Wednesday, August 12, 2015

New Industry is nearing critical mass...

THIS IS IT!  I believe that VR is the next wave in entertainment medium.  Not just in a small way, a very large way.

Years ago, back in 2011, there once lived a Thinkrium, where I posted a thread about a VR office, and my vision of what it could be.

When the Oculus Rift first appeared in 2012 on the scene years ago in the Kickstarter https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uzCwczY1jTM campaign, I thought to myself, "This is what I want, but not quite powerful enough"... And I thought, If these guys can get a concept together like this, I could build a better VR goggle that is more versatile.  Better resolution, two screens (one per eye), universal applications (not just restricted to PC), etc.  I have spent some time designing the systems and hardware making it possible to run the "ideal" VR headset... and on paper it works, though it is more expensive.  See the crude 3d model showing the dual display system mounted on the sides rather than directly in front of each eye.



Fast forward to today: Time, money, and distractions years down the road... no VR headset was built.  But Oculus still has its followers pushing it along to a final product to be released in a few months.  At this time the Rift is promising better resolution, better tracking, and a large support group too.  So it appears that the early rough areas have been cleaned up a bit.  Mix that with all the testing that is being done for the product, it seems like it will be a very hot item when released soon.

Oculus has created a store:

Similar to how the iTunes revolution took over the MP3 world, this is set to be the central hub of all things VR.  Eventually other areas will emerge that promote VR apps and games, but this is going to be ground zero for a while.

Needless to say, if you have an app/game available on opening day, there is a chance that you can establish yourself as a major player in the VR world.  As the sensation builds, you will have established roots in the new industry, and while others are getting into it seeing the potential, you will be at the foundation.

I believe this may be one of those iconic moments in our lifetime that people look back on.  Similar to the "I wish I invested in cellphones", I used to hear quite a bit back in the late 90s. There is big money in this, and I believe Oculus, now worth over 2 billion, is going to lead the way.

Time Magazine is about to release front page article about this on the 16th of this month.... and it is time to step up or watch the opportunity slide.  I haven't felt more compelled than I have in the past 48 hours to do something about this.

Saturday, October 4, 2014

Don't Feel Like Working? - How To Get Motivated to Work (And Be A Total Rockstar in the Process... )


How To Get Motivated to Work (Don't Feel Like Working?)

Get more videos like this: http://bretroyster.com/

(And Be A Total Rockstar in the Process...)


Hey Dude!

Yeah man we've all been there. That TERRIBLE feeling when you just don't feel like working. Oh my gosh, it sucks to bad! But stay calm, dude! You can hack your brain right out of that situation and totally get motivation to work!

So obviously you need to review the video to get the most out of these secrets for how to get motivated to work, but I guess if you came to YouTube to read stuff... So I've provided some notes and resources from the video right here:

1) Mindset... - News flash - DUDE!


"You don't need to feel like it!"

Its the truth! When you don't feel like working or rather... you have no motivation to work... You actually DON"T need to FEEL like it to actually do it and be effective (and potentially get 'RICH' on the Internet... just saying...) Here's where I personally learned this valuable lesson:

        http://lifehacker.com/what-to-do-when-you-just-dont-feel-like-working-1531571265

2) How to get motivated to work... when 'Mindset' fails... 

(or its just not enough to ramp up your motivation to work...)

2.1) Build successful habits which GET you in the mood...


'Habits' I personally use...

   Moving Meditation / Qigong (FREE):
   http://bretroyster.com/learn-qigong

   Brain Hacking Mediation (FREE):
   http://bretroyster.com/holosync

   Brain Hacking Coffee (FREE):
   http://bretroyster.com/bulletproof-coffee

2.2) Still don't feel like working ?

(The ULTIMATE - How to Get Motivated to Work Secret...)

'Triggers'...

Have an income producing activity the gives you motivation to work! Personally do videos and create valuable content for my subscribers about being as ultra-mega as they can possible be... You'll have to find what works best for you!

So with that said... sir up your passion - dude!

And get to work ;-)

- Bret
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zqh0XuA1aZk

Friday, October 3, 2014

Black Holes and Time Visualization



There have been many side projects mentioned here in the past few weeks and I want to add this today to add to the updates on one of those projects.

