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RSS Icon Pillow

Thu, Jul 2, 2009

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SS Icon Pillow dibuat dengan menggunakan bahan boneka yang lembut, bikin suasana kamar jadi berbau internet! hehehe ^^

RSS Icon Pillow

RSS Icon Pillow

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Bantal Facebook

Thu, Jul 2, 2009

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Akhirnya jadi juga bantal facebook ini, silakan pesan jikalau berminat. ^^

Facebook Pillow

Facebook Pillow

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Earth Animation

Thu, Jul 2, 2009

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Hari ini saya membuat animasi bumi berputar. Animasi ini sangat cocok digunakan untuk banner dan header untuk halaman situs maupun bahan presentasi. Selamat menikmati!

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Your Wedding Photo Catalog

Sun, Jun 28, 2009

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Beberapa hari ini saya mengerjakan proyek membuat katalog versi buku untuk sebuah perusahaan. Iseng-iseng saya gunakan katalog ini untuk membuat katalog foto pernikahan.

Klik di sini untuk melihat intro katalog pernikahan yang saya buat.

Selamat menikmati.

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What a busy day

Wed, Jun 24, 2009

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Dear guys, this week is a hard day for me. So much to do, and I so tired…But i won’t give up..cause my dream has not been came true. There’s so many barrier on my success way, but I hope this barrier will vanished into a deep ground.
I have thinked that my life so boring, but if i think like that I can not achieve my goal to be a great entrepreneur. Yeah, now I still work on company in Indonesia. But I don’t regret it at all, I’am so happy with my life. But I think I need someone to fullfill my life.
Hope that will come true!
Go Denny…..

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100 Orang Kreatif dalam Dunia Bisnis Dunia

Sun, Jun 7, 2009

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Fastcompany.com baru baru ini menerbitkan urutan 100 orang kreatif dalam dunia bisnis. Diantaranya ada nama-nama terkenal seperti Jonathan Ivy (Desainer apple), Melinda Gates, dan beberapa orang lainnya yang belum terlalu terkenal. Tapi dari daftar-daftar tersebut tidak ada orang yang berasal dari Indonesia. Jadi apakah orang-orang indonesia tidak kreatif, silakan menilai sendiri..!!!!

Berikut ini adalah orang-orang kreatif tersebut, saya kutip dari www.fastcompany.com.

