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  1. Imaginez le monde entier couverts de de milliard de tuiles, combien pouvez-vous en découvrir? Description en anglais: Imagine the entire world is covered in billions of tiles. How many can you open up? Strut is a game of exploration where you compete with other players around the world to uncover the map of the earth. –––––– TRACK YOUR TRAVELS Whether you walk, run, bike, drive, sail, ride a goat or take a hot air balloon, use Strut to keep track of exactly where you've been in the world. Share your map with friends, or keep your wanderings private... we won't tell. EXPLORE YOUR SURROUNDINGS Take a new route to work. Go down that street you never walked through. Visit every nook and cranny of your city. See more of your neighborhood – who knows what you might find? OPEN UP YOUR WORLD Strut around, level up and climb to the top of the leaderboards – there's a top 10 for every city, state, country, and the entire world. There are also a ton of medals to earn, so keep exploring and see what pops up in your adventures around the globe. Mon compte que j'ai ouvert il y a quelques jours! Qui d'autres est là dessus? Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
  2. http://www.newswire.ca/en/story/1016933/montreal-is-confirmed-as-the-top-host-city-for-international-events-in-america MONTREAL, Aug. 6, 2012 /CNW Telbec/ - A great victory for Montréal! The city was named the top destination in America for hosting international association events, according to the official 2011 rankings set out by the Union of International Associations (UIA). As the principal host location in Québec for major international meetings, and as a 2011 finalist for the APEX award for World's Best Convention Centre, the Palais des congrès hosts thousands of conference-goers every year and generates major intellectual and economic spinoffs for Montréal and Québec. "We are very proud of our ranking, which is testimony to the efforts made by our team and by the Tourisme Montréal team to make Montréal a top conference destination for international associations seeking an exceptional experience for their participants," said Marc Tremblay, President and CEO of the Palais des congrès de Montréal. "This title, combined with our recent 90% score for customer service quality, indicates that Montréal and the Palais remain among the world's best-loved destinations. In addition to having top-notch staff, the Palais is recognized for our city centre location, the quality of our multifunctional spaces, and our quality/price ratio," he added. The Honourable Charles Lapointe, President and CEO of Tourisme Montréal, said: "Montréal's high ranking is a fitting demonstration of our city's excellence and our capacity to meet the needs of major international associations in terms of infrastructure, hosting and entertainment, to say nothing of the unique joie de vivre our city is known for. I'd like to congratulate the Palais des congrès and Tourisme Montréal teams, who earned this success through their strong work." With this victory, Montréal has taken first place among all destinations in America, beating out the continent's other major cities, including Washington, New York and Boston, as well as Toronto and Vancouver. Final 2011 rankings for America: 1- Montréal 2- Washington 3- New York About the UIA The Union of International Associations (UIA) is a research institute and documentation centre specializing in the research, monitoring and provision of information on international organizations, international associations and their global challenges since 1907. In its ongoing efforts to facilitate understanding of the nature and complexities of the international community of organizations, the UIA has become a cutting-edge technical centre with high standing in the academic, governmental, and business domains. http://www.uia.be/ About the Palais des congrès de Montréal The mission of the Palais des congrès de Montréal is to attract and host conventions, exhibitions, conferences, meetings and other events. A public institution with a commercial vocation, the Palais generates major economic spinoffs for Québec and has contributed proudly for over 28 years to sharing knowledge and enhancing Montréal's international reputation as a first-rate destination. For more information: http://www.congresmtl.com. About Tourisme Montréal Tourisme Montréal is responsible for providing leadership in the concerted efforts of hospitality and promotion in order to position the destination on leisure and business travel markets. It is also responsible for developing Montréal's tourism product in accordance with the ever-changing conditions of the market. For more information, please visit http://www.tourisme-montreal.org. SOURCE: Palais des congrès de Montréal For further information: Source: Chrystine Loriaux, Adm.A., B.A.A. Director, Marketing and Communications Société du Palais des congrès de Montréal Tel.: 514 871-3104
  3. McGill takes 12th spot in global ranking ELIZABETH CHURCH From Thursday's Globe and Mail November 8, 2007 at 5:05 AM EST An international ranking of universities has put Montreal's McGill University in 12th spot, the highest rank to be reached by a Canadian institution. The annual rating, done by London-based Times Higher-QS World University Rankings, moved McGill up from its 21st placement last year. Ten other Canadian universities made the top 200 list, with the University of British Columbia finishing in the 33rd spot and the University of Toronto in the 45th. "This is such a source of pride for us. It shows that McGill is moving in the right direction," principal Heather Munroe-Blum said. The placement means McGill is now the top-ranked public university in North America, she said. It also demonstrates that the practice of concentrating resources on areas of excellence such as neuroscience, developmental biology and law is showing results, she added. "We have chosen our spots very carefully in areas where we can be leaders in the world." The rating, which was to be released this morning in London, comes at an important time for McGill as it looks to tap its network of alumni for a major fundraising campaign and is striving to increase its profile. Harvard University once again was placed at the top of the international ranking, which was conducted by an independent firm, sold off by the owners of the Times of London in 2005. Oxford, Cambridge and Yale all shared second place. The survey considers a number of factors in its rankings and gathers input from more than 5,000 academics around the world.
