10 Million-Dollar Ideas That Were Born Over A Couple Of Beers

Before he created Facebook, a teenaged and “slightly intoxicated” Mark Zuckerberg live-blogged his way to fame when he launched Facemash with his Harvard roommates. But guess what, he's not the only one who found his entrepreneurial spirit over a few drinks. It turns out that alcohol, especially beer, is more than just a lubricant for socialization. It's magic potion that helps people come up with earth-shattering million dollar ideas!
Don’t think so? Well, here are a few reasons that will convince you to take your next tipsy brainstorming session a little seriously:

1. Ben Lerer and Adam Rich were drinking beers on their roof when they came up with the idea for Thrillist.

Thrillist Media Group founders Ben Lerer and Adam Rich were buddies living in New York in 2004 when they single-handedly started the first Thrillist blog. In an interview with Mashable, Lerer recounted the day Thrillist was conceptualized:
"We were sitting on my roof six years ago hanging out having a beer (you know), half complaining that we were unhappy with our jobs or felt sort of under-utilized and a little bit lost, and the other half, Adam was getting ready to take a girl out to dinner. We were trying to find a place and both sort of started talking about how frustrated we were with the city guides that we were reading, and we had also been talking about how we just wanted to go and do something else. And that sort of sparked it."

2. Tinder was actually launched at a college party.

The Huffington Post has reported that co-founders, Sean Rad and Justin Mateen actually launched Tinder at the University of Southern California during a birthday party for one of the founder's brothers while he was at school there. The guests had to show they’d downloaded the app, and downloads jumped from 400 users on the first day to over 4,000 by the end of the first week!

3. The founders of Reddit, Alexis Ohanian and Steve Huffman, won over their venture capitalist over a few beers.

Ohanian revealed in an episode of the ‘A Total Disruption’ web-series that they got their funder's attention by offering to buy him a beer. Originally, both Ohanian and Huffman had set out to develop a food-ordering app. But after a conference in Boston, the two approached Y Combinator's Paul Graham and took him out for a few beers. Later, Paul Graham suggested them to develop "the front page of the Internet" instead of the app they were thinking about. Now, that's what you REALLY call a life-changing advice.

4. Anirudh Gupta, co-founder of Tripoto, got an investment proposal from his IIT-Delhi senior, Nikunj Jain in a bar.

According to an ET Tech interview, this is how their meeting panned out: 
On a balmy Sunday afternoon, after a few mugs, both started talking about their common interest: spiritual teacher Osho.
Exhausted after discussing spiritualism for an hour, the conversation inevitably veered around to the materialistic path: Gupta started sharing his business plans about Tripoto; Jain was listening. "It was then that he proposed to invest," recalls Gupta, who got angel funding from Jain in October 2014. This March, the Delhi-based startup raised its second round of funding led by IDG Ventures India.

5. Travis Kalanick and Garrett Camp came up with the idea of Uber while they were partying in Paris.

"Jamming on ideas, rapping on what's next is what entrepreneurs do. Garrett and I would get some good music, good drinks, and jam until 5 AM. Garrett's big idea was cracking the horrible taxi problem in San Francisco - getting stranded on the streets of San Francisco is familiar territory for any San Franciscan. Garrett's m.o. fits the Uber brand. He likes to roll in style, comfort, and convenience. His over-the-top idea in Paris that winter started as a limo timeshare service."

6. The founders of Southwest Airlines, Rollin King and Herb Kelleher, sketched out legendary triangular flight route on a cocktail napkin.

In 1966, lawyer Herb Kelleher’s client, Rollin King, owned a small commuter air service in San Antonio. King and his banker had been discussing the idea of running a quick commuter service between San Antonio, Dallas, and Houston. They pitched the idea to Kelleher, and the triangular flight route was sketched out on a cocktail napkin in a bar.

7. PopSugar started after founder Lisa shared celebrity gossip with a friend at a party.

According to a Mashable story, in February 2005, Om Malik, founder of GigaOm,suggested that Lisa and Brian Sugar should start an online blog network after hearing Lisa rattle off celebrity gossip over wine at their Oscar party. Today, Sugar Inc. is an entire freakin' media group.

8. Elias Bizannes came up with the idea of StartupBus while downing a few with his friends in Australia.

In 2010, Elias Bizannes was having farewell drinks with his friends before leaving Australia for Silicon Valley when he thought of the concept for StartupBus. In a few weeks, buses left from 8 different regions for SXSW, and "buspreneurs" had 72 hours to conceive, build and launch their startups.

9. The founders of Alma Mater, Varun Aggarwal & Rohan Malhotra wrote their business idea on a piece of tissue paper after a "heady" brainstorming session.

What did they write? "Make merchandise for every school and college in India."

10. The idea for the Ironman Triathlon was born during an after-awards party.

According to Wikipedia, this is how John and Judy Collin’s brainstorming session panned out at the medal ceremony for the Oahu Perimeter Relay in 1977:
Collins calculated that by shaving 3 miles (4.8 km) off the course and riding counter-clockwise around the island, the bike leg could start at the finish of the Waikiki Rough Water and end at the Aloha Tower, the traditional start of the Honolulu Marathon. Prior to racing, each athlete received three sheets of paper listing a few rules and a course description. Handwritten on the last page was this exhortation: "Swim 2.4 miles! Bike 112 miles! Run 26.2 miles! Brag for the rest of your life", now a registered trademark.
With a nod to a local runner who was notorious for his demanding workouts, Collins said, "Whoever finishes first, we'll call him the Iron Man.

