The Big Picture |
- Social Media in the Legal Sector
- Technology Footprint: Starting Up in New York
- Why Americans Pay So Much For Brand-Name Drugs
- My Mother Wants An iPhone
- 10 Boxing Day Reads
- Money & Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World
- Dogs in Cars
- 60 Seconds: Things That Happen Every Sixty Seconds
| Social Media in the Legal Sector Posted: 27 Dec 2011 01:30 AM PST Social Media Legal Infographic View more documents from Errol A. Adams, J.D., M.L.S. |
| Technology Footprint: Starting Up in New York Posted: 26 Dec 2011 01:45 PM PST At a friend’s house for a Christmas day party (yesterday), I speak with her 20-something nephew, who has worked at several NY area start ups. I mentioned this map, and he said it misses lots of small and newer start ups — the density is even greater. I believe 2011 was the year NYC start ups received more invested Venture Capital money than Boston for the first time. Given the massive difference in size, that is fairly astonishing. > click for larger version > |
| Why Americans Pay So Much For Brand-Name Drugs Posted: 26 Dec 2011 09:00 AM PST Click to enlarge: |
| Posted: 26 Dec 2011 07:30 AM PST I know, I know, I’m overloading you. You’ve had enough crap from this self-centered Lefsetz, who does he think he is anyway? But I just want to tell you this one story. My mother has mellowed. That’s one great thing about age, you stop trying to change the future, you go along for the ride. Life is one big amusement park, you think you can get on the Autopia and steer but really there’s a rail in the middle preventing you from veering too far, life’s more akin to a roller coaster than a free form assault. And once you accept this, you’re so much happier. My dad died before his time. At age seventy. After he passed, my mother told me he never thought he’d make it that far. I thought that was insane, but now I identify. The males in my lineage just don’t last that long. But the females do. So my mother sold the house and moved into an apartment building that’s akin to summer camp. If this is retirement, I want in. Everybody still standing from the area has a unit and my mom is so busy she throws me off the phone, there’s bridge and dinner and parties and movies… And my mother can barely walk, she finally acceded to using a walker, which makes us worry less on the west coast, but it’s impeded her not a bit. She still goes to the city for theatre, she flies cross-country… Hell, they put her in a wheelchair and escort her through security, it’s easier than it’s ever been. So now that my mother has grown into her skin, is comfortable, is accepting her children’s lives as opposed to trying to change them, well, not completely, our conversations are totally different. We discuss the movies, the books and the news…and talk tech. You see in the late nineties all the Gray Panthers got online. Not that they did much. E-mailed at best. They all bought Windows machines, this was before the Apple renaissance, and you need a full time IT guy to make those work. But in the upgrade cycle, all the octogenarians have switched to Apple. And when my mother gets flummoxed she calls me and I take over her screen via iChat and it’s a beautiful thing. She’s got an iMac with a screen bigger than she is, as you age you shrink, a Time Capsule, an Apple TV, I’d be lying if I told you she knew how to work this stuff well, but she’s addicted to watching TV shows on her iPad and reads books on a Kindle. But the questions are not complicated. Where’d the icon go? My mother is not mouse-savvy. She’s always dragging icons off the Dock. And Netflix continues to confuse her. It’s the menu hierarchy. I try to teach her to intuit how these devices work, but she always wants to write the instructions down. And she gets frustrated. As if the device has a personal vendetta against her. But now, unlike a decade ago, if I e-mail her she gets back to me in forty eight hours instead of a week, she goes online just that regularly, but unlike the younger generation, she’s not addicted. But she soon will be. You see her brethren are getting iPhones. That’s how it works. There’s a wave of acquisition, it sweeps through the building until everybody’s got one. Not that they know how to use the device, but they’ve got one. It was fascinating to see them all get cell phones. First they declared them unnecessary. But then they became addicted. I think my mother’s generation depends on mobile phones more than we do, if for no other reason than they’re not that mobile. So in our conversation tonight, my mother tells me a friend got an iPhone imitation. I winced. You’ve got to get the real thing. Another friend got the iPhone 3GS. It was free with renewal. You see the older generation is value conscious. A fourteen year old thinks nothing of blowing $200 on a cell phone, but an oldster…just doesn’t see the merit. So I told my mother if she can use an iPad, she can use an iPhone, they work the same way. Although there is a learning curve. And she’s got to switch to Verizon… Remember last year in Palm Springs when AT&T had no service? And she’s ready to jump. I just read 44% of shoppers have smart phones, up from 18% last year (http://t.co/iZECO8m4). And the thing about Apple is it’s the new Sony, the public trusts it. And there’s the Genius Bar. And I find it so funny that my mother wants to play. If you think about it, the entire entertainment business is about not playing, about trying to keep the customer in the dark, back in the twentieth century. But when even eighty five year olds need the latest gadget you know that philosophy is doomed. You may think CDs are better than MP3s. That a physical book is better than a Kindle. But try telling that to the people in my mom’s building. They’re completely wired and up to date. They want what we’ve got. And it puts a smile upon my face. – http://www.twitter.com/lefsetz – http://www.lefsetz.com/lists/?p=subscribe&id=1 |
| Posted: 26 Dec 2011 05:30 AM PST Some reads for your Boxing Day pleasure:
What are you obsessing over? >
Estimates are $8 billion worth of Gift Cards go unredeemed annually Source: Real Time Economics |
| Money & Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World Posted: 26 Dec 2011 05:00 AM PST
William D. Cohan’s Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World reveals what utter nonsense that story is. The faux narrative is the result of the most aggressive and sophisticated PR machine in the financial industry. Goldman is a secretive money-making machine, rife with conflict of interests, exerting undue influence over government. When the firm is not busy doing “God’s work,” it is assiduously cultivating people in power. Its been that way since 1913, when Henry Goldman advised the government on how the new Federal Reserve, designed to oversee Wall Street, should be constituted. Sidney Weinberg, who ran the firm for four decades, advised presidents from Roosevelt to Kennedy and was nicknamed “The Politician” for his behind-the-scenes friendships with government officials. Goldman executives ran fundraising efforts for Nixon, Reagan, Clinton and George W. Bush. Famously, and fatefully, two Goldman leaders — Robert Rubin and Henry Paulson — became Secretaries of the Treasury, where their actions both before and during the financial crisis of 2008 became the stuff of controversy and conspiracy theories. Reviews:
~~~ Full chapter after the jump
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| Posted: 26 Dec 2011 04:00 AM PST |
| 60 Seconds: Things That Happen Every Sixty Seconds Posted: 26 Dec 2011 03:00 AM PST 60 Seconds – Things That Happen On Internet Every Sixty Seconds
~~~ 60 Seconds – Things That Happen Every Sixty Seconds Part 2 If you think that not much can possibly happen within 60 seconds, the following infographic will entirely change the way you think. Our “60 Seconds – Things That Happen Every Sixty Seconds” infographic contains 19 interesting facts that occur every sixty seconds.
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