Feb 17 2010

Making Money Uk

“I am hugely intellectually bullish on Treasuries. I am long. I fear the end of QE, the money funds are making on the , I am aware of the issuance, I am aware that the States is going to have to sell $2.5 trillion of this stuff. But that's the marketplace – the marketplace disseminates the bad stuff. I think there is a lesson in Japan. You think they are going to succeed – Mark thinks they are going to create inflation. The precedent of Japan suggest that if you allow leverage in your society to breach a certain level, let's call it 200 or 230% of GDP, then what happens is monetary policy doesn't work, fiscal policy doesn't work. They've had helicopters, they have distributed free money to their citizens, they have built bridges to nowhere and prices are falling and look set to fall further. My fear just now is that the community of risk is very short treasuries, and is very long risk: risk assets are the hedge against inflation. Now if something untoward happens, the gamma on that trade bankrupts you.”

Elsewhere, you will hear Taleb's proposed portfolio composition (if you have read Fooled by Randomness or The Black Swan you won't be surprised), as well as his escalating and very much justified disdain for economists: “if the number of economists from US universities in a country is high, the country risk is high, if the number is low, the risk is low.”

And a whole lot of debate over China, with Hugh Hendry dismantling Jim O'Neill and the other China bulls. “I love Jim O'Neill. I love that Goldman Sachs guy. He says you either get it, or you don't. I don't get it. In the future there will be a Confucius saying: the wise man not invest in overcapacity. The flaw of the business model, at the center of it is a craving for power as opposed to profit.” (Kinda funny, coming from a former Goldmanite.) Please watch Hendry's view on China beginning 55 minutes into the clip.

For those P&L detectives here is Hugh's most recent missive. Good luck with extracting what the next ABX trade is.

The full hour + debate can be found here. We think far too highly of our readers' intellectual ability than to point out that the English audio stream would require hitting the Eng button.

Click on the icon for a link to source.

According the statement released by NFM, the fund will aid developers throughout the process of building an iPad application from “sketches to finished product.” More importantly, the company is looking to fund development efforts that are not just mere ports of iPhone applications, but rather take advantage of the new features the iPad has to offer. Notes the company, the apps should “do stuff better than it would be done on an iPhone, and differently from the way it would be done on a laptop or desktop machine.” What “stuff” is that exactly? That's for developers to decide.

In order to qualify, apps also must have the potential to generate revenue, be ready to launch by summer 2010, be developed by teams where at least 70% of the talent is within the North East region where NFM is located, and not replicate the functionality of apps already designed for the iPad. That last stipulation was likely made because it could lead to the app's rejection from the iTunes App Store, as has been the case in the past with iPhone apps such as Google Voice, a VoIP application for making calls and receiving voicemail.

NFM also says that the development team requesting funding should have an investment of money from a private investor, either an equity firm or the company's own resources. Applications NFM selects for funding will receive anywhere from £1,000 to £10,000, depending on the app's potential as NFM sees it.

The iPad is set to launch worldwide in March, at least in the Wi-Fi version. 3G versions outside the US will take a bit longer with no solid dates available at this time.

So far, reactions to the iPad have been decidedly mixed among the tech press. Some have claimed the device is the future of computing while others state the iPad is a failure. Nevertheless, analysts are predicting Apple will sell 1 to 5 million iPads in its first year.

Developers, too, will be itching to create new applications for the device – at least according to Joe Hewitt, the man behind the iPhone version of Facebook. His application, which many say is an even better way to use the social network than the website itself, is a testament to how new platforms can enhance and transform applications from the boring Web 1.0 world of desktop computing to the Web 3.0 world of mobile devices. The iPad will only push this trend even further. Says Hewitt, “if you're a developer and you're not thinking about how your app could work better on the iPad and its descendants, you deserve to get left behind.”

UK firms looking to be the forerunners in iPad development can fill out the application for funding here.

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“I am hugely intellectually bullish on Treasuries. I am long. I fear the end of QE, the money funds are making on the , I am aware of the issuance, I am aware that the States is going to have to sell $2.5 trillion of this stuff. But that's the marketplace – the marketplace disseminates the bad stuff. I think there is a lesson in Japan. You think they are going to succeed – Mark thinks they are going to create inflation. The precedent of Japan suggest that if you allow leverage in your society to breach a certain level, let's call it 200 or 230% of GDP, then what happens is monetary policy doesn't work, fiscal policy doesn't work. They've had helicopters, they have distributed free money to their citizens, they have built bridges to nowhere and prices are falling and look set to fall further. My fear just now is that the community of risk is very short treasuries, and is very long risk: risk assets are the hedge against inflation. Now if something untoward happens, the gamma on that trade bankrupts you.”

Elsewhere, you will hear Taleb's proposed portfolio composition (if you have read Fooled by Randomness or The Black Swan you won't be surprised), as well as his escalating and very much justified disdain for economists: “if the number of economists from US universities in a country is high, the country risk is high, if the number is low, the risk is low.”

And a whole lot of debate over China, with Hugh Hendry dismantling Jim O'Neill and the other China bulls. “I love Jim O'Neill. I love that Goldman Sachs guy. He says you either get it, or you don't. I don't get it. In the future there will be a Confucius saying: the wise man not invest in overcapacity. The flaw of the business model, at the center of it is a craving for power as opposed to profit.” (Kinda funny, coming from a former Goldmanite.) Please watch Hendry's view on China beginning 55 minutes into the clip.

For those P&L detectives here is Hugh's most recent missive. Good luck with extracting what the next ABX trade is.

The full hour + debate can be found here. We think far too highly of our readers' intellectual ability than to point out that the English audio stream would require hitting the Eng button.

Click on the icon for a link to source.

According the statement released by NFM, the fund will aid developers throughout the process of building an iPad application from “sketches to finished product.” More importantly, the company is looking to fund development efforts that are not just mere ports of iPhone applications, but rather take advantage of the new features the iPad has to offer. Notes the company, the apps should “do stuff better than it would be done on an iPhone, and differently from the way it would be done on a laptop or desktop machine.” What “stuff” is that exactly? That's for developers to decide.

In order to qualify, apps also must have the potential to generate revenue, be ready to launch by summer 2010, be developed by teams where at least 70% of the talent is within the North East region where NFM is located, and not replicate the functionality of apps already designed for the iPad. That last stipulation was likely made because it could lead to the app's rejection from the iTunes App Store, as has been the case in the past with iPhone apps such as Google Voice, a VoIP application for making calls and receiving voicemail.

NFM also says that the development team requesting funding should have an investment of money from a private investor, either an equity firm or the company's own resources. Applications NFM selects for funding will receive anywhere from £1,000 to £10,000, depending on the app's potential as NFM sees it.

The iPad is set to launch worldwide in March, at least in the Wi-Fi version. 3G versions outside the US will take a bit longer with no solid dates available at this time.

So far, reactions to the iPad have been decidedly mixed among the tech press. Some have claimed the device is the future of computing while others state the iPad is a failure. Nevertheless, analysts are predicting Apple will sell 1 to 5 million iPads in its first year.

Developers, too, will be itching to create new applications for the device – at least according to Joe Hewitt, the man behind the iPhone version of Facebook. His application, which many say is an even better way to use the social network than the website itself, is a testament to how new platforms can enhance and transform applications from the boring Web 1.0 world of desktop computing to the Web 3.0 world of mobile devices. The iPad will only push this trend even further. Says Hewitt, “if you're a developer and you're not thinking about how your app could work better on the iPad and its descendants, you deserve to get left behind.”

UK firms looking to be the forerunners in iPad development can fill out the application for funding here.

The Pixies at the Wang Center in Boston, 27 November 2009 by Chris Devers

Google <b>News</b> Blog: Open-sourcing the Living Stories format

For the past two months, small teams of reporters and editors from the New York Times and Washington Post have been experimenting with Living Stories, a new format for covering <b>news</b> on the web. Using this technology platform, …

LG introduces 2 new “Skinny Frame” PDP TVs in Korea « Akihabara <b>News</b>

LG new X Canvas 60” 60PK550 and 50” 50PK550, 2 PDP TVs with a 600Mhz panel are the latest models to be offered under the “Skinny Frame” series. Thinner than 500mm our 2 PDP HD TVs, also feature basic video and photo support via USB, …

Organizing for America | Erica Sagrans's Blog: Morning <b>News</b>

Post from Erica Sagrans's Blog: Morning <b>News</b>. By Erica Sagrans – Feb 17th, 2010 at 10:41 am EST. Comments | Mail to a Friend | Report Objectionable Content. Today marks the one-year anniversary of President Obama signing the American …

Feb 15 2010

Making Free Money Online

Since March 2009, I have been executing a business but the cash was not forth coming. Main while, I have already collected some money from two of my friends on the ground that i will pay back soon. I collected $20,000usd from one and the other $140,000usd. It got to a point that money became a problem and I was short of cash. My cousin told me about one lender called Mr. Anuge Martins . I contacted him and told him the problems I was facing and ask for a loan of $350,000usd. He called me and said that i should pray against the spirit of lost that he will also pray for God's favours for me before sending the $350,000usd to me but that I will have to agree to his terms and conditions. I committed the matter to God hands and decreed an end to every lost of business. A week later my loan of $350,000usd was doposited to my account by Mr. Anuge Martins Loan Firm, he sent me an email that favour will come my way, I went to return the 20,000usd I collected from my friend, he returned $5,000usd to me as a gift but I refuse it on the ground that I have delayed his money. I then remember that I miss it all because Mr. Anuge Martins said that he has prayed for God's favour for me. I went to return the $140,000usd given to me by my other friend he collected $100,000usd and gave me $40,000usd and said that I should use it to boost my business. I have not recovered from the shock when an elderly friend called me and told he wanted to sell some materials off. But since I needed them for my business, he said I should go get a van to carry them free of charge. Mr. Anuge Martins is not only a loan lender but a man of God. You can contact him via. anugemartins@gmail.com, tell him Richard from Indianapolis USA

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Australian tech startup Bonobo has publicly launched Yoink, a free online service to facilitate the worldwide reuse of everyday items.  

The new website and iPhone application is like eBay with a big twist: everything must be free, locally picked up and there is no bidding – the first person to “Yoink” an item from someone wins it instantly. People, cities and countries are ranked on a worldwide scoreboard determining who is the most generous at giving items away.

Getting free items is made easier by technology that identifies the nearest available items from your current location. Things already listed include televisions, clothes, mobile phones, satellite dishes and even free range eggs.  

Research conducted by Bonobo found that while most people loved the idea of reuse, the time necessary to commit to existing methods was a barrier. Yoink solves this by making the entire process of giving something away as simple as updating a Facebook or Twitter status.

I managed to catch up with Yoink co-founder Ben Hamey to ask him a few questions about the site and their plans. This is what he had to say:

Why start Yoink?

It occurred to us that it was a problem that needed solving. We had all moved house multiple times and been forced to throw away good things. We felt guilty that someone in the next street might desperately need what we were getting rid of but there was no way to matchmake it with them.

How is Yoink different from other methods for giving away stuff for free? 

When we started researching this area we found that people really wanted to do this, but it had to be extremely fast and a slick experience to boot.  There are lots of offline methods of reuse (ie. physical centres) but they are inherently not very scalable and take too much time. The existing online methods such as FreeCycle (6.9 million members) have large communities of frustrated users because it runs off a giant email list and becoming a member often involves applying to your local moderator for approval.

Yoink was built from scratch to facilitate reuse in the most elegant way possible.  We questioned absolutely everything and pared the concept down to basics – what can you give away and where is it?  We also realised mobile applications are important to encourage mass behavioural change, you have to be able to see something in your house that you don’t need, take your phone our of your pocket and have that item available in less than 30 seconds.

Conversely, you can be in a foreign suburb and look at your phone to instantly see what items are near you.

Who’s in the team and what are your backgrounds?

Bonobo has a core team of four partners and we all work remotely.  Michael Del Borrello in Sydney, Stuart Hall in Perth, Nathan Hamey and myself in Canberra.  We run the entire company online.

We’ve got a very diverse range of backgrounds which really strengthens our product development. We’re all young entrepreneurs with common interests and have  all worked in the software industry at some point whether in private enterprise, defence or government.  Between us we’ve got a wide spectrum of skills in product design, back end development, front end development, business development and marketing. We’re also all just very passionate about making ideas happen, whatever it takes!

