Senin, 01 Desember 2008

richest football player

According to the BBC, Britain’s Soccer / Football players are awash with money.

Unsurprisingly, the ubiquitous David Beckham tops the list with Wayne Rooney predicted to rapidly over take him in years to come.



1. David Beckham £87m ($169m)

2. Michael Owen £32m ($62m)

3. Robbie Fowler £28m ($54m)

4. Sol Campbell £27m ($52m)

5. Rio Ferdinand £22m ($43m)

6. Ryan Giggs £22m ($43m)

7. Andriy Shevchenko £22m ($43m)

8. Thierry Henry £21m ($41m)

9. Wayne Rooney £20m ($39m)

10. Michael Ballack £18m ($35m)

Senin, 10 November 2008

Richie Rich Movie


Synopsis :: Reviews :: Related Links


Richie Rich
Genre: Comedy, Kids/Family
Duration: 1 hr. 35 min.
Starring: Christine Ebersole, Eddie Bo Smith Jr., John Larroquette, Jonathan Hyde, Macaulay Culkin,
Director: Donald Petrie
Producer: Joel Silver, John Davis
Release Date: December 21, 1994
Writer: Jim Jennewein, Neil Tolkin, Tom S. Parker





Synopsis
A big budget comedy based on the diminutive Harvey Comics character to whom money is no object. But all of Richie's wealth can't buy him true friends--he'll have to earn them while saving his family from the machinations of archnemesis Laurence Van Dough.
Movie Reviews:


a movie review by: Steve Rhodes

RATING (0 TO ****): * 1/2

RICHIE RICH is a classic kid's tale retold and updated (read more expensive and elaborate toys) for the 90s. We have the rich kid who has everything. In this case, it is everything electronic. He is missing only one thing in his life--friends.

Richie Rich (Macaulay Culkin) is worth $70,000,000,000 as he will be the sole heir of the Richard Rich fortune. His Mom (Christine Ebersole) and Dad (Edward Herrman) are classic Brady Bunch types except they have enough money to buy an entire continent. Perhaps, Bill Gates will see this show and wonder if his kid in 10 years will be like this. Now, that does seem real, but I digress.

Unlike most zillionaires, the Rich family has hearts of gold. His Dad has never laid off a single person in his entire vast empire. He wants to spend more money on factories and then give them to the workers.

Of course, Richie is great in baseball having Reggie Jackson as his personal coach. When he sees a group of street kids from the local factory that his Dad owns, he wants to play with them, but the feeling is not mutual. In the classic story, he would want to be one of them. Not here. In this show, he likes his million-dollar gadgets and would never consider wanting to be anything other than super rich. He does want to invite them over to his house to play.

The reason to see the show has nothing to do with the silly plot above which goes on and on. The reason is a lot of extremely imaginative toys. I could never describe them. It is in the visuals that they are interesting. One is a million dollar mechanical and electronic bee. Sounds boring, but it is quite fanciful. Sad to sad, that the electronic toys and the goodie goodie family are not enough to carry the movie.

On the bad side, why o' why do we have to have the bad guys shoot at the Rich's with big realistic handguns? Why do we have to have a powerful laser cannon that would have been useful in Dessert Storm fired at them? They have no place in a kids' movie. These scenes scared my son (almost 6) a lot, and he sat in my lap and hid his eyes during them.

Also, on a small note, why did they put so much lipstick on Culkin in some of the scenes? I understand the greasy kid hairdo, but not the lipstick. I know his lips are red, but not that red.

The show is a mixed bag. It has great gadgets, and is mostly a classic kid's fable a la the Brothers Grimm. The scene where they teach all of the future CEOs at huge desks set up classroom style is really cute. On the other hand, we have all of those guns and the overall silliness of the show.

In the end I gave the movie a thumbs down. My son said "it was good and not so good," and he gave it a thumbs sideways. The movie runs too long at 1:35, but does have a nice Road Runner cartoon on before it. It is incorrectly rated PG. For all of that realistic shooting, I would rate it PG-13. Be careful about taking kids under 7 or 8 as it may scare them. I give the movie * 1/2--mainly for the toys.

