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  • "Agence provided us with exactly what we needed: a website that effectively reflects the corporate image of our companyThey were serious, professional and modern, providing the contracted services to Orbe."

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    Fabio Figueiredo Carvalho
    Partner - Director
    Orbe Investments Ltda.

  • "I can say that we are very satisfied with the work done by Agence. They are professional, efficient and stay within the proposed deadlines.They found the best customized technological solution for eventual problems that could occur."

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    Daniel Z. Ghovatto
    Manager
    Prime Action Consulting

  • "We contracted Agence to develop a Technical Support System and we are very satisfied with the result.Ther service was efficient and the tasks were achieved within the proposed deadline. Agence has become our business partner."

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    Daniel Pellis de Biaggio
    Network Administrator
    Toyota Brazil - Information Technology

  • "We are very satisfied with the efficiency and attention the team of Agence had with our project.Another important point was the fast understanding of what we needed and how it would facilitate our work."

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    Rafael de Oliveira and Tatiana Miranda
    Loss Prevention Management
    Sadia S/A

  • "Agence participcated in an important historical moment of Pirelli Tires. With efficient and tactful service they helped to develop our relational systemThis fruitful relationship let us decide to work together on other projects as well."

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    Patricia Mota
    Trade Marketing Latam
    Pirelli Tires S.A.

  • "Through Agence we achieved to optimize our service with a call attendance tool.The agility of our attendance and our solicitations is fundamental for the successfulness of the project."

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    Rodrigo Scarano
    IT / Infrastructure Director
    Target Sistemas

  • "The services offered by Agence were irreplacable. They completely achieved what we expected, on time with a good price and quality.They approached accurately and with great responsibility and professionalism when unavoidable problems arose."

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    André Santos
    IT Manager
    Webmotors S.A.

  • "I work with Agence for over four years and they always exceed my expectations. They are very involved with the project and quick, flexible and always work within the required deadline.I would recommend their services to any company."

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    Graciela Berlezi
    TIM Resale and Locations Coordinator
    TIM Mobile S/A - Center - East

  • "Agence represented an evolution for us by letting us work with the most modern technology available worldwide.This increased the value of our service and guaranteed scalability and high reasonability of the applicatoins."

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    Marco Luvizan
    Infrastructure Coordinator
    Toyota Brazil

  • "Agence is already our partner for over four years. It is very important for our Federationto know that we can count on them for future projects to build even more of a union."

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    Roberto Wolf
    Prime Supervisor
    Industrial Federation of the state MS

  • "We can consider Agence as another partner of us. Combining excelent service, flexibility, efficiency and effectives,in the work and projects that are nowadays part of our organization."

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    Rodolfo Neute Borges
    Sales System
    Pirelli Tires S.A.

  • "We are increasing our conquests and we count on Agence for this ambitious project in Brazil.We are very satisfied with the competency and quality of the work of the professionals of Agence."

    Foto Andre Cavalcanti
    Direct Sales Consultant
    Toyota Brazil

Banner Outsourcing

Metodologia Agence (Development Process)

Mini-Links to Web Sites Are Multiplying


If you have spent any time on the Internet in the last few months, chances are you have clicked on a shortened link Web address.

URL shorteners, which abbreviate unwieldy Web addresses into bite-size links, have been around for years. The most popular service, TinyURL.com, was started in 2002 by a unicyclist named Kevin Gilbertson.

But the tools have soared in popularity recently, in part because of microblogging sites like Twitter and Facebook, where messages are limited in length and every character counts.

URL shorteners are easy to build, and dozens of competitors have proliferated, with minimalist, character-conserving names like Bit.ly, Is.gd and Tr.im. Most of them are simple tools created as a labor of love with no real business model behind them.

Shorteners, however, could have real value beyond making Web addresses more manageable, said Danny Sullivan, editor of the blog Search Engine Land.

They have the ability to keep track of use — how many times a particular link was clicked and the geographic location of the clickers — which could be valuable to marketers, news outlets and companies looking to measure the impact of a link, tweet or mention online.

“The tracking element is very important,” said Mr. Sullivan. Some tools even highlight comments posted to Facebook or FriendFeed about a particular link — features that standard tools like Google Analytics may not be able to provide.

One popular link shortening service, Bit.ly, is trying to build a business around that kind of data.

Betaworks Studios is a New York technology incubator that has invested in Tumblr, a microblogging tool; OMGPOP, a social gaming site; and Outside.in, a hyperlocal news aggregator. It developed Bit.ly as an internal tool for its portfolio of companies to use.

“It emerged as much more than that,” said John Borthwick, the chief executive of Betaworks. “Everyone from Dell to Demi Moore is on Twitter and could want to track their emerging social system.”

Since Bit.ly was introduced last year, its volume has soared. The company says that now 50 million Bit.ly links are clicked each week — more than double the rate of early April. “And next week, we’re expecting to hit 60 million,” said Andrew Weissman, the chief operating officer of Betaworks.

The growth has attracted venture financing. Bit.ly recently announced that it had raised $2 million from investors that included Alpha Tech Ventures, the software industry pioneer Mitch Kapor and the early Google investor Ron Conway.

“The Web has been devoid of a feedback loop for a while,” said Christopher Sacca, an investor who has financed several Web start-ups, including Bit.ly, Twitter and Photobucket.

Because Bit.ly tracks its clipped URLs in real time, no matter where they are posted — instant messages, Twitter, Facebook, blogs or e-mail — the service could become “a real source for extracting information about how people are using the Web,” Mr. Sacca said.

In addition to tracking links, Bit.ly uses a service called Calais, developed by Thomson Reuters, that can extract semantic terms from the Web pages that Bit.ly users are redirected to. This allows Bit.ly track the most popular topics being shared across the Web, as well as zero in on a specific category like finance or health care and retrieve the most popular Web sites shared on that subject in the last 24 hours.

The company hopes that being able to track the “social distribution of information in real-time,” as Mr. Borthwick describes it, could potentially be relevant to the future of Web search.

Although Bit.ly is not yet sure how to make money from all this data, “there’s a business model here,” Mr. Borthwick said. “We can smell it.”

For all the convenience of short URLs, some Internet security experts worry that they could be used to camouflage spam and phishing attacks and redirect people to malicious Web sites.

“People have no way to know where they’re going,” said Patrik Runald, chief security advisor at F-Secure Security Labs, a maker of security software. “These services are great and they serve a purpose, but at the same time, there is a darker side.”

And if a shortening site shuts down, any links funneled through it would be lost forever, Mr. Runald said.

Bit.ly says it is developing an archive system to keep links from decaying and employs several filters and a preview function in Firefox and TweetDeck, a desktop application for Twitter, to help cut back on spam.

Given the ease of use, the bigger threat to start-up companies like Bit.ly is that major corporations will create their own custom URL shorteners to bolster their brands. Digg, StumbleUpon and FriendFeed recently unveiled shortening services, and it would be easy for the big social networks, like Facebook or Twitter, to create their own. And there is always the chance that a heavyweight like Google will step in and obliterate the competition.

“That’s always a risk, but we’re racing to establish ourselves in the market,” said Mr. Weissman. “We’re willing to bet that innovation comes from weird little corners of the Internet, like this.”


source: NY Times

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