Author: Serkadis

  • Quick Look: Sony VAIO X Series notebook

    The 1.5-pound, half-inch thick Sony VAIO X Series notebook is easily one of the most impressive portable computers I’ve seen in quite some time. I can’t convey how light it is. It seems to defy logic. My brain doesn’t understand that it’s seeing my hand hold up an 11.1-inch notebook that weighs less than half of what most other notebooks its size weigh.

    It’s not a super powerful computer. No sir. But Sony’s managed to stuff a nimble 2GHz Atom CPU (Z550) under the carbon fiber hood. It’s not cheap either, starting at $1299. If you can mentally get past the whole $1300 netbook thing, you get a nice array of features – solid state drive, GPS, Bluetooth, Verizon 3G, Wi-Fi, 2GB of RAM, standard 3-hour battery and an unbelievably lengthy 12+ hour battery that doesn’t seem to add much weight at all. Perhaps best of all is that unless you’re doing some relatively aggressive multitasking, using this computer doesn’t feel much like using a netbook at all.

    The screen is an 11.1-inch LED backlit affair at 1366×768, there’s a tiny but relatively functional island keyboard, multitouch trackpad (it’s too small to effectively use the multitouch features), webcam, Windows 7 Home Premium, Ethernet, memory card reader, VGA out, and two USB ports. And again, it’s unbelievably light.

    I’ll be putting the machine through its paces and will have a full review up shortly.

    X Series [SonyStyle.com]


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  • NYC iPhone Fraud Epidemic Solved! AT&T Web Site Selling iPhones to New Yorkers Again. [Digital Daily]

    UnknownLooks like AT&T has gone and “modified its promotion and distribution channels” again. Either that or the carrier has a better handle on the “online fraudulent activity” that prevented it from selling Apple’s (AAPL) iPhone online to customers with New York City zip codes.

    The company’s Web site is once again accepting iPhone orders from potential customers living in Manhattan. I was just able to initiate two orders for the iPhone 3GS using New York city zip codes (click on image below to enlarge)–one in midtown (10016), the other in East Harlem (10029).

    attwtf

    This not 24 hours after company representatives claimed that AT&T (T) wasn’t selling iPhones online to New Yorkers because of “online fraudulent activity” or because AT&T “periodically chooses to modify [its] promotions and distribution channels” or some combination of the two.

    That AT&T reversed course so quickly and without comment suggests this entire incident may have been one of those middle-of-the-org-chart missteps that went unnoticed by upper management until it blew up in the media.

    What’s perhaps most astonishing about the episode is how willing people were to buy into the idea, put forth by Consumerist, that AT&T had actually stopped selling the iPhone online in Manhattan because of data congestion issues. That such an idea is even plausible to people is truly a sad comment on the quality of AT&T’s network in the city.

    I’ve asked AT&T for comment and will update here if the company can break away from the periodic modification of its promotions and distribution channels long enough to give me one.

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  • Amazon Says Kindle and E-Book Sales Set Records

    Amazon.com said Monday that its Kindle e-reader has become the most gifted item in the company’s history, but didn’t provide specific sales numbers. The company said the Kindle, Apple’s 8GB iPod touch, Garmin’s nuvi 260W personal navigation device, and the BlackBerry Bold were among the most popular gadgets that customers purchased during the holiday shopping season this year.

    The online retail giant also noted that its customers purchased more Kindle e-books than physical books on Christmas Day — a first for the company. However, not everyone buying e-books from Amazon this holiday season will be reading them on dedicated Kindle devices.

    Amazon has unleashed a Kindle app for the iPhone and iPod touch that users in 60 countries can download from Apple’s App Store. Moreover, in November the online retailer released a free Kindle for PC application that enables customers to read Kindle books on notebooks, netbooks and desktop PCs.

    A Cross-Platform Strategy

    The reason for Amazon’s adoption of a cross-platform platform strategy is clear. Less than one percent of U.S. consumers read digital content on dedicated e-readers, mobile phones, or netbooks today, noted Forrester Research analyst Sarah Rotman Epps. “Consumers are reading books digitally on multiple devices, and they will continue to do so,” she observed in a recent blog.

    According to a recent Forrester survey of 4,711 respondents, about three percent of U.S. consumers read e-books on their desktop computers, and two percent read them on their laptops. “Going forward, 19 percent of U.S. consumers say they are interested in reading e-books on their desktop PCs, 14 percent on e-readers, 11 percent on netbooks, and five percent on mobile phones,” Rotman Epps added.

