Saturday, May 24, 2014

Mercedes Benz classes.




Evolution of Mercedes Benz

C = COMFORT
Yet again, a superb innovation by Mercedes has certainly proved why is it the worlds best car producer. The lovely S class Mercedes is a sedan production which by virtue of its luxury is winning over its rivals. The elegant look has just won it all for the buyers. Not only this, the car is also possessor of the beast in it, its powerful engine. The Mercedes S class has a 455 horsepower and 516 lb-ft of torque. Such highly loaded engine ensures that its not just comfort but also speed that matters. The lovely S class goes to 60 mph in just 4.8 seconds.

E = EXECUTIVE
It is sort of out of the question that many of us leave out the great Mercedes when it comes to car. The company has been the cutting edge one inch the actual kind associated with greatest in excess of years, along with the grounds behind it's the charming creativity like the Mercedes e class for cars. This lusty design of a sedan along with rich in deluxe exterior look is what makes this extremely portion look entirely a category apart. The E class Mercedes has a 402 blistering horse power and 443 lb ft of torque that makes the car complete in all forms















S = SUPERLATIVE
Yet again, a superb innovation by Mercedes has certainly proved why is it the worlds best car producer. The lovely S class Mercedes is a sedan production which by virtue of its luxury is winning over its rivals. The elegant look has just won it all for the buyers. Not only this, the car is also possessor of the beast in it, its powerful engine. The Mercedes S class has a 455 horsepower and 516 lb-ft of torque. Such highly loaded engine ensures that its not just comfort but also speed that matters. The lovely S class goes to 60 mph in just 4.8 seconds.




M = MULTIUTILITY
An attractive car connected with Mercedes is actually all over again a middle of utmost destination mainly because it was already released with a lot of stardom in 1997. Certainly, we're discussing the particular well-off glimpse positioning Mercedes Benz M class. Tasteful in its design and style, the particular M class is yet another powerful rolling car which is administered through an engine connected with 302 horsepower @ 6500 rpm. A 7 speed gearbox car is likewise the particular best lawn mowers of presenting luxurious features similar to sunroof, natural leather car seats, in addition to air bags. A look is plenty to make sure you became a fan of the idea, spontaneously!

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

10 self-made teen millioniares

Say what you will about the entitled group of teen millionaires in Hollywood or music, but there are a few things you can’t help but admire about kids who achieve similar success the old-fashioned way: through hard work. Most of them aren’t famous, weren’t born into money or privilege, and didn’t have endorsement deals lined up around the block. What they did have, though, was an idea, and a determination to see it become a reality.

10 Fraser Doherty: Grammy’s Jam

And As You Step Back Into Line
Fraser Doherty began at the age of 14, using his grandmother’s recipes to make homemade jam, which he then sold to his neighbors in Edinburgh, Scotland. By 16, he’d created a huge demand for the stuff by tweaking the recipes on his own and calling it “SuperJam.” Business picked up so well that he dropped out of school to work full time, and he was soon after approached by a reputable supermarket chain in the UK in 2007, who offered to stock his product in all 184 of its stores. Taking out a loan worth around $9,000 from a local bank, Doherty used the money to cover expenses, including more factory time to increase production. And in 2009, with the help of his supermarket chain connection and the addition of Asda Wal-Mart as a stocking client, Fraser hit $1.2 million in sales. He also published a book called “The Superjam Cookbook,” available for sale through Amazon.
“I can’t be preoccupied with the money,” he says. “I make jam because it’s what I love to do. Success is pretty sweet too.”

9 Ashley Qualls: Layout Loot

In an art That's Hard to Reach
In 2004, 14-year-old Ashley Qualls launched WhateverLife.com as a means to show off her design work after a few years of studying HTML. Her site had virtually no traffic until she began offering free custom Myspace layouts to fellow classmates. By 2005, with only word of mouth for advertising, her site began to explode with visitors seeking cool designs to personalize their social network page. That was when she joined Google’s Adsense program, which supplied ads to her site and paid her a share of the click revenue.
With site traffic now buzzing, she began accepting offers from various companies to advertise their products or services on her site in exchange for payment. An undisclosed bidder even offered to buy out her site in 2005, for a reported $1.5 million and the car of her choice (not to exceed $100,000). She turned it down, opting instead to continue running the site she had started on a total expenditure of $8 for the domain name.
WhateverLife.com now plays host to an estimated seven million visitors per month and continues to earn Ashley millions in advertising loot. She bought her own $250,000 home in Southgate, Michigan in 2006.

