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Jason & Jodie - Students of Abraham Hicks - Downstream Flow
http://www.TheIncomeStream.com US Ph: (619) 866-4174 UK Ph: (+44)20 8144 5211 Aust Ph: 0419 650289 Become an Attraction Marketing Expert - and just like Abraham Hicks teaches, you will attract like minded people to you... don't fight it... enhance it. Jason & Jodie will teach you to BRAND you and let the world see you so that your financial wellbeing stays in the abundance flow. Call Jason & Jodie TODAY! http://hubpages.com/hub/How-I-Found-Out-About-Attraction-Marketing
Esso Ad anúncio marketing - Rede Globo de TV - 1994
Esso é um nome comercial da ExxonMobil Corporation e de suas empresas relacionadas. Seu nome é derivado de Standard Oil Company ("SO", pronunciado esso). A Standard Oil esteve envolvida em processos jurídicos nos Estados Unidos e, por esse motivo, a marca Esso foi largamente substituída por outra (Exxon) naquele país, enquanto que no resto do mundo a marca "Esso" continua sendo utilizada, junto da marca Mobil.No Brasil, a marca Esso também está presente e é operada pela filial brasileira da ExxonMobil, com sede no Rio de Janeiro[1] e uma em Curitiba. A empresa veio para o país em 17 de janeiro de 1912, com a autorização do presidente Hermes da Fonseca, para instalar-se no Brasil. Na época, veio sob o nome Standard Oil Company of Brazil, distribuindo gasolina e querosene, vendidos em tambores e latas. A Esso ficou conhecida por também ser a primeira empresa que patrocinou um programa jornalístico no país, com o Repórter Esso. Com isso, acabou também sendo uma das pioneiras da publicidade brasileira, com os seus mascotes-gotinhas que apareciam na maioria dos comerciais da empresa[3]. A Esso vendia no país também a Querosene Jacaré. No Brasil, a Esso opera sob a razão social Esso Brasileira de Petróleo Ltda.[5]. A Mobil também atua no país, com a venda de lubrificantes automotivos. Em 1955, a empresa criou o Prêmio Esso de Jornalismo, para premiar os melhores trabalhos jornalísticos do ano.Em 24 de abril de 2008 a Cosan anunciou a compra do portfolio de downstream da Esso no Brasil.Esso (S.O.)(a.k.a. Eastern States Standard Oil) is an international trade name for ExxonMobil and its related companies. Pronounced /ˈɛsoʊ/ ("S-O"), it is derived from the initials of the pre-1911 Standard Oil, and as such became the focus of much litigation and regulatory restriction in the United States.In 1973, it was largely replaced in the U.S. by the Exxon brand, while Esso remained widely used elsewhere. In most of the world, the Esso brand and the Mobil brand are the primary brand names of ExxonMobil, with the Exxon brand name still in use only in parts of the United States.In 1911, Standard Oil was broken up into seven regional companies, each with the rights to the brand "Standard" in certain states (plus a number of other companies that had no territorial rights). Standard Oil of New Jersey ("Jersey Standard") had the rights in that state, plus in Maryland, West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and the District of Columbia. By 1941, it had also acquired the rights in Pennsylvania, Delaware, Arkansas, Tennessee, and Louisiana. In those states, it marketed its products under the brand "Esso", the phonetic pronunciation of the letters "S" and "O". It also used the Esso brand in New York and the six New England states, where the Standard Oil Company of New York (Mobil) had the rights, but did not object to the New Jersey company's use of the trademark (the two companies did not merge until 1998). However, in the other states, the other Standard Oil companies objected and forced Jersey Standard to use other brand names. In most states the company used the trademark "Enco", and in a few "Humble". The other Standard companies likewise were "Standard" or some variant on that in their home states, and another brand name in other states. This situation was confusing to travelers. In 1973, Standard Oil of New Jersey renamed itself as the Exxon Corporation, and adopted that trademark throughout the country. It however maintained the rights to "Standard" and "Esso" in the states where it held those rights, by a token effort, by selling "Esso Diesel" in those states at stations that sell diesel fuel, thus preventing the trademark from being declared abandoned. The ENCO brand name was still used on locations in the midwest, which were scheduled for abandonment (Standard Oil: The First 75 years).Esso Blue Esso Blue was the brand name of Esso's paraffin oil (kerosene) for domestic heaters in countries such as the United Kingdom. Their TV advertising song from the 1950s through to the 1970s was the famous "Bom, Bom, Bom, Bom, Esso Blue!" A later campaign used the well-known song tune of "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" cleverly reworded as "They asked me how I knew, it was Esso Blue, I of course replied, with lower grades one buys, smoke gets in your eyes. ... The non-smoking paraffin".Cleveland In the 1930s Esso acquired Cleveland, an independent company based in North East England. The name comes from the Cleveland Hills. Cleveland's products included a benzole blend and an alcohol blend called Discol. Both the Esso and Cleveland names continued in use until 1973, when the Cleveland filling stations were re-branded as Esso.
