October 2007

Monthly Archive

How To Make A Million in 7 Days With FaceBook

Posted by Jack Lan on 27 Oct 2007 | Tagged as: Jack's Life

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Facebook Again, guess this is getting very hot nowadays! Time to spend more time exploring Facebook, another social networking site.

Come across an article in John Chow Dot Com’s Blog, interesting title with 2 excellent video about FaceBook new opportunity for internet marketers.

In these two videos, Jason gives three concrete examples of how people are making huge coin off their Facebook Apps using CPA offers that can be found in Millnic Media. When watching the videos, see if you can come up with other ways to integrate the methods Jason talks about.
Monetizing Face Book Apps with Jason Bailey - Part 1

Monetizing Facebook with Jason Bailey - Part 2

Play Mahjong With Me?

Posted by Jack Lan on 25 Oct 2007 | Tagged as: Jack's Life

Interested to play Mahjong 4 Player Game? You can now play it online with anyone from the world!

Just need to sign up! Get your friend to sign up too and start playing!

The sign up is free and it only takes the user to fill up 4 fields. Player Name; Email, Password and password verification.
Click below to sign up!


Facebook a Time Suck Machine

Posted by Jack Lan on 25 Oct 2007 | Tagged as: Jack's Life

I’m sorry. It’s easy to make fun of Facebook. But I don’t get all the excitement. At least for anyone over the age of, say, 25. Here’s how it works: You create a profile that includes your date of birth, home town, high school, college, employer, political views, marital status and so forth. Then you start inviting people to be your friend. Other people invite you to be their friend, too, including people you don’t even know.

You can publish photo albums, join groups and send e-mail messages. You can leave notes on other people’s “walls” or give them a “poke,” which is the online equivalent of saying, “Hey, I’ve got nothing to say.” On the sillier side, you can send someone a virtual martini or give them a virtual “bite” that turns them into a virtual “zombie,” at which point they can virtually zombie-bite you back. In May Facebook opened its site up to outside software developers, and now there are 3,000 applications that let you hatch a dragon and raise it online, take an IQ test, show off which cities you’ve been to or find out which celebrities you resemble, personality-wise.

Facebook was created in 2004 for college students but in 2006 threw open its doors to nonstudents as a gambit to boost its traffic. It worked. Facebook adds 200,000 new members every day, and the site is one of the most popular destinations on the Web, with 54 billion page views per month.

I’m a member in good standing and a daily user of the site, but I’m beginning to grow concerned about time spent there. At the risk of sounding both dyspeptic and cynical, to me the main problem with all these Facebook applications is that they don’t solve any real problems in my life and only serve as a vehicle for showing me more ads.

Same goes for Facebook in general. I just can’t shake the feeling that I’m being lured into some carnival tent and encouraged to perform stupid tricks–fill out quizzes, send zombie bites–just so hawkers can grab me and try to sell me stuff and so Facebook’s founders can all get obscenely rich.

That they might. Facebook’s ad revenue runs about $150 million a year, but some folks (including Facebook management) reportedly believe the 300-employee company is worth $10 billion or more. It says something about the crazy bubble mentality gripping Silicon Valley that even this last reason does not turn people off. Rather, it seems to make people even more eager to use Facebook. Roger McNamee, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist whose hair is most definitely graying and whose firm, Elevation Partners, owns a stake in Forbes, has a personal investment in Facebook. He’s also an active poster on his friends’ walls.

Oldsters are swarming onto Facebook, tilting the demographics so that today more than half of its 43 million members are not college students. We’re also changing the way Facebook gets used, from a place where college kids keep track of one another and meet new friends and “hook up,” to a place where businesspeople do a lot of networking. They send silly virtual gifts to break the ice with sales prospects. You can announce an upcoming business trip to your Facebook network and see if any colleagues will meet you at an out-of-town bar or restaurant. Employees from Citigroup, ge, Procter & Gamble and Shell Oil have formed Facebook groups. I’m using Facebook to promote my blog and novel. One blog reader voluntarily created a club called the “Fake Steve Jobs Appreciation Society,” which now has 249 members. Thanks to Facebook I can tell these folks about bookstore appearances that I’ll be making.

But the weird side of Facebook is that, while loads of oldsters are jumping on board, the site still looks and feels like a place for kids. There’s a big emphasis on figuring out what kind of person you are and how many friends you have and which ones are your best friends forever. You can spend a lot of time rating your favorite movies, TV shows, books and music.

I tried the very popular Flixster movie application after a forbes colleague sent it to me, but halfway through the quiz it occurred to me the whole thing was pointless. This colleague is my friend, but who cares whether we like the same movies? Same goes for the iLike music application. It’s fine. It’s fun. But do I really want to want to sit here making a list of all the bands or albums I like? I’m married, with two kids; I’m not trying to find a soul mate who shares my taste in music.

It’s as if two very different tribes were trying to inhabit the same space. I sometimes get the creepy feeling that we oldsters are barging into some college party where we don’t belong and trying a little too hard to look like we’re having fun, like the sad middle-age guys in the movie Old School who attempt, pathetically, to recapture their college days.

