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  • Jurors Cause Trouble By Friending Each Other On Facebook, Using Wikipedia For Research

    We’ve discussed numerous court cases where modern technology has caused significant procedural problems from “the old ways” of doing things. CitMediaLaw points us to a story that includes two more cases, both in Maryland. In one, lawyers are seeking a new trial because some of the jurors became Facebook “friends” during the trial. This follows on the news that Florida is forbidding judges from friending lawyers on social networking sites, but is it reasonable to prevent jurors from friending each other? For many Facebook users, “friending” people you meet is quite natural and something you do almost immediately upon meeting someone new. So it should be no surprise that some jurors would choose to quickly friend each other. It’s hard to see how that would make the results of the jury verdict suspect, however.

    The second case involved jurors using Wikipedia to look up some terms. This is hardly a new concept. Some judges these days are specifically warning jurors not to use the internet to look up anything related to a case, but for a generation of folks who consider internet research to be an adjunct part of the thinking process, it’s not hard to recognize why many would ignore this, and not think they’re doing anything wrong (and they might have a good argument). The real question is whether or not there are reasonable ways to change the way the jury system works to allow for what many people consider perfectly natural: doing additional research on their own. For those who are comfortable with the old system, this may seem like a horrific idea (and yes, we all understand the reasons why the current system wants to limit things to just what’s said in the courtroom). However, at some point the system may need to recognize that an artificial constraint on learning about the details of the case may not actually be the best system.

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  • Permanent protection needed for Jandakot airport bushland

    WWF-Australia today called on the Australian Government to permanently protect the nationally important bushland at Jandakot Airport, Perth. The site contains high quality habitat for dozens of native species and is a Priority 1 water source protection area.

    Despite fierce community opposition, the site is under threat for the second time in two years following a proposal by Jandakot Airport Holdings to clear 220 ha of high quality remnant bushland.

    In March 2008, the Australian Government’s Department of Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts recommended that a similar proposal on the same site be rejected on the basis of its unacceptable environmental impact.

    "It may sound surprising that an airport has important environmental values, but the Jandakot Airport site is one of the last remaining large and healthy areas of bushland in Perth," said WWF-Australia’s Southwest Australia Policy Officer, Katherine Howard.

    "The bulk of the land to be cleared in this proposal is for non-aviation commercial development such as shops and showrooms. Essentially this means a few large businesses will profit at the cost of our rapidly disappearing natural heritage."

    Jandakot Airport’s draft Master Plan 2009 proposes to clear 167ha of banksia woodland for a large commercial development, and also internal roads and infrastructure, runway extensions and a fourth runway. A further 53ha, currently classified as a ‘Conservation Precinct’, is already slated for development in the future.

    However, even if this proposal is rejected, under the Airports Act 1996, the operators can prepare a new Master Plan every five years and revisit the proposal to clear this bush again.

    "It is deeply concerning that local residents may be forced to defend this vital natural heritage area from commercial development every five years," said Ms Howard.

    "This land is actually owned and controlled by the Federal Government. We are calling on the Australian Ministers for the Environment and Infrastructure to show leadership by permanently protecting this important bushland for the sake of the environment and the local community."

    The bush at Jandakot Airport has been identified as regionally significant under the WA Bush Forever policy, and described as one of the best remaining examples of banksia woodland on the Swan Coastal Plain by the Register of the National Estate.

    The site offers high quality habitat for dozens of native plants and animals, including the nationally endangered Carnaby’s black cockatoo, grand spider orchid and glossy-leaved hammer orchid. It also overlies the shallow Jandakot Groundwater Mound – a Priority 1 water source protection area which is highly vulnerable to contamination. WWF believes that development of already cleared or degraded land is more appropriate than clearing good quality remnant bush.

    The draft Master Plan is currently being assessed under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act (EPBC) 1999. An Australian Government representative will meet with concerned locals this week about the imminent decision from Minister Garrett’s office.

    More information

    Alvin Stone, WWF-Australia. Ph: (02) 8202 1259. Mbl: 0410 221 068. Email: [email protected]

    Katherine Howard, Ph: 0423 516 430. Email: [email protected]

    Notes

    The Jandakot Airport Draft Master Plan 2009 is no longer available from the Jandakot Airport website since the period for public comment closed on 30 October. Relevant sections of the draft Master Plan including maps are available upon request.

    Images of threatened Carnaby’s black cockatoos are available upon request.

    The documentation of the referral of the Draft Master Plan to the EPBC Act including a summary of public comments to the draft Plan can be accessed here: http://www.jandakotairport.com.au/Preliminary_Draft_Master_Plan_2009.asp

    The EPBC Reference Number is 2009/4796. Further information on the EPBC assessment can be accessed here: http://www.environment.gov.au/cgi-bin/epbc/epbc_ap.pl?name=current_referral_detail&proposal_id=4796

    The following table is a summary of Jandakot Airport Holdings’ proposal to clear 167ha of good to excellent quality remnant bush under the Draft Master Plan 2009:

    Purpose Area to be cleared Area as percentage of total to be cleared
    Fourth runway 30 ha 18%
    Potential runway
    extensions
    32 ha 19
    Internal roads
    and services
    8 ha 5%
    Commercial development 96ha in the next 5 years, another 53 ha described as a Conservation Precinct but proposed for possible future commercial development (NB Further 53ha have not been included in calculations) 58%
    Total 167 ha 100

    JAH submitted a Draft Major Development Plan in July 2007 that proposed the clearing of 102ha of native vegetation. In March 2008, the Minister for Environment, Heritage and the Arts provided his Department’s recommendation (EPBC 2007/3599) to the Minister for Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Local Government that the 2007 Draft Major Development Plan be rejected on the basis of the significant negative environmental impact it would involve.