    Amazon said its cross-platform moves are part of an evolving strategy under which the company also expects to release Kindle apps for BlackBerry smartphones and the Mac. All these…

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  • Google Phone, Rumored Netbook May Be Just Research

    Is Google looking to compete with Apple in the consumer hardware business? Even before the Google-branded Nexus One smartphone has been officially announced, news comes that Google is preparing a muscular Chrome OS-based netbook for release in 2010.

    The current speculation is that the machine will run on a Nvidia Tegra chipset and an ARM CPU, not Intel’s Atom. Other rumors indicate a 10.1-inch TFT HD-ready multi-touch display, a 64GB solid-state drive, 2GB RAM, and a full set of toys: Wi-Fi, 3G, Bluetooth, an Ethernet port, USB ports, a webcam, a 3.5mm audio jack, a multi-card reader, and so on.

    Google has reportedly sent out requests for proposals to various fabricators to make the machine according to Google’s specs and design and is shooting for an end-of-year release. It’s expected to have a sub-$300 price point and, in the U.S., to be bundled with wireless carriers’ 3G offerings.

    Dog-Food Devices?

    Not everyone is convinced that Google will actually release these machines as consumer products. A brief blog post by Mario Queiroz, Google’s vice president of product management, mentioned no specific products but seemed to hint that the Nexus One is only being produced for internal research.

    With the idea that the company should eat its own dog food, Queiroz wrote, “We recently came up with the concept of a mobile lab, which is a device that combines innovative hardware from a partner with software that runs on Android to experiment with new mobile features and capabilities, and we shared this device with Google employees across the globe. This means they get to test out a new technology and help improve it.”

    Tim Bajarin, principal analyst with Creative Strategies, said Google’s primary interest is in improving the Android platform. “Google is responding to the age-old chicken and egg problem,” Bajarin said. “While they hope to get a…

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  • Consumer Groups Oppose Google’s AdMob Acquisition

    After 59 acquisitions, Google has hit a roadblock with one of its latest purchase attempts. Consumer groups have asked the Federal Trade Commission to block the search giant’s $750 million acquisition of AdMob, a mobile advertising company.

    The Center for Digital Democracy and Consumer Watchdog said Google’s acquisition would be anticompetitive. Acquiring AdMob gives Google the tools it needs to more effectively create and analyze mobile-ad formats.

    The groups want the FTC to not only investigate, but block the deal. They want the FTC to consider whether Google’s access to AdMob’s technology will give it an unfair advantage in selling mobile advertising.

    “The mobile sector is the next frontier of the digital revolution,” said John Simpson, consumer advocate with Consumer Watchdog, and Jeffrey Chester, executive director of the CDD, in a joint letter to the FTC. “Without vigorous competition and strong privacy guarantees, this vital and growing segment of the online economy will be stifled.”

    Making Its Case

    Google was quick to respond to the complaint.

    “We’re confident that the FTC will conclude that the rapidly growing mobile-advertising space will remain highly competitive after this deal closes,” said Adam Kovacevich, Google’s senior manager of global communications. “There are more than a dozen mobile-ad networks, and this deal is similar to mobile-advertising acquisitions that AOL, Microsoft and Yahoo have made in the past two years.”

    The consumer groups’ letter charged, “Consumers will face higher prices, less innovation, and fewer choices.” But Google said its acquisition of AdMob will do the opposite.

    “The deal will provide users with more free mobile applications, in some cases as an alternative to pay-to-download apps, since it will allow developers to subsidize their products through effective mobile advertising,” Kovacevich said.

    Consumer privacy is also a concern for the consumer groups. Google responded that it has a track record of providing strong privacy-protection tools…

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  • Rumor du jour: Apple ordering 10″ tablet screens

    Filed under: , ,

    Another week, another day, another round of tablet rumors for the now all-but-confirmed January event. The latest news bouncing around the Interwebs is that Apple has placed an order with panel supplier Innolux for a bevy of 10″ touch panels to stick in the new devices, be they called iSlate or whatever the marketing team eventually hits on the dart board. This vibes with what we’d heard earlier about the screen being either 7 or 10″ in the diagonal, and it reveals a little bit more about the process: apparently Apple wanted to go with this release earlier, but they were concerned about the strength of the glass. Now they’ve got the stronger glass they need, so supposedly the rumors on the wind say they’re ready for a January announcement, with a release coming in March or April. They’ve even got another supplier lined up to crank out even more of these screens if needed.

