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Miami: 155000$ and you have Internet Cafe
Thursday, 18 October 2007

If you want to buy internet cafe in Miami, now its your chance (if you have 155k $).

Good Luck

See the ad in Craigslist  

 

Last Updated ( Thursday, 18 October 2007 )
 
Burma: Internet back , but lines fluctuate
Thursday, 11 October 2007
Though internet is accessible during the day since yesterday after more than two weeks of being cut-off, users in Rangoon said the connection faltered after a few hours of surfing.

An internet cafe owner in Rangoon said they were just about beginning normal business when the net became inaccessible once again.

"The lines were accessible from noon (local time) but it again went off like yesterday at about 4 p.m. (local time). It was available for a few hours, so we were not able to do any business," said a cyber cafe owner in Rangoon.

Though the junta, in a show of stability, has re-connected internet services, a Rangoon based journalist said the frequent failure of internet lines could be the junta's way to keep control information outflow.

Read more at Mizzima News

 
Baghdad: Cyber cafes provide lifeline to outside world
Monday, 15 October 2007

According to the latest estimates -- from two years ago -- there are 36,000 Internet users in Iraq. These don't take into account the thousands who visit cyber cafes across the country every day to chat with friends, do research, cyber-flirt or find marriage partners.

"Iraqis everywhere are keeping in touch with each other through the Internet," said Laith Lutfi, owner of the Baghdad Center for Internet in the capital's Karrada Meriam suburb. "Most of our customers come here to chat or to Skype".

The nightly curfew now coming into effect at midnight instead of 11pm, and that  is good news for those with relatives living in distant time zones, such as Australia, the US and Canada.

"After 10 at night I get many people who come here to chat or Skype with their relations in the United States," said Lutfi, who charges 2,000 dinar (US$1.60) an hour for Internet access.

Read more at Taipei Times

 
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