Wednesday, November 30, 2016

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5VTkDurmh7Q

The Best agency to go digital

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We offer: 

> Digital Marketing Services ( Search Engine and Social Media Optimization) 
>Animation and Graphic Design Services 
>Mobile application Development 
>Website Design and development Services ( CMS and custom build) 
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We are commonly asked the question Why Us? The answer is simple:

> We give you a complete IT solution for your business 
> We give you 24X7 support 
> Our clients keep on saying our success stories 
> We deliver quality solutions in optimum budget 
> We keep the client updated about every stage of work in progress 

We would like to Share a glance of our projects with you. Here is the Sheet 
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1RDhQfkINSpWriNXvo7gUmIGtp4nLsdIKOi6tQIS_65g/edit


Looking ahead to hear from you 


Thanks and Regards 
Anindya Mukherjee 
Business Consultant 
Creative Filament 
+91-9836521057 
Skype: anindyamukherjee1002


Thursday, November 24, 2016

Chinese officials are 'licking their lips' at Trump's decision to kill the TPP

Beijing is more than pleased about Donald Trump turning his back on a major U.S.-led Pacific trade pact.
Ian Bremmer, president of the global intelligence firm Eurasia Group and a closely watched political scientist, said Wednesday that officials in China are excited about President-elect Trump's plan to withdraw from U.S. participation in the planned Trans-Pacific Partnership. The proposed free-trade bloc would have included 12 countries accounting for more than a third of global trade.
President Barack Obama and others had argued that the TPP deal was a way for the United States to continue to assert its leadership — especially in the face of an increasingly powerful China that is eager to replace the U.S. as the main power in the region. Trump's apparent killing of the TPP creates a geopolitical vacuum in the eyes of both Beijing and American allies, Bremmer said.
"This means that everyone in Asia no longer sees the United States as a credible leader, so they have to go to China for leadership," Bremmer told CNBC. "There's a little bit of triumphalism in Beijing."
Others have pointed out that the demise of the TPP means that China now will likely set standards for a major portion of the globe when it comes to environmental laws, intellectual property rights and labor protections — all principles for which Beijing has demonstrated little commitment.
"American allies are freaked out about this in Asia. The Chinese are licking their lips — they're very happy about it."-Ian Bremmer, president, Eurasia Group, on the apparent end of the TPP
China, Bremmer said, is now actively planning "new architecture" for regional leadership that does not include Washington because "they see opportunity now that they understand the Americans are abdicating."
This, of course, will have major repercussions for other countries in the Asia-Pacific region, especially allies like Japan, South Korea and Australia.
"American allies are freaked out about this in Asia. The Chinese are licking their lips — they're very happy about it," Bremmer said in a separate televised interview Wednesday.
China has openly celebrated the TPP's seeming demise, with the propaganda outlet Global Times declaring that Trump's pledge to quit the deal "sends unclear signals."
"Trump appears to be redesigning the U.S. leadership, withdrawing the country from fields in which he thinks resources are being wasted," another Global Times editorial said. "China thus will gain some room to exert its influence."
But others are less sure that China will benefit from the apparent collapse of the TPP.
"Net net, the loss of TPP is going to be a loss for China," Meredith Sumpter, who directs the Asia practice at the Eurasia Group, told CNBC earlier this month. "There's this popular view that the TPP was meant to be exclusive of China, and that's simply not true: The U.S. wanted to get China engaged at a second (round of discussions), and the Chinese were quietly showing interest in that."
"I don't see any meaningful benefit for China from the U.S. rejection of TPP. There will be a good deal of diplomatic theater but it all gets forgotten by the next news cycle," Derek Scissors, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, wrote in a note to CNBC.
"The Chinese will talk about grand new deals but the only truly free trade agreement they've ever signed is with Taiwan, and that is still primarily political. The Chinese will certainly sign trade agreements, but they will do nothing to change the Asian economy."

