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April 20, 2008 Breaking News
Internet marketing blog
Sun, 20 Apr 2008 00:09:19 PDT
this is great internet marketing blog where you can read about web 2.0 trends, SEO, advertisement possibilities in social networking sites
Sunday Bookchat
Sat, 19 Apr 2008 20:53:11 PDT
We all know the drill. Some ostensibly left-wing figure — think Christopher Hitchens or Martin Amis — loudly announces he’s given up his liberal ways and goes flouncing off to the right side of the aisle, where his work becomes steadily crankier and less interesting. (David Mamet has just begun this process; several weeks ago he published a column titled “Why I Am No Longer a Brain-Dead Liberal,” a title that proved only half right.) And then there is former Republican strategist Kevin Philli
Untitled
Sun, 20 Apr 2008 06:00:53 PDT
It's a slow news day, but this should set your heart racing if you didn't already know it: Arkansas strawberries are in. I bought a couple of quarts grown near Cabot at Terry's yesterday. Later, I got a Boulevard Bread e-mail saying they had organic Arkansas berries for $5.50 a quart. Our first ones of the season weren't the best ever, but still plenty good with a little whipped cream and sugar. What, you ask, does the picture above have to do with strawberries? Nothing. It's just more re
Former PM still plugs for Kelowna deal (Nunatsiaq News)
Thu, 17 Apr 2008 13:54:20 PDT
Paul Martin, the former prime minister, is finding surprising success in his one-man crusade to revive the defunct political commitment known as the Kelowna accord.
Farming Revolution Could Feed the World - NewsGrabs 20 April 2008
Sun, 20 Apr 2008 03:52:15 PDT
Farming Revolution Could Feed the World - NewsGrabs 20 April 2008 Categories NewsGrabs Health Supreme's NewsGrabs - a selection of contrary and underprivileged news in health and a wide range of (mostly) related sectors. Find what trends you may have missed - watch out for the weekly News Grabs. Here is this week's selection for you: UN calls for farming revolution The Unesco study recommends better safeguards to protect resources and more sustainable farming practices, such as prod
High Tech for the High Road
Sun, 20 Apr 2008 01:17:47 PDT
So what kind of high-tech gizmo will you plunk into your car next? No idea? Then take a look at my piece on auto gadgets from the recent New York International Auto Show in the New York Daily News. And of course let me know what you think.
Builder Bankruptcies Bringing Out Some Anxiety?
Sat, 19 Apr 2008 15:38:36 PDT
An interesting story came up on National Public Radio (NPR) the other day about the growing lack of confidence consumers are having with homebuilders due to the increasing number of bankruptcies and dire financial news. While this is an alarming trend, especially with larger, higher-profile builders, it’s also an important lesson to be aware of.
Targeting the baby boomer generation
Sun, 20 Apr 2008 03:22:12 PDT
I've written about all sorts of interesting things on this blog, but never before have I written about something like this. In fact, I didn't even know they existed, but apparently a bath lift like this is in great with aging Baby Boomers. From a retail standpoint, all products and services targeted at this age group of consumers, especially things that make their life more comfortable, are sure
Paul Jacob on “the little party that could”
Sun, 20 Apr 2008 05:41:35 PDT
Paul Jacob on “the little party that could” Posted by Thomas L. Knapp --- April 20th, 2008 Over at American conservatism’s home on the web, Town hall, Paul Jacob has a look at the Libertarian Party: I] prefer to think of the persistence of the Libertarian Party as charming, not pathetic. Everything is stacked against them. The two parties in charge have made sure that it is very hard for “minor parties” to challenge them. Just getting on the ballot is no picnic. The Libertarians have spent
Francis Ford Coppola now calling Buenos Aires home (The Post and Courier)
Wed, 16 Apr 2008 21:03:26 PDT
The maestro has gone gaucho. Francis Ford Coppola, 68, believes he's finally where he's supposed to be, a place where he can revel in financial and artistic control. Yes, Buenos Aires, Argentina, land of comparatively low production costs and much cultural ferment, especially the streets of this cosmopolitan capital. A city, one might add, with a large Italian community dating back to the early ...
