Rev.Net Announcements/News
Tue Jul 21, 2009 - One month FREE service on the Home, Pro, and ProPlus plans!
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Dear Customers,
The Rev.Net offices and tech support will be closed on Friday, April 10th, 2009 in observance of Easter. The offices and tech support will reopen Monday, April 13th, at 8:00am as usual. We hope you have a wonderful Easter weekend with your families!
Rev.Net Support Team
--
Rev.Net Internet Access & Services
"The power of a good connection"
Sun Jan 4, 2009 - Rev.Net Security/Email Reminders
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This is the Rev.Net Internet Access monthly help email to remind you of
security warnings, polices and other important matters dealing with your
Rev.Net account.
** EMAIL **
Rev.Net will NEVER ask for your USER ID or PASSWORD through an e-mail.
If you get such a request, delete it. It is NOT from Rev.Net.
Just recently, another spam email came through with the subject "CONFIRM YOUR EMAIL IDENTITY FOR UPGRADE/MAINTENANCES", but it is not from us! Just delete the message.
We do occasionally send out email announcements and reminders, including
this monthly message. However, we will never ask for you to reply with personal account information including your account name, password,
billing information, etc. We never send attachments in our broadcast emails
either. If you get an email proporting to be from a Rev.Net employee or
Rev.Net department asking for personal information or with an attachment,
simply delete the email.
** SPAM/VIRUS **
Our premier customers enjoy our spam and virus blocker on their email
boxes. If you have one of our standard accounts and would like the
spam/virus blocker added to your account, please call us at 772-3282 (or
your local voice number listed at the bottom).
For virus protection on your personal computer at home, we recommend the Free AVG program by GriSoft at http://free.avg.com/
Roanoke - 540.772.3282
Salem - 540.302.3282
Blacksburg - 540.200.3282
Pulaski - 540.980.0880
Lynchburg - 434.477.3282
Lexington - 540.464.3282
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Greetings Rev.Net Customers!
Happy Thanksgiving everyone!! The Rev.Net offices and tech support will
be closed on Thursday, Nov 27, 2008 in observance of the holiday. We will
be back in the office on Friday morning. We hope you and your family have a nice Thanksgiving!
Thanks for choosing Rev.Net!
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Congratulations Erich and Lori!
Samuel James Geist, born Friday, July 25th 2008. 6 lbs 12 ozs.
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The Rev.Net offices and tech support will be closed on Friday,
July 4th, 2008. The offices will reopen on Monday morning at
8:00am as usual. We at Rev.Net wish everyone a safe and happy
Independence Day.
Thanks for choosing Rev.Net!!!
Doyle
E. Doyle Edgerton, Jr.
President & CEO
Rev.Net Technologies, Inc.
540-772-3282 x710
Mon Jun 23, 2008 - Rev.Net Employees Cut Fuel Costs
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Rev.Net has had ENOUGH!
It is time to do something to save some money against these ridiculous gasoline prices.
One way is to cut our fuel use, which will lower demand. To start what I, as CEO of Rev.Net, hope becomes a trend throughout Roanoke, I am allowing ALL my Roanoke employees to work from home 2 days per week: 1 day individually, and 1 day, collectively, on Fridays.
About 15 months ago we developed a new phone system that allows us to carry our phone number and extension wherever we are in the world! We have been testing this by allowing employees to rotate working from home for some time now and it has been a success. So now we're going full tilt. Your technical support will be the same as it is now. What this means for you is there is NO CHANGE for you to reach us by phone.
What it means to Rev.Net employees is cash back in their budget, every week, for other things, as each employee has a substantial commute. This shall result in a 40% reduction per employee, PER WEEK, in fuel use. If companies pull together and do this, IT COULD MAKE A DIFFERENCE. If it doesn't affect fuel prices, at least I'll know I've saved my employees 40% per week on their gasoline bill. That adds up, fast! I understand a lot of industries can't do this yet, but there are a LOT of companies that can. I call out to all CEO's throughout Roanoke, whose employees spend most of their time on the phone, to seriously give this some thought. It will absolutely save your employees money and raise morale at the same time. Plus we just might be able to do our part in saving a planet and maybe, just maybe, if it catches on in other cities, drive the cost of gasoline down to a sane price again.
