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I Need Some Non-corporate Sites .

Would you END CORPORATE WELFARE?

Would you or would you not END CORPORATE WELFARE?
Do You Want Lower Taxes? The US is the third lowest taxed country of the industrialized world. BUT, what If I told you that your taxes could be lowered, our schools, roads, bridges, first responders, emts, police, and fire departments could all receive more funding and in addition to all of that we could finance research and development for renewable, clean energy sources and break our dependence on oil, coal and nuclear power just by ending Corporate Subsidies(also known as corporate "welfare")? NOWHERE in the US Constitution is the House of Representatives or the Senate Granted the authority to use tax payer funds to subsidize business or guarantee loans. Why are these corporate GIANTS being supported on the backs of the hard-working, tax-paying Americans?

Help end this injustice by visiting: http://www.thepetitionsite.com/take...

Sources:
www.nader.org
www.wikipedia.com
http://www.cato.org/pubs/pas/pa592....

Need help with this corporate social responsibility question!?

SHOW HOW STARBUCKS DEMONSTRATES CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY.. YOUR ANSWER MUST INCLUDE: ENVIROMENTAL ISSUES...THE EFFECT ON SUPLLIERS,,,THE EFFECT ON EMPLOYEES... THE EFFECT ON CONSUMERS AND THE GENERAL PUBLIC...THE EFFECT ON THE LOCAL COMMUNITY?? Can someone give me an idea of what to write please as I am absolutely clueless of what to write. Thanks

Is Wordpress a good choice for a Corporate website?

The answer is yes. WordPress is a powerful open source CMS solution that provides its users with all of the tools required for unleashing the power of the web for any businesses. Many business starters develop their WordPress sites without ringing the bell of a developer while some turn to WordPress experts to get the job done. Either way you choose to proceed, using WordPress for business is a great way to get a website life for your company.Here are 6 main reasons why WordPress is a perfect option for building a corporate website:Easy to Setup and ManageEasy to CustomizeMobile ResponsiveSEO OptimizedBlogging is Built-InLarge CommunityPlus, if you’re looking for premium Wordpress themes for your corporate website, I’d like to recommend this Onetone - Powerful One page Parallax Wordpress Theme. It is one page WordPress theme which focuses on business and portfolio websites which provides all business information.

Can I add/use WordPress.com for a corporate website and not WordPress.org?

You can absolutely use WordPress.com to create a corporate website. They do have business plans that let you use your domain and even allow you to install plugins, so WordPress.com now is almost like other Managed WP hosting services. With some limitation in terms of how much you can customize your code, but with the best possible server infrastructure ever built for WordPress.Hope this helps :-)

How do you find charter numbers for ohio corporations?

You have to go to the Ohio Secretary of State Website. Then under business and services (right under Jennifer Brunner's picture) you'll click business and corporations. then you go to the database and search the filings. They'll have you type in the name of your business (i'd suggest doing a fuzzy search) and then all the businesses will pop up. your charter number will be there. you can also look at your filing paperwork and certificates. And the issue and expiration date of your charter. If you need a charter number because you dont have one, you can get it at the same site. Hope this helps!

Is the company "Corporate Research International" a legitimate company?

Yes, CRI is legitimate. Here are some things to look for to determine whether a company is a legitimate mystery shopping company or a scam.

There are hundreds of legitimate mystery shopping companies in the U.S. alone. The quickest way to determine that a company is NOT legitimate is that they require you to pay a fee to register. Or, they make you sign up for a bunch of phony "offers."

Legitimate mystery shopping companies will ask you to complete a detailed application. This is similar to a job application, however, it may include questions about your age, gender, buying habits, family income, even race. That is because some clients need shoppers who fit a certain profile.

You will also be asked, on most applications, for your Social Security Number. They need this because they may have to file a 1099 form with the IRS. Before entering your SSN or other sensitive information, check to see that the site is secure. (Look for "https" in the URL, or for the "lock" in the bottom status bar.) If you are still uncomfortable about entering your SSN online, you may be able to enter a dummy number, and provide the real number another way.

I have listed two sites below where you can get feedback about companies. If a company is a member of the Mystery Shopping Providers Association, they are legitimate. Companies are screened before joining, and they sign an ethics pledge. You can also search the archives in the shopper forums at the MSPA site and Volition.com to see what other shoppers have to say about a company.

In checking on CRI, I found that they do not belong to the MSPA, but shoppers have indicated they have had good experiences with them. So, they are legitimate.