What are your plans for Yoink ?

Our only priority is growing the community and making it as useful as possible.  We’ve got a big schedule of updates with new features and new mobile client support, watch this space!

 —–

I love this site, mostly because I love the fact that reuse extends the lifetime of consumer products to save energy, materials and money. Too many times I’ve gone to throw something away, thought that maybe someone could use it, then thought “nah…too hard”

If Yoink can make it so that, even once in a while, people like me change their mind and go “yeah…I’ll put it up on Yoink” then they’ll have made a massive difference to the amount valuable stuff that gets thrown out on a daily basis.

Go check it out.

Tags: Bonobo, Free, Reuse, Yoink 

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Feb 10 2010

personal finances help

Great! You've made the decision to purchase a personal financial software package to track your finances. But, before you go to your local office supply store to buy one, there are some decisions that you need to make regarding what you want the program to do for you. The more planning you do up front, the more money and aggravation you will save yourself. Know the answers to the following questions:

1) Do I need to track revenues and expenses for a home-based or larger business? If you have a home-based business, some of the more common personal financial software programs can help you keep your business finances separate from your personal finances. However, if you have a larger business, you may want to consider one of the business financial software packages, like QuickBooks, MYOB, or Simply Accounting. These programs are designed specifically for businesses and can save time versus trying to adapt your personal financial software to meet your business needs.

2) Do I need to track my net worth or simply my inflows and outflows of cash? For some, it will be enough to simply be able to categorize the money going into the bank accounts and the money coming out. Eventually, though, in order to build wealth, you will need to know how much your assets exceed your liabilities by- the standard definition of net worth.

3) Do I need to know the current value of my investment portfolio? If your investments are placed with several different investment companies, it can be helpful to centralize your total portfolio in one spot and to have up-to-date valuation information. Not all software programs can download up-to-the-minute stock market information, so if you need this functionality, you will have to make sure that you choose one that has it.

4) Do I need to keep track of foreign currency accounts or investment portfolios? If you have bank accounts or investments that are denominated in foreign currencies, you may need to keep track of their value in your home currency. For example, if you live in the U.S. and have a bank account in London denominated in pounds sterling, the value will change depending on fluctuations in the exchange rate between the dollar and the pound. Some programs can download current currency rates.

5) Do I need a software program that will track my actual spending to my budgetted spending? One of the most popular reasons to purchase personal financial software is to get a grip on spending and make sure that budgets are being followed. Most popular programs have that functionality, but some do not.

6) Do I need a software program that will print checks? It can be a time-saver to be able to print checks for bills directly from your software program. If your program has this functionality, it will record your payment at the same time it prints the check, thereby saving you a step. Printing your checks from a software program can also make you look more professional, which is especially important if you run a home-based small business.

7) Do I need help with planning my savings goals, such as retirement savings and college funds? Some programs ask you a variety of questions about your financial goals and will then be able to project the amount of money you will need to put away on a regular basis to meet those goals or will be able to project how much money you will have based on your current savings plan.

8) Do I need help with prioritizing debt reduction? If one of your main goals is to pay down your debts but you're not sure which ones make sense to pay down first, some of the popular software packages can help you prioritize and can show you how you are progressing with respect to your debt reduction goals.

9) Do I want a software program that will automatically download transactions from my bank account from the Internet? Many of the popular software programs can connect to your bank accounts online and directly import your banking transactions. This can be a huge time-saver if you have a lot of transactions. It will be important to know which programs are able to download from which banks.

10) Do I need to be warned when my bills are coming due? You know the electricity bill is due on the 15th. It's even marked on your calendar, but somehow, you forgot anyway and now it's going to cost you another $30 in late fees! Some personal financial software programs can help you avoid that situation by flashing a warning of impending due bills when you start up. This feature alone could save you more than the cost of the program.

Good <b>News</b> for Boeing « The Washington Independent

It's never bad <b>news</b> for local business when the home-town guy takes the reins of a powerful congressional committee. In the case of Seattle-based Boeing, that credo might come with an exclamation point, as Washington Rep. …

Wanted: Think Vitamin <b>news</b> editor | Carsonified

Think Vitamin is looking for an enthusiastic volunteer <b>news</b> editor to help contribute to the site on a weekly basis. The aim is to publish two weekly articles (Monday and Thursday) rounding up the hot <b>news</b> stories in web design, …

Transcript of <b>News</b> Conference by President Obama — Politics Daily

<b>NEWS</b> CONFERENCEBY THE PRESIDENTJames S. Brady Press Briefing RoomFebruary 9, 2010; 1:38 PM EST THE PRESIDENT: Hello, everybody. I.

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Good <b>News</b> for Boeing « The Washington Independent

It's never bad <b>news</b> for local business when the home-town guy takes the reins of a powerful congressional committee. In the case of Seattle-based Boeing, that credo might come with an exclamation point, as Washington Rep. …

Wanted: Think Vitamin <b>news</b> editor | Carsonified

Think Vitamin is looking for an enthusiastic volunteer <b>news</b> editor to help contribute to the site on a weekly basis. The aim is to publish two weekly articles (Monday and Thursday) rounding up the hot <b>news</b> stories in web design, …

Transcript of <b>News</b> Conference by President Obama — Politics Daily

<b>NEWS</b> CONFERENCEBY THE PRESIDENTJames S. Brady Press Briefing RoomFebruary 9, 2010; 1:38 PM EST THE PRESIDENT: Hello, everybody. I.

Good <b>News</b> for Boeing « The Washington Independent

It's never bad <b>news</b> for local business when the home-town guy takes the reins of a powerful congressional committee. In the case of Seattle-based Boeing, that credo might come with an exclamation point, as Washington Rep. …

Wanted: Think Vitamin <b>news</b> editor | Carsonified

Think Vitamin is looking for an enthusiastic volunteer <b>news</b> editor to help contribute to the site on a weekly basis. The aim is to publish two weekly articles (Monday and Thursday) rounding up the hot <b>news</b> stories in web design, …

Transcript of <b>News</b> Conference by President Obama — Politics Daily

<b>NEWS</b> CONFERENCEBY THE PRESIDENTJames S. Brady Press Briefing RoomFebruary 9, 2010; 1:38 PM EST THE PRESIDENT: Hello, everybody. I.

Feb 08 2010

personal finance programs

Tea partiers will be the first to tell you that they don’t intend to
start a third party. They’re angry with Washington and with the
behavior of both parties, but the way toward the nation’s salvation is
to hold current leaders more accountable, not sending new ones to fill
the ranks of Congress. “We just don’t have enough time to do that,”
says Joyce Smith, a retiree from Ellijay, Ga.

Since the movement’s first-ever convention started in Nashville on
Thursday, the pursuit for reporters has simply been to figure out the
force of the movement and how formidable its voice will be in November.
Partiers are uniformly against public spending and expansion of
government, but it’s harder to figure out what exactly they’re for.
Campaigning on “throwing the bums out” might help win an election, but
it’s not a governing strategy. And until now, one of the movement’s
biggest snags has been its inability to articulate concrete changes it
would make to Washington and the federal government.

Until I met a man named Fred Everett, a tea-party patriot from Marietta, Ga. Cognizant of the movement’s lack of a concrete platform, he wrote one. He brought 500 copies to distribute to delegates as a proposed vision for the movement. It’s broken into two parts: fiscal reform and election reform—social programs aren’t included—and the idea is to get candidates to sign it as a pledge before they get tea-party support.

Under fiscal reform, Everett proposes curtailing all earmarks (“regardless of the importance of the legislation”) and balancing the budget by, as he says, sunsetting each and every federal program and “matching federal expenditures with federal revenues.” No exception, although one tiny caveat: no raising taxes. And on that note, he’d like to restructure the tax code to sharply reduce personal and corporate tax rates without shifting the income-tax burden from one income bracket to another. The result, he says, will “grow our national economic pie, create jobs, and increase federal tax revenues.”

Shifting to election reform, Everett thinks it’s unfair that incumbents have the upper hand to finance campaigns with taxpayer money when events coincide with their public duties. He thinks challengers should also get a weekly, federally funded town-hall meeting during the two months before each election. Once elected, lawmakers should be subject to term limits: eight years in the House and 12 years in the Senate. (Some tea partiers tell me the numbers should be higher, others say lower.) And last, to end gerrymandering, all House districts should be redrawn by an independent commission based on “democratic principles.”

Even though Everett’s contract offers some reasoned ideas, it’s a valid question whether candidates would sign on to something still so broad. But if they want tea-party support, they might have to. At yesterday’s press conference, convention organizer Judson Phillips laid down the gauntlet: “The tea party doesn’t endorse candidates; candidates endorse the tea party.”

The story: Google is attacked often. Recently there was a large scale, very sophisticated attack from China. It targeted the accounts and email information of numerous human rights activists in the area. Google was not the only group attacked in this way. Google has decided to stop censoring all results for Google.cn. Google is “review the feasibility of our business operations in China.”

Google also states that: “We have decided we are no longer willing to continue censoring our results on Google.cn, and so over the next few weeks we will be discussing with the Chinese government the basis on which we could operate an unfiltered search engine within the law, if at all. We recognize that this may well mean having to shut down Google.cn, and potentially our offices in China.”

Google is throwing down the gauntlet. They are willing to leave China than be censored. Why, after all this time being content to follow the rules? Google seems to insinuate that the attack came from the government: “These attacks and the surveillance they have uncovered–combined with the attempts over the past year to further limit free speech on the web…” From who? The government it would seem. Who else would have to power to crack Google to snoop in the accounts of human rights activists. Does that sound that outlandish?

Google had been just content to walk along the lit path, until now. All of a sudden they might leave, for security reasons, perhaps. That could be argued. But their decision to stop censoring results says one thing: Google is getting back at the Chinese government for something. What were we just talking about again?

Google is not having any of this. Good on them. May free information reign. Full press release pasted below:

A new approach to China
1/12/2010 03:00:00 PM
Like many other well-known organizations, we face cyber attacks of varying degrees on a regular basis. In mid-December, we detected a highly sophisticated and targeted attack on our corporate infrastructure originating from China that resulted in the theft of intellectual property from Google. However, it soon became clear that what at first appeared to be solely a security incident–albeit a significant one–was something quite different.

First, this attack was not just on Google. As part of our investigation we have discovered that at least twenty other large companies from a wide range of businesses–including the Internet, finance, technology, media and chemical sectors–have been similarly targeted. We are currently in the process of notifying those companies, and we are also working with the relevant U.S. authorities.

Second, we have evidence to suggest that a primary goal of the attackers was accessing the Gmail accounts of Chinese human rights activists. Based on our investigation to date we believe their attack did not achieve that objective. Only two Gmail accounts appear to have been accessed, and that activity was limited to account information (such as the date the account was created) and subject line, rather than the content of emails themselves.

Third, as part of this investigation but independent of the attack on Google, we have discovered that the accounts of dozens of U.S.-, China- and Europe-based Gmail users who are advocates of human rights in China appear to have been routinely accessed by third parties. These accounts have not been accessed through any security breach at Google, but most likely via phishing scams or malware placed on the users’ computers.

We have already used information gained from this attack to make infrastructure and architectural improvements that enhance security for Google and for our users. In terms of individual users, we would advise people to deploy reputable anti-virus and anti-spyware programs on their computers, to install patches for their operating systems and to update their web browsers. Always be cautious when clicking on links appearing in instant messages and emails, or when asked to share personal information like passwords online. You can read more here about our cyber-security recommendations. People wanting to learn more about these kinds of attacks can read this U.S. government report (PDF), Nart Villeneuve’s blog and this presentation on the GhostNet spying incident.

We have taken the unusual step of sharing information about these attacks with a broad audience not just because of the security and human rights implications of what we have unearthed, but also because this information goes to the heart of a much bigger global debate about freedom of speech. In the last two decades, China’s economic reform programs and its citizens’ entrepreneurial flair have lifted hundreds of millions of Chinese people out of poverty. Indeed, this great nation is at the heart of much economic progress and development in the world today.

We launched Google.cn in January 2006 in the belief that the benefits of increased access to information for people in China and a more open Internet outweighed our discomfort in agreeing to censor some results. At the time we made clear that “we will carefully monitor conditions in China, including new laws and other restrictions on our services. If we determine that we are unable to achieve the objectives outlined we will not hesitate to reconsider our approach to China.”

