Monday, October 29, 2007

Smallville - Cool

This episode 5 - Cool in session 1 is about a jock falls into Crater Lake and comes out of it all a meteor freak who must take body heat from his victims in order to survive. His next target is Chloe Sullivan, clark's friend.





The storyline began after a student falls into Smallville’s frozen lake, the Kryptonite at the bottom of the water manages to preserve his life. However, he must now extract heat from his surroundings - and that includes sucking the life out of his friends! Meanwhile, Clark continues to get closer to Lana, but their “date” is brought to a halt when Chloe’s life is placed in jeopardy.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Find Small Ways To Develop Revenue

SeattlePI:

Q: I am a young photographer trying to start my own business. I have so
much gear that I still need to buy, and I am overwhelmed by my startup marketing
costs. I am concerned that if I don’t show more revenue or more of a profit
within the next few years that I will be seen as a failure in the business
world. Right now I’m working 70-hour weeks.

A: Here’s a fun quote to think about. Andy Warhol once said, “Making money is art and working is art and good business is the best art.”

As an emerging photographer, artist and businesswoman, the perspective you bring to your work each day, I believe, influences outcomes. Through your lens today, you see more problems than possibility. From my lens, I see a hard-working business owner who may be too focused on tasks that don’t produce a positive return on each invested hour. For freelance entrepreneurs like you, the secret to developing a
sustainable, lucrative business is not just working more hours. The trick is
developing revenue- producing assets within your business that can produce
income in addition to your portrait work.

As a brainstorming exercise, I’d like you to think creatively of all the ways you might be able to earn income but not physically have to be there to do the work every time. These initiatives can include generating royalties from Internet photo sales or developing a series of salable photography-based products, posters and greeting cards like Anne Geddes’ well-known baby photos.

Read more at this source

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Smallville - X-Ray

This is episode 4 in session 1. X-Ray vision ability.
The story began with the question that "is Lex really a bank robber?" It doesn’t appear so. Clark must confront a new “Freak of the Week”, that can shapeshift into any person she wishes. Luckily, Clark is developing that trusty X-ray vision.


Guys aren't the only ones with big crushes on Lana. Tina Greer likes Lana so much that she wants to be her. With her meteor freak powers of shapeshifting, that might not be too difficult. The answer above is Tina robs a bank as Lex. So much for playing the evil card later on.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

8 Business Technology Trends To Watch

McKinsey Quarterly:

Technology alone is rarely the key to unlocking economic value: companies create
real wealth when they combine technology with new ways of doing business.
Through our work and research, we have identified eight technology-enabled
trends that will help shape businesses and the economy in coming years.

1. Distributing co-creation. The Internet and related technologies give companies
radical new ways to harvest the talents of innovators working outside corporate
boundaries.
2. Using consumers as innovators. Consumers also co-create with
companies; the online encyclopedia Wikipedia, for instance, could be viewed as a
service or product created by its distributed customers.
3. Tapping into a
world of talent. As more and more sophisticated work takes place interactively
online and new collaboration and communications tools emerge, companies can
outsource increasingly specialized aspects of their work and still maintain
organizational coherence.
4. Extracting more value from interactions.
Companies have been automating or offshoring an increasing proportion of their
production and manufacturing (transformational) activities and their clerical or
simple rule-based (transactional) activities.

5. Expanding the frontiers of automation
Companies, governments, and other organizations have put in place systems to automate tasks and processes: forecasting and supply chain technologies; systems for enterprise resource planning, customer relationship management, and HR; product and customer databases; and Web sites. Now these systems are becoming interconnected through common standards for exchanging data and representing business processes in bits and bytes. What's more, this information can be combined in new ways to automate an increasing array of broader activities, from inventory management to customer service.

6. Unbundling production from delivery
Technology helps companies to utilize fixed assets more efficiently by disaggregating monolithic systems into reusable components, measuring and metering the use of each, and billing for that use in ever smaller increments cost-effectively. Information and communications technologies handle the tracking and metering critical to the new models and make it possible to have effective allocation and capacity-planning systems.

7. Putting more science into management
Just as the Internet and productivity tools extend the reach of and provide leverage to desk-based workers, technology is helping managers exploit ever-greater amounts of data to make smarter decisions and develop the insights that create competitive advantages and new business models. From "ideagoras" (eBay-like marketplaces for ideas) to predictive markets to performance-management approaches, ubiquitous standards-based technologies promote aggregation, processing, and decision making based on the use of growing pools of rich data.