Starting the week of June 23rd, 2008, the offices on Brambleton Ave in Roanoke will be closed on Fridays, but we shall remain hard at work on your Internet service, websites and programming. Just give us a call at 540-772-3282 if you have any questions or need Internet access support.
If you are interested in how we can help your company utilize the same phone system and other technologies available to reduce costs, save time, and increase efficiency give me a call at 772-3282 and select option 3 for sales.
Thanks for choosing Rev.Net !!!
Respectfully,
E. Doyle Edgerton, Jr. President/CEO Rev.Net Technologies, Inc.
540-772-3282 ext 710
Also, WSLS Channel 10 has done a news report on the changes Rev.Net is taking. That video can be seen on their site here.
Tue Oct 15, 2002 - Rev.Net Wins BBB Torch Award
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ROANOKE, Va., Oct. 15, 2002 - Rev.Net Technologies, Inc. was awarded the prestigious
BBB Torch Award during an awards ceremony held Tuesday, October 15th at
the Hotel Roanoke with more than 200 attendees. The award for Marketplace
Ethics is an annual program that publicly recognizes companies in Western
Virginia that maintain a solid commitment to conducting their business in
an ethical fashion. The Torch Award is designed to promote not only the
importance of ethical business practices, but the willingness and efforts
made by outstanding businesses to ensure that the state's marketplace remains
fair and honorable for all Virginians. Doyle Edgerton, Jr., President of
Rev.Net remarks, "We are very honored to receive this award. I vow to continue
our commitment to provide the highest quality of service to the communities
we serve and to make certain each person, be it customer, vendor or associate,
knows they are in a win-win situation when they deal with Rev.Net."
Entries were judged by an independent panel of business and ethics experts.
Guidelines included: long-standing history/reputation of ethical practices
in the marketplace; demonstration of ethical practices surrounding buyer/seller
relationships; high ethical standards of behavior toward customers, suppliers,
users, shareholders, employees and the communities where they do business;
marketing, advertising, communications, and sales practices that reflect what
is being offered in the marketplace; acknowledgement of ethical marketplace
practices by industry peers and in the communities where they do business; and
management practices and policies that give long-term value to shareholders,
customers, employees, vendors, and surrounding communities.
Rev.Net was one of seven finalists chosen from the Bureau's 32-county service
area that was ultimately chosen to be a Torch Award recipient for 2002. As
noted by Calvin J. Collier, Chair of the Council of Better Business Bureaus and
Senior Vice President & General Counsel/Corporate Affairs, Kraft Foods Inc.,
"The winners of the Better Business Bureaus' Torch Award competition are
remarkable for the extraordinary energy, imagination and talent they devote
to exceeding the expectations of their customers, employees, suppliers and their
communities. They are proof positive that businesses that do good, will do well,
particularly in today's competitive marketplace."
Rev.Net Technologies, Inc. located in Roanoke has been serving Roanoke, Blacksburg,
Lynchburg, Lexington and Pulaski County since 1995, as a premier provider of Internet
Services to both business and residential customers. In addition to affordable and
reliable Internet Access, the company provides Web Site Design, Hosting, Domain
Registration, Online Technical Training Programs, Streaming Video and Audio,
Shopping Cart Services, Network Design and Custom Programming. For more information
please contact Sales at (540) 772-3282 x719.
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Mon Nov 1, 1999 - Rev.Net unveils new web site filtering service
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ROANOKE, Va., Nov. 1, 1999 Rev.Net Technologies Inc., a Roanoke-based
Internet service provider, at a news conference today announced the
introduction of the "Rev.Net Family Filter," a new website filtering
service.
The Rev.Net Family Filter is designed to block access to objectionable web
sites. The web sites are pre-determined and include pornographic sites
that contain nudity of any sort; alcohol sites promoting the use of
alcohol, drink recipes, home brewing and advertisements; and criminal
sites that promote illegal activities. The program also blocks
objectionable chat rooms and incoming and outgoing e-mail.
"Using the Internet is a great way for children to learn," said E. Doyle
Edgerton Jr., president of Rev.Net. "But the Internets a hazardous place.
Children can be exposed to violent or sexually explicit material right
through the computer in the family room. Family Filter helps parents
protect their children."
