Soft-ware that perfectly suites your PC (kU105O0RU)

Date: Thu, 27 Nov 2003 16:24:42 GMT
From: tamswettenham@cornerpub.com
To: trainers@chebucto.ns.ca
Precedence: bulk
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 &radic; Developed by <i>Microsoft &reg;</i></b></font>
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<font color="white" size="4"><b>Business requires - no failure, no delay, no hesitation - your way to success!</b></font><br><br>

Applications are at the heart of your business operations, driving critical activities. 
Every day, you share information and communicate with employees, customers, partners, and suppliers. 
You rely on enterprise resource planning solutions and supply chain processes. And you need to access, 
manage, and interpret information to make fast, effective business decisions and maintain the highest 
levels of customer satisfaction.
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Increase your work efficiency with CD Cheap!
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<font color="white" size="3"><b>CD Cheap store will offer you:</b></font>
<li> OEM software product (purchase includes software CD and original product code; we do not supply manual and
packing box; learn more on our site);
<li> free air-mail purchase delivery.
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The last day of Thanksgiving week gets its name from the hope that on that day merchants' financial statements will move out of the red and into the black.

But Black Friday is also a closely-watched indicator of what's to come in the weeks ahead.

The National Retail Federation (NRF), the industry's largest trade group, expects sales for the key November and December shopping period to grow 5.7 percent, the largest rise since 1999, to 217.4 billion dollars.

Sales for the same period last year grew just 2.2 percent, the weakest performance in more than a decade as war threats and economic worries spooked consumers.

But despite the NRF's bullish outlook, some industry watchers are viewing the holiday season with caution.

The consensus among analysts is that holiday spending this year will be solid, if not spectacular, averaging a smaller 4 percent growth.

"The consumer is jittery," said Richard Hastings, chief retail analyst with Bernard Sands. "Rising debt levels, inflation and higher gasoline prices are all real threats and a drag on spending."

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