Word: bricked
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Everybody gets together for dinner two or three times a month, and all gather to celebrate the children's birthdays. This year Charlene helped Rick and Jean with the down payment for their $230,000, five-bedroom brick home in suburban Dallas. Understanding the needs and changing tastes of each child is one of the secrets of good grandparenting. Joe and Charlene, who enjoy surprising the kids with gifts, consider each child's interests and age, choosing just the right miniature car or Beanie Baby. Bridging the generation divide, Charlene offered advice about poodle skirts and other teen fashions from...
Midway through the third quarter, Colgate again attempted a fourth down conversion. This time it had made it to the Harvard 23, and had a mere yard to go. But when the offensive line pushed to let fullback Tim Lavoie leap over it, the line encountered a brick wall, and Lavoie, well, crashed into...
...month period ending in June, everybody from your broker to the corner grocer to the guy who sold you that recliner you're sitting on is paying attention to the online biz, no matter what the aggravation. And whether they're working for an aggressive Net start-up, a brick-and-mortar retailer who fears getting "Amazon-ed" or a company content for now to dip a toe into the scary world of e-commerce, they're all interested in the future of your wallet. Says Dan Burke, senior analyst at Gomez Advisors, a rater of e-commerce sites...
That's because every shopper's click provides data, Brooks says. And in the past eight months, he has used that data, along with information from focus groups, to redesign his site five times. Brooks is dubious that a brick-and-mortar retailer can adapt as quickly to consumer needs. "My sense of time is compressed," he says. "For someone who has spent 25 years as a retailer to adopt this speed will be very tough...
...assets than with profits." ETrade was not profitable in 1998, or in two of three quarters in 1999. But because it can keep its own forgiving investors happy despite those numbers, and because it's not encumbered by expensive branch offices, the company is more nimble than its brick-and-mortar competitors, Burke says. But that may change soon: Cotsakos, who's thrived on the bold moves only Net moguls seem to get away with, said in September that he plans to form an alliance with a traditional financial company. The reason? To give investors personal attention...