|
|
isp reseller program, reseller program ispreseller program, isp, isp reseller program isp reseller program |
Your
best deal for Internet service!
$1.00 for first 3 Months!

This
deal is also good for our CopperHiSpeed premium service!
* This offer is good for new accounts only. After 3 months your account
will be billed $9.95 a month for our standard monthly plan. There are
no additional fees or contracts required to take advantage of this limited
time offer. Tell
your friends!
|
 |
If you have any questions, please call us at:
| Mention promotional code 1012005 for free support! |
888-336-3318
|
Copper.net is affiliated with these organizations that assure the highest standards
of security, privacy,
and business practices.
|
|
ISP Information:
A method of constructing transistors which produces microchips that run with relatively low power consumption compared to other methods. Most of the chips found in a modern PC are built using CMOS technology. ISP Glossary:
Complementary Metal-Oxide Semiconductor - Arik Hesseldahl, 06.04.04, Forbes.comNEW YORK - Before the iPod, even before the Walkman personal stereoand the portable boom box, the transistor radio was one of the greatelectronic status symbols of young consumers.If you're of a certain age, you'll remember how the counterparts totoday's owners of Apple Computer's. iPod music players could be pickedout by the pocket-sized electronic box they held up to their ear. Thefirst transistor radio was produced in 1954 through a joint venturebetween Texas Instruments and a company known as IndustrialDevelopment Engineering Associates. But a little Japanese maker calledTokyo Tsushin Kogyo made it a cultural phenomenon. That company laterchanged its name to Sony .Aside from MP3 players, the mobile phone is probably the closestcultural equivalent to the transistor radios of old. A visit to anysuburban mall on a Saturday afternoon proves that. Teenagers gab ontheir phones endlessly and are never caught without them.That's a point not lost on Nokia the world's largest maker of mobilephones. One often overlooked feature on several Nokia phones is theability to receive FM radio signals, many of the company's phones havebeen equipped to receive FM radio signals. Nokia reckons that 77% itscustomers who use the simple radio feature tend to use it about once aweek, and consider it important. Now the company wants to make themobile phone the preferred way of listening to the radio and accessingrelated content.http://www.forbes.com/wireless/2004/06/04/cx_ah_0604radio.htmlEric Friedebach/VoIP: prank calls to ex-girlfriends has never been cheaper/[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Eric's comments about the firsttransistorized pocket radios reminds me of the one I had while inhigh school, 1956 or so. They only had AM signals of course, andyou had to put this plug in your ear which looked like a hearing aid.People who did not know me, and some who did, would see me walkingaround with that plug in my ear, and say "Oh how unfortunate thatat your young age you have to use a hearing aid. Are you mostly deafor just a little bit 'hard of hearing'? PAT]
|
|