    1. Australian Government Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts. Recommendation Report: Commercial Development on Jandakot Airport (EPBC 2007/3599) http://www.environment.gov.au/epbc/notices/pubs/recommendation-report-07- 3599.pdf
    2. Jandakot Airport Holdings/Transport – air and space/16 km south of Perth/WA/Jandakot Airport Expansion, Commercial Development and Clearing of Vegetation (EPBC Reference Number 2009/4796) http://www.environment.gov.au/cgi- bin/epbc/epbc_ap.pl?name=current_referral_detail&proposal_id=4796
    3. WA Department of Planning. Bush Forever Volume 1 – Policies, Principles and Processes. December 2000.
      http://www.planning.wa.gov.au/Publications/99.aspx
    4. The Register of the National Estate is a list of natural, Indigenous and historic heritage places throughout Australia and contains sites such as Perth’s historic King’s Park. http://www.environment.gov.au/heritage/publications/about/pubs/national-estate.pdfM/a>
  • Water for Bowen Risks Too Great for Barrier Reef

    The two organisations, who boast significant experience in sustainable water use and Reef protection, have lodged their objection to the proposed $130.5 million project.

    "We believe the environmental impacts of this project – particularly the threats posed to the Reef and coastal turtles, dolphins and dugongs – are gravely underestimated by SunWater in its Environmental Impact Study," WWF-Australia Reef Catchments Manager Piet Filet said.

    "You cannot have transformation of this scale without dire, broadscale consequences for the environment."

    The proposed ‘Water for Bowen’ project, developed by the Queensland Government owned corporation SunWater, plans to redirect water from the Burdekin River across the coastal plain to Bowen via a 130km long channel and pipeline system.

    The increased water supply would be used to boost major industrial activity in the area, including at Abbot Point coal terminal, and would also lift urban and agricultural water use in the region.

    Further concerns outlined by WWF-Australia and the QCC include:

    • a failure to take into account the cumulative impacts of all the proposed regional developments that would result from this "trigger" project, such as the development of an industrial area and port expansions;
    • a failure to take into account recent (2009) legislation to improve water quality in the Reef and its catchment areas;
    • the use of an overland, open channel delivery mechanism that is at odds with national and international efforts to minimise unnecessary water evaporation;
    • interruption of key habitat areas for local wildlife;
    • an absence of water quality reports by James Cook University commissioned by SunWater;
    • the likely destruction of vital wetland areas to make way for increased development;
    • the likely interruption of vital wildlife habitat corridors as a result of the canal.

    "This project is neither feasible nor responsible for the community or the ecological future of the Bowen area and should not be allowed to proceed," said Queensland Conservation Executive Director Toby Hutcheon.

    More information

    Dr Piet Filet, WWF-Australia Reef Catchments Manager, WWF-Australia,
    Mobile: 0407 711 262

    Charlie Stevens, WWF-Australia Queensland Media Manager, WWF-Australia,
    Mobile: 0424 649 689

  • A million copies of Final Fantasy XIII shipped to Japan

    For Japan, this Thursday is the big day. December 17th is the day when Final Fantasy XIII comes out in Japan, and the rest of the world looks on with envy (and more in-game footage). For that

  • First Look: Dec. 15, 2009

    In recent decades we have seen an explosion in the activities of multinational corporations: Just think of Silicon Valley subsidiaries residing in Bangalore (“the Silicon Valley of India”) as well as Detroit firm subsidiaries based in Slovakia (“the Detroit of the East”). Yet scholars still understand little about the global patterns of multinational agglomeration. Why do these firms group together overseas? What do such clusters mean for foreign direct investment?

    Using new data detailing location, ownership, and activity information for establishments in more than 100 countries, HBS professor Laura Alfaro and George Washington University professor Maggie Chen examined the global network of multinationals. Among their findings described in a working paper, “The Global Networks of Multinational Firms” [PDF]: Multinational subsidiaries with knowledge spillovers, among other factors, “tend to agglomerate to one another. The importance of these agglomeration economies is, however, different across headquarters, subsidiary, and employment networks.” Policymakers, they write, should weigh the interdependence of multinational firms when making decisions about FDI.

    Case studies this week examine Nanosolar, Inc., a start-up in the clean technology sector, and Tengion, a biotech company faced with critical choices in the wake of the global financial crisis.

    — Martha Lagace

    Working Papers

    The Global Networks of Multinational Firms

    Authors: Laura Alfaro and Maggie Chen
    Abstract

    In this paper we characterize the topology of global multinational networks and examine the macro and micro patterns of multinational activity. We construct indices of network density at both pairwise industry and establishment level and measure agglomeration in a global and continuous metric space. These indices exhibit distinct advantages compared to traditional measures of agglomeration including the independence on the level of geographic aggregation. Estimating the indices using a new worldwide establishment dataset, we investigate both the significance and causes of multinational firm co-agglomeration. In contrast to the conventional emphasis of the literature on the role of input-output linkages, we assess the effect of various agglomeration economies. We find that, relative to counterfactuals, multinationals with greater factor-market externalities, knowledge spillovers, and vertical linkages exhibit significant co-agglomeration. The importance of these factors differs across headquarters, subsidiary, and employment networks, but knowledge spillovers and capital-market externalities, two traditionally under-emphasized forces, exert consistently strong effects. Within each macro network, there is a large heterogeneity across subsidiaries. Subsidiaries with greater size and higher productivity attract significantly more agglomeration than their counterfactuals and become the hubs of the network.

    Download the paper: http://www.hbs.edu/research/pdf/10-043.pdf

    Policy Bundling to Overcome Loss Aversion: A Method for Improving Legislative Outcomes (revised)

    Authors: Katherine L. Milkman, Mary Carol Mazza, Lisa L. Shu, Chia-Jung Tsay, and Max H. Bazerman
    Abstract

    Policies that would create net benefits for society but would also involve costs frequently lack the necessary support to be enacted because losses loom larger than gains psychologically. To reduce the harmful consequence of loss aversion, we propose a new type of policy bundling technique in which related bills that have both costs and benefits are combined. In our first laboratory study, we confirm across a set of four legislative domains that this bundling technique increases support for bills that have both costs and benefits. We also show in a second study that this effect stems from a diminished focus on losses and heightened focus on gains when policies are evaluated in bundled form.

