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  • Healthy Snacks: Stretch Island All-Natural Fruit Strips and FruitaBu Rolls

    stretch island.jpg
    My kids love Stretch Island fruit snacks! It’s a popular lunch item and car ride treat that I feel good about giving my children. There are two varieties that come in many flavors: fruit strips (leather) and fruit rolls.

    • All-natural, 100%-fruit
    • No sugar added; gluten-free; dairy-free; certified kosher
    • One bar equal to one fruit-exchange in diabetic diet
    • Made on Stretch Island, WA

    My kids prefer the fruit strips over the rolls, probably because they are easier and neater to eat.  It is important to pay attention when buying Stretch Island products, as they do make organic and conventionally-grown versions of their popular snacks.

    Disclosure: I was sent free samples of these products to review. No prior assurances were given as to whether the review be positive or negative.


  • 2013 Porsche 918 RSR Renderings

    A Team Speed Forum user under the name PorscheCarreraGTMay6 has posted images of his renderings of a Porsche racer. The surprising part about the postings is that the renderings were done by a 13 year old. Teenager or not, the concept of the racer are quite impressive. Multiple color combinations were used for various ideas and even a YouTube video accompanies the illustrations.

    Continue reading for more images.
















    Source: Autoblog


  • Indiana yanks Kruse auction licenses :

    Kruse Inc., the auction company that sold the famous William Harrah car collection and has been synonymous with auctioning enthusiast automobiles since the 1970s, has lost its licenses in its home state.

    The Indiana Auctioneer Commission ruled on Tuesday to revoke both of Kruse Inc.’s licenses, and the company has to wait seven years to apply for new ones, said Kelly Butters, a spokeswoman for the Indiana Attorney General’s Office.

    Dean Kruse, the president of the auction house, has had his personal license suspended indefinitely. He can apply for reinstatement in two years. He and his company were fined a total of $70,000.

    A message left at Kruse Inc., which is based in Auburn Ind., was not immediately returned Wednesday evening.

    Kruse has appeared to have been in trouble since last year, when reports surfaced of consigners (sellers) at auctions not getting paid, and buyers not receiving their cars. He told AutoWeek last summer the financial woes were the result of a down economy and cash-flow problems.

    The ruling is a stunning fall for a company that helped grow the popularity of auctions and collecting cars among enthusiasts. In addition to selling the Harrah collection for $41 million spread out over three auctions, Kruse also claims to have sold the first car for $1 million in cash, a 1934 Duesenberg, and Dean Kruse has presided over more than 5,000 auctions, the company Web site said. He also is known for an impressive personal collection, and has been profiled in AutoWeek for his extensive array of cars.

    Terms of the ruling are not final, but have been agreed on by Kruse, his company and state officials. A written ruling is expected as soon as this week.

    “This agreement is satisfactory and this remedies the situation,” Butters said. “An important aspect of this is getting the consigners repaid.”

    It’s unclear what this means for Kruse’s auctions in other states. But the company and Dean Kruse cannot auction cars in Indiana or use those licenses elsewhere. Kruse held auctions in Arizona, Florida and Alabama earlier this year.

    Additionally, Dean Kruse must submit quarterly reports certified by a CPA to the auction commission showing payments to consigners. If he applies for reinstatement and gets his license back, he has 18 months to have paid off all claims and civil penalties.

    For more


    1929 Cadillac

    Source: Car news, reviews and auto show stories

  • Tweet Defense iPad Game Lets You Slaughter Zombies With Tweets [IPad Apps]

    Tweet Defense HD, the iPad version of the popular iPhone game, looks as fun as the original. The only difference is that now the zombie-filled tower defense game is made specifically for the iPad. And a bit pricier. More »










    iPhoneIPadSmartphoneHandheldsApple

  • T-Mobile Claiming ‘4G Speeds’ To Pretend It’s Offering 4G

    There’s just something about mobile operators that they love to make claims that are just sorta kinda true, while not really being true in spirit. This is the industry, of course, that has perfected “up to” marketing. As in “you should get speeds ‘up to’ xMbps” which, is technically true since any speed below that is covered, even if you’ll never get a speed anywhere near the defined “x.”

    The other popular tactic is to lie about what kind of wireless network you’re actually offering. There were the claims that any wireless broadband solution was “WiMAX” back before the WiMAX standard was even set. So you started to get companies calling their solution “WiMAX” and then including all sorts of fine print about how it was “pre-WiMAX” and would certainly be upgraded to WiMAX once WiMAX actually existed.

    Similarly, nearly a decade ago, when all the talk was about the upcoming “3G” networks, the mobile carriers all started pushing claims that they were offering “3G” when they absolutely were not. There were some interim “2.5G” steps, and some aggressive marketers just decided to round up. And, it looks like they’re doing that again. T-Mobile is going around claiming its HSPA+ network offers “4G speeds,” which, of course, is not to be confused with actual 4G. And, of course, this is an “up to” situation, where the network could, theoretically, sorta, kinda touch on “4G speeds,” but probably won’t for most people.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Rumor: Kyocera Zio M6000 Headed for Boost Mobile

    Kyocera unveiled their Zio M600 over two months ago at CTIA yet we’re still waiting to hear which carrier will be offering the device.  The last time we checked in, it was rumored to be Sprint-bound with a $99 price tag attached to it.  A source of ours is telling us tonight that it’s actually headed for Boost Mobile with a possible Best Buy exclusive deal. Close enough, right?

