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Why Dubai Matters


John A. Byrne talks with BusinessWeek's Stanley Reed about this week's cover story on the fallout from Dubai

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Chuck Norris: Bring on the Pain! Review | iPhone Games App | Macworld

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MacVoices #9125: Rob Walch of Wizzard Media Discusses the iPhone, Their Podc...

via MacVoices by Chuck on 12/4/09

Robwalch

Interested in the world of new media? Podcasting? The iPhone? All of those topics and more are covered in a conversation with Rob Walch, the Vice President of Podcaster Relations at Wizzard Media, and host of Today in iPhone. Rob was also the Podcast Tracks Coordinator for BlogWorld Expo 2009, and starts by discussing on how the show turned out, and the intersection of blogging and podcasting. Rob’s was one of the first iPhone-focused podcasts, and it is still going strong. He covers the state of the iPhone, who’s using them, and how they stack up against the newest interlopers. After all that, Rob gets down to business, explaining how Wizzard Media provides a full set of services to podcasters without burdensome requirements or obligations. From hosting to advertising to producing dedicated iPhone podcast apps, Wizzard Media is one of the most important services in the podcast space. Find out how they help deliver most of your favorite podcasts (including those of The MacVoices Group), and why it should make a difference to you.

Links:

Chuck Joiner on Twitter

The MacVoices Group

Subscribe to MacVoices in iTunes Subscribe to MacVoices in iTunes

MacLevelTen – The Mac Media Group

Today in iPhone

Wizzard Media

Libsyn

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Bonuses & ideology

via Stumbling and Mumbling by chris dillow on 12/4/09

Why is there still a row about bankers’ bonuses? What I mean is that the issue should by now be settled against them. There’s abundant evidence that large bonus “incentives” are not only not justified (pdf) by efficiency considerations, but can actually backfire, with the result that intelligent observers are demanding an end to them.
If we were serious about designing high-powered incentives, we’d consider abandoning bonuses and instead simply killing under-performing bankers. After all, the threat of death works perfectly well in motivating airline pilots or soldiers. So why not apply it more generally?*
Let’s be clear. Bankers’ bonuses have less to do with rational incentive mechanisms than with the fact that bankers have power. It’s a form of legal extortion.
Which raises the question; why is this not more clear? It’s because any power structure is sustained by ideology - a set of cognitive biases which might have a grain of truth but which serve to defend vested interests. In the case of bonuses, there are four such biases:
1. The fallacy of composition. If any one banker doesn’t get a big bonus, it’s possible he might flounce off in a huff to another firm. But it’s not possible for all bankers to do so; only a tiny handful of British bankers could get good jobs in New York or  Switzerland. In this sense, a blanket nationwide ban on big bonuses wouldn’t do much harm.
What’s true for an individual needn’t be true for a group.
There’s a parallel here with one of the errors that got us into this mess - what Keynes called the “fetish of liquidity”. An asset might be liquid from the point of view of an individual, but there is no such thing as liquidity for al investors.
2. Mental accounting. Last year’s banks’ losses seem to have been put into a separate mental box, and are regarded as an exceptional item now that business is back to normal. But this shouldn’t be the case. Those losses vindicate Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s point that banks, on average, don’t make money because occasional huge losses wipe out years of profits. Which suggests bankers don’t have the skill they pretend to.
3. The fundamental attribution error. The belief that banks’ profits come from skilled individuals is in part due to the common error of attributing to individual agency what is in fact the result of situational or environmental factors. It’s trivially true that today’s banks’ profits are due to cheap money, government guarantees and state bail-outs. But it’s always been the case that profits have risen and fallen according to environmental forces such as monetary policy, waves of takeovers and general investor sentiment.
4. The impossible/difficult conflation. Throughout history necromancers, witch-doctors alchemists and ju-ju men have extracted high incomes. They’ve done so because their patrons have believed their job to be very difficult, demanding supreme skills. But in truth, the jobs of foretelling the future, controlling the weather and turning base metals into gold  haven’t been difficult ones. They’ve been impossible.
So it is, perhaps, with banking. Making high risk-free returns isn’t difficult, but impossible. In failing to see this, we give bankers the fortunes our ancestors gave other charlatans.
* Of course, the same reasoning applies to politicians, as they too can make huge errors which cost society dearly. This probably explains why they are not proposing the idea.

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iTunes 12 Days Of Christmas Email Alerts

From: iTunes 12 Days Of Christmas <12days@iTunes.chtah.com>
Date: 4 December 2009 11:40:13 GMT
Subject: iTunes 12 Days Of Christmas Email Alerts

iTunes 12 Days of Christmas

Thank you for registering for iTunes 12 Days Of Christmas email alerts. 

The daily giveaway starts on 26th December and we'll email you as soon as each free download becomes available with instructions on how to get the content. But hurry, we can only make each one free for 24 hours. 

We won't use your email address for any other purposes and will delete it once the promotion finishes. 

Thank you 

The iTunes Team
www.itunes12daysofchristmas.co.uk


iTunes for Mac and Windows 

Copyright © 2009 iTunes S.à r.l. 8 rue Heinrich Heine, L-1720 Luxembourg 
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iTunes reserves the right to substitute an alternative free download of equivalent of greater value in the event of circumstances outside of its control. To access the free download, you must have or open an iTunes Store account (terms apply available at itunes.com/uk).

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Mac OS Ken: 12.04.2009

via Mac OS Ken by ken@macosken.com on 12/4/09

IDC Calls for 300k Apps and the MacTabletNetbookThingy by End of 2010 / Caris and Company Calls for 26 Percent Mac Growth in 2010 / Huge Online Retailer in China Sells Only Five iPhones in Two Weeks / Verizon Droid Ad Takes Direct Aim Against iPhone / AT AND T Cuts BlackBerry Prices to Battle Verizon Leaving iPhone Dangling / Motorola Invests in MultiTouch Technology Firm / Nokia Drops 2010 Phone Models to Make Fighting Weight / Apple Updates Java for Leopard and Snow Leopard / Australian Computer Seller Faces Off with Apple over 26 Year Old Macpro Name

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Dilbert comic strip for 12/03/2009 from the official Dilbert comic strips archive.

http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/2009-12-03/

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H1N1 malware epidemic is more contagious than real deal

http://arstechnica.com/security/news/2009/12/h1n1-malware-epidemic-is-more-contagious-than-real-swine-flu.ars?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss

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Podcast: iPhone developers, Google Android and Chrome OS

via RoughlyDrafted Magazine by danieleran on 12/3/09

Gene Steinberg of the Tech Night Owl invited me to talk about iPhone development and Google’s Android and Chrome OS. You can tune into the live stream Thursday December 3 at 6 PM PST, or listen to podcast episodes via iTunes, and subscribe to the Tech Night Owl RSS feed at: The Tech Night Owl LIVE [...]

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Mac OS Ken: 12.03.2009

via Mac OS Ken by ken@macosken.com on 12/3/09

Computerworld Details More of the Apple v Psystar Settlement / Apple Sued Over HTTP Live Streaming in QuickTime / Apple Web Traffic Up 71 Percent on Cyber Monday / Shaw Wu Sees iPhone on T Mobile or Sprint Before Verizon in the States / AT and T Drops Verizon Advertising Lawsuit / Adobe Says Photoshop App for iPhone and iPod touch Goes Global / ESRP App Outlines and Explains Ratings for Video Games / IFO Says Apple May Take touch POS Wide / Acer Plans Google Chrome OS Netbook for Second Half of 2010

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