Archive for November, 2007

Elliot Silver: Life Lesson

Happiness
(Above: Chinese symbol for Happiness. Image source)

Via Elliot’s blog:

Domain investing may be a way of life, but life isn’t isn’t about domain investing.

A former marketing partner of mine when I worked at AIG passed away this morning after a short battle with pancreatic cancer. She was a wonderful woman, full of energy, and she left behind young children. This is a tragic part of life.

I spend a lot of time on the computer, doing research and trying to make deals. This is a way for me to make a living for me, but this isn’t life.Life is about spending time with the people you care about. Enjoy every minute you can. Unfortunately, life can be short. Life can be unpredictable, too. Take some extra time to enjoy the little thigs in your life.

My sincere condolences Elliot. The following was sent to me couple of days ago. Good read, a reminder to all:

“One day, an old professor at the French National School for Administration was asked to give a lecture to 15 directors of large American firms about useful time management. The lecture was one of five elements of their one-day course, so the professor only had one hour to pass on his knowledge.

The professor calmly scrutinized the group of elite directors one by one. They were poised and ready to write down anything the expert would tell them. The professor said: “We will conduct an experiment.” He took a large glass pitcher from under his pulpit and carefully placed it before him. Then he took about a dozen stones, each one as big as a tennis ball, and put them, one after the other, into the pitcher. When the pitcher was filled to the brim and no other stone would fit in, he looked at his students and asked: “Is the pitcher full?” They answered: “Yes, it is!” The professor waited a minute and asked them: “Are you sure?” Then he disappeared again under the pulpit and took a jar full of pebbles. Carefully, he poured the pebbles over the stones and shook the jar lightly. The pebbles distributed themselves evenly between the stones.

The professor looked at his students again and asked them: “Is the pitcher full?” This time his clever class started to understand what he was aiming at. One of them replied: “Probably not.” “Good”, the professor said and disappeared under the pulpit again. This time he took a small bucket of sand, and carefully poured it into the pitcher. The sand filled the spaces between the stones and the pebbles. Again he asked: “Is the pitcher full now?” The group replied: “No, it isn’t!”

As if they had expected it, the professor now took a jar of water from under his pulpit and filled the pitcher to the brim. Then he looked at his class and asked: “What can we learn from this experiment?” The boldest among them was thinking about the topic of the lecture and said: “We can learn that even though we might think our time-table is already full, we can always find room for another appointment if we really want to.” The professor replied: “No, that’s not the issue. What we really can learn is the following: if we don’t put the stones in the pitcher first, they will never all fit in.”
For a moment, everyone was silent. They all realized how right he was. Then he asked: “What are the stones in your lives? They are your health, your family, your friends, making your dreams come true, doing what pleases you, learning to stand up for something, relaxing, having time or something completely different. It is important to put the big stones first in your lives. If not, you won’t be able to cope with it. If you put small things first, you will spend your lives with minor details instead of the real important issues. So don’t forget to ask yourselves: what are the important stones in my life, and put them in the pitcher first.” Then the professor greeted his audience with a small wave and slowly left the room.”

We live in a period where time is money, time management is a science and we are guided by computers, electronic organizers and mobile phones to improve our productivity, to remember appointments and important phone calls, tasks and texts to produce before deadline. Don’t you ever have the feeling that life is a never ending race? What about health, family and friends? What are the commitments towards them worth? Should we step back, evaluate our life and reset priorities?

Low Seven Figures USD Investment Opportunity, Domain Related

dollars1.gif

We just came across this great investment opportunity, posting it here first before shopping it around. If you have access to that kind of cash and interested in investing with us (domain related), contact Darren Cleveland at Recall Media Group office.
Cheers
Sahar

T.R.A.F.F.I.C. Road Rally Coming To Las Vegas

In an email to TRAFFIC attendees, Rick Schwartz writes:

Morning folks!!

I’ll be quick.

If you are interested in the T.R.A.F.F.I.C. Road Rally we are in the planning and head count stage. We will be hooking up with an exotic car rental outfit that has a fantastic selection of Bentley, Ferrari, Lamborghini, Maserati, Mercedes, Lotus, Hummer, Corvette, Porsche, BMW, Harley Davidson, whatever your pleasure. As it stands now, the event is planned for Sunday February 17th at 11am. So if this is something you are inclined to participate in, please let me know by return email no later than Monday. First come, first served. Limited sponsorships may be available.

Did you know Shelby Super Cars exclusive dealership is in Vegas? Hopefully someone will get one (I want a ride!).
If Franky attends, my guess is we gonna see a Veyron. As for myself, I have an idea what to bring.. but not telling!

