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BBC outsource deal includes staff black list







BBC outsource deal includes staff black
list

BBC outsource deal includes staff black
list
06/16/2004 07:03 AM

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BBC outsource deal includes staff black list

Grok Headline matches for BBC outsource deal includes staff black list

Inverclyde IT staff fight outsource
threat


Inverclyde IT staff fight outsource
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Drop plan or we strike

IT outsource deal key for Probation


IT outsource deal key for Probation 12/15/2003 07:00 AM
Computer Weekly Dec 15 2003 6:11AM ET

Met Police may outsource all its IT for
10 years, a possible GBP750m deal


Met Police may outsource all its IT for
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Oracle shopping list includes eight
other firms


Oracle shopping list includes eight
other firms
06/22/2004 07:12 PM
CNET Jun 22 2004 11:05PM GMT

Black cab staff walk out over pay


Black cab staff walk out over pay 01/28/2004 03:36 PM
Nearly 200 workers at the only black cab manufacturer in the UK go on an indefinite strike over pay.

ITV staff to strike over pay deal


ITV staff to strike over pay deal 03/24/2005 12:16 PM
Production staff at ITV vote to strike over pay, meaning shows like Coronation Street face disruption.

Better pay deal for council staff


Better pay deal for council staff 06/05/2004 01:15 AM
Over a million council workers in England and Wales will be consulted over an improved pay offer from employers.

Female staff agree to pay deal


Female staff agree to pay deal 03/25/2005 08:55 AM
Around 1,500 female hospital staff agree to an equal pay deal after a meeting in Cumbria.

Swansea IT staff to strike over
outsourcing deal


Swansea IT staff to strike over
outsourcing deal
08/04/2004 11:46 AM
Action starts next Monday

DoJ Staff Expected to Recommend Against
PeopleSoft Deal


DoJ Staff Expected to Recommend Against
PeopleSoft Deal
02/10/2004 06:40 PM
The U.S. Department of Justice's staff is expected to recommend against Oracle Corp.'s $9.4 billion hostile bid for PeopleSoft Inc., according to sources close to the deal.

Leaked Salary List Shows Bush's
Highest-Paid Staff Is Mostly Male
(washingtonpost.com)


Leaked Salary List Shows Bush's
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Black Friday - After Thanksgiving Day
Sales List 2003


Black Friday - After Thanksgiving Day
Sales List 2003
11/19/2003 12:31 AM
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IT staff to vote on strike over GBP100m
outsourcing deal


IT staff to vote on strike over GBP100m
outsourcing deal
12/22/2003 12:45 PM
Silicon.com Dec 22 2003 11:15AM ET

IBM wins $125m car black box deal with
UAE


IBM wins $125m car black box deal with
UAE
04/16/2005 06:44 PM
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Newspaper Publisher Cuts Deal With Black
(AP)


Newspaper Publisher Cuts Deal With Black
(AP)
01/18/2004 10:26 PM
AP - A British newspaper company announced a deal Sunday with embattled press baron Conrad Black to take over his controlling interest in Hollinger Inc., the Toronto-based parent company of newspaper publisher Hollinger International Inc.

Communication Technologies, Inc.
(COMTek) is a Leading Facilities-Based
Broadband Telecommunications Company as
Ranked by Black Enterprise 100 List


Communication Technologies, Inc.
(COMTek) is a Leading Facilities-Based
Broadband Telecommunications Company as
Ranked by Black Enterprise 100 List
05/31/2004 02:16 PM
Communication Technologies Inc., (COMTek), a national leader in delivering trusted information technology and telecommunications solutions for mission-critical environments, announced today that Black Enterprise Magazine, a distinguished national business publication, has ranked it as a leading facilities-based broadband telecommunications service company in the magazine’s 2004 Black Enterprise Industrial /Service 100 list (BE100). The BE 100s list features the largest black-owned businesses in the nation. [PRWEB May 30, 2004]

HOW TO
SAVE THE WORLD
READING LIST


HOW TO
SAVE THE WORLD
READING LIST
07/18/2004 03:41 PM
.In Beyond Civilization, Daniel Quinn says:

People will listen when they're ready to listen and not before. Probably, once upon a time, you weren't ready to listen to an idea than now seems to you obvious, even urgent. Let people come to it in their own time. Nagging or bullying will only alienate them. Don't preach. Don't waste time with people who want to argue. They'll keep you immobilized forever. Look for people who are already open to something new.