Senior Vice President of Industrial Design, Apple
Ten years ago, before the iPod and the iPhone became objects of the world’s electro-lust, Jonathan Ive sat down with Fast Company to talk about his first Apple blockbuster, the iMac. The machine could not have been a more radical departure from the ubiquitous beige-box PC: a desktop…
26
Chairman, FDIC
What with subprime mortgages and collateralized-debt obligations, creativity in finance has gotten a bad rap. But Sheila Bair’s combination of foresight, consistency, effective use of resources, and sensible ideas to secure the banking system looks pretty creative — and significant — to…
51
Partner architect, MSN and Microsoft Visual Earth
For years, techies have sought to display huge files in high resolution without crashing a computer. Blaise Aguera y Arcas did it, with technology called Seadragon. At the 2007 TED conference, he showed a multigigabyte quilt of slides, then magnified one slide to reveal the entire text of…
76
Garden designer
“The idea,” says the 64-year-old Dutchman known as the father of the influential New Perennial movement, “is not to copy nature, but to give a feeling of nature.” In Piet Oudolf’s gardens — from private landscapes in Europe to public parks in Chicago and New York — towering grasses…
2
Cochair and trustee, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Maybe it should be called the Melinda & Bill Gates Foundation. Her influence over the world’s largest foundation is enormous — Bill has said it wouldn’t exist if it weren’t for her. She has championed not only big-picture, tech-oriented solutions to improve health and education over…
27
Vice President, business analytics and mathematical sciences, IBM
“Mathematics,” says Brenda L. Dietrich, 49, “is not mechanical. You’re finding how things look different on the surface and then seeing what they have in common underneath.” Her team at IBM studies behind-the-scenes processes in business — from manufacturing scheduling to logistics to…
52
President, Prologue Films
“My job is to make people in the theater feel like they don’t want to be anywhere else,” says Kyle Cooper. He means from the beginning of a film to its very end: His specialty is the opening and closing credits. His fantasias include the immersion into a serial killer’s mind in Seven, the…
77
President, Ingenious Designs
A knack for inventing simple solutions to everyday problems — and marketing them on cable TV — catapulted Joy Mangano to business stardom. Her first hit was the self-wringing Miracle Mop; she sold 18,000 in 20 minutes on QVC in 1992. Then came no-slip Huggable Hangers and the roll-up…
3
CEO, Better Place
“How do you run an entire country without oil, with no new science, without government assistance, and in a time frame that’s fast enough to get off oil before we run out of planet?” The answer, 41-year-old Shai Agassi says, is electric cars. He’s not alone in his enthusiasm, but he may…
28
President, Polyphony Digital
The 42-year-old Japanese game designer is on the fast track: He has created eight Gran Turismo games, attracted a cult following among PlayStation users, and helped Nissan design the technology for its GT-R sports car, which appears in Gran Turismo 5 Prologue. Kazunori Yamauchi’s games…
53
Worldwide chairman, pharmaceuticals group, Johnson & Johnson
Sherilyn McCoy is one of the most powerful women in pharma, heading J&J’s work in biotech, internal medicine, and virology. Her versatility makes her a dynamo. Over three decades at the company, she has marketed skin-care products, overseen operations at home and abroad, and run the…
78
Professor, Brigham Young University
Soon after graduating from college, David Wiley had an epiphany that has moved him into the front ranks of education revolutionaries: “Unlike a real calculator, a calculator embedded in a Web page can be used by 100,000 people at the same time.” At BYU, he designed a course as an online…
4
Chief Executive Officer, Netflix
Reed Hastings, 49, could have stuck with his first breakthrough idea — Netflix recently mailed its 2-billionth DVD. Instead, he’s swiftly embraced streaming online and direct to TV via half a dozen Netflix-ready devices made by LG, Samsung, Microsoft, and others. Hastings says his…
29
Owner, Chop Shop Music Supervision
“I’ve spent 14 years listening to music set to pictures,” says Alexandra Patsavas, 41, “and I have a strong sense of how it all works together.” Her gift for matching the right song to the right scene in some of television’s most talked-about shows, including Mad Men, enhances the value…
54
Principal, Wonderwall
Tokyo-based Masamichi Katayama, 42, has created everything from furniture and lighting to TV-studio sets, but it’s his shops for clients such as Fred Perry and A Bathing Ape that have cemented his reputation as uncommonly clever. In Uniqlo’s NYC store, he deployed an army of motorized…
79
Executive vice president of production, Digital Domain
When it came to the holy grail of special effects — creating a digitized human head indistinguishable from the real thing — no one expected it to be created by a bunch of guys who make ads for BMW and Coca-Cola. But Ed Ulbrich, 44, left the visual-effects world breathless last year when…
5
President, Disney Channels Worldwide
If you’re sick of Hannah Montana, The Cheetah Girls, or High School Musical, blame Rich Ross. He has orchestrated the rise and global spread of that wildly popular, hyper, squealy, and lucrative brand of entertainment through a network of nearly 100 channels in 163 countries and 32…
30
Inventor, cofounder, Nano-Terra
His breakthroughs in molec-ular self-assembly and other production processes over a 45-year career at Harvard and MIT were a catalyst for today’s proliferation of biotechnology and nanotechnology. Dubbed a legend in chemistry by his peers, George Whitesides, 69, has cofounded more than a…
55
Mashup artist
Gregg Gillis, 27, is the first truly postmodern rock star. The ex-biomedical engineer layers unlicensed song samples and “performs” them live, with him and his laptop center stage. Last year, he released his fourth album, Feed the Animals, online, using Radiohead’s pay-what-you-want model…
80
Director of game R&D, Institute for the Future
Thirty thousand Mexicans are rioting in the streets after the price of tortilla flour quadrupled for the third time in three months. Hotel owners in Memphis are installing “anti-senior citizen” signs to keep away the thousands of aging Gulf Coasters trying to escape another violent season…
