Wednesday, August 29, 2007

DialAFlight.com

If you are thinking of booking flights to Australia or spending your school holidays in Australia, why not give DialAFlight a try?

DialAFlight is filled with some Cheap Flights and Incredible Holiday Offers! For example, on the top right hand corner of the site, you will find that you can stay at the Serpent Hostel for only £24! If you doubt the quality or question the comfort of a 1 star hotel, you can just scroll down the list as the offers are arranged according to the number of (hotel related) stars.

Hmmm... Again, I'm itching to recommend some improvements to the site. I know this is a UK-based company, but why should everything be displayed in "£"? If the target audience is that of an international one, I recommend that the website implement a function which would allow its users to change the currency of the displayed prices. The available currencies should at the very least include the countries being featured on the website.

Another laudable feature of the site is the ability to hire a vehicle, and it offers a different set of wheels for different states of Australia. Hmmm... £144 for a one-week drive of the Hyundai Getz in Cairns - That's not bad!

Lastly, if you accept DialAFlight's bundle offer of booking both a Flight as well as a Hotel stay, you get to enjoy a preferential rate! However, as to how "preferential" this rate will be, you gotta call/phone/dial them to find out!

Sunday, August 26, 2007

15-year-old clinches S$17,000 in online sales!



15-year-old clinches S$17,000 in online sales within a month
Source: channelnewsasia.com

He sold $16,800 worth of electronic gadgets — mainly iPods and mobile phones — simply by monitoring eBay transactions and offering them below the prevailing prices.

He did this within just one month. And oh, Sanchit Bareja is 15 years old.

With entrepreneurship no longer just the domain of adults, the NUS High School student is one of many youths who are jumping into the business world — and out-doing them.

For Sanchit, it is simply a game of keen observation and good timing. (aC: At least he's honest about it. I don't see how he could have won an entreprenuership competition with such a concept. If you are talking about a competition titled Highest eBay S'pore Sales Volume in 2 weeks, then my hat's off him... But Entrepreneurship??)

“I have always known this shop along Race Course Road, which sold electronic goods cheaply,” said Sanchit, whose businessman father inspired his interest in entrepreneurship.

“Nowadays, you see a lot of youngsters buying new phones every three months, and I think the iPod has been quite a success as well, which is why I concentrated on these two items.”

Going by his eBay moniker Laptopnextdoor, he monitored the bids for these items and offered them at cheaper prices. (aC: Well, a skillset necessary for day trading, so we in fact have a day trader in the making!)

“I had to do so as I do not own a shop, and also, I’ve not built up a reputation for myself yet,” Sanchit said. “If customers could get a similar bargain from Sim Lim, why would they buy it from a young, unreliable and inexperienced guy like me?”

He did not reveal his profits. (aC: I did a search on eBay and this is what I found: Mr laptopnextdoor is selling the Nokia E65 for $630, iPods Shuffle 1GB for $130 and iPod nano 2GB for $225; I can't reasonably estimte his profits w/o a good grasp of the product costs.)

Sanchit’s business idea was part of the annual Enterprise Day Forum, a nationwide ebusiness competition where students from primary schools to tertiary institutions developed business plans and competed for sales on eBay. The competition was held two weekends ago, and saw some 200 students participate. His outstanding sales figure earned him the top prize of $1,500 in the non-tertiary category.

He also earned himself an endorsement from Minister of State for Trade and Industry Lee Yi Shyan, who said: “I understand from eBay that some 4,000 Singaporeans sell on eBay. And every hour, a Singaporean sells 300 MP3 players and 27 watches to the world. Imagine if this continues, what will happen to the watch retailing industry? Clearly this tells us that business models are changing.”

Mr Lee added: “The 15-year-old is arbitraging differences in price and product knowledge. (aC: There's just a every chim or profound way of saying: "he monitored the bids for these items and offered them at cheaper prices.") If he represents a new generation of entrepreneurs, then imagine the impact on existing physical stores.”

Indeed, competitions like these are springing up regularly. Another such contest — the ninth annual Youth Entrepreneurship Challenge — attracted 79 teams from 46 secondary schools recently.

Organised by Singapore Polytechnic’s School of Business, the competition reported interesting and more importantly, highly feasible proposals, including convertible high heels for ladies and a voltage-cum-ampere indicator for car batteries.

“We came up with the idea of constructing an ultra slim backup battery that is not as bulky as conventional ones, as well as an indicator which alerts drivers when their battery current and voltage is running low,” said Dunman Secondary School student Iris Tan, a member of the winning team.

