RIP Memoriam thread?
#421
Posted 2016-February-20, 10:57
#422
Posted 2016-March-06, 14:29
Much has been said, but she and her husband were a happily married couple. That counts.
#424
Posted 2016-March-17, 14:05
Bereft of life but freedom gained
Released from all our bounds and ties
At sentence end, our story told.
More than a memory of what once was
Creative font of that to come.
For there is more, as we go on
Beyond the pale and earthly veil
Returned to our more natural state.
Of being and not just a cog
in cosmic clockwork, time and place.
Fear not and do not grieve this loss
As that was just a passing phase
We'll meet again in a new space
To celebrate and consecrate
Our return to immaculate grace.
#425
Posted 2016-March-24, 08:00
#426
Posted 2016-March-26, 09:53
Quote
Lost in the lore is Mr. Grove’s critique of Silicon Valley in an essay he wrote in 2010 in Bloomberg Businessweek. According to Mr. Grove, Silicon Valley was squandering its competitive edge in innovation by failing to propel strong job growth in the United States.
Mr. Grove acknowledged that it was cheaper and thus more profitable for companies to hire workers and build factories in Asia than in the United States. But in his view, those lower Asian costs masked the high price of offshoring as measured by lost jobs and lost expertise. Silicon Valley misjudged the severity of those losses, he wrote, because of a “misplaced faith in the power of start-ups to create U.S. jobs.”
Mr. Grove contrasted the start-up phase of a business, when uses for new technologies are identified, with the scale-up phase, when technology goes from prototype to mass production. Both are important. But only scale-up is an engine for job growth — and scale-up, in general, no longer occurs in the United States. “Without scaling,” he wrote, “we don’t just lose jobs — we lose our hold on new technologies” and “ultimately damage our capacity to innovate.”
And yet, an all-out commitment to American-based manufacturing has not been on the business agenda of Silicon Valley or the political agenda of the United States. That omission, according to Mr. Grove, is a result of another “unquestioned truism”: “that the free market is the best of all economic systems — the freer the better.” To Mr. Grove, that belief was flawed.
The triumph of free-market principles over planned economies in the 20th century, he said, did not make those principles infallible or immutable. There was room for improvement, he argued, for what he called “job-centric” economics and politics. In a job-centric system, job creation would be the nation’s No. 1 objective, with the government setting priorities and arraying the forces necessary to achieve the goal, and with businesses operating not only in their immediate profit interest but also in the interests of “employees, and employees yet to be hired.”
When Mr. Grove wrote his critique, he was concerned about the corrosive social and economic effects of high unemployment, then 9.7 percent nationally. Unemployment has dropped considerably since then, but problems persist. Insecure, low-paying, part-time and dead-end jobs are prevalent. On the campaign trail, large groups of Americans are motivated and manipulated on the basis of real and perceived social and economic inequities.
Conditions have worsened in other ways. In 2010, one of the arguments against Mr. Grove’s critique was that exporting jobs did not matter as long as much of the corporate profits stayed in the United States. But just as American companies have bolstered their profits by exporting jobs, many now do so by shifting profits overseas through tax-avoidance maneuvers.
The result is a high-profit, low-prosperity nation. “All of us in business,” Mr. Grove wrote, “have a responsibility to maintain the industrial base on which we depend and the society whose adaptability — and stability — we may have taken for granted.” Silicon Valley and much of corporate America have yet to live up to that principle. Teresa Tritch NYT
#428
Posted 2016-April-06, 14:43
#432
Posted 2016-June-03, 05:56
Somebody I saw live many times
#433
Posted 2016-June-03, 22:21
AKING: Boxing legend Muhammad Ali, 'the greatest of all time,' has died at 74 nbcnews.to/1VCRMf8
Truly a great man
#434
Posted 2016-June-05, 08:23
#435
Posted 2016-June-07, 04:25
One of the strogest chess players never to become world champion
http://www.nytimes.c...dies-at-85.html
#436
Posted 2016-June-07, 08:56
mike777, on 2016-June-03, 22:21, said:
AKING: Boxing legend Muhammad Ali, 'the greatest of all time,' has died at 74 nbcnews.to/1VCRMf8
Truly a great man
I listened to the Thrilla in Manilla on radio and loved the guy.
What is baby oil made of?
#437
Posted 2016-June-07, 11:43
phoenix214, on 2016-June-07, 04:25, said:
One of the strogest chess players never to become world champion
http://www.nytimes.c...dies-at-85.html
I've a funny feeling I played bridge with Korchnoi in the evening during one of the Hastings chess tournaments, maybe 1988, the chess players used to relax playing bridge fairly regularly in the evenings.
#439
Posted 2016-June-25, 14:42
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From Wikipedia:
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