Social Blend ZI: The Unsavory Folk view story
mixxingbowl.com — Thoughts of Digg dominate our story selections this week. Our other Stories of the Week include a couple of interesting pics from Mixx, while Jay goes political on our asses by bringing up some awesome videos that dominated social media last week.
-
Total votes over time
-
Votes per hour
Recently Voted
- voted
marisamiller13 - voted
hishaman - voted
elinalisa - voted
mylovediamonds - voted
vivekk - voted
baoma - voted
justin888 - voted
michaelwong38 - voted
v4veer - voted
Luigihbomb
There have been 229 things submitted from this site.
This site has been endorsed by Super Mixxers. What's this?
-
Lait frelaté : la France met en garde contre les bonbons "White Rabbit" view photo
A la suite de contrôles et après de nombreux pays, la France s'est décidée vendredi à mettre en garde les consommateurs contre les bonbons "White Rabbit" et les biscuits "Koala", contaminés à la mélamine, la substance au centre du scandale du lait
-
Chine: un jeune papa, vendeur de mélamine, ulcéré par le scandale du lait view story
Chen Changhua, un commercial de 33 ans, s'est emporté quand il a découvert que son bébé d'un an était peut-être nourri de lait à la mélamine, une substance chimique qu'il connaît bien puisqu'il en vend.
-
China May Let Peasants Sell Rights to Farmland (New York Times) view story
Chinese leaders are expected to allow peasants to buy or sell land-use rights for the first time, a step that could draw hundreds of millions of farmers more firmly into the market economy, now centered around the cities.
-
Real World Got You Down? IBM Invites You To A Virtual Forbidden City. view story
Can't afford a ticket to China to go visit the Forbidden City? Well, now all you need is your computer. IBM, which is a big believer in virtual worlds, and China’s Palace Museum have created an exact replica of the 178-acre Forbidden City.
-
Shanghai movie Pictures view photo
Shanghai movie Pictures
-
Will Monster Make it in China? view story
Monster wants to captialize on the 70 million graduates per year in China. Can they make it work?
Login now to post your comment.


Comments (4)