    A translated WSJ article also says a Taiwanese company called Chang Uei Precision has been signed up to provide “connectors” for the device, but that sounds quite vague and they say a release isn’t planned until Q3 of next year.

    As always, this all remains hearsay — Apple hasn’t even officially announced an event in January yet, much less hinted that they’ll be releasing a revolutionary tablet-style device. So remember what Grandma said about counting chickens before they hatch, and don’t. But if any of these rumors prove to be true, it’ll be an interesting 2010.

    [via Engadget]

    TUAWRumor du jour: Apple ordering 10″ tablet screens originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Mon, 28 Dec 2009 17:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • iPhone devsugar: SwapKit

    Filed under: , , ,

    iPhone developer Emmanuele Vulcano has been working on a new iPhone OS data exchange protocol called SwapKit [Apple Dev account required for link]. Hosted on GitHub, SwapKit provides App Store-friendly application-independent ways to publish data with custom metadata for sharing between applications.

    SwapKit can automatically find all other SwapKit-using applications on a device and determine which of those applications can perform specific actions on that data. For example, a developer might send a string to the first Twitter-ready client it finds and request that client to post the string as a new tweet. SwapKit basically offers a Mac-style LaunchServices for iPhone.

    Open source and provided under the MIT license (basically “use however you like”), SwapKit remains in early development. The screencast shown above demonstrates basic SwapKit features, demoing both sending and receiving functionality.

    TUAWiPhone devsugar: SwapKit originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Mon, 28 Dec 2009 16:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Brief: High mutation rates don’t necessarily spell rapid evolution

    Mutations are the raw material of natural selection, providing changes that help all organisms adapt to new environments. In fact, a variety of experiments with bacteria show that strains with high rates of mutation can adapt more rapidly than their peers. But mutations can also knock out vital genes, which is why cells have many mechanisms intended to limit or repair changes in their DNA. So, how does it all balance out? New research suggests that, for E. coli, a rate of about 10 times normal provides a nice compromise.

    The researchers performed a systematic test of mutation rates, swapping out the bacteria’s normal DNA Polymerase I gene (which handles repair and a portion of the normal DNA copying duties) for mutant versions that naturally produce higher and lower rates of mutation. All told, over 60 different mutant forms were tried, with the most potent mutator creating DNA changes at a rate 1,000,000 times higher than that of the the least mutation-prone. The engineered strains were then subjected to a bacterial version of Survivor, dumped in culture in various combinations for up to a month in order to see which ones were left alive.

    For the first week or so, normal strains actually outgrew the competition. But, after a few weeks, mutator strains began to pick up helpful adaptations, and quickly came to the fore. By 30 days, only 8 strains (out of 66 initially) survived in culture: all the wild type and low-mutation versions had been driven out by the competition. But so had the strains prone to the most mutations; instead, all the strains fell in a narrow range, with somewhere between three and 47 times the normal mutation rate, with most on the high end of that range.

    There seem to be three conclusions: under normal circumstances, like a stable environment, bacteria seem to have mutation rates that are conducive to good growth. But, change the conditions (shift the culture media—introduce competition—and higher rates of mutation become adaptive. But, even under those circumstances, there are limits, as the strains with the highest rates of mutation die out, too.

    What is a “Brief” post?”


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  • iPhone photos become high art in gallery competition

    photo-45When photography became commonplace in the late 19th century, it took several decades and pioneers like Alfred Stieglitz before it became accepted as fine art. Today, with ubiquitous cell phone cameras and now mobile live-video streaming, expect the divide between high and low art to become even narrower.

    A San Francisco Bay Area gallery is testing that idea with a photo contest that asks people to submit their artiest iPhone-taken pictures. At between 2 and 3.2 megapixels, depending on the model, the iPhone has a weak camera compared to competitors. But Giorgi Gallery, which is running the competition, says, “The eye of the artist is always more important than the technology in the creation of beautiful art.” Two hundred winners will get prints of their photos shown at an exhibition in Berkeley next month.

    Others galleries and institutions have also tried to hold up the iPhone as a more democratic tool for creating and distributing art. The New Yorker dabbled in iPhone-created covers created by the Brushes application earlier this year. Plus, there are several photo editing applications that give you basic tools to edit photos like Best Camera and Photogene. Adobe even created a version of Photoshop for the iPhone, but its features are very limited compared to what’s available in the proper application.