Do not limit yourself to applying to this one company. Apply to as many as you can. Generally, one company can not give you many assignments.

Cathy Stucker
Author of "The Mystery Shopper's Manual"
http://www.MysteryShoppersManual.com/

I need a nice website name/url for my stuff..?

Okay, I've been planning a website and got everything ready for it..but I have absolutely no idea what to call it..

Info: My 'site' will feature my profile/friends and my portifolio along with other website tricks and stuff for like myspace and xanga..bit of a rapid website but it's not as rubbish as it sounds! :p

Details: A nice name, something slick but not 'corporate' sounding..it'll be with '.co.uk' at the end..umm, I want something nice and short, around 10 characters..

I'll add more information as I get some..
Thanks you for any ideas!

Nitrogen.

When creating a corporate domain is it better to have a .com or a .me domain?

You should stick with a .COM, as that's what most non-technical people still associate with websites. You're putting yourself at a disadvantage by using .ME or any other TLD because people will assume as a professional corporation that you own the .COM.There should not be a direct effect on your ability to rank well for your brand name whether you use .COM or .ME. There could be an indirect effect though if less people share your site because you use some obscure TLD that they're not familiar with.One thing to keep in mind is that having a pronounceable name and one that's easy to spell trumps what TLD you use. You're better off using TruckSpot.co than Trcckk.com because your customers won't remember how to spell the latter and you'll find yourself constantly having to spell it out. Bottom line: For a corporation you need a domain name that's easy to spell, easy to pronounce, and a .COM.

Where would the Web be if these 5 websites went offline forever?

If Google disappeared, people would use Bing/another search engine and someone would develop something in an attempt to fill the hole Google left. It is the extra services that Google offers that people would miss the most but there are alternatives out there that might not work as well now but as soon as they had the market share would be improved.Twitter  - Maybe myspace will have a mini revival! I would say Google+ but assume you mean that Google includes all Google related sites and products, not just search. Again someone would build another social network to replace TwitterFacebook - same as aboveWikipedia - much of the information on Wikipedia is available elsewhere on the internet, just not in such an easy to use way. College kids would probably miss this the most but they could just use a service like quora to get the answers they need instead.Amazon - there are so many other sites that offer the same products as amazon. People would just need to use multiple sites rather than the one. I think the loss of amazon would be felt the least.None of the sites are irreplaceable. the loss of Facebook and Twitter together would leave social media junkies bereft for a bit but everyone would quickly flock somewhere else.Wikipedia would be the hardest site to replace as it has been contributed to by millions of people across the world.

What are the valid reasons a major company website should not be built in WordPress?

If the company is very small, and the site is very small-scale, fine. WP is a very good thing, and it has many uses. The Time Magazine example is trivial: it's effectively a set of static pages. Many company sites are like this, brochure sites effectively; WP works fine for this (but then so do a million and one other CMS/Frameworks/Static Site Generators, maybe not as completely, but nevertheless). When a company needs more than that, there are much, much better solutions. I'm pretty confident Time don't build everything in WordPress.But here's a normal, general scenario (applicable if there are one or two, or tens of developers):Company uses and hires [in the main] for a specific programming language.Company has a development, testing and deployment workflow optimized for this language.Company builds all their stuff (sites, applications etc) in this language (using application frameworks).Company has other (API engines, data generation, recording, payment, logging, build etc - data streams and interfaces of various kinds) services that it is important that anything they build should talk to.The developers who work for the company are experienced in all the above, and are more than capable of putting together websites very quickly.So, say the company has a development team that primarily uses Ruby (so, Rails). Why on earth would they make life difficult for themselves by using WP? Building a WP-like site, with the same functionality, is trivial; it then interoperates without major issues with internal applications etc. The deployment and testing involves known problems, security issues are understood.Same situation with Java, Python, whatever. Modern PHP even. You're a. making an error thinking it is difficult to build things with WP-like functionality, and b. making an error in thinking that, for many companies, the website is the important bit: generally it's the virtual machinery that sits behind it, handling data, that a company needs to control. Building public-facing and admin interfaces isn't particularly difficult. Having a monolithic blog framework attempting to run that is a bad thing. A company could just use WP as a front end (which is the likeliest scenario), but then, what would they gain by not using the languages & frameworks they build everything else in? Features are company a specific, so plugins would generally need to be modified, nullifying the advantage gained over building the functionality themselves.

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