Archive for the ‘Domain Investment’ Category

Greenlight Announces Migration to new Domain, greenlightdigital.com

 

 

LONDON, January 31, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --

Leading digital marketing agency, Greenlight, is excited to officially announce that commencing today, its domain name changes from greenlightsearch.com to greenlightdigital.com.

"To reflect Greenlight's expansion into providing a full digital service offering to its current and future clients, we are pleased to announce we have transitioned over to a new domain: greenlightdigital.com. The new domain is more reflective of our current offering and gives Greenlight more room to expand," says Alicia Levy, chief marketing officer at Greenlight.

Over the past year, Greenlight has been adding new strings to its bow in response to constant changes in the search industry, and more recently, the announcement by Google of the arrival of relevant personalised Social Media references in search results pages. They include:

Evolving the pay-per-click (PPC) media offering into a 360 Paid Media service including re-targeting and performance display
A full service Social Media department which has developed a suite of integrated search and social services designed to help clients maximise their presence in their audience's increasingly personalised search experience
Launching the One technology platform from Hydra, an independent Greenlight Company
The development of a unique and revolutionary content management system - shortly to be unveiled, designed to allow global organisations to respond to search and social demands of the modern online business

About Greenlight:

Greenlight is a leading independent digital marketing agency, the largest of its kind in Europe and the fastest growing. With over 100 blue-chip clients including Santander, New Look, Sky and ghd, Greenlight is a leader in the digital marketing space, and is recognized worldwide for its commitment to delivering record ROI for its clients and investing in the future of search.

Greenlight is considered the premier thought leader in the sector, publishing widely read industry reports, original research, speaking at trade events, and delivering a highly respected digital marketing training programme via the Greenlight Academy. Founded in 2001, Greenlight is headquartered in London, with offices in New York. http://www.greenlightdigital.com

To arrange an interview or for further information please contact:
 
Krishna Rao                                                   
T: +44(20)3326-6232                                   
E: krishna.rao@greenlightdigital.com

SOURCE Greenlight

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Greenlight Announces Migration to new Domain, greenlightdigital.com

dotCoop: Story of the founders who had a utopian dream for co-operatives online

dotCoop co-founders Shaun Fensom (left) and Malcolm Corbett

The launch of the .coop top level Internet domain ten years ago created an opportunity for the worldwide co-operative movement to step straight into the 21st century.

A chance to show that it was better adapted than capitalism to deal with the disruptive power of the Internet and digital technology. Sadly the movement was slow to respond and much of the original vision for .coop was written off as utopian — or has simply been forgotten. The opportunity is still there however to build on this asset.

During the DotCom boom in the early part of this century there was a frenzy of new names being created, particularly with the .com ending. ICANN decided it wanted to experiment by adding new top-level domains to free up space and give more scope for the creation of useful and meaningful names. So it invited proposals.

Malcolm Corbett who was working with me at Poptel proposed that we apply for two: .union and .coop. Poptel was itself a co-operative and provided Internet services to a number of British and international labour organisations. For the .union proposal, Poptel teamed up with the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) and for .coop it joined with the National Cooperative Business Association (NCBA) of the USA, which had the same idea. The International Co-operative Alliance (ICA) agreed to support the proposal.

But, it wasn’t cheap; ICANN demanded a non-refundable application fee of $50,000 per name. That didn’t prevent over 40 applications for over 100 names from all over the world, including some from corporate giants like Nokia.

As it happened, the ICANN board approved just seven, including .coop. Of the others, really only two have had any success - .biz and .info. Some, like .aero (reserved for the aeronautical industry) have very little visibility outside their niche. ICANN rejected .union, and also our parallel request to allow ‘.co-op’ as an ‘alias’ name so that uk.coop and uk.co-op would take you to the same place.

I shall never forget my excitement when the ICANN board made its announcement. For many of us, it seemed to be an enormous opportunity for the cooperative movement. Here was a way for co-operatives to mark themselves out from other businesses on the net, to create a badge of trust in contrast with the wild-west feel of .com.

Co-operatives would have privileged access to the names they wanted, reserved for their use. We would build sophisticated directories so that customers and other co-operatives could find a co-operative supplier of a product or service, confident that they are dealing with a bona-fide member-owned organisation.

I proposed that we should prove the point dramatically by creating a worldwide Internet services co-operative to run .coop and provide on-line services that would help co-ops work together and trade. A co-operative owned and financed by its co-operative users all over the world.

Unfortunately, much of that vision was never to be. The cost of creating the domain – in legal fees negotiating the contract with ICANN and the technical cost of building the system to run it – was enormous. The price for a .coop domain on launch day, 30 January 2002, was consequently relatively high – and remains so to this day.

The number of .coop registrations was much lower than our forecasts, partly because of the price, but also because many co-operatives simply weren’t convinced.

Most of the million or so co-operatives across the world were much too small or poor to have a website, and those that did have one didn’t necessarily think it was a good idea to change its name. It is only in recent years that our own retail consumer movement has made co-operative identity the central plank of its brand, with the Co-operative Group in the UK adopting http://www.co-operative.coop as its preferred name for the main website.

