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Friday, June 14, 2013

The Paper Chase

Robert Fair De Graff revolutionized the market of pocket books through Simon & Schuster in May, 1939 and tapped into a huge reservoir of Americans who nobody realized  wanted to read. With iPhone , e-books , a new revolution in portable publishing appeared of recently but the true revolution began with De Graff whose paperback made reading into an activity that travels everywhere.
Do you know that 30 million trees are cut down annually to produce books in USA?
(Smithsonian.com , May 2013;p14)

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Naveen Jain- Technophilanthropist

NAVEEN JAIN - an entrepreneur with passion to solve grand challenges with innovations-Born September 6, 1959; grew up in Uttar Pradesh, India, the son of a civil servant. He became a student of entrepreneurship at a very age. " When you are poor " he says " and basic survival is your concern, you have no alternative but to be entrepreneur.. You must take action to survive, just as an entrepreneur must take action to seize an opportunity".  Jain's actions and opportunities, ultimately put him on a trajectory to Microsoft, and then, through his founding of Infospace and Intelius, onto the Forbes 500 list. " My parents drilled into me the importance of education. It was a gift they themselves never had. I remember how my mother quizzed me in mathematics first thing in the morning and would often demand, Don"t make me solve this for you." Little did I know that she coldn't solve it because she had never been taught math in school. Today we have the technology , though AI, video games, and smart phones, to quiz every child on the planet and assure them access to the best education available. "
Jain signed on as the co chair of X PRIZE's Education and Global Development Advisory Group, and is now focusing his wealth on incentive competition to reinvent education and health care in the developing world. " Technology allowed me to create the capital I now use for philanthropy," he says, " and I can think of no better use of these resources than to focus on eradicating illiteracy and disease around the world. What is truly amazing is that today we actually have the tools to make this happen."