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M Adil Rasjid SEm-adil-rasjid Tuesday, April 16, 2013 6:48:00 PM

5 Secrets of Success Mark Zuckerberg,Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Lary Page, Dan Comrades
1. Start With The First Step The billionaire was not immediately successful and wealthy in an instant. They all start with the first step and the first step is usually a small step. Jeff Bezos, owner of Amazon.com, the world's largest online store, Amazon started business from his garage in 1994. Mark Zuckerberg, started Facebook from his dorm room program. Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak of Apple pioneered garage.

2. Working Hard and Seeing Opportunity Bill Gates to see if the computer will be used in every household, so she works hard to make Windows. Mark Zuckerberg also see that social media is the future, so he desperately makes programming Facebook. Likewise Lary Page, co-founder of Google, also see that the Internet will rule the world, then he
and his partner Sergey Brin are working hard to make Google.

3. Not Stop Innovating "Innovation is what differentiates a leader and a follower." This is one of the famous quote from the late Steve Jobs. Google is not the first search engine, but Google managed to
dominate the search engines. Likewise,Facebook is not the first social networking sites, but Facebook also beat MySpace and Friendster. Innovation never stops, even online stores also experienced innovation.
For a world-class online store business a highly sophisticated, no longer need to have employees, do not have to have stock

4. Working Together Every large company is usually not done alone. There must be a core team behind it. Apple for example, developed by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak, Google's Larry Page and Sergei Brin, Microsoft by Bill Gates and Paul Allen, Facebook by Mark Zuckerberg, Eduardo Saverin and Dustin Moskovitz.

5.Got A clear mission and Good The billionaire has a clear mission and well. Without a mission, maybe someone achieve success, but it is difficult to maintain that success. Larry Page's mission is to organize the world's information and make them universally accessible and useful. Misis Bill Gates is to make personal computers belong to all people. What is your mission? Will you help others live better (Help People Live A Better Life)

M Adil Rasjid SEm-adil-rasjid Thursday, April 18, 2013 5:58:49 PM

JANUARY 2013 ISSUE

This issue of Ships Monthly, the first of
2013, has an international flavour, with
articles covering ships and shipping around
the world. While we usually focus on
maritime matters closer to home, this time
our well-informed authors look at ships
further afield. We have features on the
lesser-known ferries of Japan, a voyage to
South America in the days before
containerisation dominated, a look at the
busy port of Singapore, and the US Navy.
We go to Norway to take in the Hurtigruten
ship Finnmarken, move to Denmark to
profile the historic liner Jutlandia, and on
to Rotterdam for World Port Days.

Despite Rotterdam being generally regarded
as Europe’s biggest port, closer to home the
port of Liverpool has just been awarded the
title Port Authority of the Year at the global
Containerisation International Awards. Thel
Port beat entries from many other ports,
including Los Angeles, Antwerp and
Charleston.

This award is significant and it is hoped that
the port’s profile will be raised as a result.
Many people I have spoken to believe that
the Mersey in general and Liverpool port in
particular is no longer as busy as it was in
the heyday of the cargo liner, but nothing
could be further from the truth. As with
many ports, as ships get bigger, so facilities
move to deeper water, and away from their
original location.

Most people, including many in Liverpool,
will have no idea how busy and important
the port is because it is fenced off away
from the city centre. Yet one large
container ship calling in Liverpool can carry
five times as much cargo as a traditional
cargo vessel, unload considerably faster
and be operated by fewer crew and
shoreside personnel. And when Liverpool2,
the port’s new deep-water container
terminal, opens in 2015 it will bring some of
the world’s largest container ships to the
Mersey. But will anyone actually see them?

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