NI-Limits Blog

It’s our business to help your business!

Simply put, NI-Limits are digital design and web management specialists who not only design functional interactive marketing environments, but are also able to leverage vast arrays of web-enabled technologies, which allow for fuller market penetration and impact.
As a result; we strongly recommend either IE7 or preferably Firefox to view this site!

 

 

  •  

  • People With Something To Say

    1. Genuine Administr... (20)
    2. say (2)
    3. Ahmad Ridzuan (1)
    4. Danny Foo (1)
    5. David Airey (1)
    6. Etiketer (1)
    7. free icons (1)
    8. Irvin (1)
    9. Kuan Hong Yin (1)
    10. Logistetica (1)
  • Our_Resources

  • Partners

  • Other Recent Articles

  •  

    Who needs college? A review of young web founders:

    Mashable offers-up an excellent article regarding young web-founders, the highlights of which can be seen below:

    From Tom and his 100+ million friends on MySpace to Kristopher Tate broadcasting daily videos to the Zooomr faithful during the Mark III launch crisis, a side effect of social media has been the rise of the iconic founder.

    Being accessible and putting a face to go along with the product has been a key to success for many of today’s hottest web properties. Nowhere is this truer than on MySpace, where co-founder Tom Anderson is everyone’s first friend.

    Several of today’s hottest web properties were founded by teenagers who either dropped out of college or skipped it altogether. Mark Zuckerberg was a freshman at Harvard when he launched Facemash.com, a HOT or NOT clone comprised of fellow student’s pictures.

    While Zuckerberg’s project has turned into the number two social network, which is consistently rumored to be in multi-billion dollar acquisition talks, 23-year-old Matt Mullenweg has built WordPress into one of the top blogging platforms on the Web. Mullwenweg laid the first code for what would become WordPress back in 2002 when blogging was still in its infancy, and when he was still a teenager.

    Although he has a long way to go to rival the commercial success of Zuckerberg or Mullenweg, Kristopher Tate of Zooomr has established a loyal following for his work on the Zooomr photo sharing service. At age 19, Tate has single-handedly built a viable competitor to market leader Flickr and attracted the attention of the likes of Zoho and Sun Microsystems, who came to the site’s aid during a recent technical crisis.

    While Kevin Rose has grown into one of the best-known entrepreneurs on the Web since launching Digg, many fans already knew him from his work on TechTV. Rose has leveraged his Digg fame to get back into multimedia, producing the popular weekly podcast Diggnation alongside former TechTV colleague Alex Albrecht.

    Similar to Rose, the YouTube founding team had their roots in earlier tech ventures. Chad Hurley, Steve Chen, and Jawed Karim were all early employees of Web 1.0 darling PayPal, with Hurley supposedly designing the original logo for the online payment service. Leveraging their existing relationship and several connections made at PayPal, the team built YouTube into the one of the highest trafficked sites on the Web, and within a year and a half sold the company to Google for $1.65 billion.

     

     

     

     

    Google
     

     

     

     

    Reader's Comments

    1. No comments yet.

    Leave a Reply