Movie Review by Steve Rhodes

Minggu, 09 November 2008

Makan murah tapi enak (kawasan pulau bali)

1.Jimbaran bay terdiri dari 2 tempat yaitu di desa jimbaran/di pintu masuk selatan searah dengan fourseason dan kedonganan di pintu masuk utara.Secara umum orang akan menyebut jimbaran saja,tetapi jangan terkecoh karena barangkali anda bermaksud masuk di bagian utara malah masuk diselatan.Secara umum tidak ada perbedaan rasa dan harga di dua tempat ini,namun semenjak januari 07 ini wilayah utara/kedonganan sudah mengadakan perbaikan total untuk jumlah restaurant,tempat parkir, penataan /lay out tempat berjejer berdampingan sangat rapi, yet kepuasan kamu kamu akan lebih terasa di sini.Untuk menikmati makan disini biar nggak ngurah kantong,minta paket 60ribu-70rb terdiri dari ikan kakap bakar, remis/tiram,cumi dan udang dan tentu saja peneman yang lain seperti nasi,sayur plecing kangkung,soup,kacang,bumbu 3 rasa,buah segar dan segelas teh hangat atau kopi sesudahnya.Did I mention aqua?yup aqua atau buah kelapa muda sudah termasuk.Itu paket untuk satu orang. kalo berdua ya tinggal di dikalikan saja

2.Areal tuban kearah kuta
Sepanjang jalan di patung kuda airport ke arah kuta yakni jalan raya tuban kamu kamu bisa menikmati berbagai jenis masakan,chinese,bali,jawa timur,betawi,sunda dll dll dengan harga terjangkau.Wilayah ini tidak termasuk "ring dalam kuta" jadi harga sedikit lebih murah dibandingkan di warung made jalan pantai kuta misalnya.
kisaran harga disini : masakan sunda paket 30ribu/pax, chinese 30.ribu per pax,betutu bali 25ribu,wong solo 27 ribu/orang. disini ada ketentuan minimum order spt pawon pasundan 6 pax minimum, wong solo 4 pax minimum, dan chinese rest minimum 6pax. pastikan anda tau nomer kontak restaurannya dan minta untuk paket seperti yang aku sebutkan tadi. pastinya pihak pengelola lebih dari bersenang hati akan membantu.
3.sanur
Anda terbiasa bangun pagi dan sarapan di pinggir pantai???? cobain makan di pantai segara kearah pantai dari McD sanur.Cuman jangan kesiangan bro..... keburu telat dan habis!! warung ibu ini buka beberapa jam saja dan pasti selalu ngatre. masakan bali(pedah uih... meleleh nih liur) makan lesehan ala bali di pinggir pantai. harga seporsi masakan betutu ayam bali (sorry aku nggak menawarkan produk non halal,walau demi kepentingan kalangan tertentu aku sangat banyak memiliki infonya)...sampe dimana tadi,ok.produk masakan ayam betutu cuman 15ribu seporsi. kalo pas ke sanur kamu kamu telat.... pengen dapeting warung masakan betutu ayam bali yang buka rada siangan dari lokasi warung ibu ini coba deh kamu out keluar dari pantai lurus ke arah MCD,tapi jangan belokan setir kendaraan kamu.Lurus ada ke arah barat di sebelah kompleks hotel melati,yakni hotel rani,taman sari dan sanur indah.disini (deket sini)ada masakan bali yang nggak kalah serunya (eeiit asal kamu kamu juga musti bersabar ngantre) sorry bro.seporsi 20rb doang. murah kok.
Siang siang kamu belom dapet juga masakan bali diseputaran sanur???? gampang jangan menyerah. coba meluncur di jalan yeh aya renon di sebelah barat TK Doremi renon.warung nasi merta jaya.dijamin kamu ketagihan/seprosi 12.rb juga. Murah kan? daripada masak sendiri

4.Denpasar
Wilayah makan di denpasar adanya di sepanjang akses simpang enam denpasar.Yup I said simpang enam disini semua tersedia sama seperti di jalan raya tuban yang aku sebutkan tadi.

