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Eamonn Farrell/RollingNews.ie

This new postal service will mean no need to go to the postbox

CityPost has launched a new system that it claims will save companies significant sums on mail.

A DUBLIN-BASED company has launched a new mail service aimed at businesses that is looking to break An Post’s stranglehold on the market.

Dublin-based CityPost has unveiled its ‘iPOST’ service, which it said will provide a “one-stop-solution” for businesses, providing services such as free printing, envelopes and processing.

Letters will cost 66c each to send by iPost, which is slightly less than the cost of a standard 72c stamp.

The mail will be delivered by CityPost An Post, dependent on location. An Post already offers its own mass-mailing system to companies, which CityPost is paying to use.

€1 million investment

CityPost said the service follows an investment “in excess of €1 million” in new technology at the company’s facility at Rathcoole in south Dublin.

The company said that individuals “can print and post one or thousands of pieces of correspondence without leaving their desk”.

It claimed the iPOST system can save businesses “up to 20% in total postage costs while removing  the need for business to print, stamp and envelope letters.”

File Photo To save the five day postal service the cost of a stamp is set to rise. In a statement, An RollingNews.ie RollingNews.ie

Customers download the software, and as opposed to printing a letter normally which a person than physically puts in an envelope, stamps, and posts, just hit the ‘CityPost’ button.

The customer’s file is sent electronically to the CityPOST sorting office, which will then fold the letter, put it in an envelope, put it in the post and deliver it.

‘Even playing field’

A spokesman for the company said: “It means that for large mailouts all you have to do is type the words. You make savings in ink printer cartridges, envelopes and time, it saves your clerical staff being tied up sending letters.”

CityPost chief executive Ian Glass said that the future of postal services “is in harnessing technology to provide a more effective and simple service”.

“We believe that there is a real opportunity to grow the postal market in Ireland, but this is only possible through innovation,” he said.

“iPOST also offers an even playing field for businesses around the country. Every business, regardless of location, can have direct access with the sorting office.”

CityPost said that iPOST is the first in a range of digital products that the company plans to release. Based in Dublin, the company employs about 150 people.

Written by Paul O’Donoghue and posted on Fora.ie

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    Mute Joseph Colclough
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    Dec 1st 2012, 1:06 PM

    It does make you wonder, if the sand has taken back that much in nearly sixty years, how much from the Egyptian era is lost under the Sahara.

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    Mute Rory Conway
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    Dec 1st 2012, 2:07 PM

    Surely the Kolmanskop of the Namib Desert is a well known haunt of your readers ,and this will not come as news to them.

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    Mute Aodh O Conghaile
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    Dec 1st 2012, 12:40 PM

    Some ghost estate…….

    65
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    Mute Ian Conway
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    Dec 1st 2012, 12:28 PM

    Amazeballs!

    48
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    Mute Loremolis
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    Dec 1st 2012, 2:12 PM

    That’s Longford.

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    Mute Gavin K
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    Dec 1st 2012, 4:38 PM

    Leithrim a close second

    16
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    Mute Noel Timothy Noblett
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    Dec 1st 2012, 3:19 PM

    I was in Namibia this year such an amazing country. So many natural wonders there. Oldest plants. 2nd biggest canyons in the world, 2nd biggest Sand Dune in the world, linked to Victoria Falls and many more. Ethosa Safari Park was the best experience of my life.

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    Mute damian
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    Dec 1st 2012, 12:46 PM

    This was on that BBC Science show with professor Brian Cox…. Interesting show!

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    Mute Merv Colton
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    Dec 1st 2012, 1:46 PM

    The pictures are good, but to walk around it is really strange. It’s like they planned to return there was so much stuff left.

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    Mute Kemberlee Shortland
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    Dec 1st 2012, 2:00 PM

    It’s a proven fact that deserts are living things and constantly moving and growing. Interesting stuff. Put into similar context, look at all the manors and castles in Ireland that have been taken back by Mother Nature over the centuries.

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    Mute Murty Forde
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    Dec 1st 2012, 12:17 PM

    Amazeballs

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    Mute cholly appleseed
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    Dec 1st 2012, 7:14 PM

    Amazeballs

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    Mute Sluazcanal
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    Dec 1st 2012, 8:36 PM

    Balls of amazement.

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    Mute Murty Forde
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    Dec 1st 2012, 12:17 PM

    Amazeballs

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    Mute The Green Monkey
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    Dec 1st 2012, 4:06 PM

    If they had only kept the doors closed……

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    Mute Tony Skillington
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    Dec 1st 2012, 12:48 PM

    Place looks fairly bate..

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    Mute Stanley Groves
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    Dec 1st 2012, 8:57 PM

    You’d look worse if you we’re left out in the desert for 60 years!!!

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    Mute Tony Skillington
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    Dec 1st 2012, 10:33 PM

    Wud be well exfoliated tho..:)

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    Mute Murty Forde
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    Dec 1st 2012, 12:17 PM

    Amazeballs

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    Mute Ciaran Morgan
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    Dec 1st 2012, 9:23 PM

    Longford and Leitrim in 5 years!

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    Mute mick lennon
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    Dec 1st 2012, 3:23 PM

    dump

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    Mute Thomas Geoghegan
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    Dec 4th 2012, 1:38 PM

    Namibia’s well worth a holiday. I didn’t make it to the ghost town, but Swakopmund, right on the coast, is beside some of the most breathtaking parts of the Namib Desert. Some of the world’s best oysters in those parts, too! Namibia is a weird country, due to their history of German colonialism, but it’s nevertheless rich in indigenous cultural diversity. Many would say the country benefited from it, others not. Thanks for the photos. They make me want to go back!

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