8 Ultimate Home Security Systems You Can Install Yourself

Today, the wireless technology has blown the space for home security system wide open. From connected cameras to smart sensors, and the whole home security systems have been bundled in simple, affordable, all-in-one gadgets. Here's the list of ultimate home security camera you always needed.
#1. Home Security burglar alarm system - Kawachi Entry Wireless Door Window Safety Contact Magnetic Burglar Security Alarm:
 Burglar Alarm System
This easy to install Wireless door, window safety equipment works by 2 pieces AAA 1.5V batteries with on/ off button. It recognizes vibration and sends an alarm to scare the intruder. Ideal for shop, office, home or any entrance inside a house that requires protection.
#2. Night Vision CCTV Camera: This Zvision Dome 24 IR Night Vision CCTV Camera Dvr With Micro Memory Card Slot:
Night Vision CCTV Camera
The camera records real time events and the video gets stored in built-in Micro SD-Card storage. This dome camera operates with motion detection, night vision, photosensitive induction and cycle recording.
#3. ZVision 4 Channel DVR With HDMI Port, 4 Audio, Remote Controller, Cloud:
 Zvision 4 Channel
With this dedicated server, you can view online through your mobile or laptop. It works with help of Unique ID. It has 4 Video input, Four Audio Input and with HDMI Output Port with VGA and BNC.
#4. Hikvision 1.3mp IP CCTV Camera: It can work both in day and night.
 Hk Vision CCTV Camera
With an Image sensor of 1/3 progressive scan, CMOS and 4 mm lens, it can record images with resolution 1280 X 960 along with a frame rate of  60 Hz: 30 fps (1280 X 960), 30 fps (1280 x 720).  You can set the shutter time between 1/30s ~ 1/100,000s.
#5. Security Outdoor DVR System CCTV Dome Video Camera Aluminum Alloy Material:
R Vision 1.3MP CCTV Camera
This product comes with TFT Card Slot Product. The camera has an optimum distribution of viewing angles, LED, Night Vision For indoor/outdoor security CMOS IR CCTV camera.
#6. Sunflower Design Wireless Wi-Fi Camera Baby Monitor Camera:
Sunflower Design Wireless Wi-Fi Camera


This bestselling baby monitor will help you to monitor the movements of your baby all the time. The camera is exquisite, smart and durable. Clear video and audio recording within 6 meter in night and 20 meter vision distance in day.
#7.Wi-Fi /IP Wireless Mini Spy Remote Camera Security For Android IOS PC:
CCTV Camera and Window Safety Alarm For Your House
With the new two-dimensional code technology, the users can browse and store data in local through simple set up by scanning the two-dimensional code at the back of the body.
#8. CP Plus IR Dome Camera Metal Body:With its adjustable focusing, it is excellent to use in surveillance systems inside of homes, casinos, retail stores, and restaurants.
CP Plus Dome Camera
 Everyone wants their home to be safe and secure, yet very few of them own a proper home security system. Also study confirmed CCTV camera can bring down the crime rate. You too might have been thinking about getting a home security system but haven’t because you want to do it correctly, with little investment, but not in old, outdated technology. 

