Saturday 16 June 2012

Interesting IQ Test?

Interesting IQ Test?


Intelligence Test Instructions:



Write each of your answers down, it makes a difference! You will be allowed 10 minutes to complete the test. Write your answers in the spaces provided. Are you ready? What is the time?
Start.


1 ) Some months have 30 days,some months have 31 days. How many months have 28 days? ____________________

2 ) If a doctor gives you 3 pills and tells you to take one pill every half hour, how long would it be before all the pills had been taken? ____________________

3 ) I went to bed at eight o'clock in the evening and wound up my clock and set the alarm to sound at nine o'clock in the morning. How many hours sleep would I get before being awoken by the alarm? ____________________

4 ) Divide 30 by half and add ten. What do you get?____________________

5 ) A farmer had 17 sheep. All but 9 died. How many live sheep were left? ___________________

6 ) If you had only one match and entered a COLD and DARK room, where there was an oil heater, an oil lamp and a candle, which would you light first? ____________________

7 ) A man builds a house with four sides of rectangular construction, each side having a southern exposure. A big bear comes along. What color is the bear? ____________________

8 ) Take 2 apples from 3 apples. What do you have? ___________________

9 ) How many animals of each species did Moses take with him in the Ark? ____________________

10 ) If you drove a bus with 43 people on board from Chicago and stopped at Pittsburg to pick up 7 more people and drop off 5 passengers and at Cleveland to drop off 8 passengers and pick up 4 more and eventually arrive at Philadelphia 20 hours later, what's the name of the driver? ____________________


Answers in the following article - no cheating now! GOOD LUCK!





Answers:
1 ) All of them. Every month has at least 28 days.
2 ) 1 hour. If you take a pill at 1 o'clock,then another at 1.30 and the last at 2 o'clock,they will be taken in 1 hour.
3 ) 1 hour. It is a wind up alarm clock which cannot discriminate between a.m. and p.m.
4 ) 70. Dividing by half is the same as multiplying by 2.
5 ) 9 live sheep.
6 ) The match.
7 ) White. If all walls face south, the house must be on the North Pole.
8 ) 2 apples. I HAVE 3 APPLES, YOU TAKE 2, WHAT DO YOU HAVE?
9 ) None. It was Noah, not Moses.
10 ) YOU are the driver.


Grading Scale (out of 10)

8+: Engineer
7: Student
6: High school pupil
5: Primary school pupil
4: Teacher
3: College lecturer
2: University lecturer
1: Member of Congress

Interesting Unknown Facts

 Interesting Unknown Facts

1) Human birth control pill work on gorillas.

2) The right lung takes in more air than the left.

3) it is illegal to own a red car in shanghai china.

4) A hard-boiled egg will spin. An uncooked or soft-boiled egg will not.

5) Astronauts cannot burp in space.

6) The snowiest city in the U.S.A. is blue canyon, California

7) Lake Nicaragua in Nicaragua is the only fresh water lake in the world that has sharks.

8) Kite flying is a professional sport in Thailand.

9) The great warrior Genghis khan died in bed while having sex.

10) No matter how cold it gets gasoline will not freeze.

Here are some interesting, but true facts, that you may or may not have known.

Here are some interesting, but true facts, that you may or may not have known.
  1. The Statue of Liberty's index finger is eight feet long
  2. Rain has never been recorded in some parts of the Atacama Desert in Chile
  3. A 75 year old person will have slept about 23 years.
  4. A Boeing 747's wing span is longer than the Wright brother's first flight. the Wright brother's invented the airplane)
  5. There are as many chickens on earth as there are humans.
  6. One type of hummingbird weighs less than a penny
  7. The word "set " has the most number of definitions in the English language;192
  8. Slugs have four noses
  9. Sharks can live up to 100 years
  10. Mosquitoes are more attracted to the color blue than any other color.
  11. Kangaroos can't walk backwards
  12. About 75 acres of pizza are eaten in in the U.S. Everyday
  13. The largest recorded snowflake was 15in wide and 8in thick. It fell in Montana in 1887
  14. The tip of a bullwhip moves so fast that the sound it makes is actually a tiny sonic boom.
  15. Former president Bill Clinton only sent 2 emails in his entire 8 year presidency
  16. Koalas and humans are the only animals that have finger prints
  17. There are 200,000,000 insects for every one human
  18. It takes more calories to eat a piece of celery than the celery had in it to begin with.
  19. The world's largest Montessori school is in India, with 26,312 students in 2002
  20. Octopus have three hearts
  21. If you ate too many carrots, you'd turn orange
  22. The average person spends two weeks waiting for a traffic light to change.
  23. 1 in 2,000,000,000 people will live to be 116 or old
  24. The body has 2-3 million sweat glands
  25. Sperm whales have the biggest brains; 20 lbs
  26. Tiger shark embryos fight each other in their mother's womb. The survivor is born.
  27. Most cats are left pawed
  28. 250 people have fallen off the Leaning Tower of Pisa
  29. A Blue whale's tongue weighs more than an elephant
  30. You use 14 muscles to smile and 43 to frown. Keep Smiling!
  31. Bamboo can grow up to 3 ft in 24 hours
  32. An eyeball weighs about 1 ounce
  33. Bone is five times stronger than steel.

