Author: Serkadis

  • Visceral already teasing Dead Space 2?

    It seems Visceral’s already rolling out the teasers for Dead Space 2. A pic posted on the official Dead Space Twitter account certainly gives credence to that idea, at least.

  • Related to Governments: Dubai Parallels, Bailouts End?, Exit Repos, Sunshine on Jobs, Bunning Berates Bernanke, China

    Bill-Coppedge original content selection by MortgageNewsClips.com

     

    nyt1  +  washingtons-blog

    A U.S. Parallel to Dubai World – By AGNES CRANE and WEI GU – … But creditors of the two mortgage finance giants should not forget that, like Dubai’s investment arm, they have only implicit government backing … Even setting aside domestic concerns, a default by the two on what has long been seen as quasi-sovereign debt would torpedo America’s reputation in international financial markets.  All that helps explain why two-year bonds issued by Fannie and Freddie are at levels reminiscent of a precrisis world, trading this week with yields in the area of 18 to 20 basis points less than benchmark swap rates. … – NY Times

    What Happens to Citibank’s $8 Billion Loan to Dubai? – by Washington – On Friday, I provided some specifics about who had loaned Dubai money, and the potential fallout from Dubai’s debt crisis.  But I just found another interesting tidbit.  Specifically, 7 Days – one of the largest papers in Dubai – wrote in March:  The US public will be “outraged” by Citibank’s $8 billion loan to Dubai just six weeks after the bank was bailed out, …  – Washington’s Blog

    ————

    washington-post + yahoo-news + nyt1

    Bank of America to repay U.S.- Firm will be first to reimburse taxpayers completely for bailout – Bank of America says the repayment of $45 billion in taxpayer aid shows the strength of the company. – By Binyamin Appelbaum – Washington Post 

    and
    BofA’s TARP repayment puts pressure on Citi, Wells – By STEVENSON JACOBS – Bank of America’s surprise move to pay back $45 billion in federal bailout money ratchets up pressure on rivals Wells Fargo and Citigroup to get out from under the government’s thumb. But don’t expect it to happen anytime soon.  – AP Yahoo
    and
    Geithner Expects Bailout Program to End Soon – By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS – Timothy F. Geithner affirmed Wednesday the administration’s intent to end the $700 billion financial bailout program soon. – NY Times

    ————

    imarketnews

    NY Fed’s Sack: Exit RPs May Not Work as Some Anticipate – Federal Reserve Bank of New York Executive Vice President Brian Sack Wednesday night said he doesn’t think reverse repos will work as some anticipate but the Fed can compensate by raising rates more than otherwise and with asset sales. … However, Sack said, “My own perspective differs.” He said he sees the effects of the asset purchases arising “primarily from the removal of duration and prepayment risk from the markets, based on the portfolio-balance effects.” So those effects, he said, “would not be unwound by draining reserves with reverse repos or term deposits.” … No worries, though, because, he said, “as long as the FOMC has control of short-term interest rates, … – imarketnews.com

    ————

    bloomberg

    U.S. Taxpayers May Reap $3.17 Billion in TARP Warrant Auctions – By Peter Eichenbaum – … from the first auctions of warrants demanded by the government for bailing out banks, including Capital One Financial Corp., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and TCF Financial Corp.  … The auction was set after the agency and the bank couldn’t agree on a price for selling the warrants back to Capital One … – Bloomberg

    ————

    mark-sunshine sunshine-report

    Why The Government Jobs Policy Isn’t Working – Mark Sunshine – … The problem with jobs growth in the U.S. is pretty simple; many small and medium size companies have demand for their goods and services but can’t get financing to grow.  … – The Sunshine Report

    ————

    mish-logo

    Senator Bunning to Bernanke “You are the definition of a moral hazard. Your Fed has become the Creature From Jekyll Island” – Michael Shedlock – many good quotes and a video of the senator opposing Bernanke’s renominationMISH’s Global Economic Trend Analysis
    ————

    telegraph

    China wary of gold ‘bubble’ danger after quietly doubling its reserves – By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard – The Chinese authorities have given the clearest indication to date that they view the surge in gold to an all-time high of $1,217 (£730) an ounce as a speculative frenzy. – Telegraph.co.uk

  • Marafa Depression

    Malindi, Kenya | Geological Oddities

    The Marafa Depression, also known as Hell’s Kitchen, is an odd sandstone canyon outside of Malindi, Kenya. Known locally as Nyari – “the place broken by itself” – it was once a great sandstone ridge worn by wind, rain, and floods into a series of jagged gorges. The layer-cake colors of the sandstone reveal whites, pinks, oranges, and deep crimsons, making the gorge particularly striking at sundown, when tones of the ribbed sandstone gullies are highlighted and mirrored by those of the setting sun.

    Naturally, local stories accompany the “place broken by itself.” According to legend, there was once a town located where the gorge is now. One day, all the town’s inhabitants received a vision telling them a miracle was coming and to move their town. Everyone moved except one old woman who refused to leave. The abandoned town then supposedly vanished – with the remaining woman still inside – leaving the Marafa Depression in its place.

  • Chittagong Ship-breaking Yards

    Chittagong, Bangladesh | Disaster Areas

    Supertankers and giant cargo ships are the backbone of our global consumer society.

    Hundreds of meters long, ferrying millions of tons of goods across the globe, the sheer size of these immense vessels is awe inspiring. Construction of one such behemoth is a fascinating feat of engineering, however, the destruction and final resting place of these steel giants is even more intriguing.

    Even when such a ship is not seaworthy anymore, and repairs are not economically viable, the raw material it is constructed from have some value. Nowadays ship-breaking yards tend to be located in third world countries, places far out of sight of the consumers whose supermarkets they helped supply, and where labor is cheap and environmental protection laws are lax.

