumption demand for rainforest hardwood materials, and in the process help save to the environment for our future generations. For more information and tips on bamboo flooring visit: http://www.laminateflooringzone.com/bamboo-flooring.htm




About The Author

S.A. Smith is a freelance writer, contributor, and editor of the Laminate Flooring Zone and can be reached at http://www.laminateflooringzone.com.

July 19, 2007 Posted by julezdahat | Uncategorized | | No Comments

Can Bamboo Flooring Really Help Save The Worlds Environment?

A. Smith Probably not on its own, but its an excellent example of how consumers can vote with their buying dollars to sway market demand to bring more environmentally friendly products into the marketplace.

Bamboo flooring is a rising trend in home flooring and a great alternative to traditional hardwood floors. It is the most environmentally friendly natural hardwood flooring alternative you can select for your home, it is a renewable resource, is stronger than steel, and has a greater resistance to expansion and contraction problems associated with temperature and humidity changes.

The bamboo grass is one of the fasted growing plants on the planet, only takes 5 years to grow to maturity, and can provide 25 times the bio mass of a comparable stand of trees. Bamboo is harvested every 5 years, and starts to re-grow immediately with new shoots when harvested. Bamboo is also strong and has a tensile strength exceeding mild steel. It can withstand up to 50,000 pounds of pressure per square inch versus some steels 50,000 psi ratings.

Bamboo flooring is also become a very trendy interior design statement with its rich and beautiful golden earth tones. It is important to shop around for a quality bamboo flooring product that contains no formaldehydes in its binding compounds. Many offshore brands use cheaper binding agents that may contain formaldehydes, and this can cause indoor air pollution problems down the road as all chemical compounds will slowly release their toxins into the air.

So why look to bamboo to save the environment? Bamboo is an excellent replacement product for much of the hardwood species that are being harvested in our global equatorial rainforests. Once harvested, these hardwood species often never grow back due to the thin layers of soil and lack of sunlight under the jungle canopies, and if they do grow back it can take up to 200 years! Our global rainforests are the lungs of our planet and provide a significant contribution to our global oxygen production, second only to the ocean.

By selecting bamboo flooring you reduce the consumption demand for rainforest hardwood materials, and in the process help save to the environment for our future generations. For more information and tips on bamboo flooring visit: http://www.laminateflooringzone.com/bamboo-flooring.htm




About The Author

S.A. Smith is a freelance writer, contributor, and editor of the Laminate Flooring Zone and can be reached at http://www.laminateflooringzone.com.

July 18, 2007 Posted by julezdahat | Uncategorized | | No Comments

OPML 2.0 as a namespace

First, I want to be able to use elements of OPML 2.0 in my RSS feeds. I’m already doing it on an experimental basis, in the RSS 2.0 feed for TwitterGrams.

http://mp3.twittergram.com/rss.xml

Note that it declares a “opml2″ as a namespace at the head of the document, and it uses as the URI for the namespace, the OPML 2.0 spec. Apparently this breaks nothing, I’ve had no complaints about this feed. That doesn’t mean there are no problems, however none have been reported.

The question is, can we put a namespace declaration at the head of an OPML file without breaking processors. When we tried to do this when RSS 2.0 was in its final shakeout (almost five years ago), it broke a bunch of apps and we had to back out of the idea.

It may be a problem with OPML as well. The point of this post is to ask for opinions of XML experts. Breakage of existing apps is not an option (see this post by Dare Obasanjo for an idea why).

Why we fight

Cindy Sheehan was on Hardball last night, and said the most reasonable thing I’ve heard on news TV in a very long time, maybe ever. She said that the reason we’re occupying Iraq is that it makes money for the people who run the country. Chris Matthews acted incredulous, and pressed her on it, almost ridiculing her. “Come on, do you really believe that?” may not have been his exact words but they were the sentiment he communicated.

This made me wonder about Matthews. Could he not believe it? Is he so much a Washington insider that he doesn’t see it? Then I wondered about the people who read my blog.