5.Ubud
Bicara ttg ubud dah lain neh......pertama kudu diingat yang namanya ubud,soal makan jadi nomer dua yang jadi soal utama adalah tempatnya. Nih ada beberapa tempat makan di ubud dengan harga diatas rata rata
Bebek bengil,terkenal akan crispy duck nya.seporsi cuman 100ribuan,lom termasuk pajak dan layanan. selebritis jakarta tidak melewatkan tempat ini bila berkunjung ke ubud. Mick jagger vocalist the rolling stone resepsi pernikahannya dilaksanakan disini. jadi kebayang...
Padi prada,100m sebelum hutan monyet di ubud.harga rata rata sama seperti di bebek bengil,cuman di sini viewnya....uihhhhhhh kita lepas memandang persawahan nan hijau terbentang.kalo kamu kamu pas malam kesini,jangan lupa untuk mengejar kunang kunang sebelum atau sesudah dinner,tapi awas kalo berlarian di pematang sawah, ntar terjelembab,kena lumpur lagi,hehehehe

Lotus cafe,berada di sebelah barat dari istana raja ubud merupakan tempat makan taste italia (major) dengan view hamparan kolam ditengah tengah lengkap dengan berbagai jenis ikan dan tanaman lotus dengan latar ukiran kori agung milik raja disebelah utara,yang juga merupakan panggung pertunjukan musik tradisional.Nggak suka lesehan lagi?atau bosan makan dengan meja kursi konvensional? coba reserve tempat makan diatas pohon disebelah timurnya. Be tarzan and jane for a day

Warung murnis di campuhan ubud
berada di pertemuan dua sungai utama di ubud, restaurannya berlantai empat ke bawah menuruni pematang sungai dengan view asik abis. nah di murnis ini harga nggak mencekik amat,untuk sebuah view yang ditawarkan murni termasuk salah satu tempat makan pilihan wis dom di ubud.

Sabtu, 08 November 2008

how to save money

  • Spend less on food
    • Cook at home instead of eating out
    • Cook from scratch rather than eating premade dinners
    • Take your lunch to work
    • Grocery shop with a list and stick to it
    • Don't shop while you're hungry
  • Cut your transportation costs
    • Buy the right gas for your car (87/89/93)
    • Get your car serviced regularly to optimize gas mileage
    • Run all your errands in a single trip
    • Avoid unncessary driving
    • Carpool
    • Trade your SUV for a cheaper, more gas-friendly car
    • Telecommute if your employer will allow it
  • Reduce what you spend on clothes
    • Forget about designer labels
    • Get trend-proof clothes
    • Wear layers in the winter instead of buying new sweaters
    • Don't forget sales racks, thrift, and consignment
    • Launder your clothes appropriately to get longer wear
    • Avoid dry clean only labels
  • Be entertained for less
    • Cancel movie subscriptions like Netflix or Blockbuster
    • Exchange movies with friends instead of renting
    • Catch movies on cable instead of going out
    • Books: Use the library instead of buying new books
    • Music: Purchase a song or two through Amazon or iTunes instead of purchasing an entire album
    • Have game night with family and friends
  • Move to an apartment with lower rent
  • Refinance your mortgage for a lower interest rate
  • Get a roommate (or two)
  • Cut your cable/satellite cost
    • Cancel premium channel subscriptions
    • Go basic
    • Nix pay-per-view and movies on demand
    • Ask for a promotional rate
    • Cut it off entirely
  • Lower your phone bill(s)
    • Use your cell phone as your primary phone
    • Get free long distance
    • Bundle your phone with your cable and internet
    • Ask for a promotional rate
    • Get the right minute plan for your cell phone
    • Turn off unnecessary features, even if you have to talk or text less
    • Stick with the pre-installed ringtones instead of downloading new ones
  • Lower your utility bills

Selasa, 09 September 2008

billionaire man in world

Warren Buffett has overtaken Bill Gates as the world richest man according to the 2008 report from Forbes. As we know that, Gates has been get on the top of the 10 world’s richest billionaire for the last 13 years.