There was no appetite among the partners in 2002 for launching a new global co-operative to take ownership of the domain operations and raise further investment. The ambitions for .coop to become the well-ordered and regulated ‘namespace’ in contrast to the chaos of .com were forgotten as the NCBA and Poptel struggled to make .coop cover its running costs.

Poptel — which had bet the farm on .coop — never recovered and ultimately was taken over by one of the investors who had stumped up the development costs. Many of us left as a result. Later Bob Burlton of Oxford Swindon and Gloucester cooperative (now Midcounties Co-operative) negotiated a deal with the new private owner of Poptel and brought the technical operations of .coop safely back into cooperative ownership.

Now, ten years later, it’s worth asking where we are and what has been achieved. The name and the registry operation are stable and in safe hands. It’s been recognised and adopted by some of the biggest names in the movement worldwide.

Thousands of smaller coops have enthusiastically embraced the name and wear it with pride. Forward thinking coops like Co-operative Press, operator of this website, has fulfilled some of the original vision with innovations like s.coop and thenews.coop – using names that would be impossible to obtain with almost any other ending.

There are around 7,000 names registered in all (compared with tens of thousands of new .com names registered every day) but .coop is one of the most successful of the new top level domains approved since 2000, and easily the most successful of the specialist restricted names. Not many readers will ever have seen a museum website ending with .museum or a travel website ending with .travel but many readers will know of several .coop websites.

The recent decision by ICANN to open the process so that anyone can apply for a top level domain (for a substantial fee) has led to speculation that we will see the arrival of .tesco and similar corporate names. This means that .coop will lose some of its privileged status but may ironically lead to a much wider acceptance that domains don’t have to end .com or .co.uk.

There is in any case a much bigger prize still available to the movement if it recognises the potential of the net to promote and develop the cooperative business model, using tools like .coop. The net is built on co-operative agreements between networks and mutually owned Internet exchanges. Co-operative forms of organisation flourish across the net. From Wikipedia to ‘crowd sourcing’ the net makes easy the process of building on the small efforts and contributions of many. Many of the best ideas on the net could benefit from the movement’s experience and wisdom in how best to govern such ventures, ensuring that they stay true to their founding principles. The net helps trading partners find each other and can simplify transactions between them — eBay is an obvious example. The extraordinary success of the alibaba.com trading platform for small businesses gives a glimpse of the potential to accelerate global trade between co-operatives.

A true global co-operative to facilitate the sixth principle of ‘co-operation between co-operatives’ and to show the capitalist world that coops do it better is within our reach. We should grasp it.

Link:
dotCoop: Story of the founders who had a utopian dream for co-operatives online

Tailoring 100G for Metro Networks

Fujitsu Wins Key Domain Supplier Status with
AT&T          

Fujitsu Network
Communications has been selected as one of AT&T's
Domain Suppliers for optical and transport equipment. The
multi-year selection covers equipment used to expand and
maintain AT&T's metropolitan and long-haul network
infrastructure. Financial terms of the supplier agreement
are still being negotiated.

AT&T's Domain Supplier program,
launched in September 2009, facilitates a more
collaborative relationship with AT&T's equipment and
software suppliers, enabling AT&T to have the best
technologies in place to serve its customers. The program
is also designed to ensure that the company's network
technology investment accelerates AT&T's move toward
a network that is well-equipped for the future. Fujitsu
Network Communications, which is headquartered in
Richardson, Texas, offers packet optical networking
solutions, WDM and SONET platforms manufactured in North
America. It also provides multi-vendor network services
as well as end-to-end solutions for design,
implementation, migration, support and management of
optical networks.

"After an extensive evaluation of multiple optical and
transport equipment suppliers, we are pleased to extend
our relationship with Fujitsu," said Tim Harden,
President of AT&T's Supply Chain and Fleet Operations
organization.
http://www.fujitsu.com/us/services/telecom/
30-Jan-12

In August 2011, Fujitsu introduced an Ethernet
over Anything (EoX) framework that enables its
FLASHWAVE 9500 Packet Optical Networking Platform
(Packet ONP) to serve as a gateway for delivering Metro
Ethernet Forum (MEF)-compliant services across various
transport networks. Fujitsu's EoX vision, which is
initially implemented as an EoX Gateway configuration
of the FLASHWAVE 9500, now extends into the company's
portfolio of access products.

 
 

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See the article here:
Tailoring 100G for Metro Networks

AT&T Selects Fujitsu Network Communications as Domain Network Equipment Supplier

Tokyo, Jan 30, 2012 - (JCN Newswire) - Fujitsu today announced
the selection of Fujitsu Network Communications as one of
AT&T's Domain Suppliers for optical and transport equipment
for AT&T's industry-leading IP-based network.

The multi-year selection covers equipment used to expand and
maintain AT&T's metropolitan and long-haul network
infrastructure. Financial terms of the supplier agreement are
still being negotiated.

"After an extensive evaluation of multiple optical and
transport equipment suppliers, we are pleased to extend our
relationship with Fujitsu," said Tim Harden, President of
AT&T's Supply Chain and Fleet Operations organization.