8 Cameron Johnson: Greeting Card Green

And Turning All Against the One
When Cameron Johnson’s parents asked him to design invitations for an upcoming holiday party they were having, he probably had no idea just how far it would take him. Impressed with the results of his work, people around the neighborhood began offering him money for other designing jobs. By age 11, he had banked several thousand dollars in revenue with “Cheers And Tears,” his own custom line of greeting cards.
Determined to keep the ball rolling on a good business sense, he took the money he made from the greeting cards and formed his first online business, SurfingPrizes.com. The site, a pay-per-ad toolbar service, paid off big to the tune of $300,000–400,000 per month. Before he even graduated from high school, Cameron had amassed a net worth in combined assets estimated at $1 million. Cameron went on to sell the company name and software at age 19, but held onto the customer database he’d built up, leaving business options open to himself for the future.

7 Julieth Brindak: ‘Miss O’ Dough

Another Clever Word
When she was only 10, Julieth Brindak began drawing a group of made-up characters she called “cool girls,” including a primary character named “Miss O.” At 16, she launched a social networking site for tweens, called “Miss O & Friends,” inspired by her earlier drawings, and enlisted her mother and father to help put the site together with their combined graphic and business skills. It became an instant hit with fellow tweens who began visiting the website by the hundreds of thousands.
“Miss O & Friends” earns Julieth money through advertising revenue, and was ranked the third largest girls-only website in 2011 by Inc. Magazine. The site now generates 10 million unique visitors per month, is worth an estimated $15 million, and continues to rely on word-of-mouth and very little advertising for success. In an effort to give back, Brindak also created a co-sponsorship with Simon & Schuster that offers teens the chance to win tickets to popular concerts, such as Justin Bieber and Taylor Swift.

6 David and Catherine Cook: Yearbook Yen

You're Getting Better All the Time
Brother and sister duo David and Catherine Cook became teen millionaires by creating an online version of the traditional high school yearbook with MyYearbook.com. After moving to Skillman, New Jersey when she was 14, Catherine says she and her brother began flipping through the local yearbook to see if they recognized any of the students at their new school.
“We were shocked at how useless the information was. That’s when we thought, what if we put the whole thing online? I’d always looked up to my brother Geoff. He’s 11 years older than me and had already launched a successful start-up. I thought if he started a company, I could, too,” she said.
Impressed by the idea, their brother Geoff invested $250,000 in start-up money to his younger siblings, who then launched the site. Pitching it as the “Myspace for high school,” they succeeded in getting an estimated 950,000 members to join within the first year alone. Since then, their site has grown into a business with a net worth of somewhere around $100 million, with older brother Geoff working as CEO. The siblings are now looking at options for moving their brand into the global market.

5 Sean Belnick: Chair Change

Sets Off an Unexpected Herd
Sean Belnick was intrigued at the idea of selling things online—so much so that, at the age of 14, he designed his own website to serve that very purpose. Having a startup budget of only $500 for advertising funds and $100 for web hosting fees, he began selling small items like Pokemon cards to get himself familiar with the process. Before long, he’d switched to selling office furniture on his new site, Bizchair.com—a move that ended up earning him an estimated $24 million by the age of 20.
Asked if he felt he had the makings of an entrepreneur by way of blood, Sean said, “You have to have a desire to succeed and take risks to get there—it’s not for everyone. I love the excitement and the future growth prospects, as well as watching the company grow and prosper. You have to have ambitious goals.”
He now has over 75 employees who work for him, and is setting his sights on the $50 million mark.

4 Nick D’Aloisio: Smartphone Smackaroos

Show Me How to Lie
Seventeen-year-old Nick D’Aloisio set the Internet wires abuzz when it was announced that a smartphone app he created in his spare time had been bought by Yahoo at the purchase price of a whopping $30 million. The Wimbledon school student taught himself how to code at the age of 12—a skill that paid off when he finally created the news app that grabbed Yahoo’s attention. Nicks says he has plans to invest the money he earned from the sale and offers the following advice for other aspiring developers: “If you have a good idea, or you think there’s a gap in the market, just go out and launch it because there are investors across the world right now looking for companies to invest in.”

