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  • China Unicom buys twice as many Windows Mobile handsets as iPhones for 2010

    sadiphone Marbridge Daily reports that Zhang Zhijiang, GM of China Unicom’s technology division revealed that China Unicom is buying twice as many Windows Mobile handsets for 2010 that iPhones.

    The announcement was made at the 2010 Communications Industry Technology Annual Conference currently underway in Beijing, where he said 8% of their 3G handset procurements will be Windows Mobile handsets, while 4% will be iPhones.

    China Unicom is the exclusive carrier for the iPhone in China, where the handset has been rumoured to be struggling to hit sales targets.

    Read more at Marbridge Consulting here.

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  • Firefox 3.6 Final Downloads in 2010

    It’s now official, the final release of Firefox 3.6, the next iteration of the open source browser from Mozilla has slipped into the coming year.

    Download Firefox Beta 3.6 [Mozilla]

  • Startup Visa OpEd in the Wall Street Journal

    After having a few conversations yesterday about the Startup Visa, I realized that I never posted the Wall Street Journal OpEd on the Startup Visa that Paul Kedrosky and I wrote and had published on 12/2/09.  I don’t know the rules about reposting OpEd’s – I assume that since we wrote it I can republish it.  If that’s not true, I’m sure some one will tell me.  In the mean time, here it is:

    Start-up Visas Can Jump-Start the Economy

    Immigrant entrepreneurs are an engine of jobs and growth. We need more of them.

    While fast-growing companies have long been the main source of new jobs and innovation, this country makes it outrageously difficult for immigrants to launch new companies here. This doesn’t make any sense. After all, Google, Pfizer, Intel, Yahoo, DuPont, eBay and Procter & Gamble are all former start-ups founded by immigrants. Where would this country be today without their world-changing innovations?

    Immigrants have not only founded big, well-known companies. Foreign-born residents made up just 12.5% of the U.S. population in 2008. But nearly 40% of technology company founders and 52% of founders of companies in Silicon Valley.

    Yet we don’t seem to care. We send recent, foreign-born university science and engineering graduates back to their own countries after their student visas expire—unless these creative sorts are willing to spend some of the most entrepreneurial years of their lives working in a big company under an H-1B visa after they finish their studies.

    For those who studied elsewhere, but who nonetheless want to bring their job-creating ideas here, American policies treat them—the job-creating, trouble-making innovators that they are—as a cross between deadbeats and queue-jumpers. Why can’t they wait in line like everyone else to get a visa in five years or so? What’s their hurry?

    Their hurry is Joseph Schumpeter’s hurry: They want to hustle out and disrupt markets when the opportunity arises.

    In the 21st century those opportunities don’t wait for our interminable, employment-based visa programs. As a result rather than saying "Come and create jobs here" we, in effect, tell them to shove off. Come back when you have a few million in sales— at which point they will be rooted elsewhere and creating jobs somewhere else.

    That needs to end now. Immigrants who come here to create companies create jobs. We need the jobs.

    One good idea to make this process easier is to create a new visa for entrepreneurs, something that is increasingly being called by venture capitalists, entrepreneurs, and angel investors a "start-up visa." It might work like this: If immigrant entrepreneurs want to start a company in the U.S. and are able to raise a moderate amount of money (perhaps as little as $125,000) from an accredited U.S.-based venture capital firm or qualified U.S.-based angel investors, we should let them start a company here. It could be a couple of founders with an idea—that’s it. We would give visas to the founders and welcome them in to our country.

    Would it work every time? Of course not. It would fail more often than not. Start-ups often fail.

    But having failed, the immigrant entrepreneurs could try again, and again. And as long as they are trying, raising money, creating jobs, and making sales, we would let them stay here. Founders of new companies are precious for a vibrant economy, and we should welcome them. Indeed, the country would be better served to find more of them.

    Some will say a start-up visa program will be abused. They will say that it will become a way to end-run immigration rules, to jump the queue if you have money.