A picture named eisenhower.jpgNow that most of us are against the occupation, please, if you haven’t already done so, watch the movie Why We Fight. Or if you’ve already seen it, do it again, and tell a friend. It’s not very long, and it’s certainly not biased. Most of the people they interview are Republicans, John McCain, for example. A former head of the CIA explains what blowback means. They interview the people who flew the first bombing mission over Iraq. A former analyst inside the Pentagon. They’re not typical anti-war people, they’re just telling the truth. You can tell because unlike all the crap you hear that passes for news and analysis, it has the ring of truth. It checks out, it makes sense.

We go to war because it’s profitable.

But it doesn’t make sense for most of us to support more war, because it may make us richer in the short term, in the long term (which is starting to be short term) it costs too much. It’s against our interest.

I’m old enough to remember Vietnam, and after it was over, I was sure that we would not make the same mistake in my lifetime. Well, it seems we didn’t learn the lesson well enough. It’s too easy for us to go to war. We need to do something to end the Iraq occupation, to bring our forces home and regroup. And we have to, this time, learn not just the lesson of Iraq, but the lesson of having a government that’s controlled by people who profit from war.

I love Italia!

According to Paolo, Il Corriere della Sera is one of the two most read Italian newspapers.

They have a great picture of an Italian American babe thinking about the history of something or other. It’s all in Italian.

In her mind, in 1997, is a picture of me, a nutty one at that (taken by Joe Beda), with the caption: “Dave Winer creates a new type of web site, the ‘weblog.’”

Italy is a great place! smile

It’s not a war

I find myself yelling at the TV when Bush talks about “the front” in “the war.”

It’s not a war and there is no front.

It’s much worse. In a war with a front the troops who are not on the front lines are under much less pressure than the ones at the front. In most wars the front-line troops die in great numbers. They rotate troops in and out so that only a very small number are at such high risk at any time.

In Iraq, which is an occupation, not a war, all our troops are at equally high risk any time they are off-base.

This is a very subtle way our leaders lie. They use the logic of war. Most Americans probably aren’t aware that it’s a lie. That’s why I edit my pieces so where ever I would say “war” I say “occupation.” You should do it too.

New formats for conferences

I don’t go to many conferences these days, certainly not as many as I used to. Sitting in a dark hall, checking email, blogging, etc — why go somewhere else to do what I do at home? The hallway conversations are good up to a point, but then I wonder why I can’t read about the products people are pitching on their websites, where I can also try them out.

So we experiment with new formats, to try to give us what we want. Which of course raises the question — what do we want? At breakfast a few weeks ago here in Berkeley, with a group of friends, I posited an opinion — what we want when we meet with other people is to explain who we are, and explore our issues, and learn who other people are, and what their issues are. We put all kinds of symbols in the way of the pure experience, but at the core that’s what’s actually going on.

One of my table-mates, a psychiatrist, agreed and added an eye-opening idea. She said that medicine and technology have one thing in common, most of the people you meet never grew up. She explained that in medicine they didn’t have to, because everyone looks up to them as having godlike insight into the meaning of existence, and the people in the profession tend to believe the hype. Having been in tech for many years, and having been treated by many doctors in recent years, I saw the pattern too.

A picture named scales.gifWhy grow up when the world confirms what we all tend to believe anyway, that we have special insight into meaning. This certainly is an idea that is reinforced in the tech business. And it’s why our conferences have become so boring — because despite all the odds against it, we actually are growing up. There is a difference between tech and medicine. We have bubbles and they burst, and when that happens, we’re left to figure out what went wrong. It’s these crises that force us to confront the reality that there are other people here, that it’s not all about us. And that of course is on the path to becoming an adult. There’s more to this, of course, but this is a blog post, not a book. smile

So, if we’re ready for more, if we’ve grown beyond just wanting to put the big kids on a soapbox and admire them, what’s next? I may have stumbled across an idea a few weeks ago when I invited some experts in mobile technology to my house for dinner, and asked them questions to bring me up to speed on some of the issues. It turned into a conversation, with six very alive, very informed people that lasted three hours or so. We didn’t record it. No one took notes. We agreed not to blog the details. It was a memorable evening, something I will repeat, and others can do it too. And it’s something that may make sense at an industry conference.