When presenting a new idea, you don't have to have all the answers. It's better to say 'I don't know' than to fake it. Make people formulate their own questions. Don't take on the responsibility of figuring out what their difficulty is. We each internalize information differently. If you don't understand a question, keep insisting they explain it until it's clear. Nine times out of ten they'll supply the answer themselves.

Above all, listen. Your close attention is sometimes more important than your articulateness in winning converts. And learning is always a good thing.

When I've talked to people about the ideas I've presented in this blog, I get the sense that maybe 10% really understand and appreciate what I'm saying. Perhaps another 40% are ready to listen and want to believe, but either my inarticulateness or their internalization mechanism garbles the message. After all, saving the world (or, as one recent commenter 'geo' put it more accurately "changing how humans live so we as a species can continue to survive") is not easy or obvious, or we'd all be busy doing it. This reading list is for that 40%, in the hope that better writers than I can convey more clearly and compellingly what we need to do and why. The remaining 50%, I suspect, are not ready. Five years ago someone gave me The Spell of the Sensuous and I gave up after five pages -- I just wasn't ready.

Here's the list -- 56 books and articles that forever changed my worldview, and my purpose for living::

What Life was Really Like Before Civilization: Revisionist History
  • Full House, by the late Stephen J. Gould. The presence of man on Earth was a random occurrence, and after the next Extinction Event life on the planet is likely to evolve differently. We are not the Crown of Creation.
  • The Wealth of Man by Peter Jay. The life of pre-historic man was easy, idyllic, and very pleasant. Hunt big slow game an hour a day, relax and enjoy the rest.
  • The Worst Mistake in the History of the Human Race, (online) essay by Jared Diamond Why the adoption of agriculture was 'a catastrophe from which we have never recovered'.
  • Original Affluence, by Marshall Sahlins. If you wanted to defend a new society that featured rigid hierarchy, agonizingly hard work, suffering, frequent starvation and slavery, wouldn't you try to portray the alternative life as 'short, nasty and brutish'?
  • Extinction, by Michael Boulter. Our planet's history is one of cycles punctuated by massive extinctions and new beginnings. Our only choice is whether to end this one sooner (a century) or later (several millennia).
  • The Axemaker's Gift by Jame s Burke and Robert Ornstein. How innovativeness has been increasingly corrupted to concentrate and retain power, instead of making the world better.
What's Going On Under our Noses: The Real News
  • The Unconscious Civilization, by John Ralston Saul. How and why we've become helpless slaves of the political and economic system we built.
  • Ockham's Razor, by Wade Rowland. What's wrong with our modern values, and where to look for new ones.
  • People Before Profit, by Charles Derber -- How rampant corporatism ravaged the vast majority of people worldwide in the 1800s, and is doing so again.
  • State of the World, by WorldWatch Institute, The 7 trends that most threaten eco-collapse: population growth, rising temperature, falling water tables, shrinking cropland per person, collapsing fisheries, shrinking forests, and the extinction of plant and animal species.