    The Zio M600 has received somewhat lukewarm reception thus far as it’s on the low end of the Android totem pole.  We played with one at CTIA and found it to be rather unremarkable.  However, this might be the key to its success.  With a rumored $169-$219 unsubsidized cost and a $50 all-you-can-eat calling/data plan, the Zio M600 could do very well.

    As a quick refresher, the features include:

    • 3.5-inch WVGA (480×800 pixels) touch screen
    • Android 1.6 (Donut)
    • 600MHz processor
    • 512MB internal storage
    • 3.2 megapixel camera

    Might We Suggest…

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      When purchasing a new phone many of us are being faced with not only a question of a handset but a prospective betrothed wireless carrier for at least a two year term (this is/was the genius of th…


  • You Knew The Eurozone Was Bad At Budgeting, But Turns Out Breaking Rules Was Literally The Norm

    girl cover ears loud kid

    It’s well known that Eurozone governments frequently disregarded budget restrictions as outlined by the Stability and Growth Pact.

    Yet it turns out that flaunting of budget rules was literally the norm.

    Bloomberg:

    With Greece’s debt crisis now exposing the weakness of fiscal oversight in the 16-nation economy, governments missed one or both of the European Union’s two budget requirements 57 percent of the time since they adopted the euro. Those rules limit debt to 60 percent of gross domestic product and budget deficits to 3 percent of GDP, as set out in the 1997 Stability and Growth Pact.

    There’s a long way to go to bring this under control. For starters, the Eurozone needs to simply have its rules followed more often than not. It’s hard to see how nations can be forced to regularly follow budget rules within a short period of time. The adjustment would be too sudden and harsh for populations to bear. In many nations they’ll protest or riot and push out politicians trying to make the hard adjustments.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • The Euro is Taking a Beating

    Today, the euro. Tomorrow, the dollar.

    The euro is taking a beating. Investors are worried that it won’t survive Europe’s debt problems.

    Note, we said ‘debt’ problems. Many experts still believe it is a liquidity problem. That is, they think it’s just a problem of finding financing. They blame speculators and hedge funds for panicking…or for deliberately cutting off the flow of juice.

    But the speculators are just doing their job. They see that the real problem is debt. Greece, for example, has government debt equal to 120% of GDP. It’s too much. And even if all their austerity measures are put in place successfully – that is, if the Greeks go along with proposed budget cuts – the level of Greek debt will still increase, to 150% of GDP.

    In other words, the fix makes things worse, not better. Debt needs to be defaulted…and restructured…not increased.

    And it’s not even sure that the fix will happen as planned. Spain’s big unions are planning a huge strike for June 8th. Malcontents, anarchists, public employees, retirees – all are resisting budget cuts. And as long as the fix is in, they figure they can get away with it. Most likely, the only way to really rein in spending is by cutting off the money.

    With the cuts or without them, the situation looks bad. What will happen? Some think Germany will leave the euro. Others think Greece and Spain will leave.

    Who knows?

    But the euro is not alone. The worst deficit on the east side of the Atlantic is not in Greece. It’s in England. And the worst household debt is not in Spain; it’s in England too.

    Not surprisingly, the pound is falling. This week, speculators are betting against sterling at a record level.

    And the US dollar can’t be too far behind. From the US to Britain to Greece, the basic numbers are very similar. Debt and deficits are high – with no obvious way to bring them down.

    “Divided Europe Spreads Contagion Fears in US,” says a Reuters headline.

    Reuters sees the effect; it misses the cause. Debt is not catchy. It’s more like cirrhosis of the liver or lung cancer. It’s the result of behavior, not the result of contagious disease.

    Yesterday, in New York, the Dow gave back the gains it registered on Friday. It was down 126 points. It is clearly headed down. The question we’ve been asking ourselves: is this just another downtrend…or THE downtrend.

    We’ve seen the top. Somewhere up ahead is the bottom. At the top, stocks sell for more than 20 times earnings. At the bottom, they sell for less than 10 times earnings…maybe as little 5 times earnings.

    If this is THE big downtrend, it will keep taking stocks down until it finally reaches bottom – even if there are a few bounces and countertrends along the way. Look for Dow 5,000 or less – sometime in the future.

    In the meantime, gold went way up yesterday – a $17 gain. The fundamental problem in the western world is debt. That debt is stated and measured in terms of paper money. Rather than let the debt go bad, governments are trying to increase the supply of money so that debtors will be able to pay. But governments don’t have any money, so they have to issue more debt first (magnifying the problem). Then, when governments can’t pay, they will probably issue more paper money to cover the problem. How this will play out exactly, no one knows. But it is sure to spell T-R-O-U-B-L-E. And when there’s trouble, people turn to gold.

    Here at The Daily Reckoning, our guess is that the bull market in gold will continue until the monetary system finally falls apart. Then, the dollar, the pound and the euro will ALL be going down – fast – against gold and other real assets. And all forms of debt, denominated in paper currency, will be marked down sharply. Many will disappear…worthless…

    And here we offer a prediction:

    The employees of the US Federal Reserve will ask to be paid in gold before the crisis is over.

    And more thoughts…

    Banks aren’t lending to private businesses. And now, they can’t raise money from the bond market either: Sales of corporate bonds have collapsed.

    Bloomberg reports:

    Corporate bond sales are poised for their worst month in a decade, while relative yields are rising at the fastest pace since Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.’s collapse as the response by lawmakers to Europe’s sovereign debt crisis fails to inspire investor confidence.