27 kilobytes Of Code That Changed The World

Via NEXT generation:

on a dreary and deserted Sunday morning: it seems a strange time and place to be meeting one of the most revered figures in game design history. But the café is snug, and Alexey Pajitnov, with his clipped beard, neat trainers and buttoned-up polo shirt, seems more like a favorite physics teacher than a genius, or a star.

Pajitnov is in Nottingham to appear at the GameCity festival, and to promote nothing in particular. Later in the day he’ll attend a screening of Tetris: From Russia With Love, the 2004 BBC documentary focusing on his creation of the universally popular puzzle game while at the academic Moscow Computer Centre, and the tortuous wrangling over it between communist Russia and the corporate west. He’ll sit through it all, reminding himself of events, chuckling to see his friends on the screen, and wincing at his adorably thick Russian accent (seemingly undiluted by more than a decade living in Seattle).

If Tetris was ever a part of your life, you’re going to enjoy the rest of this interview. click above to read more.

Ned Skae (Coldwell Banker): The power of address-specific URLs

Metro Chicago Real Estate Magazine

Via Metro Chicago Real Estate Magazine:

Just as a yard sign entices couples out on a Sunday drive, a Web presence attracts Internet users.

Two years ago our office began boosting its housing presence online. As the manager of Coldwell Banker’s Lake Forest East office, I encouraged agents to allocate more of their marketing budgets to the Web. They supported an online platform because they could see it was going to be the next big thing for marketing homes.

Online marketing succeeds because it takes advantage of both passive and active consumers. Viewers browsing listings can take virtual tours of homes and if they aren’t interested in a particular home, they are directed to other Coldwell Banker listings. If they aren’t ready to buy a house at that time, the process seeds interest for a future purchase. They will remember browsing homes online and return to our site when they’re ready to buy.

For active consumers, a unique URL for the home is ideal. Whether searching MLS listings, Realtor.com, or the Coldwell Banker Web site, interested buyers will come across a general listing and be prompted to visit the home’s individual Web site. An example of a unique URL is http://www.595circle.com/, an Italian-style lakefront residence listed by Jeannie Emmert, one of our agents.

And how successful is it?

Unique URLs have brought our top producers similar successes. Donna Mercier, another top agent in our office, had a woman come to one of her open houses because she was so impressed with Coldwell Banker’s unique URL listings. She promised to enlist Donna if she ever sold her home, and not long after that conversation, they began working together.

Thus, both homeowners and buyers recognize the value of online marketing.

After two years, several modifications and a lot of sales, our office now boasts more than 75 percent of our listings online at unique URLs. We’re excited to pioneer this technology because it has helped our agents become more efficient, and the results speak for themselves. Online marketing has helped agents achieve higher sales.

The benefits are so compelling that many other offices are developing similar capabilities. With the support of Fran Broude, president and chief operating officer of Coldwell Banker in Chicago and Milwaukee, we are now looking to expand our use of technology.

Realtors® should be confident that investing in online marketing is a great way to showcase excellent service and expertise. But there is one thing that any agent should keep in mind when they use Web marketing. A unique URL will bring buyers to you, but only a great Realtor® will sell a home.

I saw many of these over the years, it’s a GREAT concept for real estate agents. Think about it, many drive by properties and say to themselves “looks interesting, we should stop one day” but never do. How do you reach those? Trough a web address that matches or similar to the home address. Lots of spins can be put on the concept, I do have one in mind for few years now however, so many projects, so little time. One of these days..

The Russian Connection

Jeff just uploaded few pictures from his most recent trip to our offices in Russia. I never been to Russia, been working with these folks for many years now on various projects (Niche Directory Platform, Flowchart.com, Assista, and many others) and yet to meet one. Well, hopefully soon.

Thanks Jeff for the pictures!

More pictures here.

SitePoint Design Contest Is Out Of This World

globe2.gifThe only way to relate to you this amazing design contest we’re having is to turn the mic to a handful (of very many) outstanding artists within the contest. There is so much more said by others I will have to compile it all at a later point. Hope you enjoy and I encourage you to join in and explore further.

Leahzero:

as I designed this concept, I had my father in mind. How could I express this huge, complex notion to him in a clear and simple way–and a way that didn’t rely too heavily upon the inherent meanings and connotations of language?

I haven’t shown this to him yet, but I think he’ll grasp it fairly quickly. After all, he’s a conceptualist himself, too. :)

So, this one is for my dad as much as anything. Thanks, Baba.

