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Steve Jobs unveils the first Mac:
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(H/t Open Culture) Read the rest of this post...
A state legislator has found yet another example of government regulation getting in the way of job creation.You honestly can't make this stuff up. She's entirely serious. And notice how she's using the standard Republican talking points about government regulations interfering with employment. Yes. Those mean government regulations that don't let you throw little people around like bowling balls for the fun of it. Next time maybe they can repeal the EPA and the FDA - after all, who doesn't like a little more arsenic in their drinking water, and a touch of salmonella in their hamburger. Read the rest of this post...
So Rep. Ritch Workman, R-Melbourne, filed a bill this week to bring back "dwarf tossing," the barbaric and dangerous barroom spectacle that was imported from Australia and thrived briefly in Florida before it was outlawed in 1989.
"I'm on a quest to seek and destroy unnecessary burdens on the freedom and liberties of people," Workman said. "This is an example of Big Brother government.
"All that it does is prevent some dwarfs from getting jobs they would be happy to get," Workman said. "In this economy, or any economy, why would we want to prevent people from getting gainful employment?"
'We're Legislating. He's Campaigning.'WH Spokesman Carney:
Dear Mr. Speaker: you refuse to hold a vote on the Jobs Act, a mainstream bill that would boost economy & jobs now. That's legislating?Read the rest of this post...
As European officials brace for the potential of a Greek debt default, Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said Wednesday that she would push for more capital to protect her nation’s banks. And European banking regulators were trying to identify the region’s most vulnerable financial institutions.Merkel wants to "protect her nation's banks" as the article stated. This is not the same thing as protecting the bank's investors (shareholders and bondholders), though I'm not sure Merkel would notice the difference.
Mrs. Merkel’s comments, after meetings with the European Commission here, came amid reports that customers were withdrawing savings from the French-Belgian financial institution Dexia, which is about to receive its second rescue in three years.
Shares of the bank, which is weighed down by its exposure to Greek debt, have plunged since Greece acknowledged over the weekend that it would miss the financial goals set as a condition for its receiving its next round of European bailout money.
Germany, the euro zone’s wealthiest member, seems politically inclined for each nation to protect its own banks. So is the affluent Netherlands. But France, the most dominant euro economy after Germany, is cautious about the whole exercise and is likely to lean toward an approach drawing upon the resources of the euro zone’s bailout fund — an approach the I.M.F. favors.It's easy to read Germany as the bad guy here, but even the French approach (relying on Euro-wide funding for the re-capitalization) has its flaws.
France, worried that pumping too much of its taxpayers’ money into a bank recapitalization could lead to a downgrade of its government debt rating — driving up the government’s own borrowing costs — has called for a new look at whether Greece’s private creditors should face higher write-downs on their Greek debt.The French may be willing to put the wood to private Greek investors. Would they do the same to private French and German investors?
[T]he press is fixated on whether this will affect France’s AAA rating. Remember, if France has to make good on a guarantee, it has to borrow the money in Euros, and pay interest. That is a burden on French taxpayers. French bonds are falling against German bonds already.Time will tell in Europe, sooner rather than later.
There are no painless solutions. The only question is who will bear the pain. The US government is dominated by a financial oligarchy, (see Thirteen Bankers, by Simon Johnson and James Kwak) so we can assume it will be taxpayers who get slashed. At least in Europe, it looks like equity investors and maybe even some bondholders will take losses.
My first computer was the Macintosh 128k which I got when I was 8 years old. I drew pictures of Mr. T on it using macpaint and the mirror brush feature. I broke world records on the ski jump on Winter Olympics. I won Uninvited after lots of hard work, and I slapped around the Black Knight in Dark Castle.Read the rest of this post...
The Mac IIfx got my family through basic accounting and word processing. I managed to break it on a regular basis by adding too many extra features.
The Mac LC II helped me survive high school and and almost got me to do some studying in college. You Don't Know Jack took up much of it's use.
The Powerbook G4 helped me download all my honeymoon photos, and allowed me to view my Dad singing If You Think I'm Sexy to the bagpipes at my wedding.
The original iPod got my Dad through his chemotherapy, and he was mystified that I was able to put all his favorite operas and musicals in one little device. He couldn't eat, he couldn't relax very much, but the times in which he did, he had those little white ear buds on. When he died from Pancreatic cancer, the one thing I wanted from his things more than anything was that little player. (Even though Opera is not my favorite.)
The G5 got me through the end of my 20s, and aided me in editing a video of my Father for my family to remember him by.
The Powerbook G4 kept my ideas and thoughts for me after his passing.
Three incarnations of the Macbook Pro got me into my 30s, helped me write, helped me create, helped me do my job.
My iPhone 4 has helped me document every moment of my son's life, and will be documenting my daughter as she comes into the world in 6 weeks.
I'll probably have to get the iPhone 5 in 8 months to have enough room to record and obsess over my children's every tedious move.
Steve Jobs died of the cancer that has impacted my family for generations. The reason Pancreatic Cancer is such a death sentence is that the symptoms don't really appear noticeably until you are already close to the end. I'll continue to hunt down the latest breakthroughs in Pancreatic research on every future mac I own until I know that I and my children are safe.
Corporations who grab marketing data from Twitter, Facebook and other social media posts are curious about who's behind the Occupy Wall Street protests and the mobilizers of spin-off demonstrations in Boston, San Francisco, and (maybe) Philadelphia.I've said all along that the excuse for data-mining personal information will always be the need to advertise (because, hey, who could object to ads?). But "marketing" data is always politically useful.
Here's how it looks to one veteran data miner: "We've been watching it for three weeks. Over the weekend, with the arrests in New York, it's really taking off," he told me. "The volumes have increased 20X, 30X. There are millions of communications."
What's the message? "Politics this year, it's going to be the workers against the rich."
Who's behind it? Legacy socialists? College-town anarchists? Professors? The Democrats? "I don't know if the Democrats are involved. I have no evidence of that. It really looks like labor," he told me.
As anti-Wall Street protests have begun to move from Wall Street to main streets in other cities, the issue has also started to bubble up in the presidential campaign.Read the rest of this post...
Greeting an overflow room of voters Tuesday at a community center in The Villages, a retirement community in Florida, Mitt Romney was asked about the protests, and said that he had spoken to the people involved.
“I think it’s dangerous — this class warfare,” Mr. Romney said.
Europe needs between 100 billion and 200 billion euros to recapitalize its banks to win back investor confidence and should put in place a comprehensive plan across the continent, the International Monetary Fund's European Department Director Antonio Borges said on Wednesday.Read the rest of this post...
We are talking about figures of between 100 and 200 billion euros, which in our view is very, very small compared to the size of the European capital markets and compared to the resources of the new, enhanced EFSF," Borges told Reuters during a visit to Brussels, referring to Europe's bailout fund.
"There has been a lot of talk about French banks, but ... the problem is very widespread," he said.
The Journal's conservative editorial board doesn't think that's a great idea, saying that Buffett should instead "educate the public" by letting "everyone else in on his secrets of tax avoidance by releasing his tax returns."Rupert may be a little busy speaking with the British police and US FBI for illegal activity but surely he can still find the time to step up to the challenge, no? Read the rest of this post...
Asked about the editorial on Tuesday at Fortune's Most Powerful Women Summit, Buffett said he was willing to release his tax returns, on one condition:
"I think it might be a terrific idea if they would just ask their boss, Rupert Murdoch, and he and I will meet at Fortune, and we'll both give you our tax returns and you can publish them," Buffett said.
"I'm ready tomorrow morning," he added.
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