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TierOne Converged Networks is a Dallas, TX-based company in the Computers and Electronics sector.
Computer Express is a Wakefield, MA-based company in the Computers and Electronics sector.
Futur Telecom America is a New York, NY-based company in the Computers and Electronics sector.
Macaya Ecopreneur Ventures (MEVC) Corp., is an independent private company. The firm has comprehensive coverage of the complete energy spectrum from: Renewable Energy such as Wind Power, Wastes to Energy and Emissions Control; to Conventional Energy sources such as Oil and Gas; to Energy Linked Natural Resources such as Coal, Biomass and other minerals. The MEVC`s team has extensive experience working in the corporate and financing sectors in Canada, the USA, India and Sub-Saharan Africa. We have acted as the core component in the due diligence, financing and oversight of over $3 billion worth of projects and initiatives from renewable energy to oil, gas and coal. Our principals have acted as lead advisers to some of the largest utility transactions in the world, have been advisers to governments and corporations on the Kyoto Protocol, Emission Trading, Royalty Agreement on oil production and energy generation, transportation and regulatory issues, and have served in senior political positions acting as decision makers on renewable power and fossil-fuel based electricity generation.
TechFreedom, launched in 2011, digs deep into the hard policy and legal questions raised by technological change. We`re bullish on the future: for the most part, it`ll be great — if we let it. If those in power can resist the all-too-natural impulse for stability and control. The future isn`t a place we can design, it`s an ongoing, never-ending process of trial-and-error. In general, we`re for letting that process play out. Of course, it`ll be messy; it always has been. There will be real problems to confront; there always have been. But there are no tidy, top-down “solutions,” only adaptation, evolution, and policy frameworks that are better and worse at encouraging both. Crafting those frameworks is what we do. TechFreedom tries to write simple rules for a complex world — rules that focus on clear harms; rules can change and evolve over time; rules that leave people free to tinker, innovate and experiment; rules that unleash ingenuity rather than trying to direct it. In short, we teach policymakers how to be friends, not enemies, of the future.