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My so called life*

*better known as silly random stuff

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Selectta Hotels & Resorts (Basura)

http://www.jotajota.org/archives/000122.html

http://www.jotajota.org/archives/000122.html

http://www.jotajota.org/archives/000122.html

Greg's Digital Portfolio

Especialmente curiosas las de las tias 🙂

http://homepage.mac.com/gapodaca/digital/digital.html

http://homepage.mac.com/gapodaca/digital/digital.html

http://homepage.mac.com/gapodaca/digital/digital.html

A blog for everyone

You know a web trend has reached a high pitch of popularity when AOL starts including it in its basic software. But can blogs be truly mainstream?

Last week the net giant, which has 34 million customers, announced that it would be including web logging, or blogging, tools in AOL 9, the next version of the software people use to log on to their AOL account.

Instead of calling them blogs, however, it will call them AOL Journals, partly because a survey revealed that many users found the word “blog” confusing. AOL users are not alone in being confused about blogs, what they are for and the impact they might have.
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Wireless en Goteborg


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Logos

(Cortesía de Juan Alonso)

http://www.logo.nino.ru/

http://www.logo.nino.ru/

http://www.logo.nino.ru/

Flash mobs spread to Europe!

(Publicado por CNN News, cortesía de jotajota)

Arranged via Web sites and e-mails, flash mob members voluntarily and simultaneously converge to the venue mentioned in a general e-mail and then collect detailed instructions for the event. They partake in a silly and harmless activity and then disperse at a given time.

The phenomenon’s creator is reported to be someone called “Bill,” who began the trend by e-mailing 50 people and asking them to gather at a shop in downtown Manhattan.
Continue reading “Flash mobs spread to Europe!”

Swollen Orders Show Spam's Allure

(Publicado por Wired News)

A security flaw at a website operated by the purveyors of penis enlargement pills has provided the world with a depressing answer to the question: Who in their right mind would buy something from a spammer?

An order log left exposed at one of Amazing Internet Products’ websites revealed that, over a four-week period, some 6,000 people responded to e-mail ads and placed orders for the company’s Pinacle herbal supplement. Most customers ordered two bottles of the pills at a price of $50 per bottle.

Continue reading “Swollen Orders Show Spam's Allure”

Google News Alerts

http://www.google.com/newsalerts

http://www.google.com/newsalerts

http://www.google.com/newsalerts

Suecia

Estamos pasando unas vacaciones increibles. Todo es precioso 😀


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