3 Adam Horwitz: Mobile Monopolizer

A Mob Jumps To Their Feet
Having a goal to create a million-dollar company by the age of 21, Adam Horwitz began launching various start-up websites at 15. He created several that flopped before finally hitting on his first successful venture with Mobile Monopoly, an app that teaches users how to turn a buck with mobile market leads. Sales of the app earned him a six-figure profit, which he used to fund his next idea, YepText, a text advertising service for businesses.
He offers the following advice for others looking to tap into the app-making market: “If someone says, ‘There’s no way, you’ll never make money online, everything’s a scam online, blah blah blah,’ they’re lying. You don’t have to listen to what other people say—trust me, I went through that day-in and day-out with my friends and stuff. They did not believe that I could make money online, and then as soon as I did, I think their jaws dropped to the ground. So just go for it!”

2 Tyler Dikman: Technology Tycoon

Now Dance, Fucker, Dance
Tyler Dikman started out earning money like most other kids, by mowing lawns, running lemonade stands, and babysitting. He even did magic shows for birthday parties, charging around $25 for a 30-minute presentation. At age 10, he got his first computer, a Gateway, which he proceeded to take apart and study from the inside out. As he learned more about computers, he began repairing them for his teachers in the eighth grade, which led him to the revelation that he could charge others for repairs on their rigs. It wasn’t long before he was charging $15 per hour.
He ended up landing a babysitting job some time later for the Vice President of Merrill Lynch, Malcolm Taaffe. He was offered an internship by Taaffe, which led to a full-time job around two weeks later. Tyler was put in charge of computer acquisition, setup, training, and troubleshooting. At age 15, he started Cooltronics, a business that repaired computers, as a hobby. By hiring a few friends as employees and working long hours, he nurtured it into a one-stop company that sells, delivers, and sets up PCs for customers. He was named by Businessweek as one of the top 25 entrepreneurs under the age of 25, and continues to grow his business, which now does millions of dollars in sales each year.

1 John Koon: Fashion Financier

You're Gonna Go Far Kid
John Koon is the quintessential American entrepreneur. Opening the first-ever auto parts businesses in New York City, he began making millions in profit at the age of 16 with Extreme Performance Motorsports, a company that became one of the main suppliers for MTV’s hit reality show Pimp My Ride. Not wanting to limit himself to the auto circuit, he decided to give fashion a try and soon launched a clothing company alongside rapper Young Jeezy. Koon earned himself an astounding $40 million in the process and is reportedly on the fast track to becoming a billionaire.
His latest expansion involves the first-ever Asian streetwear couture, a company that specializes in Japanese denim, rare indigo dyes, and cutting-edge secret wash formulas for clothing.

Source:- listverse.com

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Ten things we don't understand about humans.

WHAT A STRANGE CREATURE YOU ARE
We belong to a remarkably quirky species. Despite our best efforts, some of our strangest foibles still defy explanation



But as science probes deeper into these eccentricities, it is becoming clear that behaviours and attributes that seem frivolous at first glance often go to the heart of what it means to be human.
1.

Blushing

Blushing is hard to explain. Why would humans evolve a response that puts us at a social disadvantage? (Image: Design Pics Inc / Rex Features) Even Darwin struggled to explain why we would evolve a response that lets others know that we have cheated or lied
2.

Laughter

Laughter is more often produced at banal comments than jokes, so what is it for? (Image: Jonathan Ford / Getty) The discovery that laughter is more often produced at banal comments than jokes prompts the question, why did it evolve?
3.

Pubic hair

Why humans have clumps of hair in private places is still open for debate (Image: Eryk Fitkau / Getty) Scent radiator, warmth provider, or chafe protection? The answer to why humans have clumps of hair in private places is still open for debate
4.

Teenagers

Even our closest relatives, the great apes, move smoothly from their juvenile to adult life phases, but not humans (Image: Tim Foster / PYMCA / Rex Features) Even our closest relatives, the great apes, move smoothly from their juvenile to adult life phases – so why do humans spend an agonising decade skulking around in hoodies?
5.

Dreams

Most researchers reject Freud's belief that dreams are expressions of our unconscious desires (Image: Kristy-Anne Glubish / Design Pics Inc. / Rex Features) Today, most researchers reject Freud's belief that dreams are expressions of our unconscious desires – but if that's the case, what are they for?
6.