    Pylon-768x1024

    Gordon Fraser

    IMG_0286-1-768x1024

    Alex Racanelli

    tampico

    Will Reddy


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  • VIDEO: Taylor’s big day on The Price is Right

    Filed under: ,


    Click above to watch the video after the jump

    It has been a long, long time since we’ve watched The Price is Right – let alone on a regular basis, but there was a time when 11:00am was Bob Barker time. Barker has, of course, been replaced by comedian Drew Carey, but the game show hasn’t changed much for the most part, and still rocks the most when either Plinko is being played or the showcase involves a new car.

    That’s good news for Taylor, a 19-year-old who celebrated his birthday on the show last year. Taylor had what could only be called one of the luckiest days in show history (at least to auto enthusiasts), winning two rear-wheel-drive cars, a scooter, a trip to Boston and a boatload of money. Now that’s what we call a birthday present, and hopefully Taylor was able to use some of his winnings to trade up from a V6 Ford Mustang to a GT. Hit the jump to watch this oldie but goodie. Top tip, Mojo!

    [Source: CBS via YouTube]

    Continue reading VIDEO: Taylor’s big day on The Price is Right

    VIDEO: Taylor’s big day on The Price is Right originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 28 Dec 2009 16:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Philips D908 Windows Mobile 6.5 smartphone spotted in China, claims to have 1 GB RAM

    Philips-D908-Windows-Mobile-65-2 Philips-D908-Windows-Mobile-65

    click for larger versions

    Mobile-Review has spotted the Phillips D908 Windows Mobile 6.5 Professional smartphone. 

    The device, which comes in at a chunky 14.8 mm, claims to have 1 GB RAM and 2 GM flash storage, and features a 3.2 inch WVGA touch screen display, GSM and CDMA/EV-DO connectivity, Wi-Fi, GPS, Bluetooth 2.1, 5MP camera and MicroSD card support (up to 32GB). The specs appear on Microsoft’s Chinese website here.

    The smartphone is expected to launch soon on China’s biggest network, China Telecom.

    Via Unwiredview.com

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  • UK PM Gordon Brown Sold Gold At Rock Bottom, Cost The UK $10 Billion

    gold coins

    UK Conservatives say it was a “spectacular display of economic incompetence”.

    Then Chancellor, Gordon Brown sold 400 tonnes of gold at historically low prices, and cost the country $10 billion.

    The TimesOnline UK reports:

    Brown sold the bulk of the Bank of England’s gold at an average price of $275 an ounce. Had he sold the metal this year, he would have raised $13.8 billion.

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  • REPORT: 15% of Tata Nano reservations being cancelled due to slow fill rate

    Filed under: , , , ,

    Tata Nano Europa in Geneva – click above for high-res image gallery

    When you’re talking about the Tata Nano, you’re talking about the cheapest car in the world. And on the Subcontinent’s booming economy, lots of folks are looking for their first automobile. When we say “lots” we mean millions, maybe tens or even hundreds of millions. All of which would make the Nano a highly logical choice, sort of like when Americans couldn’t stop buying Ford’s Model T. Only thing is, old Hank Ford ensured that there was a very steady stream of cheap cars for people to buy. Tata appears to be struggling with a different approach.

    As a result of slow deliveries, the Hindustan Times notes that 15% of Tata Nano orders placed so far have been canceled. To put that in perspective, just over 200,000 people have placed orders for the bare bones transportation device. Meaning slightly more than 30,000 people have canceled their orders. Unlike the Model T, India’s market is currently flooded with alternatives. Sure they cost more, but as one dealer points out, “People don’t mind shelling out a bit more to get their car immediately.” For their part, Tata is blaming capacity issues at its Pantnagar plant, but officials say they will deliver 100,000 cars by Q4 2010.

    [Source: Hindustan Times]

    REPORT: 15% of Tata Nano reservations being cancelled due to slow fill rate originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 28 Dec 2009 16:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Sustainable Power Corp. Board of Directors Appoints Michael Garjian as … – CNNMoney.com (press release)

    Sustainable Power Corp. Board of Directors Appoints Michael Garjian as …CNNMoney.com (press release)… glass manufacture and fabrication, plasma physics, high energy electronics, alternative fuels, biofuel production, biofuels in transportation, ……


  • Martin Armstrong: Is This The End Of Western Civilization?

    Another must-read for Martin Armstrong fans, this time tackling the question of Western Civilization and its future.

    Via Nathan’s Economic Edge

    Subtitled, “Has Western Society Come to an End?” Armstrong presents some key historical figures who believe that nations/ societies have life cycles. He then goes on to discuss how our country came into being and how “We are now coming up on the cyclical turning point for THE USA. It is either an opportunity to make an advance in civilization, or a collapse into self-interest and war. The choice is ours!”

