“Project Jewel ” of Changi Airport Singapore …

Singapore’s Changi Airport is alreadyconsidered to be the world’s best airport. Soon, it will be even better thanks to a “lifestyle destination” addition to connect all three terminals.

Nicknamed Project Jewel, the addition will be a dome-shaped space that will house airport operations, indoor gardens, retail stores, and and hotel facilities.

Project Jewel

Changi Airport Group

Designed by the architect of Singapore’s iconic Marina Bay Sands hotel complex, Moshe Safdie, Project Jewel will bebuilt of glass and steel andshaped like a donut. It will be approximately 1.4 million square feet with five stories.

Project Jewel

Changi Airport Group

Project Jewel will connect the all three of Changi’s terminals via all-glass walkways, and will include green walls to offset the emissions from the planes overhead.

It is set to cost $1.47 billion and will be completed in 2018, according to AsiaOne.

Project Jewel

Changi Airport Group

“We are very excited about this opportunity to create at Changi Airport an iconic global attraction that will capture the hearts of both tourists and Singaporeans,” saidLee Seow Hiang, CAG’s Chief Executive Officer.

Project Jewel should be complete in 2018.

Source::: Business Insider .in

Natarajan

Can Malaysia Airlines’ Brand Survive ?

Can Malaysia Airlines’ brand survive?

Can Malaysia Airlines salvage its brand after MH370 and MH17

 tragedies?

Malaysian Airlines planes parked at the tarmac of Kuala Lumpur International Airport Pic:

Malaysian Airlines planes parked at the tarmac of Kuala Lumpur International Airport Pic: Roslan Rahman / AFP Source:AFP

MALAYSIA Airlines is in uncharted territory after the disappearance of Flight MH370 in March with 239 people aboard was followed by the downing of MH17 carrying 298 people over Ukraine.

Before the disasters the carrier had among the worst financial performance of any airline. An even bigger question mark now hangs over the future of Malaysia Airlines, with its brand tied to two almost unfathomable tragedies.

Some analysts say the state-owned airline won’t survive a year without a substantial cash injection from the Malaysian government.

A bailout would address the airline’s immediate financial problems but without far-reaching changes it could remain a burden on taxpayers and shrivel into regional obscurity.

Several experts give their views on the airline’s crisis.

 

A piece of the crashed Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 lies in the grass near the village of

A piece of the crashed Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 lies in the grass near the village of Hrabove, eastern Ukraine, Sunday, July 20, 2014. Pic: AP Evgeniy Maloletka. Source: AP

 

HOW BAD IS THE SITUATION FOR MALAYSIA AIRLINES?

Other airlines have come back from disasters but none have experienced two tragedies of such magnitude within the space of four months.

“There’s no historical precedent,” said Mohshin Aziz, aviation analyst at Maybank. “It’s completely not their fault, but right now if you ask any customers would they fly with Malaysia Airlines, they’d just have that negative sentiment of ‘I’d rather choose something else’.”

The airline was already losing about $1.6 million a day and has been in the red for the past three years. The disappearance of MH370 with many Chinese passengers on board also caused a backlash in the crucial Chinese market. Experts don’t see any short cuts to recovery.

“It cannot be a quick fix,” said Aziz. “So the second question is do they have the financial resources to survive a year, two years? And the answer is, unfortunately, no.”

 

Debris and objects scattered on the ground where MH17 fell from the sky.

Debris and objects scattered on the ground where MH17 fell from the sky. Source: Supplied

 

IS MALAYSIA AIRLINES TO BLAME?

The airline was blasted for its erratic response to the disappearance of Flight 370 en route to Beijing from Kuala Lumpur. Because the location of the plane was unknown, Malaysia Airlines had little meaningful information for the families of passengers. Communication of what information it did have was often mishandled, compounding the anguish of relatives.

The plane, believed to have crashed far off course in the southern reaches of the Indian Ocean, still hasn’t been found.

The fate this week of Flight 17, heading to Kuala Lumpur from Amsterdam, is far more clear-cut. It was shot out of the sky over an area of Ukraine controlled by pro-Russian separatist rebels.

