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A class of enterprise software that enables a large company to manage all contact (or "touches") that it has with its customers. It would track, for example, calls to tech support, faxes, e-mails, direct mail, telephone contacts, and any other contact that a company would have with a customer and vice-versa. This information can be used for analysis of customer relationships, and gives salespeople an understanding of wha - "MerLin" wrote in messagenews:OqCdnf1IRPinkk_cRVn-2A@comcast.com... My wife has a VW Passat wagon - talk about a POS. Here is the short list: - Secondary air pump replaced twice - never fixed - Repeated electrical shorts - Hesitates during key accelaration (on-ramps) - Water pump replaced twice - coolant leaks - Dealership never fixed problems after repeated visits - Awarded a lemon lawsuit judgement WE WILL NEVER BUY A VW AGAIN - THINK TWICE BEFORE BUYING THESE LOW QUALITY VEHICLES - SLICK MARKETING AND NO QUALITY!They sure do BURN good!About 85% of the vehicle fires I see in Southern California are VW's"Farfignugyn" the feeling you get watching your god-damn VW burn to theground before the fire dept gets there
A freeware program that secures e-mail messages by encrypting and/or adding a digital signature to them. There are also commercial versions of PGP available that encrypt data and offer a wider variety of options. - Unless I am mistaken, on Tue, 04 May 2004 21:39:45 -0400, VOIP News wrote: http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/05-04-2004/0002166780&EDATE= First-Quarter Record Sales of Verizon Online DSL Help Fuel DSL Industry Market-Share Growth NEW YORK, May 4 /PRNewswire/ -- Building on momentum from a record DSL sales quarter, Verizon will spur its home broadband growth by offering an additional higher-speed DSL service to consumers this summer and by developing new service packages that include residential voice-over-Internet-protocol (VoIP) services. "We've created one of the best overall values in broadband today, with content, speed, and great service at a very affordable price," said Judy Verses, senior vice president -- marketing for Verizon's Retail Markets Group. "Our sales growth shows that when consumers in the mass market think about broadband, more and more often they're choosing DSL for their high-speed connection. And we're not stopping now." Faster DSL speeds are coming this summer when Verizon Online plans to add a new, additional tier of consumer DSL service with a maximum connection speed of 3Mbps/768Kbps for qualified customers. In addition, when Verizon introduces its consumer VoIP service this quarter, the company will provide it to qualifying Verizon Online DSL customers at a discount. "Fifty-one percent of Verizon's residential customers have purchased local calling in combination with either Verizon long-distance or Verizon DSL, or both," said Verses. "Our ability to offer customers a compelling array of local, long-distance, wireless, broadband and video services is unmatched by our cable competitors. Expanding our DSL service will allow us to offer even more innovative packages that include services like voice over IP." Pricing for the higher-speed DSL service and VoIP package will be announced later. Verses said that, like all Verizon Online DSL offerings, pricing for these services will be highly competitive. This quarter Verizon Online will triple to 384Kbps the upstream speed of its basic DSL offering for qualifying customers. The price for this 1.5Mbps/384Kbps service will remain the same as the current 1.5Mbps/128Kbps service -- $34.95 a month for stand-alone service or $29.95 a month when purchased as part of a package of local and long-distance calling services. Verizon Helps Fuel DSL Market Share Growth A recent Pew Internet & American Life study shows that DSL now has a 42 percent share of the home broadband market, up from 28 percent in March 2003, and that more and more Internet-users are moving from dial-up to broadband. The study also shows that the number of DSL users at home has more than doubled since March 2003, while the number of home cable-modem users grew by less than one-quarter. Last week, Verizon announced record sales for its Verizon Online DSL business with the addition of 345,000 new high-speed Internet customers in the first quarter of 2004, representing a 46 percent year-over-year growth rate. The company now has 2.7 million DSL lines in service. Several Verizon Online initiatives during 2003 contributed to this growth. In May 2003, Verizon Online doubled the maximum connection speed of its entry-level DSL offering to 1.5Mbps/128Kbps while lowering the price of the up to 1.5Mbps service from $59.95 a month to $34.95 a month. At the same time, Verizon lowered the price of basic DSL service to $29.95 a month when purchased as part of a package of Verizon local and long-distance calling services. Also in May, Verizon launched its partnership with MSN and began offering its DSL customers the broadband-enabled content and services of MSN 8 at no additional charge. Today the MSN service has been upgraded to MSN Premium, which includes critical tools like firewalls, virus protection and parental controls. Customer satisfaction has improved. The company streamlined its do-it-yourself DSL installation kit, r