    There ships are chipped down bit by bit, usually by hand, and stripped of every last bit of value. Fauzdarhat, 20 kilometers northwest of Chittagong in Bangladesh is where many of the world’s ships go to die.

    Over twenty ship-breaking yards dot the 16 miles of coastline. It is an industrial wasteland of epic proportions, where thousands of workers are forced to scratch their meager existence out of these hulking steel ruins, working with rudimentary protection, risking injury and illness, poisoned by toxic fumes and exposure to asbestos and other hazardous materials.

    Chittagong is but one of many such places. Gadani in Pakistan is perhaps even larger. Alang in Gujarat in India is another.

    Environmental groups such as Greenpeace have tried to raise awareness of the threat that these ship-breaking yards pose to both the people employed in them and to the environment. There is some hope that public pressure will force major shipping companies to make greater use of so called “Green Ship Recycling” facilities in developed countries.

  • Maison d’Ailleurs

    Canton de Vaud, Switzerland | Unique Collections

    Maison d’Ailleurs or the “House of Elsewhere” revolves around extraordinary journeys… of the mind, at least. It is a museum of science fiction, utopias and other futurist writings.

    The museum has had an intense history since its creation in 1976. Pierre Versins, an archivist who collected works of science fiction and related memorabilia, donated his archives to the city of Yverdon-les-Bains, which created the museum. Though originally located in a three-story townhouse, in 1991 the collection was moved to a more impressive location: a former prison built in 1806, located in the middle of the city. Unfortunately, the city cut the budget of the museum in 1995 and most of the staff was dismissed. A foundation was created to manage the museum in 1998, and a new director, Patrick Gyger, was named to coordinate the efforts.

    Today, its archives contain around 70,000 documents related to science fiction or futuristic — books, art pieces, toys — including some very old, as early as the sixteenth century, and unique pieces. The collections of the museum are also used for iconographic purposes or research (literature, history of ideas, design, etc.)and houses one of the most important collection of documentation about Jules Verne in the world.

    In 2008, the museum premiered a new wing dedicated entirely to Jules Verne and early science fiction. It also presents two to three temporary exhibitions per year, around the main themes of science fiction — cities of the future (both utopian and dystopian), space travel and aliens, lost worlds, etc — and the artists that rendered them beautifully.

    Maison d’Ailleurs is a resource that not only catalogs our ever changing vision of the future but preserves it for our actual future, so that they may understand something better about us, something any science fiction writer can surely appreciate.

  • Announcement: Free Events

    This is a last minute reminder for two events I’m speaking at in Northern California. The more the merrier so bring your friends and let’s get Primal!

    Here are the details for both events. RSVP now to guarantee your seat!

    Picture6 Announcement: Free Events

    Sunday, December 6th
    7:00pm-8:45pm
    Catalyst Athletics

    1257 Tasman Dr., Suite A, Sunnyvale, CA, 94089

    Please RSVP at [email protected] or 408-400-0067

    DiabloCrossfit FitBeyondExpectation Announcement: Free Events

    Monday, December 7th
    7:00pm-8:45pm
    Diablo CrossFit
    2447 Estand Way, Pleasant Hill, CA 94523

    Please register for the event by clicking here.

    Get Free Health Tips, Recipes and Workouts Delivered to Your Inbox

    Related posts:

    1. Announcement: Upcoming Event
    2. Announcement: New Recipe Theme for the Cookbook Contest
    3. Announcement: New Recipe Theme for the Cookbook Contest

  • REUTERS: China’s BAIC secures $2.1B line of credit… is it for Saab?

    Filed under: , , , ,

    Beijing Automotive Industry Corporation (BAIC) could still be in the game for Saab, having secured a $2.93 billion line of credit from the Bank of China. On the other hand, BAIC could just be gearing up for its own home-grown expansion plans, with an eye on ramping up production and putting financial and technological legs underneath its partnerships with Mercedes and Hyundai.

    Or… it could be doing both: trying to buy Saab and as well as remodel its business. The deal for Saab between GM and Koenigsegg was for about $1 billion: the European Investment Bank approved a loan for $615 million, and BAIC provided about $400 million by buying a minority stake in the Koenigsegg Group. If BAIC did its own deal with GM for that same amount — although we have a feeling they could get a Christmas discount — that would leave nearly $2 billion for BAIC to take care of Saab and invest in its own operations.

    This is, of course, pure speculation — BAIC could have something else in mind entirely. All we know right now is that they’ve got a lotta yuan just sitting around waiting to be spent, and aborted plans to build the new 9-5 in China. This Saab story isn’t finished yet…

    [Source: Reuters]

    REUTERS: China’s BAIC secures $2.1B line of credit… is it for Saab? originally appeared on Autoblog on Sun, 06 Dec 2009 12:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Check out Cid’s Final Fantasy XIII look and Vanille’s eidolon

    The guy’s face, physique, and last name may change, but since Final Fantasy II, every major Final Fantasy title has featured a guy named Cid. Final Fantasy XIII’s Cid is a departure from the predominantly older versions

  • Lotus and SharePoint – a mea culpa and other thoughts

    My colleague Adriaan mis-spoke when he said IBM was "slowly phasing out" Domino. IBM is doing no such thing. For that, I apologize. We have corrected the original post.

    One has to be very wary about generalizing about Lotus, since that brand extends from the likes of Lotus WCM and Connections (which are really more closely tied to WebSphere), through Quickr, to e-mail and other groupware services, down to the Lotus thick client — with much more in-between.

    Nonetheless, I think it’s worthwhile debating the larger issue of the relative profile of the Lotus/Domino stack in one of its capacities — as a broad collaboration platform — which was Adriaan’s original intent.

    Among those enterprises that have made a major commitment to Domino and Lotus for collaboration and knowledge management applications, in my experience they fall into three broad categories:

    1) Those actively enhancing existing implementations across the board.

    2) Those supporting their existing implementations, but not advancing them much, and retiring applications as they no longer serve their original purpose (usually over the course of many years).

