ver cuando se pone, detras del de david pogue
ver cuando se pone, detras del de david pogue
para lipotimia
usado 30/3/09
para lipotimia
para lipotimia
una pareja universitaria identifica a quienes postean el video usando google earth
But there was little chance of containing the two-and-a-half-minute video from then-Domino's employees Kristy Hammonds and Michael Setzer. GoodAsYou.org posted the video first, and alerted Domino's to the situation. Interestingly, it was a viewer, not the marketer, who identified the offenders first. Amy Wilson, a Georgetown University graduate student, worked with boyfriend Jonathan Drake to identify the unseemly pair after spotting the story, which by then was on Consumerist.
Starting with a Jack in the Box sign visible from a window in the video, she and Mr. Drake, who analyzes satellite images for a nonprofit, used that and other clues to assemble a street view and began to search Google satellite images for locations that matched. Then Paris Miller, a Northern Kentucky computer consultant, traced one of Ms. Hammonds' friends to Conover, N.C. There she was able to find a Domino's near a Jack in the Box.
"I didn't even intend on doing this," Ms. Miller said. "I didn't know how big this was becoming." She credits another user with calling the location to confirm that the pair worked there. Mr. Drake contacted Tim McIntyre, Domino's VP-communications. The Consumerist trio will each get Domino's coupons roughly equivalent to a year of free food.
alicia vidal levanta las notas, inclusive las falsas...
Describe incidente entre periodistas del LA Times y aviso con forma de noticia.
But in real life, journalists are feeling the chill. Calling his purchase of The L.A. Times and The Chicago Tribune “a mistake,” Sam “The Sham” Zell said, “It’s very obvious that the newspaper model in its current form does not work and the sooner we all acknowledge that, the better.” He said he probably would not try for a merger because “that’s like asking someone in another business if they want to get vaccinated with a live virus.”
Many L.A. Times journalists were outraged over a recent front-page NBC ad for the cop show “Southland” that was tarted up to look like a real news feature story (a tactic the paper repeated with an ad supplement for “The Soloist”).
lo que decimos siempre sobre metricas web
Archivo nota AdAge Santo Abril 2009.