It may be some time before these student entrepreneurs change the dynamics of the business world — but current statistics do show that more Singaporeans are starting their own business.

Results from the Start-Up Enterprise study — commissioned by credit and business information bureau DP Information Group — reflects a positive entrepreneurship trend in Singapore, with about 43,000 new companies and businesses established in 2005 — an all-time high.

-End of Article-

aC: My question is - How is selling something on eBay a newly developed business model? Isn't that eBay's business model? So he won because he acquired the most revenue? Makes me wonder what the rules of the Enterprise Day Forum are...

According to ACE which organises the competition, the participants are judged on the creativity and sustainability of their business plan, as well as the popularity of their webpage and sales volume. So, if you are curious like me, here is a breakdown of the judging criteria:

Target Market & Marketing Plan - 20%
Innovation & Creativity - 10%
Business Sustainability and Scalability - 10%
Effectiveness - 20% (This is based on the sales volume and the number of ‘views’ generated by listings/auction listing design from 14 May 2007 to 1 July 2007 (both dates inclusive). All you have to do is to sell more items on any eBay sites and achieve higher growth in eBay GMV or listing counts than other participating students with your account for the duration of this Contest.)


Unique Positive Feedback Score - 10%
About Me Page & Blogging - 10%
Bonus Points - 20% (Bonus point will be awarded to participants who take up a charity/social enterprise, offer Paypal as mode of payment and list internationally)


Thursday, August 23, 2007

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Fold your shirt in 2 seconds!


2 Second T-Shirt Fold!! - Watch more funny videos here

The above video is one of the more popular online videos that has been circulating around the Internet.

There's one drawback to this whole 2 second folding time saving thing though - It doesn't take into account the time taken needed to lay out the shirt neatly on a flat surface prior to the fold; That itself took longer than just 2 seconds...

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Website Review

Merchant Circle is basically an online business which offers the following services for 2 types of businesses:

(1) For Online Businesses - Merchant Circle helps to create awareness, increase traffic and basically handles the online marketing aspects (including ATL promos) of the business.

(2) For Offline Businesses - Merchant Circle helps to create an online element to one's existing physical shop/office/company.

There are basically 3 Plans that a Business Owner can choose from:

(1) Free
Package includes Pictures & Video Upload, Coupon creation, Ad on Merchant
Circle network and Blog creation; I think this is sufficient for those businesses that currently do not have an online presence. For those businesses that already have an online presence, you might find this Free package pretty useless and you should consider the next one.

(2) Gold ($29.95/mth)
Package includes the following:-
(i)Ads on Google & Yahoo search engines - Create up to 1 rotating ad per month
(ii) Management of online reputation - Monitor and control what's being said about your company
(iii) Increase business's visibility in nearby cities - Add 2 additional cities (service areas) where customers can find you when searching for products and services
(iv) Premium customer support

I think 2(i) and 2(ii) are useful tools to have, especially the latter. This is because this tool will probably allow you to gather customer feedback about your company's products or services, and thus allowing you to improve/enhance your products and services.

I have no idea what 2(iii) does, and I was also not able to find any information on this from the website.

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Orlando

For page loading efficiency, I have moved this post to:-

http://a-bstraction.blogspot.com/2007/08/orlando.html

Friday, August 10, 2007

Movie Review - Transformers

It's visually stunning... but where's the plot??

Wonder why they are bringing all the 1980s toys and cartoons to the big screen. First you have Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles ("TMNT"), then Transformers and next, we are going to have the Simpsons... But come to think of it, is it because there are no other toys to feature in the first place? I mean, do you know any iconic toys from the 90's or after year 2000? (Pls, pls, PLS do not mention the Teletubbies... The mere thought sickens me...)

Anyway, here's my review of the Transformers

The Good
Great "Transformation" special effects!
Bumble Bee has better acting chops and conveys more emotions than the human actors. (And he beats them hands down by hardly talking for 99% of the film)

The Bad
One of the worst plots ever.
One of the worst ending ever.
Ultimas Prime behaves like a wussy.
Can hardly differentiate one Autobot from the Decepticon.
Lousy acting from all human characters.
What's with the batman trademark move? (The "lighted symbol shining into the nightsky" thing)
Can't see why they keep promoting Shia Labeouf as Hollywood's "Next Big Thing".

The Verdict
Go watch the original cartoons or the 1987 animated movie; They are much better. I literally shudder at the thought of another Transforers Movie by Michael Bay, as the ending seems to hint...

Well... As Ultimus Prime would say: "Autobots... Fall out..."

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

Don't be arrogant, Google

Honest to goodness, I wanted to post a blog with the above title for sometime now, but the article below beat me to it.

