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BillQuick Lite 2007 8.0.89
BillQuick Lite makes time tracking and invoicing automatic. The application includes more than 400 reports and invoice templates. Enter time in as few as two keystrokes. The software handles hourly, fixed fee, hourly not to exceed, and recurring contract types. Besides tracking time, BillQuick Lite 2007 also includes project management features allowing you to track your job and engagements accurately. This software is designed for architects, engineers, contractors, accountants, CPA, attorneys, computer consultants, graphics designer, and all other professional consultants. To receive your free license and registration keys which allow you to use BillQuick Lite beyond the 30 day trial, contact BQE Software. Version 8.0.89 is a bug fixing release. Note: This is a very large (131MB) file and may take several hours to download via slow Internet connection.
Council signs off on greenway design and engineering
The Chattanooga City Council tonight approved the expenditure of as much as $241,000 to design and engineer a portion of the South Chickamauga Creek Greenway. City Parks and Recreation Administrator Larry Zehnder said the engineering phase will take about six months. �We won�t be breaking ground until early summer of 2008,� he said. The contract will be with Barge, Waggoner, Sumner and Cannon Inc. This funding involves design and engineering work for a roughly 3.5-mile portion of greenway that will stretch from the Tennessee Riverwalk up South Chickamauga Creek to the Harrison Pike area, said Rick Wood, director of the Chattanooga office of the Trust for Public Land. Four miles of the greenway now exists, from Shallowford Road to Camp Jordan, and eventually it will extend a total of about 12 miles from the Tennessee Riverwalk to Camp Jordan, he said.
Computers go green
The trouble with industrial growth is that it needs energy – which costs money, an increasingly, hurts the environment too. And, in the 21st century that belongs to computers, gizmos and electronic items, energy issues will get a serious ring in the coming days, as the debate on carbon emissions, global warming and climate change gets hotter. Global demand for energy is expected to grow 53 per cent by 2030, and 70 per cent of this demand will come from China and India. As demand grows alongside, calls for affordability “intelligent" energy could be the way out of troubles. If you thought computers were non-polluting and consumed very little energy and data centres the most environment friendly workspace you need to think again. According to analyst firm IDC, roughly 50 cents is spent on energy for every dollar of computer hardware.
Livestock trailer proposal rankles 2 commissioners
The same day the Hamilton County Commission unanimously approved a $3.5 million contract for 128 new jail cells at Silverdale Detention Center, commissioners debated spending $26,000 for two livestock trailers. "I just think this is a waste of money," Commissioner John Allen Brooks said of purchasing the two trailers, which would be used in the 10 counties in Hamilton County's Homeland Security district. Mr. Brooks and Commissioner Warren Mackey voted against the measure at Wednesday's commission meeting, arguing the money could be spent better elsewhere. The resolution was approved 7-2. Ray Burden, director of the University of Tennessee Extension Service for Hamilton County, said having the trailers would bring the county into compliance with state and federal emergency management regulations.
Allison keeps Mocs' focus on final game vs. App State
Rodney Allison doesn't want the final week of the regular season to be all about him. Regardless of what happens once the season is over -- when all of the questions about Allison's future as the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga coach will be answered -- Allison said Sunday he will go about preparing for this week's finale at No. 7 Appalachian State as he would any other game. And he expects his players and coaches to do the same. "This situation is what it is, and there's no reason to deviate or change from what we do," Allison said Sunday. "I'm not going to bring it up, but if people ask me about it I'll tell them what I think. "It's all just part of this business, the way it goes, and I don't think our kids will have any problems putting all that aside and focusing on this last game." That may be easier said than done when Allison, who is 16-39 in his five seasons at UTC, could be cleaning out his office a week from now if athletic director Rick Hart decides that it's time for the program to move in another direction or if Allison opts to not stick around for the final year of his contract.
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