“They are a victim this time, so it is very different from a situation where they have no answers,” said Caroline Sapriel, managing director of CS&A, a company that specialises in reputation management in crisis situations. “The whole world is going to be sympathetic to them.”

But another narrative questions why airlines continued to fly over the conflict zone. Some airlines were avoiding it, which involves taking a longer, fuel-guzzling route, but most were not. Malaysia Airlines may face more scrutiny about its risk-management decisions once the initial shock of the tragedy dissipates.

“It is unthinkable from a risk management point of view that the plane was flying where it was,” said Kuniyoshi Shirai, crisis management expert at A.C.E. Consulting.

“Their brand is going to suffer serious damage,” he said. “There is even a possibility the airline will go out of business.”

 

The search for MH370 continues. Pic: AFP/Greg Wood

The search for MH370 continues. Pic: AFP/Greg Wood Source: AFP

 

HOW SHOULD MALAYSIA AIRLINES HANDLE THE LATEST TRAGEDY?

Clear, consistent and compassionate communications are essential, experts say.

“I think their immediate response has been consistent and caring. They are communicating on Twitter and Facebook, they are definitely going out on the commercial media,” said Sapriel of CS&A. That’s important, she said, because “if they weren’t getting the immediate response right, then it just would be the nail in the coffin for them.”

Others say that being open and transparent, continuing to assist the families of passengers and crew members while also running a punctual and reliable business will help the airline build on the sympathy about its plight.

Malaysia Airlines “appears to have learnt lessons from its halting slowness to react to the MH370 tragedy and is already applying those lessons,” said aviation consultant Robert Mann.

 

A photograph of a young boy lies among tributes at the entrance to Schiphol Airport, whic

A photograph of a young boy lies among tributes at the entrance to Schiphol Airport, which has grown into a sea of flowers in memory of the victims of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17. Pic: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images Source: Getty Images

 

WHAT CAN THE AIRLINE DO TO REBUILD ITS BRAND?

The airline needs far-reaching changes.

“I think the Malaysian government is going to look at it eventually and say ‘Do we keep this same name or do we rebrand them?’ Maybe they will feel that they need a new name,” said Sapriel, the reputation management expert.

Because of its financial struggles, some analysts had advocated the sale of the state-owned airline to bring in fresh capital, ideas and expertise. Like all international airlines, Malaysia Airlines needs to renew its fleet with modern jets to be competitive, which requires substantial investment. Its capacity to make those investments is further compromised if travellers avoid the airline because of the disasters. But even a partial sale of the airline is unpopular with the airline’s union, the government and sections of the Malaysian public.

There are other ways it could make a break with the past, such as installing a new executive leadership.

“Malaysia needs to bring in a new CEO and head of flight operations to restore employee and consumer trust in the airline,” said travel consultant Henry Harteveldt of Atmosphere Research.

Beyond that, the carrier needs to demonstrate an absolute commitment to safety to overcome negative perceptions and rebuild confidence.

“You need an expert on risk management at the top, who has the power equal to a chief executive,” said Shirai, the crisis management executive.

“You have to change people’s consciousness. And while you’re doing all that, you have to keep the whole process transparent. Otherwise, you cannot regain the trust of either consumers or investors.”

 

Source::::news.com.au

Natarajan

Startup Lessons from Mahabharata….

 

The world is witnessing a startup revival, with many young entrepreneurs coming up with ideas and establishing themselves slowly in the business forum. Some of these startup initiatives are thriving, while others are failing and having to be shut down. This article is going to look at some startup strategies from one of the oldest books in India, which holds key to the belief of the Hindu society, the Mahabharata.

A short peek into the book, the Mahabharata is written around the battle between the Kauravs and the Pandvas. Now the Kauravs were the superior ones with a huge kingdom and an expansive army, whereas the Pandvas were without a kingdom to rule. As the story goes the five brothers defeat the Kauravs and go on to conquer the kingdom of the Kauravs.

So how was it done and how can it be applied to modern day startup initiatives in business? This we shall see by outlining certain principles followed by the Pandvas that the Kauravs forgot or were negligent about.

