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Box.net just made a new extension that backs up and synchronizes your Firefox bookmarks.

https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/5525

Its very simple, you can set it to auto update your bookmarks so they are synchronized wherever you go, or you can manually backup and restore bookmarks. The bookmarks are then stored on Box.net and can be accessed from anywhere for easy downloading.

The Guy Kawasaki Theory of Schmoozing version 1.0 was ad hoc: get to know the people that you need for a specific deal. It was short-term and focused.Version 2.0 is ad infinitum–maybe even ad nauseam. It’s taken me twenty years, but I’ve figured out that it’s much easier to make a sale, build partnerships, create joint ventures–you name it–with people that you already know than with people you just met.

The key is to establish a relationship before you need it. And this is why I’d like to provide the art of schmoozing.

1. Understand the goal. Darcy Rezac in his book, The Frog and the Prince, wrote the world’s best definition of schmoozing: “Discovering what you can do for someone else.” Herein lies eighty percent of the battle: great schmoozers want to know what they can do for you, not what the you can do for them. If you understand this, the rest is just mechanics.

2. Get out. Schmoozing is an analog, contact sport. You can’t do it alone from your office on the phone or via a computer. You may hate them but force yourself to go to tradeshows, conventions, and seminars. It’s unlikely that you’ll be closing a big order with someone you met online at MySpace or via Skype. Get out there and press flesh.

3. Ask good questions, then shut up. The mark of a good conversationalist is not that you can talk a lot. The mark is that you can get others to talk a lot. Thus, good schmoozers are good listeners, not good talkers. Ask softball questions like, “What do you do?” “Where are you from?” “What brings you to this event?” Then listen. Ironically, you’ll be remembered as an interesting person.

4. Unveil your passions. Only talking about business is boring. Good schmoozers unveil their passions after they get to know you. Great schmoozers lead off with their passions. Your passions make you an interesting person–you’ll stick out because you’re the only person not talking about 802.11 chipsets at the wireless conference. Personally, my passions are children, Macintosh, Breitling watches, digital photography, and hockey if you ever meet me.

5. Read voraciously. In order to be a good schmoozer, you need to read voraciously–and not just the EE Times, PC Magazine, and the Wall Street Journal. You need a broad base of knowledge so that you can access a vast array of information during conversations. Even if you are a pathetic passionless person, you can at least be a well-read one who can talk about a variety of topics.

6. Follow up. Over the course of my career, I’ve given away thousands of business cards. At one point, I thought I was nuts because if all those people called or emailed me, I’d never get anything done. Funny thing: hardly anyone ever follows up. Frankly, I don’t know why people bother asking for a business card if they’re not going to follow up. Great schmoozers follow up within twenty-four hours–just a short email will do: “Nice to meet you. I hope we can do something together. Hope your blog is doing well. I loved your Breitling watch. I have two tickets to the Stanley Cup Finals if you want to attend.” Include at least one thing to show the recipient that she isn’t getting a canned email.

7. Make it easy to get in touch. Many people who want to be great schmoozers, ironically, don’t make it easy to get in touch with them. They don’t carry business cards, or their business cards don’t have phone numbers and email addresses. Even if they provide this information, it’s in grey six-point type. This is great if you’re schmoozing teenagers, but if you want old, rich, famous, and powerful people to call or email, you’d better use a twelve-point font. (These are the same folks that need the thirty-point font vis-a-vis the 10/20/30 Rule of PowerPoint.)

8. Give favors. One of my great pleasures in life is helping other people; I believe there’s a big Karmic scoreboard in the sky. God is keeping track of the good that you do, and She is particularly pleased when you give favors without the expectation of return from the recipient. The scoreboard always pays back. You can also guess that I strongly believe in returning favors for people who have helped you.

9. Ask for the return of favors. Good schmoozers give favors. Good schmoozers also return favors. However, great schmoozers ask for the return of favors. You may find this puzzling: Isn’t it better to keep someone indebted to you? The answer is no, and this is because keeping someone indebted to you puts undue pressure on your relationship. Any decent person feels guilty and indebted. By asking for, and receiving, a return favor, you clear the decks, relieve the pressure, and set up for a whole new round of give and take. After a few rounds of give and take, you’re best friends, and you have mastered the art of schmoozing.

ideashower.jpgThis Firefox extension allows you to save pages of interest to read later. It eliminates cluttering of bookmarks with sites that are merely of a one-time interest. Download It Here.



* Save pages to a reading list to read when you have time

* Randomly surf through your list or select specific items

* After reading, bookmark pages on your preferred bookmarking service

* Right-click links to add to your list instead of following each link.

Video Example: How This Can Be Used with News Sites

If you have a personalized homepage (i.e. Pageflakes or iGoogle) or frequent news sites like (i.e. Digg or CNN), you can quickly scan all of the headlines on the site, saving all links of interest by right-clicking and saving to your list. When you are done, just start going through your list, uninterrupted. Beats having to go back and forth though-out the site!

gupplogo.jpgI have discovered Gubb.net yesterday, an amazing Web-based application with an easy-to-use interface that enables anyone to create, manage and share an unlimited number of lists. In short, it’s an easy way to finally organize your life.

Signing-up process is easy, after getting to the main page, you can create list with different colors with simple clicks, you can also set the way you like to show your list on the screen, screen-font-sizing option is on the top right side of the page.