How to live cashless? Learn from this man



Most urban Indians have been managing their lives with difficult-to-obtain cash since that late night prime ministerial proclamation two weeks ago.
The daily travails and the plight of the largely cash-run Indian countryside stare at you from newspaper front pages and television screens even as full-page newspaper advertisements inserted by ewallet companies urge Indians to go cashless.
Abhishant Pant, 36, a FinTech professional, has been living in a cashless state of mind for several months now.
While Indians rush to banks and ATMs to deposit/exchange no-longer-legal-tender Rs 500/Rs 1,000 bank notes and withdraw cash, Pant is chilling at home. He only had loose change amounting to Rs 546 in his 'piggy bank' when the PM declared the note ban.
"I was giving a lecture on payments at an IIT conference in February when someone asked whether it is possible to live without cash in this era of digital payments. I felt it was possible and decided to execute the idea myself," he says.
He was to travel to Singapore and felt he would not face any problems in that nation, arriving without cash in hand.
Reality confronted him soon enough at Singapore's Changi airport when he hailed a taxi.
"The taxiwallah refused to take digital payment. So, I had to wait for another cab. Luckily, the third taxi I hailed agreed to do so," Abishant recalls.
Why didn't he carry some cash for an emergency?
"I intentionally didn't," he says. "When you have a safety net, your experience is not real. If I knew I had an option, I would have opted for it. I would have ended up paying in cash, which I did not want. I survived in Singapore for five days only on digital payments."
When Abhishant wrote about his experience, Cashless in Singapore and learning for India on LinkedIn, readers said it was possible to do so in Singapore, but not in India.
IMAGE: While travelling in AlmoraAbhishant amazed an elderly gentleman, showing him how to transfer money to a bank account through a mobile wallet even without access to the Internet.
Abhishant took up the challenge and on March 13, vowed to never use cash and only opt for digital payments.
There were problems he had not anticipated, but he says a couplet by the Pakistani poet Ahmed Faraz helped him go ahead: Iss afsoos mein na guzar dena teri zindagi aey Faraz,
Kaash mauke do mauke pathar toh utthatey
(Don't spend your life regretting Faraz that you never made an attempt to take a difficult path).
'Every person must have a bank account, a pension plan, life insurance, general insurance and access to credit.'
"There are 18 kinds of services that any middle class Indian needs. I told my house maid, newspaper vendor, dhobi etc that I would not pay them in cash and their payments would be transferred to their bank accounts," he says.
It was difficult to convince them, but they finally agreed. But this was in Mumbai, India's financial capital. What about remote corners of the country?
Abhishant tried his cashless agenda in Almora, Uttarakhand.
"I had to pay someone, but he had no bank account. I then asked him for his son's bank account. Luckily, the son had an account and I showed the elderly gentleman how to transfer money from his mobile phone to his son's account," Abhishant recalls.
"The villager was so happy to see this technology. 'Aisa bhi hota hai? Meri bhasha mein bhi hota hai? (Do such systems also work in my (Hindi) language?)' he asked," Abhishantremembers.
Then, the elderly villager quipped, 'You are a rich man and have an expensive phone. You can do such things, not us.'
"I told him he didn't need a smartphone for this. He could pay through a mobile wallet from any phone. I showed him Airtel Money, it was in Hindi. I told him he did not need the Internet to use it. These are telecom-based wallets and one can send money to any bank account 24x7, 365 days," says Abhishant.
While eating bhelpuri in Delhi, Abhishant "recharged the bhelpuri vendor's mobile with Rs 50 talktime."
"He was happy to receive the digital payment," Abhishant recalls.
"Anyone doing business or selling anything has a mobile phone," he says. "So you can recharge their phone and, thereby, pay for the goods or services you avail of."
IMAGE: Even if people don't have bank accounts, Abhishant says everyone has a mobile phone, and one can pay them for their services by recharging their mobile phones.
But he must have missed having cash sometimes?
"Yes," Abhishant acknowledges, "I am a foodie. In Mumbai, there are iconic eateries like Ramashray, Mani's, Panshikar or A-1 Samosa. They don't accept digital payments. But then, as Shah Rukh Khan says in Om Shanti Om, 'agar kisi cheez ko shiddat se chaho to puri qayanat tumko ussey milaney ki koshish mein lag jaati hai, and I found a way out."
"I found the Faroma app, which delivers food from these eateries at your doorstep. Believe me, digital payments work and work wonderfully," he says.
Ask if this is not an elitist way of living, considering that 220 million Indians live on Rs 31.77 per day and do not have bank accounts, and Abhishant replies, "The answer is the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana. If you say there are 220 million people in India who do not have a bank account, I have two options: One is to wait for these 220 million to open a bank account, or make them do it."
"My maid lives in a chawl, just 100 metres away from a bank. But she opened a bank account only after I told her she would get her payment in digital mode. It took her 28 years to reach a bank, located only 100 metres away from her home."
Is it not dictatorial to force poor people to open bank accounts when they may not want to?
"In the greater common good, challenges will always arise. China might not be a perfect country, but it is the best example in such a case. Millions moved above the poverty line in China within two decades. Today, the Chinese have good food to eat and good clothes to wear and, frankly speaking, a dictatorial attitude is good if it is going to work for the larger good, or how else things will work?" Abhishant asks.
IMAGEAbhishant encourages daily wagers to take advantage of the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan scheme and open bank accounts so that they can get loans at rates of interest much lower than which private lenders offer.
"In the last 60 years India has progressed a lot," he adds, "but it is still far behind many countries. Today, if we do not take the right steps, then this huge young population is not going to get proper employment opportunities. The youth will become a demographic bomb for us."
Abhishant lists four things every Indian must have: "First is to have a bank account; second, a pension plan for long-term financial security; third, life insurance and general insurance; and fourth, access to credit."
Supporting Prime Minister Modi's Jan Dhan scheme, he says, "In the last two years, 25.51 crore (255.1 million) bank accounts were opened. And, if, say, my maid opens a bank account, she may get easy loans from banks. Banks give loans on the assessment of the ability to pay. Now, imagine if every house that she works in transfers her salary to her bank account, she can get easy access to credit at 12%, instead of paying 24% or 48% to a moneylender."
So, why he didn't apply for a job in the Prime Minister's Office to implement Modi's vision?
"I am a Left-leaning person by ideology," he laughs. "But on this issue I support the PM."
"Mark my words, 10 years later, Prime Minister Modi will be known for his Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana."