But allow me to qualify first, what I wanted to say weeks ago has nothing to do with the article below. A few weeks back, I was an Adsense Publisher, but I was shut down by Google, without any prior warning that they would do so, because they suspected "invalid clicks". I was really pissed off at that time because I had qualified for their minimum payout of US$100 after 4 months of displaying their ads. Questions raced through my mind: "Is Google shutting me down because they do not want to pay me?? Would a Company that is earning billions in Revenue do that?? If they really suspected "invalid clicks", why didn't they shut me down earlier (i.e. 1,2 or even 3 months back)? Why shut me down only when I am due for payment at the end of the month?? This is ridiculous.

So, I emailed Google asking for an explanation. I requested to view their data logs to verify that the clicks I have received are "invalid". Here is my email:

Hi,

Pls send me a detailed breakdown of all the clicks for my site. Isn't it true that Google has a way of filtering valid clicks from those that are invalid? Isn't the publisher already not paid on days when invalid clicks were suspected? So shouldn't only valid clicks be recorded in my Adsense report?

I do not appreciate my account being deactivated esp. when payment is due to me at the end of this month. My account could have been deactivated earlier if invalid clicks were indeed suspected, but this deactivation just 2 weeks before I am due to receive payment makes me wonder if Google has had the intention of not paying me all along, and has set me up to publish its ads for free.

Regards,
aC


Below is Google's standard reply:-

Hello aC,

Thank you for your email.

As you know, Google treats instances of invalidclicks very seriously. By disabling your account, we feel that we have taken the necessary measures to ensure that invalid clicks will not continue to occur on your site. Due to the proprietary nature of our monitoring system , we are not able to disclose any specific details of these clicks. As previously noted, if you would like to appeal the disabling of youraccount, please contact us only through this form:http://www.google.com/support/adsense/bin/request.py?contact=invalid_clicks_appeal&hl=en_GB

Sincerely,

The Google AdSense Team

"proprietary nature of our monitoring system" - Ha! How convenient!

No one is asking to look at the source code of your Adsense program, I just wanted to look at the (audited) logs to verify that "invalid clicks" were indeed present. I subsequently appealed against this disabling of account but it was to no avail. In their last reply, Google said they will not entertain any more requests.

In such situations, what kind of recourse can the little guy take against a conglomerate? It seems like Google has the final say (in everything internet related), and we can do nothing else but accept its decision. If you are so sure that you are right, you should come clean and be transparent in your records. Prove your case to us instead of just simply mandating your decision upon us and expect us to accept them, knowing full well there isn't any alternatives for us, the little guys.

Will that stop this little guy from putting up Ads on my Blog? No way. So, don't be so arrogant Google. If you do not want us to be your publisher, there are other companies who will accept us (e.g. Bidvertiser).

(There's a danger in putting up this post because, as you know, Blogspot belongs to Google. So, in the near future, if you type in my URL and you find an error prompt which says "No such website found...", you know the reason... But some things need to be said.)

Dont be so arrogant

Google is starting to act like your garden-variety monopoly, says Fortune's Brent Schlender.

By Brent Schlender, Fortune editor-at-large(Fortune Magazine)

-- What was good for our country was good for General Motors, and vice versa. - Charles E. Wilson, president of GM, 1953

What is it about powerful companies that makes them conflate their own selfish interests with those of their customers, their industry, and even the world at large? This is especially true in high tech. You could plug the name of any prominent Fortune 500 tech company into Charles Wilson's famous quote, and the result would sound like a mission statement for some of our most notorious corporate bullies. "What's good for Microsoft is good for the Internet." Oops, that's how Gates & Co. ran afoul of federal trustbusters as they trampled Netscape underfoot. Seriously, when a company attains extreme market domination, hubris and a sense of infallibility can't be far behind. It's only a matter of time before said market dominator tries to tell everyone else how to run their businesses.

The latest example is Google which lobbied hard in Washington to dictate the terms of an upcoming FCC auction of radio spectrum. The frequencies, currently used for UHF television, are to be sold next January. In 2009 the winning bidders will take their swaths of spectrum and unleash a new and (they hope) profitable era of data-intensive wireless devices - smartphones, media players, car computers and gizmos no one's thought of yet.

Why would the Google guys bother themselves with this auction? After all, the company isn't even in the big-time telecom biz ... yet. The answer is simple. Google wants to take its breathtakingly profitable targeted advertising beyond PCs and inject it into any other medium it can find, whether it be radio or TV or even newspapers and magazines. (aC: Seriously, I know the author is just trying to make a point here that Google is trying to dominate every known media known to men, but what synergy can Google possibly find or how can they incorporate their advertising algoirthm to the media of radio and print??? Enlighten me pls...) But the biggest prize of all may be cellphones. Why? Because there are so damn many of them, and they're behaving more and more like pocket-sized, full-blown computers (e.g. the iPhone).

