Archive | May, 2007

Google News Inclusion

4 May

I’ve tried (and failed) to get some sites into google news in the past but finally seem to have cracked it with the eyfall blog that I setup.

Hi James,

Thank you for your note. We reviewed http://www.eyefall.co.uk/blog/ and we
will be adding it to our index for Google News. You should be able to find
your articles in Google News within a few weeks. While we’ll strive to
include as many of your news articles as possible, please be aware that we
can’t guarantee the inclusion of your content in Google News.

Thank you for providing your articles to Google News.

Regards,
The Google Team

They turned my down the first time so I added a contact and profile pages for the authors and it seems to have done the trick.

Toddler Gets Stuck in Vending Machine

4 May

A funny Friday story from ABC News

ANTIGO, Wis.

Three-year-old Robert Moore went fishing for a stuffed replica of Sponge Bob and ended up trapped in a vending machine. The toddler’s adventure began with a Saturday evening shopping trip with his grandmother, Fredricka Bierdemann, and three siblings.

Bierdemann ended the trip by giving each child a dollar and telling them to have fun in a retailer’s game room.

A stuffed Sponge Bob in a vending machine’s bin caught Robert’s eye. He tried without success to fish it out with a plastic crane.

“I told him I could get it for him,” his grandmother said. “He’s a character. He said, ‘Oh no, I can get it.’”

When she turned her back to get another dollar for a second try, Robert took off his coat and squeezed through an opening in the machine. He landed in the stuffed animal cube.

“I turned around and looked for him, and he said, ‘Oma, I’m in here,” Bierdemann said. “I thought I would have a heart attack.”

Store employees couldn’t find a key to the machine, so Robert waited while the Antigo Fire Department was called.

“He was having a ball in there, hugging all the stuffed animals,” Bierdemann said. “He was so good-natured, but I was shaking like a leaf.”

Firefighters broke one lock but then spotted two latches inside the plastic cube. They passed a screwdriver to Robert.

“He stacked up all the stuffed animals and used that screwdriver to open the latch,” his grandmother said. “You should have seen him go.”

Eventually, Robert freed himself. But his mother, Marie Moore, and grandmother said they were lucky that he remained calm when another child might not have. He went home safe but without a stuffed Sponge Bob.

Seeing as these vending machines are a complete rip off (I’ve tried hundreds of times to win and it never happens) it’s nice to see a child use some initiative but sad to see he didn’t get the Spongebob after all his efforts.