Saturday, February 1, 2014

Egreetings.com closing its doors

After more than 10 years in the electronic greeting card business, Egreetings.com is closing its doors on Feb. 12. The website notified its customers in an email Saturday.

“We've enjoyed having you as a customer and we thank you for joining us over the years on this wonderful ride of bringing happiness and smiles to everyone you care about with our ecards,” the company said. “You may continue to use Egreetings until 2/12/14.”

Egreetings.com provides ecards that allow customers to strengthen friendships, commemorate milestones, celebrate holidays, or simply share a laugh. Ecard senders can browse through categories such as "congratulations", "love & dating" and "birthday."

Egreetings.com is a service of AG Interactive, Inc. a subsidiary of American Greetings.

DCNewsroom most popular posts January 2014

1.) Aerial waterfowl surveys contract in California - The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has a requirement for aerial waterfowl surveys on the Klamath Basin National Wildlife Refuge Complex, Tule Lake, Calif. [Full story]

2.) Air Force meets with industry to discuss KC-46 maintenance contract - The Air Force Life Cycle Management Center held a series of Industry Day meetings in January to provide potential prime contractors with greater insight into program requirements and to foster competition in the acquisition of the KC-46 Maintenance Training System. [Full story]

3.) Antares rocket ready to launch space station cargo ship - An Orbital Sciences Corp. Antares rocket is ready for flight on launch Pad-0A at NASA's Wallops Flight Facility, Va., liftoff planned for 1:07 p.m. EST on Thursday. [Full story]

4.) Insider account to the space shuttle Challenger disaster - This week marks the 28th anniversary of the space shuttle Challenger disaster, and the release of “Challenger: An American Tragedy - The Inside Story from Launch Control” by Hugh Harris, who was chief of public information for NASA's Kennedy Space Center at the time. [Full story]

5.) Arianespace aims for new satellite launch record in 2014 - Following a year of unprecedented orders, European-based Arianespace is gearing up to beat its record for the number of satellite launches during a year in 2014. [Full story]

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Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Navy Rear Adm. Moran plans 'fireside chat' with industry

The Naval Air Warfare Center, Weapons Division (NAWCWD) is hosting an Industry Day event on Feb. 26. [Full story]

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NOAA aircraft ground support equipment contract announced

The U.S. Department of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Aircraft Operations Center at MacDill Air Force Base in Florida is seeking a contractor to maintain its Aircraft Ground Support Equipment, the agency said in contract documents released Tuesday. [Full story]

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Insider account to the space shuttle Challenger disaster

This week marks the 28th anniversary of the space shuttle Challenger disaster, and the release of “Challenger: An American Tragedy - The Inside Story from Launch Control” by Hugh Harris, who was chief of public information for NASA's Kennedy Space Center at the time. Harris delivers a gripping insider account of the events around Jan. 28, 1986, when the space shuttle Challenger broke apart 73 seconds after launch - “a moment that left an indelible mark on the nation's psyche,” book publisher Open Road Media said in a press release on Tuesday.

From his unique vantage point as "the Voice of NASA," Harris takes us from the preparations for Challenger's launch, through to lift-off (Harris delivered the iconic countdown on that day), to the terrible moment when the O-ring failed, and on to the aftermath and investigation. Harris goes beyond discussing just the technology of the accident, revealing the touching stories of the people that were involved.

Harris' book not only demonstrates the importance of the shuttle program and NASA, but also the necessity of man's exploration of space. As Harris writes of the disaster, "It was a chilling reminder that it is safer to sit on the ground than fly into space. But that's not an option for the human race."

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Building better aircraft support structures at the Boneyard

The 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group (309 AMARG) located at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Arizona is conducting an Industry Day meeting next month to obtain input on alternative engineering methods and materials for constructing aircraft moduling units at the Boneyard, a designated “graveyard” for retired government aircraft. [Full story]

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