  4. The Global Financial Center Index published by the China Development Institude and Z/Yen partners in London ranks financials centers worlwide based on criterias such as business stability and environnement, technology and assessment by the financial community. Montreal ranks 14th up 1 spot since the last ranking 6 months ago, ahead of cities such as Geneva, Frankfurt or Paris. Highest ranked city in Canada is Toronto in 10th place, London tops chart ahead of New York and Singapore to round top 3. http://www.longfinance.net/images/gfci/gfci_21.pdf
  5. From an airliners.net thread* https://skift.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/UnderservedUncovered-Report.pdf *Interesting to see Delhi-Vancouver as the only Canadian route listed. Where's YUL-BEY?
  6. Mise a jour du classement des villes entrepreneuriales 2016 - Un regain d'optimisme propulse MONTRÉAL, le 29 nov. 2016 /CNW Telbec/ - En 2016, six villes québécoises figurent dans les 20 premières places du classement des villes entrepreneuriales au Canada selon les résultats mis à jour de l'étude de la FCEI. D'autres villes ont également effectué un bond appréciable dans ce portrait des communautés entrepreneuriales. « Les signaux sont encourageants pour plusieurs collectivités québécoises cette année. En fait, les perspectives des entrepreneurs sur l'environnement d'affaires se sont avérées plus positives au Québec que dans d'autres régions du Canada. Cela explique notamment la remontée de plusieurs villes du Québec dans le classement, car il s'agit là d'une composante de l'indice que nous calculons. Cela étant, on voit aussi qu'il reste du travail à faire dans toutes les municipalités pour offrir un environnement d'affaires plus propice à l'essor des PME », constate Martine Hébert, vice-présidente principale de la FCEI. Six villes du Québec dans le top 20 et Rivière-du-Loup première au Canada Six villes québécoises figurent dans le top 20 des 121 agglomérations et régions métropolitaines de recensement de plus de 20 000 habitants canadiennes qui ont été analysées dans cette étude. Rang au Canada Ville Cote 0-100 1 Rivière-du-Loup 72,2 3 Saint-Georges 72,1 9 Saint-Hyacinthe 67,2 12 Val-d'Or 65,6 16 Sherbrooke 64,8 19 Victoriaville 64,2 « Nous félicitons les villes qui font bonne figure cette année. Sachant que les PME jouent un rôle de premier plan dans la vitalité de nos économies locales et qu'aucune ville n'obtient un score parfait, il importe toutefois qu'elles poursuivent leurs efforts en vue d'améliorer le climat d'affaires sur leur territoire. Nous encourageons également toutes les municipalités à adopter des mesures favorisant un fardeau fiscal et réglementaire plus équitable pour les PME », commente Simon Gaudreault, directeur des affaires économiques à la FCEI. Des progrès notables pour plusieurs villes québécoises Plusieurs villes du Québec présentent également un portrait nettement plus favorable en 2016 par rapport à 2015. En fait, les villes québécoises ont fait meilleure figure dans le classement en 2016 notamment parce que l'optimisme quant à l'avenir et à l'évaluation que se faisaient les entrepreneurs de la situation de leurs affaires était plus élevé qu'ailleurs au Canada. Ainsi, Montréal a quitté la dernière place du classement, qu'elle occupait depuis les deux dernières années pour atteindre la 94e place, soit une remontée de 27 échelons. « Cela laisse présager qu'on peut inverser la vapeur à Montréal. Des actions concrètes entreprises par l'administration actuelle, comme un meilleur contrôle des dépenses ou les mesures fiscales pour les immeubles non résidentiels adoptées dans le dernier budget, peuvent contribuer à améliorer le climat d'affaires. Évidemment, il reste beaucoup à faire, mais au moins, on avance », relève Martine Hébert. Toujours au chapitre des grandes villes, Québec a également connu une progression intéressante passant de la 114e place à la 74e. « Les grandes villes partent souvent de plus loin dans ce genre de classement relatif, car, intrinsèquement, elles ont souvent plus de taxes et plus de règlements. Cela étant, elles demeurent à plusieurs égards en compétition avec d'autres villes de plus petite taille, c'est pourquoi elles ont avantage à s'y comparer », précise M. Gaudreault. Enfin, d'autres collectivités ont connu des remontées importantes, ayant aussi profité d'une nette amélioration des perspectives affichées par leurs entrepreneurs : La banlieue de Montréal s'est hissée à la 35e place (+69 rangs). Gatineau a progressé de la 112e à la 49e place (+63 rangs). Alma arrive à la 51e place (+62 rangs). Trois-Rivières est au 48e rang (+45 rangs).
