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Thursday, February 09, 2012

We Are All Weird

Success Mag interview, 2012 from Seth Godin on Vimeo.



Squidoo founder, bestselling author and prolific blogger Seth Godin recently sat down with Success Magazine’s Darren Hardy to talk about his vision, the ideas in his latest book, We Are All Weird, the smart marketer of today, and how businesses become remarkable.

Children’s Creativity Museum




At the Children’s Creativity Museum, we go beyond the conventional environment of play by inspiring kids to imagine, create and share in our multimedia environment. With every visit, kids walk away with a unique media or art project that reflects and celebrates their creativity.
All of our core studios and exhibits are facilitated by skilled artists and our C.I.T.Y. Guides who are guaranteed to spark your imagination as they guide you through the creative process. You will also notice our Creativity Critters throughout the museum. Explore our exhibits to find out more about their favorite activities.









Is your school seeing a mass influx of laptops, smartphones, tablets and other wireless devices?

Are you prepared for the invasion of the 4th "R"...wiReless?

While implementing a “Bring Your Own Device” (BYOD) strategy allows school systems to provide one-to-one computing for students, reduced equipment costs and eliminating technology refresh capital, wireless networks are feeling an enormous strain, not to mention access control and additional management issues.

TEDxTaipei miniTalks - Jiun-Huei Proty Wu - 02



Professor Jiun-Huei Proty Wu is a cosmologist teaching at National Taiwan University, jointly appointed by Academia Sinica and National Cheng-Chi University. Growing up in Taiwan, he developed a fighting spirit from the challenging experience of military service, an attitude he carried throughout his life. At 12 years of age, he built two telescopes using surplus wood and a PVC water pipe, hoping to prove the existence of the goddess of the moon. Two years later, while using these two telescopes to observe the universe, he successfully captured the astonishing moment when the Comet Halley passed, sparking his career in cosmology. At 28, he obtained his PhD in cosmology from the Relativity Group at Cambridge, led by Professor Stephen Hawking. After working at U.C. Berkeley and NASA, he returned to Taiwan and has been back for over a decade. He is currently the Project Scientist of the cosmological telescope, AMiBA, in Hawaii, and plans to build a time machine at the South Pole to search for the origins of the cosmos.