Let us have a quick view who are the top 10 richest billionaires in the world below :-


#1 Warren Buffett
Berkshire Hathaway - life insurance, annuity sales and sales of jewelry
Net Worth: $62.0 billion

#2 Carlos Slim Helu
America Movil - Wireless telephone company
Net Worth: $60.0 billion

#3 Bill Gates
Microsoft - Software developers
Net Worth: $58.0 billion

#4 Lakshmi Mittal
Net Worth: $45.0 billion
ArcelorMittal- World’s largest steelmaker

#5 Mukesh Ambani
Net Worth: $43.0 billion
Petrochemicals giant Reliance Industries

#6 Anil Ambani
Net Worth: $42.0 billion
Telecom venture Reliance Communications

#7 Ingvar Kamprad
Net Worth: $31.0 billion
Ikea - furniture and accessories

#8 KP Singh
Net Worth: $30.0 billion
DLF - Real estate development company

#9 Oleg Deripaska
Net Worth: $28.0 billion
United Company Rusal - the world’s largest aluminum producer

#10 Karl Albrecht
Net Worth: $27.0 billion
Retailing Industry

What is the common theme among the billionaires? that’s they involving in the industries which serve large amount of people .One of my millionaire mentor has taught me that, the bigger volume of people you serve = how rich you are!

Let us look at the 7-Eleven. Let say there have 10,000 of the 7-Eleven shops in your state, each shops sells the same item with the same price at 1 dollar each per hour, now we make some simple calculation:

10,000 shops x $1 = $10,000 / hour
$10,000 x 24 hours = $240,000 / day !!

Do you see the different?

If let say you do not have a huge capital to own 10k 7-eleven shops, you can start investing in small budget but with the same business model. But one thing we need to consider is, please go into the markets which have high numbers of request but low numbers of suppliers ( if no suppliers,you are the next millionaire :P). Do not go into high competitive markets, for example - if your area have 20 furniture’s suppliers serving the population of 2000 people, would you go into that market? Of course NO!

Before you start any kind of businesses, below are the 5 skills you need to learn in order to become successful:-

1) Goal Setting
2) Sales and Marketing
3) Leadership
4) Time Management
5) Money Management

Success is a journey, see you at the top!

rich like donald trumph

e Donald, how did he do it? Why is it that he is so rich in such a competitive business as real estate? Well let us look at 10 reasons why he is:

1. He has an unrivaled work ethic. His regular work routine is 7 days per week and at least a solid 10 hours per day; oftentimes more.

2. He has an almost superhuman level of confidence and belief in himself. All the greats have this quality, but Trump completely exudes it in all situations.

3. He deals with the big picture in his business, not the details. He doesn't neglect these details however, he hires the best professionals in the business to handle them for him.

4. He is a master negotiator. Many have the assumption that his style is selfish and self-serving, based on the image that the media portrays of him, but this is the exact opposite of reality; he wouldn't have made it very far if this were his style. He is in fact a compassionate man that understands the human element of his deals. He creates win-win scenarios for everyone involved.

5. His word is his bond. He is not afraid to tell you that his properties are the best because he will actually deliver on his promises. This is the foundation behind his powerful brand.

6. The way he runs his operations is centered on the concept of being cost-conscious and profit-minded. He may be known for spending a bit to get the highest quality and luxury, but you better believe he gets the best price that can be had and doesn't waste money in the process.

7. Looking at all of the key moves he made in his career, the majority of them came when it was not popular to make such moves. They were in depressed markets where people were too afraid to even consider the magnitude of the deals Mr. Trump ended up completing. He moves counter to the herd mentality.

