|
broadband canada isp - broadband isp portal
John Yourkoski Jr.
He was born in Norway on Sept. 19, 1936, the son of Stella (Oleksy) and the late John Yourkoski Sr. John graduated from Vulcan High School in 1954, and then graduated from Michigan Tech in 1959 with a bachelor�s degree in chemical engineering. He served his country in the U.S. Army in Huntsville, Ala., working on the early NASA projects. John is a member of St. Barbara Catholic Church in Vulcan, Hall-DeWinter Post 145, American Legion, Loyal Order of Moose, 1474, the Norway-Vulcan Senior Center and the North American Hunting Club. He worked for ISP Minerals in Pembine, Wis. John enjoyed many hours in his gardens; he was an avid hunter and fisherman. He was a devoted son, loving brother and uncle. John is survived by his mother, Stella Yourkoski; brother, James (Perianne) Yourkoski of Silverdale, Wash.; sisters, Viola (Willard) Stanchina of Norway, Mary (Robert) Hoheisel of Norway, Theresa (Raymond) Saxton of Newton Falls, Ohio., Jean (Carl) Sims of Charleston, S.C., and Anne (Glenn) Wellman of Nashville, Tenn.; uncles, Walter (Ethelene) Oleksy of Norway and Anthony (Celia) Oleksy of Kenosha, Wis.; many nieces and nephews, great-nieces and great-nephews and cousins; best friend and hunting buddy for 53 years, Joe �Tata� Bal of Norway.
Ofcom wants more honest broadband advertising
Ofcom's consumer panel is (again) demanding that ISPs reduce the gap between 'theoretical' broadband speeds, and those achieved in practice. In an open letter to Ofcom - the telcoms industry watchdog - the panel said it wants regulations in place to force ISPs to make the discrepancies more obvious to punters. Furthermore, says the consumer panel's letter to Father Christmas, if the broadband speeds achieved are nowhere near those promised, customers should be able to change ISP without penalty. And anyone who has ever changed ISPs will say 'amen' to that. Matt Egan | Read more... Revealed: the solution to PC security December 18, 2007 Yes, I inherited the PC-security beat by failing at 'last one out of the office', but malware writers do get the girls.
Webroot(R) Moves Aggressively to Extend Enterprise Security Capability ...
BOULDER, Colo. & LONDON, BUSINESS WIRE -- Webroot Software, Inc., a leading provider of security software for the consumer, Click for the lowest price on dmnobieblankEnterprise');" onMouseOut="setTimeout('hideLayer()',500);" class=hotlink2>enterprise and SMB markets, today announced that it has merged with Email Systems, a leading Software as a Service (SaaS) security provider. Consequently, Webroot moves decisively into providing security SaaS solutions to Click for the lowest price on dmnobieblankEnterprise');" onMouseOut="setTimeout('hideLayer()',500);" class=hotlink2>enterprise organizations, particularly SMBs. Webroot will now provide a new Email and Web Security SaaS solution that delivers email archiving, image scanning and encryption, anti-spam, anti-phishing and Symantec Norton AntiVirus 2007 ( Windows SoftwareMedia-$44.38 VioSoftware-$23.99 Buypcsoft-$28.95 ');" onMouseOut="setTimeout('hideLayer()',500);" class=hotlink2>anti-virus services for protecting email, http web filtering and other web-based communications.
Don't restrict data retention powers, says CMBA
Cyber-rights groups have accused the entertainment industry of attempting to hijack the European Union's data retention legislation. The EU is considering whether to force telecoms operators and internet service providers to retain customer data for up to a year. On Wednesday afternoon, a parliamentary committee approved these plans, which will now be voted on by the EU Council. Several governments, including the UK, want these powers brought in ostensibly to aid investigations into terrorism. But the Creative and Media Business Alliance (CMBA), a group of media companies including EMI, SonyBMG and TimeWarner, has lobbied the EU to allow this data to be used to investigate all crimes, not just serious offences such as terrorism. Opponents have claimed that if this demand was granted, then - combined with the upcoming IPRED2 legislation which could create Europe-wide criminal offences for intellectual property infringement - the entertainment industry would be able to pursue prosecutions against suspected copyright-infringers through the criminal court entirely at the cost of the taxpayer.
|

|