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featured work

energyboom.com
energyboom.com is an alternative energy news network conceptualized, designed and built by Catalyst Internet in partnership with James Hoggan and Associates. The technology behind it is groundbreaking in that it allows a relatively small team of writers to concentrate on writing while leaving the site itself to automate a wide range of algorithmic, social-media driven publishing criteria.

Social Media

Does your company have a public face? Are you paying attention to how your brand is faring in the social media universe? If not, we can help you get connected and manage your brand proactively. People are discussing your company and products on FaceBook, Twitter and other networks. It is now their brand as much as it is yours. Join the conversation.

open source

We are comfortable and experienced working with established, proprietary platforms like Oracle, but it is increasingly the case that freely available open source technologies are mature and stable enough to meet our customers needs. This saves our customers a great deal in licensing and support costs. It's the future. Find out more.

catalyst blog

  • March 3, 2012

    Recently we worked with NDP leadership candidate Nathan Cullen's campaign to launch the first truly bi-lingual implementation of NationBuilder. That's the hot new campaign management tool that is gaining momentum and today announced a 6.25M investment from Andreessen Horowitz.

  • December 12, 2011

    There's an old adage that the Cobbler's shoes are always worn because of working all day fixing the shoes of others. We have found this past year to be a great example of the truth of this. Our own web presence and marketing has been stagnant, but we have done a lot of exciting of work for a lot of great customers over the last 12 months.

  • April 4, 2011

    Canadians don’t have an electoral system that directly reflects the ballot box. With our 'first-past-the-post' electoral system, vote splitting means Canadians end up with a majority Harper Government with as little as 35 percent of the popular vote. This is not the outcome most Canadians want, and avoiding it requires voter knowledge and cooperation.