Apertura vol. 16, núm. 2, octubre de 2024 - marzo de 2025, es una revista científica especializada en innovación educativa en ambientes virtuales que se publica de manera semestral por la Universidad de Guadalajara, a través de la Coordinación de Recursos Informativos del Sistema de Universidad Virtual. Oficinas en Av. La Paz 2453, colonia Arcos Sur, CP 44140, Guadalajara, Jalisco, México. Tel.: 3268-8888, ext. 18775, www.udgvirtual.udg.mx/apertura, apertura@udgvirtual.udg.mx. Editor responsable: Dr. Rafael Morales Gamboa. Número de la Reserva de Derechos al Uso Exclusivo del Título de la versión electrónica: 04-2009-080712102200-203, e-ISSN: 2007-1094; número de la Reserva de Derechos al Uso Exclusivo del Título de la versión impresa: 04-2009-121512273300-102, ISSN: 1665-6180, otorgados por el Instituto Nacional del Derecho de Autor. Número de Licitud de Título: 13449 y número de Licitud de contenido: 11022 de la versión impresa, ambos otorgados por la Comisión Calificadora de Publicaciones y Revistas Ilustradas de la Secretaría de Gobernación. Responsable de la última actualización de este número: Sergio Alberto Mendoza Hernández. Fecha de última actualización: 25 de septiembre de 2024.
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Seven Documentaries About Internet Industry...
Seven Documentaries About Internet Industry That can Really Change The best way You See Internet Industry
por Louella Babb (2023-01-04)
(Left to Right) Wando Evans and Phillip Thomas, two employees at an Evergreen Park Walmart, died of coronavirus just four days apart
The grocery store employees joined forces with customers to demand 'adequate protections', reports. The group met in a Whole Foods parking lot where they stood apart to protest.
'The fact that we're still expected to report to work in a compromised warehouse to ship non-essential products if we still want to earn our living tells me that Amazon and Jeff Bezos clearly value profits above employee safety or health.'
Two Walmart employees at the same Chicago-area store, a Trader Joe's worker in New York, and a greeter at a Maryland Giant grocery store passed away in the last two weeks, reports.
But now they are totally a ‘thing' again. The new designer ones - Chanel, Louis Vuitton, Gucci are all doing a version - are fatly super-sized, covered with studs and dollar signs and dripping with zips and chains.
They're officially cool. Which is great.
Some local governments and law enforcement agencies across the US and Canada are now threatening to fine shoppers around $365 if they are caught in the act, as they run the risk of endangering the lives of the essential workforce forced to clean up the used gear left behind.
Other frontline workers have also gone on strike as a result of working conditions, including those as Amazon facilities, with owner Jeff Bezos being accused of 'valuing profit over safety'.
So celebs from the Jenners to Rihanna and even the bountifully bootied Kim Kardashian - the last woman in the world, frankly, Welcome Bonus Slot who needs a bottom accessory of any description - are marching around NY-LON (That's New York-London) with them as if required to by law, and fashion police be damned.