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our dear leader Kim jong il is the most praiseworthy man on earth
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Interactive Enterprise Licenses Its #1 Globally Deployed Broadband Provisioning, Service Activation Software to South KoreaÂs Largest Cable Services Provider
(PRWEB) November 13, 2004
Interactive Enterprise, the provider of ConexonTM — the #1 globally deployed system in the cable provisioning and activation market — today announced that Korea Digital Cable Media Center Co., Ltd. (KDMC), South KoreaÂs largest cable service provider, has licensed its Conexon software to support its OpenCable-based rollout of digital services.
Interactive Enterprise also revealed that it has signed its first two Korean distributors: Samsung SDS and Samji Electronics.
KDMC is a consortium made up of 44 independent cable television system operators that as a group invest in technology and programming in order to provide better quality of content and value-added-services to their customers. KDMC is by far the largest cable services provider with four million combined subscribers.
Conexon provides cable and satellite operators with complete control over back office provisioning and service activation systems. It also offers control over platform management, business process definition and service creation, as well as the ability to develop interfaces for new services, thus reducing the dependency on third-party developers and costs associated with consulting and licensing fees. Benefits to operators include reductions in deployment costs, time to market, manual work processes and data management risks.
ÂWe selected Interactive EnterpriseÂs Conexon because of its demonstrable triple-play capability, said Seong-Duck Park, president of KDMC. ÂIt is a proven, full-featured product that can be deployed in a very short timeframe, which is very important for us in this highly competitive market.Â
ÂWe are delighted to announce another Conexon triple-play licensing, said Paul McBride, chief executive officer for Interactive Enterprise, Âparticularly since KDMC is the largest digital media center in Korea, a very strategic market for us. We look forward to working with KDMC to ensure the successful implementation and deployment of Conexon to meet its subscriber needs.Â
Adds Two Korean Resellers
Interactive Enterprise has also significantly strengthened its Asian distribution capabilities with the signing of two prominent Korean distributors. Samsung SDS is the systems integration division of Samsung and is among the largest Korean information technology firms. Samji Electronics is a distributor and value-added reseller of various broadband equipment offerings, including networks, head-ends, and CPE devices.
ÂThese reseller signings are significant as they provide us with strategic distribution capabilities, said McBride. ÂSamJi has a tremendous cable/broadband customer network and technical support capability, while Samsung SDS has outstanding OSS and systems integration skills.Â
About Korea Digital Cable Media Center Co., Ltd.
For more information about KDMC, please visit http://www.dmcitv.com.
About Interactive Enterprise
Founded in 1998, Interactive Enterprise, Ltd. develops and markets broadband provisioning and service activation software to global broadband operators. Its ConexonTM software platform is the #1 solution deployed globally and enables operators to rapidly deliver voice, video and data services to their subscribers across multiple broadband platforms and devices. The company markets its multi-service offerings throughout North America, Latin America, Europe and Asia directly and through channel partners such as Motorola and CSG Systems.
Interactive Enterprise differentiates its Conexon platform on its ability to reduce operating costs by as much as 40 percent with a 7-12 month ROI. It also offers an accelerated time to revenue as operators can both deploy Conexon applications and rapidly develop and deploy their own complementary service packages from the platform. Further, Conexon enables operators to define any service and develop interfaces into third-party complementary applications such as digital head-ends, telephone switches, billing systems, etc. This gives operators complete control over the end-to-end creation and delivery of services and protects their investments. It also enables the rapid uptake of services by subscribers, thus increasing the service providerÂs average revenue per user (ARPU).
All companies and products listed herein are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders.
Media Contact:
George Cohen
George Cohen Communications, Inc.
Tel: 617-325-0011
Email: george@gccpr.com
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Article by MIN LWIN
Suspicious N. Korean Ship to Dock in Burma Soon By MIN LWINMonday, June 22, 2009A 2,000-ton North Korean cargo ship will dock at Thilawa port, 30 kilometers (20 miles) south of Rangoon, in the next few days, an official at Thilawa port authority told The Irrawaddy on Monday.The Kang Nam 1 left a North Korean port on Wednesday and passed along the coast of China. A US Navy destroyer has tracked the ship since its departure.The same ship docked at the port in 2004, at that time raising suspicions about the nature of its cargo. Speculation centered on convention arms, missiles or some type of nuclear weaponry.”Normally, North Korea cargo ships dock in Thilawa port,” the port official told The Irrawaddy.The Burmese military government permitted a North Korean cargo ship, the Kang Nam 1, to dock in 2007 near Thilawa port because it reportedly was in distress and taking shelter from a storm. The docking raised suspicions about its cargo. The government said that it allowed the Kang Nam to dock for humanitarian reasons. The true purpose of its visit might have had something to do with Burma’s goal of being a nuclear power by 2025, according to some military analysts. In the past, there have been rumors circulating inside and outside Burma that North Korean nuclear technology specialists were in Burma, offering the junta nuclear and biological technology. Military analysts say the North Korean Communist regime has provided Burma with weapons, military technology transfers and expertise in underground tunneling used for concealing military installations.North Korea sold rocket launchers to Burma in 2008, in a deal that was brokered by an unnamed Singapore trading country in violation of the UN sanctions imposed against North Korea after it conducted nuclear tests in 2006.Burmese-North Korean military ties were reestablished in 1999 when members of the Burmese junta paid a low-profile visit to the rogue state. The junta sent a delegation to North Korea secretly again in November 2000 for a meeting with high-ranking officials of North Korea’s People’s Armed Forces. A North Korean delegation led by Deputy Foreign Minister Park Kil-yon met with his counterpart, Khin Maung Win, in June 2001.Burma and North Korea, two of Asia’s most authoritarian countries, officially restored diplomatic ties in 2007, ending a diplomatic crisis after a bombing carried out by North Korean spies in 1983, part of an assassination attempt on South Korea’s then-president, Chun Doo-hwan, during a visit to Rangoon.North Korea has consistently angered its Asian neighbors and other countries with threats of missile launches, threats against South Korea and its on-gain, off-again nuclear program, prompting US and South Korean forces to raise their military alert status recently.
About the Author
For further information on it please visit http://kim-jong-il.com/DL
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