Strategy 1: Turn inevitable weaknesses to strength: Every human being has a weakness and this is a fact that can’t be ignored because it is bound to surface along the way. From the book of “Mahabharata”, the Pandvas understood each other’s weakness; they were able to support that weakness through their strength. They had a less superior army, no fort to hide behind, no king, and no home. So the Pandvas would be any startup initiates in modern day business.

Understand the fact that you have shortage of money, resource, and contacts. So work out a way to save and spend cost effectively, build contacts at every given opportunity and use the resources best available to you. The other advantage is that since experience is something you don’t possess at the start, learning will be very vital.
Strategy 2: Choose the right team: When we look at the administrative composition of the two parties, we find that one was united and the other had individual agenda. The Kauravs were split in their camp, with no common goal. Some of them secretly helped the Pandvas, others didn’t want to kill them but just capture them whereas Karna, who is believed to be a brother of the Pandvas only wanted to kill Arjuna out of hate and jealousy.

On the other hand, Pandvas were united from the start with utter respect for one another and one ultimate goal—to get their kingdom back.

When this is applied to startup enthusiasts, make sure that the team you choose has an ultimate goal. Choose people whom you trust, who are responsible and especially those who are not secretly plotting to destroy you.

As a leader do not dictate, give your team freedom to explore and innovate, and above never ever criticize their mistakes, and instead show them how to rectify it. Make sure that the whole team is doing what they love because this will drive them and remember that businesses don’t fail but people fail.
Strategy 3: Draw a battle plan through experience: The Pandvas were preparing for a battle that could be the end of their clan. . Instead each of them went out in search of a way to strengthen their battle plans individually at the start and then collectively after having been influenced by Krishna for Arjuna, Hanuman for Bheema, and Yudhistira learned from wise Rishis. Later they shared their strengths and had a concrete plan.

Ego is a very powerful weapon for self destruction. The Kauravs had a huge one and that backfired on them.

So in a startup, take the advice given to you by successful entrepreneurs. Learn from their mistakes lest you make bigger ones yourself. It is understood that the company is yours but build it with the foundation of wisdom and knowledge of elders and build on it with the creative, innovative and aggressive idea of yours. Think of what can go wrong at the start so that you can alter that on coming mistake.
Strategy 4: Take smart risks and exploit weaknesses of the enemy: Before the war, there is a small portion where Yudhishtira is seen venturing into the enemy camp to talk to the elders of the Kauravs. He eventually learns of the battle plans and also takes the time to give the people the chance to shift sides. This was a dangerous move to have gone alone in to enemy territory and to make public his presence. Yet it was a risk he was willing to take.

How does this apply to modern day startup businesses? Well firstly know when and how much of a risk to take. Don’t be a fool and take unreasonable risks because it’s not yourself you are harming alone but those who have trusted you with their life.

Be the inspiration for those that you are responsible over, counsel and teach them. Be a source of strength for them and learn to exploit your enemy’s weakness. Businesses today are much like war; the ones who are willing to risk and commit to it fully will win.

No businesses thrived from half hearted commitments and self gains. Remember that when competitions become unwise and personal, it becomes politics and most of the time it is negative.

 

Strategy 5: Women Are Integral, Empower Them: The kauravs had no women in their camp that they listened to. Even karna when meeting his mother was not willing to listen to what she had to say. Gandhari, Drona or any other women were included in the decision making process. On the other hand the Pandvas respected the women in their lives and took heed to what they have to say. Kunti was their supreme leader, and the men respected the influence of their mothers who had borne and raised them up.

Now how does this apply to startup companies? Well let us look at the characteristics of men; we are aggressive, dominant and competitive. These qualities are good but only to an extent. This is why you need the harmonious, calm and calculative qualities of women.

Is it that women should lead your team and you follow? No, but give them the space to have a say with how the business runs because they are better with looking at things more practically and decisively. They will stop you when you are hasty. They bring balance to the team that will be evident in the end.

Source::::silicon india  site

Natarajan

India Building World”s Highest Rail Bridge …35 Metres Taller than Eiffel Tower !!!

India Building World's Highest Railway Bridge

In this photograph taken on July 5, 2014, the Salal Hydro Power project dam on India’s Chenab river is seen in Riasi.