A lot of otherwise sensible adults tell me they find Facebook weirdly addictive. As one told me, “Instead of Facebook, they should call it Timesuck.” Facebook is especially all the rage in the world of tech, particularly in the p.r. and marketing end of the business. So is Twitter, another so-called social media site that lets people blast a constant stream of 140-character status reports to anyone who wants to receive them.

Example:

I’m walking into the Starbucks on 3rd St. I’m ordering a mocha latte.

I’m paying for a mocha latte.

I’m drinking a mocha latte.

You get the idea. At first glance this might all seem like ceaseless nitwittery, millions of meaningless megabytes zipping through fiber-optic lines and swarming in the air around us, for no good reason, simply because we can. Unfortunately, it kind of looks like that on second glance, too.

Over time this could change as the thousands of applications being written for Facebook include more that make the site useful for grown-ups. Some are already starting to make a bit of money. But many applications are only virtual variations of high-fiving people.

Once upon a time the darlings of Silicon Valley were companies making things like chips and software, computers and networking routers. Hot shops were Cisco Systems, Oracle and Sun Microsystems. Then came Netscape. Then Google. Right now it’s Facebook, a sort of corporate version of Paris Hilton–a company that’s famous for being famous. Soon it will probably also be rich, though right now nobody quite knows why.

Article from ChannelNewsAsia 

Have You Join Facebook?

Sorry no time for me now!! Haha…

Cheers, Jack

Blog Shopping FRAUD! Nice Spree Arrested

Posted by Jack Lan on 25 Oct 2007 | Tagged as: Jack's Life

Was watching news yesterday nice and this news attracted my attention since internet business is my rice bowl and furthermore it come from my homeland. Great disgrace!

Below from Channelnewsaisa.com

SINGAPORE : Police have arrested a 28-year-old man and his 19-year-old girlfriend on suspicion of cheating more than 40 online shoppers.

The suspects had pocketed nearly $10,000 from online sales proceeds at two internet sites.

The sites are nice-spree.blogspot.com and nicespree.blogspot.com

Police seized a computer and handphone from the man’s residence in Tampines.

 

Both suspects will be charged in court on Thursday, and could face jail terms of up to seven years if found guilty. - CNA/de

===============================================

 

More information at :

http://forums.cozycot.com/showthread.php?p=1097831

Anyway I also found a forum talking about this, from what I read, some shoppers were so piss off that they post their anger on the internet and gather many other shoppers who were cheated by the same blog. After getting enough evidences and crowd they reported to police.

Nowadays there are many people selling fashion items online, mainly the goods are from our neighbour countries Thailand, Hong Kon, Korean and China. It is always very annonying to know there are such SCAM and FRAUD around which surely will affect the public confidence when shopping online, especially in blog without establish merchant account.

This FRAUD website nice-spree, was closed down already. The are smart enough to increase their earning by selling wholesales in large quantities, which increasing their orders from $20 to large deposit of $500. With just 10 wholesales orders of $500, they would easily cheated $5000!

Accordingly to the reporter, they might be jailed for a maximum of 7 years!

Reading from some of the post, the girl attitude to all the shoppers was very bad and rude. Simply another Ah Lian ? At least from the posting I read, sound like she is one!

Anyway shoppers, there are still many good blog shops around, some of my friends are doing very well selling from blog also. So as a shopper, you must be careful before you place any orders.

This report make me decided to add another chapter in my coming ebook. Add on topic: Blog Fraud, how to ensure your shopper that your blog shop is Fraud free! hmmm… thinking

Testimonial is very very important, your credibility is the core foundation of your business, do you agree?

 

Hey guys, do remember to sign up my pre-launch promotion at http://www.moneyfromblog.com

 

1 hour 22 min 37 sec

Posted by Jack Lan on 23 Oct 2007 | Tagged as: Jack's Life

Dragging my body home, it is 1.12a.m in the morning. I just finish cleaning up myself, filp open my notebook before the next I fall flat onto my bed.

Just completed my longest run of the year, as per plan today is my marathon training,15km run.

We didn’t run 15km but 14km only, as we selected to run 2 round Pandan Reservoir, each 7km, making a total of 14 km only. After some thought, I give this route a go,  as the route was not normal running track but it is stone path. They call it granite path, (did I spell correctly)

Running on such track is actually much tiring as compare to the normal running route in the park. Therefore, the difficulties shall cover up the 1km which we didn’t complete!

Anyway it was a great run, enjoy it!

Running long distance it just like our life, often we want to turn back, often we will try to motivate ourselves, something we will blame others, sometime we will blame why we started the run in the first place. Stronger self will always feed their brain with positive attitude and have a tough fight with all the negativities.

But to complete the race in our life has one univerisal rule! Just don’t give up! Just look ahead and contiune!

You will reach your destination no matter what happen!

Next run is a 5km run, have a short break after 4 session of progressive increment in running distances.

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