Kisah hidup seorang penjawat awan yang bekerja di Kuala Perlis. Kisah yang sederhana dan sesuai dengan status penjawat awam.
Monday, December 27, 2010
Friday, October 8, 2010
Idea yang pelik untuk online business
Saya dapat cerita ini semasa google di internet. agak menarik untuk dikongsi.
artikel ini di ceduk sepenuh nya dari
http://www.nichegeek.com/10_totally_stupid_online_business_ideas_that_made_someone_rich
1000000 pixels, charge a dollar per pixel – that’s perhaps the dumbest idea for online business anyone could have possible come up with. Still, Alex Tew, a 21-year-old who came up with the idea, is now a millionaire.
2. PickyDomains
Hire another person to think of a cool domain name for you? No way people would pay for this. Actually, naming domain names for others turned out a thriving business, especially, when you make the entire process risk free. PickyDomains currently has a waiting list of people who want to PAY the service to come up with a snappy memorable domain name. PickyDomains is expected to hit six figures this year. Full Story3. Doggles
Create goggles for dogs and sell them online? Boy, this IS the dumbest idea for a business. How in the world did they manage to become millionaires and have shops all over the world with that one? Beyond me.
4. LaserMonks
LaserMonks.com is a for-profit subsidiary of the Cistercian Abbey of Our Lady of Spring Bank, an eight-monk monastery in the hills of Monroe County, 90 miles northwest of Madison. Yeah, real monks refilling your cartridges. Hallelujah! Their 2005 sales were $2.5 million! Praise the Lord. Full Story
5. AntennaBalls
You can’t sell antenna ball online. There is no way. And surely it wouldn’t make you rich. But this is exactly what Jason Wall did, and now he is now a millionaire. Full Story
6. FitDeck
Create a deck of cards featuring exercise routines, and sell it online for $18.95. Sounds like a disaster idea to me. But former Navy SEAL and fitness instructor Phil Black reported last year sales of $4.7 million. Surely beats what military pays.
How would you like to go on a date with an HIV positive person? Paul Graves and Brandon Koechlin thought that someone would, so they created a dating site for HIV positive folks last year. Projected 2006 sales are $110,000, and the two hope to have 50,000 members by their two-year mark.
Christie Rein was tired of carrying diapers around in a freezer bag. The 34-year-old mother of three found herself constantly stuffing diapers for her infant son into freezer bags to keep them from getting scrunched up in her purse. Rein wanted something that was compact, sleek and stylish, so in November 2004, she sat down with her husband, Marcus, who helped her design a custom diaper bag that's big enough to hold a travel pack of wipes and two to four diapers. With more than $180,000 in sales for 2005, Christie's company, Diapees & Wipees, has bags in 22 different styles, available online and in 120 boutiques across the globe for $14.99.
9. SantaMail
Ok, how’s that for a brilliant idea. Get a postal address at North Pole, Alaska, pretend you are Santa Claus and charge parents 10 bucks for every letter you send to their kids? Well, Byron Reese sent over 200000 letters since the start of the business in 2001, which makes him a couple million dollars richer. Full StoryFake wishbones. Now, this stupid idea is just destined to flop. Who in the world needs FAKE PLASTIC wishbones? A lot of people, it turns out. Now producing 30,000 wishbones daily (they retail for 3 bucks a pop) Ken Ahroni, the company founder, expects 2006 sales to reach $1 million.
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Lagu mana nak bagi blog lawa
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Hujan lebat @Perlis
Facebook founder
Mark Zuckerberg Biography
Zuckerberg was born in White Plains, New York, and raised in the village of Dobbs Ferry, also New York. He is said to have begun programming whilst still in middle school and enjoyed developing communication tools and games from an early age. He went on to study briefly at Ardsley High School, a public secondary school, before moving on to the independent Phillips Exeter Academy. It was whilst at Phillips Academy that Zuckerberg built several advanced programs. The first was a program to help the workers at his fathers employer to communicate, then came a version of the game Risk, and then a music player called Synapse which learnt the users listening habits using artificial intelligence. Synapse was so advanced that both Microsoft and AOL attempted to purchase the software and recruit Zuckerberg, offers which he subsequently rejected in favour of attending Harvard University.
It was from his dorm room at Harvard, on 4th February 2004, that Zuckerberg launched the first version of Facebook. It initially started as a Harvard only thing, but was so popular amongst the universities students that he soon made moves to spread Facebook to other schools, it was at this point that Zuckerberg brought roommate Dustin Moskovitz on board, and the two spread the site to five other universities including Stanford, Cornell and Yale. It was no time at all before the site was extended to almost every educational institute in the United States. Remember that Zuckerberg was just 19 in February 2004! Zuckerberg soon forgot about Harvard and moved to Palo Alto in California, with Moskovitz and some other friends, renting a small house which served as their home and office. Zuckerberg has never returned to Harvard, instead seeing his company to grow to what it is now - huge!
Facebook Inc. sold a 1.6% stake in the business to Microsoft Corporation for some $240m in 2007, suggesting an overall site value of some $15bn, although the sites growth in the years since make it likely that the company is worth much more than that figure now, in December 2009 Facebook claimed that it had 350m users. A movie based on the lives of Zuckerberg and his associates, called 'The Social Network' is set for release at some stage in 2010.
It was in September 2006 that Zuckerberg and pals rolled out the News Feed on the site, instantly creating controversy and attracting criticism for its stalkerish characteristics. Stalkerbook is still a tag which sticks now of course. It was in 2007 that the website would truly begin to create noise globally, when it launched a Facebook platform, effectively making the site open source (although with certain restrictions and pre-approval measures). Developers worldwide began building applications and it was just a matter of weeks before their were applications with over a million users, there are now some 800,000 developers worldwide building applications for Facebook. I know one of them actually, doesn't seem so special to be associated with him now!