    There are at least two answers to these objections. First, to get such a visa you would have to raise money from real investors. Second, Canada and other countries already allow entrepreneurs to start a company in their country. Shouldn’t the U.S. stop worrying so much about keeping these people out, and start worrying about bringing them in?

    We also think science and engineering graduates should get visas stapled to their diplomas. You complete your higher education here, you get to stay so that you can get out and create jobs, innovate, and grow the economy. Uncle Sam wants you, if you’re a prospective entrepreneur.

    The U.S. remains one of the most attractive countries for entrepreneurs. It has a culture of risk taking, capital formation, and an economic dynamism that is the envy of the world. This gives us a competitive edge that we should not let slip through our fingers.


  • Conference: Final programme for CRE XI

    Challenging The Past blog (Marsia Sfakianou Bealby)

    Current Research in Egyptology XI will be held in Leiden (Netherlands) this year from 5th to 8th January 2010 and the full programme is now available at the above blog site.

  • What goes around comes around, like Yule and mom-and-pop shops inside Wal-Mart

    One of the principles of anticipating the future correctly, separating out what will happen from what we think-hope-fear will happen, is to consciously factor in the principle that fundamental human needs don’t disappear. They are bundled, interpreted, and served one way in the present, and this may change in a new era as technologies advance and relationships and associations change. But needs are forever. And often the future goes ‘backwards’ to old, archetypal models that served needs before.

    Witness the uptake of ‘feudal’ protection in a competitive, recessionary marketplace, where Wal-Mart is offering rental space insde a new Chicago store to neighborhood businesses. Apparently tenants already include a dog groomer and a fried chicken outlet, and Wal-Mart is going to be inviting in barbers, manicurists, and other local small businesses.

    Regional general manager Rolando Rodriguez told the NY Times: “We want the same resurgence of the community…”.

    It’s not all about community of course. Wal-Mart is seeking counter-PR to endemic criticism (and evidence) that their megastores kill mom-and-pop shops on which many local jobs and services depend, and is hoping the gambit will revive its six-year stalled bid for the city’s approval of proposed Chicago stores.

    Anyway, as one observer, Marissa Johnson, said of the new arrangement: “It’s like sharecropping.”

    Yes, this is the return of a feudal model. The lord owns the land and the small guy works his patch, offering a regular tribute. And small guys will jump at it because — in the absence of fundamental challenge to an iniquitous system — having the protection of a lord is better than not having it.

    Another need that’s not going away, merely being reinterpreted (ironically back to pre-feudal organization) is our need to mark the darkest night of the year with ritual. Yule is the pagan winter solstice rite centered on a December 21 dusk-to-dawn vigil. It was absorbed into Christmas and not widely practiced for centuries. But now, as reported in the big UK media Christmas pregame show, there’s been a great surge in Yule festivities and attendance. By how much depends on who is quoted but nobody is denying the trend — which more or less mirrors the decline in formal Christian Christmas (secular, gift-giving, tree decorating Christmas is alive and well.)

    The need is a constant. The rituals will change, often mining the past.

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  • Matt Mladin Scatters Away WSBK Rumors

    Despite some recent rumors which placed the seven-time AMA Superbike champ in the Reitwagen BMW team for 2010, Matt Mladin yesterday put an end to all speculations that he will return to World Superbike next year.

    Some two weeks ago, Mladin fueled speculation of a possible return to racing on a Twitter feed when he said in a December 9 post: a couple of world superbike offers have come my way in the past month. 1 of them very good in regards to machinery. decisions decisions ;-)…. (read more)

  • Repatriation: More Rosetta

    ModernGhana.com (Dr Kwame Okopu)