    3) Those pro-actively replacing Lotus/Domino collaboration and KM applications with various alternatives (also a multi-year ambition).

    Although it varies by country and with enterprise size, from what I can see, the 2nd group above is the largest, and 2) and 3) together appreciably outnumber the first group in size.

    This is not a blanket indictment of IBM. It is simply a recognition of a collaboration platform that has suffered competitively in the marketplace, however much Big Blue has modernized it and continues to support an impressive partner channel. As Adriaan pointed out, Domino and the Lotus stack more broadly have some advantages over SharePoint for collaboration, but Lotus-Domino is simply not matching SharePoint’s growth in this part of marketplace.

    If there are lessons here, they are really for those new SharePoint customers with stars in their eyes. Turning over omnibus information management to a single vendor brings higher lock-in risks. Allowing custom teamspaces and collaborative apps to proliferate willy-nilly becomes unsupportable over time. Upgrades become increasingly fraught. Availability of experienced talent can become haphazard. Big-time platforms require long-term planning — and suitable hedging.

  • PS3 Weekend Warrior: 15 years of PlayStation goodness

    Thanksgiving was a boon for Sony this year. The PS3 console managed to move almost 500,000 units during Thanksgiving week. Add that to the sales generated by the Slim and the price cut a couple of months

  • VIDEO: Old Dirty Bastards – The glory of Group B

    Filed under: , , ,

    Group B Quattro
    The gorgeous insanity of Group B – Click above to watch the video

    You know, there’s a reason people talk about Group B racing – and the drivers who participated in it – in practically hushed tones. After all, we’re currently in an era where motorsports news is just as likely to be about ever-more-restrictive regulatory efforts or the deranged hooker fantasies of the F1 illuminati as it is about, you know, racing. But during Group B’s brief, crazy tenure, it was the regulations that fostered the lunacy, giving us unforgettable, insanely-powered cars and legendary drivers.

    Of course, immense power and infinitesimal margins for error meant that the dangers were high — for the drivers, obviously, but also for the spectators, who were, in their own ways, as bonkers as the factory pilots they idolized and flocked to see, forming masses of humanity that routinely spilled onto the circuits as the hyper-powered rally cars flew by. Eventually, those dangers led to tragedy, which, in turn, led to the abrupt end of the Group B era. But it’s not easily forgotten, and every so often, someone posts a reminder why.

    Follow the jump for eleven minutes of heaven, edited together (miraculously) without a lick of crappy, distracting music. The only soundtrack you’ll hear is the one coming from Group B cars engineered to explore the limits, piloted by drivers who routinely (and expertly) exceeded them. It is, in a word, beautiful. Thanks to Danijel for the tip.

    [Source: YouTube via MyCarVid]

    Continue reading VIDEO: Old Dirty Bastards – The glory of Group B

    VIDEO: Old Dirty Bastards – The glory of Group B originally appeared on Autoblog on Sun, 06 Dec 2009 10:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Bogus car hauler stealing luxury autos from dealers in several states?

    Filed under: , , ,

    Hauler

    Luxury cars are nice. Most people would consider some kind of sacrifice to own one, while others plant their behinds in Corinthian Leather through ill-gotten gains. When something is desirable, there’s no end to the scheming. The latest tactic for driving luxe without earning it is pretty blatant: just show up and take it! Automotive News reports that the FBI is currently looking into an operation that’s using the identity of Atlas Towing and Recovery of Illinois, a real, legitimate business, to take luxury vehicles right out from under the noses of dealerships.

    The false haulers are apparently showing up at dealers and picking up cars using Atlas Towing’s credentials, causing the National Auto Auction Association to send out a warning. Over the summer, Manheim Auto Auctions also got hit with a fake car hauler, and that operation is believed to be connected to the more recent activity. Dealers have been warned to notify the authorities if anyone posing as Atlas Towing and Recovery comes calling and and tries to pick up vehicles. It is pretty slick, though, showing up with a truck and an air of official-ness. Points for cleverness, but it’s likely not clever enough to avoid capture eventually.

    [Source: Automotive News – sub req, | Image: BringATrailer]

    Bogus car hauler stealing luxury autos from dealers in several states? originally appeared on Autoblog on Sun, 06 Dec 2009 09:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Did Barrick’s De-Hedging Call The Top In Gold?

    The price of gold plunged around 5% on Friday, though more significantly the volume was insanely huge. Combined with the fact that the stock market was up (mildly), there’s a sense among many that the action was some kind of a sign of a top.

    If you’re an investor in big-time miner Barrick Gold (ABX) — which fell 8.88% on Friday — you have to be wondering whether they might have mis-timed their dehedging.

    It was on Tuesday that the company announced it had fully eliminated its hedge book, and that its earnings would be nakedly exposed to the price of gold. The stock initially popped on the news — yay, leveraging up against a bubblicious asset! — but if Friday’s selloff is the start of a real move, the timing of Barrick’s decision could not have been worse.

    barrick gold

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Droid VS Touchpro2(non Video)

    Hi everyone, I know you guys have been waiting for this, so I said Ill upload the Video later and just give you what I would say now. Here you go

    Hey everyone its wen here from WMPoweruser.com, and I have with me the king of android phones the Droid, and the King of the speaker phone and all around best keyboard the Touchpro2. Today will be the battle of the kings…. We will go 5 rounds and round it out to the nearest number, lets get started.

    Connectivity

    The Droid is running with VZW, America premier 3G service provider, with a large coverage area and a really fast connection.

    The Touchpro2 is running on T-mobile currently, but you can get it with all 4 major carriers and some other less important carriers.

    The Touchpro2 has a long list of connectivity features for example Wi-fi, GPS, Bluetooth and all the basics, but with TV out which even thought your seeing it more often now is still not on every devices, including the Droid.