Kauri:  Indian engineers are toiling in the Himalayas to build the world’s highest railway bridge which is expected to be 35 metres taller than the Eiffel Tower when completed by 2016.

The arch-shaped steel structure is being constructed over the Chenab River to link sections of the spectacular mountainous region of India’s northern Jammu and Kashmir state.

The bridge is expected to be 359 metres (1,177 feet) high when completed — surpassing the world’s current tallest railway bridge over the Beipanjiang River in China’s Guizhou province, which stands at 275 metres high.

“It is an engineering marvel. We hope to get this bridge ready by December 2016,” a senior Indian Railways official told AFP.

“The design would ensure that it withstands seismic activities and high wind speeds,” he said Wednesday.

Work on the bridge started in 2002 but safety and feasibility concerns, including the area’s strong winds, saw the project halted in 2008 before being green-lighted again two years later.

The estimated cost of the project, which is being handled by Konkan Railway Corporation, a subsidiary of state-owned Indian Railways, is $92 million.

The bridge will connect Baramulla to Jammu in the Himalayan state with a travel time of six-and-a-half hours, almost half the time it currently takes.

The main arch is being erected using two cable cranes attached on either side of the river which are secured on enormous steel pylons, according to engineers of the project.

The 1,315-metre long bridge will use up to 25,000 tonnes of steel with some material being transported by helicopters due to the tough terrain, they said.

“One of the biggest challenges involved was constructing the bridge without obstructing the flow of the river,” the railways official said.

“Approach roads had to be constructed to reach the foundations of the bridge,” he added

 

Source:::: NDTV .com

Natarajan

Message For the Day…” Inner Purity is the Greatest Wealth One Can Acquire…”

Only by the light of the Divine lamp inside can  blossom  you as a worthwhile person. Inner purity is the greatest wealth that one can acquire; it is the wick in the container of the heart. Devotion is the oil and Divine Grace is the fire with which the lamp of wisdom can be lit. The prime requisite for achieving Divine Grace is to have harmony in thought, word and deed.

 

Stunning Aerial Photos of Brazil”s Soccer Fields …

 

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via The Creators Project

 

 

The community surrounding ‘The Beautiful Game’ is huge, and is a unifying force for countries all over the world. All that soccer requires is a ball, a couple goals, and some players—that’s part of what makes it so brilliant.

As many cities in the World Cup’s current home country are occupied by the most famous soccer players in the world, Brazilian photographer and journalist Renato Stockler’s photo essay Terrão de Cima captures the pure democratic essence and simplicity of the soccer fields ensconced in Sao Paulo neighborhoods.

Stockler says in the project’s description that the fields he photographs, “Are a breath for the hard daily life of those who live in the outskirts of Sao Paulo. These fields show the urgency for public and communal places to practice sports, a portrait of those who fight for leisure in a city as Sao Paulo.”

The reddish dirt and uneven patches of grass that make up most of the fields are a harsh contrast to the soft greens that soccer fans are accustomed to watching. All the same, Stockler says that when the hard day’s work is at an end, it’s easy to find tight knit communities of players, friends, and family gathered around the sparse field to blow off steam.

Terrão de Cima, which loosely translates to, “The Ground from Above,” is a love letter to the rugged fields of Stockler’s home, which are fast disappearing due to land speculation.

Aerial photography is the perfect medium for the task, since it shows the incredible variance in color, shape, and texture of local soccer fields, yet also captures the players as a single unit—a culture, rather than just a bunch of people. We’re still not sure we’d want to slide tackle anyone on these fields, but we’re more than ok with ogling them from above.

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via The Creators Project

 

 

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via The Creators Project

 

 

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via The Creators Project

 

 

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via The Creators Project

 

 

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via The Creators Project

 

 

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via The Creators Project

 

 

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via The Creators

Source:::: Business Insider .com

Natarajan

Read more: http://thecreatorsproject.vice.com/blog/see-the-soccer-fields-of-brazilian-favelas-from-up-in-the-clouds#ixzz36RuRAOD2

Simple Story With a Strong Message… Gold Coins !!!

 

 

AKBAR’S GOLD COINS

This Akbar – Birbal story is just one of the many stories, which are an integral part of rich Indian heritage.