    Download the paper: http://www.hbs.edu/research/pdf/09-147.pdf

    Publications

    Assessing the Cost and Benefits of Brokers: A Preliminary Analysis of the Mutual Fund Industry

    Author: Daniel B. Bergstresser
    Publication: Review of Financial Studies 22, no. 10 (2009): 4129-4156
    Abstract

    Many investors purchase their mutual funds through intermediated channels, engaging and paying brokers or financial advisors for fund selection and advice. We analyze five possible benefits to consumers of brokered fund distribution: (1) assistance selecting funds that are harder to find or harder to evaluate, (2) access to funds with lower costs excluding distribution costs, (3) access to higher performing funds, (4) superior asset allocation, and (5) attenuation of behavioral investor biases. Along these dimensions, we find it difficult to identify the tangible benefits delivered by brokers. While brokerage customers are directed toward funds that are harder to find and evaluate, they pay substantially higher fees and the funds they buy have lower risk-adjusted returns than directly placed funds. Brokered funds exhibit no better skill at asset allocation. Furthermore, funds sold through brokers demonstrate more performance sensitivity than funds sold through the direct channel. While the costs of brokers’ services are relatively clear, their benefits are not easily captured by the tangible measures explored in this paper.

    Restructuring Within an Academic Health Center to Support Quality and Safety: The Development of the Center for Quality and Safety at the Massachusetts General Hospital

    Authors: Richard Bohmer, Jonathan David Bloom, Elizabeth Mort, Akinluwa Demehin, and Gregg Meyer
    Publication: Academic Medicine 84, no. 12 (December 2009): 1663-1671
    Abstract

    Recent focus on the need to improve the quality and safety of health care has created new challenges for academic health centers (AHCs). Whereas previously quality was largely assumed, today it is increasingly quantifiable and requires organized systems for improvement. Traditional structures and cultures within AHCs, although well suited to the tripartite missions of teaching, research, and clinical care, are not easily adaptable to the tasks of measuring, reporting, and improving quality. Here, the authors use a case study of Massachusetts General Hospital’s efforts to restructure quality and safety to illustrate the value of beginning with a focus on organizational culture, using a systematic process of engaging clinical leadership, developing an organizational framework dependent on proven business principles, leveraging focus events, and maintaining executive dedication to execute the initiative. The case provides a generalizable example for AHCs of how applying explicit management design can foster robust organizational change with relatively modest incremental financial resources.

    From Strategy to Business Models and to Tactics

    Authors: Ramon Casadesus-Masanell and Joan Enric Ricart
    Publication: Special Issue on Business Models. Long Range Planning (forthcoming)
    Abstract

    The notion of business model has been used by strategy scholars to refer to “the logic of the firm, the way it operates, and how it creates value for its stakeholders.” On the surface, this notion appears to be similar to that of strategy. We present a conceptual framework to separate and relate business model and strategy. Business model, we argue, is a reflection of the firm’s realized strategy. We find that in simple competitive situations there is a one-to-one mapping between strategy and business model, which makes it difficult to separate the two notions. We show that the concepts of strategy and business model differ when there are important contingencies upon which a well-designed strategy must be based. Our framework also delivers a clear separation between tactics and strategy. This distinction is possible because strategy and business model are different constructs.

    Managing Know-How

    Authors: Deishin Lee and Eric Van den Steen
    Publication: Management Science (forthcoming)
    Abstract

    We study how firms can use a knowledge management system to optimally leverage employee-generated know-how. In particular, we consider the following practical strategic questions for the manager of a knowledge-intensive firm: should her firm develop a formal knowledge system? And if so, how should it be managed, particularly in terms of what information to record? We find that firms benefit more from a knowledge system when they are larger, face the same issues more frequently, have higher turnover, and face problems about which there is less general knowledge. In terms of what information to record, a key insight is that recording moderately successful practices can be counter-productive, since doing so may inefficiently reduce employees’ incentives to experiment. This “strong-form competency trap” forces firms into an exploration-exploitation trade-off. Firms that value a knowledge system most should also be most selective in recording information. We further find that recording successes is more valuable than recording failures, which supports firms’ focus on best practice. Beyond these main principles, we also show that it may be optimal to disseminate know-how on a plant-level but not on a firm-level, and that recording back-up solutions is most valuable at medium levels of environmental change.

    Optimal Taxation in Theory and Practice

    Authors: N. Gregory Mankiw, Matthew C. Weinzierl, and Danny Yagan
    Publication: Journal of Economic Perspectives (forthcoming)
    Abstract

    We highlight and explain eight lessons from optimal tax theory and compare them to the last few decades of OECD tax policy. As recommended by theory, top marginal income tax rates have declined, marginal income tax schedules have flattened, redistribution has risen with income inequality, and commodity taxes are more uniform and are typically assessed on final goods. However, trends in capital taxation are mixed, and capital income tax rates remain well above the zero level recommended by theory. Moreover, some of theory’s more subtle prescriptions, such as taxes that involve personal characteristics, asset-testing, and history-dependence, remain rare in practice. Where large gaps between theory and policy remain, the difficult question is whether policymakers need to learn more from theorists, or the other way around.

    Neural Mechanisms of Social Influence

    Authors: Malia Mason, Rebecca Dyer, and Michael I. Norton
    Publication: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, no. 110 (2009): 152-159
    Abstract

    The present investigation explores the neural mechanisms underlying the impact of social influence on preferences. We socially tagged symbols as valued or not—by exposing participants to the preferences of their peers—and assessed subsequent brain activity during an incidental processing task in which participants viewed popular, unpopular, and novel symbols. The medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) differentiated between symbols that were and were not socially tagged—a possible index of normative influence—while aspects of the striatum (the caudate) differentiated between popular and unpopular symbols—a possible index of informational influence. These results suggest that integrating activity in these two brain regions may differentiate objects that have become valued as a result of social influence from those valued for non-social reasons.

