Kennedy and Leichleiter, both former residents of Oregon, wanted to move back to the Pacific Northwest, so they moved the business to Auburn on Pike and 15th Street.
“We started with one small hand kennel,” Leichleiter said. “Within two years we had two 360-pound cookers running 24/7 to keep up with demand.”
Leichleiter didn’t have any experience making potato chips when they started the business.
“I knew how to eat ‘em,” he said.
Once production started, Leichleiter and Kennedy began a guerilla marketing campaign, attending Seattle events and handing out free bags of potato chips. Eventually companies like Safeway started picking them up.
- Co-founder of Tim’s Cascade Style Potato Chips retires in Ellensburg, DailyRecordNews.com, October 18, 2016.
3. Well, you might be very annoyed by this, but trust me, you won’t be as annoyed as me. Lenovo finally announced the over-hyped Lenovo Z5 today, and man did it suck big time. Lenovo’s VP Chang Cheng had made people dream about a device that would be truly bezel-less and instead what we got today is another badly cloned iPhone. Yes, the Lenovo Z5 is a smartphone with a notch. And this isn’t helped by the fact that the bottom bezel is 7.69mm in thickness or the starting price is 1299 Yuan. In the end, this was a case of guerilla marketing like we suspected earlier.
Despite all the fake hype, the Lenovo Z5 does have value-for-money components. So, the Lenovo Z5 has a 6.2-inch display Full-HD+ resolution and 19:9 aspect ratio. It’s covered by 2.5D Corning Gorilla glass that the company says is 40% less prone to scratches. The internal CPU is strong with a Snapdragon 636 chip in the driving seat with 6GB of RAM in tow. And you know, what the 4TB storage promise turned out to be, well it was a separate hard disk accessory.
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