The wisdom of Birbal was unparalleled during the reign of Emperor Akbar. But Akbar’s brother in law was extremely jealous of him. He asked the Emperor to dispense with Birbal’s services and appoint him in his place. He gave ample assurance that he would prove to be more efficient and capable than Birbal. Before Akbar could take a decision on this matter, this news reached Birbal.

Birbal resigned and left. Akbar’s brother in law was made the minister in place of Birbal. Akbar decided to test the new minister. He gave three hundred gold coins to him and said, “Spend these gold coins such that, I get a hundred gold coins here in this life; a hundred gold coins in the other world and another hundred gold coins neither here nor there.”

The minister found the entire situation to be a maze of confusion and hopelessness. He spent sleepless nights worrying over how he would get himself out of this mess. Thinking in circles was making him go crazy. Eventually, on the advice of his wife he sought Birbal’s help. Birbal said, “Just give me the gold cons. I shall handle the rest.”

Birbal walked the streets of the city holding the bag of gold coins in his hand. He noticed a rich merchant celebrating his son’s wedding. Birbal gave a hundred gold coins to him and bowed courteously saying, “The Emperor Akbar sends you his good wishes and blessings for the wedding of your son. Please accept the gift he has sent.” The merchant felt honoured that the king had sent a special messenger with such a precious gift. He honoured Birbal and gave him a large number of expensive gifts and a bag of gold coins as a return gift for the king.

Next, Birbal went to the area of the city were the poor people lived. There he bought food and clothing in exchange for a hundred gold coins and distributed them in the name of the Emperor.

When he came back to town he organized a concert of music and dance. He spent a hundred gold coins on it.

The next day Birbal entered Akbar’s darbar and announced that he had done all that the king had asked his brother-in-law to do. The Emperor waited to know how he had done it. Birbal repeated the sequences of all the events and then said, “The money I gave to the merchant for the wedding of his son – you have got back while on this earth. The money I spent on buying food and clothing for the poor – you will get it in the other world. The money I spent on the musical concert – you will get neither here nor there.”

The Moral:-

This is true even today.

The money you spend on friends is returned or reciprocated in some form or the other.
Money spent on charity gets converted into blessings from God which becomes your eternal property.
Money spent on pleasures is just frittered away!

So when you spend money, think a little, if not a lot!

Source::::unknown… Input From a Friend of mine

Natarajan

” ட்விட்ட ரை வாங்க முயன்ற ஃபேஸ் புக் …” !!!

இணைய உலகின் மிகப்பெரிய செய்தியாக அது இருந்திருக்கும். சமூக ஊடக வெளியில் தலைகீழ் மாற்றத்தையும் அது ஏற்படுத்தியிருக்க கூடும். ஆனால், அந்தச் செய்தி நிஜமாகும் வாய்ப்பில்லாமல் போனது பற்றி இப்போது சுவாரஸ்யமான தகவல் வெளியாகியுள்ளது.

குறும்பதிவு சேவையான ட்விட்டரை சமூக வலைப்பின்னல் சேவையான ஃபேஸ்புக் வாங்க முற்பட்ட செய்திதான் அது. சில ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன் இந்த கோரிக்கையுடன் ஃபேஸ்புக் தங்களை அணுகியதாகவும், ஆனால் அதை ஏற்காமல் நிராகரித்துவிட்டதாகவும் ட்விட்டர் இணை நிறுவனரான பிஸ் ஸ்டோன் பேட்டி ஒன்றில் கூறியுள்ளார்.

சமூக ஊடகங்களின் இரு தூண்கள் என்று சொல்லப்படக் கூடிய வகையில் ஃபேஸ்புக்கும் ட்விட்டரும் பிரபலமாகி இருக்கின்றன. இரு நிறுவனங்களுமே பங்குச்சந்தையில் நுழைந்திருக்கின்றன. இரு நிறுவனங்களுமே வளர்ச்சி பாதையிலும் அதற்கான வழிகளிலும் கவனம் செலுத்தி வருகின்றன.

