I don't know what it is, but I always forget about Camila Alves. You know who she is, don'tcha? The lucky woman who married hotty lace wedding dresses hot hottiest Matthew McConaughey over the weekend? You know, the lace wedding dresses one he has two children, Levi and Vida, with? I'm taken aback by how amazingly gorgeous she is every single time I see a picture of her by Matty's side. Let me tell ya somethin', too, their wedding day was no exception.
The first photos from their big day are in this lace wedding dresses week's People, and the whole ceremony and celebration look so adorably personal and quaint. But, I know what you really wanna talk about -- the dress. Camila wore a custom designed long-sleeve lace gown from lace wedding dresses one of her favorite Brazilian designers.
It's beautiful for sure. But I've gotta ask: Would you ever get your lace wedding dresses dress custom designed? And if so, is THIS Kate Middleton look-alike what you'd want?
There are loads of pros to designing your V-neck Beach Wedding Dresses own dress. The thing will most definitely fit like a glove, and you can pick and choose aspects from all the different dresses you've ever seen and V-neck Beach Wedding Dresses combine them in one gown. Although, knowing me -- I'd want way too many things in the same dress and none of them would go together.
But hello, when I hear the word custom -- I think one thing: $$$$. I mean good for Camila. Matty and her, they have that sort of dough to V-neck Beach Wedding Dresses shell out for a lavish affair involving gorgeousness like that. Something tells me once my big day comes around, though, I'll be on the hunt for a "perfect gown" that already exists, even if part of the reason it's "perfect" is because of the price tag.
Nevertheless, Camila, she did it right. The dress is cute, and it isn't too V-neck Beach Wedding Dresses busy. Oh, and if you're into the whole long-sleeve lace look a la Kate, then it's spot-on. Kudos to the happy couple!

BlackBerry 10 phones to offer TomTom technology

posted on 14 Jun 2012 10:56 by ibuzone
When it comes to BMW Navigation DVD mapping technology, it seems Apple Inc. and Research In Motion Ltd. are on BMW Navigation DVD  the same page.
Dutch in-car navigation firm TomTom’s announcement this week that it has licensed its map and real time traffic data to Apple follows an BMW Navigation DVD unveiling of a similar partnership with RIM a few weeks earlier.
TomTom and the Waterloo-based BMW Navigation DVD  device maker in BMW Navigation DVD May said BlackBerrys will use the services in applications including BlackBerry Maps, Traffic and BlackBerry Locate, which lets third-party software developers access the BMW Navigation DVD information for their own app development.
It’s also expected that the mapping BMW Navigation DVD  service will be offered on RIM’s BB10 software platform and smartphones slated for release in the latter part of 2012.
Apple at its annual Worldwide Developers Conference this week showcased an updated mobile device operating system that includes a customized BMW Navigation DVD mapping program to replace Google Maps. The next day, TomTom said it BMW Navigation DVD  signed a global agreement with Apple for maps and related information.
Apple also said it is working to build Siri voice activation technology into control systems in automobiles.
“Through the voice command button on your steering wheel, you’ll be able to ask Siri questions without taking your eyes off the road,” Apple said on a website describing the new iOS 6 platform.
Observers say the rise of TomTom is a blow to Google, which has enjoyed a dominant position in the mobile mapping environment, arguing as well that use of the technology by RIM and Apple should drive improvements in its performance.
TomTom on BlackBerry and BMW Navigation DVD the iOS 6 also demonstrates the growing value of navigation services for mobile BMW Navigation DVD  devices, with a recent study concluding that TomTom’s traffic information allows drivers to select the best route to their Car Navigation DVD destinations and saves commuters roughly 50 minutes of travel time per week.
And the growing importance of in-car navigation software offers an opportunity for RIM, which was early to the game when it Car Navigation DVD Car Navigation DVD acquired Ottawa-based QNX Software Systems in 2010 in part to boost its performance in the automotive sector.
QNX technology supports wireless digital services Car Navigation DVD including video-on-demand and GPS navigation, and has been licensed for more than 17 million in-vehicle systems.
The company unveiled a “cloud-connected” concept car early this year in Las Vegas that includes smartphone integration with Bluetooth, a Car Navigation DVD Car Navigation DVD reconfigurable digital instrument cluster and high-definition hands-free communications.
A concept Porsche Carrera was used to demonstrate applications, including Vlingo voice-to-text and voice recognition, a multilingual speech engine, the Car Navigation DVD  Navigation DVD Poynt virtual personal assistant, a Weather Network app, and streaming Internet radio from Pandora, NoBex, Slacker, and TuneIn.