6
Vice president of global design, Nike
Sandy Bodecker, 56, believes inspiration is everywhere. Last year, his team found what they were looking for in suspension-bridge cables. The result: the revolutionary Flywire technology, and the lightest and strongest high-performance footwear ever. Before he became Nike’s first VP of…
31
Cofounder, Studio Ghibli
When Pixar’s animators need inspiration, they watch Hayao Miyazaki’s movies. The giant of anime has been elevating cartoons into epic cinematic events for more than two decades, with fantastic, award-winning films such as My Neighbor Totoro and Spirited Away. The writer-director’s stories…
56
President & CEO, W!ldbrain
When Charles Rivkin became head of W!ldbrain in 2005, the Jim Henson vet wanted to make a statement. He started with punctuation (hence the “!”). Since then, W!ldbrain’s Sesame Street — like flagship series, Yo Gabba Gabba!, has done wonders for Nickelodeon, averaging 3.4 million viewers…
81
CFO, Cronan
What’s in a name? Everything, if you’re the founders of the Berkeley, California, graphic-design agency that has christened products like TiVo and Amazon’s Kindle. “Your name and logo should be your hardest-working employees,” Michael Cronan says. He and Karin Hibma have helped brand more…
7
Executive Vice President, Nokia
Tero Ojanperä’s career path at Nokia is a map of the company’s direction — from head of research, to CTO, to leading the entertainment division. Slowly, he’s managing Nokia’s transformation into a multimedia company. He launched Ovi, Nokia’s answer to the online Apple Store, in May…
32
Global director of media arts, TBWA\Worldwide
The resulting ad — celebrating iconoclasts from Gandhi to Einstein (”Here’s to the crazy ones, the misfits, the rebels, the troublemakers, the round pegs in the square holes …”) — was signature Clow. It tugged at the heart and purse strings simultaneously. Clow’s “Think Different”…
57
Chief executive officer, Ohai
How do you make money from things that don’t exist? Susan Wu intends to show you. The first venture capitalist to focus on virtual goods — products that don’t exist offline, such as Facebook gifts and everything your avatar needs in Second Life — Wu is the doyenne of this growing niche…
82
CEO, Cronan
What’s in a name? Everything, if you’re the founders of the Berkeley, California, graphic-design agency that has christened products like TiVo and Amazon’s Kindle. “Your name and logo should be your hardest-working employees,” Michael Cronan says. He and Karin Hibma have helped brand more…
8
President, Comedy Central
First came South Park, then The Daily Show and its Colbert spin-off. Now Michele Ganeless, 44, is expanding into digital territory. So far, Comedy Central has launched Web sites for all its shows as well as stand-alone sites such as Jokes.com, the largest Internet archive of stand-up…
33
Chief technology officer, Cisco
With a last name like Warrior, you expect ferociousness. In fact, Padmasree Warrior is just the opposite — a humble leader who says she likes to play practical jokes on her staff. She worked her way up to CTO at Motorola before joining Cisco in 2007. Her ingenious approach today can best…
58
Equity partner, Black Star Lines
Like many young students, June Arunga took time off from law school for a road trip. But it was no spring break. Working with a BBC TV film crew, she traveled 5,000 miles from Cairo to Cape Town, documenting a grueling journey that brought her from war zones, mining towns, and refugee…
83
Musician
Brain Eno, the father of ambient music, is still in the vanguard. Take his recent collaboration with David Byrne. Byrne wrote lyrics in New York to the instrumental tracks Eno had sent from Lon-don. Then they prereleased the album, Everything That Happens Will Happen Today, online. Now he…
9
Executive chairman, Palm
Jon Rubinstein is trying to do for Palm what he did for Apple. As the head of hardware engineering at Apple until 2006 (and the first head of the iPod division), Rubinstein, 52 — aka the Podfather — led the development of what’s under the hood of the iPod, iMac, and iBook, helping…
34
CEO, Twitter
@ev Site getting more buzz than F-book. Yearly traffic up 1,200%. Estimated worth = $500 million+. Wow! #twitter — by Dan Macsai
59
Head of strategy, Barbarian Group
“If a programmer saw my code, they’d probably vomit,” says Noah Brier, 27. A self-described tinkerer, he feeds his online-strategy work for clients including GE and Dove by creating, on his own time, compelling projects at the intersection of social media, digital advertising, and…
84
Director, Green Works, Clorox
Jessica Buttimer caught on early to the appeal of “natural” cleaning products. So when Clorox chemists devel-oped some promising eco- friendly formulas, she saw the opportunity to launch the company’s first new brand in 20 years. To answer consumers’ concern about nontoxic cleaners — “…
10
Chief executive officer, Focus Features
Perhaps the only person in Hollywood who can rival Meryl Streep’s versatility is James Schamus. In addition to being a CEO, he’s a veteran screenwriter, Columbia University film professor, producer, marketer, distributor, and sometime composer. “There’s nobody else like him in the entire…
35
Founding chairman, Society for Organizational Learning
We owe the very idea of the learning organization to management strategist Peter Senge. In the 1990s, he provided the ultimate decoder ring for CEOs who wanted to apply collaboration and systems theory in the workplace. His current research and latest book, The Necessary Revolution, is…
60
Television producer, writer
Josh Schwartz has made his name chronicling the young, pretty, and privileged on TV, first with The O.C., then with Gossip Girl. But after his Girl found unexpected success online — new episodes routinely top iTunes’ most-downloaded chart — Schwartz, 32, pitched his latest beautiful…
85
Chief of minimally invasive, general and robotic surgery, University of Illinois Medical Center
The Italian-born and trained surgeon has been “the first in the world to successfully complete some of the most complex robotic procedures,” says Ryan Rhodes of Intuitive Surgical — and he’s done it in operating rooms that are poorly laid out for robotic instruments. So Dr. Pier…
11
Director, HP Labs