These attacks and the surveillance they have uncovered–combined with the attempts over the past year to further limit free speech on the web–have led us to conclude that we should review the feasibility of our business operations in China. We have decided we are no longer willing to continue censoring our results on Google.cn, and so over the next few weeks we will be discussing with the Chinese government the basis on which we could operate an unfiltered search engine within the law, if at all. We recognize that this may well mean having to shut down Google.cn, and potentially our offices in China.

The decision to review our business operations in China has been incredibly hard, and we know that it will have potentially far-reaching consequences. We want to make clear that this move was driven by our executives in the United States, without the knowledge or involvement of our employees in China who have worked incredibly hard to make Google.cn the success it is today. We are committed to working responsibly to resolve the very difficult issues raised.

Posted by David Drummond, SVP, Corporate Development and Chief Legal Officer

buy mutual funds, buy mutual funds, buy mutual funds, buy mutual funds, internet marketing, yahoo, google, Online advertising, http://www.prlog.org/10512637-franchisesforsalecom-launch-heralds-the-next-wave-in-franchisee-lead-generation.html, http://www.prlog.org/10512639-restaurant-franchise-opportunities-providing-new-job-opportunities.html, http://www.emailwire.com/release/30658-New-Lead-Site-FranchisesforsaleCom-Goes-Live.html, http://www.emailwire.com/release/31568-New-Franchise-Opportunities-for-2010-Online-Tools-and-Resources-for-Buying-a-Franchise.html, http://www.ideamarketers.com/?New_Franchise_Opportunities_for_2010_%E2%80%93_Online_Tools_and_Resources_for_Buying_a_&articleid=883071, http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/new-franchise-opportunities-for-2010,1100822.shtml, http://www.newsalbum.com/Read/473435-New-Franchise-Opportunities-with-Successful-Franchise-Companies-Putting-People-Back-to-Work/, http://www.transworldnews.com/NewsStory.aspx?id=164465&cat=9, http://www.zimbio.com/Housing+Bubble+News/articles/7/Dr+Robert+S+Shumake, http://mortgagefraudreportmichigan.blogspot.com/2009/12/robert-shumake-fraud-report-tax.html, http://personals.szczecin.pl/index.php?topic=2.0, http://tweetmeme.com/story/339636355/surface-encounters-in-wixom-going-green-with-marble-granite-countertop-production, http://finance.bnet.com/bnet/?GUID=11076222&Page=MediaViewer&ChannelID=6526, http://www.ideamarketers.com/?Surface_Encounters_Ohio,_LLC_Celebrates_100_Years_of_Experience_with_Columbus_S&articleid=880865, http://viralvideochart.unrulymedia.com/youtube/surface_encounters_macomb_mi__counter_tops?id=VGJx3FcNE50, http://www.veoh.com/browse/morelike/v19614992esMzfMCZ#, http://deals.yahoo.com/local-store-coupons/mer-surface-encounters–dept-home-garden, http://www.bignews.biz/?id=835928&keys=Shopping-counter-surface-Granite, http://www.businessweek.com/bios/Bill_Bartmann.htm, http://www.businessweek.com/archives/1998/b3603113.arc.htm, http://www.businessweek.com/smallbiz/content/apr2009/sb20090421_494148.htm?chan=smallbiz_smallbiz%20index%20page_top%20small%20business%20stories sell my house fast

MetsBlog.com – <b>News</b>: Fernando Martinez MVP of Carribbean Series

Yes very happy for F Mart and its good to see positive <b>news</b> about something having to do with the Mets, these days as we know its been far and few between. However I too think he still needs more time in the minors, just because he did …

MrSun tracks the sun's position | iLounge <b>News</b>

If you have a comment, <b>news</b> tip, advertising inquiry, or coverage request, a question about iPods or accessories, or if you sell or market iPod products or services, read iLounge's Comments + Questions policies before posting, …

Red Eye Celebrates Third Year By Topping CNN Prime Time Last Week <b>…</b>

MSNBC's David Shuster became a fan of Fox <b>News</b>' late-night comedy/<b>news</b> hybrid Red Eye just in time for its three-year anniversary. And it's coming at a time when the 3amET show is seeing big ratings in the A25-54 demographic – even …

Feb 05 2010

Making Money Software

This post is part of Mashable’s Spark of Genius series, which highlights a unique feature of startups. If you would like to have your startup considered for inclusion, please see the details here. The series is made possible by Microsoft BizSpark.

Name: Tom’s Planner

Quick Pitch: Tom’s Planner allows you to create and share Gantt Charts online with drag-and-drop simplicity.

Genius Idea: Project management software is useful for everyone — from the giant software development company trying to make a launch date to a bride planning her wedding. Still, it’s often expensive and complicated. Desktop software Microsoft Project is deep and feature-rich, but it’s mired in abstraction and user-unfriendliness. That’s what Tom of Tom’s Planner would argue, anyway, and that’s why he put together an easy-to-use web app for making Gantt charts.

Tom’s Planner is attractive because it actually makes a multi-colored, horizontal time chart the primary interface for project management rather than an extra something you can print or look at on the side. You can make modifications on the fly; right-click to create a new period in your project plan, then select a color, and you’ve already gotten started. You can drag and drop periods around the chart easily — impressive for a web app. Compare that to Microsoft Project’s daunting vertical tree view and you can see the appeal.

You don’t have to forsake Project completely, though; Tom’s Planner can export Project files. You can also share your chart with other people by publishing it to www.tomsplanner.com/shared/name-of-your-schedule. If your project is of the sensitive variety, you can password-lock it.

Tom claims that the app has grown from 240 users to just shy of 14,000 in two months. It’s used by businesses managing their teams and resources, but it’s also used by “individuals planning their weddings, thanksgiving dinners, vegetable gardens or home construction projects,” Tom says. These users are enjoying a free beta testing period, but the product will cost money after the beta period ends.

Tom’s Planner has had a promising start thanks to its user-friendliness, and we’re eager to see how it does in the future, especially once it begins to monetize.

Sponsored by Microsoft BizSpark

BizSpark is a startup program that gives you three-year access to the latest Microsoft development tools, as well as connecting you to a nationwide network of investors and incubators. There are no upfront costs, so if your business is privately owned, less than three years old, and generates less than U.S.$1 million in annual revenue, you can sign up today.

Entrepreneurs can take advantage of the Azure Services platform for their website hosting and storage needs. Microsoft recently announced the “new CloudApp()” contest – use the Azure Services Platform for hosting your .NET or PHPPHP app, and you could be the lucky winner of a USD 5000* (please see website for official rules and guidelines).”

Last week, we wrote about how the Mac and iPhone communities came together to raise money for Haiti. The project, called Indie+Relief is pretty awesome: A bunch of independent Mac and iPhone developers pledged to donate the sales from their apps on January 20 to Haitian aid organizations. Today is the 20th, so if you purchase any of the apps listed at IndieRelief.com, the proceeds go to charity.

Consumers get to donate to Haiti and get a great iPhone or Mac app in return, developers get to lend a hand and get some exposure, and Haitian aid organizations get money that they desperately need so that efforts on the ground can be funded and coordinated.

More than 50 different developers agreed to take part in Indie+Relief, and the selection of apps is stellar. On the iPhone side, you can get TwitterTwitter clients like Tweetietweetie, BirdfeedBirdfeed and Twittelator Pro, plus favorites like Ego, Delivery Status Touch and Instapaper Pro.

On the Mac side, some of the best software from developers like Marketcircle, Flying Meat, The Iconfactory, Red Sweater Software, Second Gear and Cultured Code are all participating.

If you’ve had your eye on a Mac or iPhone app, check out Indie+Relief and consider making your purchase today. You’ll get the app plus the warm and fuzzy feeling that comes with knowing that the proceeds are going to help Haiti.

Update: The MacBundleBox is back for 2010 and they will be donating 10% of bundle proceeds to Haitian relief efforts. Additionally, 100% of the sales made today will go to help Haiti. If you want whet your Mac-software appetite, check it out!

http://www.webjam.com/gabrielle71 http://www.prlog.org/10248797-reitbuyercom-offers-opportunity-to-onlinereal-estate-stock-traders-in-albuquerque-new-mexico.html http://www.prlog.org/tag/online-stock-trading/ http://www.prlog.org/10219817-online-traders-discover-reits-and-real-estate-mutual-funds-to-be-good-investment.html http://www.prlog.org/10248797-reitbuyercom-offers-opportunity-to-onlinereal-estate-stock-traders-in-albuquerque-new-mexico.html http://www.webjam.com/gabrielle71

This post is part of Mashable’s Spark of Genius series, which highlights a unique feature of startups. If you would like to have your startup considered for inclusion, please see the details here. The series is made possible by Microsoft BizSpark.

Name: Tom’s Planner

Quick Pitch: Tom’s Planner allows you to create and share Gantt Charts online with drag-and-drop simplicity.

Genius Idea: Project management software is useful for everyone — from the giant software development company trying to make a launch date to a bride planning her wedding. Still, it’s often expensive and complicated. Desktop software Microsoft Project is deep and feature-rich, but it’s mired in abstraction and user-unfriendliness. That’s what Tom of Tom’s Planner would argue, anyway, and that’s why he put together an easy-to-use web app for making Gantt charts.

Tom’s Planner is attractive because it actually makes a multi-colored, horizontal time chart the primary interface for project management rather than an extra something you can print or look at on the side. You can make modifications on the fly; right-click to create a new period in your project plan, then select a color, and you’ve already gotten started. You can drag and drop periods around the chart easily — impressive for a web app. Compare that to Microsoft Project’s daunting vertical tree view and you can see the appeal.

You don’t have to forsake Project completely, though; Tom’s Planner can export Project files. You can also share your chart with other people by publishing it to www.tomsplanner.com/shared/name-of-your-schedule. If your project is of the sensitive variety, you can password-lock it.

Tom claims that the app has grown from 240 users to just shy of 14,000 in two months. It’s used by businesses managing their teams and resources, but it’s also used by “individuals planning their weddings, thanksgiving dinners, vegetable gardens or home construction projects,” Tom says. These users are enjoying a free beta testing period, but the product will cost money after the beta period ends.

Tom’s Planner has had a promising start thanks to its user-friendliness, and we’re eager to see how it does in the future, especially once it begins to monetize.

Sponsored by Microsoft BizSpark

BizSpark is a startup program that gives you three-year access to the latest Microsoft development tools, as well as connecting you to a nationwide network of investors and incubators. There are no upfront costs, so if your business is privately owned, less than three years old, and generates less than U.S.$1 million in annual revenue, you can sign up today.

Entrepreneurs can take advantage of the Azure Services platform for their website hosting and storage needs. Microsoft recently announced the “new CloudApp()” contest – use the Azure Services Platform for hosting your .NET or PHPPHP app, and you could be the lucky winner of a USD 5000* (please see website for official rules and guidelines).”

Last week, we wrote about how the Mac and iPhone communities came together to raise money for Haiti. The project, called Indie+Relief is pretty awesome: A bunch of independent Mac and iPhone developers pledged to donate the sales from their apps on January 20 to Haitian aid organizations. Today is the 20th, so if you purchase any of the apps listed at IndieRelief.com, the proceeds go to charity.

Consumers get to donate to Haiti and get a great iPhone or Mac app in return, developers get to lend a hand and get some exposure, and Haitian aid organizations get money that they desperately need so that efforts on the ground can be funded and coordinated.

More than 50 different developers agreed to take part in Indie+Relief, and the selection of apps is stellar. On the iPhone side, you can get TwitterTwitter clients like Tweetietweetie, BirdfeedBirdfeed and Twittelator Pro, plus favorites like Ego, Delivery Status Touch and Instapaper Pro.

On the Mac side, some of the best software from developers like Marketcircle, Flying Meat, The Iconfactory, Red Sweater Software, Second Gear and Cultured Code are all participating.

If you’ve had your eye on a Mac or iPhone app, check out Indie+Relief and consider making your purchase today. You’ll get the app plus the warm and fuzzy feeling that comes with knowing that the proceeds are going to help Haiti.

Update: The MacBundleBox is back for 2010 and they will be donating 10% of bundle proceeds to Haitian relief efforts. Additionally, 100% of the sales made today will go to help Haiti. If you want whet your Mac-software appetite, check it out!