U.S. Rep. Bob Goodlatte, who has supported numerous legislative attempts
to prohibit child pornography and gambling on the Internet, joined
Edgerton at the news conference.
"Congress has actively taken on the issue of the Internet and our
children," said Goodlatte, co-chair of the Congressional Internet Caucus.
"Internet safety programs put immediate control into the hands of parents.
Now parents can be sure their children are not victims of online predators
and do not fall prey to sites that promote violence, gambling or any
objectionable material. I applaud Rev.Net for offering such a practical
and worthwhile program to its subscribers. These types of products are a
responsible and affordable way to protect our children."
The Rev.Net Family Filter is also one of the easiest ways to block web
sites. Unlike over-the-counter filter software programs, Family Filter
subscribers need not install or update any software its done
automatically every 24 hours.
"Programs that load on the end-users computer require the user to install
and update them regularly. Not only that, these programs are fairly easy
to bypass," Edgerton said.
Because the filtering software resides on Rev.Nets server, it offers a
deeper level of security than other popular blocking software. The
program is constantly surveying the Internet for changes in web site
addresses and updating the system. And because the blocking software is
associated with a user name and password, Family Filter protects the user
even at other locations or computers.
Rev.Net Family Filter is available to existing subscribers for an
additional $4.95 a month. In addition to its other service plans, Rev.Net
also will begin offering a "Family Plan" for $29.95 a month. The Family
Plan includes the Rev.Net Family Filter, one dial-up account and 160 hours
of service per month plus three additional e-mail accounts for family
members and a copy of "Safety on the Web" guidelines.
The Rev.Net Family Filter is available to businesses as well. Employers
can use the Rev.Net Family Filter to block objectionable sites and prevent
employees from using the Internet for inappropriate, non-business
purposes.
Rev.Net Technologies Inc. was formed in December 1995 to provide Internet
access and services to businesses and residents in the Roanoke Valley. It
operated as a division of Kinetic Data Systems Inc., a local computer
consulting firm, until 1997, when it was established as a separate
company. In addition to Internet access, the company provides domain
creation, as well as Web design, hosting and management.
For more information about the Rev.Net Family Filter or to request your
free copy of "Safety on the Web," visit www.rev.net or call 540/772-3282.
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Thu Oct 22, 1998 - Rev.Net Technologies Now Provides Subscribers With High-Quality Training
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Roanoke, VA Thursday, October 22, 1998 Rev.Net Technologies, Inc. today
announced an enhanced service feature now available to their subscribers.
The Rev.Net Institute offers high quality, self-paced business and
personal training courses presented interactively through the Internet.
"We are always looking for value-added services that will help our
subscribers improve their quality of life, skills, or earnings" said E.
Doyle Edgerton, Jr., President. "Education and training have always been
something we wanted to offer our subscribers, but the price component has
always been unreasonable or the courses werent created in a manner that
could be effectively presented through the Internet. We can now offer
our subscribers an educational resource that covers a wide variety of
topics provided by over 200 high-quality courses. These courses can be
taken at any time, interactively, through the Internet at an extremely
low per-month price. For a limited time, we are offering our subscribers
this educational enhancement at a special introductory rate. And, if a
Rev.Net subscriber signs-up for this service before the end of 1998, we
will never increase their monthly course fee as long as they never let
their service lapse!"
Now through the December 31, 1998, you may add education to your existing
Rev.Net account for an additional $8.00 per month per userid for end-user
courses, $12.00 per month per userid for technical courses, and $17.00
per month per userid for all courses! Subscribers that take advantage of
this introductory offer will be considered "Charter Subscribers" and will
never experience an increase in course prices as long as they continue
using Rev.Net service.
Both personal and business subscribers will benefit from the courses we
offer. Home subscribers and their entire family (ages 14 and up) can
enjoy the benefits of high-quality training for users at all levels of
education or computer experience. Courses range from stress management
to business management as well as more technical courses dealing with PC
operations, the Internet, and programming languages.
Business subscribers using Rev.Net Internet access can finally provide
all their employees access to highly cost-effective training. No longer
will your business have to pay the high costs associated with to off-site
training or deal with the disruption of having employees spend days away
from the office learning a new desktop technology. Now employees can
increase their skill level at their desktop through Rev.Net, from the
home or office, at their convenience. Its easy, convenient, and very
cost effective!