Time is important when tracking, measuring, and planning.  So while trying to nail down an efficient way to display a timeline several visions have come to the foreground.  Probably the most common way to show a timeline is in a linear fashion like this:


I like the simplicity of this and like the simplicity of the clock.  I wonder if it would be possible to combine a timeline and a clock?  I believe so:  the most accurate visualization I have sketched up looks like 2 black hole gravity graphs with "now" being at the center between the two.  Time would be represented in 3d by a helix or when viewed from the side you'd see a sine wave.  



Here is a look from "NOW" looking either forward (future) or back (past):

A digital clock showing the same would look something like this:
2:0:1:4:10:03:15:23:15:19

It isn't much use to look at all this information at the same time.  Building on my prior post about increments of time though, this can be a useful tool or foundation where with the use of limits/filters a user could isolate useful views of time/timelines.

Why all the trouble to spend mental effort on something like this?  Pattern recognition, harmonics, and probably greatest of all... aesthetics.  So in addition to the time shown, data/links to events can be shown in a radial fashion like shown here:


You could always revert back to a standard timeline where time is shown in a linear fashion, and look at a clock separately...

Stay Thoughtful!  And have a great weekend!

Sunday, September 28, 2014

Think about this... Email Marketing Best Practice

Did a video for my list about...

Email Marketing Best Practices for the Make Money Online Niche 

(Email Marketing Strategy for the 'RICH' ;-) 




Description from the Video
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Join the discussion @ http://www.thinkrium.org/
Get more training videos @ http://bretroyster.com

Hey man!

Thanks for checking out my video on email marketing best practice for the making money online niche. Hope you got a ton of value out of this sucka! I love putting these videos together for my subscribers.

Some of the things I talk about in this video that help you conquer email marketing best practices: bridge videos, leadpages, clickfunnels, income proof videos, pretty emails with banners etc... and then I got on to explain some of my personal email formatting strategies - check it out!

Feel free to go get more videos about email marketing best practices (and making money online) from http://bretroyster.com With that said - much love - my motto is "Dude, I want you to be RICH on the Internet" - so go out there and make it happen -bud!

- Bret

PS - Any of your own tips for email marketing? Share your thoughts or comments in the section below!

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Resources from the video...
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Watch the actual "Income Proof Video":

Leadpages (affiliate):

Clickfunnels (non-affiliate - for now...):

Kompozer (free): 

Email Formatting "span" tag from video:

Note: Youtube does not allow me to use brackets - so add those yourself where you see [bracket]:

[bracket] span
style="color: rgb(34, 34, 34); font-family: Verdana,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: medium; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: normal; letter-spacing: normal; line-height: normal; text-align: start; text-indent: 0px; text-transform: none; white-space: normal; word-spacing: 0px; display: inline ! important; float: none; background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255);" [bracket]

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Tags
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"email marketing best practice" email marketing best practice "best practices for email marketing" "best practices email marketing" "email marketing strategy" "email marketing basics" "for make money online niche" "Internet Marketing Quest!!!" "Email Marketing Tips: Best Practices" "Email Marketing Best Practices- How To Be A Email Marketing Badass!" "Zach Crawford" "email marketing best practices" "Best Practices in Optimizing Email Marketing" "Kutenda Internet Marketing" bretroyster.com-live

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ykLyt1Ipma4

Friday, September 26, 2014

Increments and time hacking?

Do you rely on a calendar?  Do you log completed tasks?  Set appointments into the future?  I think I know the answer to that.  I know I certainly do all three.  (Google calendar works awesome for this in most ways).  Time is pretty interesting to think about when you slow down to visualize it in different manners... let me crack open this can on ya today:

So we look at time in terms of increments, using the resolution that is "useful" for the context.  The finer the resolution (increment) the harder it is to manage the calculation.  I was going to draw an example here.. but just visualize it's at this moment 8am 9/26/14, and that means we are less than 4 months away from New Years Day.  It's less natural to consider that there is about 2320 hours remaining left in the year, less useful perhaps...

Equally let's say you had a meeting on 1/1/13 at 6am.  First, good for you working on a holiday.  Second, it's probably easier and more useful to think in terms of Month and Year... rather than 54713369 seconds ago when visualizing the time frame.