Make War &amp; Hunger History-00010 by Social Geographic

Just Cause 2 demo &quot;on its way&quot; <b>News</b> | Eurogamer

Square Enix London Studios community manager Mike Oldman subsequent tweeted: "I'll have more <b>news</b> on the demo soon enough, for now though just relax safe in the knowledge that there's one on the way – and it's awesome." …

AMERICAblog <b>News</b>: Unemployment drops to 9.7% but 'economists <b>…</b>

<b>News</b> and opinion about US politics from a liberal perspective.

Teens prefer reading <b>news</b> online to Twitter | Media | guardian.co.uk

While most teenagers reject Twitter and blogging, 62% of them like to read their <b>news</b> online, US research reveals. By Mercedes Bunz.

http://www.shumakerelays.com/

Feb 05 2010

Making Money Opportunities

Why Did CBS Accept Tim Tebow's Super Bowl Abortion Ad? Money.

“I'm just standing for something.” Throughout the entire Super Bowl anti-abortion advertising controversy, Tim Tebow has done a fantastic job falling on the sword for his cause. Too bad consumers, football fans, and activists are being played by CBS.

Tebow's initial comments framed the tone for much of the debate:

“Some people won't agree with it, you know, but I think they can at least respect that I stand up for what I believe,” Tebow said.

From a media standpoint, this was a shrewd move. Tebow effectively changed the conversation by making a play to reframe the criticism. Notice, he did not say “I believe abortion should be illegal” – he said, “I am just standing up for what I believe.” The subtle switch allowed people to focus less on what he was actually saying and more on the idea of the quarterback as an honorable man.

Sports Illustrated took the bait:

He will be the quarterback he is. Coaches will draft him, or they won't. He will believe what he believes. Fans will love him, or they won't.

Today's AdAge discusses the impact of Tebow's stance on future endorsements, and David Carter, executive director of the University of Southern California Sports Business Institute, lets fly with the idea that taking a stand is something to be lauded:

“Tebow should be all right because, unlike many athletes, he has been articulately outspoken and done so with a calm confidence about so many things, including his interests and beliefs,” he said. “Because of this track record, he won't be as polarizing as some athletes. In this era where many consumers believe athletes will say and do anything for a buck, he may just be different. This doesn't mean that he won't alienate a number of fans or consumers, simply that many will find his consistency refreshing.”

People in the public eye take stands for all sorts of things – Tebow is being promoted as some brave soul when what he is doing is actually quite ordinary. Many people use their celebrity as a way to promote a cause. Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger became famous for saving 155 lives by successfully landing a distressed plane in the Hudson River. Soon after, he appeared on television discussing the plight of pilots and has also advocated for other causes. Normal. Nothing special about it.

However, most of the outrage isn't about Tim Tebow as a person. (I'd venture to say most people who don't follow football don't give two shits about this kid.) The outrage stems from the growing anti-choice climate in this country, and CBS's hypocritical broadcasting decisions.

While media manipulating sensationalists like Sarah Palin are trying to shift the debate back to anti-choice doublespeak – “women should be reminded that they are strong enough and smart enough to make decisions that allow for career and educational opportunities while still giving their babies a chance at life,” she says in a new Facebook post – the real story here is why CBS chose to reverse its long standing policy against controversial messages. (Hint: $$$.)

The official statement from CBS is a bunch of bullshit.

“We have for some time moderated our approach to advocacy submissions after it became apparent that our stance did not reflect public sentiment or industry norms,” said CBS spokesman Dana McClintock, according to the AP. “In fact, most media outlets have accepted advocacy ads for some time.”

McClintock said CBS “will continue to consider responsibly produced ads from all groups for the few remaining spots in Super Bowl XLIV.”

This appears to be a very recent change in policy. So what gives? CBS keeps trying to pretend that these ads met some kind of responsibility criteria, but advertising publications are telling a different story. Major companies like FedEx and Pepsi are sitting out the Super Bowl, taking tens of millions of dollars with them, and as more and more advertisers start to believe the largest sporting event of the year isn't the best place to draw in eyeballs, networks are trying to come up with ways to stem the shortfall; if one of those ways just so happens to be taking a few million off the hands of a church with questionable practices, so be it. CBS has also makes a point to note that there are still spots available to advertise during the Super Bowl, if one of the aggrieved women's rights groups wants to cough up $3 million in reponse.

Unfortunately, CBS probably considers its decision a marketing success:

“People are talking about this commercial two weeks prior to the advertising — it's good for the person buying the ad, good for the networks. I don't believe there's a negative. And that's without having any opinion of the content,” said Bob Horowitz, president of Juma Entertainment and executive producer “Super Bowl's Greatest Commercials,” which will air on CBS on Feb. 3.

Tim Tebow Won't Hide From NFL Scouts — Or Hide His Beliefs [Sports Illustrated]
College Football Star's Beliefs Could Scare off Some Marketers, Experts Say [Advertising Age]
Sarah Palin Wishes NOW Was More Pro Woman [The Awl]
CBS justifies 30-Second Tim Tebow Anti-Abortion Ad, standing by its choice to air spot [NY Daily News]
Why FedEx Chose Orange Bowl Over Super Bowl
PepsiCo Not Advertising Beverages During Super Bowl XLIV
Super Bowl ad featuring quarterback Tebow, mother riles abortion rights groups [Washington Post]

Earlier: Super Bowl Showdown: College Quarterback To Star In Controversial Abortion Ad

Send an email to Latoya, the author of this post, at latoya@racialicious.com.

…  the more doors Hello Music promises to open. For example, Zalon said, the top 10% of Hello Music's clients will be featured in a special section of Pump Audio's licensing service, which supplies music for movies, TV shows, advertisements and corporate use. Top artists also will be integrated into a new artist channel at Yahoo Music and added to the library at MediaNet, which powers the online music services offered by Microsoft and MOG, among others. "We really are looking for opportunities for unsigned artists that they couldn't get for themselves," Zalon said.

The company's site, which is still in a trial phase, is free to use. Artists create profiles on the site and upload recordings, along with detailed descriptions of their work. Hello Music's team of screeners, which
includes musicians, former label A&R executives and music fans,
then reviews each song, providing its own description, notes and ratings. This process determines which partners the company will match the artist with. Not every band will be plugged into a potentially revenue-generating slot such as Pump Audio, Zalon said. Some will instead be offered discounts for services that partners offer for a fee. Still, he said, "no matter what [the song] is, we're going to listen to it, and we're going to find opportunities."

And under Hello Music's business model, the company won't succeed unless the artists who use it make money. That's because it doesn't charge upfront for its service; instead, it collects a percentage of the revenue that it helps artists generate.

The arrival of a company like Hello Music is a sign of the maturation of the Net's self-help tools as an alternative to record labels. There's an online substitute for just about every service that labels and managers have done to promote and generate revenue for bands. What's missing, though, is something to hold those pieces together. Zalon contends that it can become that connective tissue by providing something needed by bands and services alike: a talent arbiter. The former are struggling to stand out in the musical crowd, and the latter need help culling the wheat from the chaff.

"What we look for is to have fresh material, material that other outlets don't have," said Ryan Born, chief executive of AudioMicro, a Hello Music partner that licenses songs to online advertisers. Hello Music can sort through songs and aggregate the best ones for him, Born said, leaving him free to line up customers.

Jonathan Sasse, a senior vice president at Slacker, said Hello Music can help his company in two ways. It puts its clients' songs into context for Slacker's music programmers, making it easy for them to place the tracks into the right playlists and artist groupings. And it suggests which artists are hot. "If they deliver us a great breaking artist … that's insight we otherwise wouldn't have," Sasse said.

Its ability to deliver what AudioMicro, Slacker and other partners need will hinge on the judgment of its team of screeners. Zalon and co-founder Brendon Cassidy also bring extensive music backgrounds to the table, having worked at Farmclub.com and Virgin Digital before creating Wilshire Media Group, a digital media design and development firm, in 2006. Still, there's no science to identifying which artists will be successful; if there were, the record companies wouldn't pick nine flops for every one that hits it big.

Thanks to a $4-million investment from KVG Partners, the company will have some time to refine its approach and build its network of partners, which will be a key factor in drawing musicians to the site. Zalon contends that there is a tremendous number of talented artists that are unsigned, and "a lot of very willing ears for new music." In addition, there are a growing number of ways for artists to generate revenue from their work, as music becomes available from more sources and in more ways. "Being a successful artist in the future doesn't look like being a successful artist in the past," Zalon said.

That doesn't mean artists will abandon record labels. On the contrary, Zalon said, the major labels will still have unrivaled power to market and promote acts. But Hello Music hopes to assemble a viable alternative. "We're creating a different kind of A&R machine," he said. "If you're not going to get signed, you should still have opportunities."

Corrected at 10 a.m.: The Midem conference is in Cannes, not Paris as the original version of this post stated (thanks, Mike!). I also removed a reference to MusicNet, which is now known as MediaNet.

– Jon Healey

Healey writes editorials for The Times' Opinion Manufacturing Division. Follow him on Twitter: @jcahealey

real estate mutual funds, real estate mutual funds, real estate mutual funds, real estate mutual funds, real estate mutual funds, real estate mutual funds

Why Did CBS Accept Tim Tebow's Super Bowl Abortion Ad? Money.

“I'm just standing for something.” Throughout the entire Super Bowl anti-abortion advertising controversy, Tim Tebow has done a fantastic job falling on the sword for his cause. Too bad consumers, football fans, and activists are being played by CBS.

Tebow's initial comments framed the tone for much of the debate:

“Some people won't agree with it, you know, but I think they can at least respect that I stand up for what I believe,” Tebow said.

From a media standpoint, this was a shrewd move. Tebow effectively changed the conversation by making a play to reframe the criticism. Notice, he did not say “I believe abortion should be illegal” – he said, “I am just standing up for what I believe.” The subtle switch allowed people to focus less on what he was actually saying and more on the idea of the quarterback as an honorable man.

Sports Illustrated took the bait:

He will be the quarterback he is. Coaches will draft him, or they won't. He will believe what he believes. Fans will love him, or they won't.

Today's AdAge discusses the impact of Tebow's stance on future endorsements, and David Carter, executive director of the University of Southern California Sports Business Institute, lets fly with the idea that taking a stand is something to be lauded:

“Tebow should be all right because, unlike many athletes, he has been articulately outspoken and done so with a calm confidence about so many things, including his interests and beliefs,” he said. “Because of this track record, he won't be as polarizing as some athletes. In this era where many consumers believe athletes will say and do anything for a buck, he may just be different. This doesn't mean that he won't alienate a number of fans or consumers, simply that many will find his consistency refreshing.”

People in the public eye take stands for all sorts of things – Tebow is being promoted as some brave soul when what he is doing is actually quite ordinary. Many people use their celebrity as a way to promote a cause. Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger became famous for saving 155 lives by successfully landing a distressed plane in the Hudson River. Soon after, he appeared on television discussing the plight of pilots and has also advocated for other causes. Normal. Nothing special about it.

However, most of the outrage isn't about Tim Tebow as a person. (I'd venture to say most people who don't follow football don't give two shits about this kid.) The outrage stems from the growing anti-choice climate in this country, and CBS's hypocritical broadcasting decisions.

While media manipulating sensationalists like Sarah Palin are trying to shift the debate back to anti-choice doublespeak – “women should be reminded that they are strong enough and smart enough to make decisions that allow for career and educational opportunities while still giving their babies a chance at life,” she says in a new Facebook post – the real story here is why CBS chose to reverse its long standing policy against controversial messages. (Hint: $$$.)

The official statement from CBS is a bunch of bullshit.

“We have for some time moderated our approach to advocacy submissions after it became apparent that our stance did not reflect public sentiment or industry norms,” said CBS spokesman Dana McClintock, according to the AP. “In fact, most media outlets have accepted advocacy ads for some time.”

McClintock said CBS “will continue to consider responsibly produced ads from all groups for the few remaining spots in Super Bowl XLIV.”

