VOIP Service Providers - Who is the Best Voip Provider ?

Best Voip Provider - The latest developments in Voice Over Internet

 Best Voip Deal of ViaTalk!
500 anytime minutes good for calls to anywhere in the U.S. or Canada. Starting as low as $9.95 a month
Sign Up Now and start saving today
 Voip Features
Minimum Program Cost Caller ID Web Based Call Logs e911 Support International Calls Enhanced Voicemail Call Forwarding Call Transfer Call Recording Free In-Network Calling Call Return Free 411 Directory Service 3-Way Calling
$9.95
 Best Voip Deal of Packet8!
Unlimited calling to the USA and Canada along with all of the great features from Packet8
Packet8 VoIP for only $19.99 a month
 Voip Features
Minimum Program Cost Caller ID Web Based Call Logs e911 Support International Calls Enhanced Voicemail Call Forwarding Call Transfer Call Recording Free In-Network Calling Call Return Free 411 Directory Service 3-Way Calling
$19.99

Voip Provider Archive
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
November 2005
October 2005
September 2005
August 2005
July 2005
June 2005
May 2005
April 2005
March 2005
February 2005
January 2005
December 2004
November 2004
October 2004


Internet Games Categories

Give a glance at Best Voip Provider's Internet casino game pages. We are dedicated to making your acquaintance with online casino games as exciting and rewarding as possible. The gambling websites listed here not only combine cutting-edge software and the most advanced security measures available on the net, but also kind customer service. Thousands of ardent poker games fans have already thanked us for the popular poker rooms we've listed here. And, if it is exclusive quality and reliability that your looking for, we advice you to check out our bingo games section. Whatever your heart desires, we've got it! So, don't hesitate any longer. You are just one click away from the online gaming realm where the incredible action will sweep you of your feet!!!

 

Global Study: Top 10 Most Confusing (yet widely used) High Tech Buzzwords

25 March 2005

In a worldwide internet and media analysis, The Global Language Monitor (www.LanguageMonitor.com) found the most confusing yet frequently cited high tech buzzwords to be ‘HTTP’, ‘Voice Over IP’ (VoIP), and ‘Megapixel’. Closely following were ‘Plasma’, ‘Robust’, ‘WORM’ and ‘Emoticon’. The study was released earlier today; the complete results can be found at www.LanguageMonitor.com.

“The high tech realm remains an incubator of great ideas and, at the same time, mass confusion. The industry, with rare exception, has never mastered the basics of translating new products and services into everyday language: It is obvious that the High Tech industry has failed in its basic language proficiency test.”

The PQ Index© (Predictive Quantities) Index is a proprietary algorithm that tracks specified words and phrases in the media and on the Internet. The words and phrases are tracked in relation to their frequency, contextual usage and appearance in global media outlets. This analysis was performed in early March of 2005.

The Global Language Monitor analyzes and catalogues the latest trends in word usage and word choices, and their impact on the various aspects of culture. The GLM is supported by a worldwide assemblage of linguists, professional wordsmiths, and bibliophiles to help monitor the latest trends in the evolution (and demise) of language, word usage and word choices.

The Most Confusing Yet Frequently Cited High Tech Words with Commentary follow:
1. HTTP – HyperText Transfer Protocol is used for HTML (HyperText Markup Language) files. Not to be confused with text on too much Starbucks. More than 1 billion references to HTTP on the web alone.

2. Voice Over IP – VoIP, (pronounced voip rhyming with Detroit). Voice over Internet Protocol. Simply put: web telephony.

3. Megapixel – A really big pixel. No, one million pixels (that’s a lotta pixels) OK, what’s a pixel? Computer-ese for ‘picture element'.

4. Plasma – As in Plasma TV. Are we talking Red Cross Drives here? Rather, a flat, lightweight surface covered with millions of tiny glass bubbles with a digitally controlled electric current flowing through it that causes the ‘plasma’ inside the tiny bubbles to glow.

5. Robust – No one quite knows what this means, but its good for your product to demonstrate ‘robustness'.

6. WORM – A virus, right? No, a ’ Write Once, Read Many’ file system used for optical disk technology.

7. Emoticon – A ‘smiley’ with an emotional component (from emotional icon). Now, what’s a ‘smiley’?

8. Best of breed – Not to be confused with the Westminster Dog Show. A personalized ‘solution’ made of components from various manufacturers; a sort of high tech ‘mix-and-match’.

9. Viral marketing – Marketing that Freezes your computer? Actually, a high tech marketing fad that theoretically results in a geometric progression of one’s marketing message. Sometimes stealth. Always irritating.

10. Data migration – Nothing to do with pre-historic mastodons or, even, global warming. It’s where the data in your present software programs can move to newer (or older) versions of the programs or, better yet, into competitive ‘solutions’ without causing much of a fuss. A highly unlikely result.

Other terms being tracked included ‘client/server,’ ‘solution,’ Paradigm,’ hypertext,’ ‘backward compatible,’ ‘best of breed,’ and the STUN protocol.

For more information, go www.LanguageMonitor.com.

About the Global Language Monitor
The Global Language Monitor documents, analyzes, and tracks the latest trends in word usage and word choices, and their impact on the various aspects of culture, with a particular emphasis on global English. Worldwide print and electronic media have come to rely on The Global Language Monitor for its expert analysis on language trends and their subsequent impact on politics, culture and business, including the PQ (Political-sensitivity quotient) Index, analysis of media coverage of the 2004 Summer Olympics, the Republican National Convention, Workplace lingo, Hollywords, Telewords, the English Language WordClock, among many others.

The GLM has been cited by CNN, MSNBC, The Wall Street Journal, Reuters, Associated Press, United Press International, Knight-Ridder, USAToday, The Washington Post, The Washington Times, The Chicago Tribune, The Los Angeles Times, The New York Times, San Francisco Chronicle, The Charlotte Observer, Minneapolis Star Tribune, San Jose Mercury, New York Post, NPR, FoxNews, ABC, NBC, CBS, The National Post, The Sydney Morning Herald, The BBC, the Australian Broadcasting Company, The Canadian Broadcasting Company, The Cape Town Argus, El Pais (Madrid), The Daily Mail (Scotland), The Hindustan Times, The Gulf News (Qatar), and various electronic and print media on six continents.

The GLM is supported by a worldwide assemblage of linguists, professional wordsmiths, and bibliophiles to help monitor the latest trends in the evolution (and demise) of language, word usage and word choices, and their impact on the various aspects of culture.

For more information, call 1.925.367.7557, send email to e-mail protected from spam bots or visit Http://www.LanguageMonitor.com.

Source: PR Web


Author:  
Email:    
Topic:    
Content:

All trademarks and copyrighted information contained herein are the property of their respective owners.


Related Voip Articles




 
Hardware News
Telecom News
Monitors News
Smart Cell News
Security News
Storage News
Electronics News
Internet News
Poker News

A   B   C   D   E   F   G   H   I   J   K   L   M   N   O   P   Q   R   S   T   U   V   W   X   Y   Z