background preloader

Milh – La mercerie en ligne

Milh – La mercerie en ligne

Petits accessoires Votre panier : 0 article 0,00 € | Votre compte 25 mars 2013 a A Vous êtes ici : Accueil / Catalogue / Petits accessoires Menu Nos engagements En savoir plus Restez informé Catalogue Trier par : Produit | Prix | Note | Date de disponibilité Tags Anniversaire Baker's Twine Baptême Blanc Bleu Bloc Boîte Box bois Carnet Céramique Chiyogami Chocolat Coffret Coton Dentelle Décoration DIY Emballage Enveloppe Epingles Etiquettes Fabric stickers Fabric tape Ficelle Glassine Paper Gris Guirlande Japanese Jaune Kraft Lace tape Liberty Mariage Marine Masking tape Napperon Noir Note-book Oeillets Orange Papeterie Pochette Rose Rouge Ruban Sachets Stickers Tampons Tape tag Vert Vintage Violet Yuzen Zakka Haut de la page © Copyright 2013 bopapier.com - Tous droits réservés. bopapier.com - Papiers, motifs & accessoires

Alexandra David-Néel Un article de Wikipédia, l'encyclopédie libre. Pour les articles homonymes, voir David et Néel. Alexandra David-Néel Alexandra David-Néel en costume de lama en 1933. Biographie[modifier | modifier le code] 1868-1895 : enfance, adolescence[modifier | modifier le code] Alexandra David, en 1886, le jour de sa présentation à la Cour de Belgique, devant le roi Léopold II et la reine Marie-Henriette. Alexandra est la fille unique d'un père (Louis David), franc-maçon de souche huguenote, instituteur (qui fut militant républicain lors de la révolution de 1848, et ami du géographe anarchiste Élisée Reclus), et d'une mère belge catholique d'origine scandinave et sibérienne[3], Alexandrine Borghmans. En 1873, les David s'expatrient en Belgique[6]. À l'âge de 15 ans, passant ses vacances avec ses parents à Ostende, elle fugue et gagne le port de Flessingue en Hollande pour essayer d'embarquer pour l'Angleterre. 1895-1904 : la cantatrice[modifier | modifier le code]

High-Tech Blocks Help Battle Brainstorming Slumps If sticky notes, whiteboards and yellow legal pads just aren't inspiring your team brainstorming sessions anymore, it's time to break out some toys. The folks at Smart Design's Smart Interaction Lab designed toy-like TOTEM blocks that can help teams improve idea-generating sessions, as explained in the video above. The creators presented these brainstorming tools at Barcelona's first Maker Faire. The three unique blocks — Batón, Echo and Alterego — all have different functions ina team meeting. The "Batón" is passed around like a talking stick, so whoever is holding it is allowed to speak. The "Echo" records background sounds and sound bytes and can play those back. The "Alterego" is meant to make the group think outside the comfort zone without biases. Fast Company notes TOTEM is still "an unproven concept." How does your team combat fruitless brainstorming sessions at your workplace? Image: Smart Interaction Lab [h/t Fast Company]

WATG Mediapart Un article de Wikipédia, l'encyclopédie libre. Mediapart (à prononcer « à l'anglaise ») est un site web d'information et d'opinion créé en 2008 par François Bonnet, Gérard Desportes, Laurent Mauduit et Edwy Plenel[1]. Un abonnement payant est nécessaire pour lire les articles du site. L'équilibre financier aurait été atteint à l'automne 2010[2]. Mediapart héberge à la fois les articles rédigés par ses équipes propres (« le journal ») et ceux de ses utilisateurs (« le club »). Soutiens au projet de Mediapart en 2007[modifier | modifier le code] Mediapart a reçu pendant sa campagne d’abonnements initiale de nombreux soutiens[5] qui se sont manifestés par une série de vidéos publiées sur le pré-site. Le soutien qui fit le plus de bruit[18] fut celui de Ségolène Royal, l’ancienne candidate à l’élection présidentielle de 2007, qui recommanda l’abonnement[19] à tous les adhérents de son association Désirs d'avenir. Caractéristiques[modifier | modifier le code] Capital[modifier | modifier le code]

Yahoo! "Carry Heavy Attachments" New Delhi Bridge Billboard Ad Bitcoin – The Honey Badger of Money San Jose Billboard Ad 1.64K Views3 Likes Thanks to evoorhees and Gerndown, I found this on funny Honey Badger Bitcoin Bilboard ad on Reddit today and LOLed for about 20 minutes! Premature Collaboration – San Jose Airport Billboard Ad 417 Views2 Likes I saw this interesting billboard ad from Kerio in the San Jose Airport recently that said "Premature Collaboration" and I had to do a double-take. 2013 Atlanta St. 439 Views1 Likes This commercial is interesting and a little freaky. Kitekat Cat Food Billboard Moscow Messiah Cat 283 Views2 Likes Paw-raise the lord! Artistic New Audrey Hepburn Galaxy Chocolate Commercial 8.36K Views49 Likes It's amazing to see how far we've come with CG (Computer Generated) photograph and film as you can see in this new Audrey Hepburn commercial for Galaxy Chocolate. Miele S8 Monster Suction Vacuum Cleaner Billboard Ad 823 Views4 Likes

Cost Per Like: A Subjective Valuation of Your Facebook Fans "Cost per Like" often crops up in conversations about Facebook advertising, though it isn't a term officially sanctioned by Facebook. So what exactly does it mean? Cost per Like refers to the cost of acquiring a new fan for a Facebook page, either through paid advertisements or, less directly, through earned media efforts. There are three ways to "buy" Likes on Facebook. One is through "cost per thousand impressions" (CPM). Advertisers bid to target a group of desired users, and pay every time their ad is seen by a thousand of those users. Earlier this month, Facebook unveiled a new metric for evaluating advertising campaigns on Facebook, called "cost per action" (CPA). For now, advertisers can only select CPA ads through Facebook's Ads API. How to Determine the Value of a Fan It sure is nice to have a lot of Facebook fans. As such, individual companies need to calculate the value of their fans before they decide to pursue a fan acquisition strategy. Not All Fans Are Created Equal

This Is The Best Ad Campaign In App History What better way for an anti-social app to get noticed than by insulting its target audience? London-based app design studio ustwo has just put up a pair of billboards in the hipster heartland of Shoreditch, East London, a stone’s throw from where its own studio is based, which brazenly proclaim: You have no friends and No one likes you. The billboards, which will be teasing Shoreditch’s hipsters for two weeks, are an experimental ad campaign for one of ustwo’s recent apps: random photo-sharing app Rando, which launched back in March on iOS. Rando has now also been rolled out on to Android and Windows Phone. Last month ustwo said the app had racked up a full five million of its entirely social-less random photo shares after around two months in the wild. So what’s with the anti-social insults? The cost of the Rando billboard campaign is “around the same amount it would cost us to develop a small app”, according to Mills.

Related: