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The Great Showdown: MS Office vs. OpenOffice
"OpenOffice works on Linux, Windows and Mac. It also supports a wider range of languages for its interface, and it's free software so you can adapt it to your needs or easily write add-ons," Mat�as Bellone, analyst at Kayote Networks in Argentina, told LinuxInsider. "I have to admit though, that its interface is still sub-par. The menus are there, and it's as easy to use as MS Office's; it's just not pretty." Learn what new marketing initiatives will affect your business in 2008. PPC, PPP, mCommerce and other options are compared and highlighted during this 30 minute Webinar by MerchantAdvantage CEO, Michael Lambert. Get armed and get ahead of your competition. Click Here to View Now! .
E-SPONDER Express(TM) Now Available for Responder Agencies
ST. LOUIS, Oct. 4 /PRNewswire/ -- Convergence Communications announced the availability of E-SPONDER Express(TM), the first plug-and-play incident management appliance that enables first-responders to prepare, respond and recover from emergency incidents and meet NIMS (National Incident Management Systems) obligations. Affordable for most agencies, E-SPONDER Express is listed at $19,999. E-SPONDER Express comes with NIMS/ICS (Incident Command System) policies and procedures already built into the system. Organizations are able to effectively manage an incident following NIMS/ICS guidelines by filling out ICS Forms in the system, and reporting against the data captured in the system during the incident. Reports and forms it manages can be used as proof of NIMS/ICS compliance.
Mitt Romney on Economics and Energy Policy
The fact that covering the 47 million uninsured already looms as the centerpiece of this debate is a warning sign that it won't be serious. We're told that the uninsured are our biggest health-care problem, but they aren't. Runaway health spending is. Although politicians pay lip service to that, what they really enjoy is increasing spending. It's understandable because expanding benefits is so much more politically rewarding than trying to control them. Everyone believes in adequate health care; people should have it when they need it. Politicians cater to these beliefs. But the intellectual and even moral laziness of this approach results in an invisible abdication of political responsibility. We are letting the unchecked rise in health spending determine national priorities.
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