Archive for the ‘E-Marketing’ Category

Filed Under (E-Marketing) by admin on April-1-2008

The word automation has become a widespread lately. This is not a problem to search out the corporation that proposes the solutions for this issue. Those programs are sold in shiny boxes with a lot of great characteristics, whistles and bells. Having analyzed all the factors for and against the usage of such programs, I arrive at conclusion that there are several reasons for the businessman not to use stuff management programs.

Reason 1: It is not a freeware soft. That is impracticable to search out the free employee management software. In addition to starting fee, you have to pay for maintenance, updates and support. Lots of people utilize such software no matter how much does it cost. If you clearly see how the benefits do it, pay. In case you don't, keep the funds. Money is the lesser evil.

Read the rest of this entry »



Filed Under (E-Marketing) by admin on September-23-2007

The world looks a lot smaller nowadays, as progress in telecommunications and technology binds more and more gaps between people daily. International calls may now be more accessible and more affordable, because of these innovations. At MyCalls.org, people from any corner of the globe may now get the prepaid phone cards they want to call anyone anywhere. Buying the prepaid credits you need is easy through MyCalls.org. Simply enter the country from where you will be making the call, and enter the country of the person you are calling. Read the rest of this entry »



HSPA is the name used for UMTS (Universal Mobile Telecommunications System) networks that provide both HSDPA (High Speed Downlink Packet Access) and HSUPA (High Speed Uplink Packet Access). A presentation from 3G Americas included market statistics showing 169 UMTS operators in 71 countries and 117 HSDPA operators in 59 countries. Clearly, HSDPA is seeing a global surge of deployment, and for good reason. With user rates frequently above 1 Mbps and sub-100 msec latency, most networking applications work extremely well. As explained in a presentation from Ericsson, HSDPA was specified in 3GPP (Third Generation Partnership Project) Release 5 specifications. Release 6 includes HSUPA, and you’ll start seeing HSUPA this year from UMTS operators such as AT&T. HSUPA will bring uplink speeds in line with downlink speeds, though as with EV-DO Rev A and WiMAX, uplink spectral efficiency is typically only half of downlink spectral efficiency, so peak rates normally will be lower than the downlink rate. Nevertheless, uplink speeds will be impressive. Ericsson showed live operator data for one network with median bit rates of 1.0 Mbps. HSUPA also enables lower latencies, as low as 50 msec when measured from the mobile device to the edge of the network. HSDPA itself will get faster, with devices supporting peak rates of 7.2 Mbps, enabling real-world throughputs of 2 Mbps to 3 Mbps, assuming the operator has the bandwidth in its backhaul to support these rates.
Read the rest of this entry »