Interesting Facts

Interesting Facts

1. The longest one-syllable word in the English language is "screeched."

2. "Dreamt" is the only English word that ends in the letters "MT"

3. Almonds are members of the peach family.

4. The symbol on the "pound" key (#) is called an octothorpe.

5. The dot over the letter 'I is called a tittle.

6. Ingrown toenails are hereditary.

7. The word "set" has more definitions than any other word in the English language.

8. "Underground" is the only word in the English language that begins and ends with the letters "und."

9. There are only four words in the English language which end in "-dous": tremendous, horrendous, stupendous, and hazardous.

10. The longest word in the English language, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, is pneumonoultramicros copicsilicovolca noconiosis.

11. The only other word with the same amount of letters is its plural: pneumonoultramicros copicsilicovolca noconiosesl.

12. The longest place-name still in use is Taumatawhakatangiha ngakoauauotamate aturipukakapikim aungahoronukup okaiwe-nuakit natahu, a New Zealand hill.

13. Los Angeles's full name is "El Pueblo de Nuestra Senora la Reinade Los Angeles de Porciuncula" and can be abbreviated to 3.63% of its size,L.A.

14. An ostrich's eye is bigger than its brain.

15. Tigers have striped skin, not just striped fur.

16. Alfred Hitchcock didn't have a belly button. It was eliminated when he was sewn up after surgery.

17. Telly Savalas and Louis Armstrong died on their birthdays.

18. Donald Duck's middle name is Fauntleroy.

19. The muzzle of a lion is like a fingerprint - no two lions have the same pattern of whiskers.

21. A pregnant goldfish is called a twit.

23. There is a seven-letter word in the English language that contains ten words without rearranging any of its letters, "therein": the,there, he, in, rein, her, here, ere, therein, herein.

24. Dueling is legal in Paraguay as long as both parties are registered blood donors.

26. A goldfish has a memory span of three seconds.

27. It's impossible to sneeze with your eyes open.

28. Cranberries are sorted for ripeness by bouncing them; a fully ripened cranberry can be dribbled like a basketball.

30. The letters KGB stand for Komitet Gosudarstvennoy Bezopasnosti

31. 'Stewardesses' is the longest English word that is typed with only the left hand.

33. The combination "ough" can be pronounced in nine different ways; the following sentence contains them all: "A rough-coated, dough-faced, thoughtful ploughman strode through the streets of Scarborough; after falling into a slough, he coughed and hiccoughed."

34. The only 15 letter word that can be spelled without repeating a letter is uncopyrightable.

35. Facetious and abstemious contain all the vowels in the correct order, as does arsenious, meaning "containing arsenic."

36. Emus and kangaroos cannot walk backwards, and are on the Australian seal for that reason.

37. Cats have over one hundred vocal sounds, while dogs only have about ten.

38. The word "Checkmate" in chess comes from the Persian phrase "Shah Mat," which means "the king is dead."

39. The reason firehouses have circular stairways is from the days of yore when the engines were pulled by horses. The horses were stabled on the ground floor and figured out how to walk up straight staircases.

China Launches 3D Newspapers.

China Launches 3D Newspapers.










Ever since China's first 3D newspaper was released, back in April, the public has been asking for more. And they're about to get it, as a limited number of the Hangzhou-based Daily Business editions are about to be issued, in 3D format.
British tabloid, The Sun, has announced it will be launching the first 3D newspaper, on June 5, a few days before the Soccer World Cup kicks off, in n attempt to raise awareness to the 3D broadcast of the sports event, by Sky News. Sorry guys, but you're almost two months late, in China, 3D newspapers are already yesterday's news.