Prith Banerjee’s job is to gaze into the $150 million crystal ball that is HP Labs and see what the future holds. Since he was lured away from the University of Illinois in Chicago in 2007, HP Labs has announced products such as flexible, paperlike display screens and CloudPrint, which…
36
Musician
Pharrell Williams knows it all starts with a beat — he got his start on the snare drum in his high-school marching band back in Virginia Beach, Virginia. As half of the production duo known as the Neptunes, he has helped everyone from Britney Spears to Justin Timberlake to Madonna to the…
61
Author, director, producer
Nora Ephron, who is partly responsible for the rise of the chick flick and Meg Ryan’s career (Sleepless in Seattle, You’ve Got Mail), is going for cross-generational appeal with Julie and Julia, out in August. Starring Meryl Streep as Julia Child and Amy Adams as Julia Powell, a thirtyish…
86
Artist
When not drawing — and detonating — pictures made from gunpowder or staging massive outdoor “explosion events” like the fireworks at the opening and closing ceremonies of the 2008 Beijing Olympics, Cai Guo-Qiang is busy breaking records. His 14 gunpowder pieces sold at Christie’s in…
12
Chief information officer, Defense Information Systems Agency
John Garing powwowed with such luminaries as Amazon’s Werner Vogels and Salesforce.com’s Marc Benioff to bring cloud computing, network services, and Web 2.0 tools to the Department of Defense. Garing’s biggest challenge: overcoming the “box hugging” impulse to control servers, data, and…
37
Founder, University of the People
College tuition in the U.S. has risen more since 1990 than the price of any other good or service. That’s why Shai Reshef decided to commit his fortune — made when he sold a for-profit educational-services firm to Kaplan in 2005 — to opening a tuition-free, online-only, open-source…
62
Creative director, Puma
Fashion designers aren’t new at Puma — as guests. But now Puma has hired Hussein Cha-layan, 38, as its first creative director and bought a major-ity stake in his own business. Known for fusing high tech and high fashion in pieces such as a Swarovski frock studded with LEDs, the two-time…
87
Director, MIT’s AgeLab
Making aging less of a drag is Joseph Coughlin’s mission — and with some 80,000 Americans turning 60 each day, it’s a more pressing task than ever. Coughlin, 47, runs the first multidisciplinary research lab devoted to using smart technology to bolster older folks’ quality of life. It’s…
13
Fashion designer
According to her boss, PPR CEO François-Henri Pinault, fashion designer and Beatle progeny Stella McCartney is the new face of responsible luxury. “Stella has set the bar,” he told Britain’s Sunday Times. Across the pond, the Natural Resources Defense Council honored her this…
38
Architect
The 73-year-old Baron Foster of Thames Bank has had as rough a year as any of his fellow starchitects: Work in Russia has tanked; his remodeling of Europe’s biggest soccer stadium, Barcelona’s famed Nou Camp, has been delayed; and he had to lay off more than 300 employees. But the guy who…
63
Chief creative officer, Joost
“I really concentrate on flow versus feature,” says Henrik Werdelin. Inspired by how people move in the real world, he designs the online TV service Joost so that no matter how you get to the site, you find shows you didn’t know you wanted to watch. He has led the transformation of Joost…
88
Creative director, Imaginary Forces
Under Karin Fong’s leadership, Imaginary Forces, best known for its innovative movie titles, has expanded into new territory: commercial work for companies such as Microsoft, Pepsi, and Target, and design experiences for architectural spaces like the Museum of Modern Art in New York and…
14
Founder, Bad Robot Productions
J.J. Abrams warps Time at will. Past, present, and future coexist as a kind of fluid that cannot be contained. The camera jumps back and forth in time. Characters age and grow younger again. Time itself accelerates, then slows. “It’s intriguing to play with exactly when you learn elements…
39
Executive creative director, BBDO
For Greg Hahn, a self-described eavesdropping addict, being nosy isn’t just a hobby. It’s the weapon that has allowed the master copywriter to consistently lend human voices and emotions to huge corporations such as Citigroup (the “Live Richly” campaign for Citibank), eBay (the “It” ads…
64
Chief executive officer, Tapulous
Three days after its release last July, Tap Tap Revenge — an iPhone game that’s basically Dance Dance Revolution except that you tap your fingers to a song rather than dance to it — shot to No. 1 among free game downloads on iTunes. It was testimony to the appeal of playing along to…
89
Manager, T-One Design
A bicycle with front-wheel drive seems like a smart idea to us, but it wasn’t until Larry Chen entered the annual International Bicycle Design Competition for the seventh time last year that he finally nabbed the grand prize. His winner: Sunny Day, a compact solar-powered electric bicycle…
15
Design Director, Morphosis
You have to admire a guy gutsy enough to build an office building in Paris taller than the Eiffel Tower. By 2012, Thom Mayne’s 68-story La Phare (”the Lighthouse”) will rise over the La Defense district. The 2005 Pritzker Prize winner is famous for audacious buildings: the bunkerlike…
40
Author, screenwriter
“Writing is, like death, a lonely business,” according to Neil Gaiman. But the prolific wordsmith has made it a bit less so, building a global community of fans of all ages and in many media, including comic books (Sandman), novels (American Gods), TV (the BBC’s Neverwhere), and a…
65
Creative director, Marni
Consuelo Castiglioni doesn’t play the usual couture game. She’s publicity-shy. She does not advertise. She won’t hustle celebrities. But Castiglioni is a master of her craft, defining Marni as a house of unusual shapes and idiosyncratic prints (she teamed with singer/painter Kim Gordon to…
90
CEO & executive producer, Original Productions
Thom Beers is a storyteller, and most of his tales are true. To find them, flip on your TV. At any given hour on any given day, something from Original Productions will be on. Ice Road Truckers, Deadliest Catch, Monster Garage, Verminators — all are his creations. At one point, he had 12…
16
Senior Platform Manager, Facebook
