96 Years Ago

Vimy Ridge

(Veterans Affairs Canada) The battle of Vimy Ridge was the first occasion when all four divisions of the Canadian Expeditionary Force participated in a battle together and thus became a Canadian nationalistic symbol of achievement and sacrifice. A 100 hectare portion of the former battleground serves as a preserved memorial park and site of the Canadian National Vimy Memorial.

At Vimy, the Canadian Corps had captured more ground, more prisoners and more guns than any previous British offensive in two-and-a-half years of war. It was one of the most complete and decisive engagements of the Great War and the greatest Allied victory up to that time. The Canadians had demonstrated they were one of the outstanding formations on the Western Front and masters of offensive warfare.

Though the victory at Vimy came swiftly, it did not come without cost. There were 3,598 dead out of 10,602 Canadian casualties. Battalions in the first waves of the assault suffered grievously. No level of casualties could ever be called acceptable, but those at Vimy were lower than the terrible norm of many major assaults on the Western Front. They were also far lighter than those of any previous offensive at the Ridge. Earlier French, British and German struggles there had cost at least 200,000 casualties. Care in planning by the Corps Commander, Sir Julian Byng, and his right-hand man, Arthur Currie, kept Canadian casualties down.

Vimy Ridge

The Battle of Vimy Ridge, a painting by Richard Jack. Canadian War Museum.

The Canadian success at Vimy marked a profound turning-point for the Allies. A year-and-a-half later, the Great War was over. The Canadian record, crowned by the achievements at Vimy, won for Canada a separate signature on the Versailles Peace Treaty ending the war. Back home, the victory at Vimy, won by troops from every part of the country, helped unite many Canadians in pride at the courage of their citizen-soldiers, and established a feeling of real nationhood.

Brigadier-General Alexander Ross had commanded the 28th (North-West) Battalion at Vimy. Later, as president of the Canadian Legion, he proposed the first Veterans’ post-war, pilgrimage to the new Vimy Memorial in 1936. He said of the battle:

“It was Canada from the Atlantic to the Pacific on parade. I thought then . . . that in those few minutes I witnessed the birth of a nation.”

For more information on Vimy Ridge, go HERE

Worldline won’t “Tie” you down

Tie DomiOur competitor, Comwave, announced this week that they have “teamed up with Maple Leaf legend, Tie Domi to help consumers “Stand Up” to the Big Phone and Cable Companies.”

First off, a Maple Leaf “Legend”? Seriously?

Second – wonder where they got that “Stand Up” idea?

Anyway, in this  “legendary” announcement they introduced a “new” product, a home phone and Internet bundle, for $49.95, something that we’ve offered for almost two years. Innovative they are not.

But what they won’t tell you is that when you sign up for this “new” bundle, you sign up for three years.

You have to sign a contract.

Worldline has no contracts, and there are big implications to that.

What No Contracts Means for You

The implications of having no contracts for Worldline Customers are basically huge.

They’ve got the power.

Let’s put it this way. Have you ever bought a lemon? A real clunker? A car that started to break down as soon as you got it, but since you bought it, all you could do is suffer through the consequences?

Wouldn’t it have been great if, at the first sign of trouble, you were able to drive that piece of junk back to where you got it and simply hand over the keys?

No muss. No fuss. No pressure.

That’s what Worldline is offering our customers the ability to do. They can cancel their service when they chose for whatever reason and they are free and clear of us.

Now, because of the quality of service and the value we offer, they don’t do that very often. We lose about 1% of our customers every month, but mostly that is due to them moving and things like that.

What No Contracts Means for Us

Simply put, every single day we have to continuously earn our customer’s business.

It’s what keeps us in business.

And so far, business is pretty good.

Hey Chris! We’re right here!

Chris_Hadfield_Southern_Ontario

Col. Chris Hadfield’s shot of Southern Ontario for the International Space Station

The entire world has been captivated by Chris Hadfield and his ongoing social campaign from space. The Canadian now commanding the International Space Station has been orbiting the earth  since December, and ever since he’s been live-Tweeting his experiences to a rabid following of over 600,000 people, with thousands more joining daily.

