3 Weird Ways You Can Sell Your Art with Criss Bellini

The art industry is part of the luxury market, where you need a proper strategy to sell out. People love beauty and creativity, but investing in them comes last on their priorities as necessities are more crucial. However, art sells well to people who genuinely see the value in it, and it’s a pride of every homeowner. You can easily win over clients by making them see art’s value in a way Criss Bellini does.  An anonymous person behind Criss Bellini has utilized art to change his life and inspire…

4 Lessons Serial Entrepreneurs Can Learn From This Jewelry Business Genius- Christian Johnston

You’ve probably seen kids riding their bikes in cities and having fun. That was the kind of life Christian Johnston lived. You would find him in skateboard shops, basketball courts, and street fashion stores just having fun with his friends.  During those days, local hip-hop artists, designers, and events complimented the culture of Pittsburgh. Christian had a vision of the kind of lifestyle he wanted. He wanted to have nice quality jewelry and enjoy life. However, the jewelry that existed when he was growing up was of very low quality…

This CEO Of Pretty Girls Is Making Headlines Again

Malacka Reed El grew up in the projects in Baltimore. Also, she grew up with a mother that sold drugs. Malacka Reed had her first child at 15 after being brutally raped at 14 years. She had her second at 19 years and the third at 31 years. As a kid, Reed fought a lot, was bullied, and would drive others too because of the pain she was going through. She also faced house raids, being a product of house rates, and watching her mother go to jail. Finally, again,…

Live Life in Full Bloom by Awakening Your Heart and Declaring the Truth

Elana van Deventer is the founder of The Revive Method, an alignment coach, speaker, and entrepreneur. She started her company after God revealed her calling. Elana experienced coming to the dead-end of her dreams, which, ironically, turned out to be exactly what she needed to become the truest version of herself. From her childhood, teenage years, and into her adulthood, there was always something or someone telling her that she would never amount to anything. First, it was a brain injury, then a degrading math teacher, an abusive boyfriend, and…

Weather Technology at NASA

Weather forecasting technology has made great strides in the last twenty years, says NASA meteorologist Sam Hardy. But, he cautions, “It’s still like gambling. You think you’ve got all the right numbers and circumstance look just about right, when BAM, a storm brews up from nowhere or the wind gets up to incredible tricks.” Sam has been a NASA weathercaster for the past 15 years, and he says probably the biggest improvement in weather technology is not the span of satellites that now crisscross the globe high above, but rather…

Going to the Airport? Why Not Fly There!

Several major companies world-wide are feverishly racing to become the first to offer a flying technology that will whisk you above the crowded gridlocked streets of a city to the airport or theater or shopping center. It may sound like Back to the Future Part Gazillion, but the technology is almost in place to begin liftoff. eVolo, a German company, is working on a multicopter that features twenty propellers to lift you up and over the ground to your destination. Each propeller is controlled by a separate computer system. EHang…

The Passing of the Password

Hackers can obtain your password from the black market as easily as they can walk down the street and buy a bag of potato chips. Or they can dig in and find it themselves, if they’re even half smart. There’s no doubt that the once impregnable password is no longer much of a watchdog against thieves who want to steal your personal information. And firewalls are pretty much burnt down. An new technology company called UnifyID, out of San Francisco, thinks it knows how to once again safeguard your cyber…

Biotechnology is Saving the Earth’s Water

The Stockholm International Water Institute met recently to ponder how our planet’s shrinking water resources can be bolstered. One way that can be done, they decided, was through more sophisticated and dedicated use of biotechnology. Farmers who use technology to monitor the temperature of their soil can significantly decrease the water they apply on fields. It’s no longer guesswork; they know that when the soil is cooler the plants require less water to stay healthy. Recycling biotechnology now allows waste water from livestock farms, once held in noisome ponds until…