8. He learned from a great mentor, his father Fred. Having a great mentor show you the way will save you a lot of time and trouble.

9. Donald Trump never gives up. No matter how many times someone tells him no he understands that he is that much closer to a yes. If he didn't possess persistence, then he wouldn't have made such complicated deals in NYC that often took years to get off the ground.

10. He studies and takes time everyday to improve his mind. He is a man of continual learning because he understands that if he doesn't continue to get better he will stop being good. All great people are students of their business and the world around them.

how to be rich

Lesson 1: Choose Your Grandparents Carefully
"There are three ways to make money. You can inherit it. You can marry it. You can steal it."

William Henry Gates III made his best decision on October 28, 1955, the night he was born. He chose J.W. Maxwell as his great-grandfather. Maxwell founded Seattle's National City Bank in 1906. His son, James Willard Maxwell was also a banker and established a million-dollar trust fund for William (Bill) Henry Gates III.

In some of the later lessons, you will be encouraged to take entrepreneurial risks. You may find it comforting to remember that at any time you can fall back on a trust fund worth many millions of 1998 dollars.

Lesson 2: Choose Your Parents Carefully
"A young man asked an old rich man how he made his money. The old guy fingered his worsted wool vest and said, "Well, son, it was 1932. The depth of the Great Depression. I was down to my last nickel. I invested that nickel in an apple. I spent the entire day polishing the apple and, at the end of the day, I sold the apple for ten cents. The next morning, I invested those ten cents in two apples. I spent the entire day polishing them and sold them at 5 pm for 20 cents. I continued this system for a month, by the end of which I'd accumulated a fortune of $1.37. Then my wife's father died and left us two million dollars."
William Henry Gates, Jr. and Mary Maxwell were among Seattle's social and financial elite. Bill Gates, Jr. was a prominent corporate lawyer while Mary Maxwell was a board member of First Interstate Bank and Pacific Northwest Bell. She was also on the national board of United Way, along with John Opel, the chief executive officer of IBM who approved the inclusion of MS/DOS with the original IBM PC.

Remind your parents not to send you to public school. Bill Gates went to Lakeside, Seattle's most exclusive prep school where tuition in 1967 was $5,000 (Harvard tuition that year was $1760). Typical classmates included the McCaw brothers, who sold the cellular phone licenses they obtained from the U.S. Government to AT&T for $11.5 billion in 1994. When the kids there wanted to use a computer, they got their moms to hold a rummage sale and raise $3,000 to buy time on a DEC PDP-10, the same machine used by computer science researchers at Stanford and MIT.

Note: Recall that in the 1980s we venerated Donald Trump and studied his "art of the deal". If Donald Trump had taken the millions he inherited from his father and put it all into mutual funds, you'd never have had to suffer through one of his books. But he'd be just about as rich today.

Lesson 3: Acquire Research Results by Hiring and Buying
Conventional (loser) economic wisdom holds that monopolies should spend heavily on research because they are in a position to capture the fruits of the research. But if you want to become as rich as Bill Gates, you have to remember that it is cheaper to wait for a small company to come up with something good and then buy them. In the old days, antitrust laws kept monopolies from buying potential competitors. But not anymore. When Microsoft products were threatened by network computers and Web-based applications, they simply bought WebTV and Hotmail.

Another good strategy is to hire the right people. Some of the guys who wrote Microsoft Windows had previous worked on window systems at Xerox PARC. So Xerox paid for the research; Microsoft paid only for development.

In the long run a tech company without research probably can't sustain its market leadership. So you'll eventually need to build something like research.microsoft.com (check out netscan.research.microsoft.com to see some interesting online community research).


