Word: printings
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...north. Next stop: A weathered, squat building in Milton Keynes, home of the 10-screen easyCinema. At 2 p.m. on a Thursday, the place was almost empty. "It picks up during the evenings and weekends," insisted one assistant, who represented half of the visible staff. Book your seat and print the ticket at home; scanning devices at theater doors mean you don't even have to make eye contact with an employee. "It can't be a bad idea," says Emma Buckingham, a practical-minded 22-year-old job seeker. Buckingham made the 45-km trip from Luton...
These days there's almost nothing you can't adorn with a shot of your child's smiling face. Many websites that store, share and print digital photos are in the business of putting your favorite images on clothing, accessories and collectibles, with surprisingly high-quality results. Here's a look at the best new products, plus a comparison of the four most popular sites as they stacked up in our side-by-side print test. --By Maryanne Murray Buechner...
Appearances clearly matter in the battle for defense dollars, which is one reason EADS has focused so steadily on making itself part of the American landscape. Its print ads feature a former Marine who runs one of its 21 U.S. operations. Dressed in a big black cowboy hat, he is standing in front of a patriotically painted helicopter, with the tagline "I am EADS." The company has also figured out how to play American-style politics: in contrast to Boeing, whose most vociferous political proponents are Democrats in Washington State eager to protect the company's Seattle-area jobs, EADS...
...changing a dozen diapers a day). She cooked up an exfoliating, moisturizing formula in her kitchen, then juggled eight credit cards and even resorted to bartering to get her One Minute Manicure business off the ground. Back in 1999, a neighbor who owned a computer would place orders and print invoices for Herman and get home-cooked meals in return. Since then, Herman has sold $20 million worth of products, hired a staff of 25 and bought a few computers for herself...
...eBay, where she was shocked to find a single used copy selling for $300. "I could buy it for my children, but I couldn't let them hold it," she says. So Morgan founded Purple House Press and set about acquiring the rights to republish out-of-print children's classics, such as the Mad Scientists' Clubseries. Mr. Pine's Purple House was released in the fall of 2000, along with two other books, and by June 2003, the company was doing well enough for her husband to quit his job and for the whole family to move from Texas...