Internet Marketing Strаtеgу

Posted by Md Habibullah

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Internet marketing Tulsa

Posted by Mary Putnam

Internet marketing is the procedure of growing, building, and endorsing a business people or organization through any online events. Tulsa digital marketing belongs to blog sites, article marketing, press releases, online market research, email marketing, and online promotion. We help Tulsa businesses grow by using proven profitable SEO, PPC and Reputation systems that provide measurable results. For more details please visit at www.designyoursite.net/Tulsa-SEO/Tulsa-Search-Engine-Opti…

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DSC_0032 Rafael Martínez tuvo un gran domingo tras adjudicarse la victoria de la carrera “Puebla 240” Autódromo Miguel E. Abed Fotografía Lyz Vega / Manuel Vela para Mv Fotografía Profesional – Edición y retoque www.pueblaexpres.com

Posted by Puebla Expres

7° fecha de NASCAR TOYOTA SERIES “Puebla 240” Autódromo Miguel E. Abed

Departamento de Prensa Nascar Toyota Series | LAE Manuel Vela Flickr – Facebook // Fotografía Lyz Vega / Manuel Vela para Mv Fotografía Profesional / Edición y retoque www.pueblaexpres.com / en Twitter @Mv_ManuelVela
Puebla, Puebla 16 de Junio de 2013

Rafael Martínez tuvo un gran domingo tras adjudicarse la victoria de la carrera “Puebla 240”
El piloto del auto No. 18 del equipo Canel’s Racing – HDI Seguros logró completar las 120 vueltas pactadas en dos horas, 14 minutos con 44.910 segundos, quien calificó en la segunda posición y siempre se mantuvo al frente del pelotón con lo cual sorteó los múltiples accidentes suscitados a lo largo de la justa.

El veterano piloto demostró que la experiencia puede más por encima de la juventud, representada esta fecha por Rodrigo Peralta (Tame Racing – Cinemex #24), quien tuvo un desarrollo de carrera muy interesante pues el joven queretano arrancó desde la 26º sitio y avanzó posiciones en cada re-arrancada hasta pelear la cuadriculada con ‘Rafa’, pero poco pudo hacer para arrebatarle el triunfo.

La tercera plaza cayó en manos de Rubén Rovelo (TELMEX #5) y cuidó mucho su lugar una vez que Jorge Goeters (FICREA – Xtreme – Potosinos #4) apretó intensamente pero se quedó con el cuarto sitio mientras que Hugo Oliveras (Monster Energy #11) fue el quinto piloto de la contienda.

El Top-10 es completado por Homero Richards (NEXTEL #20), Héctor Aguirre (Grupo GAMA #29), el ganador de la Pole Position Carlos Contreras (FICREA – Xtreme – Potosinos #14), Patrick Goeters (SyD #43) y Carlos Peralta (La Costeña – Oro #7).

Con la combinación de resultados, los clasificados extraoficiales para la etapa final de “Desafío” son: Antonio Pérez, Rubén Rovelo, Rubén García Jr, Hugo Oliveras, Rafael Martínez, Rubén Pardo, Daniel Suárez y Homero Richards mientras que los dos comodines son: Héctor Aguirre y Abraham Calderón.

La próxima fecha de NASCAR TOYOTA SERIES será el 30 de junio para visitar la ciudad de Monterrey y darle vida a la 8ª fecha de la temporada.

En lo que respecta a la carrera de la Serie Stock V6 en Puebla, Alejandro Moreno con su auto #11 del equipo Tame Racing, se adjudicó la Pole Position tras completar la vuelta más rápida al óvalo de dos kilómetros de longitud en 46.699 segundos.

El segundo lugar fue para Juan Carlos Buitrón (Pro Sports Extreme #94) quien completó la vuelta en 46.909 segundos. En tanto, el piloto local de la categoría co-estelar, Ricardo Hernández (Litac – Red Rain #53) calificó en tercer sitio y compartirá la segunda fila de la Parrilla con el actual del Campeonato, Erick Mondragón (Neumann Ecom Star #20).

El quinto tiempo de la tarde fue para Carlos Azcárate (Cuadritos Racing Team #19), actual sublíder de la categoría, quien buscará disminuir la diferencia para acercarse a la cima de la Tabla General de Pilotos.

[Manuel Vela Photography Copyright©] This image is protected under International Copyright laws and may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without written permission. / Esta imagen se protege conforme a leyes de Derechos de Autor internacionales y no se puede transferir, reproducir, copiar, transmitir o manipular sin el permiso de escritura.]

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Top 10 Tech Trends for 2010

Posted by Steve Jurvetson

With real time voting by all audience members, just to add to the stress. =)

Each of us had to come up with two tech trends to watch for the next year. Here is what we debated:

Steve Jurvetson:
1) It’s a wonderful time to start a company. In retrospect, 2010 will be a great entrepreneurial vintage with exceptional fruit from low-yielding vineyards.