The courses provide training on such topics as:
| * Netscape and Internet Explorer |
* HTML |
* Windows NT Workstation 4.0 |
| * Windows 95 |
* FrontPage 97 |
* Windows NT Server 4.0 |
| * Microsoft Office 97 |
* Internet Basics |
* Microsoft Exchange Server |
| * Microsoft Exchange |
* Visual Basic |
* PowerBuilder |
| * Time Management/Stress Management |
* Math |
* JAVA |
| * Performing Under Pressure |
* Grammar |
* C and C++ |
| * Quicken 98 |
* Project 98 |
* Windows 98 |
| * And many more! |
Most of the Microsoft courses have received either the Microsoft Approved
Study Guide logo or the Approved Courseware User Certification logo
assuring subscribers of high-quality content reviewed by Microsoft. The
courses were also specifically developed for effective presentation
through the Internet using a 28.8 KB modem. Rev.Net subscribers wanting
to see an example of these courses can visit our Web site at
http://www.rev.net/.
To sign-up for your educational service upgrade, call Rev.Net at
540-772-3282.
Tue Mar 24, 1998 - Rev.Net: Ready for the next 1,000 subscribers
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ROANOKE, Va., March 24, 1998 -- Rev.Net, a local Internet service provider, today
announced that it will begin accepting new dial-up subscribers April 1. The company
stopped taking customers early last month after reaching a self-imposed limit of
1,000. The limit was set over two years ago when Rev.Net began operation.
The company has spent the last two months planning for future growth and bolstering
operations to ensure the continued high quality of its service. With added staff and
equipment upgrades, Rev.Net said it is now prepared to accept another 1,000
subscribers.
Customers who had been put on a waiting list will have the first chance to sign up.
To handle the expansion, Rev.Net has added two employees to its technical support
staff. Technical support will continue to be provided seven days a week from 8 a.m.
to 10 p.m.
The company also has invested in software and hardware enhancements, which allow
Rev.Net now to provide:
· Secure Web site hosting, which safeguards commercial transactions.
· Faster connections for dial-up subscribers.
· The ability to handle a 500 percent greater volume of data.
To mark this milestone in the company's history, Rev.Net plans to award a $1,000
scholarship to a Virginia Western Community College computer science student.
The company also plans to replace the message on the billboards it has posted
throughout the Roanoke Valley. The billboards now read "Thanks, Roanoke, for our
first 1,000 customers." After April 1, the message will be changed to: "Ready for the
next 1,000. Sign up today."
Rev.Net was formed in December 1995 to provide Internet access and services to
businesses and residents in the Roanoke Valley. It operated as a division of Kinetic
Data Systems Inc., a local computer consulting firm, until the end of last year, when
it was established as a separate company.
Rev.Net's offices are in the Fralin & Waldron building at 2917 Penn Forest Blvd.,
S.W., in Roanoke County. In addition to Internet access, the company also provides
domain creation, as well as Web site design, hosting and management.
###
Mon Feb 2, 1998 - Company starts waiting list as it considers expansion
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ROANOKE, Va., February 2, 1998 -- Rev.Net today announced that it has signed its
1,000th customer, reaching a self-imposed limit set just over two years ago when
the local Internet service provider went into business.
"We didnt want to sign up any more dial-up subscribers than we felt we could
handle initially, both from an equipment and a personnel standpoint," said E.
Doyle Edgerton, president of Rev.Net, which provides technical support and
service in person.
Dial-up subscribers are those who access the Internet for a few hours each month
for personal or limited business use and need only a temporary connection.
Rev.Net also provides dedicated lines, including the high-speed ISDN, Frac T1
and T1 for business subscribers who require permanent, uninterrupted access.
The limit on dial-up subscribers in no way affects Rev.Nets dedicated-line
subscribers.
While Rev.Nets equipment and other infrastructure can accommodate more than
1,000 dial-up subscribers, Edgerton said he wants to evaluate the quality of the
service to make sure it's just as good today as it was when Rev.Net began.
Still, the companys incoming phone lines are being only about 70 percent
utilized even during peak times and only one or two busy signals have ever been
reported, according to Edgerton.
