morangofilms
We create, innovate life.
Monday, July 21, 2014
Sunday, January 2, 2011
Saturday, October 30, 2010
Interview with Abrar ul Hassan (Courtesy: www.viewscraze.com
Thursday, October 28, 2010
Presentation for AllWorld Summit at Harvard University
Produced By: Morangofilms
Directed By: Abrar ul Hassan
Sixty Growth Entrepreneurs from Africa, the Middle East and Asia Arrive at Harvard University for the AllWorld Summit
These companies just might have the solution to reviving the Global Economy.
Boston, MA, October 18, 2010…This week (Oct. 18-22) 60 growth entrepreneurs from 20 cities in Africa (South Africa), the Middle East (Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, and UAE) and Asia (India and Pakistan) will arrive for the AllWorld Summit at Harvard University (www.allworldlive.com). This is an unprecedented gathering of the world's top performing company builders with illustrious Harvard faculty, private equity and VC leaders, and VIPs.
As the world economy stagnated, these companies grew 85% a year over the last three years and employ 7,000. They expect sales and employment to rise significantly over the next year and plan to launch 46 new companies.
The number one problem for every country is employment. Who better to create the new growth agenda for the world economy? This group has the track record for driving job growth in the 21st century. At Harvard they will come up with new ideas for policy makers to get the market moving. Over the week, they will also test their leadership skills, and go global with their new network of AllWorld collaborators.
AllWorld’s mission is to find and scale ALL the growth companies of the emerging world by 2015 to create one million new jobs. AllWorld was co-founded by Deirdre Coyle, Jr., Anne Habiby and Board chairman Harvard Business School professor Michael Porter. Professor Porter was described by the Times of London as the world’s “most influential management guru” and is widely regarded at the foremost authority on company and country competitiveness. Coyle and Habiby recently co-wrote the Harvard Business review article – The High-Intensity Entrepreneur.
Event: AllWorld Summit at Harvard University
Venue: Harvard Business School and Harvard Kennedy School
Friday, October 8, 2010
Friday, September 17, 2010
Looking into the Future: Mixed Reality
Venue: Meijiang Convention and Exhibition Center - Beta Zone
Meeting: Summit: at the Annual Meeting of the New Champions, Tianjin 13 -- 15 September 2010
An Interactive Session on: Looking into the Future: Mixed Reality
Mixed reality merges the real with the virtual, connecting people in new ways to unlock human potential, creativity and learning.
What are the implications of mixed reality on business and society?
Key Points:
• Mixed reality seeks to bring the wealth of information and interactivity of the Internet into interactions with the real world.
• One of the best examples of mixed reality at present is Layar.com, which pushes location-based information to smart phones, from stores and history to Twitter posts and virtual monuments.
• Developers are also creating video games that can be played in the real world, in which players and other objects are displayed relative to real-life objects.
• Researchers are also exploring ways to transmit information that can be not only seen or heard, but also felt, tasted or smelled.
• Mixed reality could further enhance long-distance education and healthcare by increasing the kinds of sensory information that can be shared between people over the Internet.
The presentation by Amir Jahangir walks us through time on the mankind's fascination to combine the real life experiences with virtual sharing, this ultimately can be defined in a simple equation:
Reality + Virtuality = More Interactivities
• Social Interactions
• Economic Opportunities
• Political Empowerment
Mixed reality seeks to combine the things perceived in the real world with the things that are read or heard in the information world, i.e. the Internet, connecting the world of our imagination, our senses and even our intuition.