Some technology facts

Some technology facts

  • 160 billion emails are sent daily, 97% of which are spam.
  • Spam generates 33bn KWt-hours of energy every year, enough to power 2.4 million homes, producing 17 million tons of CO2.
  • 9 out of every 1,000 computers are infected with spam.
  • Spammer get 1 response to every 12 million emails they send (yet it still makes them a small profit).
  • A twillionaire is a twitterer with a million or more followers.
  • There are some 1 billion computers in use.
  • There are some 2 billion TV sets in use.
  • There are more than 4 billion cell phones in use. About 3 million cell phones are sold every day.
  • The first known cell phone virus, Cabir.A, appeared in 2004.
  • Since 2008, video games have outsold movie DVDs.
  • About 1.8 billion people connect to the Internet, 450 million of them speak English. See list of Internet languages.
  • Google indexed it’s 1 trillionth unique URL on July 25, 2008. That is thought to be about 20% of all the pages on the Internet but a high percentage of the World Wide Web (the public Internet).
  • One google search produces about 0.2g of CO2. But since you hardly get an answer from one search, a typical search session produces about the same amount of CO2 as does boiling a kettle.
  • Google handles about 1 billion search queries per day, releasing some 200 tons of CO2 per day.
  • The average US household uses 10.6 megawatt-hours (MWh) electricity per year.
  • Google uses an estimated 15 billion kWh of electricity per year, more than most countries. However, google generates a lot of their own power with their solar panels.
  • The first public cell phone call was made on April 3, 1973 by Martin Cooper.
  • The Motorola DynaTAC 8000X was the first cell phone sold in the US; launched on April 11, 1984, it was designed by Rudy Krolopp and weighed 2 pounds.
  • About 20% of the videos on YouTube is music related.
  • 10 hours of video viewing is uploaded every minute on YouTube.
  • People view 15 billion videos online every month.
  • On average, US onliners view 100 videos per month each.
  • Flickr hosts some 3 billion photographs, FaceBook hosts more than 10 billion.
  • 1 Bit = Binary Digit
  • 8 Bits = 1 Byte
  • 1000 Bytes = 1 Kilobyte
  • 1000 Kilobytes = 1 Megabyte
  • 1000 Megabytes = 1 Gigabyte
  • 1000 Gigabytes = 1 Terabyte
  • 1000 Terabytes = 1 Petabyte
  • 1000 Petabytes = 1 Exabyte
  • 1000 Exabytes = 1 Zettabyte
  • 1000 Zettabytes = 1 Yottabyte
  • 1000 Yottabytes = 1 Brontobyte
  • 1000 Brontobytes = 1 Geopbyte
  • Technically speaking, the sum is 1024 bytes.


Human Lifespan

Human Lifespan

Human development is marked by different stages and milestones over the lifespan.

It is expressed over three domains: physical, cognitive and socio/emotional. While human physical and cognitive development is universal, socio/emotional definitions and development vary from culture to culture. Gaining a basic knowledge of human lifespan development will lead to a better understanding of the appearance, perceptions and behaviors of the self and others.

    Stages of Human Development

        The various stages of human development include the prenatal period, infancy, toddlerhood, early childhood, middle childhood, adolescence, young adulthood, middle adulthood and late adulthood. Each stage is marked by milestones in physical, cognitive, and socio/emotional development.
    Physical Development

        Physical development has to do with the way that the human body develops over a lifespan. The most rapid and complex human development occurs during the prenatal period. From infancy to early childhood, the physical milestones include developing motor skills like learning to control body movements, walk, talk, speak, use tools like spoons and forks and use the restroom. From infancy to early childhood, humans grow in height, weight and mass and get their first set of teeth. Middle childhood has only a few physical milestones, such as continued growth at a much slower rate and the gain of permanent teeth.

        Adolescence is the second most rapid and complex time of human development and is when the sexual maturation process begins. Females begin to grow breasts, their hips expand and they grow pubic hair and begin menstruation, which marks their physical ability to procreate. They may grow a few inches more in height. Males have significant growth spurts and develop facial and pubic hair, their voices deepen and they begin to have sperm-producing ejaculations, signifying their ability to procreate.

        Young adulthood is when humans are at the prime of their physical development. All of the systems are functioning optimally, making this the best time for reproduction. Middle adulthood brings the beginning of physical deterioration, such as the end of fertility in women, or menopause. The decrease in physical abilities and health for both sexes continues through late adulthood.