    Most who believe in economic cycles believe that we are destined to make the same types of errors as those who preceded us in history. In fact, much of Armstrong’s own writing counters his last sentence that “The choice is ours!” Everyone likes to believe they have some choice, some control, over events and indeed I believe that we do.

    The Decline of the West–Has Western Society Come to an End 12!09

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  • Tablet to be Called iSlate?

    So, after years of speculation, debate and rumor-upon-rumor, the mythical tablet device from Apple is, it seems, here. In a matter of weeks we expect Steve Jobs to take to the stage at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco and deliver the announcement we’ve all been waiting for.

    And when he does, will he call the legendary tablet an “iSlate”? He will, if the current crop of fresh rumors prove correct.

    MacRumors has been doing a fair bit of digging and, despite some cunning digital sleight of hand by the boys and girls in Cupertino, has discovered that the domain name islate.com is registered to Apple. MacRumors has this to say on the tortuous history of the iSlate domain;

    The iSlate.com domain was originally registered in October 2004 by a company called Eurobox Ltd. It later changed hands to Data Docket, Inc. in 2006. In 2007, however, the domain was transferred to registrar MarkMonitor.com. MarkMonitor handles domain name registrations and trademark protections for many companies, including Apple. As is typical, however, the name of the actual registrant was initially hidden to obscure the identify of the actual owner.

    […] after further investigation of the domain name registrant history, it seems Apple’s name was temporarily exposed as the actual owner of “iSlate.com” for several weeks in late 2007. It was changed back within a few weeks…

    And the triumphant icing on this little cake of investigative journalism is a screenshot of the registrant details [image by MacRumors];

    Of course, the question now is whether this is the real, final name of the device or some sort of devious distraction designed to throw curious cats off the scent. Would Steve Jobs really have settled on a name for a brand new device so many years before going to market?

    Trademarks, Ghost Companies and Name Drops

    But wait, there’s more. Not to be outdone in the art of digging through obscure, dusty microfiche in the darkened basement of the Internet, TechCrunch has found compelling ties between Apple and various legal and business entities indicating they not only own the iSlate domain, but also the iSlate trademark, in several key territories including the United Kingdom, France, Japan and China.

    Furthermore, in the United States, the iSlate trademark is registered to a company called “Slate Computing.” TechCrunch offer a compelling trail of breadcrumbs that lead from Slate Computing right back to Apple. It’s a somewhat convoluted path that takes quite a number of dastardly administrative twists and turns, but if you stick with it, the conclusion is fairly compelling. Take a look, it’s definitely worth a read.

    And then there’s that name-drop by New York Times editor Bill Keller, which I wrote about here back in October. Keller’s comments during a speech he made to a gathering of the NYT staff included the use of the word “slate” which was notable at a time when most people were still just using the noun “tablet” to describe Apple’s mythical device;

    I’m hoping we can get the newsroom more actively involved in the challenge of delivering our best journalism in the form of Times Reader, iPhone apps, WAP, or the impending Apple slate, or whatever comes after that.

    (You can watch the video of the speech here, just scooch forward about eight minutes.)

    So was Keller inadvertently dropping the name of Apple’s upcoming tablet? It’s not beyond the realm of possibility; after all, rumor has it Apple has been secretly meeting with major publishers (including the New York Times) in the latter half of this year, presumably offering guidance and advice on how best to leverage their new platform for content delivery. As a senior editor, it’s entirely reasonable to assume Keller would have been privy to that information, possibly even present during one of those meetings.

    Devil’s Advocate

    On the other hand, is it more likely that this is simply one of dozens – possibly hundreds – of domains Apple has snapped-up over the years to protect their iProduct branding? Some of the more obvious domains actually do something useful and redirect to product pages on apple.com (see what happens if you try to go to ipod.com or imac.com). At the moment, however, islate.com goes nowhere. At the moment.

    Personally, I don’t dislike it. I can see some of the more dumb abuses it invites; iSlate – Eye-s-late? As in, “I ’s late… for this meeting.” There are probably more. Share your own in the comments below, let us know what you think of the name, or just let us know if you think this is a red herring.


  • IBM CEO Dismisses Idea of Google Dominance

    photo_Sam_Palmisano.jpgIBM CEO Sam Palmisano had some questions of his own in response to a question by a Barron’s writer about Google in the enterprise.