So where do we draw the line on these useful increments?  I enjoy 15 minute increments when working on small tasks... it seems to be enough time to get going on something with small ramp-up time... It forces me to break down larger tasks in to "sprints" as well.. which provides more flexibility and clarity.  Even so, I don't think in terms of 4 increments in an hour as easy as say the hour increment.  It's more natural to think of 24 hours in a day than 96 incs.  And when I think of dinner on Sunday night, I visualize in terms of days not hours.  [Side note:  I started to think about this a bit more and as I did I realized something, this may be related to age.  How is it that the only clock I see consistently chiming on the 15s is a "grandfather clock"?  So many questions as to why this is haha.  Society?  Pace of life?  Different generation norms?  You paid so much for a clock it needs to do more than just chime on the hour?]

I bring all this up because I'm working on a database system that requires interaction with time.  Time is a line: past-> present-> future->.  I like to serialize the time as 2014/09/26 unlike typical US or World which prefer 09/26/2014 and 26/09/2014.  Apparently the computer likes my way better as well... well until Y10k....prepare for the end now!  Anyways, I got to thinking about this more and realize that current clocks, calendars, and standard increments that everyone go by are just the accepted norms... but maybe not the most effective norms.  Not only that but is it beneficial to think in higher time resolution consistently even if it's only 1 degree higher than normal?  Is it for example better to visualize 30 min incs rather than 1 hour incs WHEN your mind defaults to hours?  Is it useful to consider 24 hours WHEN your mind defaults to day?

Back to the database system:

When considering past events and logging data, the computer can be as precise as we require.  This is awesome because it allows us to interpret the data however we desire at what ever increment is desired.

When planning for the future, we look to our calendar and plan ahead in terms of days, weeks, months, or years.

When visualize present time, I want to touch on a subject we have discussed before.  A lot of this comes from one of my day trading mentors, Elder Alexander, who in his book "Come Into My Trading Room", recommended analyzing your market on 3 different time increments.  He recommended this because of the indications the different perspectives offered.   He liked the powers of 5 because it worked out that looking at 1 month chart bars could be divided by 5 to provide approx weekly increments which divided by 5 again would yield daily increments.  Each increment contained a different key to the message that he was looking for, "is the price going higher or lower?".  It went further than price and deeper into psychology of the group mentality of the other traders, but that is another topic.  So in a similar manner I have began to think about time in a different manner than just one increment, and you know what I found, we all do... look at your watch or a clock: Seconds, Minutes, Hours.

Why stop there, is this the only useful info?  Why not Seconds, Minutes, Hours, Days, Weeks, Months, Years?  Why not Seconds, 15 seconds, mins, 15 mins, hours, 4 hours, days.... etc?  I imagine it has to do with norms.  If you wore a watch that presented 15 second incs, 15 min incs, 4 hour incs, and 4 days incs do you think you would be more aware of time or less?  If all your clocks counted down rather than up, would that affect you positively?  Why do all the movies show self destruct sequences counting down... not up like a normal clock???

Stay thoughtful!  Have a great weekend!

Friday, September 19, 2014

Raspberry Pi, Banana Pi, Apple Pie!


"Let the dollar be your employee...they work 365 days a year, never ask for a sick day, and will do the task you ask of them without complaint.." is a phrase I have latched onto from years ago during some of my financial studies...though I cannot remember where I found this piece of wisdom.  Now a dollar is really just a unit of energy/work/talent that is exchangeable... ...50 dollars is not as capable as 50 human employees and I don't believe this phrase is supposed to imply that.  What it does do on the other hand is make you consider the dollar in hand and what that dollar can do for you!  If you start down the path of investing in your self/company/enterprise, those dollars begin to make a difference assuming you put those "employees" to work in the right areas.

One area of investment that I can say has my business working in the right direction is the computer.  My laptop is really like a silent partner in this journey.  This guy does the work of sorting my information, scheduling tasks, and the many other tasks I ask it to do (currently playing music, burning Blu-Ray backup discs, word processing).  And it took over 1000 "employees" to bring me the support at this level, but they are still at work to this day!  So with this in mind, let's move on to the subject in the title:

So what do Raspberry Pi, Banana Pi, and Apple Pie have in common?  That's right they all sound like food but the first two are actually tiny computers!  If you're not familiar with the Raspberry Pi or Banana Pi, I hope to bring some light to the subject today.  I've been thinking a lot on the subject of automation in the past years and these little guys are a bit of a look into what the future can hold.