  • World Scientists' Warning (online), by the Union of Concerned Scientists. "Human beings and the natural world are on a collision course. No more than one or a few decades remain before the chance to avert the threats we now confront will be lost and the prospects for humanity immeasurably diminished. A great change in our stewardship of the Earth and life on it is required if vast human misery is to be avoided and our global home on this planet is not to be irretrievably mutilated."
  • Dream of the Earth by Thomas Berry. "We are in trouble just now because we do not have a good story. We are in between stories. The old story, the account of how we fit into it, is no longer effective. Yet we have not learned the new story."
  • The Future of Freedom, by Fareed Zakaria Why we can't change another country's culture from outside it.
  • The New Rules of the World, by John Pilger An accurate, devastating portrait of the world in 2003.
  • The Demon in the Freezer, by Richard Preston. How vulnerable we all are to individual acts of terror, chaos and sabotage.
  • Against the Grain, by Richard Manning. How grain monoculture evolved, and how it's ruining the Earth.
  • Population Projections, by US Census Bureau. They're no longer assuring us that US and Global Population will level out at 300 million and 9 billion. Would you believe 1 billion and 12 billion by the end of the century, and still rising?
  • Global Warming, by NOAA. An online synopsis of US scientists' consensus on the causes and consequences of global warming.
  • This Overheating World - Worried? Us? (online essay) by Bill McKibben. Article in the UK journal Granta explaining the psychology, and cynical political expediency, of denial.
  • Are Cities Changing Local and Global Climates?, (online) by NASA. Studies of urban microclimates and how they contribute to local climate change and instability.
  • Restoring Scientific Integrity (online) by Union of Concerned Scientists. The Bush regime's distortion of scientific research to forward its own political agenda.
  • Climate Collapse, by David Stipp (online article) from Fortune Magazine. The possibility and chilling implications of global warming producing sudden drastic climate shifts.
  • Conservative Myths on Global Warming (online) by Blogger Carpe Datum. A brief but thorough explanation of the science behind global warming, and the reasoning behind scientists' connecting it to human activity and worrying about the risks of resultant instability
  • The Empire Strikes Out, by Kenny Ausubel. Corporatism and acquisitiveness run amok are ruining our world, but nature always bats last.
  • The Tragedy of the Commons, by Garry Harding. The commons, that which belongs in common to all of us, is disappearing -- Why nobody really cares.
  • Elizabeth Costello, by JM Coetzee. Why we tolerate a holocaust against our fellow creatures on Earth.
  • The Machine in Our Heads, by Glenn Parton. How the ecological crisis is rooted in a human psychological crisis.
About Gaia: What Nature is Really About
  • When Elephants Weep, by Jeff Masson. Compelling scientific evidence that animals feel deep emotions.
  • Mind of the Raven, by Bernd Heinrich. Compelling scientific evidence that animals are intelligent, complex, rational and communicative.
  • The Sacred Balance by David Suzuki. A passionate explanation of James Lovelock's Gaia Hypothesis, the need to redesign how we live, and the importance of spending more time in nature.
  • The Hidden Dimension, by Edward Hall. We need space and a natural environment to be healthy and human. When we're deprived of them, we get mentally ill.
  • The Spell of the Sensuous, by David Abram. How to reconnect with nature, and rediscover wonder.

