Not content with curling the world's cutlery, renowned paranormalist Uri Celler is now launching is own lnternet Service Provider and predicting teddy bears will save us from the millennium bug. Uri Geller is the man who made his name by using Mindpower to bend spoons in the early 1970s, but today he is more than just a man with a drawerful of deformed cutlery. A world renowned paranormalist, a best selling author and, increasingly, an influential figure in the lnternet industry, Geller now pens a weekly column for the Interface supplement of The Times on the weirder side of the Web and also writes regular columns for Computer Active magazine, Electronics And Beyond and GQ Active.
"The lnternet is turning economics inside-out," insists the mercurial mystic. "For example, everybody on the internet now wants stuff for free and there are so many free services available. You can copy all your hard disc data into online storage called @backup and get free technical advice at expertsexchange.com. In the past people would have expected to pay for such services. This issue will change every aspect of trade." Geller predicts that the lnternet is causing businesses to radically rethink the way they deal with consumers who now demand something for nothing. The success of Dixons' subsidiary Freeserve has accelerated this new way of thinking in the UK, but old-hands know that the "something for nothing" motto has been part of Net culture since it started. However, what's different today is that, while Netscape was able to steal a march on the rest of the Web browser industry a few years ago when it decided to give its Navigator software away, "freebies" have now become the norm: an essential rather than simply canny business tactic for gaining market share. Geller claims that, as we enter a new century, paying for things is almost becoming an old-fashioned concept, "it's a ridiculously retro, 20th Century idea and just because things are free it doesn't necessarily mean they're not worth having. The Linux operating system is just one example of a quality product which people do not have to pay to use." What today's top companies get in return for providing products and services for nothing is information: and information about your about your customers can have a tremendous value in the future. Today hardly anyone would dream of paying for a browser and one year on from the launch of Freeserve there are over 150 ISPs who do not charge a monthly access fee. SURFING FOR CHARITY In keeping with the free ethos of business, Peoples Net provides its customers with a whole range of free offerings. Subscribers get free unlimited lnternet access for the cost of a local call along with free registration and subscription, web based e-mail, 25Mb of web space and technical support. Another pioneering and free service which Peoples Net is offering its customers is the change of e-mail address template. Subscribers just need to complete a form with the details of the friends and family members who they want informed about their change of e- mail address, and Peoples Net will mailshot them at no cost.
What makes Peoples Net truly unique, though, is its status as the first major charity donation- linked ISP. Whenever the Internet connection with Peoples Net is used, five per cent of the local call revenue goes to charities which customers can help select. Via the Fountain Charitable Trust, the funds are then distributed, with no deductions, to charitable and voluntary groups working in healthcare, human rights and the environment. By donating five per cent of total connectivity revenues, and not just five per cent of profits, a successful Peoples Net could mean a massive injection of cash to good causes. Josh Mailman, founder of the Social Venture Network (USA and Europe) and Business For Social Responsibility, is impressed with the approach: "By pledging five per cent of its revenues to voluntary and charitable groups, they are ensuring that the non-profit sector will benefit directly from the growth of the internet. I'm not aware of any other ISP that has made this commitment."
"You won't be big unless you get lots of hits to your Web site. Visits to your Web site is how you'll make money. I believe your credit card details will be held by your Web browser and you will be charged for visiting certain sites. You'll probably pay more for visits to entertainment sites such as Disney than you will for visits to others. Geller believes that because so many people in the world will eventually have their own website, successful sites will have to indispensable to stand out from the billions on offer. He also believes that in the future teenagers will become billionaires: "They're so much more open-minded and consequently pick the technology up so much more quickly." Backing up his claim" Geller quotes the example of a 13-year-old from his home country of Israel. "Ray Narunsky has created an Operating System called Curtains which protects parents' files when children are working on the family PC. He's already CEO of his own corporation called Bilisoft and he wants to start building it into a business empire when he's 18." And with the lnternet meaning webpreneurs don't necessarily need staff, capital or experience to achieve business success, Geller sees it as the perfect medium for discovering your own genius. "If you're brilliant and open-minded, you can start at the top," he enthuses. "We're all brilliant at something. I discovered my powers when I was four years old. When you're young you're more in touch with your real talents, but so often the 30 year slog knocks it out of people." BUGS AND BEARS "I believe that if you are good to your computer, it will be good to you," decides Uri. "The Bug Buster is aimed at chiidren but it will work for anyone if they believe in the power of positive thinking." Uri Geller's novels Dead Cold (£9.99) and Ella 5.99) are published by Headline Feature. Jonathan Margolis's Uri Geller, Magician or Mystic? (£5.99) is published by Orion Books. Visit Uri's Web site at www.uri-geller.com Steve Roche is one of the leading advisers to startup lnternet entrepreneurs in the UK. Contact him on 01 81 -582-2583 or at sroche@netpreneur.co.uk
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