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news and events |
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2014-07-10
EV1 and The Planet Announce MergerCombination Creates Industry-leading Dedicated Hosting Company; Combined Company Will Continue to Deliver Industry-leading Client Experience
Houston, Texas and Dallas, Texas | May 6, 2006: Everyones Internet (EV1) and The Planet, two leading suppliers of dedicated hosting, declared today they have merged. |
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2012-05-28
Vodacom promotion continuesVodacom has extended its MyGig one and MyGig two info contract promotion, which offers 1GB for R99 and 2GB for R149, to 31 July 2012. |
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client comments |
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"I get no problems whatsover..."
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"Thanks, we checked out the site this weekend [and] we are really stoked! It really is what we are looking for..."
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latest articles |
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2014-06-14
Nature of the Work About this sectionAn overview and general explanation of Graphic Designers, their job and responsibilities.
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2012-02-08
7 Essential Search Engine Optimisation ElementsWhen it comes to Search Engine Optimisation, many companies assume that getting results is as simple as adding keyword-stuffed webpages onto their sites. But there are several factors one should know about...
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We Accept:
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Chinese government website attacks
2012-04-05
China was wrestling Thursday to revive 1 or 2 central authority internet sites that global hacking group incognito explains it attacked in a clear protest against Chinese Web limitations. On a Twitter account established in late March, nameless China listed the sites it asserts it hacked during the last a few days. They include state firms in 1 or 2 Chinese towns, including in Chengdu, a regional capital in southwest China. Some of the sites were still blocked Thursday, with errors shown. Incognito activists have defaced internet sites around the planet. They're engaged in political causes, including opposition to the worldwide clampdown on file-sharing sites and defense of the secret-spilling site WikiLeaks. Some internet sites that secret asserted it attacked were working Thursday, and state officers denied the sites were ever hacked. China's Countrywide PC Network Emergency Reply Technical Team wasn't available for swift comment. In a message left on one of the hacked Chinese sites cdcbd.gov.cn, a default page for Chengdu's financial district the hackers voiced fury with the Chinese govt for limitations placed on the Web. "Dear Chinese administration, you aren't infallible, today web sites are hacked, tomorrow it'll be your evil regime that may fall," the English-language message read. "What you do today to your Great Folk , tomorrow will be inflicted to you. With no mercy." The message also offered directions on the best way to by-pass China's limitations on its Net . The govt. makes an attempt to block Web users in China from seeing social media sites like Facebook and Twitter. Info on politically delicate subjects is sometimes blocked.
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