In a van, down by the river...
Saturday, June 30, 2007
Sunday, June 17, 2007
An artist's look at statistics...
Artist Chris Jordan looks at contemporary American culture through the austere lens of statistics. Each image portrays a specific quantity of something: fifteen million sheets of office paper (five minutes of paper use); 106,000 aluminum cans (thirty seconds of can consumption) and so on. The picture above depicts two million plastic beverage bottles, the number used in the US every five minutes.
More here
Tuesday, June 5, 2007
Might be illegal, but it's so cool...
Monday, June 4, 2007
Every marketers nightmare...Bank of America promotional fax mistaken as bomb threat
The Associated Press
Wednesday, May 30, 2007
ASHLAND, Massachusetts: A Bank of America employee misinterpreted a faulty fax about a bank promotion as a bomb threat Wednesday, leading authorities to evacuate more than a dozen neighboring businesses.
The fax from a marketing group about a Bank of America small business promotion contained images of a lighted match and a bomb with a fuse, bank spokesman Ernesto Anguilla said. But words explaining the promotion did not transmit.
"The fax machine malfunctioned, so a partial image came through that looked somewhat suspicious," Anguilla said.
The missing text included the phrases "The countdown begins" and "Small business commitment week June 4-8," according to a copy circulated by police.
"It was an internal communication designed only for our employees," Anguilla said. The fax was sent to the bank's branches in parts of New England as well as New York and New Jersey.
The bank's Ashland branch manager called police Wednesday morning. Fears also arose because the branch received a suspicious package delivered by a customer around the same time, police said. A State Police bomb squad searched the bank branch and checked out the package, which was a delivery of documents.
About 15 small businesses in a shopping plaza were evacuated for about three hours, including a day care center with about 30 children, Police Chief Scott Rohmer said.
Authorities eventually learned from Bank of America security officials that it was a false alarm.
Wednesday, May 30, 2007
ASHLAND, Massachusetts: A Bank of America employee misinterpreted a faulty fax about a bank promotion as a bomb threat Wednesday, leading authorities to evacuate more than a dozen neighboring businesses.
The fax from a marketing group about a Bank of America small business promotion contained images of a lighted match and a bomb with a fuse, bank spokesman Ernesto Anguilla said. But words explaining the promotion did not transmit.
"The fax machine malfunctioned, so a partial image came through that looked somewhat suspicious," Anguilla said.
The missing text included the phrases "The countdown begins" and "Small business commitment week June 4-8," according to a copy circulated by police.
"It was an internal communication designed only for our employees," Anguilla said. The fax was sent to the bank's branches in parts of New England as well as New York and New Jersey.
The bank's Ashland branch manager called police Wednesday morning. Fears also arose because the branch received a suspicious package delivered by a customer around the same time, police said. A State Police bomb squad searched the bank branch and checked out the package, which was a delivery of documents.
About 15 small businesses in a shopping plaza were evacuated for about three hours, including a day care center with about 30 children, Police Chief Scott Rohmer said.
Authorities eventually learned from Bank of America security officials that it was a false alarm.
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