    It is very strange how the minds of some Westerners seem to work when it comes to discussing repatriation of looted/stolen cultural objects or objects acquired under dubious circumstances or from a people under foreign domination. For example, we have a fairly senior member of the British cultural establishment, Roy Clare, head of Britain’s Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, writing in an article, “The Rosetta Stone can be shared where it is” as if its removal by French soldiers and the subsequent transport to London were perfectly legitimate. (2) Who gave the French the right to remove objects from Egypt? Even the British Museum, in its publication, entitled The Rosetta Stone, by Richard Parkinson, noted the evil colonialist and imperialist aims of Napoleon’s military expedition to Egypt in 1799: “…it colonized, in the name of the Enlightenment, a country that was supposedly the origin of all wisdom. The French justified this imperial enterprise by claiming that it would rescue the ancient country from a supposed state of modern barbarism, but the Egyptian historian Abd al-Rahman al Jabari (1754-1882) saw the start of the occupation in July 1798 from a very different perspective as the beginning of a period marked by great battles…miseries multiplied without end.” (3)

    Since the British seized the Rosetta Stone, considered by scholars as having been very crucial to the modern understanding of Egyptian hieroglyphics, from the French on the defeat of Napoleon’s army in 1801, they cannot claim any right greater than that of the French, except if you concede that the powerful can take whatever they like from any country. The Egyptians never consented to such a seizure or removal. The capitulation agreement, the Treaty of Alexandria (1801), was an agreement between the victorious British and the defeated French. The surrender, resulting in the seizure of Egyptian artefacts under the control of the French, some allowed to be taken to Paris and others, including the Rosetta Stone, taken to Britain, was an affair between two European imperialist powers at the cost of an African country, not recognized by either combatant State as equal partner at the International Law level.

  • Rumor: 2013 Nissan GT-R Hybrid variant to use Infiniti Essence’s electric setup

    When it comes to the Nissan GT-R, not a month passes by where we don’t hear some wild ass rumor about the supercar. Earlier this month, its was reported that the next-generation GT-R will carry a hybrid system featuring an electric-motor capable of producing 160-hp.

    We now have more information on the Nissan GT-R Hybrid courtesy of some “sources” that spoke with Inside Line. Insiders familiar with the project say that the drivetrain for the Nissan GT-R Hybrid will be a version of the hybrid system found in the upcoming Infiniti M35 Hybrid but with some significant power output and an all-wheel-drive system. The model will use a twin-turbocharged V6 just like the R35 based Infiniti Essence concept did.

    Targeted output is expected to come in around 440-hp plus the 160-hp from the electric-motor. That will allow for a total of 600-hp, with fuel-economy estimated between 25-30 mpg.

    The Nissan GT-R Hybrid will come in as a part of the R36 generation lineup. Expect it debut in 2012 as a 2013 model year with prices starting around $100,000.

    2011 Nissan GT-R:

    – By: Kap Shah

    Source: Inside Line


  • Youtu.be – You’ll never guess what this URL shortener does

    Hot on the heels of both Goo.gl and Fb.me, there’s now a Youtu.be! Its sole purpose: shorter YouTube links.

    There isn’t really a lot more to this one, other than a brief explanation of how they work:

    * Take the ‘key’ from the end of a YouTube video URL — The key, in the URL http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHg5SJYRHA0 would be ‘oHg5SJYRHA0′
    * Stick it on the end of YouTu.be — and… voila! http://youtu.be/oHg5SJYRHA0

    The thing is, it’s not really all that short. The only real advantage, over something like Bit.ly, is that you now know it’s a video and not some stupid meme or phishing attempt. Also, as the YouTube Blog suggests, web developers can use the video key to bring up thumbnails, or embed videos directly. It’s also great with YouTube’s fairly-new AutoShare option: publish your youtu.be links straight to Twitter! Woo!

    I know what you’re all thinking: Belgium has finally brought more than than just waffles or fries to this world; hallelujah!

    More information [Download Squad]

  • Mercedes Grand Prix confirma el fichaje de Michael Schumacher

    Asi es, finalmente se ha hecho oficial, Michael Schumacher regresa a la Fórmula 1 y esta vez lo hará con la nueva escudería Mercedes Grand Prix que esta misma mañana han publicado el comunicado oficial en su página web.