Innovation transformation

posted on 14 Jun 2012 10:54 by ibuzone
Editor's note: As China moves up the manufacturing value chain from "made-in-China" to "designed-in-China", the phenomenon of shanzhai products has become part of the English lexicon. The word literally means "mountain fortress" and originally referred to bandits operating outside official control. It has been associated with china manufacturer counterfeit goods, such as cell phones or copies of brand name handbags. But as the country china manufacturer develops, the term has expanded further to mean micro-innovation - an expansion of existing technologies and design concepts or marketing that deliver genuinely original products.The china manufacturer opening-up and reform of the economy in the 1980s also opened the floodgates to shanzhai, which was initially the imitation of branded goods. At first, shanzhai products were mainly articles of daily use, such as sports apparel, shavers and humidifiers. But at the turn of china manufacturer the millennium, when the country's IT industry boomed, so too did the copying of digital products from the West, such as cell phones and MP3 players. By 2010, according to an iSuppli report, China was producing more than 200 million cell phone clones a year, which had the effect of forcing foreign firms to reduce the sale price of their phones in the mainland market to compete.While foreign companies and even governments complain of intellectual property rights infringement, many Chinese consumers point out the originals are overpriced, and they cannot afford them.As such, there is a sentiment that these "pirate" manufacturers are on the side of justice, providing goods the poor and the disenfranchised would otherwise not be able to own.From its humble beginnings, this shanzhai spirit has evolved into a cultural phenomenon. The grassroots population, for instance, makes fun of elitist culture by parodying it.To show their disdain for china manufacturer State broadcaster CCTV's annual Spring Festival Gala, a shanzhai version with weird and wonderful acts was shown online and competed with the original.Even so, society's tolerance toward the phenomenon worries some."If we allow this copycat culture to grow, Chinese culture can hardly foster a spirit of original creation, and China's manufacturing industry will lose its edge for innovation," Shanghai-based culture critic Zhu Dake says."It could become a vicious circle."He refers to Japan and South Korea, which were both previously known for copying advanced concepts and technologies from the West.However, Zhu says, it didn't take them long to shake off this culture to become among the world's superpowers in innovation, with well-respected brands like Sony and Samsung."But 33 years after China's reform and opening-up, I still haven't seen any sign of us becoming more innovative," Zhu concludes.Sociologist Ai Jun disagrees. He says the shanzhai phenomenon signals a "revolution and progress in terms of thinking".By imitating, he says, many businessmen and manufacturers have learned to produce goods independently and are now refining the original idea by adding more advanced and customer-friendly functions, and are moving up the value chain to produce genuinely original products.Copying is a "necessary stage", Ai says, for startup entrepreneurs, who have to confront the challenge of other countries blocking the transfer of technologies to China.At home, Ai keeps one of the first group of domestically made humidifiers. They were created in the 1980s by He Lumin, whom Ai calls the "Shanzhai King".He was initially inspired by Japanese humidifiers, after which he started adding new technologies adapted to local needs.Now the 59-year-old - also known as the "Father of China's Air Purification Industry" - is chairman of a tech company that owns 70 percent of the core technologies in the global air purification industry."Of course, there are those who copy to make quick money," Ai says."But many farsighted entrepreneurs take shanzhai as a strategy to accumulate capital and become an innovative company."The Internet industry has a plethora of similar examples.Many leading domestic websites for online searches, e-commerce and social networking services initially resembled their foreign counterparts in one way or another.Tencent's instant messaging service QQ is viewed as a copy of ICQ, while YouTube, Facebook and Twitter respectively inspired Youku, Renren and Sina Weibo.If a country is five china manufacturer years ahead, the newcomer should, of course, learn from them, the former head of Google China, Kai-Fu Lee, is quoted as saying.Now in charge of a $115-million tech venture capital fund called Innovation Works, he says: "These companies have tailored their products to the tastes of Chinese users."These tailor-made, small and incremental improvements are what many IT insiders describe as "micro innovations"."Their innovative approach is based on local characteristics," Tencent chairman and CEO Pony Ma said at an industry forum in October 2011."They have enabled many domestic Internet companies to overshadow their international counterparts in China."Sina Weibo, for example, is a simulation of the Twitter platform, but it has improved it considerably and in such a way that it is "a much more powerful platform in terms of functionality", says French technology investor and entrepreneur Franck Nazikian.He believes the copy/paste Chinese business model is a thing of the past, and China is right on track to becoming a superpower in tech innovation.In order to spur the growth of young Chinese entrepreneurs, he founded CHINICT eight years ago. Every year, the forum gathers international tech stars in Beijing to talk about their experiences to inspire their Chinese peers.The latest example of tech innovation, Nazikian says, is Tencent.The country's largest Internet company in China by sales started a new voice messaging application a year ago called Weixin. With more than 100 million active domestic users, he says, the company is now exporting this concept all around the world under the name WeChat."People would argue that Tencent hasn't created the concept of voice messaging. That's true. But nobody is creating anything," he says."The nature of this industry is to copy each other, whether it is in China or the United States."Nazikian cites Skype, seen by some as one of the most disruptive tech companies of the past decade.He says Skype didn't create the concept of voice over IP at all, as Yahoo messenger and MSN were already using it. But by providing better quality and a more aggressive marketing-focused strategy, Skype took over the voice over IP market."There is nothing like disruptive technology, meaning creating something totally from scratch," Nazikian says. "And everybody is improving someone else's innovation." Ai, the sociologist, says Chinese entrepreneurs have mastered the language of technology and are now positioned to turn from imitation to innovation.Another Chinese company that is transforming from shanzhai manufacturer to a market leader is the sports apparel brand Adivon, which was originally an adidas copycat.The company's brand manager Liu Feng says that by reversing the "elite athlete" image of many international sports brands, Adivon has marketed itself as an "ordinary hero" and has won over converts nationwide, and china manufacturer especially in the overlooked fourth-tier cities and the countryside.The company has become a famous brand in its birthplace of Fujian province. Its annual online sales alone have reportedly reached 30 million yuan ($4.71 million).To promote its image, the brand has sponsored international sports contests and charity events. It will even sponsor three African countries for the upcoming London Olympics."We have china manufacturer always believed innovation is the key to the whole process of our development," Liu says."In the 21st century, if you don't change, you will be eliminated from the market."