La alianza nace para potenciar los valores compartidos por Telefónica y Adrià: la visión, la pasión, el talento y el compromiso, y se fundamenta en la idea común de que es posible “transformar las oportunidades en realidad”.  Ambas marcas son un referente en sus sectores y han demostrado su capacidad para vislumbrar hacia dónde va el futuro, adelantándose a través de la innovación, la creatividad y la tecnología.  También tienen en común una posición privilegiada en sus sectores avalada por años de crecimiento constante, conocimiento y profesionalidad, y el haber sido capaces de atraer y retener un equipo humano, experimentado, dinámico y creativo.

La alianza nace para potenciar los valores compartidos por Telefónica y Adrià: la visión, la pasión, el talento y el compromiso, y se fundamenta en la idea común de que es posible “transformar las oportunidades en realidad”.  Ambas marcas son un referente en sus sectores y han demostrado su capacidad para vislumbrar hacia dónde va el futuro, adelantándose a través de la innovación, la creatividad y la tecnología.  También tienen en común una posición privilegiada en sus sectores avalada por años de crecimiento constante, conocimiento y profesionalidad, y el haber sido capaces de atraer y retener un equipo humano, experimentado, dinámico y creativo.

The Carlsberg Brewery

abudak:

Though not quite as cool as the Heineken Factory in Amsterdam, the Carlsberg Brewery was quite interesting, especially seeing its roots stretching back centuries!  

What’s the best brewery you’ve ever visited?

martinvarsavsky:

aspen july 10 (38 of 49)

martinvarsavsky:

aspen july 10 (38 of 49)

Never hold discussions with the monkey when the organ grinder is in the room. Sir Winston Churchill

Never hold discussions with the monkey when the organ grinder is in the room. Sir Winston Churchill

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/03/books/03under.html

“The New Yorker has chosen its “20 Under 40” list of fiction writers worth watching, a group assembled by the magazine’s editors in a lengthy, secretive process that has provoked considerable anxiety among young literary types. The list…

quoteskine:

It’s True You Know

quoteskine:

It’s True You Know

newsweek:

itsfullofstars:

On June 3, 1965, Edward H. White II became the first American to step outside his spacecraft and let go, making his 23 minute drift the first spacewalk in U.S. history. (via)

(via crookedindifference)
Time’s hyper-detailed cover story about this spacewalk, from its June 11, 1965 issue, reminds us that Newsweek really needs to get its act together and get its archives online. The lede of the Time story:

He stood on top of his spaceship’s white titanium hull. He touched it with his bulky thermal gloves. He burned around like Buck Rogers propelling himself with his hand-held jet. He floated lazily on his back. He joked and laughed. He gazed down at the earth 103 miles below, spotted the Houston Galveston Bay area where he lives and tried to take a picture of it. Like a gas station attendant, he checked the spacecraft’s thrusters, wiped its windshield. Ordered to get back into the capsule, he protested like a scolded kid. “I’m doing great,” he said. “It’s fun. I’m not coming in.” When, after 20 minutes of space gymnastics, U.S. Astronaut Edward Higgins White II, 34, finally did agree to squeeze himself back into his Gemini 4 ship, he still had not had enough of space walking. Said he to Command Pilot James Alton McDivitt: “It’s the saddest day of my life.”

newsweek:

itsfullofstars:

On June 3, 1965, Edward H. White II became the first American to step outside his spacecraft and let go, making his 23 minute drift the first spacewalk in U.S. history. (via)

(via crookedindifference)

Time’s hyper-detailed cover story about this spacewalk, from its June 11, 1965 issue, reminds us that Newsweek really needs to get its act together and get its archives online. The lede of the Time story:

He stood on top of his spaceship’s white titanium hull. He touched it with his bulky thermal gloves. He burned around like Buck Rogers propelling himself with his hand-held jet. He floated lazily on his back. He joked and laughed. He gazed down at the earth 103 miles below, spotted the Houston Galveston Bay area where he lives and tried to take a picture of it. Like a gas station attendant, he checked the spacecraft’s thrusters, wiped its windshield. Ordered to get back into the capsule, he protested like a scolded kid. “I’m doing great,” he said. “It’s fun. I’m not coming in.” When, after 20 minutes of space gymnastics, U.S. Astronaut Edward Higgins White II, 34, finally did agree to squeeze himself back into his Gemini 4 ship, he still had not had enough of space walking. Said he to Command Pilot James Alton McDivitt: “It’s the saddest day of my life.”

A lie gets halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants on. Sir Winston Churchill

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