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She's portrayed many love stories on stage and screen.But according to new reports, Academy Award winner Lupita Nyong'o may have found a happy ending of her own.The 12 Years A Slave actress, 33, has been dating GQ Style's Fashion Editor Mobolaji Dawodu for six months, according to Us Weekly.Lupita Nyong'o, 33, has been dating GQ Style's Fashion Editor Mobolaji Dawodu for six months, according to Us WeeklyClaims of a romance emerged when a supposed pal of Mobolaji's revealed the relationship to the publication, saying they had been introduced 'through mutual friends of the fashion world'.The friend added that Mobolaji had 'discreetly told people they are dating'.The stylish journalist added fuel to the speculation thanks to his Instagram page, on which he has posted numerous photos of the pair together, with one dating up to 35 weeks ago.One selfie depicts the pair in a gloriously sunny holiday location, where they celebrated Christmas Eve together, according to the caption.The pair have allegedly been introduced 'through mutual friends of the fashion world'




Jetsetters: The award-winning actress and the fashion writer appear to have enjoyed a holiday togetherIn another, the duo jokily posed stiffly side by side in a hotel room as they prepared to head to the 2016 Met Gala, with the stylish male writing to followers: 'About last night'.The most recent snap of all shows the pair in each other's arms, dressed in cute co-ordinating outfits as they seemingly enjoy a lazy Sunday together.With Lupita in a denim jacket and bright orange top, matching her rumoured beau's denim shirt and tangerine trousers, the pair seem the perfect match in both personality and interests, evidently sharing a passion for fashion. ', taking to his Instagram to document his projects with movie stars such as Jared Leto for the men's mag. Meanwhile Lupita has always expressed an interest in style in the past. As well as putting on endless show-stopping displays at red carpet events, she revealed to Vogue magazine that as a child in Nairobi: 'I read American, British, and a few African magazines.




Then I would design my own clothes.' Coy: The friend then added that Mobolaji had 'discreetly' informed people that he and Lupita (above) were datingJudging by Mobolaji's Instagram, the new couple have managed to make time for each other despite Lupita's hectic schedule recently.   She has just finished filming new Disney film Queen of Katwe, which follows Phiona Mutesi, a Ugandan chess prodigy who finds great success at the Women's Chess Olympiads.The film was entirely shot in South Africa and Uganda, and is set to premiere at the 2016 Toronto International Film Festival on September 10. The Kenyan-born actress has also just wrapped promotion for Jon Favreau's blockbuster remake of The Jungle Book, in which she portrayed Raksha, a female Indian wolf who is Mowgli's adoptive mother.And now, after the release of the new Star Wars film in last year, Lupita is set to begin filming on its sequel.Playing a pirate and longtime friend of Han Solo and Chewbacca in the popular franchise, Lupita anticipates the Rian Johnson film's release on December 15.




Work hard play hard: Lupita has found love amidst a very busy schedule, having just released The Jungle Book and looking forward to promotion of the new huge Disney and Star Wars filmsGq Grand Quality Hotel Yogyakarta Jalan Adi Sucipto No 48 Gq Grand Quality Hotel Yogyakarta Our hotel is located on the outskirts of Yogyakarta city. Grand Quality Hotel Yogyakarta offers a whole range of international standard facilities to business and leisure travelers. It is including business facilities, conference and banqueting service are organized with full attention and care. We also provide a free exclusive shuttle service to airport and railway station and Malioboro shopping district as scheduled. Services in the hotel and nearby Services and practical information Reception open 24 hours a day Dry cleaning / Ironing ADI SUCIPTO AIRPORT At 1.5km / 0.93 miles MAGUWO STATION At 1.5km / 0.93 miles TUGU STATION At 7.3km / 4.54 miles It features one King size bed or two Single beds.




