Wednesday, February 24, 2010

" Slip Don’t Fall "

One of the most important things to know on your journey to success is that you will occasionally slip up. It’s how you respond to these slip ups that will determine if and when you achieve your goals.


Even the most disciplined, motivated people in the world have days when they don’t take action and don’t follow through. The difference between those who succeed and those who fail is that successful people slip but they don’t fall.


Here’s a graph that shows how successful people progress towards achieving a goal:




As you can see from this graph, successful people DO slip up, but they always recover quickly. Compare this with the graph of people who fail:




Instead of recovering after a slip up, an unsuccessful person allows a slip to become a Fall.


Option 1: You can start thinking negative thoughts and criticizing yourself by saying things like, "I don’t have any will power" or "I’m just hopeless – I never follow through".

This is the approach of those who fail. Self criticism leads them into a downward spiral that inevitably ends in failure.

OR

Option 2: You can accept that you slipped up and simply say:

"OK, I slipped, but I will not fall!"

When you take this approach, you quickly overcome your slip up and get back on track towards achieving your goals.

So today, I’d like to encourage you to change your approach to dealing with slip ups. Instead of criticizing yourself, just accept the situation and make the decision that even when you slip, you will get back on track quickly and will not allow a slip to become a fall.

Until Next Time,

Dare To Dream

Monday, February 15, 2010

Create an iPhone Web App

This is where iWebKit comes in. iWebKit is a free framework package for creating websites and applications that are optimized for the iPod Touch, iPhone & iPad. The bulk of the framework is CSS3 which can work its magic to makeover any dreadful site and make it look fresh.

When designing for the iPhone OS, you should use the iPhone simulator available in the SDK to get an idea of where your design is heading. You can also use Safari to get a pretty close representation, but nothing beats using a real physical device. It’s amazing how cool it feels and you really do get the impression it’s a native application.

you can also follow the this link...good article..
http://theappleblog.com/2010/02/12/how-to-create-an-iphone-web-app/