    The Droid has everything from 3G to Wi-Fi, GPS and all the usual Smartphone stuff…..

    When on my home network I notice the Droid’s Wifi connection is slightly faster than the Touchpro’s and also stronger at that. The Touchpro does have a steadier stream and the Droid has to offer.

    After all that I would say the Touchpro2 gets a 4.5 and the Droid gets a 4.0

    Next round

    Customization

    Like all android phones the Droid comes with the app store, which has anything you would need, but when you think about it, how many different looks can it really have?

    The Touchpro2 Running Windows Mobile on the other hand is build on customizations, if you don’t like something, there is no reason to live with it; Microsoft made it a 3 step process on changing your homescreen, download, install, select. That cannot be said on the Droid, because I cannot find any customizations available to it in the app store, maybe themes and background and slight UI changes, but not anything major like the touchpro2 has.

    For this I would have to say the Touchpro gets a 5 and the Droid a 3.5

    Now let’s look at

    Style

    This is where the Droid takes the upper hand. The droid is running Android, which is a way more modern OS, very new and extremely sexy and the phone itself is beautiful. The Touchpro2 has a lot of potential, but Windows Mobile is still holding it back, with its old style Windows 95 look and its chunky buttons, it does not impress. The look of the touchpro2 is not bad, but it is still a little chunky and wide, but that is thanks to its beautiful 3.6inch screen… with 65K colors, it looks gorgeous and just stunning when you compare it to the older model HTC devices.

    The Droid has a newer thinner, manlier design with a extremely sensitive touchscreen which is only comparable to the Iphone, because it is also 3.5inches.

    This one I will have to give to the Droid because it just has a more modern look and is slimmer, better looking. The Touchpro comes in at 3.5 and the Droid a solid 5.

    User Interface

    This is another place where the Droid takes charge. The UI which is basic Android has a newer look, a easier UI and a smoother app transition. The Touchpro2 has a better more usable Homescreen, everything is on the main screen so you do not need to open any apps to get your details, but you do get this sexy looking drop down notification bar that give you all your info at once. The weather, twitter and everything is on your homescreen, so when you think about it the Touchpro2 has a better User Interface, but it can never be as smooth as the Droid at running apps or even going through the menu. The Touchpro2 gets a 4 and the Droid gets a 4 also because of the lack of information on your homescreen.

    Business features

    A phone with a large keyboard is usually aimed like a missile at the business user. The TouchPro 2 excels here, with excellent business features such as deep Exchange integration, built-in document editors, excellent call handling functions and of course the landmark feature, the speakerphone. The Touch Pro 2 has an excellent keyboard which makes tapping out those e-mails easy as pie, while the Droid suffers from shallow travel and little differentiation between keys.

    The Droid has some degree of Exchange integration, but is of course far from fully featured. While the speakerphone is loud, it lacks the TP2’s noise cancellation technology. The Droid features document viewers, but no editors, and the viewer can not show images.

    TouchPro2 – 5/5, Droid 3/5

    After all this the Touchpro2 comes out the Champ with a very close battle but the Droid has some things to fix before it can play with the Touchpro2. The final score is, Touchpro2, …. That was a very close battle but it seems the TouchPro2 came out the champ.

    A little something extra:

    Can you read your word documents while on the go?
    Can you simultaneously change your UI?
    Can you flip your phone over and have it turn to a business call?
    Can your phone connect to your TV?
    If you don’t like something can you change it without any problems?
    If you dont like your ROM, can you flash in a 2 step process then restore all of your files back in less than 5 mine?

    No Droid doesn’t, but Touchpro2 does.

    That’s all for now, keep looking forward for my full out video comparison.

    By request: Battery life on this device is excellent, It goes all day even thought its always on 3G and wifi, It gave me at least a good 9 hours, but the screen is the main power killer. The batter recharges really fast, not anything more than 2hours, way less.

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  • Four Stanford alums win Marshall

    Four recent Stanford alumni—Andrew Ehrich ‘09,  Anne Kalt ‘07,  Emily Warren ‘08 and Michael Wilkerson ‘09—have earned the prestigious Marshall scholarship for study in England.

    Ehrich and Warren are off to the London School of Economics and Political Science, Kalt will study at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, and Wilkerson will attend Oxford University.

    Stanford has the most Marshall Scholars this year of any academic institution.

    For in-depth profiles of the four students, please see further coverage in The Stanford Report. For a complete list of winners, please visit the The Marshall Scholarship’s Web site.

  • Stocking Stuffers for Pet Lovers

    Stock the pet lover’s stocking with a staple-free stapler in Doggie or Kitty, available at Think Geek. This fly stapler never needs refills. It cuts a tiny flap and notch in the paper, then folds the flap back into the notch.

    staple_free_stapler_pets_2

    Adopt one of a 100 species of wild animals in need of conservation help through the World Wildlife Fund.

    snow-leopard-adoptWith a donation of $50, the recipient will be sent a plush animal in the species adopted, plus a photo, adoption certificate and species info card. You may also choose to have the goods mailed to you, but hurry if you want to adopt for the holidays. Animals include snow leopard, arctic fox, panda, polar bear, seahorse, harbor seal and many more.

    Bring back memories of the beach, or just celebrate a fish keeper with the Capiz shell votive holder from Chimp Feet. They’re made with shell, glass and metal.

    fish-votive

    Present the dog and cat person in your life with a playful designer card case from Uncommon Goods.

    cat-dog-card-case

    Are you choosing animal-themed gifts for the holidays?

    (Snow leopard image via stock.xchng; Other images via retailers linked above.)

    Post from: Blisstree

    Stocking Stuffers for Pet Lovers

  • Citi: Cost Cutting Is Over, Now Leverage Will Drive Earnings

     

    80% of companies beat expectations during the recent earnings season according to Citi Investment Research. This was higher than the 73% beating estimates in the second quarter of 2009, and 65% in the first.