Clickbank Merchandise
Current News
Sun, 20 Apr 2008 00:09:19 PDT
this is great internet marketing blog where you can read about web 2.0 trends, SEO, advertisement possibilities in social networking sites
Sunday Bookchat
Sat, 19 Apr 2008 20:53:11 PDT
We all know the drill. Some ostensibly left-wing figure — think Christopher Hitchens or Martin Amis — loudly announces he’s given up his liberal ways and goes flouncing off to the right side of the aisle, where his work becomes steadily crankier and less interesting. (David Mamet has just begun this process; several weeks ago he published a column titled “Why I Am No Longer a Brain-Dead Liberal,” a title that proved only half right.) And then there is former Republican strategist Kevin Philli
Untitled
Sun, 20 Apr 2008 06:00:53 PDT
It's a slow news day, but this should set your heart racing if you didn't already know it: Arkansas strawberries are in. I bought a couple of quarts grown near Cabot at Terry's yesterday. Later, I got a Boulevard Bread e-mail saying they had organic Arkansas berries for $5.50 a quart. Our first ones of the season weren't the best ever, but still plenty good with a little whipped cream and sugar. What, you ask, does the picture above have to do with strawberries? Nothing. It's just more re
Former PM still plugs for Kelowna deal (Nunatsiaq News)
Thu, 17 Apr 2008 13:54:20 PDT
Paul Martin, the former prime minister, is finding surprising success in his one-man crusade to revive the defunct political commitment known as the Kelowna accord.
Farming Revolution Could Feed the World - NewsGrabs 20 April 2008
Sun, 20 Apr 2008 03:52:15 PDT
Farming Revolution Could Feed the World - NewsGrabs 20 April 2008 Categories NewsGrabs Health Supreme's NewsGrabs - a selection of contrary and underprivileged news in health and a wide range of (mostly) related sectors. Find what trends you may have missed - watch out for the weekly News Grabs. Here is this week's selection for you: UN calls for farming revolution The Unesco study recommends better safeguards to protect resources and more sustainable farming practices, such as prod
High Tech for the High Road
Sun, 20 Apr 2008 01:17:47 PDT
So what kind of high-tech gizmo will you plunk into your car next? No idea? Then take a look at my piece on auto gadgets from the recent New York International Auto Show in the New York Daily News. And of course let me know what you think.
Builder Bankruptcies Bringing Out Some Anxiety?
Sat, 19 Apr 2008 15:38:36 PDT
An interesting story came up on National Public Radio (NPR) the other day about the growing lack of confidence consumers are having with homebuilders due to the increasing number of bankruptcies and dire financial news. While this is an alarming trend, especially with larger, higher-profile builders, it’s also an important lesson to be aware of.
Targeting the baby boomer generation
Sun, 20 Apr 2008 03:22:12 PDT
I've written about all sorts of interesting things on this blog, but never before have I written about something like this. In fact, I didn't even know they existed, but apparently a bath lift like this is in great with aging Baby Boomers. From a retail standpoint, all products and services targeted at this age group of consumers, especially things that make their life more comfortable, are sure
Paul Jacob on “the little party that could”
Sun, 20 Apr 2008 05:41:35 PDT
Paul Jacob on “the little party that could” Posted by Thomas L. Knapp --- April 20th, 2008 Over at American conservatism’s home on the web, Town hall, Paul Jacob has a look at the Libertarian Party: I] prefer to think of the persistence of the Libertarian Party as charming, not pathetic. Everything is stacked against them. The two parties in charge have made sure that it is very hard for “minor parties” to challenge them. Just getting on the ballot is no picnic. The Libertarians have spent
Francis Ford Coppola now calling Buenos Aires home (The Post and Courier)
Wed, 16 Apr 2008 21:03:26 PDT
The maestro has gone gaucho. Francis Ford Coppola, 68, believes he's finally where he's supposed to be, a place where he can revel in financial and artistic control. Yes, Buenos Aires, Argentina, land of comparatively low production costs and much cultural ferment, especially the streets of this cosmopolitan capital. A city, one might add, with a large Italian community dating back to the early ...
Clickbank Merchandise
Current News
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