Lesson 4: Let Other People Do the Programming
If you're a great engineer, it can be frustrating to rely on other people to translate your ideas into reality. However, keep in mind that the entire Indian subcontinent is learning Java. And that if Microsoft, Oracle, SAP, and Sun products simply worked and worked simply, half of the world's current IT workers would be out of a job. You're not going to get rich being "just a coder." Especially working in painful low-level imperative languages such as C or Java. It might be worth writing your own SQL queries and HTML pages since these tend to be compact and easier than precisely specifying the work for another person to do. But basically you need to get good at thinking about whether a piece of software is doing something useful for the adopting organization and end-user. Bill Gates does code reviews, not coding.

[If you aren't sure that you need to be filthy rich and like to do some coding, see this old misguided article for more about what it might mean to be a great software engineer.]

Lesson 5: Train your new CEO
If you're an intelligent curious person it can be painful to run a company of more than 50 people. You spend more time than you'd like repeating yourself, sitting in boring meetings, skimming over long legal documents in which you know there are errors but aren't sure how serious, etc. The temptation is to hand over the reins to the first "professional manager" who comes along. And that's what the standard venture capitalist formula dictates. But Bill Gates didn't do that. He hired Steve Ballmer in 1980 and gave him the CEO job 20 years later. Making money in the software products business requires domain expertise and a commitment to solving problems within that domain. Great tech companies are seldom built by non-technical management or professional managers who aren't committed to anything more than their paycheck. Adobe is another good example. The two founders were PhD computer science researchers from Xerox PARC who were passionate about solving problems in the publishing and graphics world. They are still guiding operations at Adobe.

Note that this is a principle that Old Economy companies have long understood. Jack Welch joined GE in 1961 and became CEO 20 years later. Sometimes an Old Economy company may pull in a few outsiders to senior positions but, because they have such stable bureaucracies underneath, they can more easily afford this than startups.

See Charles Ferguson's High Stakes, No Prisoners (1999) for a longer explanation of how hired-gun CEOs manage to kill software products companies.

Lesson 6: Focus on Profit
"At Hewlett-Packard, people, materials, facilities, money, and time are the resources available to us for conducting our business. By applying our skills, we turn these resources into useful products and services. If we do a good job, customers pay us more for our products than the sum of our costs in producing and distributing them. This difference, our profit, represents the value we add to the resources we utilize."
-- David Packard in The HP Way
Remembering to make a profit was tough in the dotcom 1990s but it turns out that Hewlett and Packard's ideas were right. Most of the management teams at dotcom businesses, by being disorganized, unintelligent, and ignorant, were subtracting value from the resources that they controlled.

How does one make money in the software products business? Simple. The necessary step is to build something that becomes part of information systems that generate value for organizations and end-users. Once you've created value you can extract a portion in lots of ways. You can be closed-source and charge a license fee. You can be open-source and charge for training, service, support, and extensions. But if you aren't getting your software product into important information systems, you don't have a prayer, no matter how slick your marketing materials.
If you're creative and diligent the software products business is extremely lucrative. If you're losing money, ask yourself what you're doing wrong. The answer is probably "plenty".

Lesson 7: Let the Venture Capitalists Schmooze Wall Street ...
... but don't let them run your company. A profitable Microsoft Corporation brought in venture capitalists (VCs) at the last minute. They didn't need or spend the money but used the VCs to boost their valuation at the initial public offering, thus getting more money for the shares that they sold. Venture capitalists are dangerous because even the most successful might not know anything about business. Remember that there are tens of thousands of venture capitalists in this world. Assuming that they make random choices of companies in which to invest there will be a Gaussian curve of performance. Some firms will do consistently better than average even if everyone is guessing. Imagine that thousands of monkeys are flipping coins; some of the monkeys will get 10 heads in a row. These are the monkeys that will be celebrated for their insight. These are the monkeys whose track records will lead to uncritical cheerleading by underwriters and public investors. In bull markets such as we had in the 1990s nearly all the monkeys will be fairly consistent winners. But remember your next-door neighbor who made money in the stock market in 1985. He convinced himself that he had special insight and ability when actually he was only holding high-beta stocks in a rising market. So his foray into the commodities futures market wiped him out in the crash of '87.