Monday, March 28, 2011

Unclaimed Baggage Center: A Retail Store of Lost Luggage

Ever wondered what happens to lost airline baggage? It ends up in Scottsboro in Alabama, the United States at the Unclaimed Baggage Center. The store's concept of reselling of lost or unclaimed airline luggage has received national attention over the years, including mentions on the Oprah Winfrey Show, Late Night with David Letterman and the Today show.


At Unclaimed Baggage Center you can buy a lost $1000 Versace dress for $55, an Adidas jacket for $15, a tube of slightly used Japanese toothpaste for 50 cents, a $15,000 sapphire and diamond bracelet for $7500, gold wedding bands and pearl necklaces for half their value. Over a million customers visit the 50,000-square-foot store each year to browse through some of the 7,000 items added each day.
It all started in 1970, when an insurance salesman named H. Doyle Owens borrowed $300 and a pickup truck and bought a hundred or so bags left on Greyhound buses. He brought them back to Scottsboro, a town with a population of about 15,000, expecting to sell them off within a couple of weeks. He was surprised to find all the items were gone in just one day. For Owens it was just a part-time business until 1978. Now the Unclaimed Baggage Center covers an entire city block- 50,000 square feet and employs 110 workers.
Sixty percent of the items sold are clothing. All clothing is cleaned and pressed in one of the largest laundry facilities in the state. Racks and racks of clothes cover the main floor of the store. There are shelves of books, racks of CDs, baskets of Walkman's and inexpensive cameras, and a jewelry counter. Sporting goods line the wall on one end of the store. Unclaimed cargo fills a room on the other side.
"It’s like Christmas everyday," says Bryan Owens, Doyle Owens’ son who took over the operation in 1995. "People come again and again," said Owens, 43. "You can find a lot of practical merchandise here. But I think people really enjoy going through all the stuff and seeing what new treasures they can find. We have so many new items each day that people never know what they are going to discover."

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Doomsday Bunkers

 A devastating earthquake strikes Japan. A massive tsunami kills thousands. Fears of a nuclear meltdown run rampant. Bloodshed and violence escalate in Libya.

This is what you need to live if doomsday do really happened. The bunker is facilitated with radiation-protection tents, and nuclear, biological and chemical (NBC) air filters.

For an example, like the one build in Nebraska, it can house  950 people and its 37,000 square feet - bigger than Wal Mart -  and it can withstand 50 megaton blast. Once completed, it will boast four levels of individual suites, a medical and dental center, kitchens, bakery, prayer room, computer area, pool tables, pet kennels, a fully stocked wine cellar and a detention center to place anyone who turns violent.

How much does it cost per person?? $25000 

Friday, March 25, 2011

Strange Items Confiscated at Kennedy Airport, New York

Handbag, Louis Vuitton (disguised) (counterfeit)

Chicken feet (Avian Influenza/Newcastle Disease) (9CFR.94) (prohibited)

Bird corpse, labeled as home décor, Indonesia to Miami, Florida (prohibited)


Cow dung toothpaste, India (BSE, Foot and Mouth Disease) (9CFR.94.6) (prohibited)

Deer penis, Asian origin (9CFR.94) (prohibited)

Horse sausage, Eastern European origin (natural casings) (9CFR.94) (prohibited)



Next : Indian Tycoon, Gates and Buffet Philantropic Action


March 11, mark another step of Bill Gates and Warren Buffet action to spread words and urge Indian tycoon to give up some of their wealth to the impoverished people in their country.

Flashback,  Bill Gates and Warren Buffet have long ago committed to allocate their wealth to Bill and Melinda Foundation and also have been urging wealthy American to do the same thing too.
Just a few years ago, this duo started a mission to replicate of what they've done in America to the rest of the world.
Last September, they have visited China, however its initiative to spread charitable mission gives little success.
And now, in India, the other way around happened, just to mention a few:

1. Chairman G.M. Rao of GMR infrastructure group pledged $340 million toward education and vocational training.

2. Azim Premji (third Indian richest man), shifted shares worth about $1.95 billion in his software services giant Wipro Ltd. toward funding education for the poor.

3. India's second-richest man, Mukesh Ambani - known better for building a 27-story home than for his social vision - started a foundation in 2009, and his Reliance Industries pledged to double the foundation's initial $110 million endowment.