    Companies have issued $47 billion of debt in May, down from $183 billion in April and the least since December 1999, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The extra yield investors demand to hold company debt rather than benchmark government securities is headed for the biggest monthly gain since October 2008, Bank of America Merrill Lynch’s Global Broad Market index shows.

    Concern that European leaders won’t be able to coordinate a response to rising levels of government debt from Greece to Spain, while US legislation threatens to curb credit and hurt bank profits, is driving investors away from all but the safest securities. The rate banks say they charge each other for three-month loans in dollars has almost doubled since February.

    “This is a quintessential liquidity crisis,” said William Cunningham, head of credit strategies and fixed-income research at Boston-based State Street Corp.’s investment unit, which oversees almost $2 trillion. “It’s not inconceivable to imagine a situation where the markets behave so poorly, the liquidity behaves so badly, and risk- tolerance just evaporates that – particularly in Europe – consumers contract, businesses stop hiring and stop investing, and economic activity halts.”

    Mr. Cunningham doesn’t understand what is going on. It’s NOT a liquidity crisis… It’s a debt crisis…aggravated by a stupid government response.

    Almost all capital in the western world (and Japan, for that matter) is going to the government. The private sector is deflating…the public sector is inflating…

    .the whole process will continue until it blows up.

    Regards,

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

    Similar Posts:

  • Soon You’ll Unlock Hotel Room Doors By Playing Songs on Your Phone [Hotels]

    Some Holiday Inn locations will soon begin using the OpenWays door system. This means that guests will be offered the option of having a unique melody sent to their smartphones and playing that to open doors instead of swiping keycards. More »










    HotelTravel and TourismUnited StatesLodgingHotels and Motels

  • LIVE Activity for week May 17th

     

    Here is a look at the titles people are playing on Xbox LIVE.

     

    Xbox 360 Top LIVE Titles (based on UU’s)

    1    Modern Warfare 2  
    2    Halo 3

    3    Red Dead Redemption
    4    Halo 3: ODST
    5    Call of Duty: WaW
    6    Halo: Reach Multiplayer Beta (Pre-order the game)
    7    FIFA 10
    8    Battlefield Bad Co. 2
    9    GTA IV (Purchase the full game for direct download)
    10   Call of Duty 4 (Purchase the full game for direct download)
    11   Gears of War 2
    12   Left 4 Dead 2
    13   UFC Undisputed 2010 Demo (Order the game)
    14   Forza Motorsport 3 (Download the demo)
    15   NBA 2K10
    16   Splinter Cell Conviction
    17   Skate 3 Demo (Order the game)
    18   Borderlands 
    19   NHL 10
    20   Madden NFL 10 (Download the demo)

     

     

    Top Arcade Titles (Full Versions purchased)
    1    The Secret of Monkey Island: Special Edition
    2    METAL SLUG XX
    3    Game Room **
    4    Toy Soldiers
    5    Magic: The Gathering
    6    Trials HD
    7    Castle Crashers
    8    Perfect Dark
    9    UNO
    10   Marvel vs. Capcom 2
    11   3 on 3 NHL Arcade
    12   Battlefield 1943
    13   AQUA
    14   Braid
    15   Worms 2: Armageddon
    16   Worms
    17   Tecmo Bowl Throwback
    18   Rocket Knight
    19   Hasbro Family Game Night *
    20   AFTER BURNER CLIMAX
    The above arcade list is based on full versions purchased.
    **Combined sales of all Game Room titles

    *Combined sales of all Hasbro Family Game Night titles

     

    Top Indie Games (Full Versions purchased)

    1     Avatar Racedrome
    2     Baby Maker Extreme
    3     The Impossible Game 
    4     Zombie Estate
    5     Avatar Ninja!
    6     I MAED A GAM3 W1TH Z0MB1ES!!!1 
    7     GET TO THA CHOPPA!!1
    8     Avatar Onslaught
    9     Home Run Challenge
    10    Breath of Death VII 
    11    Newton Vs The Horde
    12    まもって騎士
    13    ゆっくりの迷宮
    14    Avatar Drop
    15    Miner Dig Deep 
    16    Zombie Sniper 3D
    17    Gerbil Physics 2
    18    radiangames JoyJoy
    19    Inside Lacrosse's CL2010
    20    Ambient Water

     

    Games for Windows Top LIVE Titles (based on UU’s)

    1    GTA IV
    2    Warhammer 40,000: Dawn of War II
    3    Colin McRae : Dirt 2
    4    Street Fighter IV
    5    Fallout 3
    6    Bioshock 2

    7    LOST PLANET COLONIES
    8    Shadowrun
    9    Resident Evil 5
    10   Halo 2
    11   Batman: Arkham Asylum
    12   Gears of War
    13   Red Faction Guerrilla
    14   Fuel
    15   Universe at War
    16   Tinker
    17   Battlestations: Pacific
    18   FlatOut UC
    19   Quantum of Solace PC
    20   Section 8 

     

    These lists are based on global unique users connected to Xbox Live or in the case of Arcade and Indie Games, full versions purchased during the week.

    Some content (and therefore the links) may not be available in all Xbox LIVE regions.

     

  • Rob Glaser Moves Into Venture Capital; Joins Accel Partners


    RealNetworks' Rob Glaser

    Rob Glaser has landed at his next gig, relatively quickly. He is joining one of the bluechip VC firms Accel Partners, as a Venture Partner, focusing on digital media technology, social media, and mobile service investments. He will remain at his homebase in Seattle, and will surely be looking at the startups based there.