"As we grow, we want to make sure our first 1,000 subscribers arent adversely
impacted by our next 1,000," said Jeff Culverhouse, Rev.Nets director of
Internet services. "Once we determine that we have the capability to expand, we
will begin accepting new dial-up subscribers."
In the meantime, those who want to subscribe are being added to a waiting list.
In anticipation of the expansion, Rev.Net plans to add technical support staff
and has already begun interviewing.
Rev.Net was formed in December 1995 to provide Internet access and services to
businesses and residents in the Roanoke Valley. It operated as a division of
Kinetic Data Systems Inc., a local computer consulting firm, until the end of
last year, when it was established as a separate company.
To celebrate this milestone in Rev.Nets history, Edgerton is posting billboards
throughout the Roanoke Valley that read, "Thanks, Roanoke, for our first 1,000
customers." He also has awarded Rev.Nets first subscriber, Chuck Keelean of
Roanoke, a lifetime account.
"We owe our success to our subscribers who have supported us from the very
beginning," Edgerton said.
Rev.Net's offices are in the Fralin & Waldron building at 2917 Penn Forest
Blvd., S.W., in Roanoke County. In addition to Internet access, the company
also provides domain creation, as well as Web site design, hosting and
management.
Thu Sep 25, 1997 - Roanoke Valley Internet users now can download data twice as fast
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ROANOKE, Va., September 25, 1997 -- Roanoke Valley computer users with the fastest modems
now can benefit from Internet connections with the speed to match. Rev.Net, a local Internet
service provider, today announced that it has completed a major hardware upgrade which makes
the service compatible with users' 56 kilobits-per-second modems. Rev.Net is the first ISP in
the Roanoke Valley to offer compatibility with the new, faster modems.
The new 56 kbps modems, introduced earlier this year, send and receive data at twice the rate of
modems commonly used today. To benefit from the modem's speed, though, the user's ISP also must
have newer, faster modems.
Rev.Net has added new high-performance Series56 Digital Modem modules from Ascend Communications,
a leading provider of Internet hardware.
"The 'World Wide Wait' has just gotten shorter ," said Rev.Nets director of Internet services, Jeff
Culverhouse, referring to the time computer users spend waiting for web pages to materialize. "People
have been clamoring for faster access to the Internet and Rev.Net is pleased to be the first ISP in
the Roanoke Valley to provide high-speed, 56K service."
Rev.Net is using K56flex technology, which is expected to become the standard for 56 kbps Internet
access. Personal computers or modems that bear the K56flex logo are compatible with Rev.Net service
and available from most major computer and modem manufacturers, including Compaq, Diamond, Hewlett-Packard,
IBM, Motorola, Sony, TDK Systems, Toshiba and Zoom. The new modems retail for between $150 and $200.
Rev.Net is offering 56 kbps access at no additional charge to subscribers. Monthly fees range from
$9.95 for ten hours of access to $24.95 for 160 hours. Subscribers who pay by credit card receive a
20 percent discount and pay $7.95 and $19.95, respectively.
K56flex technology was developed by Rockwell Semiconductor and Lucent Technologies, which are among
the worlds leading chip makers.
Rev.Net is a division of Kinetic Data Systems, a Roanoke-based computer consulting firm. Rev.Net
became the Roanoke Valley's first local ISP when the service was launched in December 1995. Since
then, Rev.Net has signed up more than 900 subscribers.
For more information about subscribing to Rev.Net, call 772-3282 or visit Rev.Net's homepage at
www.rev.net.
###
Fri Jan 24, 1997 - The Roanoke Valleys first online service provider celebrates one year in business
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ROANOKE, Va., January 24, 1997 -- Five computer programmers huddled around a computer
screen late one fall afternoon in 1995 awaiting the much-anticipated message.
"Rev.Net is alive."
The words flickered humbly on the computer screen, but the message they contained sounded as
momentous as "The Eagle has landed."
After ten long months of intense research, the programmers finally had figured out how to tap into
the Internet, paving the way for the Roanoke Valley's first direct connection to the "Information
Super Highway."
"We saw that the Internet was going to change the way business is conducted, and we wanted to be a
leader," said E. Doyle Edgerton Jr., president of Kinetic Data Systems, a Roanoke-based computer
consulting firm whose online service known as Rev.Net celebrated its first year in business in late
December.