This appears to be a very recent change in policy. So what gives? CBS keeps trying to pretend that these ads met some kind of responsibility criteria, but advertising publications are telling a different story. Major companies like FedEx and Pepsi are sitting out the Super Bowl, taking tens of millions of dollars with them, and as more and more advertisers start to believe the largest sporting event of the year isn't the best place to draw in eyeballs, networks are trying to come up with ways to stem the shortfall; if one of those ways just so happens to be taking a few million off the hands of a church with questionable practices, so be it. CBS has also makes a point to note that there are still spots available to advertise during the Super Bowl, if one of the aggrieved women's rights groups wants to cough up $3 million in reponse.

Unfortunately, CBS probably considers its decision a marketing success:

“People are talking about this commercial two weeks prior to the advertising — it's good for the person buying the ad, good for the networks. I don't believe there's a negative. And that's without having any opinion of the content,” said Bob Horowitz, president of Juma Entertainment and executive producer “Super Bowl's Greatest Commercials,” which will air on CBS on Feb. 3.

Tim Tebow Won't Hide From NFL Scouts — Or Hide His Beliefs [Sports Illustrated]
College Football Star's Beliefs Could Scare off Some Marketers, Experts Say [Advertising Age]
Sarah Palin Wishes NOW Was More Pro Woman [The Awl]
CBS justifies 30-Second Tim Tebow Anti-Abortion Ad, standing by its choice to air spot [NY Daily News]
Why FedEx Chose Orange Bowl Over Super Bowl
PepsiCo Not Advertising Beverages During Super Bowl XLIV
Super Bowl ad featuring quarterback Tebow, mother riles abortion rights groups [Washington Post]

Earlier: Super Bowl Showdown: College Quarterback To Star In Controversial Abortion Ad

Send an email to Latoya, the author of this post, at latoya@racialicious.com.

…  the more doors Hello Music promises to open. For example, Zalon said, the top 10% of Hello Music's clients will be featured in a special section of Pump Audio's licensing service, which supplies music for movies, TV shows, advertisements and corporate use. Top artists also will be integrated into a new artist channel at Yahoo Music and added to the library at MediaNet, which powers the online music services offered by Microsoft and MOG, among others. "We really are looking for opportunities for unsigned artists that they couldn't get for themselves," Zalon said.

The company's site, which is still in a trial phase, is free to use. Artists create profiles on the site and upload recordings, along with detailed descriptions of their work. Hello Music's team of screeners, which
includes musicians, former label A&R executives and music fans,
then reviews each song, providing its own description, notes and ratings. This process determines which partners the company will match the artist with. Not every band will be plugged into a potentially revenue-generating slot such as Pump Audio, Zalon said. Some will instead be offered discounts for services that partners offer for a fee. Still, he said, "no matter what [the song] is, we're going to listen to it, and we're going to find opportunities."

And under Hello Music's business model, the company won't succeed unless the artists who use it make money. That's because it doesn't charge upfront for its service; instead, it collects a percentage of the revenue that it helps artists generate.

The arrival of a company like Hello Music is a sign of the maturation of the Net's self-help tools as an alternative to record labels. There's an online substitute for just about every service that labels and managers have done to promote and generate revenue for bands. What's missing, though, is something to hold those pieces together. Zalon contends that it can become that connective tissue by providing something needed by bands and services alike: a talent arbiter. The former are struggling to stand out in the musical crowd, and the latter need help culling the wheat from the chaff.

"What we look for is to have fresh material, material that other outlets don't have," said Ryan Born, chief executive of AudioMicro, a Hello Music partner that licenses songs to online advertisers. Hello Music can sort through songs and aggregate the best ones for him, Born said, leaving him free to line up customers.

Jonathan Sasse, a senior vice president at Slacker, said Hello Music can help his company in two ways. It puts its clients' songs into context for Slacker's music programmers, making it easy for them to place the tracks into the right playlists and artist groupings. And it suggests which artists are hot. "If they deliver us a great breaking artist … that's insight we otherwise wouldn't have," Sasse said.

Its ability to deliver what AudioMicro, Slacker and other partners need will hinge on the judgment of its team of screeners. Zalon and co-founder Brendon Cassidy also bring extensive music backgrounds to the table, having worked at Farmclub.com and Virgin Digital before creating Wilshire Media Group, a digital media design and development firm, in 2006. Still, there's no science to identifying which artists will be successful; if there were, the record companies wouldn't pick nine flops for every one that hits it big.

Thanks to a $4-million investment from KVG Partners, the company will have some time to refine its approach and build its network of partners, which will be a key factor in drawing musicians to the site. Zalon contends that there is a tremendous number of talented artists that are unsigned, and "a lot of very willing ears for new music." In addition, there are a growing number of ways for artists to generate revenue from their work, as music becomes available from more sources and in more ways. "Being a successful artist in the future doesn't look like being a successful artist in the past," Zalon said.

That doesn't mean artists will abandon record labels. On the contrary, Zalon said, the major labels will still have unrivaled power to market and promote acts. But Hello Music hopes to assemble a viable alternative. "We're creating a different kind of A&R machine," he said. "If you're not going to get signed, you should still have opportunities."

Corrected at 10 a.m.: The Midem conference is in Cannes, not Paris as the original version of this post stated (thanks, Mike!). I also removed a reference to MusicNet, which is now known as MediaNet.

– Jon Healey

Healey writes editorials for The Times' Opinion Manufacturing Division. Follow him on Twitter: @jcahealey

learn tv and radio by munny_makin

Just Cause 2 demo &quot;on its way&quot; <b>News</b> | Eurogamer

Square Enix London Studios community manager Mike Oldman subsequent tweeted: "I'll have more <b>news</b> on the demo soon enough, for now though just relax safe in the knowledge that there's one on the way – and it's awesome." …

Rebellion apologises for AVP demo issues <b>News</b> | Eurogamer

Read our Rebellion apologises for AVP demo issues <b>News</b> for PC, Xbox 360, and PlayStation 3.

SEOmoz | Getting Started Publishing on Google <b>News</b>

How do you get articles indexed and ranking in Google <b>News</b>? This blog post, which builds off the information provided in the Google <b>News</b> publisher help center and in Maile Ohye's awesome video on Google <b>News</b>, provides publishers with a …

http://www.shumakerelays.com/

Feb 04 2010

Making Money Through

“We can't walk away from this and lead our daily lives as if nothing had happened,” Donna Karan immediately thought when she heard about the tragic earthquake in Haiti. “This is a wake-up call, a call to community, to caring, to something greater than ourselves.”

Andre Harrell, an entertainment industry executive and founder of Uptown Records, heard the same call. “From the first moment I heard about the crisis in Haiti, I felt a sense of responsibility — and the question: 'What can I do to help?' It sounds a little mystical but I felt like the universe was speaking to me,” he said.

Harrell went through a typical day for him–high level meetings uptown, midtown and downtown in Manhattan. Later at the Boom Boom room, he connected with his friend, Andre Balazs at Balazs' elegant Standard Hotel. “We're great friends and I felt the urgency of finding a way to support him in supporting Haiti,” Balazs explained. “This is an opportunity to take advantage of a tragedy to focus the world's attention on an ongoing crisis, and create a sustainable solution.”

Before long, the two Andres reached out to Donna Karan, whose Urban Zen Center is just a few blocks away from the Standard.

“We have the passion to support Haiti, we have the dream of making a difference, but the question is how do we make it happen?” Karan asked when the powerhouse creative trio met to discuss partnering to bring together the New York art, music, fashion and entertainment worlds to kick off a benefit called Hope, Help, and Relief Haiti, slated for next Monday, February 8th.

The funds raised from that evening will provide immediate support for a country in crisis. Following the event, the initiative will explore ways to meet long term needs for housing, health care, and sound economic infrastructures.

In seeking the star performer for the event, Harrell, “knew it had to be an entertainer with the purity of heart and the hard-won experience that could speak for those going through the worst crisis.”

A phone call later and Mary J. Blige was on board.

Urban Zen, the non-profit foundation which Karan founded is hosting the benefit at the Urban Zen Center next Monday night. Blige will headline with an exclusive performance at a sold-out fundraiser dinner (hosted by CNN's Soledad O'Brien) which also features an auction (lead by Whoopi Goldberg). In typical New York style, the evening will continue as the crowd moves from the Urban Zen Center to a late night after-party at the Standard Hotel, featuring a performance by Wyclef Jean.

Three organizations will receive the monies raised: Habitats for Humanity, Partners in Health, and Yele Haiti. In keeping with the trio's slogan, “Tents today, homes tomorrow,” the monies raised will be used immediately to send tents to Haiti. The tents are actually “shelter survival kits” and each kit includes a tent that can house 10 people, along with water purification and storage, stove for heating and cooking, utensils, tools and other items.

Attendees will also have the opportunity to purchase “homes tomorrow,” to be distributed by Habitats for Humanity.

Following the event, the Initiative will focus on a strategy of support for a long-term rebuilding effort.

“This is a call to action,” Harrell points out. “Here's a whole new generation of performers who can wake up to the power of using their talent and their fame as a different kind of currency. They can meet the immediate needs of people in a hopeless situation. Long term they can help empower Haitians to rebuild their community themselves.”

“If this current tragedy could be parlayed into something positive, that would be a great outcome,” says Balazs.

“Whether it's donating money, or shoes — whether it's purchasing a tent today, or helping Haitians rebuild their homes tomorrow, there's something we each can do,” says Karan.

Those interested in donating can contact Karan's foundation at www.urbanzenfoundation.org

I'll blog on the benefit next week. For insight on health, lifestyle, and sustainability, get the free Health Outlook at www.healthjournalist.com

When al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and the Taliban fled Afghanistan, they made their last stand in Paktia province on the border with Pakistan. The Zazi valley, known during the Soviet occupation as “the gateway to Afghanistan,” is located on the southeast of the Tora Bora, literally white mountain. In 2001 hundreds of al Qaeda slipped over the fluid border into Pakistan, crossing through Zazi, to the 'badlands' of Pakistan's Waziristan province, which continue to be insurgent hotbeds. Sympathizers straddle both sides of the Durand Line, which divides the two countries, and Zazi remains strategically significant.

Earlier this year Chief Ajmal Zazai, an Afghan Canadian, decided to unite his 11 tribes (of many thousands in the country) to form a Tribal Police Force. His idea was to start the process from his valley, which he hoped would eventually create momentum across the country, against historic precedent. It was something his father, Raiss Afzal Khan Zazai, had tried unsuccessfully in 1984 when he formed the Zazi Tribal Unity to fight the Soviets.

Recent motivation came when three local tribesmen, including one who had earlier denounced suicide bombing as 'un-Islamic,' were beheaded by Taliban fighters. He was found in his home with his eyes gouged out and his ears slashed. Zazai appointed a former mujahuddin fighter, Amir Mohammed, as his head of security and gathered 30 armed men to protect the tribal chiefs of his valley.

Originally the force was to consist of 450 men, but only a few dozen patrol Zazi Valley and they use their own weapons. They have no uniform and go for months without salary. “Money from other sources — the Russians or Iranians,” says Zazai, “tempts them away, and creates obstacles so grass roots level partnerships between the tribes and the Nato forces will not take place.”

Security remains at the heart of Afghanistan's problems if it is not to become a failed state. Setting up Tribal Police Forces, arbakai, the Pashto word for militias, is an attempt under discussion and scrutiny and is highly controversial. Concerns revolve around these forces creating new warlords of their leaders, as well as concerns that tribal Pashtun rivalries could be reignited. There are hundreds of Pashtun tribes so there is also the question of who to arm and how to control these militias. Some think the arbakai provide a role model for stemming the violence elsewhere in the country. British Prime Minister Gordon Brown spoke about “community defense initiatives” as a way of dismantling the insurgency. It received a cold reception from Washington.

Afghan human rights' activist, Orzala Ashraf Nemat, says that there is no evidence to show that arming local militias has ever worked in bringing stability. “We are supposed to be committed to promoting governance. How can you ensure that if there is no accountability, and the militias are only accountable to local commanders or tribal elders. Villages in Afghanistan don't always have such well-defined borders. What's most important is that the arbakai do not undermine the rule of law.”

Recently, after Zazai spent a month's fellowship at Johns Hopkins enrolled at the Central Asian-Caucasus Institute Silk Road Studies program, he met the former US Secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld, who shook his hand and addressed him at 'Mr President.' There are harrowing echoes of the disastrous role Rumsfeld played in the king-making process in Iraq and his relationship with Ahmad Chalabi, the neo-cons choice as post-invasion leader. After a tour of Washington discussing the need for a tribal role in bringing peace and stability, Zazai formed the TPF in June last year. “I got the impression that many people in Washington think the tribal structure has been destroyed (due to decades of war).”