Now we come to the hubris part. Google promised the FCC it would bid at least $4.6 billion to purchase spectrum rights - but only if the FCC met all of Google's terms. Specifically, the FCC must ensure that all networks using the new parcels of spectrum be "open platforms." That means four things: (1) The new networks must allow consumers to use any device they desire; (2) they would support standard software like Internet browsers and e-mail; (3) network operators would be required to lease some capacity to other providers; and (4) the new networks would all have to be mutually compatible. In other words, Google wants this spectrum to behave a lot like the Internet.

Sounds reasonable. Wouldn't it be nice to use your cellphone on any network you wanted? But traditional telecom powers like Verizon and AT&T which run tightly controlled wireless networks, felt blindsided when they first heard of Google's demands. Allow any old device to plug into their new networks to run any old software? That's giving away the store! Even more galling was the notion of being forced to lease out capacity to all comers. If they pay billions for spectrum, shouldn't they be entitled to use it as they see fit? What are we, communists? Moreover, by preemptively offering to meet the FCC's minimum bid if its conditions were met, Google appeared to be forcing the agency into an auction for spectrum that would arguably have far less business value. The spokesman for the Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association called it nothing short of "Silicon Valley welfare."

The FCC has offered a compromise: yes on the open devices and software; no on the other two conditions. Hungry for the new spectrum, AT&T reluctantly announced its support; at presstime, Verizon was mulling its choices. Google should be thrilled that the FCC adopted even some of its suggestions, given that it's not a big telecom player. But apparently "compromise" isn't in the company's vocabulary. After the vote, the nicest thing Google's chief telecom lobbyist could say was that the FCC ruling was "real, if incomplete, progress," adding that the company would take weeks before deciding whether to participate in the auction.

Open networks are a legitimate goal for Google and are good for consumers. But all the grandstanding has probably hurt Google's chances to get open networks. Message to the "Don't be evil" people: Don't be so arrogant, either.

Saturday, August 4, 2007

Why stocks can shake off mortgage meltdown (Part 1)

The following article is for people who are afraid that recent financial events are the onset of a Bear Market.

Turmoil in the credit markets is sparking a global sell off, but are investors overreacting?
By Grace Wong, CNNMoney.com staff writer

The threat of a broad credit crunch has jittery investors rushing for the exits, but those concerns may be overdone.

Problems in the risky debt and subprime mortgage sector have sparked wild swings in the market recently - these days few bat an eye at 100 point-plus drops and gains on the Dow Jones industrial average.

Investors have been rattled by a wave of credit woes that has hit leveraged buyouts and the mortgage sector. The worry is that a tightening of credit will have a broader impact on consumers and the economy.

Don't freak out about the Dow
There are reasons for concern. American Home Mortgage (Charts) said Tuesday lenders had cut off its access to credit and that it may have to sell off its assets. The collapse of companies like American Home and other mortgage lenders could make home loans more expensive for borrowers.

And after two years of rapid-fire deal making, the buyout boom is facing a lull. As a debt crunch starts to squeeze private equity firms, the boost take-private deals have provided for stocks could start to crumble.

Uncertainty about how wide credit problems will spread is likely to persist, which means investors are in for more sharp swings in the market. (Watch how you can protect your portfolio -- 6:07.) But there are a number of reasons why stocks aren't likely to fall off a cliff, analysts say.

(1) Stock valuations are reasonable For one, stocks aren't too pricey and sell offs are likely to bring in buyers looking for a bargain.

"A lot of stocks are looking reasonably cheap," said Peter Dixon, strategist at Commerzbank in London. "On the basis of valuations, you've got to continue to favor equities," he said.

In the U.S., the S&P 500 index is valued at about 15 times 2008 earnings, which makes stocks attractive investments, according to Stephen Leeb, president of New York-based Leeb Capital Management.

(2) Deals not doomed Private equity buyouts have helped support the stock rally in the U.S. and Europe as investors have bet that nearly any public company could be taken over.

The outlook for these deals is looking murky as buyout firms face hurdles securing financing, but a slowdown in leveraged buyouts isn't going to have a substantial impact on stocks.

"The exit of private equity is not going to be what caps this market. There are lots of corporate buyers out there willing to step up to the plate and fill the gaps left by private equity," Leeb said.

Continue Part 2 here...