He’s Facebook’s strategic thinker on the next big thing in social media — which isn’t the redesign of Facebook’s home page, but identity protection on the Web. The issue is who is going to set the standards for open-identity protocols that would enable you to safely take your online…
41
Writer, illustrator, producer
The extraordinary Maurice Sendak has sold millions of copies of Where the Wild Things Are (1963) and In the Night Kitchen (1970); most recently, he collaborated with Tony Kushner on Brundibar (the book debuted in 2003, the play in 2006). Sendak, now 80, has designed operas, won myriad…
66
President of NBC Universal Cable
“We’re escapism,” Bonnie Hammer told The New York Times last year. Which might explain why the USA Network’s ratings have soared under her watch — its 2008 prime-time viewership was the largest ever for any basic-cable channel — and her products contributed more than $1 billion to NBC…
91
Chief executive officer, Growing Power
If it were up to Will Allen, low-income urbanites would be cultivating fresh fruit, vegetables, and fish in community centers, in empty lots, even on their own rooftops. “People don’t realize that cities originally produced the food,” says Allen, an urban-farming expert who has pioneered…
17
Product Manager, Google Maps and Google Earth
Incorporating photos into online maps wasn’t a new idea at Google, but no one had figured out how to pull it off until Stephen Chau tackled what became Street View, the company’s fastest-growing product of 2008. Chau, 29, is a former Goldman Sachs banker (he worked on Google’s IPO) who…
42
Fashion designer, LVMH
Marc Jacobs has “made fashion hip, but not inaccessibly hip,” says Vogue editor Anna Wintour. Accessibly hip enough for him to build a $5 billion empire within LVMH that delights both the moneyed elite and the allowance-driven economy (his junk-store concept — $11 flip-flops, $55 rubber…
67
Senior digital-imaging evangelist, Adobe
If teaching others to express themselves is a measure of creativity, then Julieanne Kost is off the charts. Part teacher, part marketer, she is Photoshop guru to legions of followers. Whether helping pros with the digital equivalent of darkroom techniques or showing amateurs an…
92
Dean of fashion, Parsons
After 20 years in the industry, Simon Collins is grooming the next wave of Tom Fords to be as prepared for the boardroom as they are for the run-way. In less than one year, he has devised a new model for his 1,300 students to collab-orate with companies such as Ellen Tracy, Henri Bendel,…
18
Chief economist, Microsoft
As a kid, Susan Athey tagged along when her grandfather sold cattle at auction. “I’d wonder, Why is this how they sell cows?” she recalls. At 38, she’s now Microsoft’s chief economist and a Harvard prof, asking grown-up versions of that question. Athey studies everything from government…
43
Presidential Fellow, MIT Media Lab
In the MIT Media Lab’s basement workshop sits a machine that can slice human bone instantly using a blast of water mixed with garnet dust. It’s Neri Oxman’s favorite. “The laser cutter is very feminine, elegant. The water-jet cutter is very masculine. It cuts anything. To be here at 2 a.m…
68
Principal, Zaha Hadid Architects
If there’s a starchitect who is still shining, it’s the Baghdad-born, London-based Zaha Hadid, whose firm’s profits were up 400% last year. Hadid, 59, who won the Pritz-ker Prize in 2004, has created astonishing projects around the globe — from the BMW Central Building in Germany to the…
93
Principal, Bensley Design Studios
Bill Bensley’s design philosophy: Lebih gila, lebih baik. That’s Indonesian for “the odder, the better.” For the American-born, Bangkok-based architect and landscape designer who specializes in luxury resorts, that means blurring the line between interior and exte-rior, creating lush…
19
Senior vice president of merchandising, Target
Hiring boldface fashion designers to do lines for big-box retailers was an innovation born when Trish Adams signed on Mossimo for Target in 2001. Since 2006, she has lured the likes of Proenza Schouler, Luella Bartley, and Behnaz Sarafpour for the Go International cheap-chic lines, which…
44
Chef
In this era of celebrity chefs and haute cuisine gone less haute, Alsace-born Jean-Georges Vongerichten is the rare talent who has grown his empire without resorting to the indignity of slapping his face on a frying pan or frozen pizza. He already has 18 restaurants — eight of them in…
69
Musician and record producer
You may know Dave Stewart as the Eurythmics cofounder and a singer’s songwriter — he’s written hits for Tom Petty, Celine Dion, and No Doubt. But it’s the rest of his CV that’s unexpectedly impressive. He started the consulting company DeepStew with Deepak Chopra, acts as U.S. creative…
94
Lighting designer
Kevin Adams is on the leading edge of the post-incandescent age on Broadway, exploiting the potential of CFL bulbs, fluorescent tubes, glass and flex neon, and the latest LED technology. His work for Spring Awakening — brilliant white light for the 19th-century play’s scenes and…
20
Sustainable design program manager, Autodesk
Dawn Danby pops upover a Skype connection on the screen of my computer, holding up her laptop to the camera mounted in another. The machine in her hands shows a screen shot of Ecotect, a building-design program that represents the type of sustainability software she’s helping develop for…
45
Director of user experience, Intel Digital Home Group
Genevieve Bell thinks about people. She travels the world studying us — how we think, how we live, and what place technology has in our lives. This year, the Stanford-educated anthropologist is doing that in her homeland, as a “Thinker in Residence” for the government of South Australia…
70
Artist and Designer
Brian Donnelly has been compared to Jean-Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring, both of whom straddled the divide between street and institutional art. But Donnelly has arguably surpassed them with his one-man empire. Business at his Tokyo-based company OriginalFake, created as an outlet for…
95
In a quest to make user-generated manufacturing a reality, Kohei Nishiyama launched a Web site where independent designers can initiate production of an item when orders reach a break-even point. Then, using a similar site that Nishiyama created with retailer Muji, a college student with…
21
Owner, Tyler Perry Studios
