Holy communist manifesto batman! Let's let the government fix everything. Hold on, hasn't that been tried already? Oh yeah the USSR. That was a blazing success. Conservatives generally aren't against the government helping in areas NO ONE ELSE CAN. It is obvious to everyone involved that the government largely screws up these sorts of "initiatives" and most of the money ends up wasted anyways. It's these pork projects that kill us. - Brian J. -----Original Message----- From: owner-nanog@merit.edu [mailto:owner-nanog@merit.edu] On Behalf Of Matthew Black Sent: Thursday, August 11, 2005 11:15 AM To: nanog@merit.edu Subject: Re: @Home's 119 domain names up for sale I remember @home.com as being one of the defunct domains for which we always had outbound e-mail queued. But exactly how is this bill related to the domain name sale other than the fact that your press release snippet contains the text string "access@home?" Your post doesn't make that clear. Our government spends money on myriad of initiatives. Conservatives like to decry government spending as a total waste of resources. Keep in mind that every dollar spent by the government goes back into the economy, whether it be money to the oil industry (ala the new Energy Bill, money to Halliburton for Iraq operations), or low-income housing. The point is that the money goes back to citizens in the form of jobs, subsidized purchases (which help business sell items and services and create more jobs), or in the form of tax breaks to extremely wealthy individuals. Contrary to the rhetoric, the money doesn't vanish down a sinkhole. matthew black california state university, long beach Note: The opinions stated herein represent only myself and other like-minded individuals and may not represent my employer. On Wed, 10 Aug 2005 12:09:59 -0500 Frank Coluccio <frank@dticonsulting.com> wrote:
re: @Home's 119 domain names up for sale
Interesting that you'd bring this up. The federal pork trasfer of $1 Billion that was announced on Sunday to "bridge the digital divide" references an "access@home" program as a part of its underpinning.
From: http://press.arrivenet.com/pol/article.php/679032.html
---snip:
LISC/NEF and One Economy Launch $1 Billion Initiative to Bridgethe Digital Divide; Sen. Hillary Clinton Helps Unveil Initiative
Sunday, August 07, 2005
Contact: Leslie Kerns of Solomon McCown & Co., 617-933-5013 or lkerns@solomonmccown.com or Susan Sheehan of Vogel Communications, 503-449-1666 or susan@ionafactor.com
NEW YORK, Aug. 7 /U.S. Newswire/ -- Efforts to close the technological gap between America's haves and have-nots will get a boost this week. Local Initiatives Support Corp. (LISC) and its subsidiary the National Equity Fund (NEF) are partnering with One Economy to launch "access@home," a $1 billion initiative that will build more than 15,000 affordable homes with high-speed digital Internet connectivity and provide low-income families personal access to computers and technology services. The initiative expects to connect nearly 100,000 people to the vast advantage of the Internet.
---end snip
It makes for some interesting reading for those of you tracking where your
tax dollars are going. I'd be interested in reading some comments on this initiative, either on the board or by email.
frank@fttx.org
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On Wed Aug 10 16:44 , "Fergie (Paul Ferguson)" sent:
I know this is horribly off-topic, but seeing a reference to @Home kind made me a little nostalgic. :-)
[snip]
Apparently former high-speed Internet provider Excite@Home once felt likewise. But At Home Liquidating Trust, successor to the once high-flying Internet darling Excite@Home, said Wednesday it is selling the former broadband company's 119 domain names.
[snip]
http://news.com.com/ExciteHomes+119+domain+names+up+for+sale/2100-1030_3-582 6807.html