  7. I have a dream. That the Mont-Royal was taller. Let's make it that way. Let's dump some tonnes (several) of dirt and rocks on top of it. Let's prevent the inevitable building plateau.
  8. Under heavy renovation at the moment. They are adding new street-level locations despite 75% availability (only the SAQ remains) and the Stylexchange failure. Will they shake off the cockroach stigma? This next picture shows flooring being put on top of the old bagel place. New Taiwanese place where Grumman used to be
  9. Happy to see Montreal back in the 2016 top 25 cities ranking by Monocle, one of my favorite magazines. Montreal is back at number 25. Unfortunately the magazine is not online so you will have to pick it up at a bookstore! https://skift.com/2016/06/22/monocles-new-quality-of-life-top-25-cities-survey-tokyo-is-tops-again/ A few takeaways from the Montreal description: Pros: SLR Cons: "Lack of diversity" Other Montreal mentions in this latest issue: Alexandraplatz and Quartier Marconi
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  11. With twice the debt of California, Ontario is now the world’s most indebted sub-sovereign borrower. - > I'm sure Québec had that top spot before, by reading some frequent comments in mtlurb... http://business.financialpost.com/news/economy/with-twice-the-debt-of-california-ontario-is-now-the-worlds-most-indebted-sub-sovereign-borrower
  12. New technology that can detect when graffiti vandals are tagging train cars is being heralded in Australia as a major breakthrough in crime prevention. The electronic sensor, called a "mousetrap," has been tested across the network and has so far led to the arrest of 30 people. It works by detecting the vapours of spray cans and markers while they are in use and alerting transport authorities and police. Australian Transport Minister Andrew Constance said it was a useful tool. "What this means is that those who commit graffiti can now be caught immediately, with can in hand, marker in hand, doing the damage," he said. "[Mousetrap] provides real-time information, triggering closed-circuit TV back to Sydney Trains staff and also real-time information provided directly to the Police Transport command." Sydney Trains declined to say how many of the devices would be rolled out across the network but indicated they would be randomly moved from different train lines. Removing graffiti cost taxpayers $34 million last financial year, up from $30 million the year before. Sydney Trains chief executive Howard Collins said it was a big problem. "Our customers hate it – it's one of the top customer complaints and cleaners work hard to remove about 11,000 tags from trains each month," he said. "We know customers feel unsafe when they are using a train which is covered in graffiti and offenders often place themselves and others in danger by trespassing on the railway or being somewhere they shouldn't. "When I came to Sydney 10 years ago most of the trains had graffiti inside and out. We now work on keeping our trains clean." http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/mousetrap-can-detect-when-graffiti-vandals-are-tagging-trains-1.3066838?cmp=rss
  13. New York City at top of the list for this year according to Economist's FDI magazine. Toronto at no.5, Montréal at no 9 for major American cities. Source: http://www.fdiintelligence.com
  14. http://journalmetro.com/opinions/bouffe-et-compagnie/754430/montreal-parmi-les-villes-gastronomiques-du-monde/ 09/04/2015 Mise à jour : 9 avril 2015 | 15:46 Montréal parmi les villes gastronomiques du monde Par Audrey Lavoie Métro Condé Nast Traveler a publié jeudi sa liste de villes les plus gourmandes: The World’s Best Food Cities. Choisi par ses lecteurs, ce palmarès sélectionne les villes où il fait bon manger autour du monde. En 2014, les lecteurs ont couronné la ville espagnole de San Sebastian. Paris et Cape Town arrivent respectivement en deuxième et troisième position, alors que les villes italiennes de Florence et Rome terminent le top 5. La ville de Québec figure dans le top 10, en dixième position. On y parle notamment du Marché du Vieux-Port et des restaurants Panache et l’Auberge Saint-Antoine. Montréal n’est pas en reste puisqu’elle figure au 13e rang du palmarès grâce à sa poutine, ses bagels et ses institutions comme le Pied de Cochon et le Joe Beef.