AT&T's Domain Supplier program, launched in September 2009,
facilitates a more collaborative relationship with AT&T's
equipment and software suppliers, enabling AT&T to have the
best technologies in place to serve its customers. The program
is also designed to ensure that the company's network
technology investment accelerates AT&T's move toward a
network that is well-equipped for the future.


About Fujitsu Limited

Fujitsu is a leading provider of information and communication
technology (ICT)-based business solutions for the global
marketplace. With approximately 170,000 employees supporting
customers in over 100 countries, Fujitsu combines a worldwide
corps of systems and services experts with highly reliable
computing and communications products and advanced
microelectronics to deliver added value to customers.
Headquartered in Tokyo, Fujitsu Limited (TSE:6702) reported
consolidated revenues of 4.5 trillion yen (US$55 billion) for
the fiscal year ended March 31, 2011. For more information,
please see: http://www.fujitsu.com .

Contact:

Fujitsu Limited
Public and Investor Relations
http://www.fujitsu.com/global/news/contacts/
+81-3-3215-5259

Jan 30, 2012
Source: Fujitsu Limited
Fujitsu Limited (TSE: 6702) (U.S: FJTSY)
From the Japan Corporate News Network
http://www.japancorp.net
Topic: Press release summary
View more news from these Sectors: Electronics General, Hardware, Networks & Cloud Computing

Read the original here:
AT&T Selects Fujitsu Network Communications as Domain Network Equipment Supplier

AT&T Selects Domain Network Equipment Supplier

DALLAS, Jan. 27, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- AT&T[1]*
today announced the selection of Fujitsu as one of its Domain
Suppliers for optical and transport equipment for AT&T's
industry-leading IP-based network.

The multi-year selection covers equipment used to expand and
maintain AT&T's metropolitan and long-haul network
infrastructure.

Financial terms of the supplier agreement are still being
negotiated.

"After an extensive evaluation of multiple optical and
transport equipment suppliers, we are pleased to extend our
relationship with Fujitsu," said Tim Harden, President of
AT&T's Supply Chain and Fleet Operations organization.

AT&T's Domain Supplier program, launched in September 2009,
facilitates a more collaborative relationship with AT&T's
equipment and software suppliers, enabling AT&T to have the
best technologies in place to serve its customers. The program
is also designed to ensure that the company's network
technology investment accelerates AT&T's move toward a
network that is well-equipped for the future.

Domain Suppliers will support AT&T in its continual efforts
to innovate and invest in one of the world's most advanced and
powerful networks. AT&T's IP
backbone network
[2] carries
more than 28.9 petabytes of traffic on an average business day
and includes more than 917,000 route miles of fiber-optic
cable. With continued mobile
broadband
[3] growth and
wired broadband usage, traffic on AT&T's IP backbone
network continues to grow year over year.

*AT&T products and services are provided or offered by
subsidiaries and affiliates of AT&T Inc. under the AT&T brand
and not by AT&T Inc.

About AT&T
AT&T Inc. (NYSE:T) is a premier
communications holding company and one of the most
honored companies in the world
[4]. Its
subsidiaries and affiliates – AT&T operating companies –
are the providers of AT&T services in the United States and
around the world. With a powerful array of network resources
that includes the nation's fastest mobile broadband network,
AT&T is a leading provider of wireless, Wi-Fi, high speed
Internet, voice and cloud-based services. A leader in
mobile
broadband
and emerging 4G capabilities, AT&T also
offers the best wireless coverage worldwide of any U.S.
carrier, offering the most wireless phones that work in the
most countries.  It also offers advanced TV services under
the AT&T U-verse® and AT&T ?DIRECTV brands.
The company's suite of IP-based business communications
services is one of the most advanced in the world. In domestic
markets, AT&T Advertising Solutions and AT&T
Interactive are known for their leadership in local search and
advertising. 

Additional information about AT&T Inc. and the products and
services provided by AT&T subsidiaries and affiliates is
available at http://www.att.com[5].  This
AT&T news release and other announcements are available at
http://www.att.com/newsroom[6] and
as part of an RSS feed at http://www.att.com/rss[7]. Or
follow our news on Twitter at @ATT[8].

© 2012 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
Mobile broadband not available in all areas. AT&T, the
AT&T logo and all other marks contained herein are
trademarks of AT&T Intellectual Property and/or AT&T
affiliated companies.

 

 

 

References

  1. ^ AT&T
    (us.lrd.yahoo.com)
  2. ^ AT&T's IP backbone
    network
    (us.lrd.yahoo.com)
  3. ^ mobile broadband
    (us.lrd.yahoo.com)
  4. ^ one of the most honored companies
    in the world
    (us.lrd.yahoo.com)
  5. ^ http://www.att.com
    (us.lrd.yahoo.com)
  6. ^ http://www.att.com/newsroom
    (us.lrd.yahoo.com)
  7. ^ http://www.att.com/rss
    (us.lrd.yahoo.com)
  8. ^ @ATT
    (us.lrd.yahoo.com)

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AT&T Selects Domain Network Equipment Supplier