We started our office yesterday here in Bangladesh. We have taken a nice and huge house for us. Here is some pictures from inside@TrippertLabs. FYI, Trippert Labs is a small PHP company who are developing Facebook Applications along with some other inhouse/revenue projects. 1. The Powerstation 2. Powerstation at Full Throttle 3. Refreshment 4. The Kitchen King - [...]... lire la suite
Lien du post: http://hasin.wordpress.com/2007/12/29/inside-at-trippert-labs/
We started our office yesterday here in Bangladesh. We have taken a nice and huge house for us. Here is some pictures from inside@TrippertLabs. FYI, Trippert Labs is a small PHP company who are developing Facebook Applications along with some other inhouse/revenue projects. The Powerstation 2.
Incubating Inside Xerox Labs: Innovation that Benefits the Workplace, Healthcare, and the Environment
I am leaving TrippertLabs by the end of this month. It is kinda painful leaving something which I have developed actively as a part of management entities. And TrippertLabs become a big hit here in Bangladesh for PHP devs. In the past one year in TL I have managed to set it up with 4 [.
Scobleizer scored a tour of the NYT’s building, which included a peek into some cool gadgetry and interactive experiments. His blog post includes some video of the “Time Machine,” a new archive application. Via Fimoculous.
Join us in SoMA on Wednesday night for a special Labs event starting at 6: pm. Come wearing your thinking hat. More details soon to be posted.
It’s time for another Monthly Meetup. This month’s meetup will be Thursday, August 28th, 6pm at the Twitter office - 539 Bryant St. Suite 402, San Francisco. There will be progress updates on the various active Labs projects as well as plenty of opportunity for discussion and hacking.
Seven Ads A-Running The Iowa caucuses come earlier than ever for 2008 -- in fact, they'll be held on the 10th day of Christmas. That's "lords a-leaping," in case you're wondering. Because the holidays and the campaign are overlapping as never before, many major presidential hopefuls are running Christmas-themed political ads.
See You In September? Republicans are beginning to express fears that their wide-open presidential nomination fight could actually stretch out until the Republican National Convention that opens on September 1 in Minneapolis-St. Paul. RNC Treasurer Timothy Morgan warns, "As late as it is in this election cycle, no candidate in our party has moved enough to be assured of the nomination, and the models I look at suggest a serious possibility we could have a brokered convention.
Des Moines Register Backs Clinton, McCain In editorials to appear in Sunday morning's editions, the Des Moines Register endorses Sen. Hillary Clinton for the Democratic presidential nomination and Sen. John McCain for the Republican nomination. ciceroinsider@gmail. com
This Is a Toss-Up" On NBC Nightly News Monday night, Tim Russert, speaking about the Democratic presidential race, advised, "Get rid of those national polls. This is a toss-up. It's too close to call. There is no longer a frontrunner. There is no longer someone who is going to be coronated or inevitable.
Was Hillary Sending A Hint? At the Black and Brown Forum in Iowa last weekend, Gov. Bill Richardson ran through Bill Clinton's gubernatorial successes in Arkansas, then asked Sen. Hillary Clinton, "Don't you think governors make good presidents? Without missing a beat, Clinton replied, "Well, Bill, I also think they make good vice presidents.
The More Things Change. It is once again possible that Sen. John McCain will win the New Hampshire primary on January 8. McCain remains a longshot there, but things have been going his way in the state he won in a landslide over George W. Bush and others in 2000. Can McCain, the onetime GOP frontrunner for 2008, get back in the game?
Senate Blues The 2008 U. S. Senate picture is looking ever more dismal for Republicans. A small bit of good news is that the GOP looks likely to hold retiring Sen. Chuck Hagel's seat in Nebraska, now that the field is starting to clear for popular ex-governor and ex-U.
And They're Off With the date of the New Hampshire presidential primary set at last, the primary calendar is finally in order. The first votes will be cast 38 days from today in Iowa. The course ahead over the next three months: Thursday, January 3: Iowa Saturday, January 5:
Ins and Outs in Iowa Is Rudy Giuliani's team getting a bit nervous? After long holding to a disciplined strategy that banked on trying to survive the first states to vote before capturing the lead in the February 5 national primary, Giuliani is increasing efforts in Iowa with what the New York Times calls "a surge of radio advertisements, telephone calls and mailings.
Big Apple and Little Rock As his political stock has risen over the past couple of months, Mike Huckabee has frequently been asked about his interest in the vice presidency, especially on a ticket headed by Rudy Giuliani. On CBS's Face The Nation Sunday, Huckabee handled the question with his usual joke, saying he would happily consider Giuliani as his running mate when he himself wins the nomination.
Lou Dobbs For President? Is populist CNN broadcaster Lou Dobbs mulling a political future? Writing at CNN. com last week, Dobbs said, "One year from now, we will have elected a new president. As eager as I am for that reality, I can't imagine any one of the current candidates for their party's nomination being chosen by the American people to lead this nation for the next four years.
Richardson's Dilemma After briefly climbing into the double digits in some Iowa and New Hampshire polls, Gov. Bill Richardson's presidential campaign seems to have plateaued. The latest RCP Average in Iowa has Richardson at just 7. not that far ahead of Sen. Joseph Biden, who has been making recent gains in the state and now pulls an average 5.
Bloomberg Steps In An independent presidential run by New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg now looks like a near-certainty. Earlier this month, rumors began swirling that Bloomberg had decided to run and would enter the race in February. On Sunday, the Washington Post reported that Bloomberg "has scheduled a meeting next week with a dozen leading Democrats and Republicans, who will join him in challenging the major-party contenders to spell out their plans for forming a 'government of national unity' to end the gridlock in Washington.
Close Calls For Iowa Predictors are remembered for their errors, not their dead-on guesses. Pollster John Zogby confidently called the 2004 presidential race for Sen. John Kerry a few days before the election; in an early column of mine in 1994, I said Democratic Govs. Mario Cuomo and Ann Richards would both win re-election -- a prediction that, if accurate, would have led to very different presidential elections in the time since.