     

    Still, many skeptics say this performance isn't sustainable since much of the earnings strength came from corporate cost-cutting rather than actual growth in new business. As proof of this, note how operating margins didn't fall as much as they had during the early nineties:

    citi

    Yet Citi's Tobias Levkovich makes an interesting point on the growth prospects for 2010.

    Basically, while the margin boost from cost-cutting may be coming to and end, operating leverage could support margins over the next few quarters. Essentially, small additions to revenue flow disproportionately grow profit when you maintain the same fixed costs, since revenue increase but without a concurrent increase in costs. This is known as operating leverage. Thus as many companies remain highly cost-conscious, even a small growth in revenue could deliver decent earnings growth in 2010.

    Citi: While deep employment cuts clearly helped sustain corporate operating margins during the downturn, a reluctance to add people quickly and a turn in industrial production should keep the profitability machine running over the next several quarters. If history is any guide, analysts will under-estimate the potential for incremental returns given management guidance on fixed overhead cost structures that miss some key factors such as S,G&A and R&D expense that do not change much at cyclical turning points.

    The 2010 challenge though will be in terms of expectations. Beating expectations isn't getting any easier after the 80% beat rate we just had.

    (Via Cit Investment Research, 'Meaningful Margin Madness', Tobias Levkovich, 4 December 2009)

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • DS homebrew – Woopsi v0.42

    Homebrew coder ant512 has released a new version of Woopsi, a handy Nintendo DS GUI library for creating homebrew user interface based on AmigaOS windowing system. The latest release is another feature pack update and includes a

  • A Conversation With John Mauldin

    john-mauldin-thumb2

    This week I am in New York, and have a whirlwind of meetings (and I admit, a lot of fun on the side) and not much time to write.

    I have been saving today’s letter for a month or so, for a time such as this. Damien Hoffman of the Wall Street Cheat Sheet interviewed me and posted the transcript on his web site. I thought it was one of the better interviews I have done recently, and so it is this week’s Thoughts from the Frontline. In addition to the wide-ranging economic questions, he asks for my thoughts on how one becomes an investment writer. I often demur when asked that question (what do I know?), but did my best to answer this time. I think you will enjoy the letter. (By the way, he does a lot of interesting interviews, which he posts for free on his web site at www.wallstcheatsheet.com.)

    Unemployment Positives

    This morning’s unemployment number, though still down by 11,000, is the best we have seen in a very long time. The birth/death ratio only added 30,000 jobs, and previous months were revised upwards. Given that the ADP employment number on Wednesday was so high, and the service ISM was not good, this comes as a very pleasant and positive surprise. Is this a trend, or something seasonal because the main driver was temporary jobs? We will see in a few months. Let’s hope we see a real turnaround soon.

    A Conversation with John

    With Damien Hoffman

    John Mauldin coined the incredibly popular phrase, “Muddle Through Economy.” If the next few years continue to drag along as we rebuild from the greatest credit bubble in history, then John’s term may become the catch phrase used by every financial journalist and economist in the land.

    John is a passionate traveler with business partners all over the world. He also puts out a free newsletter to over one million people worldwide. This reach of friends and travels give John an excellent macro view of the world economy. Further, his multidisciplinary interests offer some unique insights into economics and human behavior.

    I had a chance to catch up with John and talk about his experiences as an economist, his perspective on which countries will grow the fastest in the coming decades, how he sees demographics affecting the world, and a bonus question from one of our 1400 Twitter followers …

    Damien Hoffman: John, was economics part of your schooling or a passion of yours right from the start?

    John: I had a triple major in college, one of them being economics and history. So I’ve always been fascinated by history, economics, and finance. The markets are a big puzzle to me and I’m a puzzle addict. So it feeds my addiction. I started reading the Austrian economists first, in the early ’80s as I entered the investment world. That was my real introduction to economics. Over time, if you stay around long enough and read enough, you can pick up all the other schools of thought, like I did.

    Damien: Based on some of your newsletters, I can see you are also interested in anthropology via the studies of the generations. These are major themes for investors to trade, because they’re based on slow-moving macro phenomena. Can you share what interests you about this particular framework?

    John: That’s a good question and a difficult one. This topic covers a book I’m trying to write. I don’t know if I’m ever going to get it done, but it’s called The Millennium Wave. It’s about what the world is going to look like in twenty years. My basic thesis is, we’re going to see a pace of change that far exceeds anything human beings have experienced since the dawn of man. Furthermore, in terms of technology, that change is going to accelerate. We’re going to have multiple waves of technological change. It would be as if electricity, the steam engine, and the automobile all showed up at the same time. Boom!

    We’re going to see massive technological revolutions. However, as human beings, our psychology was developed on African savannas, dodging lions and chasing antelopes. So we have a much slower rhythm to us. We’re not paced for change. Therefore, we’re going to have a backdrop of slow-moving generational changes.

    Demographic changes are predictable: we know how many people are going to be here in forty years because they’re already born. We know how many forty-year-olds we’ll have in forty years because they’re already born. So, we can see these changes coming at us.

    If you’re Japan, you’re walking into a demographic nightmare. Russia is a demographic train wreck. And it’s not going to be but a few decades, in the grand scheme of things, until Iran will have more people than Russia. That’s got to be fit into your equations. You’ve got to look at these large, broad changes that are happening.

    In the US, we’re going to be running into the freight train of Medicare and Social Security. There’s just not any way to get around it. We’re going to have to make tough generational decisions about how to handle that. And how we handle it is going to have enormous implications for our economy. If we handle it the way it’s likely to be handled – which is by raising taxes – then we have said we’re making a decision, conscious or not, that we’re going to become Europe. That means high residual unemployment and difficult, slower growth of individual opportunities.