The name Rev.Net is an abbreviation for Roanoke Electronic Village Network and reflects Edgertons
vision of an electronically connected Roanoke Valley.
A local service would provide a direct connection from the Roanoke Valley and eliminate the busy
signals that subscribers frequently experienced because of the large volume of users across the
country competing for access. Edgerton also figured his company could offer a lower-cost service
and provide technical support in person, which was unheard of among the Internet access providers
of the day.
By early 1995, he had committed himself and his company to developing an online service.
Beginning in June that year, he and a team of four KDS staff members worked 12- to 16-hour days
reading, researching, problem-solving, meeting and planning. They had to learn quickly because
he knew it was only a matter of time before competitors would begin providing local access.
"We knew the Internet had consumed us when I called another member of the team one day and told him
that 'my TCPIP stack was having trouble running PPP over the ISDN line,' and we both knew what we
were talking about," Edgerton said.
Only four months later on Sept. 28, the team sent out its first test message into cyberspace and
Rev.Net was deemed "alive" or operational.
After thorough testing, KDS began marketing Rev.Net to businesses and consumers on December 29.
Now, after one full year in business, Rev.Net has reached 50 percent capacity with 500 subscribers.
Rev.Net offers 160 hours of service for a monthly fee of $19.95. To maintain quality, the service has
a self-imposed limit of 1,000 subscribers.
While individuals make up the majority of its customers, large commercial Internet users represent a
growing segment of the subscriber base. Moore's Lumber and Building Supplies, Delta Dental Plan of
Virginia and Professional Network Services are among the businesses for whom Rev.Net has begun providing
high-speed, 24-hour dedicated Internet access.
Also in its first year, Bernie Cosell, a computer engineer who in 1969 helped develop the original
software for the Internet, signed on with KDS as a Rev.Net consultant.
"Hiring Bernie is one of the smartest moves I've ever made," said Edgerton. "He was one of a handful
of people in the world who designed a lot of what is still in use today on the Internet."
Other major advances in Rev.Nets first year include converting its entire network to digital telephone
lines, which transmit data more clearly, and extending its network to the New River Valley. KDS will
begin marketing its online service to New River Valley businesses and residents later this month.
"Launching an Internet access service requires a huge investment of time and money. Weve come along
way in a year, and its very gratifying to see the results of all our hard work," said Edgerton.
Rev.Nets greatest accomplishment in the past year, he said, is successfully competing against the many
other Internet providers -- including the large, national companies -- that serve western Virginia.
At one year old, Rev.Net is the oldest of at least a half dozen companies that now provide local Internet
access in the Roanoke and New River valleys.
For 1997, Edgerton plans to further develop Rev.Nets services and, of course, remain competitive
in an industry that is becoming increasingly crowded.
"This will be the year that will determine which Internet service providers will survive," he said.
But with Edgerton's perseverance and talented staff, chances are that at this time next year Rev.Net
will still be alive. And well.
###
Wed Jan 8, 1997 - Rev.Net expands to the New River Valley
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ROANOKE, Va., January 8, 1997 -- Rev.Net, a Roanoke Valley-based online service provider,
today announced that it will begin offering local Internet access to New River Valley residents
and businesses.
Rev.Net is a division of Kinetic Data Systems, a Roanoke-based computer consulting firm. Rev.Net
became the Roanoke Valley's first local online service provider when the service was launched a
year ago. It now has more than 500 subscribers.
"The tremendous growth that Rev.Net has experienced in its first year positions us well to expand
beyond the Roanoke Valley, and we look forward to providing the New River Valley community with a
high quality, dependable direct connection to the Internet," said E. Doyle Edgerton Jr., president
of KDS.
Monthly fees range from $7.95 for ten hours of access to $24.95 for 160 hours. The $20 setup fee
will be waived for New River Valley Internet users who switch from another online service provider.
Although Rev.Net is based in the Roanoke Valley, an expansion of its all-digital network now allows
New River Valley subscribers to access the Internet without making a long-distance call.
In addition, high-speed service via ISDN is available for a monthly charge of $9.50 plus 2 cents for
each minute of use. With an ISDN connection, Internet users can send and receive data five times
faster than is possible with a 28.8 modem.