  15. Vote for Montreal to be the sole Canadian city on the board! Only 20 cities will be included. We are currently 18th!
  16. Bay Street still has Canada’s most expensive office space http://renx.ca/bay-street-still-canadas-expensive-office-space/ Bay Street in Toronto has the most expensive office space in Canada, and no other city comes close to matching the $68.52 per square foot average rent that’s being asked for in the heart of the country’s financial district. JLL Canada recently released its “Most Expensive Streets for Office Space” report, which ranks Canadian cities by their highest asking rents. It shows many companies are still willing to pay a premium for the most expensive spaces, and competition is growing to get into prominent financial, retail and government hubs. “The most significant trend that we are seeing across major markets is that there are a large number of new developments underway,” said JLL Canada president Brett Miller. “Although we have only seen minor changes to the top market rents thus far in 2014, we anticipate that as the new inventory comes to market, overall rents will decrease in the older class-A stock whilst headline rents in new developments may raise the top line rents.” Here are the most expensive streets in nine major Canadian cities 1. Bay Street, Toronto, $68.52 per square foot Bay Street held strong in first place for the fourth year running. It features the headquarters of major Canadian banks and is home to many investment banks, accounting and law firms. Brookfield Place, at 161 Bay St., continues to command the highest office rents of any building in Canada at $76.54 per square foot. The average market rent in Toronto is $34.82 per square foot. (Bay St. looking north from Front St. shown in the image,) 2. 8th Avenue SW, Calgary, $59.06 per square foot 8th Avenue SW again has the highest average gross office rents in Calgary. Large vacancies and availabilities along this corridor typically account for significant activity and command market-leading rates. Large oil and gas companies have historically clustered around the central business district in this area. The top rent on the street is $64.40 per square foot and the average market rent in Calgary is $46 per square foot. 3. Burrard Street, Vancouver, $58.87 per square foot Burrard Street has dropped to third place despite a slight increase in average asking rent from $58.47 in 2013. Approximately 18.3 per cent of downtown class-A office supply is located on Burrard Street between West Georgia Street and Canada Place. The vacancy rate in these six buildings sits at 1.6 per cent, which justifies this location commanding some of the highest rental rates in the city despite the impending influx of new supply that’s putting downward pressure on rents throughout the central business district. The top rent on the street is $66.06 per square foot and the average market rent in Vancouver is $38.81 per square foot. 4. Albert Street, Ottawa, $52.10 per square foot Albert Street remained in fourth position with average rents decreasing slightly from $53.40 per square foot. Albert Street is mainly home to government-related office towers, including numerous foreign embassies, and a few of the largest Canadian business law firms. There seems to be a wait-and-see approach in anticipation of the 2015 federal election regarding the government’s intentions to lease or return more space to the market. The top rent on the street is $53.54 per square foot and the average market rent in Ottawa is $30.90 per square foot. 5. 