He writes, directs, produces, acts, and scores — Tyler Perry controls an entertainment empire and moneymaking machine that includes the hit show Tyler Perry’s House of Payne and movies featuring his alter-ego Madea, a jumbo, no-nonsense granny with a knack for physical comedy. Perry’s…
46
Founder, chief executive officer, Red Digital Cinema
Jim Jannard is the type of obsessive freak who will pour and break the foundation for a new house a half-dozen times. And when he wants something that doesn’t exist, he creates it. After selling his sunglass company, Oakley, to Luxottica for $2.1 billion in 2007, Jannard focused on…
71
Director, Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine
If a salamander can grow a new limb, Dr. Anthony Atala likes to say, why can’t a person? It’s hardly an idle question. Atala, 50, is at the forefront of the study of growing human tissue, an emerging field also known as regenerative medicine. He made headlines around the world in 2006…
96
Light-rail designer, Parsons Brinckerhoff
Mass transit is crucial to a carbon-frugal economy and livable, vibrant cities; $150 billion in new federal spending for infrastructure, including a substantial chunk for light-rail, drives the point home. An unassuming Texan who has worked in Germany, France, and the U.K., John Swanson…
22
Artist
Hate him or loathe him, Damien Hirst is an artistic and business provocateur. Who else could render a photo of Bill Gates standing in front of his own famous work (The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living) and turn it into a painting that sells for more than half…
47
Composer
You might know A.R. Rahman as the Oscar-winning composer behind Slumdog Millionaire’s “Jai Ho,” which has been downloaded more than 100,000 times on iTunes and was re-recorded as a hit collaboration with the Pussycat Dolls. But Rahman has been writing Bollywood hits since 1992. His…
72
Inventor, cofounder, Makani Power
At 35, Saul Griffith is already a prolific — and eclectic — inventor and entrepreneur. He has helped launch a half-dozen startups around his creations: a portable machine that makes cheap corrective lenses; a hand-powered gen-erator for recharging handheld devices; Instructables, a Web…
97
Chief executive officer, Imax
When Richard Gelfond and then co-CEO (now chairman) Bradley Wechsler acquired Imax in 1994, it was a museum-movie staple. Then they asked to see the classic 2001: A Space Odyssey on an Imax screen, and, recalls 53-year-old Gelfond, “We both came out saying, ‘We have to figure out a way to…
23
Chief technology officer, DreamWorks Animation
Whether it’s making Shrek come alive, guiding the 20 million hours of computing time to build Kung Fu Panda, or putting the amoeba-like B.O.B. into 3-D for Monsters vs. Aliens, DreamWorks’ problems eventually find Ed Leonard. “For every film we start, we never know how we’re going to…
48
Chairman, Interscope Geffen A&M Records
In music, all roads lead to — and from — Jimmy Iovine. The resurrection of the New Kids on the Block. The exclusive Best Buy deal for Guns N’ Roses. MySpace’s music venture. Dr. Dre’s high-tech headphones. Iovine had a hand in all these projects — and he’s still thinking big, bold, and…
73
Executive chef and co-owner, Blue Hill restaurants
“Manhattan’s answer to the Farmer in the Dell,” as Dan Barber was called by a New York Times restaurant critic, is more than the foodies’ latest locavore darling. The driving spirit behind the two Blue Hill restaurants, Barber, 39, is a passionate advocate for regional farm networks. They…
98
Blogger
Scott Schuman, 41, started his fashion blog, The Sartorialist, to “share photos of everyday people I thought looked great.” More than 2,000 posts later, the former Valentino marketer has a monthly column in GQ, a six-figure book deal with Penguin, and a booming photography business. (He…
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Designer, creative director, Uniqlo
The high-fashion/mass-marketing movement seems to be reaching a new phase with Jil Sander’s new project: The German designer, who became famous for her luxurious if minimalist couture, has signed on as the creative director for Japanese retailer Uniqlo. Sander, who sold her namesake label…
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Founder, Bankable Enterprises
The former model has built a distinct brand — and media empire — by presenting herself as the fun, driven mentor to a young, multiethnic, and aspirational female demographic. No idle pretty face, Tyra Banks, 35, has taken a hyperactive hand in creating several reality programs,…
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Director and founder, Plexifilm
Gary Hustwit’s new film, Objectified, got everyone’s attention at this year’s South by Southwest festival. So did the fact that he lost his iPhone at the premiere — a delicious irony for a man obsessed by design and consumerism. Objectified veers from musical montages of Ikea, Target,…
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Creative director, thatgamecompany
If video games can be art, the proof is likely to come from Jenova Chen, 27. He explores the expressive possibilities of game design by tapping into emotions rather than relying on virtual violence. His thesis project, which got 300,000 plays in 10 days, won his company a three-game deal…
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CEO, Red Bull
Last year, Dietrich Mateschitz’s Austria-based company sold 4 billion cans (more than its next three energy-drink competitors combined), reportedly spent more than $300 million on marketing, and pushed the category beyond $30 billion. All that has less to do with the drink than Mateschitz…
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Partner, Fireman Capital
The music industry’s business model “is clearly and completely broken,” says Lisa Ellis. “Changing it from the inside, like so many smart people have tried to do, is impossible.” So in December, after huge success branding such artists as John Legend and Beyoncé, Ellis left Sony…
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Cofounder, Rockstar Games
Critics may decry Sam Houser’s “brutally violent” and “sexually explicit” world in Grand Theft Auto, but there’s no denying his genius. He took control of GTA III in 2001 and turned the already-popular series into a stunning 3-D playground, where gamers can go anywhere and talk to anyone…
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Now You Can Build a Firefox Add-on Too!

