| Song Name | Artist | Album | Record Label | Last Week | Status | Weeks On | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | Hello | Adele | 25 | XL Recordings | |||
| #2 | Sorry | Justin Bieber | Purpose | Def Jam Recordings | |||
| #3 | Lean On | Major Lazer & DJ Snake ft. MO | Peace Is The Mission | Mad Decent | |||
| #4 | Hotline Bling | Drake | (single) | Cash Money Records | |||
| #5 | Adventure Of A Lifetime | Coldplay | A Head Full Of Dreams | Parlophone Records | |||
| #6 | Love Yourself | Justin Bieber | Purpose | Def Jam Recordings | |||
| #7 | Stitches | Shawn Mendes | Handwritten | Island Records | |||
| #8 | Stressed Out | twenty one pilots | Blurryface | Fueled By Ramen | |||
| #9 | What Do You Mean? | Justin Bieber | Purpose | Def Jam Recordings | |||
| #10 | Same Old Love | Selena Gomez |
TOP 10
the top most thing in the world. example. car, mobile, gadgets, people, songs, movies..
Tuesday, February 9, 2016
Top 10 Songs 2016
Sunday, February 7, 2016
THE TOP 10 BEST CAR IN THE WORLD
Volkswagen Golf GTE
The Volkswagen Golf GTE blends hot hatch performance, hybrid economy and hatchback practicality into one stylish package. Could this be the perfect city car?
BMW i8
The BMW i8 hybrid supercar lands from the future to reassure petrolheads that excitement and eco can co-exist
Tesla Model S
The extraordinary Tesla Model S is the first electric car to appeal to even the grumpiest eco naysayer
£59,990
Volvo XC90 T8
Forget Volvo's slightly dull image - inside and out this hybrid SUV is one of the smartest cars there's ever been
from
£97,195
Mercedes-AMG GT
The Mercedes AMG-GT is a £100k sports car monster - and it's got the Porsche 911 in its sights
Range Rover Sport SVR
Of all the bonkers-fast SUVs out there, this is by far the best and may just be all the car you ever need - if you can
from
£25,680
BMW i3
BMW says it has created the first affordable premium electric car. Does the i3 match up to the claims?
£38,195
Mercedes-Benz A45 AMG
It's like a hot hatch, only way more bonkers. Let's call it a hyper hatch!
£37,710
BMW M235i Convertible
It's not as insane as a full-on M car, but this four-seater drop-top is plenty fast and plenty fun
Saturday, February 6, 2016
Top 10 best project management software
For any project size big or small, utilising a project management software can help you work more efficiently.
Do you ever use emails to communicate with your clients, send documents and action multiple to-do lists and find this difficult? Whether you are working on a small or large scale project, instituting a team management software will help you become successful.
Using a project management tool will help better communicate with your team and keep your clients informed. Having all your tasks laid out and assigned to the correct person will allow you to stay organised and ensure tasks are completed on time.
With a huge variety of project management applications available, we’ll spotlight on the 10 best ones in the market.
01. Basecamp
Basecamp is the grandaddy of project management apps. Basecamp is considered the leading project management tool around. It boost a simple and easy to use interface to collaborate with your team and client. It allows you to create multiple projects and setup discussions, write to-do lists, manage files, create and share documents, and organise dates for scheduling. It is fully responsive so you can manage your projects and check statues on your mobile device on the go. Basecamp’s basic plan starts at $20 a month.
Teamwork Projects is the ultimate productivity tool to manage projects with your team. Teamwork allows you to keep all your projects, tasks and files all in one place and easily collaborate with a team. Teamwork helps you to visualise the entire project through a marked calendar and gantt chart and setup reporting.
Teamwork supports file management with Google Drive, Box.com and Dropbox. As well as integration with leading apps such as third party accounting software and customer support apps.