101st Street NW, Edmonton, $46.71 per square foot The average asking rent dropped from $48.19 per square foot, but 101st Street NW is expected to remain the most expensive in Edmonton with the recent commitment to build the arena district, a large-scale, mixed-use project incorporating the city’s new National Hockey League arena. This is expected to revitalize some of the most important corners on the street. The top rent on the street is $54.15 per square foot and the average market rent in Edmonton is $28.30 per square foot. 6. René-Lévesque W, Montreal, $44.28 per square foot The average gross rent on the street hasn’t changed significantly year over year, but the total value of tenant inducement packages has nearly doubled. The most expensive building on the street (1250 René-Lévesque W) rents for $52.76 per square foot but has seen some downward pressure of two to four dollars on its net rent due to 170,000 square feet of vacant space left behind by Heenan Blaikie. The average market rent in Montreal is $30.38 per square foot. 7. Upper Water Street, Halifax, $36.42 per square foot Upper Water Street has maintained seventh place despite its average asking rent dropping from $36.65 per square foot last year. New construction coming on stream is expected to put downward pressure on rents in existing office buildings. The top rent on the street is $36.62 per square foot and the average market rent in Halifax is $27.44 per square foot. 8. Portage Avenue, Winnipeg, $35.67 per square foot Portage Avenue held strong in eighth place, with its average rent increasing from $35.17 per square foot. The class-A market remains tight and is expected to remain so through 2015. The top rent on the street is $37.32 per square foot and the average market rent in Winnipeg is $23.62 per square foot. 9. Laurier Boulevard, Québec City, $27.50 per square foot Laurier Boulevard held its ninth-place position despite the average rent dropping from $28.14 per square foot. There’s been no notable increase in the average gross rent and the vacancy rate on the street remains low at 5.2 per cent compared to the rest of the market’s 7.8 per cent. The top rent on the street is $28.98 per square foot and the average market rent in Québec City is $21.89 per square foot. JLL manages more than 50 million square feet of facilities across Canada and offers tenant and landlord representation, project and development services, investment sales, advisory and appraisal services, debt capital markets and integrated facilities management services to owners and tenants.
  17. Montréal: Canada’s innovation epicenter Posted on November 21st, 2007 by Mitch Brisebois Where do Canada’s innovators live? Mostly Montréal. Followed by Ottawa. A quick database search of The US Patent and Trademark Office reveals that 4,931 granted patents are held by inventors living in Montreal. Ottawa-based inventors offer up 3,402 patents. Here’s a coast to coast breakdown of the top 10 major centers: Montréal - 4,931 Ottawa - 3,402 Toronto - 3,187 Vancouver - 2,407 Calgary - 1,598 Edmonton - 1,293 Quebec City - 702 Winnipeg - 696 Saskatoon - 470 St. John’s - 117 These are respectable enough numbers. But… consider New York City: 22,571 patents.
  18. GFCI 16 provides profiles, rating and rankings for 83 financial centres, drawing on two separate sources of data - instrumental factors (external indices) and responses to an online survey. 105 factors have been used in GFCI 16, of which 42 have been updated since GFCI 15 and 4 are new. New York, London, Hong Kong and Singapore remain the top four centres. All fourt centres lose.points in the GFCI ratings but retain their relative ranks. New York remains the top centre but by only one point on a scale of 1,000. Following GFCI 15, London remains just behind New York due to uncertainty over the UK’s position in Europe, regulatory creep and the UK appearing to be less welcoming to foreigners all being contributing factors. ... Montreal went from 16th to 18th but still is in the top 20 !! http://www.zyen.com