    Michael Schumacher en las instalaciones de Mercedes GP

    Sin duda, el regreso de Schumacher a la máxima categoría hará que suba la audiencia y la emoción en las carreras pero no podemos olvidarnos de que el piloto alemán ya tiene 40 años aunque si su estado físico es bueno, estoy más que seguro que será un claro optador al título mundial.

    La parrilla de la próxima temporada esta más que completo con pilotos de primer nivel como Alonso, Hamilton, Button, Massa, Vettel y Schumacher. A continuación os dejo con las primeras palabras de Schumacher tras su fichaje:

    La llamada que Ross Brawn me hizo a finales de noviembre y las circunstancias en que Mercedes-Benz se involucró con el propietario fueron importantes. En realidad yo nunca dejé la F-1. A finales de 2006 yo estaba cansado de correr, pero después de tres años de ausencia, he vuelto con mucha energía y me siento con fuerza. Mi participación en carreras de motorbikes también me ha ayudado. Por otra parte, antes de dar el visto bueno me aseguré de tomar la decisión correcta. También quiero dejar claro que la lesión de mi cuello está curada al completo y no me dará ningún problema.

    Related posts:

    1. Michael Schumacher ya habría cerrado un acuerdo con Mercedes Grand Prix
    2. Luca di Montezemolo da por firmado el acuerdo de Schumacher con Mercedes Grand Prix
    3. Michael Schumacher no correrá en Valencia
  • Have a Good Recipe for Bosanski Kruh European Bread? Good Questions

    2009-12-30-BosnianBread.jpgQ: Recently I bought a loaf of the most wonderful bread. It was toothsome and dense with a beautiful shiny golden crust. The label calls it “European bread – bosanski kruh”.

    Only flour, water, yeast, and salt were listed in the ingredients, but it’s very different from the usual “italian bread” or baguette. I’ve searched for a recipe, but the only ones I’ve been able to find are in Bosnian. Can anyone share a recipe for this lovely bread?

    Sent by Erin

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  • Aston Martin Carbon Black for DBS and V12 Vantage

    Aston Martin DBS e V12 Vantage Carbon Black

    The Aston Martin DBS and Aston Martin V12 Vantage will have a carbon black edition available from next month. In time for Christmas orders, the Aston Martin carbon fibre finish increases the appeal of the cars and reduces weight. Thanks to new sports seats, for example, the use of carbon and kevlar has saved up to 17 kg.

    New Aston Martin rims with five spoke design are available, and obviously the DBS and V12 Vantage now come with Carbon Black exterior finish, used also on the interior features. The audio systems also get an overhaul, with the Vantage now equipped with the 700 Watt Premium Audio System, while the DBS has the Bang & Olufsen Beosound.

    According to Aston Martin, a price increase of approximately five percent will be added, although full pricing and available will be available next month.

    Aston Martin DBS e V12 Vantage Carbon Black Aston Martin DBS e V12 Vantage Carbon Black Aston Martin DBS e V12 Vantage Carbon Black Aston Martin DBS e V12 Vantage Carbon Black

    Aston Martin DBS e V12 Vantage Carbon Black Aston Martin DBS e V12 Vantage Carbon Black


  • Best Airports to Hook Up With A Hottie

    9F1BDDA5-5726-4011-AE1B-0C3EDD834462.jpg

    Traveling for the holidays is never fun and getting stuck at an airport during a snowstorm can be hell. Unless you happen to hook up with that globe-trotting hottie a few seats away.

    If you’re stuck waiting at an airport over the next week, the folks at AXE grooming have put together a list of the best spots to “make a connection” with fellow travelers this holiday season.

