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| Related Articles |
| Flower Press UK Pressed Wedding Flowers, Bouquets, Favours, Trinkets Stationary (London UK) |
01 January 0001 |
| Please visit our website w.flowerpressuk.com We are a family run business based in Dorset UK. We have many years of experience in managing and handling flowers from our customers special occasions. These can be set in a frame of your choice embedded in an exquisite trinket box or we can discuss your own personal ideas. We are also developing a delightful range of Wedding stationary. We look forward to helping you remember that special occasion for many years to come. Feel free to browse our website email us if you have any questions or queries. |
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| GRAPHIC DESIGN Service: Eye catching, |
05 October 2007 |
| innovative logos, company stationary, flyers, business cards e A fully degree qualified Graphic Designer offering eye catching, innovative designs for logos, company stationary, posters, flyers, business cards etc etc. Only charging £15 per hour and offering 3 months after sale advise too (for extra peace of mind!)Examples of work can be sent on request. Please give me a call for further ... |
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| Changing Times in Upcountry Tanzania |
18 June 2007 |
| ... training ground for the guerrillas of South Africas African National Congress. One way and another ... orphaned children so that they can buy clothes, shelter, stationary and other essentials. 4,686 started ... a great deal of confusion. On the business side of Morogoro life there is good ... |
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| HP aims to speed business printing with Edgeline |
11 April 2007 |
| (InfoWorld) - Hewlett-Packard Co. (HP) has built its Edgeline print head into two new departmental printers designed for print volumes up to 50,000 pages a month. The printers offer the speed of laser printing with the color quality and reliability of ink.
The CM8050 and CM8060 color multifunction printer-copier-scanners, announced Wednesday, print in black at speeds up to 50 or 60 pages per minute, respectively, and in color at 40 or 50 pages per minute. The new print heads deliver pigment-based ink and a bonding agent across the full width of an A4 page in one go, allowing the printers to run faster than inkjet printers that must scan back and forth across the paper. The heads have a life of around 2 million pages, allowing them to run for three years under a typical service contract, the company said.
HP will charge from US$23,530 for the CM8060 and $18,930 for the CM8050 in the U.S., depending on options ordered, and similar pricing in Europe.
HP introduced the Edgeline head last October in a system for photo kiosks that printed using dye-based inks on four-inch-wide paper. The CM8050 and CM8060 contain six such heads arranged in pairs to span the width of an A4 page. The first pair delivers the bonding agent, the second the yellow and black ink, and the last cyan and magenta. The paper is carried, up to three pages at a time, on a drum where it is held by a vacuum as it is whisked under the print heads, which remain stationary.
The printers also sport HP's EasySelect Control Panel, a common user interface it introduced to its multifunction business printer line six months ago. HP's aim is that users will be able to operate future business printers intuitively, wherever they find them in the enterprise, through a common interface.
In another step toward that goal, it will update an older printer, the Color LaserJet 4730, with the EasySelect interface. The updated model, otherwise largely unchanged, is the CM4730, and will go on sale in May, starting at €3,999 (US$5,362) excluding tax.
The new inkjet printers will be available starting this week, said Rolf Gerstner, HP's manager of business and marketing strategy for commercial imaging and printing solutions in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
Alongside the printers, HP also presented a new version of its WebJetadmin networked printer administration software. WJA 10.0, now compatible with Windows Vista, will be available for free download from April 30. The new version includes step-by-step help for common tasks, and tools for restricting access to color printing functions per application or per user.
With additional reporting from Ben Ames in Boston. |
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| Begg: I'll be off to the third world |
28 November 2007 |
| ABTA Travel Convention special report: Global founder plans to swap business for charity |
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| Harvey World parent to buy Global Travel Group |
28 November 2007 |
| Major independent agency consolidation signalled as Stella becomes major UK force |
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| Stella acquires leading UK independent travel group |
28 November 2007 |
| adding 1,100 agencies to the Stella network, including 650 travel agencies in the global network. |
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| QinetiQ to cut 400 despite profit jump |
29 November 2007 |
| QinetiQ, the defence research business in which the chairman and chief
executive made more than £35 million on the flotation of the business, will
eliminate 400 jobs across the UK. |
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| It was right to extradite NatWest Three |
28 November 2007 |
| ANDREW FASTOW’S allegation that the NatWest Three were involved in the
financial deceits which brought down Enron does not mean the men are guilty.
But it does mean that they have a case to answer — a case which is rightly
being tried in the US. <br/>
<br/>
The US has had no particular beef with British businessmen. It seeks out
suspects of white-collar crime whoever they are, wherever they are. Kobi
Alexander, the chief executive of Comverse Technology, was apprehended this
week in Namibia, ending his two-month flight from American law enforcers
seeking to prosecute him for the back-dating of stock options. The “perp
walk” — the US practice of hand-cuffing and frog-marching a
multi-millionaire American executive out of his office and into a waiting
police car in full view of the waiting, tipped-off camera crews — has become
a regular feature of the nightly news in the US. Foreigners who do business
in America know full well that the Land of the Free is not nice to
criminals, nor even criminal suspects. <br/>
<br/>
The public outcry over the extradition of the NatWest Three — Gary Mulgrew,
David Bermingham and Giles Darby — has from the outset felt like a
misplaced, sometimes mendacious venting of national frustration at
Washington. <br/>
<br/>
The fact is that this case has nothing to do with the war in Iraq, with the
presidency of George W. Bush, with Tony Blair’s Atlanticist inclinations.
Even the esteemed British chief executives and chairmen who signed up to the
letter calling for fair trials abroad looked like suckers: their campaign
seemed to put patriotism, even a huffy anti-Americanism, before the due
process of law. <br/>
<br/>
Certainly, they had a just complaint: the British Government agreed an
extradition treaty without securing reciprocity from the US. But, for that,
more fool the British Government. It knows a pledge from the Administration
will not necessarily be honoured by Congress, particularly involving the
issue of extradition. <br/>
<br/>
Fastow’s claims against the three British men may be suspect. The quiet chief
financial officer of Enron has made a second career for himself shopping his
old acquaintances. In 2002, he was indicted on 78 counts of fraud,
money-laundering and conspiracy. Thanks to his “co-operation with the
authorities”, he has been sentenced to six years in prison. <br/>
<br/>
Nonetheless, Fastow’s legal deposition describes a “close, personal
relationship” with Mulgrew. Enron collapsed in 2001, undone by an intricate,
ingenious web of financial fraud. Fastow claims that, in his financial
dealings with the men as late as 2000, they “knew what I expected”. The
deposition seems to skewer the argument that the men should be tried in
Britain. They may have to face allegations of defrauding their former
British employers too, but if they played a part in Enron’s downfall, then
they have a case to answer in America as well. There is a principle at
stake, one which underpins global capitalism and one which is as dear to
every Briton as it is to every American: respect for the due process of law. |
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| Yard owner 'shot in face' |
28 November 2007 |
| A trial at the High Court in Edinburgh hears allegations that a Lanarkshire business man was shot in the face. |
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