Safe deposit box in room WIFI in your room Hair dryer in bathroom Smoke alarm in room Emergency info in rooms Our restaurant is located at the lobby level and provide a cozy ambience for breakfast, lunch and dinner. We are available 24 hours daily. The best Chinese Restaurant in town serving a wide array of speciality dishes such as Cantonese and Szechuan cuisine. Our restaurant is located besides the poolside area and the coffee shop. It serves a wide variety of Japanese foods such as teppanyaki, sukiyaki and sushi. See all our restaurants It is located at the main lobby which offers a cozy and spacious lounge with a wide variety of drinks and meals, and pleasing live music. See all our restaurants and bars Other web-users rate our hotel When making a booking at this hotel:If you’ve glanced at the ads for Simba, Eve or Casper, you’d be forgiven for thinking they were flogging some kind of new gadget. They have the aesthetic of tech startups everywhere, tout the research and development that went into their sparkly new products, and offer eye-catching, venture capital-funded deals.




If you look more closely, however, you’ll see they’re actually selling mattresses. But why would companies selling foam, springs and fabric be posturing as Silicon Valley brands? The answer is mattress-selling has changed. At the heart of the ad battle is a three-way fight between companies all promising to use the latest technology to both produce and sell you a mattress. British startups Simba and Eve are taking on each other, as well as the better-funded American competitor Casper, in a war of words, technology, and a lot of billboards. To be clear, these companies aren’t selling “smart mattresses”. Those exist, made by companies like ReST and Sleep Number, and are your classic internet of things devices that can record things like your sleep patterns and automatically adjust the firmness of the mattress to help you get a better night. Instead, the mattresses sold by these new startups are, well, mattresses. Nonetheless, Jas Bagniewski, the chief executive of Eve, says his firm sees itself as a technology company.




“Whether you think of the technology in the website, the technology used to compress the mattresses for postage, or the technology of the ERP [enterprise resource planning] system that links the warehousing to the stock control,” he says. He likens it to Amazon a decade ago, or his previous employer, the e-commerce site Zolando: just selling things online doesn’t necessarily make you a tech firm, but if you do it with a sufficiently innovative approach, you can be one, even if what you sell isn’t technology itself. Bagniewski concedes that it’s “a stretch” to call Eve’s mattresses “technology”. “Some people would say yes, some would say no. A lot of technology goes in to developing the product. But is a Nike shoe technology? James Cox, the founder and chief executive of Simba Sleep, says he “definitely” sees his company as a technology firm. “The mattress market was one of the last venues that hadn’t seen any change. The simple direct-to-consumer offerings that the likes of Casper came up with were clever, but more from the marketing than the product side.”




As for Casper itself – no surprises: “Casper is indeed a technology company,” the company’s co-founder Constantin Eis tells me. “We have an army of web developers that allowed us to build and scale software to enable one of the fastest growing brands of all time. Our tech hardware is our sleep product line. The engineering team at Casper is based in San Francisco, where they researched, designed, prototyped, and iterated on the mattress, pillow, and sheets.” Not to be outdone, Cox says Simba’s mattress is “the most advanced in the world”, not only in terms of actually sleeping in it, but also in how it’s built from the ground up to be sold online and posted to customers: even the springs are slightly conical, so that they can be compressed fully flat. “We’re the only ones that have truly used technology to create a superior product,” says Cox. Nonetheless … it’s still foam and springs and fabric. Three types of foam, and conical springs, but still: does making really fancy foam and springs turn you into a technology company?




Perhaps the link isn’t really in the product, or even the way the product is sold, but the way the company is run. “We’re a tech-enabled business,” says Cox: “We acquire clients in the most strategic way possible, and we acquire them for the least amount of money.” That means things like heavily targeted Facebook adverts, smart lead generation for sales and canny investment in growth. Indeed, the attitude to growth is perhaps the single biggest thing that unites all three companies against the Warren Evanses of the world. All describe, in different forms, what’s come to be known as “growth hacking” as core to their approach: rapid experimentation in marketing and development with the aim of quickly identifying and putting into practice methods to build their business. For Eve, that included offering a chunk of its company directly to Channel 4, leading to its first TV adverts; for Casper, branching out from mattresses to similarly fancy pillows and sheets; for Simba, a smart manufacturing line that lets it identify faults from returned mattresses and monitor across batches for similar problems.

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