Thu, May 21, 2009

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Most people cannot build a Firefox extension - it requires knowledge of Javascript, XUL, and a little bit of XML experience. While there are about 8000 developers and 12,000 add-ons for Firefox, Mozilla is always looking to expand that base even further.

So, Mozilla has released an experimental program, Jetpack, that allows anyone who can build a web page to build a Firefox add-on. This means that if you only know HTML, you can build simple extensions for the popular browser. Jetpack also supports CSS design and Javascript.

And for those of you who are not programming nerds, Jetpack makes one very nice change: you won’t have to restart the browser to install extensions built through Jetpack.

The Jetpack experiment is a very early open-source project - in fact, it’s version 0.1 - and thus, is highly buggy. But in its current form, it allows anyone to use an API to build statusbars, work with tabs, and more. It also supports external APIs like Twitter, so you can build simple Twitter apps for Firefox.

So if you’re a developer, check out Mozilla’s introductory video on how to build an add-on for Firefox. And if you’re just a fan of Firefox who hates restarting his or her browser, just be patient: Jetpack is still a baby, and it will be some time until restarting the browser is a thing of the past.

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The Extreme Cash Coaching Makes You Earn While You Learn!

Wed, May 20, 2009

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A lot of people have their own dream of financial freedom, and would like to work online from home, but one of the things that may stop them from actually achieving it is the tough requirements to fulfill. Knowledge and experience is a must and the only way to get that is through training which they often do not want to afford.

Instead of looking for a shortcut when it comes to working online from home, and desperately looking for a way to make some extra cash from home overnight, some fundamental skills about the online marketing business would save way more time on the road to success. Some work from home programs include some training, but they are nothing compared to Extreme Cash Coaching program.

Not only does Extreme Cash Coaching share the secrets in making a successful online business, that not every program really revealse, but it also helps the members build a continuous flow of income, as well as residual cash. Newbie or seasoned marketer, the training area is so jam packed with fantastic training tutorials, you will eventually master online marketing business and become the pro you want to be with lots of money in your wallet.

In addition to techniques that have been practiced successfully by other online business in the past years, the Extreme Cash Coaching Team will give you a solid preparation for the future by sharing the most powerful web marketing 2.0 strategies, that are normally not shared everywhere in that detail. Because not everyone has fully tapped into it, and many are still using old school marketing methods online, here you will get up to speed with the nowadays online marketing strategies.

If it makes you comfortable to know somebody is always theree to reach out in case you have questiions, you will love the 24/7 chat that is included with the Extreme Cash Coaching program. Moreover included are audio trainings for people that prefer to gradually become better in marketing. Video trainings are included and cover everything from complete newbies to advanced techniques for more experienced marketers. Weekly live training webinars are held on a regular basis. All this various learning resources are covering a huge variaty of topics regarding online and offline marketing. If you really want to master online marketing business, you can take on all the channels of learning for a truly unique experience.