    Glaser was at RealNetworks (NSDQ: RNWK) for 16 years, before he stepped down as CEO in January this year, though he still remains the chairman there. Accel has a long history with Glaser: they invested about $6 million in his then-called Progressive Networks in 1995, a year after he founded it.

    Glaser as a VC would be a very interesting ride to watch. He hasn’t been the easiest of bosses to work for over the years, as has been well documented, and has been more than hands-on over his time at Real, so being a VC would require lot more patience than he has been used to in the past. Real was always been an early adopter and pioneer in different digital sectors, even if Glaser’s long-term execution record has been mixed. He also has a big picture view of the digital media industry, having dabbled in almost all possible sub-categories over the years. And you certainly can’t accuse of him of not trying to take on big media and entertainment, as evidenced by his legal fights over the years; disruption as a VC would serve him well.

    He told PEHub that he will not work Accel full time. “I’m still chairman of Real, am helping some entrepreneurs start a couple of companies and still have a bunch of charity work like my family foundation. So it will be significant, but not fulltime.”

    —————————————————
    Rob Glaser, Founder of RealNetworks, Joins Accel Partners

    PALO ALTO, Calif., May 26 /PRNewswire/—Accel Partners, a leading global venture capital and growth equity firm operating in Silicon Valley, Europe, Israel, China and India, today announced that Rob Glaser has joined the firm as a Venture Partner.  At Accel, Rob will focus on digital media technology, social media, and mobile service investments.

    Rob currently serves as Chairman of RealNetworks, which he founded in 1994.  Rob has been a member of the Accel Partners family since it invested in Real (Nasdaq: RNWK) in 1995.  In addition to his role as Chairman, Rob served as Real’s CEO from February 1994 through January 2010, leading the company from scratch to over $500 million in revenue.  Real went public in 1997. 

    Rob’s extensive experience as a digital and social media pioneer should prove to be an asset for Accel’s renowned and growing technology portfolio. Jim Breyer, a Managing Partner in Accel’s Palo Alto office, said “We have been delighted to work with Rob as an entrepreneur and CEO since 1995.  His thought-leadership in the world of digital media and the consumer internet are well known, and we are very excited to have him join the Accel team in his new role as Venture Partner.”

    “After years of working with Accel as an entrepreneur, I look forward to working side-by-side with the Accel team to help identify companies which will benefit from the same kind of resources and partnership RealNetworks was so fortunate to have,” said Rob. “There are a wealth of promising startups in the world of digital media and I am thrilled to have the opportunity to work with Accel to help them succeed.”

    Prior to founding RealNetworks, Rob worked for Microsoft (NSDQ: MSFT) for 10 years in a number of executive positions, including Vice President of Multimedia and Consumer Systems.  Before joining Microsoft, Rob founded his first company, Ivy Research, in 1981 to make games for the newly launched IBM PC.  Rob has also been an early stage investor in several successful technology companies including TellMe, PlanetOut (NSDQ: LGBT), and SmileBox. Rob’s relationship with Accel is part-time, enabling him to keep time open for other engagements, including continuing to serve as Chairman of RealNetworks.

    Rob is a 1983 graduate of Yale University, with a B.A. and M.A. in Economics and a B.S. in Computer Science. 

    About Accel
    Founded in 1983, Accel Partners has a long history of excellence and innovation in venture capital, and is dedicated to partnering with outstanding entrepreneurs and management teams to build world-class businesses. Accel today invests globally using dedicated teams and market-specific strategies for local geographies, with offices in Palo Alto, California; London, UK; and Bangalore, India as well as in China via the IDG-Accel Partnership.

    With over $6 billion under management, Accel has helped entrepreneurs build over 300 successful companies, many of which have defined their categories, including Actuate, Acopia, AdMob, Agile Software, Alfresco, AMCC, Arrowpoint, BBN, Brightcove, ComScore (NSDQ: SCOR), Etsy, Facebook, Foundry Networks, Gameforge, GlamMedia, Groupon, Imperva, Infinera, Interwoven, JBoss, Kayak, Macromedia, Maven Networks, metroPCS, NextG Networks, Polycom/PictureTel, Portal Software, QlikTech, Rapt, RealNetworks, Redback Networks, Riverbed, UUNet, Veritas, Walmart.com (NYSE: WMT), Webroot, Wily Technology, XenSource and Zimbra. For more information, please visit the Accel Partners web site at http://www.accel.com or find us on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/accel.
    SOURCE Accel Partners

    Related


  • Encrypt Calls And Text Messages With These Android Apps [Android Apps]

    A company called Whisper Systems has made two Android apps to aid the paranoid: RedPhone and TextSecure. The apps allow you to encrypt calls and text messages, respectively, and are available through a public beta right now. [WhisperSys] More »










    AndroidHandheldsNexus OneMulti-touchPortable Document Format

  • The Chinese Gold Rush

    While in Beijing last week, I visited the Cai Bai gold market. China is the largest buyer of gold in the world…and becoming larger by the day.

    Anecdotally, I can tell you the Cai Bai gold market was bustling with people. (I wish I could show you, but a guard promptly stopped me when I pulled out my video camera.) I was there in the middle of the day, and there was a good crowd of people buying gold in all its forms – from jewelry to bars.

    The numbers coming out of China back that street-level view. May is a peak gold-buying season in China, as it is a popular time for weddings. Even so, gold sales are up over 70% year-over-year, and the sale of gold bars has doubled from a year ago, according to CCTV, the large state Chinese television station.

