| BizAtomic Introduces Version 5 of its SEO Optimized E3 Ecommerce ...
BizAtomic introduces version 5 of its SEO optimized E3 Ecommerce software. The new version offers many SEO enhancements; including Search Engine Friendly URLs, a large number of HTML code enhancements and standards compliant HTML. St. Augustine, FL (PRWEB) September 7, 2006 -- BizAtomic, a national leader in Search Engine Marketing (SEM) and Search Engine Optimized (SEO) ecommerce application development, today announced the release of E3 Ecommerce version 5. E3 is a professional, robust, and reliable ecommerce software system featuring an easy to use shopping experience with a quick checkout process, a web-based admin area that enables on-demand changes to the look and feel of the E3 storefront, and extensive marketing and comprehensive reporting system. BizAtomic augments its E3 websites with a complete line of professional services including SEO, marketing programs, and superior hosting and support.
Toy retailer entertains web upgrade
Independent toy retailer The Entertainer has completed a website refresh and contracted ecommerce specialist Escalate Retail to provide a software suite for the back-end. The implementation cost just over 400,000, including overall hosting, development and license costs, in the first year but since the system went live in October 2007, one of the retailer's sites, thetoyshop.com, has increased sales by 147 per cent, according to The Entertainer's online marketing and ecommerce manager Richard Bewley. silicon.com Retail & Leisure Get the latest retail and leisure news straight to your inbox. Sign up for the R&L newsletter today! The system replaces a bespoke implementation made before thetoyshop.com and The Entertainer's other brand Gadgetshop were acquired, which was deemed too inflexible to be able to cope with the peaks and troughs of traffic.
At CBC Radio 3, podcasts reach global domination
On a wall in the Vancouver offices of CBC Radio 3 hangs a map of the world with pushpins sticking out of it. Each pin represents a person who has written to Grant Lawrence, host of The CBC Radio 3 Podcast. When the Georgia Straight interviewed Lawrence earlier this month, he proudly pointed out pins marking faraway places such as Iceland, Germany, India, and Easter Island. One listener, Lawrence reflected while sitting on a couch in the Radio 3 lounge area, had downloaded the podcast to her iPod in an Internet café in Mongolia, and then listened to the show hundreds of feet underground while working in a uranium mine. When she's on hiatus, she lives a few blocks from Lawrence in the West End. Canadians can be found everywhere in the world, and for many of them The CBC Radio 3 Podcast is a lifeline to their home country and its unique musical culture.
Davidson Calendar: March 7-16
The subject matter is wide-ranging but mainly reflective of the manner in which each artist works. For details, visit www.cumberlandgallery.com. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Cumberland Gallery, 4107 Hillsboro Circle. The Avatar Series: Works by Don Porcaro, on view through March 8. Porcaro works in a modernist's vein, utilizing plumbing and electrical appliance parts paired with carved stone and ceramic elements. For more information, visit www.cumberlandgallery.com. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Cumberland Gallery, 4107 Hillsboro Circle; 297-0296. Born Yesterday: A corrupt tycoon brings his showgirl mistress with him to Washington, D.C. When her ignorance becomes a liability to his business dealings, he hires a journalist to educate her. In the process, she realizes how corrupt he is and makes a few plans of her own.
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Allegiant currently services airports in Des Moines and Cedar Rapids, among 58 destinations in the United States.The announcement of discussions with Allegiant Air was made at the Waterloo Regional Airport board meeting Wednesday morning in the airport conference room. The board also reviewed a draft of the airport's fiscal year 2009 budget, which will be subject to a board approval next month before a final draft is sent on to the city of Waterloo for approvalAccording to the budget, total expenses for the airport are expected to rise by $58,696 from the FY2008 budget. The largest increases in expenses from 2008 to 2009 were in regular salaries ($16,535), time and a half ($14,442), health insurance ($12,338) and utilities ($11,000). Revenues were expected to rise $15,450 from 2008 to 2009, with the biggest gains coming from gas sales ($9,000) and miscellaneous revenues ($3,500).
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Seeking solutions for Sonic gloom
All right, after sifting through another 2,500 e-mails Thursday night and Friday morning, we had to run a sequel to the "Save The Sonics" piece from Thursday. Allow me four points before we turn it over to the readers: Point No. 1: There's one solution David Stern could facilitate -- you know, assuming he cares at all about not murdering the Sonics in Seattle -- that seems so remarkably logical, it's hard to figure how this couldn't work. The NBA failed in Memphis, and the Grizzlies are currently for sale, right? Well, couldn't Stern broker a sale in which Clay Bennett acquired the Grizzlies at a discount and moved them to Oklahoma City, then sold the Sonics to a group of local buyers? (An article in Friday's Seattle Times says numerous local buyers are lining up.) That wouldn't make everyone happy? We lose one of the weakest NBA cities (Memphis) and gain a city that was routinely selling out Hornets games (Oklahoma City), and if that's not enough, Seattle gets to keep the franchise it has had for 41 seasons.
BroadRamp $150K grant funds UTSA, SISD project
(Dec. 10, 2007)--The UTSA Center for Distance Learning and Academic Technology received a $150,000 grant from the San Antonio Southside Independent School District (SISD) to develop a Web portal to offer online course content to SISD students. UTSA and San Antonio-based BroadRamp Inc., a privately held venture capital-funded company, will partner on the grant project, which will include the development of SAT and ACT test-preparation courses, a high school algebra course and College 101, an introduction to college course designed to close the gaps in minority participation in higher education. .
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