“The whole structure of Afghan society changed after 30 years of war,” says Afghan political analyst, Haroun Mir, director of the Center for Research and Policy Studies (ACRPS).

Zazai, who is the chairman of United Afghan Tribes, a movement aimed at uniting disparate tribes, disagrees and decided to take some practical steps of his own to show that not only does the tribal structure exist but that it could be the best way of achieving Afghanistan's goals.”

“The tribes need to be engaged with NATO forces in order to fight the insurgency more effectively. Tribal members know the terrain, they know the local people and they know who the outsiders are. We have identified no more than five commanders and 35 members of the Haqqani network, closely related to al Qaeda and based in Waziristan, who intimidate 250,000 people in Zazi. My commander, Amir Mohammed, provided a list of names and locations to the commanding officer of the US 10th Mountain Division (based in Paktia).” The TPF is designed to work in coordination with the Afghan National Army and Police to provide another layer of protection.

The big question now is whether the Taliban are fighting for political power or not. A few of their leaders have political objectives but most of them are brainwashed in the madrassas of Pakistan. according Mir. The reason this matters is that it is now easier for al Qaeda to recruit from Canada and the US than in Afghanistan, says Mir when we spoke in Kabul. “This radicalization of the Pashtuns (who dominate the southern region of the country) has been a deliberate policy of Saudi Arabia, a Sunni country, to counter the influence and expansion of Shia Iran.”

“Canada should be worried about al Qaeda,” continues Mir, who grew up in France (and whose mother lives in Montreal). He does not see much light at the end of this particularly dark tunnel. “Canada has lots of immigrants from Pakistan, India and Afghanistan and it is too close to the US. If al Qaeda and other terrorists groups cannot reach the States, they will try in Canada.”

Just after the Soviets invaded eleven-year old Zazai and his family took refuge in Pakistan in 1980. Some years later Zazai ended up working for a medical charity as assistant director of public relations. During an ambush in mid-December 1990 his boss was killed. The bullets missed Zazai and he drove to the house of a French friend who was head of an NGO, and where he stayed for 15 days.

The UN contacted the Canadian government, and on January 1st, Zazai left Peshawar and moved to Toronto where he lived until 1997. “The Canadian government saved my life by offering me asylum.” One of his four children was born in Canada. He returned to Peshawar to help his father fight the Taliban, but few months later in 1998 he was imprisoned by Pakistan in a case he says was 'concocted' by the ISI (Pakistani intelligence). No charges were brought against him despite spending two and a half years in prison.

His father did not have such a lucky escape when an attempt was made on his life in 2000 on the orders, believes Zazai, of top Taliban officials. “My father led our Zazi tribes in the fight against the Soviets and later he organized the tribal chiefs from three (of Afghanistan's 34 provinces) in order to raise up against the Taliban. Some ex-commanders were visiting him at our family home, which is where he was killed. I have not found who gave the orders yet but the motive behind this was to bring a full stop to this movement and also to frighten the rest. My father was one of our country's first industrialists. He and my uncle founded the first Afghan transport company, Mrastay Transport, and they established a raisin processing factory where over 600 people worked.” His father believed that the tribes were the past and future of Afghanistan.

Zazai and his family now live in the United Arab Emirates, close to Afghanistan, where they moved after he survived two further attempts on his life in 2007 and 2008. Subsequently he asked his elders to meet with me in Kabul. In a guesthouse called the Cedar Inn in the Shar-e-Naw district, fifteen local tribesmen entered bearded, wearing turbans, shalwar kameez and covered with a patoo, the heavy blanket Afghan men wrap around themselves to keep out the bitter winter cold. They ranged in age from young to old, and each shook my hand.

As we sat around a large table each one stood up and introduced himself. The key points they made during our two-hour discussion was what we are all familiar with — they need security. After security they need jobs. They need education and they want help with reconstruction. The corrupt government has left people feeling powerless. Afghanistan is the fourth poorest country in the world so when the Taliban offer money, “they feel obliged to go,” said one tribal leader.

“Al Qaeda came to Zazi with the help of the government,” says one of the tribal elders. He shows me a picture of two suspected al Qaeda operatives. They were with Mohammad Daoud, an MP from Zazi, supported by the Wahabi vice-president and former warlord Rasoul Sayyaf, and Commander Mohammed Nabi, the Border Police Chief. Zazai alleges that Nabi “works closely with the ISI and assists al Qaeda members to cross the border from Pakistan into Afghanistan. The enemy,” he continues, “in Zazi is in the government.”

Four or five months ago, explains one of the tribal elders, before the TPF, “the Taliban would tell us to bring food, bring tea for us, do everything, and nobody was allowed to go out of their house. We weren't even allowed to take people to the hospital. Three people were beheaded just because they spoke out against the ill treatment of Taliban. They come to destroy everything.”

“For 30 years everything has been going wrong.” says Mr Qazi, an elder. “We like peace. Our place is the nearest place to Pakistan, when the Taliban came they destroyed our schools, our roads, we have no work and the economic situation is terrible, we are very poor. The Taliban are terrorizing our lives because there is a gap between the people and the government. Because the government is corrupt and inefficient many local tribes are assisting the the Taliban. The main reason we are united is that we want a viable alternative to the present worsening situation and we need to bring peace and stability to our homeland. We want reconstruction. We want libraries, hospitals, universities. The reason we are so poor is that our girls don't go to school. That is why our community is backwards.”

He continues, “We want education for our mothers and our daughters, we want education for older women too, we want women to be able to work, to make things that they can sell in the bazaar. But we also want medical aid. We need maternity wards, and first aid. None of that exists.”

“We had 14 girls graduate from middle school,” he boasts. “Unfortunately there is no school building, so they did their studies in the shadow of the sun, but even under the Taliban we had a secret place to teach them. I have good ideas for girls,” he continues, “we just are not able to develop them. Why can't women be doctors, ministers or engineers?” he asks. “Or even journalists? The most difficult issues are solved by people taking positive and practical steps. We too can solve our own problems this way. I believe aid should reach the poor and needy but the mafia of the present Afghan regime doesn't allow this to happen.”

“In this modern time,” he concludes. “In the 21st century, in the age of the computer, we are in search of a loaf of bread for our children, crying out for peace and stability.”

http://www.webjam.com/gabrielle71 http://www.prlog.org/10248797-reitbuyercom-offers-opportunity-to-onlinereal-estate-stock-traders-in-albuquerque-new-mexico.html http://www.prlog.org/tag/online-stock-trading/ http://www.prlog.org/10219817-online-traders-discover-reits-and-real-estate-mutual-funds-to-be-good-investment.html http://www.prlog.org/10248797-reitbuyercom-offers-opportunity-to-onlinereal-estate-stock-traders-in-albuquerque-new-mexico.html http://www.webjam.com/gabrielle71

“We can't walk away from this and lead our daily lives as if nothing had happened,” Donna Karan immediately thought when she heard about the tragic earthquake in Haiti. “This is a wake-up call, a call to community, to caring, to something greater than ourselves.”

Andre Harrell, an entertainment industry executive and founder of Uptown Records, heard the same call. “From the first moment I heard about the crisis in Haiti, I felt a sense of responsibility — and the question: 'What can I do to help?' It sounds a little mystical but I felt like the universe was speaking to me,” he said.

Harrell went through a typical day for him–high level meetings uptown, midtown and downtown in Manhattan. Later at the Boom Boom room, he connected with his friend, Andre Balazs at Balazs' elegant Standard Hotel. “We're great friends and I felt the urgency of finding a way to support him in supporting Haiti,” Balazs explained. “This is an opportunity to take advantage of a tragedy to focus the world's attention on an ongoing crisis, and create a sustainable solution.”

Before long, the two Andres reached out to Donna Karan, whose Urban Zen Center is just a few blocks away from the Standard.

“We have the passion to support Haiti, we have the dream of making a difference, but the question is how do we make it happen?” Karan asked when the powerhouse creative trio met to discuss partnering to bring together the New York art, music, fashion and entertainment worlds to kick off a benefit called Hope, Help, and Relief Haiti, slated for next Monday, February 8th.

The funds raised from that evening will provide immediate support for a country in crisis. Following the event, the initiative will explore ways to meet long term needs for housing, health care, and sound economic infrastructures.

In seeking the star performer for the event, Harrell, “knew it had to be an entertainer with the purity of heart and the hard-won experience that could speak for those going through the worst crisis.”

A phone call later and Mary J. Blige was on board.

Urban Zen, the non-profit foundation which Karan founded is hosting the benefit at the Urban Zen Center next Monday night. Blige will headline with an exclusive performance at a sold-out fundraiser dinner (hosted by CNN's Soledad O'Brien) which also features an auction (lead by Whoopi Goldberg). In typical New York style, the evening will continue as the crowd moves from the Urban Zen Center to a late night after-party at the Standard Hotel, featuring a performance by Wyclef Jean.

Three organizations will receive the monies raised: Habitats for Humanity, Partners in Health, and Yele Haiti. In keeping with the trio's slogan, “Tents today, homes tomorrow,” the monies raised will be used immediately to send tents to Haiti. The tents are actually “shelter survival kits” and each kit includes a tent that can house 10 people, along with water purification and storage, stove for heating and cooking, utensils, tools and other items.

Attendees will also have the opportunity to purchase “homes tomorrow,” to be distributed by Habitats for Humanity.

Following the event, the Initiative will focus on a strategy of support for a long-term rebuilding effort.

“This is a call to action,” Harrell points out. “Here's a whole new generation of performers who can wake up to the power of using their talent and their fame as a different kind of currency. They can meet the immediate needs of people in a hopeless situation. Long term they can help empower Haitians to rebuild their community themselves.”

“If this current tragedy could be parlayed into something positive, that would be a great outcome,” says Balazs.

“Whether it's donating money, or shoes — whether it's purchasing a tent today, or helping Haitians rebuild their homes tomorrow, there's something we each can do,” says Karan.

Those interested in donating can contact Karan's foundation at www.urbanzenfoundation.org

I'll blog on the benefit next week. For insight on health, lifestyle, and sustainability, get the free Health Outlook at www.healthjournalist.com

When al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and the Taliban fled Afghanistan, they made their last stand in Paktia province on the border with Pakistan. The Zazi valley, known during the Soviet occupation as “the gateway to Afghanistan,” is located on the southeast of the Tora Bora, literally white mountain. In 2001 hundreds of al Qaeda slipped over the fluid border into Pakistan, crossing through Zazi, to the 'badlands' of Pakistan's Waziristan province, which continue to be insurgent hotbeds. Sympathizers straddle both sides of the Durand Line, which divides the two countries, and Zazi remains strategically significant.

Earlier this year Chief Ajmal Zazai, an Afghan Canadian, decided to unite his 11 tribes (of many thousands in the country) to form a Tribal Police Force. His idea was to start the process from his valley, which he hoped would eventually create momentum across the country, against historic precedent. It was something his father, Raiss Afzal Khan Zazai, had tried unsuccessfully in 1984 when he formed the Zazi Tribal Unity to fight the Soviets.

Recent motivation came when three local tribesmen, including one who had earlier denounced suicide bombing as 'un-Islamic,' were beheaded by Taliban fighters. He was found in his home with his eyes gouged out and his ears slashed. Zazai appointed a former mujahuddin fighter, Amir Mohammed, as his head of security and gathered 30 armed men to protect the tribal chiefs of his valley.

Originally the force was to consist of 450 men, but only a few dozen patrol Zazi Valley and they use their own weapons. They have no uniform and go for months without salary. “Money from other sources — the Russians or Iranians,” says Zazai, “tempts them away, and creates obstacles so grass roots level partnerships between the tribes and the Nato forces will not take place.”

Security remains at the heart of Afghanistan's problems if it is not to become a failed state. Setting up Tribal Police Forces, arbakai, the Pashto word for militias, is an attempt under discussion and scrutiny and is highly controversial. Concerns revolve around these forces creating new warlords of their leaders, as well as concerns that tribal Pashtun rivalries could be reignited. There are hundreds of Pashtun tribes so there is also the question of who to arm and how to control these militias. Some think the arbakai provide a role model for stemming the violence elsewhere in the country. British Prime Minister Gordon Brown spoke about “community defense initiatives” as a way of dismantling the insurgency. It received a cold reception from Washington.