    Cognitive Development
        Cognitive development has to do with the way humans perceive and experience the world and deals with issues like memory, thinking and decision-making processes and concept comprehension.

        During the prenatal period, cognitive development is highly enveloped in physical development as the primary tool for cognition; the brain is still being developed. During infancy and early childhood, milestones like speaking, comprehension and object differentiation occur. Thoughts about the world are simplistic, and judgments are made in an either/or framework. Middle childhood brings the beginning of concrete and logical thinking, and adolescence brings about a phase where cognitive judgments are often overridden by feelings and impulses because of the body's rapidly changing physical and biological climate.

        Young adulthood is the human cognitive prime, as the capacity for rapid and accurate memory, thought processing and information analysis function at peak levels. Perceptions of the world, judgment and morality become more sophisticated and complex. During middle adulthood, humans are experts at problem solving, atlthough they begin to experience some signs of decline with speed in processing and recall. Late adulthood signifies the continued deterioration of cognitive abilities.

    Socio/Emotional Development

        Socio/emotional development has to do with how an individual is able to handle emotions, relationships, social situations, and the various roles demanded of them by society. Some aspect of Socio/Emotional standards, such as social expectations, relationships, and roles vary from culture to culture.

        During infancy and early childhood, the primary relationships are with the parents and based on attachment. Environmental exploration, impulsivity, differentiation of self (from others) and the basics of social interaction are learned. In early childhood, impulsivity begins to give way to control, and awareness of consequences significantly effects behavioral choices. Middle childhood begins the transition from family orientation to peer orientation, which carries on into adolescence.

        Issues of identify, sexuality and sexual expression, conflict and resolution and internal stability prevail. By young adulthood, the focus shifts from peers to career, social role, building external stability, finding a mate and starting a family.

        Middle adulthood is met with the psychological and emotional challenges of facing the mid-life crisis, and a life analysis and inventory is taken. Late adulthood marks the transition from the mid-life crisis. Life reflection, acceptance of death, and legacy building or making social contributions also occur at this phase.
    Significance

        Having some knowledge about human lifespan development is beneficial for many reasons. It increases self-awareness and understanding, which helps with life planning. If a female is aware of the stages of her physical development, for example, she will know that her natural childbearing years are limited. If she wants to have children, she can use family planning to make choices about her education, career and mate to support this goal. Additionally, this knowledge can be helpful for improving relationships and interpersonal communication and resolving conflicts.




About Mobile Screens

About Mobile Screens

The screen defines your smartphone. This is why its size and the quality of image it reproduces determines, to a large extent, your overall experience of using a smartphone

#1...LCD



LCD, or Liquid Crystal Display, is the most common flat panel display. It uses a combination of layers of liquid crystals and a backlight to produce an image. The properties of the liquid crystals to block or allow light change as current is applied

#2...TFT


TFT or Thin Film Transistor is used to improve readability of LCD panels. Transistors are embedded within the panel itself, reducing crosstalk between pixels and improving image stability. Used mainly in entry-level handsets with colour screens.

#3...IPS LCD

IPS, or In Plane Switching, is a further evolution of the LCD, invented by Hitachi and LG to improve on colours and viewing angles of TFT displays

4...Retina


Introduced by Apple, this type of LCD uses pixels smaller than the human retina can perceive. Retina displays are found in fourth-generation iPod Touch and iPhone 4/4S.

#5...OLED


OLED or Organic Light Emitting Diodes, produce their own light rather than relying on a backlight. It offers a brighter, more vivid picture with a higher contrast ratio on lower power consumption.


#6...AMOLED

AMOLED, or Active Matrix OLEDs, allow for a larger size screen with a higher number of pixels.

#7...SuperAMOLED


SuperAMOLED Plus & AMOLED Advanced are improvements that increase brightness, reduce reflectance or lower power consumption.

#8...S-LCD


Super, or S-LCD, is a corporation founded by Samsung and Sony. S-LCDs use technology that brings quality and contrast levels to near-Amoled standards, but at a lower price.


RFID - The Way of the Future


RFID - The Way of the Future


RFID has been talked about a lot in the past few years and for good reason. It is essentially the future due to the significant role it can play in every industry you can imagine. Healthcare, manufacturing, logistics, hospitality, retail, education, you name it!