    The surging demand may be the result of Chinese investors shifting their focus from real estate to gold. This is a snippet from CCTV’s report, which gives you a peek into what is starting to happen:

    “Housing speculators from Wenzhou City in southeastern China are switching their money from property into gold following government restrictions on the real estate market.

    “Tao Xingyi, president of Beijing-based Jinding Group, a company specializing in high-end gold trading and investment, said the company’s customers have increased by 300-400% recently…

    “Tao said that within one month, three groups of Wenzhou investors made purchases of gold from his company worth more than 10 million yuan (about $1.5 million).”

    We often heard on our trip that the Chinese buy empty apartments and just sit on them, treating the investment as a store of value. Their other favorite place to park cash is gold.

    So this transition from real estate to gold is potentially a very big story, if such actions become common across China. That’s a lot of buyers coming to the market. It’s a story we heard more than once on our trip.

    While in China, I met with Patrick Chovanec, a professor at Tsinghua University in Beijing. We dined one night at a 500-year-old restaurant in town, amid a striking interior made up of thick wood beams and traditional Chinese woodwork. In addition to his professorial duties, Chovanec advises hedge funds and investors in China.

    Chovanec is an expat and writes a blog called An American Perspective From China. Commenting on CCTV’s gold story, he wrote:

    “I find it very interesting given the analogy I’ve always drawn between the way Chinese invest in empty apartments as a ‘store of value’ and investment in nonproductive assets like gold. So it might very well make sense that, if they are no longer so certain stockpiled real estate will act as a reliable store of value, they would opt for gold as an attractive alternative.”

    This dramatic surge in Chinese gold demand is just one more trend in the yellow metal’s favor. When you consider that robust Chinese gold- buying is occurring in the context of volatile currency markets and deteriorating government finances in the Developed World, it is easy to imagine a much higher gold price.

    Chris Mayer
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • The Winner Of Our Win A Sony Dash In A Dash Contest


    The Sony Dash is your favorite parts of the internet customized the way you choose, available in a dash. Over 1,000 free apps can be displayed at the touch of a finger. Choose from your favorite information and entertainment content including weather, traffic, social networking, movies, music and more – pushed right to your kitchen, bedroom, or office. The dash Personal Internet Viewer connects quickly and easily to your existing wireless network and features a vibrant 7 inch LCD touch screen for accessing a variety of video services for online music and viral videos, full-length feature movies and TV shows. You can also listen to MP3s and internet radio via the built-in stereo speakers, or by using the headphone jack (headphones not included).

    Our “Win a Sony Dash in a Dash” contest was simple enough: we merely asked you to submit a picture of yourself in a Dash. We received dozens of interesting entries, and after consideration it seems like Pauric O’Donnell really captured the feeling of the word dash. His winning picture is above. Thanks to Sony for providing the Dash for our contest, and congratulations, Pauric!

    Keep an eye out for an even bigger contest celebrating our second birthday soon!

  • 48 Hour Magazine: The Six Minute Movie [Movies]

    48 Hour Magazine was an incredible project: thousands of contributors using online tools to create, print, and ship a magazine in two days. First: read Joel’s interview with the creators. Then: watch how it all happened. [Vimeo via Laughing Squid] More »










    Magazines and E-zinesArtsJoelEntertainmentOceania

  • Italdesign Giugiaro-Vw deal leaves Bmw and others without designers?

    2010 Bmw 7-SeriesSince Volkwagen AG now has a 90% stake in Italdesign Giugiaro S.p.A., its customers might be worried that VW will be able to gain access to their confidential technology.

    These customers, which include BMW AG, Proton and Hybrid Kinetic Motors Corp., may decide to go somewhere else but Chairman Giorgetto Giugiaro has given assurances of “100% secrecy.” Giugiaro said that in the future, Italdesign, Italy’s largest automotive design and engineering company, will work only for the VW Group but that it will complete all the ongoing projects for other carmakers. Continued after the jump!

    Last Tuesday, a BMW spokesman said that it will continue with its contract with Italdesign, which has worked on the BMW-owned Mini’s Roadster and Coupe models. Enzo Pacella, Italdesign CEO, said that the company will work on the Mini derivatives for one more year.

    Last January, Italdesign signed a 375 million euro ($462 million) multi-year deal to provide complete design and engineering for Hybrid Kinetic Motors’ eight new models.

    Italdesign also still has a current contract with Proton to design the production version of the Emas minicar concept that was introduced at the Geneva show last March.

    China’s Brilliance China Automotive and Chery Automobile are two of Italdesign’s customers that are likely to be affected by the VW deal since both compete against VW’s joint venture partners in China: FAW Group Corp. and Shanghai Automotive Industry Corp.

    [via autonews – sub. required]

    Source: Car news, Car reviews, Spy shots

  • Samsung I897 still seems to be the Galaxy S?

    According to the folks over at AndroidGuys, a tipster notified them that the Samsung I897 – a device that seems to closely resemble the Samsung Galaxy S – would be launching with Android 2.1, a 5-megapixel camera, 2GB of internal storage, and 800×480 resolution.  The phone got certified by the Bluetooth SIG back in late March and shares the same exact description as the Samsung I9000 (the model number for the Galaxy S).  The description is as follows “I897 is a Full Touch phone with reinforced features, 4.0 inch AMOLED screen perform expading full touch to follow TouchWIZ 3.0.  It embedded Android OS.  It supports EDGE/GSM Quad-Band (850/900/1800/1900).”  Switch out I9000 with I897 and you’re looking at the exact same device.  The thing that bothers me about AndroidGuys’ informant is that last I checked (and feel free to correct me if I’m wrong) the Galaxy S was going to come in two variants an 8GB device and a 16GB device.  So, forgive me if I’m a little thrown (read: underwhelmed) by the 2GB version that said tipster has claimed.