Radical Analysis, Radical Solutions (these are the most important readings, but you probably won't 'buy' their arguments unless you've first read much of the material above)

  • Ishmael, The Story of B, and Beyond Civilization by Daniel Quinn. Also the IshCon discussion forum. The first two of these three books are fictionalized stories about human history from a different, anti-civilization perspective, with penetrating, astounding analysis and insight. Ishmael is more popular but I prefer The Story of B which recapitulates the entire theses in a series of 'lectures'. The two critical lectures are online here. Beyond Civilization is about what we should do about all this.
  • A Language Older Than Words, by Derrick Jensen. A profound and disturbing argument for why moderate answers to our current predicament won't work.
  • The World We Want, by Mark Kingwell. Why we are best served by trusting our instincts rather than what we are persuaded is moral or rational.

Toolkit for Change: Knowledge We Can Use to Save the World

  • Freeman Dyson's Brain (online interview), in Wired Magazine. The twin keys to building a better world are (a) establishing viable self-sufficient local communities to replace big centralized states and governments, and (b) selective more-with-less technologies like solar/wind energy coops and biotech medicines.
  • The Developing Ideas Interview (online) with economist Herman Daly. An economic and tax program that favours communities and commons instead of corporations, and a 'contract' to reduce our population and ecological footprint.
  • The Unconquerable World, by Jon Schell. Why non-violence and consensus-building are the only viable way forward.
  • The Support Economy, by Shoshana Zuboff A model for a post-capitalist economy.
  • Unequal Protection, by Thom Hartmann. The case for denying 'personhood' to corporations.
  • When Corporations Rule the World, by David Korten. The need to get corporations out of politics and create localized economies that empower communities within a system of global cooperation, overcoming the myths about economic growth and the sanctification of greed, and focusing instead on overconsumption, poverty, overpopulation, and reining in untrammelled corporate power.
  • Radical Simplicity, by Jim Merkel. How to free yourself from possessions and wage slavery without sacrifice.
  • The Tipping Point, by Malcolm Gladwell. What makes things change.
  • Ten Ways to Make a Difference, by Peter Singer. A pragmatic recipe for change.
  • The Truth About Stories, by Thomas King. The truth about stories is that that's all we are. Want a new society? Write a new story.
  • The Boycott List, by Responsible Shopper, and Good Stuff, by the WorldWatch Institute. What not to buy, and what to buy instead.
  • The Corporation, by Joel Bakan. An action plan for undermining corporatism.
  • Humans in the Wilderness, by Glenn Parton. How we might reintroduce humans, well-spaced-out, into a primarily wilderness Earth.
  • At Home in the Universe, by S tuart Kauffman. How self-organizing, self-managing systems work.
  • EarthDance (entire book online), by Elisabet Sahtouris. Eleven steps to cultural metamorphosis (my summary is here)
  • eGaia (entire book online), by Gary Alexander. How to achieve of peace, cooperation and sustainability (replacing war, competition and growth, the fuels of our current culture) and a future state vision with vignettes from individuals' lives in a balanced and harmonious future world.

A BLOGGER'S
CHRISTMAS WISH LIST


A BLOGGER'S
CHRISTMAS WISH LIST
12/19/2004 02:54 PM
lights

11.
A simple way to simultaneously send new blog articles, as they are posted, to any number of user-maintained, editable e-mail lists (from which people could easily unsubscribe, of course).
10.
An automatically maintained Table of Contents with one-sentence abstracts for each of your blog posts, editable by you and sortable by your readers by title, date, and category/sub-category.
9.
A simple, meaningful measure of total readership, that weighs blog hits, visits, average duration of stay, RSS subscriptions, inbound blogs, e-mail subscriptions, and visits to copies of your posts on aggregators.
8.
An ability to create standing-order 'profiles' for all blogs, as you now can for newsfeeds, so that you can receive a single daily e-mail or web page that aggregates everything posted that day, anywhere in the blogosphere, on a specific topic or containing specific keywords or phrases.
7.
A gigabyte or two of free storage on the hosted blog server, so you can keep a copy of your entire My Documents folder on the server, link to anything in it from your blog without having to FTP a copy, and be able to access your entire 'e-filing cabinet' from any computer anywhere anytime.
6.
An easy migration path from the asynchronous, polished anonymity of the blog to the real-time, one-to-one, face-to-face or voice-to-voice, halting interactive iterative intimacy of other media, media that move you from talk to action.
5.
Inclusion of our posts, if we want them to be, in Google News.
4.
More first-person accounts, first-hand news, live photos and reports, and investigative reporting in the blogosphere.
3.
A blogging tool so simple even our parents can maintain one.
2.
No more fear of your blog or your computer crashing and irretrievably losing everything you've written on your blog.
1.
The end of the terms 'weblog', 'blog' and 'blogger', and to be simply called An Online Journalist.

ACTIVE SALON
BLOGS LIST UPDATED


ACTIVE SALON
BLOGS LIST UPDATED
01/10/2004 03:19 PM
salonI've updated the Dire ctory of Active Salon Blogs. Please send me details on any missing and new Salon Blogs, and errors in the Directory. I promise to post any updates I receive at least once a week.

