USA-MIAMI.HERE AT SILICON BEACH, THE LINCOLN ROAD Lincoln Road runs east and west between 16th Street and 17th Street on Miami Beach. Once open to vehicular traffic, Lincoln Road is now closed to traffic between Washington Avenue and Lenox Avenue. PROMENADE FEATURES such Internet notables as StarMedia Network, Yupi.com, Patagon.com, and El Sitio Latin internet portal founded in 1997, by Roberto Vivo-Chaneton and Roberto Cibrian-Campoy. Founded in Argentina, El Sitio was considered one of the principal Spanish language internet companies of the late 1990s dot-com boom. . Zona Financiera Inc., an online financial services The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page. website, and Telefonica de Espana's Terra Networks Terra Networks, S. A., usually referred to as "Terra", is an Internet multinational company with headquarters in Spain. Part of Telefónica Group (the former Spain's public telephone monopoly and now one of the most important telecommunications companies in the world), Terra , are nearby. These are just some of the established companies and Spanish- and Portuguese-language web start-ups turning the Miami area into a Latin American Internet hub with an array of services, ranging from e-mail and chat rooms to search engines and e-commerce. "We like Miami because the city is the center of the Latin music business," says Francisco de la Torre La Torre is a municipality located in the province of Ávila, Castile and León, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 357 inhabitants. , CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. of eritmo.com, a website for selling and promoting music. "Miami has all we need to make it the platform of our regional business." Latin Internet companies favor Miami for its growing pool of bilingual and trilingual workers, numerous daily flights to Latin America and the many resellers, brokers and cargo companies that have made Miami a hub for international trade. Business groups such as the Miami Internet Alliance, which was formed in 1999, and the Tuesday Network are making concerted efforts to attract Latin America web and telecommunications companies to the South Florida area. ZONAFINANCIERA.COM Ex-Spook Seeks Digital Dollars. Greg Keough, a former operations officer for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA CIA: see Central Intelligence Agency. (1) (Confidentiality Integrity Authentication) The three important concerns with regards to information security. Encryption is used to provide confidentiality (privacy, secrecy). ) in El Salvador, knows the worth of quick and reliable information. And that's exactly what he's trying to provide with Zona Financiera, Inc., an online financial website that provides information regarding loans, CDs, insurance and regional stock exchanges in Latin America. "We have tailored information about each country," points out Keough. Keough started his web venture in 1997 in a Virginia basement with two brothers and US$500,000. Today, the 33-year-old's Internet venture employs 100 people throughout the United States and eight Latin American countries. Zona Financiera has yet to turn a profit. But, Keough says, the company is reinvesting its money to improve services and should be out of the red in 2000. The Capital Investors Group, whose members include America Online founder Steve Case and MCI (1) (Media Control Interface) A high-level programming interface from Microsoft and IBM for controlling multimedia devices. It provides commands and functions to open, play and close the device. (2) (Microwave Communications Inc. WorldCom Vice Chairman John Sidgmore, among others, is backing the company. "It is like a decision speed wagon," he says of the Internet life. The long hours and the insecurity of most start-ups is not for everyone." If it doesn't happen in two hours it will probably not happen." ERITMO.COM Ex-CBS Executive Rocks Online. In July, Francisco de la Torre raised a few corporate eyebrows when he resigned as president of CBS-Telenoticias to create Eritmo.com, a fledgling Internet company that sells music videos, reviews and promotes artists such as Enrique Iglesias. "People asked me why I traded a predictable future with a multinational for an industry where the rules have yet to be written," explains the 51-year-old executive." But at CBS (Cell Broadcast Service) See cell broadcast. , the only guarantee I truly had was that things would remain the same. As an executive, this [eritmo.com] is a great opportunity to create a new business. He started, though, with two desks, two cellular phones and two employees, himself and Raul Vasquez, Sony Latinoamerica's former finance vice president. Since then, the company has grown to 60 employees and there are plans to open offices in Spain, Argentina, Colombia, Mexico and Brazil. He learned quickly that the Internet is not a business for the stodgy stodg·y adj. stodg·i·er, stodg·i·est 1. a. Dull, unimaginative, and commonplace. b. Prim or pompous; stuffy: or stubborn. "You only have to stop recycling the past," he says. "With the Internet, the model is execute, execute, execute, and then revise and make corrections. You have to be able to do 10 things at once, knowing that maybe five are likely to go wrong." |
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