Imagine an evening event where, at random, groups of six were put together in a room with food and drink, perhaps an inspiring view, and a topic to discuss. As with our evening confab, it would be off the record, just a discussion that might or might not lead somewhere. You have to get beyond the usual surface-level stuff because you have three hours to fill. Who knows what might happen?

Blogs I’m reading

These are not new blogs, but ones I started reading recently.

Michael Miller was the innovative editor-in-chief of InfoWorld and PC Mag, and now he’s got a blog. I’ve always valued his opinion of software and technology.

I bought a car almost two weeks ago after a couple of months shopping. I bought a car that this blog, The Truth About Cars, hated. But I love the blog, it’s irreverent and has reminded me of something important, if you want credibility with readers you have to regularly take shots at the vendors in the industry you cover (if you cover an industry). Clearly TTAC is not in bed with any of the manufacturers, that’s why I, as a user, trust their advice, even if I don’t follow it.

Which leads me to Uncov, a site that takes cheap shots, regularly, at the icons of the tech blogging world. No, I wouldn’t like it if they said these kinds of things about me, and I’m sure I will get my turn, but these guys remind me of the kind of incisive writing that used to come from Spy, or the National Lampoon or even Suck, in their heyday. They’re great writers (even though they deny it), and provide a valuable alternative to the knee-grabbing footsy-playing party-goers of the Bay Area.

July 18, 2007 Posted by julezdahat | Uncategorized | | No Comments

Bath Style

Baths Take On a New Seasoned Look from Modern to Traditional

By: Shelley Murphy

Everything old is new again especially when it comes to bathroom remodeling.

HomeoweraredicoverigoeofthehottettrediathroomdecorirelacigexitigathtuwithvitageVictoria

As do people come in all shapes and sizes, baths are following suit to accommodate every lifestyle exemplifying unique individual tastes incorporating extraordinary design elements. Creating a bathroom to reflect one’s personal style can easily be accomplished with several different designs to choose from. Freestanding roll top baths are a great way to combine contemporary with traditional design by incorporating an ornate wooden pedestal or classical ball and claw foot mounts.

July 15, 2007 Posted by julezdahat | Blogroll | | No Comments

Dust Mites

Dust Mites

Housing and Asthma

My guess is that you don’t know much about dust mites except they are small, unseen creatures that disgust you.

Well Perhaps someone in your household is allergic to them. Here is some background information on dust mites and how you can work to control them in your houe.Dust mites dont live in your air ducts, although most people tend to focus there when attempting to remove them. They live in soft places, prefer higher humidity and release a protein which causes an allergic reaction for many people. If you dont have any reactions to dust mite proteins then reducing your exposure may not be a priority for you but these basic treatment steps should still be taken to reduce their presence in your home and affect on your life. If you need motivation to do some of these steps you can see pictures of dust mites by doing this google image search. They’re gross enough to scare anyone into a rapid cleaning spree.

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July 15, 2007 Posted by julezdahat | Blogroll | | No Comments

Home Magazine

Home Improvements

House Beautiful [1-year subscription]

Taking the time to read up on the latest trends is always a good idea

As a real estate investor it is sometimes a good investment move to make home improvements to any real estate properties that you purchase.

There are several mistakes that commonly occur involving home improvement and real estate investing, and by knowing what these mistakes are you can save a lot of money and aggravation. Let the mistakes that other real estate investors have made be your guide on what to avoid.

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July 14, 2007 Posted by julezdahat | Blogroll | | No Comments

Cool Stuff

June 5, 2007 Posted by julezdahat | Blogroll | | 1 Comment

a steal

June 3, 2007 Posted by julezdahat | Blogroll | | No Comments

Great Wine Links

May 13, 2007 Posted by julezdahat | Blogroll | | No Comments