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Re: None

Tuesday, 08/18/2009 8:54:45 AM

Tuesday, August 18, 2009 8:54:45 AM

Post# of 127409
Here's my take on the pr. AWESOME! I'm glad the company is getting noticed and I'm glad we have pr's more than once a month. I think many on here LOVE this company more than they have been letting on. First they complain there's no pr's, then they complained about the content of the pr's and now they are complaining about the spelling errors in the pr's. Well i did a quick search on spelling errors in press releases and here's 2 I came across. I'm not saying misspelling words in a pr is ok, but I've got to laugh at all the people here who have nothing better to complain about. Upside? We are in good company when it comes to misspelling words......
July 9, 2009
More spelling errors plague Obama releases
@ 2:09 pm by Michael O'Brien
Misspellings continued to plague the Obama administration on Thursday, after two more releases containing errors were sent to reporters in the last 24 hours.

After misspelling the president's name as "Barak Obama" yesterday on an official document sent to reporters, the General Services Administration messed up another message when announcing it had awarded an $18 million contract to redesign the website keeping track of spent stimulus dollars.

"Recvoery.gov Version 2.0 $18 Million Contract Awarded," the release's subject line read. ("Recovery" was spelled correctly in the body of the email.)

Jul 07, 2009 – An analysis by enterprise website spell checking platform spellr.us has revealed that on average, 14.2% of web pages on the world's most prestigious university websites contain at least one genuine spelling error.
The annual spellr.us Higher Education Online Content Survey found that these spelling mistakes ranged from obscure, easy to overlook slip-ups to obvious and embarrassing blunders.
The word "university", for example, was misspelled by 13 of the world's top 20 educational institutions . Other significant errors included Harvard Law School's misspell ing of "professor" on a primary navigation menu , and Ivy League neighbour Yale University's misspelling of "Yale University"


"Do not dwell in the past, do not dream of the future, concentrate the mind on the present moment."