Best Fat Paysites
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vows, bench, exercise, vegan recipes, fatty bear , blog, currency, dog house, the wb, kill, birds of prey, olympus, new parenting book reviews, trivia, | Vonage and other VOIP providers also might fall into this bucket. To drive this point home, a Bellsouth spokesman in this WSJ article complains about Google’s freeloading ways as follows: “During the Hurricanes, Google didn’t pay to have the DSL restored. We’re paying all the cheap books money.” cheap books If like me you thought that the $30-$80 you send cheap books to your phone company every month for basic service constitutes “paying for it”, think again. What telcos want to start doing is charging people like Google and Vonage big piles of money so that their content gets to consumers in a fast carpool lane while the content providers that don’t pay up (and their customers) gets stuck on a less glamorous road with more traffic, fewer lanes and perhaps a few potholes. |
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Actually, it's hard to decide which is worse - the dancing, or the sweaters. But after such a long drought at Beware of the Blog's Cheesy Euro-Disco bureau, it's heartwarming that we even have such currency questions to ponder. via del.icio.us/tag/video. More Cheesy Euro-Disco links here. Posted by Station Manager Ken currency on January 07, 2006 at 11:22 AM in Cheesy Euro-Disco, Station Manager Ken's Posts, Video Clips | Permalink | Comments (6) | TrackBack (2) January 06, 2006 Greed Watch: The Two Tier Internet Today’s Wall Street Journal currency has a nice article on the telco industry’s latest idea for a good money making venture: two tiered access to the internet. The idea here is that as companies like Google, Yahoo and other corporate titans like WFMU provide more video and audio for consumers on-line, “someone has to pay for it”. |
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