linkedin chud
seen from China

seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from Romania
seen from Ukraine
seen from Croatia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United Arab Emirates
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Denmark
seen from United Arab Emirates
seen from United States

seen from India

seen from Canada

seen from United States
linkedin chud
woah my favourite office worker ever!
office work
Story OF Delhi Poet- Dheeraj Sharma, Expresssing Today's Youth Mind and Heart in Perfect Blend.
Story OF Delhi Poet- Dheeraj Sharma, Expresssing Today’s Youth Mind and Heart in Perfect Blend.
POETRY cannot be easily DEFINED, It’s an Echo asking A shadow to Dance!! Poetry is Thoughts that Breathes and Words that BURN. !!!
Meet Dheeraj Sharma, a free soul, a corporate guy, not a writer by profession but still has been sharing thoughts and ideas or feelings with peoples through his page DELHI POET on Instagram and Facebook .
Within few months he has been able to get many followers…
View On WordPress
'You see a problem, but I see a problopportunity.'
New York's RadioFace has put together an ad to promote .me web domains. In this ad, "Corporate Guy", it highlights the "me" aspect by attacking the fundamental logic behind the coveted ".com": it's meant for companies, and most people aren't one.
That sounds harsher than the ad makes it look. But the execution is pretty good, in part because we know a lot of people who behave like Corporate Guy. If the juxtaposition of me:company works, it's because it's only a slight exaggeration of an irritating truth.
The ad wraps neatly with, "You're not a corporation; you're a person. .Me: the right web address ... for people." It's true there's a campiness to it, especially graphically, but it's not like the creative bar is super-high for domain ads. (Although you'd think it would be, given how much dosh domain registry companies rake in, and that they're punting a social necessity that should represent you unflinchingly well. Maybe in another life.)
If we could take another shot at this, we'd probably pit .me against Facebook, which, for many, is the definitive landing page of our online identities. Is that monster too big to beat? Maybe. Either way, nobody should rely exclusively on Facebook to make a first impression.