Altruism

People still debate whether humans are genuinely altruistic by nature (Image: John Alex Maguire / Rex Features) People still debate whether humans are genuinely altruistic by nature, but if we are, most agree it doesn't make evolutionary sense
7.

Art

Sexual display, learning tool or form of social glue? (Image: Ray Tang / Rex Features) Sexual display, learning tool or form of social glue? Art still refuses to be pinned down
8.

Superstition

(Image: kaibara87 / Umberto Salvagnin / Flickr) Many of us have superstitions – odd, reassuring habits that make no rational sense – but there may be an underlying reason for such behaviour
9.

Kissing

The urge to kiss is not brought about by genes (Image: plainpicture / Folio) The urge to kiss is not brought about by genes, so why do we find it so pleasurable to share saliva?
10.

Nose-picking

Many of us do it, but eating bogeys offers little nutritional reward (Image: KPA / Zuma / Rex Features) Many of us do it, but eating bogeys offers little nutritional reward – could there be a health reason for the unappealing habit?

Source:- www.newscientist.com

10 Fascinating Facts About the World Wide Web on Its 25th Birthday.


The idea for what would become the World Wide Web was proposed 25 years ago today on a NeXT computer, on March 12, 1989. This threadbare, imageless cluster of text is what the first web landing page looked like. It was nothing more than a white background with black words and a smattering of blue “hypermedia” links to click on. No Google. No Twitter. No Facebook. They were still years away.
There were, however, all of 17 “subjects” to peruse, along with the web’s five-question inaugural FAQ, written by none other than physicist Tim Berners-Lee, the man who conceptualized the revolutionary information linking and sharing tool in a CERN office in Switzerland. (CERN is short for the European Organization for Nuclear Research.)
Related: The Internet of Things: New Threats Emerge in a Connected World
The newborn web wasn’t exactly riveting, but it was a start. The birth of a fascinating intangible cultural force that matured into a churning virtual mass of some 4.1 billion pages, with countless more coming online right now as you read this.
It’s an understatement to say that the web has forever changed the way we live, work, play and communicate, for better and for worse. I lean toward better.
So grab a slice of cake, send a #web25 hashtagged social media birthday card and check out these 10 cool historical facts about the web on its 25th anniversary:
1. The Father of the web wants you to fight for its freedom. Berners-Lee, 58, is celebrating the landmark anniversary of his pioneering collaborative communication protocol today by imploring its users to “defend its core principles” of freedom, non-censorship, and net neutrality.
The vocal Edward Snowden supporter is calling for people to back a universal “Internet Users Bill of Rights.” The “Web We Want” initiative sets out to establish personal user protections, including many now routinely trampled upon by the NSA. The project also aims to expand the web to the two-thirds of the world that still doesn’t have access to it.
Related: This Is What the Internet Will Look Like in 2025
2. The Internet’s first website went online on Aug. 6, 1991. Berners-Lee and his fellow CERN team members launched http://info.cern.ch with a landing page that only contained 153 words. It defined the World Wide Web (“W3”) as “a wide-area hypermedia information retrieval initiative aiming to give universal access to a large universe of documents” and contained 25 links to basic additional information about the pioneering initiative.
3. Let freedom ring. On April 30, 1993, CERN announced that its World Wide Web technology would be available to all for free. The public statement declared that the main components of the web’s structure were to remain in the public domain, giving anyone in the world freedom to use them. “CERN relinquishes all intellectual property rights to this code, both source and binary and permission is given to anyone to use, duplicate, modify and distribute it,” the historic statement read.
4. You are now free to roam freely about the Internet. Archie, which is widely considered to be the first-ever primitive search engine, went live in 1990. But a slew of others followed suit over the following decade, including web crawling giants who still chug on strong today like Yahoo, MSN, and, yes, the almighty Google.
5. Librarians surf, too. We have a New York librarian who calls herself Net-mom® to thank for the term “Surf the Internet.” Jean Armour Polly penned an article called “Surfing the INTERNET” that was published in a University of Minnesota library bulletin in 1992. Some credit Mark McCahill, the programmer behind an early web alternative called the Gopher protocol, for dreaming up the phrase.
Related: Internet Activists Plan Day of Action to Protest Mass Surveillance 
6. An all-girl band stars in the first ever picture posted online. Berners-Lee also boasts the bragging rights to another awesome first: uploading the first photo to the web in 1992. It was a picture snapped backstage of an all-girl physics-themed rock band called Les Horribles Cernettes, which was founded in 1990 by a graphic designer at CERN. Berners-Lee scanned the photo, uploaded it to a Mac and FTPd it to the now famous info.cern.ch. The web Berners-Lee invented lives on, but the Cernettes broke up in 2012. Bummer.
7. Primitive browsers helped the web reach critical mass. NCSA Mosaic, the web’s first widely used graphical browser is often credited with bringing the internet out of geeky obscurity. Marc Andreessen and Eric Bina developed the iconic black, gray and blue browser at the University of Illinois National Center for Supercomputing Applications in 1993. Before Mosaic, web users had to slog through arduous, complicated character-based interfaces, like Lynx.
Netscape Navigator, which landed on the internet a year later on Dec. 15, 1994, also played a momentous role in making the web accessible to the general public. (Remember that first newspaper assignment I scored? I tackled my article research by drifting in a bottomless, frustratingly slow-loading Netscape vortex for three weird hours. Good times.)
Mosaic may take the title for the first popular web browser, but the honor of the inaugural graphical web browser belongs to ViolaWWW. The complex “hypermedia browser,” which only worked on the X Windows System and Unix workstations, launched on March 9, 1992.
8. The internet is not the web and the web is not the internet. Don’t get them twisted like most people do, especially not if you’re in Silicon Valley. The internet was a thing long before the web and the web wouldn’t exist without the internet. The internet, the roots of which can be traced as far back to the invention of the modem in 1958, is a massive infrastructure that bridges millions of computers throughout the globe. The World Wide Web is a vast system of interlinked hypertext documents accessed on the internet.
9. Billions of people surf the web. Of the world’s 7.1 billion people, an estimated 2.4 billion people go online today. That’s 37.7 percent of the world’s total population. About six out of seven people across the globe have internet access. Approximately 70 percent of internet users surf the web every day.
Related: An Accelerated History of Internet Speed (Infographic)
10. Americans rock the web the most. Users in the U.S. account for 78.6 percent of global web usage, trailed by Australia (67.6 percent), Europe (63.2 percent), Latin America/Caribbean (42.9 percent), Middle East (40.2 percent), Asia (25.7 percent) and Africa (15.6).  Surprisingly, some 24 nations remain completely offline.