Did You Notice That iPhones In All Apple Ads Display The Time 9:41AM? Here’s The Reason Behind It

If you are the observant types, you must have noticed that Apple's iPhone and iPad commercials always display 9:41 AM on the phone screen. And in case you haven't, skim through their advertisements and you'll see that in each ad, the devices are set to the same time.

Can you think of a reason why?    



You might think that there can't be a logical reason behind this but you'll be surprised to know that this particular time, in fact, is a moment seized from one of the historic keynote presentations given by Steve Jobs. The tradition of iPhone and iPad commercials showing 9:41 AM started during the 2007 Macworld Conference & Expo, when Jobs was going to announce the official launch of the iPhone in a keynote presentation.

While rehearsing for the presentation, Jobs had calculated that the slide of the newly launched iPhone was going to appear on screen at around 9:41 AM. Acting in advance, to show the real time, he instructed his advertising team to prepare it with the device showing 9:41 AM.


Such was the accuracy of his calculation that during the presentation, the first ever iPhone was unveiled at the near-exact time! The skilled orator that he was, Jobs gave a very engaging presentation. As he began to announce the launch of an iPhone, his words were:

"This is a day I've been looking forward to for two and a half years."


"We design the product launch keynotes so that the big reveal of the product happens around 40 minutes into the presentation. When the big image of the product appears on screen, we want the time shown to be close to the actual time on the audience's watches. But we know we won't hit 40 minutes exactly. And for the iPhone, we made it 42 minutes. It turned out we were pretty accurate with that estimate, so for the iPad, we made it 41 minutes. And there you are—the secret of the magic time."

WhatsTools lets You Share Different File Format on WhatsApp & other IM

At present instant messengers totally changed the way we communicate with each other, instant messengers are there from a long time, when I started to use internet for the first time i came to know that there is something called Yahoo Messenger, G-talk, and Orkut which let us communicate in real time using text messages, at that point of time there was no Android and other smartphones, and we had to use our computers mostly, also when it needed to send any file we were doing it over the emails.
Nowadays everything has been changed since the smartphones came into existence especially the Android smartphone, it is expected that mobile will be the primary device to connect with the internet by 2020,  also there are tons of instant messengers are available which does offers different features apart from real-time communication, but few instant messengers went too far in term of popularity like WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger, Line, Wechat etc, you can send photos, videos, contacts, location, stickers, and emoji but when it come to file type and size every IM has restriction, like you can’t send bigger file than 16 MB on WhatsApp also you can’t send pdf and other document files over IM.
If any IM allows you to share bigger files then there will be a huge burden on their servers, which will cost them big chunk of the amount and there will be frequent outrage.

Send any file up to 1 GB on WhatsApp & Other IM using WhatsTools


There are several ways you can send big files on Whatsapp like, upload the file to Dropbox or Google Drive generate a shareable link and send it using WhatsApp or Messenger.
Above task may be hectic since you have to upload the file and generate a shareable link every time you need to send a file, to automate and make this task easy as possible here comes WhatsTools which lets you send different file format having size up to 1 GB.

How to Install WhatsTools

WhatsTools is currently available for Android smartphones only, it will be available for Windows phone soon according to the developers.
  1. First download the WhatsTools from Play Store                                                                                                         button-get-it-on-google-play-download
  2. After installing WhatsTools, Open it and it will ask for the permission to Start the WhatsTools Service.                  
    whatstools
  3. Once you tap on Turn On Service it will prompt for another pup up window tap OK, Continue there.
  4. It will take you to Settings > Accessibility check the bottom of the screen you will find WhatsTools Service, Tap on it and Turn ON the Service from the Right Top corner.
  5. Now it will ask for permission to connect with your Google Drive, authenticate the permission and connect Google drive to WhatsTools.

How to Use WhatsTools

Lets WhatsApp as example.
  1. Open WhatsApp and tap of attachment option.
  2. Now whatsTools will prompt for an option to send different files like this.                                                                       whatstools download
  3. Select the file type ( Archive, doc, ebook etc) which you want to send.
  4. It will prompt you to choose files, select your file and tap on Share button.
  5. WhatsTools will generate a link for your file and copy it to chat box, all you need to do is hit send.
  6. The file will be uploaded to your Google drive in the background, you will see a WhatsTools folder in Google drive.
  7. The receiver needs to open that link to download the file.
  8. It generates a link which can be open into any browser on any device like iPhone, Windows phone etc.
  9. The receiver doesn’t need WhatsTools to download the file.
  10. If you send a large file it will immediately generate the link and keeps uploading you may send that link and receiver will get option “Download when ready”. You can share that link on any IM.
So WhatsTools is going to be handy for most of the users who needs files sharing over IM, it saves your time as you don’t have to manually upload and create a shareable link to the file every time.
Here is a little privacy problem that anyone having generated link can view and download the file, if receiver further shares that link to their contact or in a group or on web they all will be able to view the files, however, every file is under your control you can always change the privacy of file by going to Google drive, or delete it permanently.
If you send large files too frequent your Google Drive may get full in this case you have to delete old files in order to send new files again.
Conclusion – WhatsTools is a new way to send different file format on Whatsapp and other instant messengers having file size up to 1 GB, which saves your time and frustration.
- See more at: http://www.itechfever.com/whatstools-share-every-file-whatsapp-im/#sthash.6Sd5yRav.dpuf