Good omens include: global markets of record scale, an influx of human talent, a recurring long-wave-cycle of venture economics, and compounding disruptive innovation. Scientists do not slow down for recessions. The pace of innovation, as epitomized by Moore’s Law, is accelerating and is exogenous to the economy. Healthier company cultures are formed during down markets, with a frugal focus on customer feedback, rather than investors, or competitors. Most of the DJIA are companies founded during a recession. (edit: this video is now online here)

2) Code comes alive. History will highlight 2010 as the year of the first synthetic life — a watershed accomplishment in “Biotech 2.0” and the next epoch of evolution.

With 100% of the DNA assembled from beakers of chemicals, synthetic microbes will boot up as living, self-replicating cells. Heralding an era of intelligent design in biology, one composes the digital genome on a computer, writing software that creates its own hardware. Instead of slowly splicing physical genes, scientists will create billions of genetically novel microbes per day. Early applications will recycle waste into fuels, chemicals and clean water. (edit: a video clip of this one went online)

David Weiden:
1. Wearable computers and the next hundred billion connected devices
Breakthroughs in power management and manufacturing, combined with a steady shift to cloud services and increasingly pervasive wireless Internet connections form the catalysts for new classes of devices and Internet services. Many expect connected devices to be more than an order of magnitude greater than the number of phones with the next decade or two. Will there be an Apple of wearable computers? Of connected medical devices? Inside or outside your body? Opportunities for new category defining companies abound. But beware of silicon cockroaches.

2. The Internet finds a new patient: healthcare
A $2.7 trillion dollar industry in the US alone. The 2010 healthcare reform bill will introduce 30 million new patients, no new doctors, less money available per patient. The government has signed up to pay over $40,000 per doctor who moves to electronic medical records. Oracle recently turned their acquisition sites in this direction with the $700M acquisition of Phase Forward. Huge market, under stress, financial incentives, increasing M&A activity … is it time for Internet innovation to increase focus here?

Kevin Efrusy:
1. Social Web as Substrate for New Category Killers
Every major media shift (Radio to TV, TV to Web Portals, Web Portals to Search, Search to Social) gives rise to a set of brand new fast-growing companies who are the first to recognize and fully exploit the transition. Yahoo! enabled DR advertising, Google enabled long-tail ecommerce and media, and Facebook/Twitter enabling social gaming (Playfish/Zynga), social commerce (Groupon, Gilt), and soon will enable other categories to be reinvented as well (Travel, Finance, etc).

2. The Rise of the New Software Stack
While threatened before, the traditional stack for managing apps and data has come under its final assault. The old infrastructure was designed for reservations and financial transactions (precision at all costs), while the data from new applications is 3 orders of magnitude larger and often generated by machine or other non-financial activity (logs, clicks, metadata, links, streams, etc.). The new companies (Google, Facebook, Zynga) have solved this with a new infrastructure “stack,” (Hadoop, MemcacheD) for the masses as even small companies have big data problems.

Esther Dyson:
1. HomeBrew Health: We don’t need no stinkin’ care! We’ll manage our bodies the way we manage our budgets, and reduce our health care costs by not needing care.

80 words: That’s aspirational, but it’s happening and will spread. Quantified Selfers will monitor their own vital signs and behaviors, using tools such as Nike+, FitBit, MyZeo (sleep monitor). Game dynamics will let them compete/collaborate with others. There’s a huge market for health care, and a huge market for bad health (cigarettes, too much alcohol, fatty/sweet foods). Now there will also be a market for good health. Over time, aggregated data will persuade employers and even insurers to pay, broadening the market further.

2. Long-term accountability is the new transparency:

Transparency was great, but the market demands results, not just visibility. Nonprofits and for-profits alike will be measured on the results of their spending – on ROI rather than donations, on the creation of sustainable businesses rather than short-term gains. Wal-Mart and others lead the way with focused programs for employees and supply-chain visibility, while the World Bank will publish its spending so that putative beneficiaries get what was promised.

Ron Conway:
1) the web is now truly social since consumers are more Open and Willing to Share data resulting in explosive growth and monetization as proven by the widespread adoption of Facebook, Twitter and other social media sites.

Proof: Twitter will grow to 1B searches a day across its ecosystem (up from 600m today) and Facebook will grow to over 500m users in the coming months.

2) the real-time web, the corpus of time-relevant data created by users collective wisdom will be a billion dollar oppty in 2010.

Twitter led the charge, and now companies are integrating time-relevancy/LBS into products like FourSquare who will grow to 3-5m users over the next 12 months

Here’s the ABC news coverage of this Churchill Club event last night.

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