குறிப்பாக பேஸ்புக் எதிர்கால கணக்குகளுடன் புதிய வசதிகளை அறிமுகம் செய்து வருவதுடன் தனக்கு வலு சேர்க்ககூடிய இணைய நிறுவனங்களையும் செயலிகளையும் (ஆப்ஸ்) கையகப்படுத்தி வருகிறது.

இளைய தலைமுறையை கவர்ந்த வாட்ஸ் அப் செயலியை ஃபேஸ்புக் வாங்கியதும், அதனைத் தொடர்ந்து மெய்நிகர் சேவையான ஆக்குலஸ் ரிஃப்ட் நிறுவனத்தை ஃபேஸ்புக் வாங்கியதும் இணைய உலகில் பரபரப்பை ஏற்படுத்தியது நினைவிருக்கலாம். இடையே, தானாக அழையும் செய்திகளை அனுப்ப உதவும் ஸ்னேப்சேட் செயலியை ஃபேஸ்புக் வாங்க முற்பட்டதும், அதற்கு 3 பில்லியன் டாலர் தருவதாக கூறியும் கூட ஸ்னேப்சேட் அதை ஏற்க மறுத்ததும் இணைய உலகில் வியப்புடன் பேசப்பட்டது.

இதற்கு சில ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன்னரே ஃபேஸ்புக், குறும்பதிவு சேவையான ட்விட்டரை விலைக்கு வாங்க முயன்றிருக்கிறது. இந்த தகவலை ட்விட்டர் இணை நிறுனரான பிச் ஸ்டோன், ஸ்கை நியூஸ் பேட்டியில் கூறியுள்ளார்.

ஃபேஸ்புக் நிறுவனர் மார்க் ஜக்கர்பர்கே தொடர்பு கொண்டு ட்விட்டரை வாங்க விரும்புவதாக கூறியதாகவும், உடனே மனம் போன போக்கில் 500 மில்லியன் டாலர் விலை சொன்னதாகவும் ஸ்டோன் தெரிவித்துள்ளார்.

இந்த விலையை கேட்டு ஜக்கர்பர்க் தானாக விலகி விடுவார் என எதிர்பார்த்ததற்கு மாறாக, அவர் அந்த விலையை தர தயாராக இருப்பதாக மறு நாள் கூறிய போது ட்விட்டர் நிறுவனர்கள் ஸ்டோன் மற்றும் இவான் வில்லியம்ஸ் அதிர்ச்சியும் ஆச்சர்யமும் அடைந்திருக்கின்றனர். ஆனால், நிறுவனம் வளரும் நிலையில் தான் உள்ளது எனக் கூறி ஜக்கர்பர்க் கோரிக்கையை நிராகரித்து விட்டனர்.

இன்று ட்விட்டரின் மதிப்பு. 23 பில்லியன் டாலர். ஃபேஸ்புக், ட்விட்டரை ஏன் வாங்க முற்பட்டது, ட்விட்டர் ஏன் அதை நிராகத்தது என்பவை சுவாரஸ்யமான கேள்விகள். ஆனால், இணைய உலகை பொருத்தவரை ட்விட்டர், ஃபேஸ்புக் வசமாகாமல் தனித்து நின்றிருப்பது தான் நல்லது எனத் தோன்றுகிறது.

சைபர்சிம்மனின் வலைத்தளம் http://cybersimman.wordpress.com/

Source::: The Hindu… Tamil

Natarajan

People Invested $1Million in App that Just Says ” Yo” !!!

 

yo2

It only took 8 hours to build the app, and the only thing it does is allow you to send the word ‘Yo’ to your friends. To many, it seems like a joke. But its inventor, Or Arbel, is totally serious.

Arbel, who built the app three months ago, has quit his job and moved halfway around the world — from his native Israel to San Francisco — to work on Yo full time. He’s opening an office, hiring staff and seeking “strategic partners.” And oh yeah: He’s already raised $1 million from investors.

So is Arbel right? Is Yo, which he calls “context-based communications,” the future of messaging? Or is investor interest in Yo an unmistakable sign that we are in the midst of another internet bubble?