There are now 159 active (updated in the last month, or officially on vacation but returning) Salon Blogs. Comings & Goings this past month:
  • No longer blogging, it seems: The enormously helpful Charlie Z at Driver 8, the enormously successful Julie Powell of the Julie/Julia Project, Ray of Nobody Loves Raymond, whose blog is MIA, great story-teller Hugh Elliott at Standing Room Only, and Cat M. of Chronicles of an Anti-Apathetic. Their presence in this part of the blogosphere will be sorely missed.
  • Good news: Penny of My So-Called Lesbian Life is back.
  • Daniel X. O'Neil, the veteran Salon blogger at GoogObits who uniquely chronicles the deceased, has moved to his own site.
  • The flight from Radio to Typepad seems to have stopped, at least for now.
  • Of the roughly 100 new Salon Blog numbers assigned this past month, about 40 actually made at least one post, and the following 17 appear to be posting regularly. I especially recommend MallowDrama, Hermit's Notebook, Hoi Polloi and I Don't Know What Happened, which are off to sensational starts. Welcome, new Sloggers all.
Althaea Officinalis: MallowDrama
Hermit's Notebook, A
Theater of the Absurd
Much,Much,More of This and That
Letters to Jessica
Worms of Endearment
Arclist
Gabriela's Radio Weblog
Music Freak's dip into blog-infested waters
Hoi Polloi
I Don't Know What Happened
Living Backstage
You're Getting Very Sleepy
Frances D. Gonzalez's Radio Weblog
Blogcabin - Come Warm Yourself By The Fire
Pan's Garden
75003 Paris

Some stats for this past month:
  • Total hits this month for Salon Blogs were about 1.1 million, up about 8% for the month, but they were very unevenly distributed (even more than usual), with 850 thousand of these hits going to the top 11 blogs. For the typical Slogger, December traffic was about 10% quieter than November, due probably to the holidays. The median for active Salon Bloggers was only about 700 hits per month, about 30 per day.
  • Inbound blogs totaled about 3250, up about 5% month-over-month, with the top 11 blogs accounting for 50% of them. The median for active Salon Bloggers was 7 inbound blogs.
  • About 42% of active Sloggers are female, up significantly from just over 30% three months ago. That's great news, but I don't know what to make of it.
I'll continue to keep the Directory current, with your help, and will report at least bi-monthly on comings & goings and stats.

P.S. I've also updated my Tables of Contents (see top left of my blog). Since Google has, for some reason, stopped crawling How to Save the World, Google is no longer a reliable way to find things in my archives. I'm going to test some other search engines and change my search bar accordingly.

HELP COMPILE
"THE WEB USER'S ESSENTIAL LINKS AND FREE
DOWNLOADS" LIST


HELP COMPILE
"THE WEB USER'S ESSENTIAL LINKS AND FREE
DOWNLOADS" LIST
06/07/2004 02:25 PM
bookmarkMy Salon Blog colleague Ted Ritzer keeps a list of Useful Web Sites (for all web users, not just bloggers) originally compiled by Kevin Kelly, of Wired, The Well, and Whole Earth Catalog fame. Kevin no longer maintains his list, and instead has an intriguing Cool Tools site, but it's only for the rich -- virtually everything on the site costs money, often a lot of it. So Ted and I agreed it's time to update the Useful Web Sites list, and we need your help. What links and free downloads should every self-respecting Internet user have on their desktop?

The list should not include pay sites, nor should it include news sites, blogs or other sites that appear on blogrolls (too many, and too subjective). Nor should it include highly specialized sites (I have a personal list of favourite genealogy sites, but I realize that few people would consider these 'essential').

To make the list manageable, I've identified 21 categories for the essential links (let me know if you think I've missed an entire category). If I get enough response, I'll publish a list of the Top 3 in each category and keep it on my sidebar or Spurl it (Spurl lets you keep your web bookmarks online and share them with others).

The examples shown for each category are my personal favourites and some of them are eccentric, so they may not make the Top 3 list. Quite a few of them come from the excellent Jason Lefkowitz' Quality Software list (thanks to Internet Time for the link):
  1. Search engines -- e.g. Google
  2. Converters, voice recognition tools and translators -- e.g. Reverso Language Translation
  3. Internet browsing tools and aids -- e.g. Firefox browser, Xne ws newsreader
  4. Website composing and management tools -- e.g. HTML-Kit web page editor
  5. Publishing tools - e.g. PDFCreator
  6. Word processing and office productivity -- e.g. OpenOffice
  7. File and desktop management -- e.g. FilZip compression software, Furl digital filing cabinet
  8. Writing aids -- e.g. The 39 Steps, Rhymezone
  9. Reference tools -- e.g. IMDB movie & TV show database
  10. Music and book sellers -- e.g. FYE, CDBaby, McNally Robinson
  11. Consumer information -- e.g. CNet product reviews
  12. File sharing tools
  13. Internet streaming radio/video -- e.g. ShoutCast
  14. Connectivity and discussion tools -- e.g. Thunderbird e-mail, SightSpeed videoconferencing, Trillian IM and chat integrator, Skype VoIP
  15. Multimedia tools -- e.g. PhotoPl us image editor, IrfanView image viewer
  16. Website/RSS feed aggregation tools -- e.g. BlogLines site aggregator, Spurl online bookmarking
  17. Network/community builders and expertise finders
  18. Software download sites -- e.g. Download.com, Tucows
  19. Investment tools and information -- e.g. MLS real estate finder
  20. Electronic Payment and LETS tools
  21. Anti-spam, anti-virus, anti-spyware/adware utilities -- e.g. SpyBot anti-spyware
What are your essential links and invaluable free downloads?