    The quote appears in a Barron’s story about IBM’s comeback. The actual story requires a subscription to view. Here is what Palmisano had to say:

    “Is Google going to become the computing platform for the enterprise? Is a bank going to run itself on Google? Is an airline going to run itself on Google? Is IBM going to run its supply chain on Google? Is Bharti Wireless going to run themselves on Google? Is the banking system of China that we’ve built going to be on Google? Is the Russian Central Bank that we’re building going to be on Google? No.”

    Sponsor

    It’s often perceived that a threat really is a threat when a smaller competitor is acknowledged by a much bigger rival. Is that the case, here? Palmisano does appear to infer that Google is not up to the task of handling the work required of major operations. By making the comment, it opens up questions about how much of a threat IBM sees in Google.

    There is no doubt that Google has made noteworthy strides in developing an enterprise suite of products. And why would a company like an airline not consider Google? Of course, Google does not offer the technology to perform core transactional task or much less in-flight software. But day-to-day office tasks can well be handled with Google applications.

    Google does not pose any threat to IBM. Google dominance is not at hand. But Palmisano does appear to acknowledge that Google has a place at the table.

    Discuss


  • Audit Integrity: ‘Socially Responsible’ Companies Have Worse Accounting Practices Than Normal Ones

    So-called socially responsible funds may actually be higher risk than their plain vanilla brethren. According to the firm Audit Integrity, if you take two socially responsible funds as an example it appears that their ‘socially responsible’ holdings contain companies who practice some pretty risky companies from an aggressive accounting or corporate governance perspective.

    For the Domini Social Equity Fund and the FTSE KLD 400 Social Index, 50% of their holdings have been ranked as ‘Very Aggressive’ by Audit Integrity’s metrics, as shown below.

     

    Aud

    This is a pretty substantial shift in governance risk when compared to Audit Integrity’s entire universe of stocks under coverage, for which only 9% are bad enough to receive ‘Very Aggressive’ ratings. 

    Aud

    Obviously any such accounting or corporate governance ratings system is only as good as the methods employed. Maybe one has to look closer at how Audit Integrity actually scores companies. Yet given the wide divergence between the two charts above, the relationship likely still stands even after accommodating some room for error.

    The larger question we feel is why some socially responsible funds might inadvertently be exposing investors to higher governance risk. Perhaps it’s because the socially responsible label makes people less skeptical. Or perhaps socially responsible funds are less diligent in checking companies beyond their standard social criteria. Yet you’d expect that good governance was part of being a socially responsible investment. Thus our message is that socially responsible investing, as a label, might be pretty misleading.

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  • Interscope And Best Buy Team Up To Give You A Free Twitter Application For Free (With Purchase)

    Dear major record labels: when we suggested you learn how to embrace “free” in your marketing and promotions, this isn’t quite what we meant. Consumerist points out that Interscope (part of Universal Music) has put together a promotion with Best Buy, whereby if you buy a CD from certain Interscope artists, you get a free copy of the software Tweetdeck. Well, that’s nice… other than the fact that Tweetdeck is already free. Great deal! Now, to be fair, the copy of Tweetdeck you get is a special “customized” version that automatically has you following 16 Interscope artists (even if you only bought a CD from one of them). Of course, you could also just follow any of those artists yourself (again, for free), so it’s not quite clear what the promotion is. But, they sure seem to suggest it’s a big deal in the Best Buy newspaper ad:




    Now, I guess, to some extent, we should note that it’s a good thing that a major record label is admitting publicly that “free” can act as a good promotion — so kudos to Interscope for taking that big step. It’s also nice to see Interscope recognize that an infinite good (software) can potentially help sell more scarce goods (CDs). But, on the whole, it definitely seems like this promotion could have been handled a lot better. Pumping up the “free” aspect of something that’s already free just doesn’t seem that compelling.

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  • Headlines of 2009 according to Parade.com

    It has definitely been a year full of scandals, splits, sudden celebrity deaths and scintillating news stories. Parade.com polled the American public on what they felt were the top headlines of 2009.

    George Clooney beat out his buddy Brad Pitt by a wide margin (56 percent to 16 percent) in the category of what celebrity would you choose to kiss under the mistletoe. Jennifer Aniston defeated her ex-husband’s current lover, Angelina Jolie (50 percent to 24 percent). Other celebs voters wanted to kiss include Bradley Cooper (10 percent) and Robert Pattinson (8 percent); Beyoncé (13 percent) and Rihanna (7 percent).

    For a complete list of winners, visit Parade.com.