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| MarketWatch.com - Internet Daily |
Internet Daily: Video clerks try to build the perfect beast
Thu, 29 Mar 2007 20:03:00 GMT The secret weapon powering Stuart Skorman's new company is not computer technology. It's people.


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Internet Daily: Huffington, NewAssignment.Net plan swarming campaign coverage
Wed, 28 Mar 2007 19:44:00 GMT It's going to get even more crowded out there on the Presidential campaign trail. I'm not just talking about what would happen if Fred Thompson or Michael Bloomberg declares he's in the race.


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Internet Daily: PodCampNYC goes more commercial
Tue, 27 Mar 2007 19:30:00 GMT San Francisco (MarketWatch) -- The chief organizer of PodCampNYC.org knows the decision over the weekend to move the April 6th event to a midtown New York hotel is going to cause some criticism.


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Internet Daily: Rocketboom may charge for shows
Thu, 22 Mar 2007 19:12:00 GMT Rocketboom is searching for a new way to put fuel in its tank. Advertising is not doing it. "It's frustrating that we haven't worked it out by now," said the daily video blog's founder, Andrew Baron. (www.rocketboom.com)


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Internet Daily: Top 5 political video Web sites
Wed, 21 Mar 2007 17:46:00 GMT TechPresident.com


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Internet Daily: Anemic growth for podcast listening
Tue, 20 Mar 2007 18:48:00 GMT The Corporate Podcasting Summit in London this week may have gotten off to a downbeat start after a research presentation by Tom Webster of Edison Media Research. Quoting from the yet-to-be-released "Arbitron/Edison Internet and Multimedia Study 2007," he said podcast listening isn't growing much.


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Internet Daily: Bob Pittman to tell NAB where the money is
Thu, 15 Mar 2007 19:22:00 GMT Bob Pittman will deliver a keynote address at next month's National Association of Broadcasters conference in Las Vegas. The co-founder of MTV, and former president of America Online, will tell broadcasters how venture investors - like himself - are finding opportunities in radio and television.


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Internet Daily: NY Times to charge for Reader
Wed, 14 Mar 2007 18:37:00 GMT Hours after I blogged how much I liked The New York Times' "Reader," the company announced this afternoon, "Times Reader will launch as a subscription service on March 27." Cost: $14.95/month or $165/year as a standalone service. But, as I hoped, "Times Reader will be free to home delivery subscribers." That's the right thing to do.


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Internet Daily: Podtrac hopes new tool gets advertisers comfortable
Wed, 14 Feb 2007 21:07:00 GMT Podtrac Inc. has introduced an online service to make it easier for advertising agencies to find the right podcasts for their clients.


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Internet Daily: Will anybody watch the Fox Business Channel?
Tue, 13 Feb 2007 19:43:00 GMT Why did Rupert Murdoch wait so long to decide to launch Fox's business channel? It's been about two years since the first wisp of speculation about the competitor to CNBC.


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| Word of the day |
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for May 17, 2012 is:
maffick \MAF-ik\ verb
: to celebrate with boisterous rejoicing and hilarious behavior
Examples:
Fans mafficked for hours outside the stadium, celebrating the team's dramatic victory in the division championship.
"In half an hour, after the mildest of mafficking, the last visitors of the exhibition's last day had gone out of the gates and the staff began their final acts of closing up shop." From an article in The Guardian (London), October 1, 2011
Did you know?
"Maffick" is an alteration of Mafeking Night, the British celebration of the lifting of the siege of a British military outpost during the South African War at the town of Mafikeng (also spelled Mafeking) on May 17, 1900. The South African War was fought between the British and the Afrikaners, who were Dutch and Huguenot settlers originally called Boers, over the right to govern frontier territories. Though the war did not end until 1902, the lifting of the siege of Mafikeng was a significant victory for the British because they held out against a larger Afrikaner force for 217 days until reinforcements could arrive. The rejoicing in British cities on news of the rescue produced "maffick," a word that was popular for a while, especially in journalistic writing, but is now relatively uncommon.
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