Life's A Bitch.wmv
I stared into the dark. Far-off lights reflected, shimmered and danced on the roiling water. The river washed everything downstream while the lights sparkled in one place. It was all illusion. Somewhere, deep below, hidden within the weeds and muck, buried, lurked other things. Things that wouldn't, couldn't, be washed away. Unseen. Unknown. Waiting. Life had moved on, but, like the lights on the water, I was stuck in one place. And I dread the horrid things buried within. Hard-boiled? or only poached in Tabasco? Either way, private detective Rachel Cord pursues multiple threads seeking a runaway teen and why gay performers are being beaten at Miss Kitty's Kathouse Kabaret; threads that twist and bind Rachel within a tight cord of lost love, child pornography, rape, murder, and near insanity.
Don't Vote Polar Bear
To encourage people to vote, Portland, Oregon advertising agency Borders Perrin Norrander created a marketing campaign to serve as a wake up call. The idea was to distill some of the large problems America faces into simple, potent messages that arent soon forgotten. The flag video you see here is one piece of the much larger effort which is available for viewing at thingsarefine.org The campaign is running nationally, and has spread internationally as well. The website, thingsarefine.org links all efforts in one central place that allows voters to register, download and distribute content and spread the word. Visit the site. And most importantly. VOTE.
Don't Vote Church And State
To encourage people to vote, Portland, Oregon advertising agency Borders Perrin Norrander created a marketing campaign to serve as a wake up call. The idea was to distill some of the large problems America faces into simple, potent messages that arent soon forgotten. The flag video you see here is one piece of the much larger effort which is available for viewing at thingsarefine.org The campaign is running nationally, and has spread internationally as well. The website, thingsarefine.org links all efforts in one central place that allows voters to register, download and distribute content and spread the word. Visit the site. And most importantly. VOTE.
Don't Vote Freedumb
To encourage people to vote, Portland, Oregon advertising agency Borders Perrin Norrander created a marketing campaign to serve as a wake up call. The idea was to distill some of the large problems America faces into simple, potent messages that arent soon forgotten. The flag video you see here is one piece of the much larger effort which is available for viewing at thingsarefine.org The campaign is running nationally, and has spread internationally as well. The website, thingsarefine.org links all efforts in one central place that allows voters to register, download and distribute content and spread the word. Visit the site. And most importantly. VOTE.
Don't Vote Crayon
To encourage people to vote, Portland, Oregon advertising agency Borders Perrin Norrander created a marketing campaign to serve as a wake up call. The idea was to distill some of the large problems America faces into simple, potent messages that arent soon forgotten. The flag video you see here is one piece of the much larger effort which is available for viewing at thingsarefine.org The campaign is running nationally, and has spread internationally as well. The website, thingsarefine.org links all efforts in one central place that allows voters to register, download and distribute content and spread the word. Visit the site. And most importantly. VOTE.
Don't Vote Flag
To encourage people to vote, Portland, Oregon advertising agency Borders Perrin Norrander created a marketing campaign to serve as a wake up call. The idea was to distill some of the large problems America faces into simple, potent messages that arent soon forgotten. The flag video you see here is one piece of the much larger effort which is available for viewing at thingsarefine.org The campaign is running nationally, and has spread internationally as well. The website, thingsarefine.org links all efforts in one central place that allows voters to register, download and distribute content and spread the word. Visit the site. And most importantly. VOTE.