Technical support will be provided from Rev.Nets Roanoke office by a toll-free telephone line.
Rev.Net, which stands for Roanoke Electronic Village Network, was developed by KDS after ten months
of research and made available to the public in December 1995.
For information about subscribing to Rev.Net, call 800/487-8058 or see Rev.Net's homepage at
http://www.rev.net.
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Wed Sep 4, 1996 - Rev.Net begins providing high-speed Internet access for Moore's
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ROANOKE, Va., September 4, 1996 -- Rev.Net, the Roanoke Valley's only local on-line service
provider, today announced that it has begun providing high-speed access to the Internet for Moore's
Lumber and Building Supplies.
The new high-speed service will allow employees at Moore's corporate headquarters on Brandon Avenue
to access the Internet 24 hours a day and send and receive data up to 25 times faster than is possible
with the fastest available modem.
"We needed fast, reliable Internet access," said Martin Ewing, Moore's vice president of information
systems.
"Our new high-speed Internet connection through Rev.Net enables us to obtain up-to-the minute business
information and communicate more quickly and inexpensively with our hundreds of suppliers."
This high-speed service is made possible by a special telephone line and a direct connection to the
Internet. The telephone line, known as an Integrated Services Digital Network, transmits data
digitally unlike a conventional telephone line which transmits information using analog signals.
Digital technology is considered to be far superior for the speed and clarity with which it transmits
information.
The ISDN line can transmit data at 128 kilobits per second or five times the rate of a 28.8 modem.
The high-speed line also has the ability to compress data and transmit it up to 25 times faster than
is possible with a 28.8 modem.
"Moore's is one of the first companies in the Roanoke Valley to embrace this powerful new technology.
They are demonstrating how the Internet can become an invaluable tool for business, saving time,
increasing productivity and allowing businesses to become more competitive," said E. Doyle Edgerton Jr.,
president of Kinetic Data Systems, Rev.Net's parent company.
Rev.Net installed Moore's ISDN line earlier this year. With employee training now complete, the lumber
company is beginning to experience the benefits of having high-speed Internet access.
For example, managers can now obtain the number of new housing starts and a complete analysis of the data
within hours of its release by the federal government. That information is extremely important to Moore's,
whose customers are professional contractors and builders.
"We used to wait days to receive housing start information. Now we get it the same morning it's released,"
said Ewing.
Managers also can more closely track lumber prices, which helps them make better buying decisions and
marketing employees now are able to quickly access product information for company ads or other promotional
literature via suppliers' homepages or e-mail.
Rev.Net was formed in 1995 to provide Internet access and services to businesses and residents in the
Roanoke Valley. It is a division of Kinetic Data Systems Inc., a local computer consulting firm. Its
offices are in the Fralin & Waldron building at 2917 Penn Forest Blvd., S.W. in Roanoke County.
###
Tue Apr 23, 1996 - Local chamber to break new ground in cyberspace
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ROANOKE, Va., April 23, 1996 -- The Roanoke Regional Chamber of Commerce today announced
plans to create an "electronic marketplace" on the Internet. Through the Roanoke Chamber Network,
as it is being called, The Regional Chamber not only will connect its 1,700 members with one
another and the rest of the world, it will also become one of the first organizations in the
country to set standards for conducting business on-line.
This "chamber of commerce in cyberspace" is being created through a partnership with Kinetic Data
Systems Inc., a local computer consulting firm which began providing Internet access and services
through its Rev.Net division last year.
"The Roanoke Chamber Network will help chamber members communicate and do business with one another
more efficiently. It also has the potential to stimulate economic growth within the region by
linking area businesses with prospective customers throughout the world," said John M. Stroud,
president of the chamber.
The network will consist of three components: a business interchange, a homepage and electronic
mail.
The most innovative part of the project is the business interchange, which will allow businesses and
individuals to conduct commercial transactions on-line.
The concept is similar to that of bev.net, the Blacksburg Electronic Village, which pioneered the idea
of electronically connecting a community. But architects of the Roanoke Chamber Network plan to take
their electronic village one step further by standardizing business forms, such as credit applications
and purchase orders, and regulating business procedures. This direction would be a significant advance
over current Internet business methods.