    The Effects of a Central Clearinghouse on Job Placement, Wages, and Hiring Practices

    Authors: Muriel Niederle and Alvin E. Roth
    Publication: In Studies of Labor Market Intermediation, edited by David H. Autor, 273-306. The University of Chicago Press, 2009
    Abstract

    New gastroenterologists participated in a labor market clearinghouse (a “match”) from 1986 through the late 1990s, after which the match was abandoned. This provides an opportunity to study the effects of a match by observing the differences in the outcomes and organization of the market when a match was operating and when it was not. After the GI match ended, the market unraveled. Contracts were signed earlier each year, at diffuse times, often with exploding offers. The market became less national, more local. This allows us to discern the effect of the clearinghouse: it coordinated the timing of the market in a way that increased its thickness and scope. The clearinghouse does not seem to have had an effect on wages. As this became known among gastroenterologists, an opportunity arose to reorganize the market to once again use a centralized clearinghouse. However it proved necessary to adopt policies that would allow employers to safely delay hiring and coordinate on using the clearinghouse. The market for gastroenterologists provides a case study of market failures, the way a centralized clearinghouse can fix them, and the effects on market outcomes. In the conclusion we discuss aspects of the experience of the gastroenterology labor market that seem to generalize fairly widely.

    Book: http://www.press.uchicago.edu/presssite/metadata.epl?isbn=9780226032887

    Deferred Acceptance Algorithms: History, Theory, Practice

    Author: Alvin E. Roth
    Publication: In Better Living Through Economics, edited by John J. Siegfried, 206-222. Harvard University Press, 2010
    Abstract

    The deferred acceptance algorithm proposed by Gale and Shapley (1962) has had a profound influence on market design, both directly, by being adapted into practical matching mechanisms, and indirectly, by raising new theoretical questions. Deferred acceptance algorithms are at the basis of a number of labor market clearinghouses around the world and have recently been implemented in school choice systems in Boston and New York City. In addition, the study of markets that have failed in ways that can be fixed with centralized mechanisms has led to a deeper understanding of some of the tasks a marketplace needs to accomplish to perform well. In particular, marketplaces work well when they provide thickness to the market, help it deal with the congestion that thickness can bring, and make it safe for participants to act effectively on their preferences. Centralized clearinghouses organized around the deferred acceptance algorithm can have these properties, and this has sometimes allowed failed markets to be reorganized.

    Book: http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog/SIEBET.html

    Cases & Course Materials

    Emotiv Systems Inc.: It’s the Thoughts that Count

    Elie Ofek, Jason Riis, and Paul Hamilton
    Harvard Business School Case 510-050

    Emotiv is getting ready to launch its innovative brain-computer interfacing (BCI) technology. The company has developed a special headset, called EPOC, and highly sophisticated software that can translate a person’s emotions, cognitive thoughts, and facial expressions into digital outcomes. Emotiv wants the technology to be adopted by mainstream consumers and is leaning towards the video game market as its primary initial target. However, it needs to decide whether to continue efforts to convince one of the big three console makers (PS3, Xbox 360, Wii) to enable the EPOC on their platform or to settle for the PC gaming market. Alternatively, the company could have chosen a number of different markets to focus on (such as medical, military, market research). A host of additional marketing decisions need to be made (pricing, channels, bundling a demo game). The case allows students to grapple with the issues of selecting a target application for the launch of an innovation, determining the importance of having a big name partner for the launch by an unknown start-up, considering the wisdom of taking a B2C rather than B2B approach with a novel technology, and using analogous products to forecast demand and sales for a new technology.

    Purchase this case:

    http://cb.hbsp.harvard.edu/cb/product/510050-PDF-ENG

    GE Money Bank: The M-Budget Card Initiative

    Michael L. Tushman, Sebastian Raisch, and Christian Welling
    Harvard Business School Case 410-052

    The M-Budget Card case study is about mastering the challenges of an exploratory strategic initiative in a context marked by time pressure and frequent change. M-Budget was the first of a series of highly successful projects that established GE Money Bank as a leader in the Swiss credit card market. The business concept was to cooperate with the country’s leading retailer MIGROS to develop an innovative credit card offering, the M-Budget card. The M-Budget card was launched a mere six months later and was an immediate success. The demand for the card exceeded expectations by far and the bank was inundated by more than 100,000 applications in the first weeks. The road to the successful market launch, however, was a rocky one and the team around Pierre had to master numerous challenges. Pierre, who took the lead in the initiative, had to select the right people to compose a team that had all the expertise and knowledge required to develop an entirely new market offering. A competitive move by the second largest retailer COOP forced the team to change its initial value proposition while working under intensive time pressure. Finally, the team had to overcome a series of operational problems after the initial market launch. The case study retraces the initiative’s development over time and describes the leadership and organizational challenges faced by the team on its way to the successful creation of an entirely new business segment.

    Purchase this case:

    http://cb.hbsp.harvard.edu/cb/product/410052-PDF-ENG

    Gillette Company (E): Procter & Gamble

    Rosabeth Moss Kanter and Matthew Bird
    Harvard Business School Supplement 309-033

    After arriving in 2001 as the first outsider Chairman and CEO in Gillette history, Jim Kilts led a remarkable turnaround. But by late 2004 he had to make a difficult decision. To better position the 104-year-old, Boston-based company, he opted to sell it to Cincinnati-based Procter & Gamble. How should Kilts lead the transition?

    Purchase this supplement:

    http://cb.hbsp.harvard.edu/cb/product/309033-PDF-ENG

    Introduction to Competitive Dynamics: Strategy and Tactics

    Dennis Yao
    Harvard Business School Course Overview 707-475

    Provides an overview of the course Competitive Dynamics: Strategy and Tactics and discusses challenges facing those who wish to use game theory to assist in strategic and tactical decision making.