Some scanners support 48-bit color, which offers the ability to identify over 281 trillion (2^48) colors. Such color differences may be imperceptible to the human eye, but as scanner DPI levels increase it helps keep colors more accurate. - Well, now you're really in an area where you'd need someone ina Unix, rather than modem, newsgroup to help you, if you stillfeel that this is a significant issue. (Unless "-onlret" - whichseems more applicable to your situation than "onlret" - works.)Aaron---~ Thank you for your reply.~ To update the issue - problem is now only at Password,~~ GenericSysName (see /etc/issue)~ login: root~ Password:~ Please wait...checking for disk quotas~ ....... (indent will be to the end of last line)~ # (no problem from this point)~~ I then added onlcr and onlret to the /etc/gettydefs file, the entry of~ which now look like,~~ ult9600 #B9600 cs8 hupcl ignpar icrnl ixon opost onlcr onlret cread~ isig icanon echo echok istrip ixany tab3~ #B9600 cs8 hupcl ignpar brkint icrnl onlcr onlret ixon ixoff~~ cread isig icanon echo echok tab3~ #login: # ult9600~~ init q, but the problem after Password: and before # sign remains.~~ Aaron Leonard wrote:~ > On Tue, 09 Sep 2003 14:15:41 GMT, Jun Zhang wrote:~ >~ > ~ Dialing through modems, and logged in, the unix prompt shifts to the~ > ~ right, something like the following,~ > ~~ > ~ # ls~ > ~ a b c d~ > ~ #~ > ~~ > ~ Is this related to some terminal parameters?~ > ~~ > ~~ > ~ Jun~ >~ > Yeah, Unix is sending a bare linefeed aka newline (ASCII 0x0a)~ > at the end of each line of text, and your terminal emulator~ > is displaying the linefeed as such.~ >~ > Your terminal emulator REALLY wants to see a carriage-return /~ > newline sequence (ASCII 0x0d 0x0a) to properly position your~ > cursor.~ >~ > I think you can address this on the Unix side with~ > stty onlcr or maybe -onlret:~ >~ > #man stty~ > ~ > onlcr (-onlcr)~ > Map (do not map) NL to CR-NL on output.~ > ~ > onlret (-onlret)~ > On the terminal NL performs (does not perform) the CR~ > function.~ > ~ >~ > Btw the modems have zero effect on this behavior.~ >~ > Aaron
A method of sending information over a network. With broadcasting, data comes from one source and goes to all other connected sources. This has the side effect of congesting a medium or large network segment very quickly. Sometimes broadcasting is necessary to locate network resources, but once found, more advanced networking protocols change to point-to-point connections to transmit data. Nowadays, switches and routers - On Mon, 7 Jul 2003 20:20:19 +0100, "Bobby" wrote:Cheers Chuck. But I don't want to pay for a fix until I'm sure that that isthe problem. Is there any way of checking if my modem has been hi-jacked? Ivaguely remember some IE control being downloaded just before my problemsstarted. How can I check this?Bobby Modem hijack is a popular scam. Checkout this discussion:http://www.spywareinfo.com/forums/index.php?act=ST&f=16&t=3079&s=fe377012b0cbed4292234c4677998803HijackThis is free, the interpretation by the experts is free, andusually you'll see two or three replies same day after you post the HTlog. Read this article (third try to get this right!):http://www.spywareinfo.com/forums/index.php?act=ST&f=24&t=5187&s=f17386d251d9953a96b4fb2852a447ebCheers,Chuck Crollcacrollthespam@yahoo.comSpam sucks - PLEASE get rid of the spam before emailing me!Trusted Computing? Right! http://www.againsttcpa.com/WHAT IS THE CBDTPA? http://www.stoppoliceware.org/
Someone who seeks to understand computer, phone, or other systems strictly for the satisfaction of having that knowledge. Hackers wonder how things work, and have an incredible curiosity. Hackers will sometimes do questionable legal things, such as breaking into systems, but they generally will not cause harm once they break in. Contrast a hacker to the term cracker or malicious hacker. - "Rick Stoll" wrote in messagenews:9881db65.0404301612.7052d8b0@posting.google.com... I�m an evil servant of hell and I kill people to get steal their blood, because I must write evil books for the devil and evil books must be written in blood.Wouldnt it be easier to keep somebody captive, and then draw blood from themwhenever you need it? This would put you at much less risk of being caughtby the law, and you will always have a fresh source of blood whenever yourdark lord summons you. That way, instead of risking your freedom by killingothers, you merely need to keep somebody in reasonable health, albeitprisoner, to keep writing. It would surely be more convenient, as if youever do run out, you can simply pump them for some more, rather than have tostop your writing, and go out to find a fresh source.
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