First let's go further back in my findings of these micro boards and talk about the "Arduino", a micro-controller.  The Arduino is a very simple design, it's low cost ~$25 on Amazon right now makes it very obtainable, and it's modular so think of it as a lego piece in the larger lego puzzle.  You would use this little guy to control motors, servos, sensors, lights, and even home automation.  What makes this guy even better is the huge community out there that supports/generates/distributes this product and its accessories!  There isn't an operating system, just a simple shell for "c" code and execution of that code.  Needless to say, this tool will make it to my workshop soon!




Next, the "Raspberry Pi"!  This is where things start to get even more exciting.  This tiny board can fit within the an Altoids container and is micro linux/Android computer!  The operating system fits on a Mirco SD card now (Rev B+), and it has many of the same features of the Arduino, just with a few changes.  The cost is about the same, ~$25-$50 depending on model and distributor.  The I/O pins are about the same in number, but this is where they differ a bit as well.  The Arduino is a micro-controller with more muscle than brains where as the Raspberry Pi is a micro-processor able to crunch data but weaker on onboard power to move motors.  As you know, I'm a huge fan of Python, which is built into Linux directly, so if you throw together some quick scripts, or download them from the web from other contributors, you can get this guy off the ground and working for you!  This makes the Raspberry Pi awesome as a stand-alone computer which can be networked and duplicated throughout a project.  Imagine if you tie Arduino and Raspberry Pi together!


Let's talk about "Banana Pi", the latest powerhouse and alternative to Raspberry Pi.  Banana was released several months back and departs from the Raspberry direction slightly giving more features!  This guy runs both Linux/Android ...*cough* Python *cough*... as well and now allows you to use a SATA port for a hard-drive now too...what???  Banana's micro-processor is a Dual Core 1Ghz+ chip with 1Gb DDR3 ram in comparison to the older 700MHZ and 512MB ram on Raspberry.  This guy has more power and more ability at a slighly higher expense ~$50-60.  For the cost and ability this is probably the best of the 3 in terms of all around package!  It really boils down to application...

This is all great, but what application do you have in mind?  That's a great question, and I'm glad you asked!  Have you considered that one of the highest expenses you may experience is your energy usage cost?  Or perhaps your food bill?  Or even your cable/DVR rental?  Whether your micro-processor is running as a home automation system, Aeroponics controller, or simply entertainment media center, if you have a need to put some delegation into action consider a Pi!  If you think about it, those "employees" are way more capable when they are put to use than just sitting around anyway right?

Do you currently delegate tasks to your computer?  Automate your thermostat in your house?  Have your coffee prepared for you when you walk into the kitchen?  Have fun thinking about this, I know I have!

Stay thoughtful! FFAP

Friday, September 12, 2014

Freemium for all!


As active participants in this wild multimedia world we live in, we have all been exposed to the marketing gravity of the Freemium products.  This week I want to open the discussion about this prominent strategy!

Being of frugal software collecting nature, I can say that if a software package exists that will make my life better in some way, and I don't have to exchange dollars from my pocket, I'm interested.  I have other more important tasks for my dollars than to convert them into hard-drive real estate.  Developers know this feeling all too well and have steered the market with making their products available, in many cases for free.  That's not to say they don't make money from giving you a free product...it's just not as apparent on the surface as the old dollar exchange method of traditional commerce.

On the stage today is a quest to scratch the surface to understanding of why this works so well for the consumer:


Let's breakdown the easy elements:
1) The product is either wholly or partially free to use, install it and you're on your way.
2) Access to the software is usually extremely streamlined, not slowing the easy sale of free goods.
3) It lifts the burden of making a good decision from the consumer, no one wants to make a mistake.

To summarize: "It's cheap, easy, and a no-brainer"


4) Users can usually immediately begin using the product to some purpose.
5) The developer now has a user of their products at the cost of their own investment.
6) The user of the product is more likely to share a free product over a paid product when price is the only difference.

Again summarizing: "Hey try this out, I use it, it's free..." * N


7) Once the ownership train has started there is a natural force that keeps it moving.

Newton summarized this best: "Objects in motion tend to stay in motion."


Did I miss anything obvious in this scratch session?