Last week’s tweet highlights in a nutshell? Remember always, you *are* good fortune; leadership the clear-headed way; making a good first and last impression with your customers; getting people to spread your ideas; tools to make social-media marketing easier; super-fast phone chargers en route; Wi-Fi routers don’t care much for plant life…
Here’s a quick summary of tweets posted by @nycework between June 2 through June 7, 2013:
- A quote by Walt Whitman reminding you that you are good fortune;
- a video in which Seth Godin discusses meaningful ways to connect with people so they’ll gladly spread your ideas;
- an article by Dave Sheffield that uses an experience he had onboard a plane to illustrate 3 principles that make your customer interactions outstanding;
- an article about how to develop clear-headed leadership strategies that accomplish your goals in less stressful ways;
- an article that lists 30 tools you can use to track, manage and fine-tune your social-media marketing campaign;
- an article about how an experiment to find a link between extended cellphone use and the inability to concentrate led some ninth grade students to the discovery that plants won’t grow near Wi-Fi routers;
- and, @nycework’s previous digest that includes a post about Eesha Khare, an 18-year-old student whose superconductor invention charges phones in seconds.
Enjoy! Continue reading →
Posted in Business, Health, identi.ca, Internet, Life Skills, Marketing, Nanotech, Nanotechnology, Psychology, Self-Improvement, Social Media, Technology, Twitter, Video
Tagged business, cell phone, cellphone, customer experience, customer relations, customer service, Dave, Dave Sheffield, Eesha, Eesha Khare, entrepreneurship, Godin, identi.ca, Khare, leadership, management, microblogging, mobile phone, otaku, phone charger, plants, router, science, Seth, Seth Godin, Sheffield, small biz, small business, smallbiz, social media, supercapacitor, TED Talks, ted.com, The Shef, tweet, tweets, twitter, ultracapacitor, Walt, Walt Whitman, Whitman, Wi-Fi, WiFi, Wonder Woman
Did you know there are man-made machines that are invisible to the naked eye? Microscopic guitars, cars, computers and many invisible things are being designed using nanotechnology.
Now nanotech’s found its way into food. Yes, nano foods are already on store shelves.
Reading about nanotech reminds this blogger of a scene from the 2003 movie X2: X-Men United. In the scene Magneto Escapes, the movie’s villain Magneto breaks out of confinement by extracting iron from a prison guard’s blood. No, the prison guard didn’t boost his body’s iron levels feasting on chicken liver just before going to work. His body was hacked. The scene Bottoms Up! shows how the “iron hack” was done.
So what do these advancements in nanotech potentially mean? For starters, every one of us and everything in life is now potentially hackable. Bottoms up, folks!
Further Reading
Posted in Nano food, Nanofood, Nanotech, Nanotechnology
Tagged food, hacker, hacking, health, magneto, mystique, nano food, nanofood, nanotech, nanotechnology, science, tech, technology, x-men, x2