    Here’s the top 20 international airports to hook up with a hottie:

    1. Liberty Int’l (Newark, N.J.)
    2. John F. Kennedy Int’l (New York)
    3. Philadelphia Int’l
    4. Dallas/Ft. Worth Int’l
    5. Minneapolis – St. Paul Int’l
    6. San Francisco Int’l
    7. Charles de Gaulle (Paris, France)
    8. O’Hare Int’l (Chicago)
    9. London Heathrow Airport
    10. Rome Fiumicino Airport
    11. Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport
    12. Montréal-Pierre Elliott Trudeau Int’l
    13. Miami Int’l
    14. Frankfurt am Main Airport
    15. Singapore Changi Int’l
    16. Capital Airport (Beijing, China)
    17. Hong Kong Int’l
    18. Sydney Airport
    19. Narita Airport (Tokyo, Japan)
    20. George Bush Intercontinental (Houston, TX)

    How did they figure out which airports were best for hooking up? I have no idea, but if you get stuck at one of these places and do manage to meet the girl of your dreams, let us know!

    photo credit: f_mafra

    Related posts:

    1. Ashley Force Hood is Racing’s Newest Hottie
    2. The Brilliant Slap Chop Remix

  • Think Our Little Recession Was Bad? Check Out The Dark Ages

    Monte Python

    Bryan Ward-Perkins presents a fascinating snapshot of history in the FT, describing what happened in Britain after Rome was sacked in 410 AD.

    Some highlights:

    • Money disappeared
    • Towns and villages disappeared
    • Manufacturing collapsed
    • The economy did not reach its pre-crash size for 600+ years

    So maybe Hank Paulson, Ben Bernanke, and Tim Geithner were actually right about what would have happened If they hadn’t bailed out AIG!

    Bryan Ward-Perkins: As we face an uncertain and worrying New Year, we can at least console ourselves with the fact that we are not living 1,600 years ago, and about to begin the year 410. In this year Rome was sacked, and the empire gave up trying to defend Britain. While this marks the glorious beginnings of “English history”, as Anglo-Saxon barbarians began their inexorable conquest of lowland Britain, it was also the start of a recession that puts all recent crises in the shade.

    The economic indicators for fifth-century Britain are scanty, and derive exclusively from archaeology, but they are consistent and extremely bleak. Under the Roman empire, the province had benefited from the use of a sophisticated coinage in three metals – gold, silver and copper – lubricating the economy with a guaranteed and abundant medium of exchange. In the first decade of the fifth century new coins ceased to reach Britain from the imperial mints on the continent, and while some attempts were made to produce local substitutes, these efforts were soon abandoned. For about 300 years, from around AD 420, Britain’s economy functioned without coin.

    Core manufacturing declined in a similar way.

    Keep reading >

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Here’s 10 Reasons There Won’t Be A Rate Hike And The Yield Curve Will Flatten

    As I told Larry Kudlow on CNBC last night, the employment recovery will be poorer than the market appears to expect, for reasons I’ve posted on this blog during the past two weeks. The yield curve is at record steepness. I think that’s an overreaction. In fact, the steep yield curve in the present environment is NOT a harbinger of recovery — it’s a brake on recovery because it encourages banks to own Treasuries rather than risky assets (see below). Here are my top ten reasons to expect the yield curve to flatten.

    1) The Treasury is shifting issuance to the long end of the curve, and the market is front-running the Treasury in anticipation of higher issuance. This effect is temporary.

    2) Employment won’t come back because the unvarying source of employment recovery — small business — is flat on its back. The credit crunch for small business (with bankruptcies up 44% year on year) keeps getting worse

    null

     

    Read the rest of the reasons at Inner Working — >

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Fair Isaac Doesn’t Get To Trademark Its Credit Score Scale

    Eric Goldman has the details on a case involving Fair Isaac and its (failed) attempt to claim a trademark on the infamous credit scores it offers. Obviously, you can’t just trademark numbers, but Fair Isaac tried to make the case that the scale it uses for your credit rating scores, 300-850, is protectable. The jury tossed that out, and the judge summarized:


    “the jury returned a verdict finding that the alleged ‘300-850’ mark was not a valid, protectable trademark because the term ‘300-850”’has not acquired secondary meaning.”