Wednesday, November 16, 2016

Demonetisation with Bollywood pinch

Some lessons to be learnt here!
Prime Minister Modi's demonetisation has sent the entire nation scurrying to ATM machines and banks, trying to withdraw cash.
Waiting in serpentine queues, empty ATM machines and shortage of hard cash has become a familiar feature these days.
It's not a pleasant scenario for most Indians, but we decided to find some humour to keep us going.
Some filmi reactions to the money problems plaguing us these days:

 
You can't get sleep because all you can think is, 'How will I buy the groceries?'
 
When your friend calls and says there is money in the ATM.
 
When it's your turn at the bank.
 
And then, the ATM machine displays 'out of cash'.
 
When you're thrown out of a wedding for gifting the newlyweds an cash envelope containing Rs 1,000 notes.
 
'Ek hazaar ke note ka kimaat tum kya jaano, Modi babu?
 
The best time to score with the ladies -- just woo her with Rs 100 notes so that she follows you, and not the ATM queue.
 
When you have notes of Rs 500, but they're not worth more than pieces of paper.
 
Don't want to stand in line? Go to the nearest temple.
 
After hours of waiting in ATM queues, when you finally get cash!
Disclaimer: This is a satirical feature. Readers are requested to take the content with a pinch of salt.

Want cash? Bollywood tells you how!

Some lessons to be learnt here!
Prime Minister Modi's demonetisation has sent the entire nation scurrying to ATM machines and banks, trying to withdraw cash.
Waiting in serpentine queues, empty ATM machines and shortage of hard cash has become a familiar feature these days.
It's not a pleasant scenario for most Indians, but we decided to find some humour to keep us going.
Some filmi reactions to the money problems plaguing us these days:

 
You can't get sleep because all you can think is, 'How will I buy the groceries?'
 
When your friend calls and says there is money in the ATM.
 
When it's your turn at the bank.
 
And then, the ATM machine displays 'out of cash'.
 
When you're thrown out of a wedding for gifting the newlyweds an cash envelope containing Rs 1,000 notes.
 
'Ek hazaar ke note ka kimaat tum kya jaano, Modi babu?
 
The best time to score with the ladies -- just woo her with Rs 100 notes so that she follows you, and not the ATM queue.
 
When you have notes of Rs 500, but they're not worth more than pieces of paper.
 
Don't want to stand in line? Go to the nearest temple.
 
After hours of waiting in ATM queues, when you finally get cash!
Disclaimer: This is a satirical feature. Readers are requested to take the content with a pinch of salt.

Want cash? Bollywood tells you how!

Some lessons to be learnt here!
Prime Minister Modi's demonetisation has sent the entire nation scurrying to ATM machines and banks, trying to withdraw cash.
Waiting in serpentine queues, empty ATM machines and shortage of hard cash has become a familiar feature these days.
It's not a pleasant scenario for most Indians, but we decided to find some humour to keep us going.
Some filmi reactions to the money problems plaguing us these days:

 
You can't get sleep because all you can think is, 'How will I buy the groceries?'
 
When your friend calls and says there is money in the ATM.
 
When it's your turn at the bank.
 
And then, the ATM machine displays 'out of cash'.
 
When you're thrown out of a wedding for gifting the newlyweds an cash envelope containing Rs 1,000 notes.
 
'Ek hazaar ke note ka kimaat tum kya jaano, Modi babu?
 
The best time to score with the ladies -- just woo her with Rs 100 notes so that she follows you, and not the ATM queue.
 
When you have notes of Rs 500, but they're not worth more than pieces of paper.
 
Don't want to stand in line? Go to the nearest temple.
 
After hours of waiting in ATM queues, when you finally get cash!
Disclaimer: This is a satirical feature. Readers are requested to take the content with a pinch of salt.

Posibilities pf Mergers: India & Maldives

  There are a number of reasons why the Maldives might merge with India in the future. These include: Cultural and historical ties: The Mal...