Source:- www.entrepreneur.com

Why Apple needs Beats??





We shouldn’t be surprised that the strongest brand in the world is looking to buy another solid brand. Far beyond the guffaws of audiophiles and tut-tutting of those who know what Apple would do, we find a place where a massive investment in Beats would make some sense.
First, understand that Beats is a successful hardware startup in an era of fizzling hardware profit. Most of Beats’ competitors are also-rans at best and there isn’t a single audio company that I can think of with the same numbers or the recognition. There are a number of headphone companies that own the low end, but these are krill in the oceans of commerce, rebadgers that buy cheap and sell high.
Then there’s the high end. Apple could buy Bose or Grado but neither of those companies have the scale necessary to make the investment make sense. Logistically, Beats can make and ship thousands of units a day at a clip and with a quality that rivals Apple’s own accessory sales.
How certain am I that Beats will be bought? I approached my source who, it can be said, was quite giddy at the prospect. Instead of an immediate denial, they offered something far more quizzical – a wry smile. While they can’t say much, this alone is interesting.
Beats is a marketing miracle. The company has risen again and again out of the ashes of failed partnerships, first with Monster Cable and then with HTC. Beats survived being glommed onto HP laptops and it has thrived despite endless hoots from self-style audio gurus. Put simply, Beats is an expensive, popular brand that to the consumer is well worth the investment if you’re outfitting your digital wardrobe. Why? The cynical would say it’s for the styling, and the pragmatist would say because there is little else on the market in the same vein with the same cultural cachet and the same good looks. In a decade when it has been notoriously hard to market to the young adults and teens, Beats has done it again and again.
Remember that it made no sense for Apple to buy SoundJam MP, an MP3 player and media sync system, in 1999. The company made a basic desktop music player and was relatively unknown in the market. In fact, in 1999 it wasn’t even certain that the MP3 would take off. Napster launched in June 1999 and died soon after. Why, then, would Apple want an arguably small-fry MP3 player app?
On January 1, 2001, SoundJam MP turned into iTunes 1.0.
In 2013, Beats owned 64 percent of the high-price headphone market. That’s the kind of market share any executive could get behind. It was worth a billion dollars last year, which makes the $3 billion price a little low. Why does Apple need Beats? Perhaps it wants to shore up its cachet with young music lovers. Maybe it wants a source of steady revenue. Maybe it loves the bass-heavy, bombastic sound out of headphones that look like Lobot’s cybernetic enhancements. Maybe it wants to meet Dre. But know that this merger makes perfect sense, even if we can’t see why just yet.

