Yakka, Inc. announces launch of new website: Best Side By Side Refrigerator ...
01.01.70
Emil Yau of Yakka, Inc. is proud to announce the launch of a new website: Best Side By Side Refrigerator Reviews . The purpose for the launch of this website is to serve a market of internet customers looking for information and reviews about the best side by side refrigerators.
Emil Yau is an internet programmer and marketing consultant that specializes in researching under served niche markets where there is a heavy supply of internet searchers and a lack of websites serving information for these internet searchers. After doing an extensive research he finds markets to create websites that will provide pleasant experiences for the user as well as provide the exact information they are looking for.
"The newly launched site: Best Side By Side Refrigerator Reviews will contain reviews and customer testimonials of side by side refrigerators. I plan for this site to be a one stop shop for information so people can look in one place for all the information they need to make an educated buying decision" says Yau. "I have just launched the site and plan to pull in information and provide somewhere in the neighborhood of ten reviews of side by side refrigerators from all the main manufacturers every month"
Source: WebWire (press release)
Roger Tallon
01.01.70
Roger Tallon was born in Paris on May 6 1929. As a child he showed talent as
an artist, and his parents wanted him to go to art school. Instead, against
his parents’ wishes, he decided to study Engineering. Upon graduating,
however, instead of practising engineering, he almost immediately turned to
design, for which he never had any formal training.
He started his career with Caterpillar France, before becoming a consultant
with DuPont de Nemours. In 1953 he joined Technès, the design consultancy
founded in 1949 by Jacques Viénot and Jean Parthenay, becoming the sole
director of the agency after Viénot’s death in 1959. Two years earlier
Tallon had established the first design course in France, at the École des
Arts Appliqués in Paris, and, in 1963, he created the design department of
the Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Arts Décoratifs.
From the 1950s onwards Tallon and his team worked for many leading industrial
concerns, designing machine tools and household appliances for General
Electric, the Frigidaire division of General Motors and Thomson consumer
electronics. A modular helicoid metal staircase, designed in 1964, was
bought by the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
Source: Telegraph.co.uk