More Training and Money Made per Sale. Being on the road to becoming the best web marketing training on the internet Extreme Cash Coaching now further increased the commissions to a crazy $400. Yes, to enter the program you need to invest $497, but with only one sale you make $400 in commissions right into your pocket! And it does not even stop there! On Tier 2 level you make another $50 on the sale the person you brought in makes. This is truly a program completely tailored and dedicated to help people succeed in every possible way.

More Freebies to Keep. $497 may seem like a lot of money for a business opportunity, but in addition to the huge web marketing software package that Extreme Cash Coaching provides, a professional screen recording software valued at $299 is offered for free and that screen recording software get you tons of leads when used correctly.

When you join Extreme Cash Coaching, you get the opportunity to work online from home and learn plenty of other things that other programs simply do not offer. Consider checking it out because it is backed by numerous video testimonials that explain how you can learn and earn.

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Which Coffee Franchise Best For You?

Wed, May 20, 2009

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When it comes to the wonderful wide world of franchise business opportunities there are plenty from which to choose. The coffee franchise is one particular franchise that seems to be growing by leaps and bounds with new businesses and franchises being created in this field on a very regular basis. Much like the drink, coffee franchises have seen a few evolutions during the course of the last decade and business is, quite literally booming in little drive thru coffee shops and huge coffee cafes across the country and around the world.

The big problem with this is that as businesses are created and franchises made there are more decisions that must be made when deciding on whether or not to open a coffee franchise of your own. If you do decide to open a coffee franchise, there remains the question of which coffee franchise is the best choice for your management style and desires for your business future.

Putting pen to paper is always a great way to begin the search for the perfect franchise. Study the establishments in your area and the general vicinity in which you would like to place your coffee franchise (assuming of course, this is the sort of business you are planning to pursue) and do the math. Some questions you will want to ask are: are there existing coffee franchises in the area and what sort of competition will they create? What type of market do you have for the business you are pursuing? Will business be largely seasonal and is there a way to cut cost during slower seasons that will not jeopardize the reputation of your business and the good name of your coffee franchise? Are you interested in a “hands on” business or do you wish to leave the running of the business in the capable hands of managers? Finally, you need to ask yourself if you can feel passionate about the coffee franchise you are considering?

Each of these questions is an important question to answer before deciding if a particular coffee franchise meets your needs. Different franchises have different requirements and some will only deal with franchise owners who are interested in a direct involvement in the daily running of the business. Others are a little more open to investment franchising. You should also ask yourself if you prefer a coffee franchise that deals with one thing and does that one thing exceptionally well or a franchise that handles coffee and something else.

Building a business is a lot of hard work. Investing in a coffee franchise is a good beginning for many investors that are willing to put the effort into learning their business well (as are any franchise opportunities) but they are somewhat risky in light of extreme competition in many areas and battles with the big names that everyone is familiar with. Choose wisely when deciding the coffee franchise you will pursue and make sure it is one that you can enjoy working with as hard work is a requirement for building a successful franchise.

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Ideas To Earn Extra Income Online

Wed, May 20, 2009

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If you are looking to earn extra income online, you have to determine your strengths as well as your inherent skills that commensurate the opportunities available.

PPC or Pay Per Click programs is one of the most popular ways to earn extra money online. All you need is a valid email address and a chosen payment processor and you are all set to earn as much money as your time and production will allow.

In order to earn from Pay Per Click Programs you need to click as many ads every day as you can for a few minutes and the system will be the one to calculate your earnings. This is a very easy way to earn extra money online while staying at home and sitting down.

Paid blogging is another way to earn extra income online. If you have an excellent command of the English language and a skill in writing there are numerous sites that are looking for people just like you. These people are paid to write blog content as well as comments regarding various topics. The rates vary depending on the amount of work done and the quality of the blogs written at a given time. You can apply for a spot in as many paid blogging sites as you can if you have an inherent writing skill and your grammar is good. Unfortunately there are some sites that promise a great income opportunity and turn out to be fraudulent, so you need to be aware of bogus sites. Ensure that you affiliate yourself with the right sites and businesses.

Affiliate marketing programs are among the most popular ways to earn extra income online. In order to effectively promote their products and services for a lower cost, these are advertising tools that online businesses use. Affiliates, as they are called, are the ones who advertise the products and services on behalf of the online businesses and they get paid commission for the merchandise they have successfully sold.

In order to earn extra money online, you will need some tools to help you perform your job and produce the best results for you as well as the business you affiliate yourself with. If you know how to build and design a website which you will need especially if you are an affiliate marketer because that is where you will promote products and services, it will be a big plus. Since you will be dealing with potential buyers you also need a working knowledge on network building and a little bit on customer relations. If you know how to sell products and services and make them look attractive to as many potential customers as possible, it will be a great help to you.

If you are experiencing the extreme effects of a severe economic turmoil, the above extra income ideas will give you alternative sources of online income that can be tapped if and when you become unemployed or otherwise lose your primary source of livelihood.

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