“That's very compelling to major groups, the fact that we can entertain groups on site without them having to go over the city. Groups like our meeting space because there's not a lot to divert their attention. We're not across from a major mall where they can get out to avoid attending meetings.”
Kristen Jarnagin
“The fact that we have experienced such a large rebound in site traffic is significant not only for sites like cars.com, but it certainly represents a positive start to 2006 for the automotive industry as a whole. In fact, many manufacturers already are reporting better-than-expected sales in January.”
Joe Wiesenfelder
“We have just finished assessing subterranean water quality at former blast sites. Our group worked near the No. 1,003 and No. 1,004 wells, where nuclear warheads were detonated, which spewed earth and radiation into the atmosphere. The received data have shown that local subterranean waters are absolutely clean; background radiation alone has been registered. The same can be said about water inside these wells. We failed to obtain ample data for assessing radionuclide migration inside subterranean waters. Our project has therefore flopped. This is bad for our research. On the other hand, we have received new information about regional radiation levels.”
Yelena Kvasnikova
“We have crashed Web sites. All of a sudden the Web site disappears. Well, then the listener thinks that well, maybe Kim got it wrong. Maybe I wrote it down wrong. Maybe I spelled it incorrectly when really, that particular vendor just couldn't handle the traffic that generated from that particular recommendation.”
Kim Komando
“I had expected more producers to integrate shows more into their Web sites. The fact that they don't have a map that you can use to track the characters is just silly.”
Mike Pegg
“We no longer need that part of our Web site and had in fact never even accessed it. Therefore, we took it down.”
Todd Harris
“The fact that these productive kelp forests are found adjacent to some of the earliest coastal archaeological sites in the Americas really enhances the argument that the first Americans didn't walk here, they floated. In essence, they may have utilized a sort of kelp highway.”
Jon Erlandson