I have tried almost all online To-Do list services, but finally I will stick to Gubb.net for few reasons, the easy-interface without complicating what you are really trying to do, 1 easy step to set a new list or to add a to-do that also can have the following 3 set-ups:
1- you can define the priority of the to-do with stars rating system
2- you can set a due date for the to-do
3- you can set a reminder to be received by email or sms text to you mobile

Another wonderful thing is that you can add to-dos to any of your lists by sending a simple email where the subject line is what you want to appear. Gubb.net also give you the option to add to-dos by sending sms text from your mobile, but unfortunately I can do this from where I living, for the time being this service is only available for mobile operators in the USA and Canada, hoping that will offer this service worldwide.

I would like to suggest to Gubb.net considering the following options:

1- Creating special numbers in the USA, where subscribers can send sms text from outside the USA that will drop in a given list created.

2- Be able to add items to lists by including your Gubb.net email address in the CC and/or BCC section of a message.

Gubb.net is also working on a desktop solution for PC and Mac that will be offered soon, as their website is saying.

Joe Bergeron & Josh Weinstein founded gubb to address one real time question: What’s with the total perplexing absence of Web-based applications built around our ceaseless obsession with lists, lists, lists?

Keep it up Gubb boys, I will spread the word !!!

1. iPhone.eu – registered in October 2006 by the company Virtualisers
2. WordPress.eu – registered in April 2006 by the company Parknet
3. Twitter.eu – registered in April 2006 by the company World Index Limited
4. Digg.eu – registered in April 2006 by the company Besite
5. TechCrunch.eu – registered in August 2007 by ???
6. Zune.eu – registered in May 2006 by the company Register.com
7. SecondLife.eu – registered in December 2006 by the company Yggdrasil Beheer
8. Typepad.eu – registerd in June 2006 by the company Kausani Enterprises
9. Flock.eu – registered in April 2006 by the company NEW MEDIA GROUP
10. Jaiku.eu – registered in March 2007 by ???
11. Blognation.eu – registered in May 2007 by ??? (oops)
12. Linkedin.eu – registered in April 2006 by the company Vinitsia.com
13. MovableType.eu – registered in June 2006 by ???
14. Plaxo.eu – registered in April 2006 by ???
15. GoogleApps.eu – registered in November 2007 by the company Xel Media

After a Heady Debut, Shares Fall Back 18%; Questions of Value
By LORRAINE LUK – The Wall Street Journal – Nov 08, 2007

HONG KONG — Many investors took the money and ran, driving shares of Alibaba.com Ltd. down 17% a day after their debut, when they nearly tripled from their initial-public-offering price.

Analysts said the flagship business-to-business unit of Alibaba Group is likely to fall further on continued profit-taking for a while, as the stock is still overvalued.

• First-day pop: Shares of Alibaba.com, the business-to-business unit of its eponymously named parent, nearly tripled in their debut.
• Second-day slump: The stock fell 18% as investors booked profits amid valuation concerns.
• What’s next: More profit-taking, according to analysts.
• Quotable: ‘The valuation is still too expensive given its fundamentals, and it has priced in all the good news,’ said Peter Lai, a director at DBS Vickers Securities.

Shares of Alibaba.com, which connects small manufacturers in China and elsewhere with potential customers, fell to 32.60 Hong Kong dollars (US$4.20) yesterday, after touching a low of HK$31.90 intraday. By contrast, the benchmark Hang Seng Index rose 0.9%, or 270.8 points, to 29708.93. Alibaba.com was the third most actively traded stock on the Hong Kong exchange, with shares valued at more than HK$6.3 billion changing hands.

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“At above HK$30, Alibaba.com is trading at more than 200 times [forecast 2007 earnings]. The valuation is still too expensive given its fundamentals, and it has priced in all the good news,” said Peter Lai, a director at DBS Vickers Securities Ltd.

Yahoo Inc. of Sunnyvale, California, owns about 39% of Alibaba Group.

On its debut Tuesday, Alibaba.com closed at HK$39.50, up from its issue price of HK$13.50. The shares ended Tuesday trading at 320 times the company’s forecast 2007 net profit of 622 million yuan (US$83.4 million). That valuation was much higher than the price-to-earnings ratio of 52 at Nasdaq-listed rival business-to-business search engine Global Sources Ltd. and the 177 P/E ratio of Chinese-language Internet-search provider Baidu.com Inc.

Mr. Lai said he expects bargain hunters to sell the “overshot” Alibaba.com and use the funds to buy market laggards.

Alibaba.com raised US$1.5 billion in its Hong Kong IPO by selling 858.9 million shares. The company said Tuesday that it exercised an overallotment option, selling an additional 113.7 million shares at the IPO price of HK$13.50 to raise HK$1.53 billion more. The exercise of the option increased the funds raised from the IPO to US$1.7 billion.

Alibaba.com was founded by its chairman, Jack Ma, in June 1999. It leads the B2B market in China, with a 69% share, according to second-quarter trade-value numbers from technology-consulting firm Analysys International. Web-site tracker Alexa.com ranks it as the most visited import/export site.

Parent Alibaba Group’s other units include Taobao.com, the leading online-auction site in China, online-payment system Alipay, and Yahoo China, and it is one of the few Chinese Internet companies to establish a global profile.

Write to Lorraine Luk at lorraine.luk@dowjones.com