    Purchase this overview:

    http://cb.hbsp.harvard.edu/cb/product/707475-PDF-ENG

    Merger of Equals: The Integration of Mellon Financial and The Bank of New York (A)

    Ryan D. Taliaferro, Clayton Rose, and David Lane
    Harvard Business School Case 210-016

    Less than a month after the close of the merger between The Bank of New York and Mellon Financial, managers at the two firms realized that plans for combining their asset servicing businesses—and realizing the $180 million of annual cost savings that they had promised Wall Street—were fraught with risk. Senior executives must evaluate the seriousness of the risks and identify alternative ways of integrating the two firms, while safeguarding the technologies that process and clear a substantial fraction of the world’s financial transactions.

    Purchase this case:

    http://cb.hbsp.harvard.edu/cb/product/210016-PDF-ENG

    Purchase supplement B:

    http://cb.hbsp.harvard.edu/cb/product/210025-PDF-ENG

    Purchase supplement C:

    http://cb.hbsp.harvard.edu/cb/product/210028-PDF-ENG

    Nanosolar, Inc.

    Thomas Steenburgh and Alison Berkley Wagonfeld
    Harvard Business School Case 510-037

    Nanosolar is a start-up company in the clean tech sector. It expects to be one of the first manufacturers to produce thin-film solar panels using copper indium gallium (di)selenide (CIGS) technology. Although this technology is less efficient in producing electricity than polysilicone, it is much less costly too. As it is about to enter the market, Nanosolar is facing the decision on which market to enter. Should it attempt to go into the European market which has established feed-in tariffs? Or should it enter the nascent, but growing, U.S. market?

    Purchase this case:

    http://cb.hbsp.harvard.edu/cb/product/510037-PDF-ENG

    Tengion: Bringing Regenerative Medicine to Life

    Elie Ofek and Polly Ross Ribatt
    Harvard Business School Case 510-031

    Tengion is a young biotech company that is at the frontier of regenerative medicine—a nascent field that seeks to promote the creation of new cells and tissue to repair or replace tissue or organ function lost due to age, disease, damage, or congenital defects. In late 2008 Tengion management faces a difficult dilemma. In light of the financial crises, the company needs to manage cash burn by prioritizing its R&D efforts. CEO Nichtberger needs to recommend to the board which of two promising new medical treatments to keep developing while placing the other on hold. In comparing the two options, a host of factors need to be considered—these range from assessing the regulatory challenges, manufacturing challenges, marketing challenges (in particular pricing), and partnering challenges. Each of the treatments would target a unique patient population that differs in both size and composition. Tengion must also consider how quickly it might expect to bring each of the two treatments to market. The decision could have significant long-term implications for the company’s ultimate survival and success.

    Purchase this case:

    http://cb.hbsp.harvard.edu/cb/product/510031-PDF-ENG

  • Nirvana Technologies introduces PLUS Glass Manager

    Mumbai, India – 15th December 2009 – Nirvana Technologies introduced backoffice software PLUS Glass Manager at the recently concluded Zak Glasstech ’09 exhibition at Mumbai. The software is slated for release in early 2010.

    PLUS Glass Manager is an Order Processing and Inventory software for Glass Processors and Fabricators, which provides for:
    – 1-Click Estimation – Material & Time
    – 1-Click Quote
    – 1-Click Material Balance

    Other salient features:
    Multiple price list
    Regeneration of estimates with changes in parameters
    Tracking of Offcuts
    Links to optimizers – PLUS 2D and PLUS 1D
    Customer and Contacts Management
    Extensive reports

    On display at the exhibition were the One-Stop Solutions suite of products, which includes the following products, apart from the PLUS Glass Manager:
    PLUS 2D Glass Optimization software
    PLUS RepliCAM – Digitizing software to replicate templates
    PLUS Label Maker – Bar Code Label generation and printing software and
    PLUS 1D – Bar Nesting software.

    For more information about their products visit:
    http://www.nirvanatec.com/products.html

  • REPORT: Ex-execs from Chrysler join startup green company

    Filed under: ,

    Ex-Chrysler CEO and co-president Tom LaSorda (above) and ex-VP of North American sales Steven Landry have joined a small Detroit startup called ALTe. Focused on the fleet industry, ALTe aims to retrofit light trucks and vans, limos and taxis, and police cars with its flexible and proprietary plug-in hybrid drivetrains.

    ALTe is headed by other former car industry alumna from Ford and Tesla. They formed the seed of technical know-how, and speculation is that they are looking to Lasorda and Landry to help them lure three groups: institutional investors, fleet operators and dealers.

    At the moment ALTe is focused on acquiring the funds it needs in order to be approved for a DoE loan (it has to get money to make money). Eventually, based on global industry regulations alone the company stands to make a fortune… if it can just stay in business long enough to make that fortune.

    [Source: Forbes | Image: Bill Pugliano/Getty]

    REPORT: Ex-execs from Chrysler join startup green company originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 15 Dec 2009 08:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Wholesale Inflation Rises More Than Expected Led By Surge In Energy

    gasoline gas station

    No deflation here.

    The PPI rose 1.8% compared to .6%, though core inflation of .5% was more subdued

    Here’s the full release from the BLS.

    —-

    The Producer Price Index for Finished Goods rose 1.8 percent in November, seasonally adjusted,
    the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. This increase followed a 0.3-percent advance
    in October and a 0.6-percent decrease in September. In November, at the earlier stages of
    processing, prices received by manufacturers of intermediate goods climbed 1.4 percent, and the
    crude goods index rose 5.7 percent. On an unadjusted basis, prices for finished goods moved up
    2.4 percent for the 12 months ended November 2009, their first 12-month increase since
    November 2008. (See table A.)