Afghan human rights' activist, Orzala Ashraf Nemat, says that there is no evidence to show that arming local militias has ever worked in bringing stability. “We are supposed to be committed to promoting governance. How can you ensure that if there is no accountability, and the militias are only accountable to local commanders or tribal elders. Villages in Afghanistan don't always have such well-defined borders. What's most important is that the arbakai do not undermine the rule of law.”

Recently, after Zazai spent a month's fellowship at Johns Hopkins enrolled at the Central Asian-Caucasus Institute Silk Road Studies program, he met the former US Secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld, who shook his hand and addressed him at 'Mr President.' There are harrowing echoes of the disastrous role Rumsfeld played in the king-making process in Iraq and his relationship with Ahmad Chalabi, the neo-cons choice as post-invasion leader. After a tour of Washington discussing the need for a tribal role in bringing peace and stability, Zazai formed the TPF in June last year. “I got the impression that many people in Washington think the tribal structure has been destroyed (due to decades of war).”

“The whole structure of Afghan society changed after 30 years of war,” says Afghan political analyst, Haroun Mir, director of the Center for Research and Policy Studies (ACRPS).

Zazai, who is the chairman of United Afghan Tribes, a movement aimed at uniting disparate tribes, disagrees and decided to take some practical steps of his own to show that not only does the tribal structure exist but that it could be the best way of achieving Afghanistan's goals.”

“The tribes need to be engaged with NATO forces in order to fight the insurgency more effectively. Tribal members know the terrain, they know the local people and they know who the outsiders are. We have identified no more than five commanders and 35 members of the Haqqani network, closely related to al Qaeda and based in Waziristan, who intimidate 250,000 people in Zazi. My commander, Amir Mohammed, provided a list of names and locations to the commanding officer of the US 10th Mountain Division (based in Paktia).” The TPF is designed to work in coordination with the Afghan National Army and Police to provide another layer of protection.

The big question now is whether the Taliban are fighting for political power or not. A few of their leaders have political objectives but most of them are brainwashed in the madrassas of Pakistan. according Mir. The reason this matters is that it is now easier for al Qaeda to recruit from Canada and the US than in Afghanistan, says Mir when we spoke in Kabul. “This radicalization of the Pashtuns (who dominate the southern region of the country) has been a deliberate policy of Saudi Arabia, a Sunni country, to counter the influence and expansion of Shia Iran.”

“Canada should be worried about al Qaeda,” continues Mir, who grew up in France (and whose mother lives in Montreal). He does not see much light at the end of this particularly dark tunnel. “Canada has lots of immigrants from Pakistan, India and Afghanistan and it is too close to the US. If al Qaeda and other terrorists groups cannot reach the States, they will try in Canada.”

Just after the Soviets invaded eleven-year old Zazai and his family took refuge in Pakistan in 1980. Some years later Zazai ended up working for a medical charity as assistant director of public relations. During an ambush in mid-December 1990 his boss was killed. The bullets missed Zazai and he drove to the house of a French friend who was head of an NGO, and where he stayed for 15 days.

The UN contacted the Canadian government, and on January 1st, Zazai left Peshawar and moved to Toronto where he lived until 1997. “The Canadian government saved my life by offering me asylum.” One of his four children was born in Canada. He returned to Peshawar to help his father fight the Taliban, but few months later in 1998 he was imprisoned by Pakistan in a case he says was 'concocted' by the ISI (Pakistani intelligence). No charges were brought against him despite spending two and a half years in prison.

His father did not have such a lucky escape when an attempt was made on his life in 2000 on the orders, believes Zazai, of top Taliban officials. “My father led our Zazi tribes in the fight against the Soviets and later he organized the tribal chiefs from three (of Afghanistan's 34 provinces) in order to raise up against the Taliban. Some ex-commanders were visiting him at our family home, which is where he was killed. I have not found who gave the orders yet but the motive behind this was to bring a full stop to this movement and also to frighten the rest. My father was one of our country's first industrialists. He and my uncle founded the first Afghan transport company, Mrastay Transport, and they established a raisin processing factory where over 600 people worked.” His father believed that the tribes were the past and future of Afghanistan.

Zazai and his family now live in the United Arab Emirates, close to Afghanistan, where they moved after he survived two further attempts on his life in 2007 and 2008. Subsequently he asked his elders to meet with me in Kabul. In a guesthouse called the Cedar Inn in the Shar-e-Naw district, fifteen local tribesmen entered bearded, wearing turbans, shalwar kameez and covered with a patoo, the heavy blanket Afghan men wrap around themselves to keep out the bitter winter cold. They ranged in age from young to old, and each shook my hand.

As we sat around a large table each one stood up and introduced himself. The key points they made during our two-hour discussion was what we are all familiar with — they need security. After security they need jobs. They need education and they want help with reconstruction. The corrupt government has left people feeling powerless. Afghanistan is the fourth poorest country in the world so when the Taliban offer money, “they feel obliged to go,” said one tribal leader.

“Al Qaeda came to Zazi with the help of the government,” says one of the tribal elders. He shows me a picture of two suspected al Qaeda operatives. They were with Mohammad Daoud, an MP from Zazi, supported by the Wahabi vice-president and former warlord Rasoul Sayyaf, and Commander Mohammed Nabi, the Border Police Chief. Zazai alleges that Nabi “works closely with the ISI and assists al Qaeda members to cross the border from Pakistan into Afghanistan. The enemy,” he continues, “in Zazi is in the government.”

Four or five months ago, explains one of the tribal elders, before the TPF, “the Taliban would tell us to bring food, bring tea for us, do everything, and nobody was allowed to go out of their house. We weren't even allowed to take people to the hospital. Three people were beheaded just because they spoke out against the ill treatment of Taliban. They come to destroy everything.”

“For 30 years everything has been going wrong.” says Mr Qazi, an elder. “We like peace. Our place is the nearest place to Pakistan, when the Taliban came they destroyed our schools, our roads, we have no work and the economic situation is terrible, we are very poor. The Taliban are terrorizing our lives because there is a gap between the people and the government. Because the government is corrupt and inefficient many local tribes are assisting the the Taliban. The main reason we are united is that we want a viable alternative to the present worsening situation and we need to bring peace and stability to our homeland. We want reconstruction. We want libraries, hospitals, universities. The reason we are so poor is that our girls don't go to school. That is why our community is backwards.”

He continues, “We want education for our mothers and our daughters, we want education for older women too, we want women to be able to work, to make things that they can sell in the bazaar. But we also want medical aid. We need maternity wards, and first aid. None of that exists.”

“We had 14 girls graduate from middle school,” he boasts. “Unfortunately there is no school building, so they did their studies in the shadow of the sun, but even under the Taliban we had a secret place to teach them. I have good ideas for girls,” he continues, “we just are not able to develop them. Why can't women be doctors, ministers or engineers?” he asks. “Or even journalists? The most difficult issues are solved by people taking positive and practical steps. We too can solve our own problems this way. I believe aid should reach the poor and needy but the mafia of the present Afghan regime doesn't allow this to happen.”

“In this modern time,” he concludes. “In the 21st century, in the age of the computer, we are in search of a loaf of bread for our children, crying out for peace and stability.”

Correlation Secret pdf by review4bonus

Is online <b>news</b> just ramen noodles? What media economics research <b>…</b>

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<b>News</b> Ticker: Weezer, The Strokes, Pavement, Men at Work. 2/4/10, 8:33 am EST. Photo: Moore/WireImage. Unreleased Weezer, Ween, the Donnas and more tracks are up for pay-what-you-want download to raise money for cancer research via …

Steam <b>News</b>

Steam <b>News</b>. Official Steam time: Thursday, February 04, 2010 – 3:22 pm. Team Fortress 2 Update Released. February 3, 2010, 2:28 pm – Valve – Product Update <b>…..</b> <b>News</b> Archive (2010). Feb Jan. Archives By Year. 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 …

http://www.shumakerelays.com/

Feb 03 2010

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Bill bartmann, Bill bartmann, Bill bartmann robert shumake, robert shumake

Separate Offers From <b>News</b> Corp &amp; Qualia Seek To Keep MGM <b>…</b>

I've confirmed <b>news</b> reports saying <b>News</b> Corp this week sent a letter to MGM with a non-binding offer of cash and debt assistance to the studio teetering on the brink of bankruptcy because of the $3.7 billion it owes. …

Joe Klein rips Fox <b>News</b> for airing Beck's 'hateful crap,' but O <b>…</b>

Bill O'Reilly has been irked at Joe Klein since last October, after Klein wrote a typical Villager piece for Time castigating President Obama for standing up to Fox <b>News</b>. That's not what upset O'Reilly, though.

Everybody Forgets The Readers When They Bash <b>News</b> Aggregators

I remember way back before the Internet when I got most of my daily <b>news</b> via the San Francisco Chronicle and CNN. If …

La Video Sous Marine by L'agence Medianet

Jan 29 2010

about internet marketing

We believe that the movie industry has embraced social media in a big way. Not only do social networks and the Internet offer a direct connection to fans and potential consumers, but campaigns can be better targeted and better measured. Avatar, District 9, and Paranormal Activity are all good examples of what social media can do for a film.

MashableMashable had the opportunity to speak with some members of the marketing team at MGM Studios about the advertising campaign for the film Hot Tub Time Machine, the social-media component and the results so far.

The Film

Hot Tub Time Machine is a raucous comedy starring John Cusack, Rob Corddry, Craig Robinson and Clark Duke about four friends who live it up one night in a ski resort hot tub and wake up in the year 1986. Think The Hangover meets Back to the Future.

The film opens in March. In its promotional campaign, MGM is placing an emphasis on word-of-mouth because it is now viewed as a vital component to a film’s success these days, especially for R-rated comedies. (Hot Tub Time Machine is awaiting a final MPAA rating but I have no doubt this is going to be an R-rated picture.) The Hangover was such a huge success because of its strong word of mouth.

To that end, MGM decided to take a cue from Paranormal Activity and its Eventful collaboration. The studio is launching a bunch of free preview screenings for fans to help build word of mouth surrounding the film. Fans can go to this site and volunteer to host a screening of the film. Hosts can invite nine of their friends, and everyone gets free popcorn and soda, a free t-shirt, and reserved seating. In addition, the host gets a special introduction before the show. If you can’t host a screening in your area, you can also sign up to attend the show for free.

Preview screenings aren’t a new concept, but marketing the screenings directly to fans and creating the type of hosting incentive that Hot Tub Time Machine is doing is pretty unique.

The Execution

The preview screening campaign and engagement with social networks was born out of MGM’s marketing department. Michael Vollman, the Executive Vice President of Marketing, oversaw the campaign. Sara Bordo, who heads up Digital Marketing, was involved with the social media aspects of the project while Christine Batista, EVP of Marketing Partnerships and Promotions, has been overseeing the different screenings in cities across the country.

Yesterday, MGM launched the red band trailer for Hot Tub Time Machine via its website and to various movie blogs. Red band trailers contain profanity, sometimes brief nudity and more adult-content than a standard “green band” trailer. For films like Hot Tub Time Machine, these types of trailers are often popular online and can help build word of mouth. In addition to the trailer, MGM has also started spreading the word about the EventfulEventful free preview screenings.

In addition to blogs, FacebookFacebook and TwitterTwitter, a big component of MGM’s outreach campaign for Hot Tub Time Machine was via MTV’s hit reality-show Jersey Shore. During last night’s finale, spots like the commercial embedded below aired, tying together the “hot tub” connections. Justin Slobig, the VP of Theatrical Marketing, oversaw the trailer and the Jersey Shore spot.

The Results So Far

According to MGM’s marketing team, the responses on Twitter and Facebook have been through the roof. The red band trailer has been viewed hundreds of thousands of times in less than 24 hours and as of 10 am this morning (18 hours or so after launch), screenings for the film — both host and non-host spots — were almost full, with many bigger cities already sold out.

The success of the preview screening campaign went above and beyond the studio’s expectations and they are currently in negotiations to add more screens to the program. Originally 300 screenings were planned but MGM hopes to double that number in the next few weeks.