One of the significant reasons for its adoption across various types of businesses is that the cost and complexity associated with RFID is minimal. RFID tags, RFID readers, RFID infrastructure as a whole can be integrated into existing products and solutions quite easily. For those of you who are not familiar with how RFID really works, here is a short little explanation:

RFID Tags: Small little chips of various sizes with information loaded in them.
RFID Readers: These are your scanners with antennas built-in to scan for information from the RFID tags.

Now, how this essentially works is that the RFID tags are loaded with information and the RFID reader's antenna sends out radio signals in short bursts which essentially communicates with the RFID tags and also powers the RFID tags which enables them to communicate. So basically you are sending/receiving information without the middlemen: Wires! It is a really neat concept which is being adopted worldwide to enable businesses keep track of their investments and it provides them with a more efficient way to carry out various tasks.

Imagine this: you have a RFID chip embedded in your arm and that carries all your personal and financial information. You never need to carry a wallet or ID. Ever! Isn't that something? Well, the question still remains if you would actually embed a a metal chip in your arm? I wouldn't!

RFID How Does it Work?


RFID  How Does it Work? 















have been talking to my friends about RFID a lot lately and a number of them have told me exactly this:

"Yeah, RFID! I know what it is. The thing which works wirelessly." Once they said this I noticed the little confusion in their face and that said it all! How does RFID actually work? Well, I am here to explain what components form the RFID infrastructure and how it really works.

RFID stands for Radio Frequency Identification (as you would have realized). The components involved:

1. RFID Tag

2. RFID Reader

3. Software to track and analyze data

The RFID tag is attached/embedded into the asset you want to track. The RFID tag consists of a microchip containing pre-loaded data. The tags can take any shape and do not require a power source. Well, then how does it work? The answer is the scanning antenna contained in the RFID reader. The RFID readers can be attached to specific areas to scan any tag passing through that area or even take the form of a handheld device. The scanning antenna gives signal bursts regularly and the tags are activated when they come in contact with those radio signals thus "waking" up the chip in the RFID tag and the data is transmitted to the reader which decodes the data. Isn't it amazing how such a sophisticated sounding technology can seem so simple to understand and implement? Can you think of any other technology which has the potential to have as big an impact as RFID?



Face Recognition Technology


Face Recognition Technology




What is Face Recognition? As the name implies, it's referring to the most obvious human identifier which is - the face. The face is the most visible part of human anatomy and serves as the first distinguishing factor of a human being. It helps a person to distinguish an individual from the other. Each individual has his own uniqueness and this could be one of the most transparent and unique feature of a human being.



A practical application of knowledge is then used together with this process of identifying individuals. Related systems are developed as application of the face recognition concept. How does these system work? Developers came up with the design that is capable of extracting and picking up faces from the crowd and have it compared to an image source - database. The software has the ability to know how the basic human face looks like in order for it to work accordingly. Thus, developers designed these programs (by storing commands) to pinpoint a face and measure its features.

As study shows, each human face has specific distinguishable landmarks (or nodal points) that make up the different facial features. It has been known that there is a large number of nodal points on a human face(about 80) and these include the most commonly known - the distance between eyes, width of the nose, depthless of eye sockets, cheekbones, jaw line and chin.

There are different methods of facial recognition which involve a series of steps that serve to capturing, analyzing and comparing a face to a database of stored images. Some related software was designed to recognize similarities through pattern recognition. Pattern recognition is often used under the names of diagnosis and clarifications. Each of this software varies on how it is designed to work yet the function and concept is still the same that is - identifying on facial landmarks. Because of these, facial recognition is hard to fool since it compares specific proportions and angles of the defined facial features.

Career in cryptology


Career in cryptology

The name cryptography comes from the Greek words 'kryptos' which means hidden and 'graphia' which means writing. Avishek Adhikari, lecturer, Department of Pure Mathematics, University of Calcutta, explains: "A cryptosystem or cipher system is a method of disguising messages so that only certain people can see through the disguise. Cryptography is the art of creating and using cryptosystems. Or simply put, it is the art of secret writing."

Cryptography can also be defined as the science of making messages illegible to unintended recipients. "There are actually two terms – cryptography and cryptanalysis. The latter consists of techniques for breaking cryptographic codes. Together it is called cryptology," clarifies Indranil Sen Gupta, head, Computer Science and Engineering and School of Information Technology, IIT-Kharagpur.