    Finished goods

    About three-fourths of the November advance in the finished goods index can be traced to
    higher prices for energy goods, which jumped 6.9 percent. The indexes for finished goods less
    foods and energy and for finished consumer foods also contributed to the finished goods
    increase, both rising 0.5 percent.

    Finished energy:  The index for finished energy goods climbed 6.9 percent in November after
    advancing 1.6 percent a month earlier. About sixty percent of the broad-based November rise can
    be attributed to a 14.2-percent surge in gasoline prices. Increases in the indexes for liquefied
    petroleum gas and home heating oil also were major factors in the finished energy goods
    advance. (See table 2.)

    Finished core:  The index for finished goods less foods and energy moved up 0.5 percent in
    November, its largest increase since a 0.5-percent gain in October 2008. Leading the November
    advance, the index for light motor trucks jumped 4.2 percent. Higher cigarette prices also
    contributed to the rise in the finished core index.

    Finished foods:  The index for finished consumer foods advanced 0.5 percent in November, its
    second consecutive monthly increase. Over sixty percent of the November rise can be traced to
    higher prices for fresh and dry vegetables, which climbed 8.7 percent.

    Intermediate goods

    The Producer Price Index for Intermediate Materials, Supplies, and Components rose 1.4 percent
    in November, its fourth straight monthly advance. Accounting for about three-fourths of the
    broad-based November increase, prices for intermediate energy goods climbed 5.4 percent. The
    indexes for both intermediate goods less foods and energy and for intermediate foods and feeds
    also contributed to this advance, rising 0.3 and 0.7 percent, respectively. On a 12-month basis,
    prices for intermediate goods fell 1.6 percent in November. This is the fourth consecutive month
    of slowing year-over-year declines following a record 15.2-percent drop for the 12 months ended
    July 2009. (See table B.) 

    Intermediate energy:  The index for intermediate energy goods rose 5.4 percent in November,
    its second consecutive monthly increase. A major factor in the November advance was an 18.8-
    percent surge in jet fuel prices. The indexes for gasoline and liquefied petroleum gas also
    contributed significantly to higher intermediate energy goods prices. (See table 2).

    Intermediate core:  Prices for intermediate materials less foods and energy increased 0.3 percent
    in November, their fifth increase in the last six months. The index for basic organic chemicals led
    the November advance, rising 4.3 percent. Higher prices for medicinal and botanical chemicals
    also were a factor in the intermediate core increase.

    Intermediate foods:  The index for intermediate foods and feeds moved up 0.7 percent in
    November following two consecutive monthly declines. About forty percent of this advance can
    be attributed to prices for pork, which climbed 6.4 percent.

    Crude goods

    The Producer Price Index for Crude Materials for Further Processing increased 5.7 percent in
    November. For the 3-month period ending in November, crude material prices rose 9.1 percent
    after advancing 4.4 percent in the 3 months ending in August. In November, monthly increases
    of 12.2 percent in the index for crude energy materials and 2.6 percent for prices of crude
    foodstuffs and feedstuffs outweighed a 0.8-percent decrease in the index for crude nonfood
    materials less energy. (See table B.)

    Crude energy:  The index for crude energy materials increased 12.2 percent in November. From
    August to November, this index rose 15.0 percent compared with a 12.6-percent rise in the 3
    months ending in August. Accounting for about two-thirds of the monthly November increase,
    the index for natural gas jumped 25.5 percent. Higher prices for both crude petroleum and coal
    also contributed to the advance in the crude energy materials index. (See table 2.)

    Crude foods:  Prices for crude foodstuffs and feedstuffs rose 2.6 percent in November. This
    index moved up 5.8 percent in the most recent 3-month period compared with a 7.1-percent
    decline in the previous 3-month period. In November, over sixty percent of the monthly increase
    in the crude foods index can be attributed to a 25.6-percent surge in prices for slaughter hogs. An
    advance in the fluid milk index also was a significant factor in the rise for crude foodstuffs and
    feedstuffs.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • DIGITAL, KENYA MUSIC WEEK

    kenya-music-week

    The Kenya Music Week (KMW) marked its 6th annual event this year with the theme ‘Embracing Digital’.

    Music Piracy has affected Kenya’s music industry, hence, the need to embrace digital technology in order to fight piracy and increase sales. It brought together stakeholders in the industry to mingle, market and sell their merchandise.  Click below to listen to interviews on the event.

    KENYA MUSIC WEEK 2009

  • HP slip confirms new Intel CPUs, Radeons for Pavilion Model

    Current info about HP Pavilion Entertainment Processor and HD cards is not always the easiest thing to locate. Fortunately, this report includes the latest HP Pavilion Entertainment Processor and HD cards info available.

    It seems like new information is discovered about something every day. And the topic of HP Pavilion Entertainment Processor and HD cards is no exception. Keep reading to get more fresh news about HP Pavilion Entertainment Processor and HD cards.

    A leaked document from HP has confirmed some roadmap details for both Intel and AMD. As part of a plan to update its all-in-one PCs with a new Pavilion model in April, the company says it expects to use dual-core Core i3 and i5 desktop processors and reiterates their key features. The Core i5 will have Turbo Boost to shut down some cores and overclock others and will also have hardware acceleration of AES encryption; Core i3 goes without but is based on the same architecture.

    Future TouchSmart 600 PCs, and likely Pavilion notebooks, should get Intel’s dual-core mobile Core i5 and i7 processors. These are already known to consume about 35W of power and clock lower than desktop equivalents, but will almost always use Hyperthreading and Turbo Boost and are separated primarily by the amount of L2 cache (peaking at 4MB on i7 parts).

    The Engadget tip also has HP’s Pavilion and Pavilion Elite towers getting new AMD budget ATI Radeon HD cards. The Radeon HD 5350 is likely one of AMD’s least expensive models but will have 1GB of video memory as well as DVI, HDMI and VGA output; it’s likely to surface at CES as it has an “MR” date of January 7th. The 5570 wouldn’t be unveiled until February 20th but would drop VGA entirely in favor of DisplayPort and carry a very large 2GB of video memory. Its naming scheme also puts it above the 5300 series in overall performance but below the already shipping 5700 series.

