To Get Ben Metcalfe into Quadruple Digits...
…on Technorati.
Tis the season.
Happy Blogidays, Ben!
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telecom, technology and the occasional floobergeist
I’ve got an abundance of bits and pieces of canadian telecom and internet experience, and I am thrilled to be in a place in time when all is changing, technology is developing, and the status quo is being disrupted.
Floobergeist is a word that is beginning to defy definition. The more I roll that smooth pebble around, the more it becomes to mean. Floobergeist started out as the magic dust that turns dreams into ideas. And then it began to encompass the zing that happens when you have conversations about those ideas. And now, it’s the whole evolution from dream to conversation, with each step improving the later and the former along the way.
Everyone aspires to good conversations. They can lead you to adventures you’ve never imagined, and to people you can twig with.
Let’s have a good conversation…
welcome.
…on Technorati.
Tis the season.
Happy Blogidays, Ben!
Technorati Tags: Ben Metcalfe, Technorati
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Good Monday News! The CRTC has been overruled by Ottawa yet again. Last month it was deregulation of Voice over IP services, now it’s the deregulation of local voice services, one of the last, locked down, traditional components of the major incumbents. Industry Misister Maxime Bernier has given BELL, TELUS and the rest of the incumbents the power to set their own prices, as long as there is sufficient competition in the local area. Hmmm…. I don’t see a definition for “sufficient competition” yet. (Updated: Mark Goldberg’s got the definition, and it’s EASY!) It used to be required that 25% of the local services had to be held by a competitive carrier in an area, before BELL could change their pricing. This could change the face of local voice services, which can only be good news for the Canadian consumer. Mark Evans has more details.
Monday’s move throws out the old CRTC threshold policy and furtherreinforces Bernier’s reputation as a minister who favours free-marketsolutions to telecom issues.
Ottawa overrules CRTC; to accelerate deregulation of local phone service
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Ok, Jay Andrew Allen (aside from the fact that I dig people with 3 names), bless your bloggy heart and your Sugar Rush!
I even grudgingly appreciate your love-hate relationship with Violent Acres. Althought I've got to admit, blatent self-promotion is in most bloggers DNA, if you dig deep and long enough at their genetic makeup. :-)
My apologies for lumping you in with the die-hard "haters". ;-)
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Ever since stumbling upon it last week, I am addicted to violent acres. Her blatent no bull attitude, her hilarious commentary that pokes fun at the real world, and the sordid people populating it, everything.
Sure, folks are noticing. Ben Metcalfe noticed, but I don’t think he’s as thrilled as I am. The Zero Boss also has a few choice words. The vast majority of the blogosphere is taken up with angst about violent acres. Who is she? What is she doing? Is it all for her blog-ego? How come she won’t identify herself? Ben went so far as to reverse engineer her site and came to the conclusion that she’s no ordinary blogger, her back end (no pun intended) is too customized and technical for most folks to pull together.
Violent Acres just put up a FAQ, answering many of the questions that people have been asking, and she hits the nail right on the head. She’s my new double-espresso shot for the morning. Gets the brain going, no sugar needed.
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I believe the culprit is insular blogging. Insular blogging is when yousit and post content to your blog never linking to or talking aboutother bloggers, blogs or websites. You need to interact with theblogosphere and other people online in order to grow your trafficrapidly.
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I’ve got thestar.com in my news reader, and have been following along through some of the articles on the upcoming mortgage fraud legislature that’s to be launched in the upcoming months. It’s just a hobby, learning about mortgages, now that I’ve *got a biggie*…..
Aside from the reports of people being financially targeted as victims of mortgage fraud, there’s also an interesting story of a couple who is working on a petition to tighten up the legislation when it comes to titles and land ownership. In Ontario alone there are 10 instances where people’s homes have been stolen using falsified documents. That sounds like a low number, but when the average pricetag is $700,000 per instance of fraud, it’s not an insignificant number. :-(
There are no real organizations that help you keep your mortage, and look out for people who have become victims of fraud, but there *are* a few who make sure that the house that you want to buy aren’t “fraudulently” on the market, and that’s a step in the right direction. Mortgages are easy to get usually, and no one thinks that the house the’ve fallen in love with has more strings that a marionette attached to it. It’s difficult for most people to figure out the research needed to actually perform more due dilligence on mortgages, refinancing and real estate, so there’s a definite market for this sort of mortgage service.Stay tuned to the Star to see if the mortgage legislature is passed…
Technorati Tags: mortgages, mortgage fraud
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Systems restored at 8:41.
Funny - no mention yet of the outage or what caused it, anywere….. curious.
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