8. Making businesses from information
Accumulated pools of data captured in a number of systems within large organizations or pulled together from many points of origin on the Web are the raw material for new information-based business opportunities.

Read more on this sources.

Sunday, October 14, 2007

Smallville - Hothead

Smallville session 1 episode 3, Hothead.
The story is about a abusive and hot-tempered football coach gains the ability to control and project fire.
Meanwhile, Lionel Luthor comes to town, Lana wants to quit cheerleading, and Clark wants to play football.Hiro Kanagawa makes his first appearance as Principal Kwan. He was originally supposed to appear in the series pilot, but his scenes were cut.


Clark and his father come to a stand-off, as he joins the school football team. Scared to death that Clark will accidentally harm his team-mates, Jonathan must deal with his son’s new-found independence. Lex is also battling the wishes of his father, as they tussle over the control of LuthorCorp. Still, their troubles seem petty when the team’s coach takes on pyrotechnic abilities, using his fiery rage to win at any cost.

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Smallville - Metamorphosis

Smallville Session 1 Episode 2 which is Metamorphosis. After watched the first episode, i believe that every must, expected to watch the following episode for the great storyline.







The summary of the story as, the meteor rocks are continuing to affect the towns population, including a certain insect fanatic, who takes on bug-like tendencies after being attacked by his swarm. Unfortunately, he wants to mate with Lana. Clark must save her, without revealing his powers. Meanwhile, Lex holds Lana's Kryptonite necklace in his possession, and ponders what to make of the strange stone.


This episode is Clark must deal with Greg, a nerdish bug collector with a crush on Lana who gains the ability of various insects and uses them to lash out at anyone who opposes him.

Saturday, October 6, 2007

Smallville - Pilot

Smallville session 1, episode 1 - Pilot.




This is the first episode of smallville launched at year 2001 - 2002. The great starting story. Every show needs a strong pilot, and Smallville has a pretty great one that establishing the main story and characters in a simplistic, yet interesting way.


The story as begins nearly 20 years ago, when the meteor shower lays waste to most of the town, bringing the infant Kal-El (Clark) to Earth. Brought up as Clark Kent, his foster parents decide to tell him of his origins, now that he is a teenager. Keeping his abilities a secret, he is forced to help Lex when his car spins off the road, granting him a new “friend” in the process.


Lex made friend with clark after his rescue; the fact that meteor rocks hurt him, and that his love for Lana is planting him in trouble with her boyfriend Whitney (Eric Johnson). With some nice moments of sly humour, and clever foreshadowings of the future, the first episode is one of the better instalments from this season.

Thursday, October 4, 2007

Smallville Highlight

Smallville tells the tale of a teenage Clark Kent in the days before he was Superman.

It is the town where he came from where very strange things started happening with his arrival in a spaceship in the midst of a meteor storm of green rocks. Clark must deal with a variety of individuals given powers by the green rocks, keep his powers a secret, cope with his friendship with a young Lex Luthor, and balance the two girls in his life, Chloe and Lana. The show also shows us how Lex Luthor develops from a friend of Clark's and kinda-okay guy to (presumably) the villain who will plague Superman in his later years.

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Smallville Premier

Smallville series, is a drama that film about the story of the teenager before he become a superman. So begins the “Early Adventures of Superman”.





Photo of the actors and actress

Long before Clark form those legendary tights and a cape, the Man of Steel was living the life of a teenager; with superhuman abilities. As his body developed, so did his alien powers.

As Smallville opens, Clark Kent cannot fly. He can not burn objects to a crisp with his vision, and he has yet to master the ability of seeing through walls. With the pain of puberty, comes enormous power, and overwhelming responsibility.


It’s a stroke of genius, and it’s hardly surprising that the show has become a roaring success. Season 1 is hardly its strongest hour, but it places the foundations for what is, currently, the best on-screen Superman since 1978’s motion picture.


Originally created by Joe Shuster and Jerry Siegel, the Superman comic was groundbreaking; pretty much establishing the modern comic book rules, and providing DC with its most well-known character. During his conception, it was fairly easy to see the real-life parallels that influenced Shuster and Siegel.



A tale about a stranger coming from an alien world, and using his unique gifts to help others. It was a revolutionary time. A time of change. Clark Kent would struggle to hide his identity, and get by in a world that was a million light years from home. Little did they know, that the character would continue to go strong in the 21st Century.