Yo is a very simple app. It allows you to send a push notification to anyone else with the app. All of those notifications say the same thing: “Yo.” Arbel says that “you usually understand what the Yo means based on who you get it from and when you get it.” According to Arbel, once you start using Yo “the way it affects your life is profound.” He noted that many of the reviews of Yo in the app store say things like “Yo changed my life.”

Some of these reviews, however, do seem a bit sarcastic: “Not just a means of simple but effective communication, Yo is a way of life,” one review says. “Since downloading Yo, all my relationships have improved and I’ve regrown most of my hair.”

Yo was launched in the App Store on April Fool’s Day of this year. (It was initially rejected by Apple because they thought the App wasn’t finished yet.) It took off when tech evangelist Robert Scoble called it “the stupidest but most addicting app ever.” Thus far, it has attracted over 50,000 users who have sent about 4 million Yos. It’s particularly popular among other start-ups like Kickstarter and Four Square. Once it gets into an office, Arbel says, “it goes viral.”

Why not just send the word “Yo” using an existing messaging app? Arbel says the primary benefit is efficiency. With WhatsApp, an extremely popular messaging app that allows you to send words of your choosing, it takes 11 taps to send a Yo. With the Yo app, it only takes two taps.

The comparison to WhatsApp also may point to Arbel’s larger strategy. In February, Facebook acquired WhatsApp for $19 billion, even though the company’s revenue is negligible. Arbel says that anyone who uses WhatsApp will also want Yo. If Arbel can grow Yo into something a larger company believes is even 1 percent as valuable as WhatsApp, that’s still $190 million.

Some analysts believe the WhatsApp sale and the flood of venture capital seeking out the next big thing represents a new tech bubble. Hedge fund manager David Einhorn, speaking to the Los Angeles Times recently, said “[t]here is a clear consensus that we are witnessing our second tech bubble in 15 years. What is uncertain is how much further the bubble can expand, and what might pop it.”

During the last tech bubble, in 2000, the Nasdaq Index — which features many technology stocks — lost nearly 80 percent of its value and “Silicon Valley saw 200,000 jobs evaporate overnight.” In the first quarter of 2014 “venture capitalists invested $9.5 billion in 951 U.S. companies,” a level not seen since the last bust.

Many people within the tech industry, however, remain bullish. The internet is much more mature than at the turn of the century, the smartphone plays a central role in modern life, and people much more willing to spend money to enhance their online experience.

So how do you convince investors that there is money to be made in the Yo-delivery business? Arbel is working on developing an API that will allow him to “partner with brands.” In our Yo-enhanced future you would get Yos from “things that interest you.” When the Gap has a sale, for example, it would send you a Yo. When your friend’s plane lands, Delta will send you a Yo. Arbel is particularly excited about the prospect of getting a Yo into Starbucks. When your order is ready, Starbucks could send you a Yo.

“Shouting your name is old fashioned,” he says.

The first $1 million has come from group of investors associated with Moshe Hogeg, the CEO a social network similar to Instagram, Mobli, where Arbel worked for two years. (He initially created the app at the request of Hogeg, who wanted an easy want to tell his personal assistant he needed to talk to her.) Arbel said he’d like to raise some more money from “strategic partners.”

One thing that Arbel won’t be doing is adding more features. He believes that simplicity is the key to its success. (There are some hidden features, or “Easter eggs,” in the app. You can double tap someone’s name to send a “YoYo.” And adding a plus sign between usernames sends Yos to a group.) The simplicity also provides some benefits to users. Unlike most other messaging apps, Yo doesn’t collect any personal information from users. In comparison to photo messaging apps like SnapChat, it’s hard for kids to get into trouble using Yo. You cannot sext on it.

“We do have some users who don’t get it and think it’s a joke,” Arbel admits. He thinks that even if users initially download the app because they think its funny, they’ll keep using it because it will “change their everyday life.” He describes the perception of Yo as a joke as a “problem we need to solve.”

The larger problem is whether an economy built on seven-figure investments in Apps like Yo is sustainable. If Arbel can convince sophisticated investors that Yo already merits a $1 million investment, maybe he is onto something. Or maybe the potential of Yo is not in the product itself, but on the ability in a frenzied marketplace to quickly flip Yo to another company for a profit and move onto the next app. It was too many of those kinds of transactions — divorced from revenue or value of the consumer — that caused the entire system to crash at the turn of the century.