    Truthfully, at this point,as long as it’s pretty close to what we saw at CTIA I’m going to be a happy camper, so let’s just get this thing launched already, shall we?

    Via AndroidGuys


  • Markets Binge, then Purge

    Phew! That felt like a near miss, didn’t it? If Dow Theorist Richard Russell is right, you should run for the hills because the crash is coming. But we’re not going to dwell on that possibility today. It is what it is, and it’s probably a real possibility.

    Instead, in today’s Daily Reckoning, we look at whether last night’s big recovery in U.S. shares signals a temporary bottom in the end of the world sentiment gripping markets. Also, an army of economists has boldly marched into the battle of the resource super profits tax. We examine their position and find it guffaw-able.

    Finally, in light of recent criticism about our cavalier and inherently alien attitude about ownership and wealth and freedom, we examine on our own self and find it wanting too. And you are duly warned: today’s Daily Reckoning takes up the cause of liberty and the right to be ungoverned by even well meaning men. If that bothers you, we suggest you stop reading immediately.

    Seriously. This is your last chance…

    Still with us? Then to the barricades!

    Both Australian and Japanese futures were up overnight. And both markets will probably be up at the close after U.S. stocks reversed an opening decline of nearly three percent on the S&P 500 to close with modest losses, or in the S&P’s case, even with a small gain. The Dow closed down by a few points but managed to hold the line above 10,000. It will live to trade another day.

    There may be an elaborate explanation for the intra-day reversal. But the simple one is that the sellers have exhausted themselves and left the field of battle for the day. The shorts would be covering. And with no body in the mood to sell, the buyers would drive up prices.

    Then again, we are not a trader and don’t actively trade. It’s just that in the last few days Murray Dawes has been more active than we recall seeing him ever. He’s come into the office guns blazing, barking out orders about trade recommendations to subscribers of the Swarm Trader and Slipstream Trader. This is definitely a trader’s market. And Murray is definitely loving it.

    Investors, on the other hand, would be feeling nauseous. It’s a bit, so we hear, like what you feel like during or after a big night out. If you’ve had too much, the nausea washes over you in waves and crests with an technicolour yawn. Then you feel better. Until the next wave hits. Eventually, your system is purged of the toxins and poisons you paid to consume.

    This seems roughly to be how the world’s financial markets are dealing with an entire financial system built on too much debt. Huge chunks of value are upchucked during these more frequent and more violent waves of nausea. Then some psychological and physiological calm returns and the system – still inherently unstable and unfit – stabilises at a new equilibrium for a while.

    A trader might just say we’re going to make lower highs and lower lows from here on out, until the various variables of uncertainty are clarified. Those variables include, but are not limited to: the ultimate form and fate of the resource super profits tax here in Australia, the solvency of the European banking system and European governments, the long-term viability of Anglophone welfare states in the U.S. and the U.K., China’s real estate bubble, paper money.

    No wonder everyone feels ill.

    But really, all of what’s listed above fits in with the general idea of the Money Migration. Western Welfare states are going broke. Many are already broke. To paper over this, they are distorting markets with massive money printing, centralising risk on larger institutions, expanding central bank balance sheets, and intervention in the market (via, among other things, low interest rates).

    This prevents the needed write-down in bad credits and keeps capital tied up in the places it was misallocated during the credit boom, which was global in nature. Hence the nature of the crisis. And meanwhile, in the Western world, as the private sector deleverages and seeks to live within its own means, the public sector gorges on debt and passes the problem on to the next election cycle.

    It’s pretty hard to have a wealth-preservation strategy in a world where most governments are determined to keep spending money they don’t have and printing money that isn’t real to prop up asset prices that must fall and pay for programs that no one can really afford for the benefit of people who have no idea what’s about to happen.

    But there is some good news for Australians.

    The emerging markets are still emerging. That is, the developing world still has a structural bias to export led growth and over production. That’s why there’s been no decoupling from Asia to the Western world. And emerging markets will get hit just as hard as developed markets.

    But structurally speaking, emerging market nations are emerging with better public sector finances than developed nations, with lower levels of government debt and fewer entitlement promises and unfunded liabilities. And economically speaking, as these emerging markets like China and India shift toward more consumption from high savings rates, there will be more growth and it won’t be correlated or dependent on mercantilist trade relationships with the U.S. and Europe.

    Not that it will be a barrel of clowns. There are huge growth issues in the developing world too. And you know our view on China. But geographically speaking, Australia could benefit from the future state of play.

    How? Obviously as an exporter of raw commodities. But quite possibly as an exporter of financial services, too.

    No. We’re not reversing ourselves on the bank or the state of domestic household finances. Australia household debt levels are enormous by Western standards. And as we’ve said, the banking sector is massively exposed to residential real estate prices. And let’s not forget the nation remains a capital importer, and a net debtor, which is a precarious position to be in during a credit crisis.

    But for investors, does the future look bright here?

    Well, it certainly looks less bad than in other places. And that’s even considering the on-going prize fight between the mining industry and the government. Overnight a group of very brave economists came out swinging on the side of the government in supporting a “superior” resource tax that taxes profits and not production.