    There are other large changes when you talk about the demographic issues. Europe would have to take massive numbers of immigrants in order to support their system. They’re just not prepared for that. Neither is Japan. The US is blessed with a world population that wants to come here and are not very culturally different from us – especially the Hispanic populations. We’re going to need those immigrants. I think that one of the most economically suicidal things we’re doing today is trying to figure out how to close the borders. We need to be doing the opposite. We need to figure out how to open the borders. It needs to be a more rational policy than we have now. Again, you have to put those things into the financial equations.

    We also have the fast-moving things such as the growth of biotech and the complete retooling of our telecommunications network over the next ten years. The way we communicate with each other and the way we receive information is also going to be significantly different in the next ten years. There will still be human beings talking, but how we sort through and assess information is going to be different. There are going to be winners and losers in that competition.

    I do a lot of biotech research to determine where it’s going. For instance, you could construct an investment play where you are long life insurance companies and short annuity insurance companies, because we’re going to live much longer than any of the actuaries would tell us. That means life insurance companies aren’t going to have to pay, while annuity companies are going to have to pay longer. That trade is probably not ready to happen yet. But when the perception kicks in, that’s going to be a very good trade.

    The new medical devices and therapies that are coming along are going to be transformational. I think about what kind of impact that will have on societies and generations – what John Howe and Richard Strauss call “the Fourth Turning,” which we’re in the middle of. All of these things have an impact on the way I think.

    Damien: Keeping on a similar topic but shifting over into a different part of the logic tree, let’s talk about one of your passions: traveling. You kind of touched on which markets have a lot of trouble, but which markets will out-perform in the next decade?

    John: If I’m picking regions, I would be an emerging market fan over the developed world, simply because the developed world, especially old Europe, is going to be running into such major underfunding problems in their pensions and healthcare. That’s going to put constraints on them and on their growth. Developing countries don’t have that problem. I’m not as much a China fan as an India fan. I like Brazil. I like Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. I know that Australia wouldn’t be an emerging market, but they sell the resources and the tools to the emerging markets.

    Damien: Is there a specific reason why you prefer India over China? If you were going to have a conversation with Jim Rogers, who favors China, what would you say to him?

    John: We’ve had a lot of conversations over time, but not that one. I think India is eventually going to get its act together. I think there’s more upside there. I think China is still trying to absorb 24 million new people into their markets annually. They’ve got major demographic issues. I’m talking about the next two decades. China may still be better than India in ten years, but I think India is the favorite over time, because they have natural resources, smart people, and better technology. But who knows. Governments can always alter the course by doing stupid things.

    Damien: That’s inevitable.

    John: Exactly. Government is the wild card. For example, Japan just elected a very left-of-center government. One that’s far more left of center than Obama. If interest rates were to rise by 1%, it would cut into their budgets by at least 25% or 30%. I think Japan is going to be a basket case ten years from now.

    Damien: That’s interesting, because one of your letters sparked a conversation with my friend Andy Glatstein about the life cycle of empires. Thinking about the Roman Empire, the Iberian Peninsula, the British Empire, and the US after WWII, it seems our predecessors in the Western line of empires have a life-cycle. It started with entrepreneurism and ambition, exploring and conquering, then reached some sort of stability point that included a decent standard of living for the masses. However, ultimately the economy sort tripped over itself and all these former empires had major issues. If today you look at Italy, Spain, Portugal, and Britain, they’ve all moved in a similar direction. Is this the fate of the US?

    John: We’re in the process of having that debate as we speak. It’s not clear how we’re going to answer that. We’re going to have to raise taxes when we hit the Medicare crisis in the next decade. No question about it. If we use that tax increase now, it will be hard to cut later. If we save the tax increases and hold our spending down, then we’ll be able to handle the Medicare crisis. It’s not clear which of two directions we’re going to take right now. We’re probably going to raise taxes and kick the ball down the road. It will have some very serious consequences in the middle of the next decade. We will probably be forced to implement a VAT tax, which is one more way to slow things down.

    Damien: Switching topics, can you explain why Wall Street economists tend to be permabulls or permabears?

    John: Mostly because their job descriptions create agendas. There are very few like David Rosenberg who feel they have the independence they need. Also, a lot of them are traditionally trained. So, they’re trained to create tools, and they think economics is a science. It’s not. It’s an art. And quite frankly, when you treat it as an art form you have a better chance of getting the numbers right.

    Damien: Can you explain what you mean by that?

    John: All of the economic models are created on past performance. For instance, right now the economic idea du jour is what the recovery will look like. So, economists go back and average the eight post-war recessions and say, “Look, this is what the average was and this is how it responded.” Well, making a prediction based on that only works as well as the underlying fundamentals of the recession.

    This is a deleveraging, deflationary, asset-bubble-bursting recession. We’re going to lose 8-10 million jobs. We’re back to where we were in early 2000 in terms of jobs. Over the next five years, just to keep up with population growth, we must create another nine million jobs. Plus, we’ve got another almost five million people who are underemployed. And the Census Bureau took 450,000 people off this year because they said, “They’re no longer looking for jobs, and since they’re not looking for jobs they’re not unemployed.” That is a fascinating way of looking at it! Last month you were looking for a job and now you’re so discouraged you’re not looking for a job, so we’re not going to count you as unemployed. That’s a patently silly idea!

    Damien: That’s absurd.

    John: Right, it is absurd. Over the next five years we’re going to have to create something like 17-20 million jobs to get back to 4-5% unemployment. That’s a staggering number of jobs. That’s something like a 15% growth in the number of jobs over five years. You’d need real GDP growth of 15% to make that happen. What is the likelihood of total real GDP growth of 15% for the next five years?

    Damien: Less than 0%. [Laughing]

    John: I think we’re going to be lucky to have GDP growth of 8-10%. So there’s going to be a real shortfall with jobs. Unemployment is going to stay stubbornly high for the next five years unless something comes out of the clear blue – which is always possible. Somebody could invent a new energy source or we could start retooling our telecom systems – something like that.