Grain Action
www.Grainaction.ca Canadian Grain Commission and Bill C-39 Bill C-39: A threat to producers & Canada's international reputation Bill C-39 would eliminate or reduce several services and regulatory oversight activities of the Canadian Grain Commission, leaving producers newly disadvantaged in their dealings with grain companies and undermining the quality and food safety assurance programs Canada's international reputation for excellence are built upon. The Grain Commission has served as an independent referee and honest broker to settle disputes between Canadian grain producers and the powerful companies which buy and export to ensure producers are paid fairly. The Commission has also served as the body that can determine the amount producers, grain companies and the Canadian Wheat Board are paid based on the CGC's determination of grain weight and quality. The Commission provides independent, objective and comprehensive information about the quality and quantity of Canadian grain that is crucial to the international marketing efforts of the Canadian Wheat Board. Threatens Canadian grain producers These roles will dramatically diminish if C-39 becomes law. The bill would kill the Commission's "inward" inspection and weighing service leaving producers newly disadvantaged in their dealings with grain companies when it comes to determining grain weight and grade. With the loss of the Commission's weighing and grading service, producers may not be paid for the quantity and quality of grain delivered. Currently, the Canadian Grain Commission routinely revises upward grain grades and corrects quantity measurements, resulting in fair payment to producers. While the bill provides that producers have the option to hire a private company to grade and weigh their grain, no companies capable of the task exist today. The bill would eliminate the requirement for grain buyers to post security bonds and expose grain producers to financial harm in the event of a grain buyer bankruptcy or refusal to pay. C-39 would eliminate the Grain Appeal Tribunals which protects producers and the Canadian Wheat Board from unscrupulous behaviour on the part of grain companies. In Vancouver alone, it is normal for more than 100 appeals to be launched in a day. These changes may result in increased costs to producers with the shift to a for-profit service delivery model. The bill proposes a new purpose clause which dilutes the intent of the Grain Act to protect producer interests. Risk to Canada's international reputation Our grain is in demand because no other country offers a quality guarantee backed by a system of government inspection as stringent and comprehensive as Canada. To protect our quality brand, Canada even has programs and procedures to prevent Canadian grain from being mixed with imported US product to ensure the integrity of Canada's quality guarantee. Along with Canada's international reputation as a producer of the highest quality, at risk is the quality premium paid to Canadian producers. Once this "quality incentive" to ship Canadian grain separate from American grain is lost, we expect Canadian grain will be shipped overland, mixed with the lower quality American product and shipped through US ports. This will have significant downstream consequences for the Canadian economy as lucrative business is lost at Canada's ports. Ignores the unanimous advice of an all-party committee of the House of Commons After extensive study of the future of the Canadian Grain Commission, the House of Commons Standing Committee on Agriculture published a report and made several recommendations which were supported by all parties, including the Conservatives. Yet, the Minister and his officials have chosen to ignore the Committee. In several respects, the provisions of Bill C-39 are directly opposed to what the Committee recommended. For instance, while the Committee recommended CLEARLY protecting the interests of Grain producers the current legislation eliminates Grain Appeal Tribunals. (Section 38) Although the committee specifically asked for and received a report discussing options for contractual security the legislation undermines producer security. Although the committee recommended increased funding for the CGC to ensure long-term sustainability the bill is silent. Although the committee recommended that the CGC receive adequate funding to be able to properly benchmark other options through a cost-benefit analysis, and a three year pilot, the bill supercedes those recommendations by aggressively cutting regulatory responsibilities and services immediately. The legislation seems to be at odds even with the government's own response to the Committee's report.
Tellabs Get Schooled Podcast: WDM PON
WDM-PON uses multiple optical wavelengths to increase the upstream and/or downstream bandwidth available to end users. Once identified as a "technology for the future," WDM PON promises to deliver optical technology that is cheaper and easier to deploy, and satisfy end-users demands for higher bandwidth. Tim Doiron, Director,Broadband Product Marketing, explains the different PON technologies and why WDM PON is the only answer for this generation's bandwidth-hungry end-users.