The Internet store

Published: 19 July 2001 y., Thursday
The company ``Lattelekom`` opened the Internet store ``www.collectoria.lv``, where ``Lattelekom`s`` pre-paid cards and ``Apollo`` cards will be available for collectors. As LETA was told by the public relations department, the purchase will be possible in the ``on-line`` regime, by using ``Visa`` and ``Master`` credit cards. Initially the cards will be available only for foreign collectors, but by the end of the year, also for local collectors.
Šaltinis: riga800.lv
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Latvian Association of the Internet.

The representatives of the Latvian firms, business of which is connected with the Internet, have founded the Latvian association of the Internet. more »

Intel's new chip to be called Pentium 4

Intel will call Willamette, its next-generation processor, the Pentium 4. more »

FBI Intervenes in Planned Sale Of Internet Service to Japanese

The FBI is raising national security concerns about a Japanese telecommunications giant's planned acquisition of a U.S. Internet company. more »

Shopping portal cancels free Net access

Online shopping portal WorldSpy has pulled the plug on a rare Web freebie: no-charge, advertising-free Internet access. more »

Hacker compromised astronaut safety

The lives of space shuttle astronauts were put at risk by a computer hacker who overloaded Nasa's communication system in 1997. more »

The plans for Web-based software services

Microsoft unveiled its long-awaited vision for the future of computing and a new strategy for enabling its Windows software for the Web. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Microsoft brewing Java-like language

Microsoft unveiled a new, Java-like software programming language intended to simplify the building of Web services using its software. more »

Intel targets Crusoe with low-power notebook chips

Chip giant Intel unveiled five new notebook processors, including two low-power chips designed to compete against Transmeta's Crusoe. more »