Flatline Systems
Flatline Systems is a maturing partnership. Originally started sometime around 1996 as an online bulletin board system, Flatline Systems has matured into an internet services provider with capabilities to the endless degree.
Providing everything from your basic home page, to a secure online transactional site. With non-public services such as online corporate databases and private data backups.
We are capable of sourcing the information required to do any task, and if we ourselves cannot do it - we know someone who can.
We also come from a background of affordability. Although, there is always someone cheaper, we feel our pricing is strong and in line with what we can provide to you.
Give us a try and we'll show you why.
Former U.S. vice-president Al Gore has been cleared of allegations he groped and assaulted a masseuse in a luxury Portland, Ore., hotel room in 2006, closing a case that could have tarnished the Nobel prize winner's reputation.
A tornado touched down near Sundre, northwest of Calgary, as people in parts of southern Alberta were warned to watch for more twisters.
B.C.'s representative for children and youth says she was disturbed to learn criminal charges were laid against a former government contractor who was testing the sexual responses of young sex offenders by attaching sensors to their genitals.
Wildlife officials said Friday a grizzly bear was put down after tests determined it was responsible for a triple mauling in a Montana campground.
The RCMP says it has closed a loophole in security checks Canadians undergo before working with children, the elderly and other vulnerable people. But the new fingerprint process takes longer, costs more and is making more work for local police forces.
B.C.'s Solicitor General Mike de Jong says he has yet to decide whether he will call an inquiry into the police investigation of Robert Pickton after police admitted they made mistakes.
The remainder of the performances by the Canadian Forces CF-18 demonstration team were cancelled Friday, one week after one of the jets crashed in Alberta and its pilot was injured.
More than 150 conservation officers and rangers will be patrolling B.C. parks and campsites over the long weekend, enforcing a campfire ban.
The federal government has tapped Reid Morden, the former director of Canada's spy agency, to perform a workplace assessment of the RCMP.
China has overtaken Japan to become the second-largest economy in the world, a senior Chinese official says.
Source: CBC | Top Stories News