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  2. Two brothers created the Yeti cooler. Then their partner was ...

    www.aol.com/yeti-set-conquer-cooler-market...

    The first Yeti coolers arrived in America in the spring of 2008. They had spent weeks at sea, traveling from a factory in the Philippines to a leased warehouse in the hills south of Austin, Texas.

  3. Yeti Holdings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yeti_Holdings

    A display of Yeti products at Academy Sports + Outdoors in Indianapolis, Indiana.. YETI Holdings, Inc. is an American brand of outdoor recreation products, headquartered in Austin, Texas, [2] specializing in outdoor products such as ice chests, vacuum-insulated stainless-steel drinkware, soft coolers, dry bags, and related accessories. [2]

  4. Utah Yeti out: NHL team tries three other options for ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/utah-yeti-nhl-team-tries-011015668.html

    Utah Yeti was one of the final six choices in the initial fan vote for the NHL's newest team, but KSL and The Athletic reported last week that a trademark bid was rejected. Smith Entertainment ...

  5. Score a Ridiculously Good Deal on This Yeti Cooler

    www.aol.com/score-ridiculously-good-deal-yeti...

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  6. Igloo Products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Igloo_Products

    Igloo began in 1947 as a metalworking shop that produced metal water coolers for blue-collar workers. In early 1960, Igloo merged with the Production Tooling Company, and the company name changed to Texas Tennessee Industries (TTI). The company's marketing arm was the John T. Everett Company, a company from Memphis, Tennessee. [1]

  7. How Mark Zuckerberg Should Give Away $45 Billion - The ...

    highline.huffingtonpost.com/articles/en/how-to...

    These aren't, of course, the only ideas I heard for how Zuckerberg should give away his money. Charles Kenny of the Center for Global Development says Zuckerberg should invest in global public goods, things no single government wants to pay for but the world needs nonetheless—like a vaccine for malaria, or making renewables cheaper than ...