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About
us
BEXOUT Ltd was founded
as a swedish-bulgarian IT Company at year 2003.
The firm is working not only for Bulgarian web
market, but also as an outsourcing company for
Swedish or other English speaking clients. The
firm is focused on web site design and development,
graphic and logo design, web hosting services,
search engine optimization and domain name registration.
Among the sites that Bexout developed noncommercial,
for the benefit of all internet users, are napazar.com
and support pages.
Bulgarian translation of the book "Basic
HTML and working with Dreamweavwer" is also
available for free download.
At august, year 2005 the Russian and Ukrainian
versions of Bexout`s site were stolen by wangberg.net
: http://www.wangberg.net/russian/, http://www.wangberg.net/ukrainian/.
More about Sweden
Today Sweden is a member of the EU, which was
previously considered incompatible with neutrality.
But they did not accepted Euro as national currency,
so they use Swedish krona instead. Many people
also believe that Sweden should join the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), while others
argue firmly that even in a new world security
situation, non-alignment must remain a basic feature
of Swedish foreign policy.
Sweden's evolution from a poor, backward agrarian
country to a modern industrialized nation in the
space of only half a century is internationally
classified as an economic miracle, in many respects
comparable with that of Japan.The prosperity that
Sweden built up during the 20th century was distributed
among the population in the form of large tax-financed
systems of education, health care, child and elder
care, parental insurance, pensions and various
general allowances. The consequence has been a
society with narrower economic gaps between the
social classes than in comparable countries.This
classic welfare state has been referred to internationally
as the "middle way," the "third way" or the "Swedish
model" (the latter expression originally coined
to describe the centralized negotiations between
Swedish employers and the country's strong unions,
which secured crucial stability in the labor market
for several decades as the welfare state expanded).
Openness is yet another of the fundamental principles
of Sweden's public sector. The opportunity to
examine how our politicians and public agencies
exercise their power is a self-evident civil right
in Sweden. The "principle of publicity," which
goes further in Sweden than in most countries,
not only makes all written business and all correspondence
to and from our government ministries, municipalities
and public agencies available to the press and
the general public, but legislation also requires
public agencies to provide this information in
easily usable form and free of charge.
With fewer than nine million inhabitants, Sweden
is an insignificant market in macroeconomic terms.
This is the most important reason why Swedish
companies have always been extremely dependent
on import and export. Sweden has more multinational
corporations per capita than almost any other
country. Volvo, Saab, Ericsson, Electrolux, ABB,
Astra Zeneca, Pharmacia, Atlas Copco and SKF are
only a few of these companies.
A more recent phenomenon is service and consumer
goods companies that have employed the same principles
to build up strong global brands in recent decades.
The main example is the "twin" companies IKEA
and H&M, both founded in 1947 by classic Swedish
entrepreneurs and both based on the concept of
making modern design available to broad segments
of the population.An exceptional case is the global
marketing success of Absolut Vodka, a brand belonging
to the government-owned (!) Vin & Sprit AB.
By means of a brilliant design and advertising
concept, Absolut managed to establish one of the
world's strongest international brands in the
space of only 20 years.
Swedes have never contented themselves with a
role as a small, anonymous backwater on the world
cultural map. They have always been remarkably
quick and diligent at snapping up impressions
from outside sources, then using them for our
own purposes. Their national creative culture
can be described as based on a skillful reshaping
of impulses borrowed from other, larger cultures.
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©2003
Bexout Ltd – Web Site Design & Development
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