Iyii Amazon Launches Surprise!, A Facebook-Powered App For Sending Personalized E-Cards
Both companies have created job listing sites for college students and recent graduates, but WayUp co-founder and CEO Liz Wessel pictured above with Looksharp CEO Andrew Maguire told me they ;re complementary in a rather specific way.The key, she said, is search engine optimization 鈥?after all, that where job seekers usually start looking for opportunities. And while WayUp student profiles do wel
stanley thermos l on Google in some cases ranking above LinkedIn , Wessel said Looksharp has better SEO when it comes to job listings.For that reason 鈥?and because WayUp and Looksharp had similar users but not the same users 鈥?the two companies started discussing a partnership, which eventually tu
stanley italia rned into a conversation about a possible acquisition. When I met with
stanley termos Liz and [co-founder JJ Fliegelman], we realized that both of our companies wanted to change the way students secure jobs, and how businesses find student talent, Maguire said in the acquisition release. Iijf Indonesia s Snapcart Turns The Humble Receipt Into Big Data For Brands And Retailers
Ask engineers about their favorite toys growing up, and chances are, LEGOs will be
stanley quencher mentioned. Often, they ;ll be discussed with great intensity and detail, as in, The best Christmas ever was in 1988, when I turned my entire bedroom into a LEGO City. There is something about LEGOs that really takes a hold of kids and sparks their interest in building things
stanley kubek termiczny giving them the bug for engineering that can often carry on into their adult lives.The fact is, though, that toys like LEGOs have traditionally been marketed to boys more than girls. And as it turns out, some 90 perce
termo stanley nt of people who are employed as engineers today are men. Whether those two facts are related is hard to know, but either way, the dearth of women in engineering is seen by many as a real problem.And it a problem that GoldieBlox founder Debra Sterling has set out to help solve. Sterling, who has an engineering degree from Stanford, never grew up playing with LEGOs and she didn&