| cp Reseller Hosting
CPWebHosting.net's <b>Reseller Hosting</b> Program Plans are the most all-inclusive web site hosting reseller plans you will find on the web. Please look below for additional benefits and demos of our web hosting reseller hosting Program control panel and automated billing module.cpwebhosting have great <b> web hosting </b> plans you can check out .Platform (Linux and Windows)Brandable Control Panel for end users (optional)Branded signup interface for new customers to purchase your plansUnlimitedDaily Back-upsWeb emailTrouble Ticket SystemSite Studio for all of your domainsGet a PAYPAL ACCOUNT its SAFE!MissionOur mission is to offer customers industry-leading web hosting services and tools, coupled with superior customer support. We arm our customers with the online capabilities of large corporations without burdensome infrastructure - at an affordable price.ExperienceWith over 5 years in the hosting industry, CPWEBHOSTING.NET has grown to become a leader with in the <b> reseller hosting </b> industry.
Has reaction to the Archbishop's Sharia law comments been Islamophobic ...
Furthermore, would he expect Muslim countries to adopt our laws so that we, a minority of Christians feel more at home there? I think not. This has nothing to do with Islamaphobia, it has to do with our ability to stand up for our own Western, Christian culture, ideals and law. If this is not good enough for our Muslim residents then they need to find somewhere else to live. Britain for centuries has been seen as a country with one of the finest legal systems in the world - what exactly are we doing even thinking of compromising it? I would suggest the Archbishop does a bit of research on the implications of Sharia law for women specifically in the areas of marriage and property, before he welcomes it so whole-heartedly. .
Cape May
It did, with the help of grand, colorful Victorians. Residents and business owners (realizing that historical interest might draw people back to Cape May) began restoring their Victorian-style homes and buildings with zeal. In 1976, Cape May was declared a National Historic Landmark. The visitors poured in. .
Data on PolyMedix Antimicrobial Polymers Presented at American Society ...
PYMX), an emerging biotech company developing acute care products for infectious diseases and acute cardiovascular disorders based on biomimetics, announced that Dr. Byron Brehm-Stecher presented data yesterday at the "American Society of Microbiology 6th Annual Biodefense and Emerging Diseases Research Meeting" in Baltimore relating to PolyMedix's proprietary antimicrobial compounds. Dr. Byron Brehm-Stecher of Iowa State University, whose work is supported in part by a grant from PolyMedix, presented a poster presentation relating to the activity of some of PolyMedix's antimicrobial polymer compounds against certain biowarfare pathogens, including S. typhimurium, L. onocytogenes, Y. enterocolitica and E. coli O157:H7, and the enhancement of the activity of the polymers by agents called sesquiterpenoids.
Davidson Calendar: Jan. 25-Feb. 8
Improv Nashville performs scenes, games and a one-act play based on audience suggestions. 8 p.m. Jan. 25, 12th South Arts Venue, 2907 12th Ave. S.; $10; tickets: 418-0905 or www.improvnashville.com. Hamlet: Nashville Shakespeare Festival production in the Trout Theater. For more information call 225-2273 or visit www.nashvilleshakes.org. 7 p.m. Jan. 25-26, 31-Feb. 2; 2:30 p.m. Jan. 27, Belmont University, 1900 Belmont Blvd.; $20. .
about this blog
Both seedlings are big enough that I ought to have laid eyes on them before...but it seems like they appeared from nowhere!In the right foreground of this next pic is a yellow sulfur cosmos seedling I planted just this past week. I'm nearly certain there wasn't another plant crowding so close beside it when I did ...which means the upper seedling has popped up pretty quickly since then while I was busy looking elsewhere...like magic.Posted by PicasaA third yellow and brown iris came into bloom today. They are beautiful, and I'm enjoying having them here. Ungrateful bastard that I am, however, I am hoping there'll be some other colors in the vast array of irises which have yet to bloom. Posted by PicasaI think this one is beautiful, especially in the close up (don't get me wrong) but because of the dark falls, it tends to look much smaller at a distance.
Souped-Up Contact Lenses Promise On-Demand Bionic Eyesight
Potential uses include virtual displays for pilots, video-game projections and telescopic vision for soldiers. A working prototype of a lens-embedded antenna that draws power for the device from radio frequencies has also been created. The next steps are to build a version that can display several pixels—and then to test it on a person. The UW team uses a technique called self-assembly to manufacture the eyewear. Researchers dust a specially designed contact lens with microscale components that automatically bond to predetermined receptor sites. The shape of each component dictates where it attaches. “There's a lot of room to expand," Babak Parviz, an assistant professor of electrical engineering at UW, says of the technology. “You can let your imagination run wild." .
EAST COAST BIAS
The NFL counted it the third-coldest game in league history. The Giants didn't care because this wasn't at Giants Stadium, where they were 3-5, they might want to sign the deed and title over to their Jets roommates. But then, that's what had made the Giants' meteoric recovery all the more stunning. This is a team that started 0-2 with a coach fans wanted fired and a quarterback they wanted benched. Instead of imploding, the Giants set out to prove the world terribly mistaken. "We like to make things exciting," Giants quarterback Eli Manning said. "We don't like to win the easy way with the short field goal. We have to hit the long one on the road." Blame that on Tynes, who could have prevented further exposure to hypothermic conditions by making a 43-yard field goal with 6:49 left in the fourth quarter.
Essay: A more casual approach to the bottom line
Back in my younger days, I had a pretty basic arrangement where money was concerned: Every week I'd earn a little bit of it and, just as regularly, through various transactions, it would end up in the hands of other people. All very simple and straightforward. There was no need for any smooth-talking advisers, helpful booklets, or weekend seminars designed to show me how a property investment in some emerging backwater could be the key to my long-term financial security. But then marriage and a child came along, and suddenly it was important that there was enough money tucked away for a rainy day and maybe even a week in the sun, as well. Pension plans and retirement funds became hot topics, instead of being a conversational fallback. And to top it all off? Thanks to the global economy, those of us within a slightly graying demographic now have international finance to worry about – which, as far as I understand it, involves prime lending rates, the price of various commodities, and the cost of a barrel of oil.
Nearly $10 Million in Domain Names Sold During Moniker's Live and ...
POMPANO BEACH, Fla., Oct. 29 /PRNewswire/ -- Moniker, the first and only provider of Domain Asset Management(TM) services, today announced that its premium domain name auctions at T.R.A.F.F.I.C. East in Hollywood, Fla. generated $9.7 million earlier this month. In total, more than 570 domains offered for bid by Moniker were successfully sold. The live auction, held at the Westin Diplomat in Hollywood, Fla. on October 12, generated more than $7.7 million. Top purchases included: Moniker's live auction marked the first time individuals participated from around the globe via telephone bidding. Individuals from the Middle East, Asia, Australia and Europe purchased some of the top-grossing domains at the auction. Moniker.com also broadcasted the entire auction live through WebmasterRadio.fm and via streaming Webcast.
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.
|