I’ve seen this video a long time ago, so when I came across it today I’ve already knew it was worth watching.
Invest a couple of minutes into watching these videos and they might inspire you, indeed.
I’ve seen this video a long time ago, so when I came across it today I’ve already knew it was worth watching.
Invest a couple of minutes into watching these videos and they might inspire you, indeed.
If you’ve had a tough day this is the video you need to see.
Ryanair’s CEO Michael O’Leary had been invited to speak about innovation at conference held in Brussels. Hell, what a great speaker he is…
You think you’re an autonomous human being, right? Well, there’s a must-see TED video for you, then.
I hadn’t wanted to write about Jobs’ death. However, I’ve changed my mind after I watched his commencement address to Stanford 2005 graduates. I suppose that this speech has been published in every article about his death, but in the unlikely case that you haven’t came across it already, I hope you find it inspiring.
Stay Hungry. Stay Foolish.
Stanford’s ecorner is a well-known source of great speeches on business, innovation and entrepreneurship. I came across the first one I had ever listened to and I still find it really inspiring.
Imagine you have 5$ and 2 hours. What would you do in order to make as much money as possible?
“An inspirational talk” doesn’t really describe the following video. Yossi Ghinsberg spoke at TEDxBratislava about his experiences from being lost in Amazon forests for weeks. He touched many interesting topics:
…and how being happy is the most important thing, ever.
Here goes a tremendous speech given by the famous comedian Charlie Chaplin in his film The Great Dictator. It’s been more than 70 years since the film has been released, but the content of the speech is now relevant as never before.
Today I had a chance to watch an inspiring documentary about the world’s greatest money maker, Warren Buffett. Until now, the only thing I knew about Buffett was that he’s really, really rich. I also recalled that he gave an enormous amount of money to Gates’ foundation and persuaded other billionaires to do the same.
The documentary is definitely worth watching. It emphasizes many interesting habits Buffett developed over time.
Buffett’s characteristic I found most interesting is that he apparently has a high level of self-confidence. Ok, “high” doesn’t sound explicit enough.
He just doesn’t care about what others think.
…and that’s my take away from this documentary: if everything seems great to you, just don’t give a crap about what others say, and do your thing.
The World’s Greatest Money Maker: Warren Buffett - Part 1 of 6