    Damien: Are those the technological catalysts that will bring us the next economic expansion?

    John: Yes. Remember, in the late 1970s we were in an economic malaise. The Japanese were kicking our butts, inflation was high, and the market was in the doldrums. It was not a fun time. Yet the correct answer to the question “Where are the new jobs going to come from” was: I don’t know, but they will. Because that’s what happens in free-market societies. That’s why I’m an optimist. Even looking at all the data and all the problems, I’m saying that 130 million families will figure out what to do to make their lives better. Some of them will sit around and wait for the government to do it, but a lot of people will do it themselves. It’s like the two vultures sitting on the cactus, and one of them looks at the other and says, “Patience? Hell, let’s go kill something.”

    Damien: As my regular readers know, that relates to one of my favorite quotes: “Desperation is the mother of ingenuity.”

    John: Precisely. Most people will go out and try to figure out something to do. That’s just what we do as a country. It’s part of our particular genius. We’re going to be helped along by some major technological and scientific breakthroughs. I’m an optimist in that regard.

    Damien: John, sometimes there are so many variables to think about and so much information it can lead to paralysis by analysis or even worse. Where do you draw the line while informing your investment decisions, when markets diverge from economic reality?

    John: You’ve gotta look at why markets are diverging from economic reality. You have to ask yourself, “Do I need to reassess?” You must constantly question yourself and sift through the data.

    Right now we’re at a place I call the Statistical Recovery. We’re going to see a recovery in the math, but it’s not going to feel like one in the real world. It’s probably going to be the middle of next year before we see job growth and reduced unemployment. If we’re not seeing job growth, if we’re not seeing income growth, if we’re not seeing a drop-off in foreclosures, if we’re not seeing a rise in consumer credit and consumer confidence, if we’re not seeing a lot of things of that nature, it won’t feel like a recovery.

    Economists can say, “Look at these numbers! The numbers are good!” But in the real world you may say, “I’m still not getting the hours I want. I haven’t seen a revival of people coming into my store. Sales are still down 10%.” If that’s the case, then it doesn’t feel like a recovery.

    That’s where I think we’re going to be. But that’s part of the process of going to the New Normal. We’re having to rationalize our entire economy, our world economy, which was built around ever-increasing amounts of leverage. And that leverage bubble has burst. The genie is not going back into the bottle. The psyche of the American consumer has been permanently scarred. And we’re going to get to a new level of economic activity that’s going to assume 7%, 8%, or 9% savings. We will see less credit. We’re watching unprecedented amounts of credit-card debt being paid off. That’s never happened in America. That’s positively un-American. Yet, we are. Because what happens? People are saying, “Maybe this leverage and debt thing is not so good. Let’s get more conservative.” It’s the new frugal.

    All we did with this “Cash for Clunkers” thing was move cars forward that would have been bought later. You’re not increasing sales down the road. Yeah, you’re taking cars off the road and spare parts and stuff, but I think it’s kind of a silly investment in dollars. But, what’s $3 billion when we’re wasting a trillion here and a trillion there? Still, it’s disappointing.

    Damien: Speaking of disappointment, I’m in my early thirties, and when I think about these trillions of dollars being thrown around I say, “I’ve been out of college a decade. We’ve had two bubbles and two collapses. It’s been a completely volatile employment and investment market. A completely volatile social environment. And, to top it all off, we’re kicked in the butt with all of this debt.” My peers look ahead and see our parents getting older and the cost to society. What do you say to our generation? Will we be the forgotten generation which toils our way through it and pays for the problems created before us, to repave the road for those behind us?

    John: I tell you, I’m sorry. That’s what you’re going to have to do. You’re going to have to move the ball forward with an extra twenty pounds on your back. That’s just the way life is. I don’t think it’s only your generation in your thirties. I think it’s my kids in their twenties who are going to be dealing with it as well.

    We’ve made some generationally bad choices, with unintended consequences. And now we’re going to have to deal with them. It just makes moving forward in the economic environment tougher. You play the hand that’s dealt to you.

    You can’t wish, “I would have been better with 35% taxes.” I know that my tax bracket is going to go into the mid-40s at a minimum. Would I be happier and have more money to invest if I had a tax bracket in the mid-30s? Yeah. But that’s just not the hand that was dealt. So, I have to figure out how to move forward with my taxes. When they add the VAT tax in the middle of the next decade, my effective taxes will run into the 55%-60% range. That’s just the way it is. I can either crawl into some hole or go to another country, or just move on and make the best of the hand I’ve been dealt. I choose the latter.

    Damien: John, we chose a question from one of our 1400 Twitter followers: Can you be very successful and still live a fulfilling family life without being obsessed with work?

    John: I’m partly obsessed with work. But you have to take time for family. You can’t ignore it. It’s easier for me now; I’ve only got one left at home.

    The most fulfilling part of my life is my seven kids. We adopted five, so it’s a colorful family. We all get along. It’s the one great pleasure of my life — the best pleasure of my life: my kids, and now grandkids.

    Damien: What advice do you have for your grandkids if one day they read this and aspire to follow in your footsteps?

    John: That’s a tough question, because I took the Yogi Berra path of career guidance: you come to the fork in the road and you take it. I am as surprised to be where I am today as anybody. I have partners around the world that take the leads we get and do sales and research on funds. Besides writing and trying to figure out the world of economics, my real job is to make sure I have the best partners, who are in the right spot to help readers find the appropriate investment ideas for them. That is not as easy as it sounds, because the majority of potential partners are either traditional money managers (which I am not) or have constraints because of their situation.

    People ask me what I’d do if I retired. I’d read, write, travel, speak, and enjoy myself – that’s what I’m doing now! So, I don’t know if retirement is in my path. But for a young person starting now, looking at what I do, I’d say the first thing you have to do is start writing. It’s a craft. I didn’t start out writing top-quality work. When I look back on letters I wrote early on, I think, “My goodness that’s sloppy.” I’ve improved over time, over the decades.