  19. La Presse, 7 Juillet 2009 Tokyo est la ville la plus chère du monde Les deux villes japonaises de Tokyo et Osaka ont doublé Moscou et sont devenues en 2009 les villes les plus chères du monde pour les expatriés, selon une étude dévoilée mardi par le cabinet d'études britannique Mercer. Le classement a profondement changé en 2009 pa rapport à 2008, principalement à cause des fluctuations monétaires mondiales. Le renforcement du yen japonais par rapport au dollar américain a ainsi fait passer Tokyo de la 2e à la première place et Osaka de la 11e à la 2e. Au Canada, la baisse du huard par rapport au dollar américain a entraîné une chute des principales villes du pays dans le classement. Toronto a baissé de 31 places au 85e rang et Ottawa de 36 places à la 121e position. Montréal est maintenant au 103e rang alors qu'elle occupait la 72e place en 2008. Les villes américaines ont en général progressé. New York, la plus chère, entre dans le top 10 en se classant 8e. Los Angeles est passée du 32e au 23e rang, alors que San Francisco a bondi du 78e au 34e rang. Houston, Boston et Chicago occupent les 63e, 60e et 50e places respectivement. «La majorité des villes européennes a baissé dans le classement», indique l'étude, à l'exception des villes suisse: Genève (4e), par exemple, prend 4 places. Paris se classe 13e (12e en 2008), Varsovie, classée 113e, enregistre la plus importante chute en reculant de 78 places par rapport à l'an dernier. Moscou (3e) reste la ville européenne la plus chère, malgré la dépréciation du rouble par rapport au dollar et le léger reflux de l'immobilier. Londres et Oslo, dans le top 10 l'année passée, perdent respectivement 13 et 10 places. La plupart des villes du Moyen-Orient ont connu une tendance inverse, notamment Dubaï qui monte de 32 places (20e) et Abou Dhabi de 39 places (26e). Outre les villes japonaises, les mégapoles asiatiques restent onéreuses: Hong Kong se classe 5e , Singapour 10e, et Pékin intègre le top 10 à la 9e place. Seule l'Inde fait exception, en raison de la dépréciation de la roupie: New Dehli perd 10 places en 65e position et Bombay glisse de 18 places au 66e rang. Johannesbourg (Afrique du Sud) se positionne de son côté comme la ville la moins chère des 143 villes couvertes par l'étude, à la place d'Asuncion au Paraguay. L'étude fonde son évaluation du coût de la vie sur les prix de 200 objet ou service incluant le logement, le transport, la nourriture, l'habillement, les appareils ménagers et les loisirs. Voici le classement des 15 villes les plus chères selon Mercer: 1) Tokyo 2) Osaka 3) Moscou 4) Genève 5) Hong Kong 6) Zurich 7) Copenhague 8) New York 9) Pékin 10) Singapour 11) Milan 12) Shanghai 13) Paris 14) Oslo 15) Caracas
  20. http://www.travelchannel.com/interests/host-central/articles/anthony-bourdains-montreal-travel-tips
  21. Je suis en train de faire une liste de buildings intéressants qui sont présentement "oubliés" par leurs propriétaires, un peu comme il est arrivé à la Maison Redpath. Pas nécessairement la même chose que la liste d'Héritage Montréal. J'essais de faire un top 10 des buildings à sauver. Selon ma propre opinion pour mon blogue, mais j'ai besoin de votre aide. Je suis certain que je n'ai pas tous les buildings et je ne connais pas tous Montréal après tout. Prérequis pour faire la liste 1. Building doit avoir une certaine histoire, pas nécessairement ancienne, doit avoir de l'intérêt. Un triplex de la 5e avenue à verdun datant de 1930 est peut-être vieux mais n'a pas "d'histoire" 2. Le bâtiment doit être laissé en décrépitude par son propriétaire. Coin St-Laurent et des Pins, le proprio a du faire faire des rénovations, ne compte donc pas. 3. Dans un endroits qui vaudrait la peine d'être sauvé, Prime real estate. Voici ma liste jusqu'à maintenant, j'attend vos suggestions pour faire un Top 10. Cinéma Champlain, Ste-Catherine Est, Montréal Silo #5, Vieux-port, Montréal Canada Malting, Rue St-Ambroise, St-Henri. Forge Cadieux, Rue St-Paul, Montréal. Maison Louis-Hippolyte La fontaine, Rue Overdale, Montreal Caserne Létourneux, Notre-Dame Est. Eventide Home - Salvation Army, 7480 St-Jacques, NDG Tunnel Wellington, Wellington, Griffintown, Église du Très-Saint-Nom-de-Jésus, Hochelaga-Maisonneuve (promesse, mais toujours rien) Bureau Canada Packing, 316 Rue Bridge, Sud-Ouest. Banque Molson, 5001 Notre-Dame Ouest, St-Henri. Pavillon du Pont Jacques-Cartier, Ile Ste-Hélène, Sous le Pont. Externat Sainte-Sophie, 1105 Gouin Est. Merci de votre aide et vos suggestions.