Monday, May 12, 2014

Apple gonna buy Beats for $3.2 Billion??

There's a rumour that Apple is gonna buy Beats for $3.2 Billions. Isn't it a sign of growth in monopoly of Apple in entertainment. First of all let's have a look back for Beats history. July 25, 2008: Rapper and producer Andre “Dr. Dre” Young and Interscope chairman Jimmy Iovine cofound Beats Electronics. The duo’s first product launches exclusively in Apple and Best Buy stores and cost $349.95.
 August 2010: Beats Electronics licenses its brand to third-party manufacturers under the “Beats Audio” name. HP is the first to sign up. Standout integrations include the HP Envy 14.

 April 19, 2011: Beats signs deal with Chrysler Group to bring Beats Audio into automobiles. According to Beats: “Your car is more than just a way to get from A to B. It’s one of the few places where music matters the most. With BeatsAudio you can immerse yourself in your favorite songs and hear them in ways you never have before.”
 August 2011: HTC buys a majority 50.1 percent share in Beats Electronics for $300 million. Simultaneously, HTC loans the firm $225 million. According to the New York Times: “Peter Chou, HTC’s chief executive, said that teaming up with a top music brand would help his company compete with other cellphone makers like Apple and Samsung.”
 September 14, 2011: HTC begins releasing Beats Audio-powered smartphones. The first product: the HTC Sensation XE.
January 12, 2012: Beats begins manufacturing its products in-house, after ending an exclusive manufacturing deal with Monster Cable Products. Later, Monster kicks off a competing product.
 July 2, 2012: Streaming music service MOG is officially acquired by Beats. The service reportedly sold for over $14 million.

 July 23, 2012: Dr. Dre and Jimmy Iovine buy back a portion of HTC’s shares for just $150 million. The two founders collectively own 75 percent of the company. HTC still owns 25 percent.
  November 2, 2012: Beats gets into the portable speaker market, flops. VentureBeat calls it “a tiny speaker with big problems.”
 December 10, 2012: Beats partners with Nine Inch Nails front man and Oscar-winning musician Trent Reznor, and plans to launch a music streaming service the following year.
 January 11, 2013: News surfaces that Beats cofounder Jimmy Iovine had tried to convince Apple’s Steve Jobs to launch a music streaming subscription service before launching Beats. Iovine was reportedly quite close with Jobs.
 March 5, 2013: Beats raises $60 million and plans to spin-off its music streaming project into a separate company. Apple is said to be a potential partner in the new venture.
 September 27, 2013: HTC sells its remaining 25 percent stake in Beats for $265 Million. Meanwhile, Carlyle Group LP reportedly invests in Beats. Following the deal, Beats is reportedly worth $1 billion.
 January 21, 2014: Beats Electronics enters the music streaming business to challenge the likes of Spotify, Pandora, and Apple’s iTunes Radio.
 April 21, 2014: Rumors that Beats is raising another $60+ million in funding emerge. The alleged round signals that Beats is likely struggling to compete with companies like Spotify.
 May 8, 2014: Reports allege that Apple is in talks to buy Beats for $3.2 billion. Later, a video surfaces on Facebook which appears to drunkenly confirm the news. While we still await formal confirmation (or denial) from the two firms, the timeline above reveals that Apple and Beats have apparently been close for years. Rumor or not, the deal could actually make sense for Apple, according to VentureBeat’s own Devindra Hardawar.
Anyhow Beats is a common choice of celebrities.It's not just a headphone.It's a kind of jewellery.

What do you think of the deal? Let us know in the comments below!