    One of the people who helped me learn how to write was my first publisher. I tried to copy his writing style. He had a particularly friendly, easy-to-understand writing style. I’ve long since developed my own style, but I am still grounded in that foundation. I tell people, “If you want to be a writer, find a writer you like and try to imitate him.” I have a certain style, a certain voice when I write. It’s not better than anybody else’s. Sometimes I go back and think, “I don’t particularly like that.” But it’s my voice and I’m comfortable with it.

    Second, don’t be too hung up on knowing everything or thinking that you’ve got to have it all figured out. You won’t. You’ll never figure it all out. Economics is an art form. The goal is to kind of be in the middle of the lane and not end up in the ditch somewhere. Don’t think you’re going to be there by the time you’re 30 or 35. It takes time to reason, read, and mature.

    Third, early in your career you should be reading more books and analyzing less data. Information is less important than theory and a grasp of the basics. You need to understand what the difference is between John Maynard Keynes and Irving Fisher and von Mises. If you don’t understand what they’re writing, if you can’t get your head around their concepts, data isn’t going to help you.

    So, you’ve got to have a handle on how the big stuff works and what the theories are. But none of the theories have independently proven to be particularly adept at describing the problems we have. So, you’ve got to figure out how to blend them and weave them.

    If you cling to one perspective, you are going to run into a wall. And you’re going to run into a wall at one of the most embarrassing times. It can be a career-ending event. I’ve been wrong. It’s easy to go back through my letters and say, “John, what were you thinking?” But on average, I’ve been more right than wrong. I often joke that I am often wrong, but seldom in doubt. But I never get married to a position. I constantly test my views. Constantly. It’s important to get the big things right and understand the big picture while not focusing too much on the little details.

    Damien: John, thanks for that advice and thanks for indulging my curiosities this afternoon.

    John: My pleasure. You asked some very interesting questions.

    New York, London, Monaco, and Zurich

    Today was a great (and going to be a long) day. I started off with a couple of interviews on Yahoo Tech Ticker with Henry Blodgett, had a few meetings, and then went to Henry Blodget’s office at Business Insider, where we did three more quick (and different) interviews. He is doing something quite intriguing. I walked in, and there were a dozen 20- and 30-something kids working intently at screens, crammed into a room not as big as my bedroom. In less than two years, he is getting two million unique visitors to come to his web site each month.

    It made me feel like such an old lion. Tiffani and I have been giving a lot of thought as to how we should manage the business over the next two years. How do we adapt to a world that is changing so fast?

    Zip to two million in two years? Interestingly, as we talked business at a long lunch, I wondered if I should write more, as there are so many blogs that hit us each day, and the number seems to be growing. He disagreed. He emphasized that I should not change my model. “You are the one guy I read each week who is above the fray. You see through the day-to-day noise. You come and tell me what was important and make me think. For you, less is more. Don’t change.” Maybe the old lion still has some teeth.

    And speaking of old lions, I later visited with Art Cashin and the Friday evening gathering of the Friends of Fermentation, at Bobby Vann’s across from the exchange, at the close of the trading day. What a pleasure. Art is one of the world’s great market savants, full of wisdom and the greatest stories, and a true friend. There is never enough time to spend with him.

    And when I hit the send button, I will go to Festivus with Todd Harrison and the crowd from Minyanville. That is always a great party and a worthy cause. Tomorrow night we see Gods of Carnage with Barry and Toni Habib, and then back on Sunday. And then home until the middle of January, when I go to London, Monaco, and Zurich.

    But the most important news is that yesterday the doctor told Tiffani she may be getting ready to have my new granddaughter a little early. It is going to be a great Christmas.

    Have a great week, and remember to make sure you have some fun on the way. And spend more times with friends. That is the best dividends you will ever get.

    Your having fun in New York analyst,

    John Mauldin
    [email protected]

    John Mauldin: We’re Still Heading For A Double-Dip Recession:
    http://www.businessinsider.com/business-news/dec-04-mauldin1-2009-12

    And here’s the Yahoo link:
    http://finance.yahoo.com/tech-ticker/article/384610/Beware-%22Nosebleed%22-Valuations-Plenty-Ways-to-Make-Money-Beyond-Stocks-Says-John-Mauldin?tickers=spy,dia,^dji,^gspc,vpu

    Copyright 2009 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved

    John Mauldin, Best-Selling author and recognized financial expert, is also editor of the free Thoughts From the Frontline that goes to over 1 million readers each week. For more information on John or his FREE weekly economic letter go to: http://www.frontlinethoughts.com/learnmore

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  • VIDEO: STR8 Weird: Euro cologne TV spot sounds like Mopar, looks like Chevy, but mostly stinks

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    STR8 Cologne TV commercial

    STR8 Challenger cologne TV commercial — Click above to watch the video

    According to one of the YouTube commenters for the STR8 Challenger cologne commercial embedded after the jump, it was made for Polish television. Which , of course, makes perfect sense, since the whole thing’s in English. Regardless, the ad features Captain Generic Macho driving a Chevy Camaro, which gradually transforms into a giant robot tsunami of cologne that deposits him into the arms of Random Desert Babe. Frankly, “STR8 Challenger” sounds a lot more more like a certain Mopar than some quasi pheromone for European dudes. Check out the video after the jump to see how you too can have it “STR8 My Way.” Or, at least, smell like you do. Or something. Hat tip to our man in Poland, Rafal!

    [Source: YouTube]

    Continue reading VIDEO: STR8 Weird: Euro cologne TV spot sounds like Mopar, looks like Chevy, but mostly stinks

    VIDEO: STR8 Weird: Euro cologne TV spot sounds like Mopar, looks like Chevy, but mostly stinks originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 05 Dec 2009 19:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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