Cryptologists before the 80s were primarily depicted as spy agents involved in deciphering and configuring coded messages to gain momentum against enemy activities. However, with the upsurge of information technology and the increasing dependence on electronic data processing, the range of activities a cryptologist is involved in has expanded. The vast digital data that is stored and processed in large computer bases and transmitted through complex communication networks is susceptible to unauthorised interception and interpretation and hence, needs to

be protected through encrypted remote access or passwords. "Our commercial transactions (credit card numbers and bank data), our medical data (which may soon be stored on smart cards), mobile communication and other secret diplomatic information can be traced by hackers. To prevent such data theft, we need cryptographers to write stronger codes. In fact, currently, cryptography has broadened greatly from the study of secret writing to the study of information security," informs Adhikari.

The field also includes decoding patterns and symbols, integrity checks, authenticating digital signature and predicting the possibility of certain outcomes by preparing mathematical models. C E Veni Madhavan, Department of Computer Science and Automation, IISc-Bangalore, elaborates: "The work of a cryptologist includes designing and analysing various robust and strong algorithms, implementation of such algorithms on various platforms and interfaces to other input/output media." They can also analyse existing algorithms for weaknesses, solve known mathematical problems on which many cryptographic algorithms are based and find weaknesses and/ or patch vulnerabilities in existing implementations.

Cryptologists are in demand in the military forces, government agencies, technology companies, banking and financial organisations, law enforcement agencies, universities and research institutes. Depending on the profile of the organisation one is involved with, the area of functioning varies. Veni Madhavan points out, "Cryptologists can work with mathematical topics such as number theory, algebra, information theory, combinatorics, probability, etc and also computer science topics such as algorithms, hardware interfaces and other areas including image processing, complexity theory, and so on."

For instance, the cryptographers of banking companies try to make their systems secure so that all the transactions over the internet can be made safely. On the other hand, cryptographers in the defence arena or intelligence organisations will try to break codes transmitted between two suspected enemies.

So what does it take to enter this enchanting world of secret messages?

"It is primarily a research-based subject and hence a PhD in cryptography is the best possible solution. Alternatively, a master's degree in mathematics or computer science is also useful. It is however important to have excellent problem solving abilities, familiarity with mathematical and programming tools and some expertise in hacking," contends Adhikari.

Computer - Man's Best Friend


Computer - Man's Best Friend
Some people hate going to offices anymore, doing presentations and reports to please their boss and struggling from 8m to 9pm inside the office. Now, people can make money online. This way of getting cash instantly is possible with the help of the computer.

What is the Process?

The process of getting money online is simple. The first thing that a person needs to do is to get a working computer. Then, he should familiarize himself with the computer. After that, he can start looking for affiliate programs in the internet and sign up with the best affiliate programs. These programs will help the person sell and refer products. Now that he or she has selected an affiliate program, then he could set up an online store. In the online store, he can put as many products as he can. But he should be very sure that the products in the online store are best-sellers in the internet or else he is wasting time.

Search for Products to Sell

There are a lot of products which can be sold in the online store. But then, the owner should think of the product he is going to sell million of times. The product may be a best-seller not in the internet but in the local stores. This might be a problem. There are specific products that are best-selling in the internet stores. Then, the owner should also think that the product he is selling should be within his interest. This way, he could sell the product easily because he has a lot of knowledge about it. Here are some products that are best selling online:

a) Digital Products- Examples of digital products are ebooks, software packages, etc. These products can be downloaded in the internet instantly. And the payment also goes in the bank account of the seller instantly. Thus, once the seller has closed the sale to the buyer, he can get his money in seconds. Payments are done online.

b) Flash Videos - Flash videos are in demand nowadays. Many people want to have flash videos that are of high quality. They do this for fun and entertainment. But the cost of flash videos is high. Even though, these people who are into flash videos would sacrifice large amount of money just to get one. For example, one video would cost 1500 to 2000 dollars. If the seller has a lot of flash video collection in his store, he could earn as much as 20000 dollars in one day. There is Master Resell Rights given to sellers of flash videos meaning, they could sell, resell and produce many copies of their flash videos. This means that they could earn more than 20000 in flash videos.

c) Travel Packages - Travel packages are usually given to promote a company- mostly, a traveling agency. Online business owners usually engage into giving out travel packages in a barter system. Meaning, there is no money involved. They will just get exchange travel packages with another product of the same value.

No other site in the Internet has great variety of products such as travel and leisure packages, digital products as well as online courses that you can avail of to learn how you can make money on the Internet really fast except for "Big Ticket to Wealth". You can even join the site's affiliate network so that you can start generating income from selling your products.