Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Boring Mark Zuckerberg

After a body building blog exposed a Facebook glitch that gave users access to private hidden photos, the best thing the Internet could think to do was post Mark Zuckerberg's super boring private photos. And now they are all around the blogs. That's because the tech world wants so badly to find something noteworthy -- quirky, scandalous, salacious, interesting in any way, at all about the Facebook founder. As the supposed "next Steve Jobs" and CEO of a tech company that will likely have a presence for a very long time, it would be really nice if Mark Zuckerberg weren't so boring. But even his "private" Facebook photos show the same old regular-dude Zuck that we know.
Facebook has since disable the glitch, but within a day of the exposed flaw, a cached album of Zuckerberg photos appeared on the Web. In theory, it sounds like an illicit act and one would think the offenders would snatch the dirtiest photos. Yet, the album depicts a very normal 27-year-old guy lifestyle.
Zuck riding in a non-tinted windowed car with his adorable puppy.
Zuck with his low-profile non-celebrity girlfriend, doing a very normal couple activity.
And there's more boring where that came from, with the most interesting of the bunch of Zuckerberg with Obama. These photos wouldn't even qualify for the "celebs are just like us" section in Us Weekly, because he is more boring than us.
This isn't the first failed attempt at scandalizing the Facebook creator. The 6,000 word New Yorker profile didn't do much -- The Atlantic's Alexis Madrigal called it "stupefyingly boring." And all the tech blogger "revelations" posts didn't reveal much of anything. A look at his Facebook Timeline, led to the same Zuck-is-boring conclusion. And his recent Charlie Rose interview didn't do much either. And as the tech world personality to watch, we can look forward to more yawn-worthy Zuckerberg personal exposes.
http://news.yahoo.com/mark-zuckerberg-private-secrets-hes-boring-205327513.html

2011 End of an era

http://yearinreview.yahoo.com/2011/us_end_of_an_era#us_end_of_an_era


2011 End of an era

Friendster

 Before MySpace hit the scene, and back when everybody was still talking about Napster, there was Friendster. One of the first social networking sites, Friendster exited that realm in May 2011 to become a social entertainment site, intended to complement Facebook -- the very social network that was blamed for its downfall.
Friendster, which was started in 2002 by Jonathan Abrams, gave its users about a month to export their profiles before they were erased, so the company could focus more on connecting people through gaming, not networking. The site sputtered in the U.S. but picked up a strong following in Asia, and stated its intent to expand there after being acquired in 2009 by a Malaysian company. The newest incarnation essentially creates a parallel social network for your avatar.
Some are comparing the Friendster reinvention to that of MySpace after Facebook trounced it. The two companies' fates are unclear: News Corp., busy managing its own problems in 2011, finally shed MySpace, having bought the company for $580 million back in 2006. Online advertising firm Specific Media acquired the company in June for $35 million -- a little more than a $1 per user. Had the sale happened in 2008 at the same rate per user, the price tag might have been $75 million.
But what's the update on the Friendster so many of us have forgotten? The latest status, from its new CEO: The company is attracting young Asians to social gaming; more than 90% of its new users are based in Asia. The epitaph of the original Friendster, however, is one of wasted potential. It had millions of users only months after its March 2003 launch. How, then, did Facebook end up with all the cool kids? A Harvard Business School professor told the New York Times in 2006 that it was a complicated question but one thing is pretty certain: Abrams, who blames missed audience targeting and terrible technology, probably should have accepted a $30 million buyout offer from Google in 2003.
Considering the launch of Google+ this year, would there have been a whole different Silicon Valley landscape if that 2003 buyout had happened? Instead of creating a social networking site to rival Facebook, might Google have prevented the now powerhouse company from even existing? Of course, Google did launch its own social networking site, Orkut, in 2004. Kind of like Friendster, Orkut really found its following outside the U.S. and is now based in Brazil -- although its members have been bailing fast for Facebook.
The Friendster makeover probably didn't take many by surprise; the change more often prompted some to ask, "Is Friendster still around?" It is, but not as we once knew it. Friendster is now dot-com vintage, a nostalgic relic we can muse about in Facebook status updates or tweets.
A former reporter for the Associated Press and ABC News, Laura E. Davis writes about gay rights and the Supreme Court. She is one of the social media editors for Yahoo! News. Follow her on Twitter at @laura_ynews.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Christmas set menu


 Poached prawns, apple and plum chutney and mustard dressing, avocado oil

 ****
 Oven baked rolled turkey with sorrel chocolate butter and hazelnut roast potato, grilled pumpkin with herbs and caramelized carrot OR Chicken galantine in lobster sauce with honey baby carrot and black olive soft semolina.

 *****
Steamed Christmas pudding Vanilla white chocolate sauce and wild berry compote 

*****
 Freshly brewed coffee and selection of teas Complementary glass of house wine or juice and Free flow house pouring red and white wines for only RM 50.00++

What is Marketing?

What is Marketing?

You see a gorgeous girl at a party.
You go up to her and say, 'I am very rich. Marry me!'
That's Direct Marketing
You're at a party with a bunch of friends and see a gorgeous girl.
One of your friends goes up to her and pointing at you says, 'He's very rich. Marry him.'
That's Advertising.

You see a gorgeous girl at a party.
You go up to her and get her telephone number.
The next day you call and say, 'Hi, I'm very rich. Marry me.'
That's Telemarketing.

You're at a party and see a gorgeous girl.
You get up and straighten your tie; you walk up to her and pour her a drink.
You open the door for her, pick up her bag after she drops it, offer her a ride, and then say, 'By the way, I'm very rich 'Will you marry me?'
That's Public Relations.

You're at a party and see a gorgeous girl.
She walks up to you and says, 'You are very rich, I want to marry you.'
That's Brand Recognition.

You see a gorgeous girl at a party.
You go up to her and say, 'I'm rich. Marry me'
She gives you a nice hard slap on your face.
That's Customer Feedback

I want you to marry a girl of my choice

Father: I want you to marry a girl of my choice
Son: 'I will choose my own bride!'
Father: 'But the girl is Bill Gates's daughter.'
Son: 'Well, in that case...ok'

Next Father approaches Bill Gates,

Father: 'I have a husband for your daughter.'
Bill Gates: 'But my daughter is too young to marry!'
Father: 'But this young man is a vice-president of the World Bank.'
Bill Gates: 'Ah, in that case...ok'

Finally Father goes to see the president of the World Bank,
Father: 'I have a young man to be recommended as a vice-president.'
President: 'But I already have more vice- presidents than I need!'
Father: 'But this young man is Bill Gates's son-in-law.'
President: 'Ah, in that case...ok'

This is how business is done!!

Moral: Even If you have nothing, You can get Anything. But your attitude should be positive