    Hopefully the sections above have contributed to your understanding of HP Pavilion Entertainment Processor and HD cards. Share your new information about the upcoming HP Pavilion Entertainment Processor and HD cards with others. They’ll thank you for it. Share your thoughts on the comments.

    Source


  • Mail.ru Switches to Google as Default Search Engine

    Google rules the search market worldwide and clearly dominates in most countries. In a few markets though, it has failed to make too much inroad, especially where the country is being served by a powerful local brand. This is the case in China, where Google is getting trumped by Baidu and has just managed to get to a 30 percent share of the market. Things are even worse in Russia, where Google manages to get just 23 percent. Things are about to change there though, as Mail.ru has announced that Google will be powering its search engine at least for the coming year.

    “Mail.Ru and Google signed an agreement on cooperation in the field of search and advertising technologies. Search engine portal Mail.Ru, a member of the three leaders in the Russian market will use Google search technology, from January 2010, as well as displaying search results relevant ads using AdSense. This Mail.Ru plans to actively develop its own search technology,” Mail.ru said in a statement in Russian via Google Translate.

    This deal enables Google to secure a better foothold in the Russian market which is dominated by local player Yandex with a 58 percent stake in the search market. Mail.ru, which operates the most popular social network in the country, as well as the most popular web portal, also has about 10 percen… (read more)

  • Keep the holidays from being ho-ho-hazardous to kids

    ornamentsBy Lois Lee, MD, MPH, from Children’s Hospital Boston’s Emergency Department Injury Prevention Program

    Many parents know that kids like to put things in their mouth, nose and ears—even if they know those things don’t belong there. Holiday decorations are no exception. Every year in the Emergency Department (ED), we see children who get injuries from holiday decorations—usually from trying to eat them. But children can sustain other injuries as well—and usually in ways that an adult would never think about.

    My colleagues and I have just published a study in the journal Pediatric Emergency Care about holiday-ornament related injuries in children. We saw an average of five children a year who came to the ED for injuries from a holiday ornament. Most of the injuries were from glass ornaments, but some were related to the light bulb part of the decoration. Almost half of the children came to the ED because they tried to eat the ornament. Twelve of these children had bleeding from their mouth or gastrointestinal tract (stomach and intestines). Others had cuts on their skin by glass in the ornament or light bulb. Two children suffered minor electrocution when they put the ornament in the electrical socket. Another child placed part of an ornament fragment in his ear canal.

    The majority of these children had an X-ray as part of their evaluation. Two children had to go to the operating room (OR) for further exploration of the ornament foreign bodies in the mouth or airway. Six children were admitted to the hospital for observation.

    In addition to holiday ornament injuries, there are other types of injuries that we see XMAS stockingsaround the holidays. The Christmas tree can fall on children if they pull on an ornament and the tree is not well secured. Stocking holders, which can be placed on a mantle, are very popular, but can cause head injury if the child pulls on the stocking and pulls the holder (which is often heavy) onto their heads. Candles can cause burns to children or fires in the home if not well monitored.

    So here are a few tips to keep your children safe this holiday season:

    • Consider placing ornaments on higher branches of the Christmas tree to keep them out of reach of curious toddlers.
    • Cover electrical outlets so children can not put an ornament or wire in them.
    • Candles should only be lit in rooms where people are present.
    • Take care in using stocking holders if the stockings hang low enough for children to reach.
    • Take care in placing garlands that hang from windows or other surfaces, as they can be a strangulation hazard if a small child gets caught in them.
    • Make sure the Christmas tree has a secure base to prevent it from falling on a child.

    And as always, close supervision of young children is the best way to keep them safe this holiday season—and all year round.

    Read this LA Times article highlighting Children’s research on the perils posed by holiday ornaments.

    Related posts:

    1. Get rid of those old glass thermometers
    2. Glass-table injuries to children prompts industry changes
    3. This week on Thrive: Oct. 5 – 9

  • Maybe This Is The Chart Warren Buffett Keeps Under His Pillow

    We recently posted a chart comparing rail activity with the PMI — which has recently spiked — and wondered if its’ the chart Warren Buffett keeps under his pillow.

    rail

    The question was a little facetious, since obviously Warren Buffett didn’t make a gigantic, company-defining bet on one chart. But it’s still interesting and some fodder for rail bulls.

    ZeroHedge has another interesting chart — and he makes the same allusion to Buffett — though we’re not quite sure which way it goes.

    oil rail

    This one looks at railcar loadings at spot WTI oil, which ahve been in pretty tight correlation for nearly two decades. If you think oil is heading higher, you might bet on rail as well.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • New Climate Risk report looks at infrastructure risks from Climate Change

    Infrastructure Summit reports on major legal, investment and standards challenges from Climate Change.
    ————
    As Kevin Rudd prepares to fly to Copenhagen this week for the last two days of negotiations, Infrastructure Partnerships Australia, Climate Risk Ltd, Evans & Peck, Malleson Stephen Jacques and Zurich Insurance released today a report of the proceedings of their Climate Change and Infrastructure Summit.

    The report says that there needs to be a recognition that climate change is real and already impacting on Australia’s infrastructure. The report finds that without a new approach to specifying standards for construction and design, there is an increased chance of outages and asset failures – such as those seen during Australia’s extreme weather last summer, leaving widespread economic impacts.  There is also risk of legal actions.

    Climate Risk CEO Dr Mallon said: “The science is moving too fast for standards to keep up, which leaves the infrastructure sector in a very difficult space. We need some new, more dynamic approaches to folding climate change into the infrastructure development process.”

    “The summit also revealed that sticking to standards that do not include climate change risks may provide no protection from future litigation. Climate change has to be considered from now on.”