Hope you enjoy.

Cheers,
Leah

jyon writes:

This has been a fascinating contest and I have learned alot. If nothing else I can walk away feeling rewarded from the experience and I have enjoyed everyones designs and thoughts, there are some fantastic artists that have participated.

graneydesigns, in contest thread

This contest is one of the best examples of drawing out the creative juices in all of us. I am truly amazed to see what’s going on in my fellow designers heads… I am left speachless. Awsome work folks!

And Stormjem, in contest thread as well.

Sahar

I would like to say THANKS! to you for holding this contest. I have enjoyed the challenge of my mind and my creativity immensely. I commend you on finding a different approach that has pushed people to really think and to achieve more from themselves. We have all discovered new things (about the topic and ourselves) in needing to learn about conceptualism as part of the creative process. Its been a great opportunity to create from ‘philosophy’ rather then what is logical. I often feel creativity (and ideas) is sourced from outside (be it the spirit or universal consciousness), energy flowing into the mind and heart to inspire what becomes the creation. Once inspired it usually needs to be converted and simplified to what is practical which is a growing experience in itself. Your competition however has given that us more. Given us reason to think and to reach. I can not thank you enough for this experience. It has been a real joy and given me an enthusiasm for my art I had forgotten about.

Thanks!
Jade

Owen’s update: It Was A Joke

whatever.jpgAfter posting dotMobi messages that seems to be very serious in nature Owen later added notes that it was suppose to be “humor”, some sort of a joke.
Sorry Owen, I don’t find this funny at all. Matter of fact, I felt very sad about that suicide note.




As they say, “Fool me once Shame on you Fool me twice Shame on me”
Sahar
(image source)

Either Owen Has Lost His Mind Or Big Things Are Happening In dotMobi Land

cat1.gifThree links via Owen Frager’s blog. First titled “MOBI Investor Suicide” where Owen has this to say:

“Wife claims man took two self-inflicted gunshots to the head after reading TFF’s characterization of dotMOBI as DEAD and dot MOBI investors as ‘dumb” and “uninformed.”…. developing”

Second article, titled “MOBI Investors face Stiff Fines; Prison Time” which Owen says the story is developing on a private dotMobi forum. Owen writes:

A US Postal Inspectors and Bureau of Alcohol Firearms and Tobacco report is about to blow the lid off dotMOBI. Nearly 650K of the 700K registrants are in violation of the law. They do not have mandatory MOBI-complaint sites and those with PPC pages have links that are not MOBI-complaint- a double fine; and possibly opening the door for a 25-life sentence.

And third, titled “Forum Leader Surrenders to Authorities; TFC Raids Eminent on 40 Chicago Suburb locations“, where Owen says:

Computers, records, MOBI propaganda seized…. developing

Time will tell what is going on. If anyone has further info, please post in comments area.

A Blogger in The (Bugatti Veyron’s) Driver Seat

Mainstream learns how influential a blogger is, putting him in the driver seat, that is, of one of the hottest cars in the world, the Bugatti Veyron.

Via Autoblog:

I opened my inbox one morning to find this question from a publicist: “Would you have time to drive the Bugatti Veyron?” Would I have time? Really? Would you believe, uh, yes? And that’s how I found myself at Westlake Village with a black and cream Veryon waiting in the shade of the porte cochère. Yes, it was perfect. It was like getting a date with that frighteningly beautiful woman I’ve had my eye on for a while now, and actually enjoying it. Follow the jump to read about The Day of the Veyron, and check out the gallery of hi-res pics below.

And how does it drive?

So this is what happens from a 2-MPH start in a Bugatti Veyron when you floor it (in fact, it would have already happened by now. It’s that fast, and you haven’t even started reading about it):

Hit the gas. The car rockets forward. Immediately. Instantly. You’re going really fast. Like it decided to skip everything from 2-MPH to 40-MPH and just jumped straight to 41-MPH, didn’t pass go, didn’t collect $200.

That took maybe two seconds. Maybe.

And you’re not even doing anything yet.

Because while you were busy trying to figure out where those two seconds went and where this speed came from, the turbos were busy getting ready to come on stage –

And then they kick in –

And then forget about it.

No really, forget about it.

Sixty miles per hour comes in maybe another second.

And another second after that, hell, who knows how fast you’re going. And another second after that, I think time and space take on different properties. I think I became a rhombus.

And this is the PCH, remember. I only had room in my head for two thoughts:
1. I need to stay on Earth.
2. I need to not hit a telephone pole.

That’s it.

To buy or not to buy.. that is the 2.4M+ question.




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