online advertising
- Workers want fair compensation without a doubt, but they also want to feel that their work and their company's mission matters, workplace research shows.
- Baltimore television stations were expecting little in the way of political advertising this campaign year. Then the fight over expanded gambling in Maryland erupted, pitting deep-pocketed and competing casino companies against one another.
- Sierra Club calls for tighter pollution controls on two Baltimore power plants being sold by Exelon
- You may have noticed over the past several months that WWE's look and content have changed dramatically. WWEĀæs official website, once considered an afterthought, has become a frequent destination for many in the WWE Universe. For WWE, the new look has paid off.
-
- Baltimore tech news for Friday
- The MdBio Foundation, a private charitable organization for promoting science learning and workforce development, is building an online video game for high school students
- Josh Charles of "The Good Wife" will have dinner with a lucky few who donate to Maryland's same-sex marriage campaign.
- Olympics executive producer Jim Bell describes approach to 5,535 hours of coverage
- Is it healthy that the video game industry is looking for funding and guidance from the masses?
- For a second time this month, the Anne Arundel County police's vice unit has arrested a woman for prostitution during an undercover operation targeting solicitation activities in Linthicum's hotels area, near BWI Thurgood Marshall Airport.
- A 20-year-old man was robbed of $4,500 in cash during a meeting Saturday with two men who had posted an advertisement on Craigslist about a car for sale, police said.
- In new online ad, Raven Ray Rice pitches Xenith helmets, which he says protected his head for 'the best year of his career'
- Despite FCC ruling, those behind attack ads can remain in shadows
- Drastic cuts at the New Orleans Times-Picayune upset David Simon, who films his HBO show 'Treme' in the city
- FTC says MySpace settles privacy charges
- Study and commentary take alcohol marketers, sellers to task over youth
- Food from 18 establishments on the menu
-
- Baltimore's Millennial Media founded in 2006, now dominant in mobile ad market
-
- Site designed to help news consumers find trustworthy data and analysis
-
- Chris Ford of Baltimore's Wit & Wisdom has been voted the People's Best New Pastry Chef by readers of Food & Wine magazine
- Smackdown recap: Daniel Bryan becoming master manipulator
- Larry W. Warner Jr., of Joppa, was sentenced Friday to 10 years in a federal prison, followed by supervised release for life, for enticing a minor to engage in sexual activity.
- Millennial Media, a five-year-old mobile advertising firm based in Baltimore, has proposed an initial public offering of shares of its common stock in paperwork filed Thursday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
- The new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau seeks input on private education loans as it prepares to write a report on them for Congress.
- The Walters' decision to put its entire collection online is the logical extension of its free admissions policy
- A Joppatowne man pleaded guilty late Thursday to federal charges of enticing a minor to engage in sexual activity, according to the Maryland U.S. Attorney's Office.
- 'The Learning' looks at lives of Filipino teachers in city schools
- Former caterer and cancer survivor forms nonprofit to feed the homeless
- Even though nearly 14 million unemployed Americans are searching for work, some employers limit their hiring to preferred candidates: people who already have jobs.
- Social recruiting: While just a few years ago, much of the action took place on online job boards, now sites such as LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter has supercharged the experience for recruiters and job-seekers alike.
- Legislation to bank unemployment discrimination
- The two-day festival, organized by the German-American Citizens Association of Maryland, was held Sunday in air-conditioned comfort at the Exhibition Hall on the Maryland State Fairgrounds in Timonium.
- Thirty million dollars was deposited with the nonprofit Investor Protection Trust to spread among the states through grants for investor education. But Maryland groups have barely tapped it in all this time
-