"We are pleased to join forces with the chamber on this exciting project. It has been a goal of ours
to create an electronic village in the Roanoke Valley. Through this partnership, we are taking the next
step toward turning our dream into reality," said E. Doyle Edgerton Jr., president of KDS, whose Internet
division is a high-tech abbreviation of Roanoke Electronic Village Network.
The Roanoke Chamber Network will use IBM AS/400 technology, considered to be the best for supporting
commercial transactions. According to Edgerton, KDS is one of only 50 Internet service providers in
the world that uses this technology.
The second component of the Roanoke Chamber Network is a homepage, an electronic vehicle accessible
through the Internet whose purpose is strictly informational. The chamber's homepage will incorporate
a listing of all of its members and links to their own homepages.
In addition to information about individual businesses, homepage visitors will be able to access a wide
variety of data about the area, such as its history, demography and economic statistics. Stroud said
that information will be updated frequently so that the homepage will become a "living, vital source of
regional economic and business development data."
When fully developed, chamber officials envision links with the homepages of other community organizations
in the Roanoke area and in western Virginia, including other chambers of commerce.
"Through our homepage, we would like to provide those outside the area with easy access to information
about the communities and businesses throughout western Virginia," said Stroud.
Roanoke Chamber Network users also will have the ability to send and receive messages and transfer data
through electronic mail. The e-mail adresss chamber@rev.net already has been established for this purpose.
Work on the other portions of the Roanoke Chamber Network will begin immediately. The chamber plans to
post its homepage early this summer, and the business interchange portion of the network is expected to
be operational within a year. An advisory board made up of representatives of the area's business community
will be formed to guide the development of the network.
The Roanoke Regional Chamber of Commerce is the third largest business organization in Virginia. Its
primary mission is to facilitate economic growth in the region.
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Fri Dec 29, 1995 - Direct Internet access now available in the Roanoke Valley
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Direct Internet access now available in the Roanoke Valley
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ROANOKE, Va., December 29, 1995 -- Kinetic Data Systems Inc., a local computer consulting
firm, has begun providing access to the Internet in the Roanoke area. The service is being
offered through a division of the company known as Rev.Net and is the only on-line service
provider to offer a direct connection to the Internet for Roanoke Valley computer users.
"We are excited to be able to provide Roanoke Valley businesses and residents direct connection
to the Internet," said E. Doyle Edgerton Jr., president of KDS. "Subscribers will benefit from
quicker and better connections, as well as a high level of personal service and support that
Rev.Net is able to provide because we are based here in the Roanoke Valley."
A direct connection improves access to the Internet by shortening the distance between the
computer user and the "Information Superhighway." A direct connection also eliminates busy
signals caused by large numbers of people competing for access at the same time.
Monthly fees range from $9.95 for ten hours of access to $24.95 for 150 hours of access.
Subscribers will receive an on-line orientation and telephone support. Training is available
if needed.
Rev.Nets use of the latest computer technology and the capacity to use up to 200 incoming
telephone lines ensure fast and reliable direct connections to the Internet.
Dedicated lines, which guarantee access at all times, also are available.
Rev.Net, which stands for Roanoke Electronic Village Network, was developed after ten months of
research. The service has been fully tested and is now available to the first 1,000 subscribers.
The number of subscribers is being limited to ensure quality, according to Edgerton.
In addition to Internet access, Rev.Net provides corporate domain creation, which allows companies
and organizations to have their own Internet address, and Web site creation and management.
Rev.Net also provides classes and seminars on how to use the Internet for business. "Businesses
today are using the Internet in a variety of ways, from marketing to research. We want to help
Roanoke Valley businesses benefit from the tremendous potential that the Internet holds," said
Edgerton.
Beyond information transfer, Rev.Net's use of IBM AS-400 computers positions it well for the future,
when the Internet is expected to be used increasingly for commercial transactions. According to
Edgerton, Rev.Net is one of only 50 Internet service providers in the world which uses AS-400
technology.
For more information about Rev.Net, call (540) 772-4967 or see Rev.Net's home page on the World Wide
Web at http://www.rev.net.
Kinetic Data Systems, founded in 1989, provides both computer consulting and Internet access from
offices in the Fralin & Waldron building at 2917 Penn Forest Blvd., S.W. in Roanoke County.
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