Brightmail Denies "White List"
Deal With Spammer


Brightmail Denies "White List"
Deal With Spammer
12/21/2003 12:05 AM
ThePretender writes "From the InfoWorld article: 'A spammer's claim to his clients that he had an agreement with anti-spam technology vendor Brightmail to not ...

SMEs can outsource too


SMEs can outsource too 12/31/2004 06:35 AM
Express Computer India Dec 31 2004 10:54AM GMT

Why outsource hiring?


Why outsource hiring? 04/02/2005 08:32 PM
Express Computer India Apr 3 2005 12:24AM GMT

Sun set to outsource workers


Sun set to outsource workers 02/05/2005 09:10 PM
Sun this week said it will outsource its internal information technology team to Computer Sciences Corp. in a contract worth $360 million.

When you don't want to outsource network
security


When you don't want to outsource network
security
04/29/2004 09:05 AM

Commerzbank plans to outsource IT to IBM


Commerzbank plans to outsource IT to IBM 12/02/2003 01:28 AM
The deal, if approved, would be IBM's second big outsourcing contract with a German bank, following its groundbreaking agreement with Deutsche Bank nearly a year ago.

[$$] M&S to outsource website to
Amazon


[$$] M&S to outsource website to
Amazon
04/19/2005 08:54 AM
News.ft.com - Tue Apr 19, 11:49 am GMT

outsource the 2004 election!!!!!


outsource the 2004 election!!!!! 05/14/2004 01:26 PM
indian electronic voting vs. diebold
"Reading this article, some of you might remember that Cold war era joke, about NASA and its multi million dollar experiment with a pen that can write in micro gravity to solve the writing problems of astronauts, and the Russian solution of using a Pencil to solve the same problem."

Patriotic PC Maker: No Outsource


Patriotic PC Maker: No Outsource 06/27/2004 01:13 PM
Wired News Jun 27 2004 5:22PM GMT

McAfee Buys Outsource 802.1X Firm


McAfee Buys Outsource 802.1X Firm 06/05/2005 10:56 PM
Wireless Security Corporation bought by McAfee: The PC security giant has purchased the company that makes WSC Guard, an outsourced subscription service provider of 802.1X through their own client software. WSC had worked with McAfee to create a wireless security testing Web application that McAfee offered at no cost on their Web site....


GM goes the outsource route for dealers'
web sites


GM goes the outsource route for dealers'
web sites
08/06/2004 06:40 PM
InternetRetailer.com Aug 6 2004 11:28PM GMT

M&S may outsource its internet sales
to Amazon


M&S may outsource its internet sales
to Amazon
09/11/2004 07:06 AM
News.independent.co.uk - Sat Sep 11, 10:39 am GMT

ACI to outsource notebook output to
India


ACI to outsource notebook output to
India
07/05/2004 11:22 AM
Ethos production moves from the UK

Bridgestone to outsource ERP support,
maintenance


Bridgestone to outsource ERP support,
maintenance
03/28/2005 01:42 PM
Bridgestone plans to outsource its SAP ERP support and maintenance to Satyam Computer Services in India, but the move isn't expected to lead to layoffs at the European tire maker.

Nortel agrees to outsource manufacturing


Nortel agrees to outsource manufacturing 06/29/2004 12:05 PM
Company will hand over most of its manufacturing operations and 2,500 employees to Flextronics as it continues to cut costs.