"Giving and making money have a lot of similarities" 
Bill Gates



Very Inspirative Advertisement

Here's an example of one advertisement made by Axe, Unilever, where this is an example of ads that creates involvement of their audience.


Augmented Reality

Researchers at Cambridge University have developed a cool augmented reality app calledPopcode. An update to the app recently made it available for iPhone 4 and Android, and the app is being featured at the University of Cambridge Science festival being held this week and next.
Before we say much about the app, take a look at a one-minute demonstration for yourself:

As an augmented reality application, Popcode's central innovation is that it's "markerless"; after unlocking the content by scanning the Popcode logo, additional content can be added onto just about anything. T-shirts seems to be a favorite of the team; here's another one:



Tuesday, March 15, 2011

The value behind the name TRUMP

As you know, Donald Trump, the most well known real-estate businessman have grow his brand "Trump" beyond his skyscrappers, casinos, clothing line, private jets and soon. I would rather said that I'm astonished and respect Donald Trump for his strategy in branding his name. Never in my mind imagining that a name of public figure being used, branding a U.S Treasury Bond. Read the full story here.

Saturday, March 5, 2011

How Facebook plans to bust up the SMS profit cartel


In acquiring Beluga, Mark Zuckerberg has set Facebook's sights on cell companies' most overpriced service: text messaging.



Under the cell phone industry's peculiar pricing system, downloading data to your smartphone is amazingly cheap—unless the data in question happens to be a text message. In that case the price of a download jumps roughly 50,000-fold, from just a few pennies per megabyte of data to a whopping $1000 or so per megabyte.
In that giant pricing gap, Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg spies opportunity.
Yesterday Facebook acquired Beluga, a nine-month old company that built a better and cheaper way to send text messages. Download the Beluga app to your smartphone and suddenly you can send texts to groups of people with one click, along with other handy tricks old-fashioned text messaging software can't handle. The cost of sending texts with this improved app: zero.


Wednesday, March 2, 2011

14 months in the making, 42 countries, and a cast of thousands, this is what it takes to gain 35 million views on YouTube. 

"A Very Fun Video to Watch"




Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Microsoft Wants You to Control Your Phone by Touching Yourself

    
Kinect's "using your body as a controller" feature was one of technology’s big hits last year--not only have users had fun dancing up a storm and racing cars with official Kinect games, but a whole community has emerged to dream up new and inventive ways of hacking the system that tracks 20 joints in your body.

  " Keyboards and mice are so '99. The interface of the future will be your own body."
  One of the projects they’re working on is "Skinput," a system that would allow you to control devices simply by hitting specific points on your arm. Not a device on your arm. Just your arm itself.


Read more : http://www.fastcompany.com/1732673/microsoft-skinput-hands-free-device-controllers

Is Buffet Betting On America? Or Just Its Exports


Leave it to Warren Buffet to be the biggest America bull. The legendary billionaire investor gave a pep talk on our country's prospects to investors in his annual shareholder's letter, arguing that the nation's “best days lie ahead” and pledged to pour record amounts of money into the US economy. He's already put his money where his mouth is. His $26.6 billion purchase of Burlington Northern Santa Fe railroads in late 2009 has worked out well, and Buffet says he'll spend $8 billion on other such deals this year.

But what, exactly, is Buffet buying? I'd argue that it's not so much the prospects of our country as a whole, but rather, the ability of our best companies to sell more and more of their goods and services overseas. Here's why:


Read more: http://curiouscapitalist.blogs.time.com/2011/02/28/is-buffet-betting-on-america-or-just-its-exports/#ixzz1FM9rMfpl

SMALL BUSINESS COMEBACKS

Nick Uresin, founder of Tuccini Corp.

 "When bad things happen, sit down and analyze. 
Don't look for a magic bullet,"


When in time of hard times hit the economy, it sure will affect all business from small scale to large scale businesses. Plunging sales, increasing cost, uncertainty of the future, problematic human resource and everything you can name it, sure will be the condition or atmosphere that you may be encounter during that time.

Every single decision made will be very crucial to the continuous of the company than the ordinary time. Any misstep made by the CEO or managers may put the company in the edge of hill.

Nick Uresin, the founder of Tuccini Corp shared about his experience in facing this kind of situation in 2008 financial crisis in the article below and I said " he has made a great decision."