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Magopinaciophiles
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Marabout Chichi (Dec 21 2005 18:46 GMT) - Le flyer est un peu daté, mais avec le temps on n'est toujours pas sűr qu'il arrive ŕ tenir toutes ses promesses. Source : Le Mamouth.... |
Affiliate Program Tip Blog
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November Spawned a Monster in the Shape of Cyber Monday (Dec 21 2005 18:45 GMT) - Back in November, there was much talk about Cyber Monday (the first Monday after Thanksgiving) being the big online shopping day of the year. But as the numbers came in, Cyber Monday turned out to be more of a silly marketing ploy from Shop.org to get journalists to quote Scott Silverman, executive director of Shop.org. According to eMarketer, Monday, November 28, 2005 or Cyber Monday, was merely the 9th biggest online shopping day of the year. |
SportzDomain
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MARCEL GOC AND CHRISTIAN EHRHOFF TO REPRESENT TEAM GERMANY (Dec 21 2005 18:45 GMT) - MARCEL GOC AND CHRISTIAN EHRHOFF TO REPRESENT TEAM GERMANY AT 2006 WINTER OLYMPICS CLEVELAND - The International Hockey Federation announced today that former Barons Marcel Goc and Christian Ehrhoff were named to Germany’s men’s ice hockey team for the 2006 Winter Olympic Games. The Olympics will be held Feb. 15-23 in Torino, Italy. |
LinuxPlanet
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Report: Interop: Giants, Start-ups Examine Open Source (Dec 21 2005 18:45 GMT) - From giants such as Sun and Computer Associates to start-ups such as Sourcefire and GroundWorks, companies are now stepping in to the open source market from a variety of directions and perspectives, as evidenced at last week's Interop show in New York City. Jacqueline Emigh reports. |
Signifying Nothing
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Moving back in the funnel of causality (Dec 21 2005 18:45 GMT) - Barry Burden notes that party identification explains too much variance in vote choice these days: The old Michigan triad of partisanship, issues, and candidate evaluations as an explanation for vote choices is proving less useful in recent days. The main reason is that party identification and the vote are practically one and the same. In the 2000 and 2004 NES data, better than 90% of partisans voted for the presidential candidate of their party. In 2004 only 40 respondents (7% of partisans) voted against their stated party identification. |
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