This week, I am going to count down the Top 10 most-read items on this blog during 2006. Number 10 is Four reasons why Vonage IPO's email and phone pitch is the wrong strategy. I made this post back ...
So much for thinking telecoms might be going back to the heydays of 1999. After much fanfare, Internet telephone provider Vonage launched its initial public offering Wednesday, only to fall flat on ...
Vonage Holdings Corp. said hello to the public markets Wednesday, but all the Internet phone company got back was static from investors. Shares tumbled 13% on their first day of trading -- making ...
Vonage Holdings Corp., the nation’s biggest provider of Internet-based phone service, said Wednesday that it planned to raise as much as $250 million through an initial public stock offering. A Vonage ...
Mike Snyder, Vonage CEO, said, "In 2006, the build-out of the business was clearly seen through the growth of our customer base and the resulting impact of scale benefits. We more than doubled our ...
This week, I am going to count down the Top 10 most-read items on this blog during 2006. Number 9 is "Some Vonage users are frustrated about Comcast connection quality." Originally posted back on ...
HOLMDEL, N.J., April 25 /PRNewswire/ — Vonage Marketing Inc., a subsidiary of Vonage Holdings Corp., a leading Internet telephony company today announced that the phone is our Nation’s favorite way to ...
Internet phone giant Vonage plans to get seriously into WiFi next year, making it easier for globe-trotting customers to connect via a laptop or smartphone. Chairman Jeffrey Citron didn’t offer ...
Vonage has seen its share of legal tussles, most of which have resulted in the company paying millions of dollars in patent lawsuit settlements. But the VoIP provider is on the opposite side of the ...
A federal judge has ordered Vonage to halt its use of three voice over Internet Protocol patents owned by Verizon Communications, but he postponed enforcing the ruling for now. U.S. District Judge ...
The VoIP service provider has a tough road ahead as it tries to recover from a disappointing opening on the stock market. Marguerite Reardon started as a CNET News reporter in 2004, covering cellphone ...
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