03. ActiveCollab
ActiveCollab recently released its new version 5.0. The new revamped app is now more powerful and focused project management tool. It offers team collaborating features, task management, time tracking and importing expenses. One of the biggest asset of ActiveCollab is it offers invoicing features. You are able to track payments and expenses and have invoices paid directly within ActiveCollab with PayPal, and other credit card payments.
ActiveCollab cloud plans starts at $25 a month and they offer a self-hosted version if you want to run this application on your own web server.
04. Zoho Projects
Zoho offers a wide range of business software including Projects. Zoho Projects is an proficient tool to project plan and project coordinator from start to finish.
It boost all the features you need for project management with some advance features including reporting, integration with Google Apps and Dropbox, bug tracking, setup Wiki Pages to build a repository of information, forums and more.
You can start Zoho Projects with a free plan and upgrade to a paid premium account starting at $20 a month.
05. Trello
Trello isn’t your average project management tool, instead this app is a free visual way to to glance at the entire project with a single view. With Trello you can organise cards, these cards can be your thoughts, conversations and to-do lists and be placed on a board for everyone to collaborate on.
Trello is absolutely free but also offers a gold package at $45 a year, which extends larger attachments, extra sticker packs, saved searches and more.
06. Jira
Jira is specifically targeted for software development teams. Jira offers abilities to raise issues and bugs. Jira makes it real easy to track bugs and see which issues are still outstanding and how much time was spent on each task.
Atlassian owners of Jira, also offer other products including Confluence a document collaboration tool, and HipChat a team chat and video and file sharing platform and other products. Which you may integrate with Jira seamlessly.
Jira starts at $10 for for 10 users a month.
07. Asana
Asana is a platform that allows you to easily collaborate with remote workers and freelancers. Asana’s purpose is to stop working with email as a communication tool and actions list. Instead Asana keeps all the actionable tasks, scheduling, sharing files including with Google Drive, Dropbox and Box.com and receive status updates without using email again.
Asana also comes with mobile apps on both iOS and Android, so you can work anywhere whilst on the go. Asana starts at $21 a month for up to five members.
08. Podio
Podio is a ever growing tool to organise and communication tool for any business. Podio allows you to personalise this platform to fit your business needs. Besides being able to communicate with a team, setup task management, use as a file storage system, like a traditional project management app, Podio can be an internal intranet for all your colleagues and departments to interact. Podio can also be transformed into a CRM system. Podio plans start at $9 a month.
09. Freedcamp
Whatever your project may be, either setting up an event, a web project or organising a wedding, Freedcamp helps you organise and plan effectively.
Freedcamp has an organised dashboard to view the entire project at a glance. You can easily setup tasks, use sticky notes to visually setup tasks and organise them into the calendar. Freedcamp provides advance add-ons for high level business use including CRM, invoicing, issue tracking and setting up wiki pages.
Freedcamp is free to start with and only add-ons are chargeable.
10. Wrike
Wrike is advance application to help you work smarter. By making sure you are always staying on track and ensure you have the adequate resources to finish on time and on budget.
Setting up tasks, engage your team and integrate with your business tools including Google Apps, Microsoft Excel, Dropbox and many more is so easy with Wrike. You can even make your emails more productive by converting emails into tasks with a simple click of a button.
Wrike is free for the first five users and paid professional plans start at $49 a month.
Top 10 Horror Films of All Time
1. The Cabin in the Woods —
2. Oculus —
Complex occult terror that devilishly throws us off balance in parallel stories past and present. Constantly forcing viewers to question and second-guess their expectations and perceptions, it delivers gory goods for those who think the rest of the list isn’t quite bloody enough. But it’s far more than that, and you’ll appreciate the smart storytelling and effective acting. The $44 million box office numbers are a win, in light of the comparatively low $5 million budget, another entry that proves low-to-modest budgeting is typically the smartest and most profitable route for horror.
A lush Gothic haunted mansion story in the best classic tradition. Hammer Films had their finest revival entry by far with this gorgeously designed, atmospheric tale. Few horror films have this level of commitment to setup and presence, allowing the tension and dread to grow as we linger in each scene and location. This is one of two films on the list that harken back to good old fashioned haunted house filmmaking of the 1960s and 1970s. Budgeted at a modest $15 million, the $127 million worldwide box office was an impressive return and led to a far less impressive sequel.