    You can read the whole letter, if you dare, here. We believe that is the real deal, although could not verify it before going to print. For the purposes of today’s letter, we’ll assume it is authentic. So what to make of it?

    Well, in the battle of public relations, this a pure argument from authority. You could just as well call it something like: “A letter from really smart people that is so complicated you probably don’t even understand it, which should cause you to shut up and go along with what the government says. Stupid face.”

    Not that we’re anti-intellectual. But it’s pretty cheeky for a group of economists to expect credibility on an issue simply because they have a degree, especially after the collective performance of the profession in the last ten years. It’s even cheekier for the media to give the argument authority based on the fact that the people who wrote it are “economists.”

    But as an argument from authority goes, it’s an impressive one. The economics profession has not enjoyed a lot of credibility in recent years, having generally missed the warning signs of a global financial crisis and then endorsing interventionist stimulus policies that have left national governments with greater debts and long-term liabilities. But authority is in the eye of the beholder, when it comes to confidence games.

    You can’t keep a good interventionist economist down. Like Paul Krugman, they just keep popping up. So as much as we’d like to dismiss the claims of a group of economists on the basis that they are, after all, economists, we won’t.

    It’s true, it’s hard to see how the profession has any credibility at all after blowing it so badly in the last few years. Bute know we that line of attack is no fairer than making an argument from authority. It would be making an ad hominem attack. So we’ll take the argument on its merits and attack it for what it is: goofy and misguided and it’s rotten heart: utterly unfree and coercive.

    By the way, though, we do realise that there exists in certain cultures a kind of deference to arguments made from authority. Our own household was like this. And we had many a sore backside to show for our disagreement with this political arrangement.

    Maybe the same is true here in Australia. Maybe people inherently trust authority because it’s authority. We get it a fair bit here at the Daily Reckoning. Whenever we wander outside financial or economic matters in our free e-letter which, being free, no one is obligated to pay for (or read), we are often advised to stick to what we know and leave the other stuff to the experts, whomever they are.

    Fortunately, or unfortunately for you, we normally ignore those reader-imposed commandments. In the financial world, the best strategy is to distrust everyone and ask the obvious questions until your common sense is satisfied. Leaving all the decisions up to the PhDs has not worked out very well in the last few years.

    Of course there is a place in life for expert opinion. If a doctor tells us our heart is going to quit because we’re drinking too much beer and not exercising enough, we listen to him. If a physicist tells us that jumping from high places without a parachute could be bad for our health, we listen to him. If Tiger Woods tells us how to correctly hit a one iron or send a saucy text message, we listen to him.

    But if a group of economists tells us that a government tax delivers a public benefit, we are inclined to guffaw in their collective face.

    Most of the economics profession that gets quoted in so-called respectable publications has studied the wrong textbooks over the last 50 years. They are doctors prescribing remedies based on an incorrect understanding of illness. The letter quoted today in the press is a great example. We’ll get to it in a moment.

    Most mainstream textbook economists are reading from the playbook of John Maynard Keynes. They believe, and will say on command – not because there’s any evidence that it works but because it’s how you get tenured and earn grant money or get a government job – that when private demand falls because households and business de-leverage, it is the proper role of government to boost consumption and aggregate demand by increasing public spending. Amen.

    As a scientific proposition, empirically speaking, there is zero evidence that this policy works. The one example trotted out is FDR’s spending boom in the Great Depression. But the evidence now suggests that it was war-time production that dragged the American economy out of depression, not morally enlightened fiscally policy.

    There no evidence to suggest the big deficit spending really is better than doing nothing. But time after time, the interventionist mantra gets trotted out like the Ten Commandments in the Ark of the Covenant to incinerate anyone who doubts its gospel truth. Yet it’s just a bunch of superstition with very little basis in fact.

    Economics is simply not a science in the same way that chemistry and physics are sciences. It’s probably not a science at all, to be honest. Or, if it is, it’s a pseudo science, having more in common with psychology than geology.

    Complex adaptive systems like the modern marketplace do not behave mechanistically. They cannot be controlled precisely with the rods and levers of monetary and fiscal policy. To believe so is an enormous – and as we’re finding out – costly error. It’s also massively arrogant and conceited.

    There’s a reason the great Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises called his great book “Human Action.” Economics is the study of human action. And human action is sometimes rational, sometimes irrational, sometimes predictable…but ultimately…very difficult to model and predict with charts.

    As Nassim Taleb points out, all the most important stuff in your life probably happened or will happen in non-predictable ways. Most of the time, today is going to be like yesterday and tomorrow is going to be liked today. But the most life-changing things happen to you at times you’d have no way of predicting or preparing for. But not everyone is comfortable with this kind of un-planned spontaneity.

    Please note the Austrian School of Economics was the only school of economic thought that accurately predicted the current crisis. Why? The Austrians correctly identified the influence of credit (free money to change your life) on human action. Altering the price of money alters incentives and changes individual calculations across the breadth and depth of an economy.

    The Austrians pointed out that government-controlled interest rates are the real cause of the business cycle inasmuch as they lead to credit booms and inevitable busts. When the price of money is rigged, the market isn’t free. Only if you understand the “root cause” of the business cycle can you learn how to prevent bubbles from blowing up and popping later. The Austrian answer is, by the way, sound money.

    But back to our merry band of resource super profits tax supporters. They tell us that:

    Mining is different to other industries in that it uses and depletes natural resources. Some return on those resources should flow to the Australian public. The existing royalty system reflects the fact that it is desirable to levy a charge for access to publicly owned mineral resources, in addition to normal corporate income tax.