Outsource disaster no deterrent for
immigration service


Outsource disaster no deterrent for
immigration service
08/12/2004 04:00 AM
Computer Weekly Aug 12 2004 8:15AM GMT

Thoughtful article on why you should
never outsource your business plan


Thoughtful article on why you should
never outsource your business plan
02/01/2005 09:59 PM
For those of you who are of an entrepreneurial bent, there’s a good article just added to The Intuitive Life all about why it’s a bad idea to have outside help when you’re creating or updating your business plan. Written by someone with years of experience in startups, both from the startup and venture capital side, it’s ten minutes well-spent in your day. Read more about Never outsource your business plan…

Direct and Related Links for 'Thoughtful article on why you should never outsource your business plan'


Siemens faces outsource protest strike


Siemens faces outsource protest strike 08/17/2004 09:37 AM
National Savings jobs off to India?

Outsource to India and watch me cancel
contracts!


Outsource to India and watch me cancel
contracts!
03/06/2004 01:54 AM
We needed some critical technical support last week with a computer firm that handles some of our mid-range servers. The...
Grok Description matches for BBC outsource deal includes staff black list
GrokA matches for BBC outsource deal includes staff black list

BBC outsource deal includes staff black list

The following phrases have been identified by the grok system as matching this entry:

















Also check out:


Grok

Ipod Porn on the
Rise

Brief Abstract of
Wikipedia's
Mesothelioma Cancer
page

Get first aid
instructions in your
cell phone

IE is crap
JSPWiki gains
podcasting support

Wheels come off DVD
royalty-dodging ruse

FCC posts GSM, Wi-Fi
iPaq specs

SurfControl
distributes email
mailing list

EMC ups storage
software market
share

Elipda, Micron ask
Japan to take Hynix
to task

Redbus Interhouse
suffers power outage

Astronomers weigh
ultra-cool brown
dwarf

APTIKA Announces a
New Partnership with
Evolis for the
Distribution of ID
Card Printers in
North America

Acacia files more
suits

The ink is black
First mobile phone
worm created

One in three PCs
hosts spyware or
Trojans

Gartner warns banks
on spyware fraud

Potter withstands
Pandora assault

Intel opens $2bn
chip plant in
Ireland

Companies
underestimate cost
of offshore
outsourcing

Internet hosting
firm blames 'global
DNS attack' for
disruptions

Gateway sees higher
Q2 revenue on
improved sales

FTC puts off
do-not-e-mail list

Firms roll out
latest notebooks to
meet business demand

Search is on for
London's oldest PC

SmartBee - the
Smarty Framework

Accel-KKR completes
acquisition of Alias

'Breen's Bungalow'
shows hidden tricks,
more MUG news

FileMaker Developer
Conf. early bird
pricing ends soon

Bits : PayPal
SandBox - Ebay
DevCon

The Ins and Outs of
Open-Source
Licensing

S.F. software scours
beyond Web
(SiliconValley.com)

Photo Gallery of
Jobs' iTunes
presentation posted

Acquisition of Alias
completed

CourseWizard adds
XML data export,
more

Seismic Toolkit 0.18
OCC 1.1.2
Email address
validation component
2004-06-16

Securepoint Firewall
and VPN Server 4.0p4
(Securepoint4)

mod_security 1.8
(Stable)

PyEximon 1.0
DeLi Linux 0.6
Privacy advocates
protest Northwest
dismissal

Bribery Case Against
Sharon Is Closed
(Los Angeles Times)

Ex-Soldier Recalls
Beating He Received
in Guantanamo Drill
(Los Angeles Times)

Sea Change Since Era
of Steinbeck (Los
Angeles Times)

Khatami Threatens
Uranium Enrichment
if Draft Passes
(Reuters)

OPEC to Ask Oil
Producers to Boost
Output (AP)

He held the bowl
aloft and intoned

CollegeHumor.com :
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Show me a culture
that despises
virginity and I'll
show you a culture
that despises
childhood

Six Log: Announcing
Pricing & Licensing
Changes to Movable
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San Diego Blog
» San Diego
Earthquake!

ReJoyce Dublin 2004
- The Official
Bloomsday Centenary
Festival Site

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