4. Troll Hunter –
“Troll!!” Satirical without being a comedy, filled with terrific visual effects despite a low budget, and just flat-out wildly entertaining. It’s a big-monster movie with enough creepiness and carnage to qualify as “horror” for this list, but it’s also got terrific mythology and fantasy elements as well, and the fake documentary angle that is otherwise so overused in the genre never wears out its welcome here. The $5 million it managed from global receipts is not much above its $3.5 million budget, but it built a minor cult following on home release, and now a U.S. remake is planned.
5. Let Me In — A coming of age that is unexpectedly and disorientingly sweet even while something terrifying and/or bloody is happening. Yes, it’s very similar to the first film adaptation of the same novel, but that doesn’t really matter when the final result is this good. The lovely visual palette and lazy sweeping camera movement creates a dreamy — sometimes nightmarish — impression when combined with the patient pacing and terrific cast who speak volumes in the silence between their words. Releasing in October of 2010, this one took only $24 million in theaters, off of a $20 million budget. Sadly, then, it never enjoyed the attention it deserved from audiences.
6. It Follows —
Whether perceived as a parable on the dangers of unprotected sex in the age of AIDS and pandemics, or a proclamation of reclaiming control of life and sexuality amid those sorts of dangers, or even as more about broader concepts of simultaneous risks of intimacy and isolation in the modern hyper-connected world, it’s undeniably great filmmaking. The relentlessness, personal nature of the central conflict makes it most of all a story simply about death’s inevitability however hard we fight to delay or deny it, and that is ultimately why it resonated so strongly with audiences. That, and it’s scary as hell. Costing just $2 million to produce, this movie more than covered expenses even with an extremely modest $18 million theatrical cume.
7. A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night —
Sensual shades of black and gray mingle to a hip western score for a vampire romance by way of Dead Man and Rumble Fish. Few directors in horror have a freshman outing as perfect as this, and it’s brilliant that the blood letting is of secondary importance to the main characters and arcs woven throughout the film. With a micro-budget, the film had a limited release and only took just under $500,000. But it received almost universal critical praise, as well it should, and is building quite a following on home entertainment among horror fans.
8. The Conjuring —
Supposedly based on a true story (but of course, none of it is seriously true), it’s old-school haunted house cinema extraordinaire. There is an instant timelessness to the proceedings, and a visual texture that is John R. Leonetti’s career-best. If you want to ensure you’ll spend the rest of the night awake under your covers, jumping at every creaking floorboard and afraid to look at the closet door lest it seem to move, this is your ticket. At $20 million to produce, the film was a major hit with $318 million worldwide, making it one of the most profitable and highest-grossing horror films in history.
9. The Babadook —
With serious capacity to disturb viewers, it relies not just on monstrous terror but also psychological terror of the most frightening sort. Some of the most unnerving and chilling moments are not of the creepy creature, but of the little boy as he seems to lose his mind or lashes out until his mother is losing hers. Amazingly effective with very few literal “traditional” scares, it relies on tension and unsettling real-life moments to make the darker parts all the more horrific. Budgeted at a low $2 million, the film pulled nearly $7 million in theaters and garnered widespread acclaim as one of the greatest modern horror releases.
10. Sinister —
This film has been on my top horror lists since its release, and it’s slowly made its way higher with each viewing. Now, it finally sits where it was destined to, asthe most terrifying, disturbing, well-acted, perfectly paced horror film not just of the last five years but of the last decade. It’s a true modern classic that joins the ranks ofThe Exorcist, Halloween, Psycho, and other iconic productions that constitute the best achievements of the genre. For the ultimate effect, watch this one as late at night as possible, with all of the lights off and either alone or with just a small number of other people. This film grossed $77 million off of a $3 million budget, so it performed very well and had terrific profit margins.
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