Tweeting pictures of the planet from his unique perspective, he’s been praised around the globe for his thoughtful, provocative, fun and sometimes philosophical messages.

The astronaut has posted thousands of pictures of Canada like Victoria, Cape Breton and Ottawa, as well as locations around the world including Havana, Central Asia, Mt. Fuji, Belarus and Mt. Etna, an active volcano spewing smoke and ash into the sky in Italy.

On Easter at dawn he was flying over Southern, Ontario, and he took the picture on the top of this post.

It was our one dawn of the day, it was his 16th. As powerful as that image is for us to see, showing us where we work live and play, from his perspective, he’s sees things differently.

“The world just unrolls itself for you and you see it absolutely discreetly as one place.

“Yes, there are important territorial issues, there are important personal issues. But at the same time, with increased communication, with increased understanding, comes a more global perspective.

“This is a spaceship, but so is the world.”

Follow Canadian ISS Comander, Col. Chis Hadfield on his epic journey here.

 

 

She turned me into a NEWT™

http://youtu.be/xzYO0joolR0

We have hundreds of thousands of Worldline customers across the country, but I bet no more than a handful of them have heard first, that Worldline is the residential brand of a company called Fibernetics, and second, Fibernetics has a business services division named NEWT™.

newt_box_cmNot the John Cleese version, but our little green guy is on the logo on our hardware, like this thing called the NEWT™ Managed PBX.

What this teeny little machine does (it’s about the size of a paperback) is get rid of business’s huge, clunky, outdated energy sucking, costly phone systems and instead provides them with an easily managed voice solution, that doesn’t require a team of IT guys to keep it running.

Cooler still, they run it from their desktops using a console application. Packed with over 60 features, the NEWT™ Managed PBX provides startup companies with a big company presence, and big companies with multiple locations a completely scalable system and one that saves them up to 80% on the telco bills.

Canadian green energy leader Bullfrog Power just switched over to the NEWT™ Managed PBX because of all of the above, and the power consumption for their install is about the same as running one 60 watt light bulb.

To give you an idea of what that means, an old style phone system, like Nortel’s Meridian with a similar configuration uses 26x the electricity to run.

80% savings on telco bills and 26 times less power. That’s the NEWT™ Managed PBX.

If you’re interested in outfitting your company with this cool little guy, you can get more details here.

 

 

 

Madame X & Surge

Madame X

Madame X perched on the Worldline Falcon Cam

Next time you are in Hamilton, Ontario, and passing by the Sheraton Hotel, look up and you might be able to see a pair of Peregrine Falcons who are currently preparing a nest to lay their eggs.

Or, instead of breaking your neck trying to catch a glimpse, you can watch from your desktop using the Worldline Falcon Webcam.

The Hamilton Community Peregrine Project hosted by the Hamilton Falcon Watch and the Hamilton Naturalist Club reactivated the cameras last month and currently they are on the lookout for courting and nesting behaviour.

They expect to see eggs in early April – or basically right now!

In 2012 Madame X and Surge hatched three chicks, all boys – Beckett (682 grams), Felker (671 grams) and Tiffany, who weighed in at a trim 641 grams. All named for Hamilton waterfalls, all three birds flew strongly on their first flights, and quickly mastered the skies without need for any rescues.

Falcon_beam

Surge, perched on the Camera beam

Falcon Watch says Madame X was hatched on a bridge on Pennsylvania Route 309, the Cross-Valley Expressway in Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania. Banded as a hatchling on 7 June 1999, she was known to the falcon watchers in Northeast PA as ‘Runaround Sue’, a name suggested after she was found running along the expressway guide wall one morning.

Hatched and banded in Etobicoke in 2002, Surge spent at least part of the 2004-2005 seasons trying to establish a nest at the Burlington Lift Bridge. In 2006 he replaced the male at the Sheraton nest and has been in Hamilton since. This will be the nineteenth year the same nest site on the Sheraton Hamilton Hotel has been used.

Worldline is thrilled to be able to provide the webcam for the world to watch Madame X and Surge as they prepare for their new family.

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