  22. Quoi y a un concours?!?! Oui sans le vouloir, vous y avez tous participé... pourquoi le secret??? la raison est bien simple... continuez à lire plus bas et vous comprendrez! Comment récompenser les membres d'un forum? Qu'est ce qui fait vivre un forum? Les membres contributeurs!!! Ceux qui participent aux débats et surtout ceux qui se donnent la peine de prendre des photos pour être nos yeux sur le terrain. En annonçant le le concours en début d'année, j'avais bien peur que le forum soit inondé de messages et photos dans le but de gagner... voici pour le secret. L'expression une image vaut mille mot, sur MTLURB c'est encore plus vrai! Chaque image génère une quantité incroyable de commentaires et de visites sur le site web... Alors voilà, j'ai séparé les gagnants en 2 catégories, soit top 3 des photographes MTLURB, et top 3 des contributeurs en volume (longueur des textes) de participation. La période couverte est du premier décembre 2012 au premier décembre 2013! Il y a 5 gagnants puisqu'un l'un deux se retrouve dans les deux catégories! Top 3 photographes [table=width: 500, class: grid] [tr] [td]Membre[/td] [td]Photos[/td] [/tr] [tr] [td]Yvon L'Aîné[/td] [td]1539[/td] [/tr] [tr] [td]IluvMTL[/td] [td]449[/td] [/tr] [tr] [td]denpanosekai[/td] [td]299[/td] [/tr] [/table] Top 3 en participation dans les débats [table=width: 500, class: grid] [tr] [td]Membre[/td] [td]Messages[/td] [td]Volume[/td] [/tr] [tr] [td]IluvMTL[/td] [td]1176[/td] [td]1818476[/td] [/tr] [tr] [td]acpnc[/td] [td]765[/td] [td]1255511[/td] [/tr] [tr] [td]monctezuma[/td] [td]1054[/td] [td]628612[/td] [/tr] [/table] Quels sont les prix?? Lors de mon dernier voyage à New York, j'ai remarqué un casse-tête pour adultes, qui est vraiment remarquable pour nous "nerds" de villes et de tours!! Regardez ce vidéo pour comprendre: J'ai choisi 5 villes pour distribuer aux gagnants, soit: New York, Berlin, Sydney, London et Toronto. Puisque pour les contributions photos, consiste à beaucoup plus de travail, je pondère en leur faveur, voici donc l'ordre des gagnants: 1-Yvon L'Aîné 2-IluvMTL 3-denpanosekai 4-acpnc 5-monctezuma Chacuns à votre tour, faites un choix parmi les villes, et je me ferais un plaisir de vous les poster ou livrer. IluvMTL en bonus, vu que tu gagnes dans les deux catégories, tu recevras aussi un puzzle 3D de l'Empire State Building. Merci à tous, et excellente nouvelle année 2014!!!
  23. http://www.montrealgazette.com/news/montreal/Montreal+quality+city+Mercer+rankings+affirm/9525645/story.html?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter Montreal a quality city, Mercer rankings affirm We’re No. 4 in North America for quality of life; Vienna ranks No. 1 worldwide, while Baghdad is last BY ANNE SUTHERLAND, THE GAZETTE FEBRUARY 19, 2014 1:17 PM Montreal is the fourth-best city to live in North America, according to Mercer. Photograph by: Dave Sidaway / THE GAZETTE MONTREAL — Worldwide, we’re No. 23, but in North America, Montreal ranks in the top five cities for quality of life. Mercer, a consultant in health, retirement and investments, comes out with a ranking of cities every year. This ranking helps companies determine compensation packages when employees are given international assignments. In the 2014 global list, Vienna is No. 1, but Canadian cities rule when the it comes to North America: Vancouver is first, Ottawa second, Toronto third and Montreal fourth. San Francisco rounds up the top 5. Here are the top five worldwide: Vienna, Austria; Zurich, Switzerland; Auckland, New Zealand; Munich, Germany; Vancouver. The worst places to live, according to Mercer: Mexico City in North America; Port-au-Prince, Haiti, for Central and South America; Tbilisi, Georgia in Europe; Dushanbe, Tajikistan, in Asia; Baghdad for the Middle East and Africa. Some of the factors that affect rank are political stability, censorship, air and water pollution, schools, recreation, climate and natural disasters. For more information and bragging rights, go to www.mercer.com/qualityofliving
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