Where does Yo fit into this equation? We’ll need to wait and see. Until then, Arbel has been waiting for a Yo when this piece gets published.

Source:::: thinkprogress.org

Natarajan

Cool … Cool … Ice Cream !!!

 

Amazing Things You Never Knew about Ice Cream.

When I think about summer, one of the first things that come to my mind is the way our family used to eat ice cream on the weekends. Something about this delicious dessert always makes us feel better, and it’s a well known “cure” for a hard day. It was really surprising for me to find out just how many things about this simple delight are attributed to luck and chance. I’m sure you too will be amazed to find out all of these incredible facts about ice cream:
The idea for chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream came from an anonymous suggestion on a board in a Burlington shop of Ben & Jerry’s. The flavor went into production in 1991 and became a huge success.
ice cream
The sundae was invented by soda shops in the late 1890s and there is much debate about the true origin and meaning of the name. It might come from a belief that a special treat such as sundae is usually eaten on special day, such as Sunday. Another possible origin is the German word Sünde, meaning sin, alluding to the calorie rich nature of a sundae.
ice cream
When you see pictures of ice cream on advertisements or on display cabinets it’s most likely mashed potatoes.  Food photographers often use this as a stand-in for actual ice cream since it looks the same, but is much easier to shape.
ice cream
The first known ice cream recipe was found in the recipe book of Lady Anne Fanshawe. It is dated at 1665 and shows it was flavored with orange flower water, mace and other bizarre additions.
ice cream
The first versions of Neapolitan ice cream were made of green pistachio, white vanilla, and red cherry ice cream, the same colors as the Italian flag. Today the flavors have changed to vanilla, chocolate, and strawberry, because those are the three most popular flavors in the market.
ice cream
A “brain freeze”, or a “ice cream headache” happens when the nerve endings on the roof of your mouth touch anything too cold. When that happens they send a message to your brain signaling a loss of body heat. The blood vessels in your brain contract in response to that and when they return to their normal size, the blood rushes back to your head. Knowing this won’t make your head hurt any less, but at least now you know why it hurts…
Some the most popular ice cream flavors of the colonial era in the United States were oyster, parmesan, and asparagus. Luckily they have been replaced by vanilla, strawberry and chocolate.
ice cream
Chocolate ice cream is much older than vanilla, the first documented recipe for it appeared in the book The Modern Steward, published in Italy during 1692. Not only was vanilla much later invented, but it was also much less popular since vanilla was very expansive.
ice cream
Professional ice cream taste-testers (yes It’s a real job) use special gold spoons to test each new dish. Gold dishes leave virtually no trace of flavor which allow the tester to taste the product with no trace from what was last on the spoon.
ice cream
Ever wondered why Ben & Jerry’s ice cream flavors are so full of chunky mix-ins and extra everything? Well it turns out that co-founder Ben Cohen has no sense of scent. He therefore gets a lot of his pleasure in ice cream from its texture. After some early tasting sessions Ben & Jerry’s decided this wasn’t a bad idea at all, and we should all be thankful about that!
ice cream
This is the biggest ice cream dish in the UK, it takes two hours to make and it includes 99 scoops of ice cream. This sugar monster weighs around 9lb (4kg) and contains more than  21,000 calories.
The waffle cone was created by simple chance when Abe Doumar, a traveling salesman, was working at the 1904 World’s Fair in St. Louis. He saw that an ice cream vendor ran out of paper dishes and encouraged him to start serving on rolled waffles made by another nearby vendor.
The most important ingredients in ice cream are milk, sugar and… Air. Without air mixed in, ice cream would be as hard as a rock and not much different then flavored ice.
The Frrrozen Haute Chocolate ice cream sundae is the most expansive dessert in the world according to the Guinness Book of Records. It’s made using a blend of 28 cocoas, including 14 of the world’s most expensive, 5g (0.17 oz) of edible 23-karat gold, and a gold spoon decorated with white and chocolate-colored diamonds, which you can take home with you. The price for all of this goodness? 25,000$ US.

Source: Bill J. in ba-ba mail site

Natarajan