    Separately, in the meat of the case, the court rejected claims by Fair Isaac that Experian and Trans Union infringed on its trademarks with their Google AdWords advertising, noting that (beyond the fact that 300-850 isn’t trademarkable), there was no confusion on the part of consumers who saw the ads. Fair Isaac had offered up an “expert” witness to claim otherwise, but the court simply said that the expert “lacks credibility.”

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  • Have Cheese, Will Fly: What Cheeses Travel Well The Cheesemonger

    2009_12_23-travelcheese.jpgI remember my years behind the cheese counter distinctly. But around the holidays, my days would blur together, with endless hours and perpetual lines of people needing cheese. One question was consistent, anxiety-ridden and almost deja vu-like in its repetitiveness: “I’m flying. I want to bring cheese. But can I?”

    The simple answer is yes. But what is the best, most durable cheese to choose if refrigeration is nowhere in sight, and what won’t instigate a seat change on the part of your neighbor?

    Here, a quick rundown on some safe (and delicious) bets, even if your travel time is upwards of 8 hours.

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  • Mon Dieu! France Is The Latest To Scream Towards Loss Of Its AAA Rating

    sarkozy, carla bruni, 122109

    France is heading for a credit rating downgrade from all-important AAA-status warns Fitch Ratinggs.

    Just like the U.S. and most major developed nations, the country’s debt-to-GDP ratio has exploded and is expected to hit 90% by 2011. Realize that Japan lost AAA-status in the past by just breaking 80%. Thus France, and the U.S., could be pushing its luck already.

    Telegraph: Mr Coulton [of Fitch Ratings] said the surprise “mauvais élève” has been France, which has let its budget deficit balloon to 8.5pc of GDP next year – or higher including an off balance sheet “Grand Loan” of €35bn (£31bn) for investment projects – despite having suffered a mild recession. “It is one thing to run a large deficit when your economy has shrunk sharply, but this is self-inflicted. They are moving close to double digits. It is a concern,” he said.

    Luckily the solution is far easier than one would expect. Just jawbone.

    France must articulate credible fiscal consolidation programmes over the coming year, given the budgetary challenges they face in stabilising public debt. Failure to do so will greatly intensify pressure on their sovereign ratings,” it said.

    The funny thing, is that when every developed nation risks losing AAA-status, then it all becomes far more excusable on a relative basis. Thus the more other nations push their debt limits, more politically palatable it becomes for the U.S. to do so as well.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • What Are The Best Alternatives to Nonstick Cookware? Good Questions

    2009-12-30-AlternativesNonstick.jpgQ: I’m looking for help in selecting new cookware. My Teflon set is 8 years old and flaking, and I’d like to get pots and pans without Teflon coating, as I’m concerned about the health risks associated with nonstick cookware.

    I’d like something that food doesn’t stick to, is easy to clean, and is economical, and I am open to mixing and matching (e.g. stainless pots and iron skillets).

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  • Zynga Tests SMS Notifications to Distance Itself from Facebook

    Social gaming has really taken off this year, following the spectacular rise of Facebook, but much of that rise can be attributed to the sometimes spammy methods these companies used to attract more users. It’s no doubt that they worked, Zynga, the largest social gaming company, has a user base comparable to that of Facebook, but the social network is moving to close of some of the ways these companies used to spread their messages. Zynga is already looking ahead and has began testing SMS notifications as a way of keeping the users engaged.

    The move is important for Zynga and social gaming in general for a couple of reasons. First, it may be one way of dealing with the fact that Facebook is banning apps from being able to send out regular notifications and app messages will be relegated to a special dedicated section. This move would likely significantly affect the conversion of new users, but also how much existing ones invest in the games. While it won’t solve the new users problem, SMS notifications would enable Zynga to notify users in a hard to dismiss way.

    Second, it gives the company a bit more independence from Facebook, something it sorely needs. The two companies are largely dependent on each other, but Zynga is in the worst position. It is said that the social gaming company is F… (read more)