The document provides tips for quickly leveling up in the Restaurant City game. It recommends focusing on leveling up dishes to level 10 in each category by choosing dishes with ingredients that are easy to obtain. Serving level 10 dishes across categories would allow reaching level 20 in the game within 32 hours of play over a week, versus serving only level 1 dishes which would require over 85 hours of play daily. It also provides other optimization strategies like maintaining high employee energy, managing table and customer capacity, and leveraging social features to trade ingredients.
This document lists 12 Google Maps mashups or applications that combine Google Maps with other data. Some of the mashups listed include ones for finding Japanese castles, the Moscow Metro lines, weather information overlaid on maps, air traffic maps, and street views of Thailand.
How To Strategically Differentiate Your Web 2.0 Idea From Others?Apisilp Trunganont
The document discusses different levels of cloning an existing product and provides examples. It states that applying an existing product to a new market through localization, serving different communities or categories is one level. Another level is adding new product features, concepts or mashing up existing products. The highest level is creating a new innovation by combining an existing technique or product with an impressive new concept. The document lists examples for each level and ends by thanking the reader and asking if they have any questions.
This document discusses using social networks for e-commerce marketing. It defines social networks as structures of nodes (individuals) connected by relationships. Popular social networks like Hi5 and Facebook allow individuals to share interests and activities, represented as profiles. The document suggests marketing products to 1% of profiles on Hi5, noting glitter and ads in comments are common. On Facebook, apps are popular. It also describes social shopping sites like ThisNext that allow users to recommend products to others and include links to purchase them.
The document provides tips for quickly leveling up in the Restaurant City game. It recommends focusing on leveling up dishes to level 10 in each category by choosing dishes with ingredients that are easy to obtain. Serving level 10 dishes across categories would allow reaching level 20 in the game within 32 hours of play over a week, versus serving only level 1 dishes which would require over 85 hours of play daily. It also provides other optimization strategies like maintaining high employee energy, managing table and customer capacity, and leveraging social features to trade ingredients.
This document lists 12 Google Maps mashups or applications that combine Google Maps with other data. Some of the mashups listed include ones for finding Japanese castles, the Moscow Metro lines, weather information overlaid on maps, air traffic maps, and street views of Thailand.
How To Strategically Differentiate Your Web 2.0 Idea From Others?Apisilp Trunganont
The document discusses different levels of cloning an existing product and provides examples. It states that applying an existing product to a new market through localization, serving different communities or categories is one level. Another level is adding new product features, concepts or mashing up existing products. The highest level is creating a new innovation by combining an existing technique or product with an impressive new concept. The document lists examples for each level and ends by thanking the reader and asking if they have any questions.
This document discusses using social networks for e-commerce marketing. It defines social networks as structures of nodes (individuals) connected by relationships. Popular social networks like Hi5 and Facebook allow individuals to share interests and activities, represented as profiles. The document suggests marketing products to 1% of profiles on Hi5, noting glitter and ads in comments are common. On Facebook, apps are popular. It also describes social shopping sites like ThisNext that allow users to recommend products to others and include links to purchase them.