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    6 Simple Steps to $1 Million

    This article is part of a series related to being Financially Fit

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    Let's face it; we all don't make millions of dollars a year, and the odds are that most of us won't receive a large windfall inheritance either. However, that doesn't mean that we can't build sizeable wealth - it'll just take some time. If you're young, time is on your side and retiring a millionaire is achievable. Read on for some tips on how to increase your savings and work toward this goal.

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    Microsoft Open Source Strategy: a chat with Hank Janssen

    I have been following Microsoft open source strategy from 3 years or so now, and they are not an exception: adaptation is a gradual process at Microsoft too.

    Hank Janssen, Director of Program Management at the Microsoft Open Source Technology Center,  over these days is traveling around Europe, and yesterday we had an interesting conversation about how open source things are going at Microsoft these days.

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    Vodafone Egypt challenge 2009

    sponsored by Vodafone Egypt
     

    Think, Innovate, and Develop Mobile Applications to give new services, or to enhance life style

    Add Your Personal touch to every one’s life

    Type: Student
    Multiple entries per user is allowed.
    • Open from: Oct 17, 2009
    • Last entries: Mar 31, 2010

    The Brief

    As Vodafone is always keen on developing youth, Vodafone Egypt, had established a competition for Mobile Application Development for all Egyptian university students with sum of prizes more than 70,000 EGP

    Suggested Catergories

    The application is recommended to be in one of the below concept areas but not restricted to:

    • Social networks
    • Applications that can be used to enhance communication between people, facilitainting access for social networking sites, facilitates images, videos, and audio sharing...etc

    • Games and Entertainment
    • Mobile games applications that entertains the customers, either solo-games, or group games

    • Travel & Tourism
    • Mobile applications that facilitates for travelers and Tourists their trip

    • Business support and services
    • Mobile applications that facilitates for business customers their day to day life

    • Sport, fitness and health
    • Mobile applications that enables sportive or ordinary people to follow up their fitness and health

    • Utilities
    • Mobile applications that facilitates the day to day life, or enhaces a given service like Audio, Video, and Images enhancement or editing, Enhanced clock , ...etc)

    Building the applications using new technologies (e.g. Location based services, data streams, widgets, etc.) gives the application higher ranking opportunity.

    Winners will be announced on the website within three months of the closure of the competition. The prizes will be distributed in a Vodafone/Betavine ceremony.

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    An Engineer's Guide to Bandwidth

    Web app developers spend most of our time not thinking about how data is actually transmitted through the bowels of the network stack. Abstractions at the application layer let us pretend that networks read and write whole messages as smooth streams of bytes. Generally this is a good thing. But knowing what's going underneath is crucial to performance tuning and application design. The character of our users' internet connections is changing and some of the rules of thumb we rely on may need to be revised.

    In reality, the Internet is more like a giant cascading multiplayer game of pachinko. You pour some balls in, they bounce around, lights flash and —usually— they come out in the right order on the other side of the world.

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    America's Best Young Entrepreneurs 2009

    For our fifth annual roundup, BusinessWeek readers nominated a record number of young entrepreneurs. Meet the 25 most impressive

    Welcome to our fifth annual roundup of the country's most promising young entrepreneurs. Before we get started examining the new batch, consider this question: Who is more likely to start a business: A college student or a worker with a few decades of experience? Yep, you guessed it: the experienced worker.

    It turns out it's boomers, not twentysomethings, who start the most businesses in the U.S. Over the past decade or so, the highest rate of entrepreneurial activity belongs to the 55-64 age group. The 20-34 age bracket, by contrast, had the lowest rate. That's according to a recent report by Dane Stangler, a senior analyst with the Kauffman Foundation, based on data collected from 1996 to 2007. It echoes research by entrepreneur-turned-academic Vivek Wadhwa, who found that twice as many tech entrepreneurs create ventures in their 50s as do those in their early 20s.

    So not only are these entrepreneurs navigating the toughest economy many of us have ever lived through, they're also vastly outnumbered by older, more experienced competitors, who usually have more contacts and capital. That's even more reason to continue to give young entrepreneurs the encouragement, respect, and awe that they've received since becoming cultural icons during the dot-com boom.

    Stangler says he's not suggesting young people aren't entrepreneurial or won't be. "The cachet of large, established companies has taken a hit. Job tenure has been falling for a long time. Employment is not going to recover in the very near future. People across all age groups are going to take the future into their own hands."

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