Internet Mind

Learn from selected people with their unique solution facing internet industry chalenge...Get inspirational move before you start an internet business...Many links to great resources for your online business...

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MOK OH, Ph.D.

Founder and Chief Technology Officer

EveryScape


Mok Oh has 15 years of experience in computer science and computer graphics R&D. He is the founder of Mok3 Inc./EveryScape.com in 2002, and is the inventor of the Mok3 technology based on his doctoral dissertation work from the Computer Graphics Group at MIT. In EveryScape, he is responsible for product and technology development, functioning as software architect and leading intellectual property development. He holds multiple patents and publications in image-based modeling, image and photo editing, and 3D-related technologies. His research and development further spans into 3D modeling, ray tracing and light-transport algorithms, interactive tools, and image processing. He was an invited speaker at multiple venues, such as MIT Lecture Series, Harvard School of Architecture, and internationally in various universities in South Korea and in the Asia-Pacific Innovation and Entrepreneurship Conference. Prior to his doctoral work at MIT, he worked for Accenture as an Information Systems Analyst, where he developed business software for AT&T. Mok also earned a Masters of Science and Engineering degree in Computer Information Sciences from University of Pennsylvania, and multiple Bachelor of Arts degrees in Computer Science, Art History and Studio Art from Oberlin College.

EveryScape isn't an online world, it's the world online.

EveryScape lets businesses and organizations build engaging, immersive relationships with consumers through three-dimensional, photo-realistic experiences of cities and towns, streets and sidewalks, building exteriors and interiors. EveryScape's patented HyperMedia Technology Platform allows anyone with a browser to experience a first-person, eye-level walk down a scaped street, gathering and sharing information on businesses and attractions, entering a store and shopping, checking the menu and reviews of a restaurant or the upcoming performances of a theater. It is the real world, online.

Founded in 2002 by Mok Oh and led by president and CEO Jim Schoonmaker, EveryScape, Inc. is headquartered in Waltham, Massachusetts.













RON JACKSON

DN Journal
Editor & Publisher

Began his career as a radio news director at a small station in Ohio, Ron Jackson now known well as Editor and Publisher at DN Journal Sites, a sites dedicated for fascinating Domain Name Industry. A industry that everybody can joint and have very little barrier for new comer just like you and me, to hit profit just with little skill and everybody good at : word game. If you can play scrabble, then this "game" is just perfect-right for you.
Think a word that popular or easy to remember, then you've done. Off course with little luck, a new comer can easily get $100 per transaction, just flipping a name that he bought the other day.

From Ohio, Ron Jackson moved on to television as a news reporter with an ABC-TV affiliate in Florida. Two years after arriving there he became the station’s Sports Director. Later he moved on to a Top 20 market, doing sports for the CBS-TV station in Tampa.
After 20 years in radio/TV he start his own business and opened a series of record stores, an antique shop and various internet ventures. He bought his first domain name in 1997 and put his first site online named musicparadise.com. In early 2002 he was looking for additional names for his internet projects when he found this DN business. Now Ron Jackson is President of Internet Edge, Inc., a web publishing company founded in 2000.

Thought many critics about domain business say as "word gamble" industry, but still, for newbie, Ron's Journal is one of the first resources to considered about, for everybody want's to jump is this games. With a series of sites dedicated for domain name business, Ron Jackson has a unique "brand" as Domain Names Games Master. He shaped internet industry with his weekly report for "hit" price in domain name transfer accros the internet. You could take a look the report at here.
This is just our opinion that even the report is collecting data from well known auction site like SEDO, Moniker, etc, but we have to preserved ourselfes a cool mind. Because it's really interesting huge profit for a domain bought at $10, sold at $250.000, but there's no written prove that we can confirm. That kind of transaction happen in closed door and never exposed originally. We can only look at auction board, but no chances to check it wether it's right or just a buzz.

We think that a profit value between $100 and $ 1000 is natural, if we take look at Kevin Rose's digg.com story when he bought his famous digg.com at $1200 after he rejected by digdig.com's owner at $500. This is true story from Kevin Rose. So if you think a new business and you like scrabble, you may test your luck in domain business, but don't push it to much. Windfall profit in six digit is rarely happen if not a fake story...don't forget to read Ron Jackson site and get all help you need there.





ARIANNA HUFFINGTON

Megablogger

In her own words :
"The growth of New Media journalism will be a hybrid combining the best aspects of traditional print newspapers with the best of what the Web brings to the table. We're getting a glimpse into this with the many changes afoot at Old Media places like the The New York Times, and from New Media players like, well, like the Huffington Post.

The online vs. print debate is totally obsolete. It's as musty as the old barroom argument about Ginger vs. Mary Ann. It's 2008, why not have a three-way? Traditional media have ADD: They are far too quick to drop a story. Online journalists, meanwhile, tend to have OCD—we chomp down on a story, refusing to move on until we've gotten down to the marrow.

The shifting dynamic between the forces of print and online reminds me of Sarah Connor and the T-101 in The Terminator. At first, the visitor from the future (digital) seemed intent on killing Sarah (print). But as the relationship progressed, the Terminator became Sarah and her son's one hope for salvation. Today, you can almost hear digital media (which for some reason has a thick Austrian accent) saying to print: "Come with me if you want to live!"

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When first starting Huffington Post at 2005, 3 years ago, many critics on her idea mentioned as a digital meeting for her old politics friends to gather new liberal friend. But Huffington Post has grown in ways that few, except perhaps Ms. Huffington herself, expected.

In February 2008, The Huffington Post visited by 3.7 million unique visitors, according to Nielsen Online, for the first time beating out The Drudge Report, the conservative tip sheet with which The Post is often compared. On Technorati, a blog search tool, The Huffington Post is the second-most-linked-to blog (now #1), behind technology site TechCrunch. (14 million unique visitors for the most recent month)

Today, The Huffington Post has become one of the most popular and widely quoted sites on the web, its influence easily rivaling that of many mainstream media.

But who's Arianna Huffington ?
Born native of Greece, she has been the president of the debating society in University of Cambridge. An author of books about feminism, Picasso and green movement, a panelist on radio and television shows, a millionaire, and she is also a candidate in the 2003 California governor election.

And now she is become one of -peole said about- megablogger, in 100 most influenced people in the web according to Time Magazine, time will tell...