    There is no reason to expect a net contraction in mining over the longer term as a result of replacing royalties with the proposed resource rent tax. This is because a tax on economic rent of non-renewable resources is a more efficient way of raising royalties than taxing mining production….

    The RSPT will reduce the profitability of mining companies and the value of the exploration and mining rights granted to them by Australian governments on behalf of the public. The current high profitability of these companies means that this is an appropriate time for them to adjust to a more efficient and equitable system of sharing the value of those rights.

    We haven’t reproduced the entire statement. Just the parts that seemed most relevant. And we’ll bet you didn’t see that last part in the papers, did you? Emphasis added there is ours.

    Mining is no different than other industries in its use of natural resources. It’s just that in the chain of economic production, extraction is the first step. That makes mining incredibly capital intensive, which means the industry must be able to make long-term plans with confidence that the rule are not going to change mid-stream.

    All industries use resources. All industries benefit from the extraction of those resources before they become finished goods or services. Consumers benefit the most. Why should mining be treated differently simply because it’s first in the causal chain of a raw material being turned into a value-added good?

    The fact that the existing royalty system is “desirable” because it levies a charge on publicly owned mineral resources is certainly debatable. It’s obviously “desirable” to government, which must pay for what it does by taking from someone who has money. As a pragmatist, you could make the argument government has to pay for itself somehow. So we should just shut up about it and get on with the business of “paying” for the modern welfare state this way.

    That doesn’t seem desirable if you want to live a free and fair society. But on to the second point…

    Should we adopt a tax because it’s the most efficient way to collect the tax? Granted, that certainly lowers the cost of collecting the tax. But the most efficient way to administer medical care to terminally ill people would probably be to shoot them in the head. One bullet. One case. Same result. Faster. Very efficient.

    We don’t do that, though, because other considerations enter into the decision of how a life should end. Similarly, good public policy should not be made on the basis of what’s most efficient for the tax collectors without any discussion of the wisdom of the tax itself. So what if it’s good for the government? Is it legal, fair, and good for Australians?

    The last paragraph we quoted speaks for itself. These economists seem to believe that the existence of high profits in the mining industry is a moral signal for the government to take from those that have and give to those to whom it sees fit. It presumes that the value of exploration and mineral rights is equally shared by the general public and the shareholders and firms who spent their time, talent, and capital to turn an ore body into surplus value.

    Free loaders. Free riders. Rent seekers with degrees. Call it what you will. But let’s be clear that the motivation of the policy is finally exposed for what it is: the moral right to take what you didn’t create through force of law.

    Of course to be less ideological, the economists are not claiming to take something that’s not theirs. They are effectively saying that the fruits of prosperity from the mining industry belong to all because the resources belong to all of us. It is again the question of ownership. And since we’ve banged on about long enough today, we won’t tackle that issue just now.

    But why ARE we banging on so much about it? Because we are a nosey, know-it-all, unpragmatic, ideologically driven American smart-arse? Maybe. We wouldn’t rule that out. But we do like this country a fair bit and think it deserves a proper argument over a serious issue.

    And frankly, we are just tired of gradual encroachments and ignorant assaults on the rule of law and liberty. We’ve seen a lot of that everywhere, including our homeland. And we’ve come to realise that every little degradation to rule of law is an assault to the public order. And that public order is a nearly miraculous achievement of hundreds of years of legal and economic tradition that should not be trifled with in order to score electoral points. Such trifling has real costs, both to wealth and freedom.

    But we’ll leave the last word to one of our economic heroes, Friedrich Hayek. In the post-script to his classic “The Constitution of Liberty,” Hayek penned a chapter called, “Why I am not a conservative.” It might even be the sort of chapter Malcolm Fraser would have read, before deciding to leave the liberal party in December of last year.

    Hayek wrote that “It is not who governs but what government is entitled to do that seems to me the essential problem.” And like your editor, he was no big fan of conservatives with respect to this problem. Why? He writes:

    “Conservatives are inclined to use the powers of government to prevent change or to limit its rate to whatever appeals to the more timid mind. In looking forward, they lack the faith in the spontaneous forces of adjustment which makes the liberal accept changes without apprehension…

    “In general, it can probably be said that the conservative does not object to coercion or arbitrary power so long as it is used for what he regards as the right purposes. He believes that if government is in the hands of decent men, it ought not be too much restricted by rigid rules…

    “Like the socialist, he [the conservative] is less concerned with the problem of how the powers of the government should be limited than with that of who wields them; and, like the socialist, he regards himself as entitled to force the value he holds on other people.”

    If the apparatus of the law must be paid for in some manner, then perhaps some form of taxation is a necessary evil to civil society, although it is not an issue we have explored much. But we’ve reacted so much to the resource profits tax not because we have a soft spot in our heart for multinational miners. It’s not that.

    It’s that the right of the government to force its values on you should always be resisted and questioned, no matter who’s in government. Resisting the government’s tendency to constantly expand its authority in private and public life promotes a real democracy of, for, and by the people.

    The less you object, the more you’re going to get what we have: an oligarchy of financial, political, and corporate elites who govern to enrich themselves and produce the satisfying sensation of telling other people how they must live.

    But then, we are crazy free-thinking libertarian from the mountains of the American west. And no one is forcing you to read this. And it’s free. So take it for what it’s worth.

    Dan Denning
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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