Why This is the Future

The best campaigns are those that work on multiple levels and reach the targeted audience. By targeting potential moviegoers through both social media and through a show like Jersey Shore that shares similar demographics, word about the film and the free preview screenings was able to be spread faster and to more people.

The goal of this campaign is to raise awareness and word-of-mouth, the idea being that this will lead to friends recommending the film to other friends and thus generating more ticket revenue. As clever as the preview screening program is, using the online component to build anticipation and a viral marketing effort is something we think is even more impressive.

In August, Fox sponsored what was dubbed “Avatar Day” as a way for fans to see a free 30 minute preview of the film at IMAX or other 3D screens. Although Avatar has been an enormous success and is paying off in dividends for everyone involved, the “Avatar Day” campaign didn’t go as smoothly as plan, despite its online integration.

One difference between that campaign and the campaigns that MGM is doing with Hot Tub Time Machine and what Paramount did with Paranormal Activity is that the former is targeting the right users by engaging them on their turf and on their networks and not trying to bring the activity to their portals. Sure, you still have to go to the Eventful site to sign-up, but you can share trailers and other information via Twitter, Facebook and other services. Plus, an established platform like Eventful has the back-end to deal with scheduling issues that a homegrown solution might lack.

Social media is powerful because it can connect people directly to one another and that makes for more effective communication. It’s too soon to say how successful Hot Tub Time Machine will be, but the first stage of the media campaign has worked.

What do you think about how movie studios and other parts of the entertainment industry use social media to further their message and connect directly with fans? Let us know!

Why Can't Girl Scouts Be Digital Cookie Pushers?

As Girl Scout Cookie season approaches, the age old conversation around parental involvement in cookie sales is rearing its head. However, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution outlines a new twist – are kids allowed to push Samoas on the internet?

While marketing cookies using email is okay, the leadership of the Scouts has put the kibosh on other online initiatives, hoping to encourage a return to knocking on wood.

In an effort to boost door-to-door sales, the Girl Scouts of Greater Atlanta is offering new incentives including a specific “Walkabout” patch (featuring a girl taking strides), according to Sarnethia Wilkinson, product sales marketing representative for Girl Scouts Greater Atlanta cookie program. The patch will be given to girls who participate in chaperoned door-to-door sales in early March (or troops can select a different date to do a Walkabout).

It used to be against the rules to send e-mail cookie pitches, but the Girl Scouts reconsidered because technology and e-mail are such a part of the girls' lives, according to Wilkinson. Meanwhile, Internet sales, such as setting up a payment account or creating a Web site to sell the cookies, is strictly prohibited.

Why can't the girls set up their own e-commerce sites? I can completely understand the drive to have girls out and interacting with their communities, instead of passively sitting behind a computer screen and fulfilling orders. However, since the cookie program is about teaching girls life skills, wouldn't website management, maintenance, order fulfillment, and digital marketing all be a vital part of today's skill set? There are lots of ways to make it work – maybe there's a master troop website, or a maximum web allotment (where each girl receives a portion of the web sales, and has to do the rest through more direct sales methods.)

Perhaps the Girl Scouts organization is reluctant to allow online sales because they already beat the kids to the punch:

In ye olden days, a Girl Scout used to come knocking on every door in the neighborhood offering up Thin Mints and Trefoils. Then came the world of two working parents, pedophiles hiding behind doors and a crappy economy. Kids just don't go door-to-door anymore. But that doesn't mean we don't crave minty chocolatey goodness.

So the Girl Scouts have set up a site for you to indulge your inner blue monster – Find Cookies Now connects you with your local Girl Scout Council via zip code.

But providing a cookie connection does not preclude other online sales techniques or strategies. While there is a Cookie Biz badge to reward girls who are willing to do things like create infomercials for Thin Mints, most of the badges related to internet savvy are way too basic, particularly when dealing with older Scouts. It's considered normal for teenage boys to launch web companies in their basements or in their first few years of college, but the GS leaders seem to think teen girls only use the computer for email – even as casual gaming (which girls disproportionately participate in) is becoming a larger industry, and social networking can provide thousands of innovative ways to sell and draw awareness to the cookie drive. If 32% of teen girls have enough web-savvy to build their own sites, clearly, there's a hell of a lot of untapped potential around leveraging technology to benefit the Scouts beyond email based instruction.

Pushing Girl Scouts to push doorbells [Atlanta Journal-Constitution]
Online Tool Guarantees Girl Scout Cookies Without the Girl
Cookie Biz Badge [Girl Scouts]

Computers in Everyday Life [Girl Scouts]
Girls rule the internet [Napa Valley Register]

Send an email to Latoya, the author of this post, at latoya@racialicious.com.

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Jan 28 2010

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Facebook is Africa’s Most Popular Mobile Destination – Facebook is the most popular mobile web destination in Africa, according to a report from Norway-based mobile software developer Opera. Africa’s 400 million mobile subscribers often turn to mobile devices for Internet access because it’s more reliable than hardwired connections and, even as Twitter begins to gain ground there, Facebook was the top social networking site in six out of 10 countries surveyed by Opera.

Mplayit Releases Most Shared Mobile Apps – Mplayit, an app that recommends new apps, released a list of the most shared apps on the iPhone, Android, BlackBerry and Java devices. The list included a variety of apps for a variety of functions, ranging from CafeSolitaire to the Finger Physics game to ReaderScope RSS feed reader to Call Blocker Professional.

Facebook Goes to Washington – Adam Conner is a 25 year-old Facebook lobbyist who’s been acting like tech support for much of Washington, D.C., fielding as many as 20 help requests a day, helping representatives and staff learn to use Facebook more effectively. His free services earn him $75,000 a year with equity from Facebook and he’s got more than 2,500 friends on his profile.

Notes App Imports Images from Blogs – Facebook’s Notes app now includes images when blog feeds are automatically imported to the site. The changes were likely made in the past few weeks, previously images were lost when blog posts were automatically imported.

It’s 20-10, not 2010 – A web site, in conjunction with a Facebook group and fan page, has set out to change the way we talk about the next decade — literally. The site, twentynot2000, is dedicated to the simple idea that speaking “two thousand and ten” is too long, whereas “twenty ten” is much shorter, “If we don’t fix this now, we’ll be stuck saying years the long way for the next 89 years,” the site pleads. The site’s fan page boasts over 20,000 fans so far and the group has over 1,400 members.

Indonesian Woman Cleared after Facebook Snafu – A 32 year-old woman in Indonesia was cleared of defaming a hospital she claimed misdiagnosed her after an email she wrote about the ordeal was widely circulated on Facebook. An Indonesian court threw the case out on December 29 and Prita Mulyasari was cleared of criminal defamation under Indonesia’s 2008 Electronic Information and Transactions Law. In the message she wrote to friends, she said she had been misdiagnosed with dengue fever, when she actually had mumps. She was facing up to six years in jail.

Free Snow Goggles for Skiers on Facebook – Stratton Mountain Ski Resort in Vermont launched a Facebook promotion encouraging skiers there to make a video promoting their new park in exchange for ski goggles valued at $129.99. The resort’s newest park, Lower Middlebrook, is the largest at the resort and in order to promote the latest offering Stratton is asking fans to friend them on Facebook, sign up to make a short video skiing in the new park, upload it to their Facebook page and vote for the winner of the video via the “Like” button.

McAfee Labs: More Hacks on Facebook in 2010 – McAfee Labs published its 2010 threats predictions this week, noting an expected increase in threats to social networking sites like Facebook in particular. The report stated that spammers are likely to take advantage users trusting their friends on social networks and that this “friendly fire” will reach “new heights” in 2010.

Facebook consumes 5.5% of Internet Time in U.S. – comScore reported in December that Facebook use accounts for 5.5% of the total amount of time U.S. users spent in 2009, up from 2.5% a year ago.

Facebook Files New Lawsuit Against Spammers – Facebook filed its latest lawsuit in its crusade against spammers and phishers on December 14, accusing three men of phishing and spamming its users.

The suit, filed in San Jose, California, alleges that Jeremi Fisher, Philip Porembski and Ryan Shimeall phished users’ accounts, gained access to them, and then sent spam to other users from the compromised accounts. Facebook accuses the defendants and their companies — Choko Systems, Harm, and iMedia Online Services — of launching at least four spam campaigns during the last few years and recently sending nearly three-fourths of all spam on the site.

This latest suit follows two previous suits Facebook won against spammers and phishers: a $711 million judgment in October of 2009 and a $873 million judgment in November of 2008.

[Conner photo via The Washington Post.]

Facebook is Africa’s Most Popular Mobile Destination – Facebook is the most popular mobile web destination in Africa, according to a report from Norway-based mobile software developer Opera. Africa’s 400 million mobile subscribers often turn to mobile devices for Internet access because it’s more reliable than hardwired connections and, even as Twitter begins to gain ground there, Facebook was the top social networking site in six out of 10 countries surveyed by Opera.

Mplayit Releases Most Shared Mobile Apps – Mplayit, an app that recommends new apps, released a list of the most shared apps on the iPhone, Android, BlackBerry and Java devices. The list included a variety of apps for a variety of functions, ranging from CafeSolitaire to the Finger Physics game to ReaderScope RSS feed reader to Call Blocker Professional.

Facebook Goes to Washington – Adam Conner is a 25 year-old Facebook lobbyist who’s been acting like tech support for much of Washington, D.C., fielding as many as 20 help requests a day, helping representatives and staff learn to use Facebook more effectively. His free services earn him $75,000 a year with equity from Facebook and he’s got more than 2,500 friends on his profile.

Notes App Imports Images from Blogs – Facebook’s Notes app now includes images when blog feeds are automatically imported to the site. The changes were likely made in the past few weeks, previously images were lost when blog posts were automatically imported.

It’s 20-10, not 2010 – A web site, in conjunction with a Facebook group and fan page, has set out to change the way we talk about the next decade — literally. The site, twentynot2000, is dedicated to the simple idea that speaking “two thousand and ten” is too long, whereas “twenty ten” is much shorter, “If we don’t fix this now, we’ll be stuck saying years the long way for the next 89 years,” the site pleads. The site’s fan page boasts over 20,000 fans so far and the group has over 1,400 members.

Indonesian Woman Cleared after Facebook Snafu – A 32 year-old woman in Indonesia was cleared of defaming a hospital she claimed misdiagnosed her after an email she wrote about the ordeal was widely circulated on Facebook. An Indonesian court threw the case out on December 29 and Prita Mulyasari was cleared of criminal defamation under Indonesia’s 2008 Electronic Information and Transactions Law. In the message she wrote to friends, she said she had been misdiagnosed with dengue fever, when she actually had mumps. She was facing up to six years in jail.

Free Snow Goggles for Skiers on Facebook – Stratton Mountain Ski Resort in Vermont launched a Facebook promotion encouraging skiers there to make a video promoting their new park in exchange for ski goggles valued at $129.99. The resort’s newest park, Lower Middlebrook, is the largest at the resort and in order to promote the latest offering Stratton is asking fans to friend them on Facebook, sign up to make a short video skiing in the new park, upload it to their Facebook page and vote for the winner of the video via the “Like” button.

McAfee Labs: More Hacks on Facebook in 2010 – McAfee Labs published its 2010 threats predictions this week, noting an expected increase in threats to social networking sites like Facebook in particular. The report stated that spammers are likely to take advantage users trusting their friends on social networks and that this “friendly fire” will reach “new heights” in 2010.

Facebook consumes 5.5% of Internet Time in U.S. – comScore reported in December that Facebook use accounts for 5.5% of the total amount of time U.S. users spent in 2009, up from 2.5% a year ago.

Facebook Files New Lawsuit Against Spammers – Facebook filed its latest lawsuit in its crusade against spammers and phishers on December 14, accusing three men of phishing and spamming its users.

The suit, filed in San Jose, California, alleges that Jeremi Fisher, Philip Porembski and Ryan Shimeall phished users’ accounts, gained access to them, and then sent spam to other users from the compromised accounts. Facebook accuses the defendants and their companies — Choko Systems, Harm, and iMedia Online Services — of launching at least four spam campaigns during the last few years and recently sending nearly three-fourths of all spam on the site.

This latest suit follows two previous suits Facebook won against spammers and phishers: a $711 million judgment in October of 2009 and a $873 million judgment in November of 2008.

[Conner photo via The Washington Post.]

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