Friday, January 30, 2009

How to Find Good Language Translation Service

Finding a good language translation company through Internet is confusing experience. You study about the services provided by the company before selecting any company and based on the experience of the professionals you can find a good language translation service.

Capacity to deliver: You should be clear about the capacity of the company in providing better and accurate results. Know about the company’s background and reputation before signing a contract for a language translation service. If company is delivering the results after deadlines, its better to go for another company.

Commitment to quality: Look for the company that has good project management skills like translation, editing and proofreading. Good Translation Company provides quality work and does proofreading for numerous times before delivering it.

Kind of Service: Translation Company does more than just translating the document in to required language like handle graphics, video productions and many more. They should have the capacity to handle the project even without the client supervision.

Professional Translators: Company should have experienced and qualified employees. Translators should have ability to translate the document with good grammar and with high accuracy.

Related Links:
Spoken English

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Sony to Face First Annual Lose In 14 Years

While Apple is celebrating its record quarter, the situation with other tech companies is absurdly in contrast.

Microsoft has announced a mass layoffs from its company while Nokia reported a 63 percent drop in its profit. However, Sony has given a big shock with a loss prediction of around $3 billions. The recession stands as the major reason for this loss. And along with recession, high yen value and low running LCD TV market added up to the hefty losses for Sony.

This loss, according to Sony, is predicted as the first annual loss in 14 years. It is OK.

Nevertheless, it has announced that it is going to adopt lay offs, pay cuts, job reductions, and trendier targets, in order to cope up with the situation.

Whatever may be the situation, just fall on the employees every time you feel you are not doing well. That is quite simple. Moreover, who are the big losers here? Employees of course…

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Business Class Fares Lowered In International Flag Carriers

The travel industry is one of those major industries, been hit hard by the recession. To deal with the crisis times, many international air carriers have lowered their business class fares.

This reduction in the fares has begun quietly and is been adopted by major companies to attract more customers.

Presently the ticket fares for business class are only reduced on popular and long lug roots and might steadily expand into other roots.

If you have booked for a ticket first class or business class ticket for old price in 2008 just before the reduction was announced, don’t worry. They are going to refund you with the excess money you have paid them. But as usual ‘Conditions Apply’.

As this strategy seemed to work, even domestic airfares seemed to lower. And according to a survey by the Bureau of Infrastructure, of Australia, discount domestic airfares hit a 17-year low. These were lowered to around 30 percent of their fares, the previous year.

Yahoo's Carol Bartz as New CEO

Yahoo is out with its new CEO name. Finally!

The new CEO of this second biggest search engine company is the former Chairman and CEO of the Autodesk Inc. She is Carol Bartz, a Silicon Valley expert with a good reputation as a manager.

But shares of Yahoo fell 3.6 percent after Yahoo announced Bartz as its new CEO.

However analysts say that, Carol might not be interested in selling Yahoo’s search business to Microsoft. This was the same dispute which led Yang Jerry, the co founder of Yahoo to resign from his CEO position. Yang has angered many stock holders by rejecting the $47.5 million takeover bid by Microsoft and planned an unsuccessful partnership with Google. This resulted in Yahoo’s stocks to slide, for which Yang owned the responsibility and stepped down as the CEO.

Carol Bartz has done her Bachelor degree in Computer Science from Wisconsin University.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Avoiding Wallet-Wrecks: While Shopping

You go for a super market to buy an item. AS soon as you enter the super market, you see yourselves stepping into a paradise of groceries. There is this new perfume bottle, and new brand chips. You simply grab those. Then you come across a stock of fresh fruits, tempting (but with soaring prices). You pick in some of them.

This time you come across some other fancy item. Now you need a cart. You simply pull out a cart and start roaming out the entire super-market. You go to the bill counter only after you see that your cart is filled. And when you pay fro the bill, you see your wallet out of money. In addition, what more is that you just remember that you forgot to pick the actual item for which you came to the market?

People commit the same mistake repeatedly but can’t resist this habit of over shopping. It is when you come out of this kind of shopping habits, which you can survive through the crisis.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Hyundai's Strategy On Laid Off Consumers

Companies were so mean and rude and laid them off mercilessly. They have no income now.

Vendors are not ready to provide them at any low costs though you plead that you will repay as soon as you get a new job. This was the same vendor where they used to do lots of shopping, though not required.

Banks are not ready to provide them any kind of credit as they have no means of constant income. These were the same banks where they used to have many good amounts of savings.

Credit card companies are pressuring them to pay off the pending bills, though you ask for some more time. These were the same companies for which you used to pay big amounts of bills till few months.

This is the present situation of laid-ff employees worldwide.

At the same time, Hyundai has a new strategy to help their consumers who were laid-off within a year of buying their car.

Doesn’t this sound great?

Sunday, January 4, 2009

When Confidence Becomes Over-Confidence…

Confidence is a power that helps you to perform things at your full ability. But when confidence becomes overconfidence you cannot even perform. And the end product of some work performed in overconfidence is a mere blunder. No matter, whether it’s almost a success or almost a failure.

People never get a full failure due to overconfidence unless in cases where specific and accurate performance is required. For example, consider the case of a professor conducting some critical chemical experiment and is overconfident about his ability in measuring substances. He either comes up with new chemical or blasts up the chemical lab.

When people are subjected to overconfidence they stop growing in their life or their career.

Over confident is best explained as the thin line between two phrases -
“Nothing is Impossible” and “Everything is possible”.

The difference between these two phrases gives you the difference between confidence and overconfidence.