    “With Melbourne predicted to have another scorching summer, the prospect of rail lines buckling again causing massive economic disruption shows that we can’t assume the future will be like the past. “

    “These fast-emerging climate change risks to infrastructure were the trigger for this Rapid-Response Summit by the private sector, for the private sector.”

    The Summit was convened by Climate Risk ltd in conjunction with the nation’s peak body Infrastructure Partnerships Australia, infrastructure advisory firm Evans & Peck, law firm Mallesons Stephen Jaques and hosted by Zurich Insurance Australia – 34 private and public sector infrastructure organisations participated.

    Dr Mallon says that Australia is experiencing conflicting pressures, with a massive increase in infrastructure investment at the same time that climate change policy is undergoing rapid change. Government and academic research is increasingly pointing to major changes in sea levels and extreme weather events like heatwaves, bushfires and floods, meaning that much greater consideration of the vulnerability of existing and new infrastructure is badly needed.

    “The standards for infrastructure development are not keeping up with climate change science.” he said. “Because the science is changing so fast,we have to build in flexibility to our infrastructure, and to the standards that guide us, so we can move with that science.”

    Brendan Lyon, Executive Director of IPA states, “Climate change is a reality and that demands a new approach in the way we plan and procure our next generation of infrastructure.  A key consideration should be designing infrastructure that has options for adaptation, allowing major projects to be upgraded at least cost as the climate changes.

    “The infrastructure sector is acutely aware of the risks and challenges posed by climate change and adaptation needs to be part of major projects. What is also required is greater certainty around the price and structure of carbon abatement, allowing industry to deliver fit for purpose
    infrastructure for the long-term.

  • Buffett Wins Again

    Warren Buffett won the financial crisis, making several spectacular bets–and, just as important, passing on several deals that looked great to some other suckers.

    And to think that for a few minutes some folks thought he had lost it.

    (via Barry Ritholtz)

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • McLaren’s Whitmarsh reportedly elected to replace Montezemolo as FOTA chairman

    Filed under: ,

    There’s only so many chairs one man can sit in at once. But Luca di Montezemolo has made an art out of pushing the limits. In addition to serving as chairman of both Ferrari and the Fiat group, the hereditary nobleman was, until recently at least, also chairing the Italian Confindustria employers’ federation and the FIEG editorial organization. But something’s got to give, and at the end of this year he’s stepping down from his role as the founding chairman of the Formula One Teams Association.

    In his place, according to the latest reports, will serve one Martin Whitmarsh, recently promoted to team principal of the McLaren team after Ron Dennis went off to concentrate on the emerging road car division. Meanwhile, Red Bull chief Christian Horner was reportedly elected to chair the Sporting Working Group while Ross Brawn stays on as head of the Technical Working Group within FOTA. The meeting of the team principals took place in Monaco on the heels of the F1 Business Forum and the Formula 1 Commission meeting.

    [Source: Autosport | Image: Clive Mason/Getty]

    McLaren’s Whitmarsh reportedly elected to replace Montezemolo as FOTA chairman originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 15 Dec 2009 08:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Introducing Watson the Cat, Plus BONUS GIVEAWAY!

    Watson1

    This cool little moderncat is Watson the Cat. He’s the mascot over at Medium Control Design. Watson is very smart and stylish. In fact he even has his own design blog, The Watsonian. Watson is also a very good helper, as you can see in this video:

    Watson2

    Watson is available on a variety of products including some hip bags, clothing, and even as a vinyl decal that you can put anywhere. All of the Watson products can be purchased at Medium Control’s Etsy shop.

    Watson Bomb Tshirt + Turtle Neck

    Watson_enterToWin

    BONUS GIVEAWAY! FOUR WINNERS!

    This is your chance to win one of four Watson t-shirts! Each winner will receive an organic cotton short-sleeve cinder colored t-shirt with the psychedelic Watson graphic shown above. Winners get to pick the size (sm, med, lg, or x-lg).

    To enter this giveaway, please leave a comment on this post. Winners will be chosen in a random drawing on December 22. One entry per person. This giveaway is open to addresses in the US and Canada.


  • Abu Dhabi Will Use Its Bailout To Crush Dubai’s Leadership

    Dubai has a ridiculously weak bargaining position against Abu Dhabi right now, given that Dubai is essentially dead in the water without Abu Dhabi’s liquidity.

    This might not just be money between friends.

    Expect Abu Dhabi to get their money’s worth, given that they can extract pretty much whatever concession they want in the end — even perhaps stealing Dubai’s financial hub status.

    Starting at 1:00.

    • “They wanted Dubai to sweat…”
    • “I think they are going to get their pound of flesh… it might be ownership of Emirates Airlines, inheriting the mantle of regional financial services, Abu Dhabi I think is going to be the big winner here.”
    • “They’re playing their cards pretty well to take what they want.”
    • “Will Abu Dhabi take over [Dubai’s] role?”
    • “I think they well… it’s something they’ve been aspiring to do…”

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • test result scare

    Hey Everyone! I am new to this site and also new to this diabetic lifestyle – I was diagnosed in January of ’09 with type II diabetes and have been taking Simvastatin, Metformin Glimepiride along with Benicar and Levothyroxine for high blood pressure and thryoid respectively. My platelet count has been steadily falling and my dr. suggests seeing a hematologist . Do any of these drugs cause thrombocytopenia ? thanks
    also flonase- maybe that’s the culprit.
  • BUSTED: Lieberman Caught Flip-Flopping On Medicare Buy-In

    Harry Reid caved to Joe Lieberman last night night, and dropped from healthcare reform a scheme that would allow private individuals the opportunity to buy into Medicare.

    Barack Obama told Reid to cut a deal with the former, but estranged, democratic Veep candidate at all costs.

    Why did Joe Lieberman decided to cause trouble? Probably because he hates his old friends. After all, just three months ago, he favored the Medicare buy-in. And it’s on video. (Via Memeorandum and WhoRunsGov)

    Join the conversation about this story »

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