|
|
|
The obsessive life of bond guru Bill Gross Contributed by Chetan Parikh
One of the world’s legendary investors, Mr. Gross doesn’t have a cellphone. So when the U.S. Treasury Secretary needed to reach him, the call was routed to his wife. “We chatted for 30 minutes in my inebriated state about what to do about the U.S. economy,” he says with an impish smile.
Bill Gross: The path to prosperity is through production Contributed by Chetan Parikh
So the hedgies are in retreat and, in some cases, on the run. Ken Griffin at Citadel is considering cutting fees, and Stan Druckenmiller at Duquesne/ex-Soros is packing his bags for the golf course. Frustrated at his inability to replicate the accustomed 30% annualized returns that his business model and expertise produced over the past several decades, Stan is throwing in the towel. Who's to blame him? I don't. I respect him, not only for his financial wizardry, but his philanthropy which includes not only writing big checks, but spending lots of time with personal causes such as the Harlem Children's Zone. And at 57, he's certainly learned how to smell more roses, pick more daisies, and replace more divots than yours truly has at the advancing age of 66. So way to go Stan. Enjoy.
Bill Gross: Mr. Gross Goes to Washington Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Bill Gross of PIMCO has published an essay on how to reform the country’s mortgage lending regulation. Apparently he has gone to Washington DC and proposed a resolution of Fannie Mae (FNMA) and Freddie Mac (FHLMC) and the evolution of housing finance in the United States.
Buying and Selling Hope.
"All the interest of my reason comes together in the following three questions: 1) What can I know? 2) What ought I to do? 3) What may I hope? Fascinating application to the current investment landscape."
North to Alaska
"These 21st Century dogs don't seem to be responding, and the warming huts of Iditarod and the V-shaped recovery are still a long way off. Look for more Federal Reserve cuts in the immediate future to get our economic dogsled up to crusin' speed.
|
|
|
|
A Deadlier Disaster for the Third World: Unemployment (23rd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The recent collapse of a garment factory building in Bangladesh, resulting in the death, at latest count, of more than 1,100 workers who were employed there, has led to international outrage not only against the building’s owner but also against the various retailers in the United States and Europe, many of them prominent, that have sold clothing produced in that building. It is demanded that they assume responsibility for working conditions in the factories that supply them and not deal with factories that do not provide safe and humane conditions and pay fair wages.
Crowd funding for Start-Ups and Small Business-video (23rd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
A Better Kind of Bank (23rd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Investing in a bank used to seem like such a great idea…But then came the crises, the scandals, the closures, not to mention the government bailouts.
Jim Grant Asks 'What Happened To Capitalism?'-video (23rd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Grant thinks the Fed minutes today which turned the stock market lower contained zero pieces of useful information.
The Debt-Growth Controversy (23rd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The recent controversy over errors in a 2010 paper by the economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff is a sad commentary on the demands of the 24/7 news cycle and the politically toxic atmosphere surrounding fiscal policy in the United States, Europe, and Japan.
Present Shock and the Loss of History and Context (23rd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Rushkoff's reply to an interview question on the consequences of ubiquitous marketing reveals how media/marketing has created an unquestioned politics of experience in which one's identity and sense of self is constructed almost entirely by what one buys
The Pace of Productivity and How to Master Your Creative Routine (23rd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
“When you work regularly, inspiration strikes regularly.”
Arianna Huffington on Redefining Success: 2013 Smith College Commencement Address (23rd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
“Money and power by themselves are a two-legged stool — you can balance on them for a while, but eventually you’re going to topple over.”
Neil Gaiman — Make Good Art (23rd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
When you start out on a career in the arts you have no idea what you are doing.
How to retain more of what you read (23rd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
One of the keys to getting smarter is to read a lot.
Still Charting Memory’s Depths (23rd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
In many ways, the Obama administration’s new plan to map the human brain has its origins in the work of Brenda Milner, the neuropsychologist whose detailed observations of an amnesia patient in the 1950s showed how memory is rooted in specific regions of the brain.
How the hot hand delusion messes with the game (23rd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
If one of your players is on a hot streak, tell him to cool off. An analysis of consecutive shots in the 2010-2011 NBA season finds that players who had just scored during regular play (not a free throw), especially from longer range, were more likely to take the next shot for their team. However, that follow-up shot was riskier, as it was more likely to be taken from longer range, and was therefore more likely to miss.
Deleveraging, Releveraging and Finding the New Saturation Point (23rd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
I won’t do away with buzzwords altogether, but I’ll recycle an old one that’s faded from public discussion. Before cliff took its new meaning and austerity spawned a new branch of etymology, we had deleveraging.
Guitars, Eccentric Billionaires, and Space Travel (23rd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
This feat is certainly an odd way of carving a niche in the country-music industry. The standard career track is to develop guitar skills and a drinking problem simultaneously, then write songs about both until you wind up in Nashville. Very few astronauts ever wind up with Grammys—Neil Armstrong never even got nominated. Going through rigorous astronaut training in order to be blasted through the stratosphere in a billion-dollar tin can seems like roundabout career planning, but perhaps that’s the standard course for Ontario musicians.
Brainstorming Is a Terrible Way to Come Up With Ideas (23rd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
A QE Thought Experiment (23rd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
QE is an asset swap of privately held bonds for some form of money (reserves if banks sell or deposits if a non-bank sells the bond). So there’s no change in the private sector’s net financial assets. In other words, the private sector doesn’t experience some form of excess financial assets from QE. If you want to call it “money printing” then fine, but it’s a lot like changing a saving account (t-bonds) to a checking account (reserves/deposits). So the moneyness of the private sector’s assets change, but the net financial assets do not change.
Martial Law vs. Market Law: Reflections on Boston (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
There are two kinds of people in the world: those who respect coercive authority and consider it legitimate, and those who do not. The former group is likewise split into two factions: a relatively small group that, for whatever reason, essentially worships power, and a much larger one whose members merely tolerate authoritarianism, either as a matter of expedience or habit.
Kyle Bass bets on full-blown Japan crisis (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Kyle Bass hopes he is wrong, and so may everyone else, as the danger predicted by the founder of Dallas-based Hayman Capital is nothing less than a full blown financial crisis in the world’s third-largest economy, Japan.
Jim Rogers - Give Me a Trillion Dollars and I’ll Show You a Really Good Time!-Video (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Here is another interview with Rogers who is continuing to warn about an unhappy ending to all of the global money printing.
Austere Illusions (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The doctrine of imposing present pain for future benefit has a long history – stretching all the way back to Adam Smith and his praise of “parsimony.” It is particularly vociferous in “hard times.” In 1930, US President Herbert Hoover was advised by his treasury secretary, Andrew Mellon: “Liquidate labor, liquidate stocks, liquidate the farmers, liquidate real estate.
China’s Interest-Rate Challenge (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
China’s successful transformation from a middle-income country to a modern, high-income country will depend largely on the reforms that the government undertakes over the next decade. Financial reforms should top the agenda, beginning with interest-rate liberalization.
A Case of Virtual Hyperinflation (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
As virtual fantasy worlds go, Blizzard Entertainment’s Diablo 3 is particularly foreboding. In this multiplayer online game played by millions, witch doctors, demon hunters, and other character types duke it out in a war between angels and demons in a dark world called Sanctuary.
Your Cousin, the Blade of Grass: Brian Cox on the Wonders of Life (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
“All science is provisional.”
How Creativity in Humor, Art, and Science Works: Arthur Koestler’s Theory of Bisociation (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
“The discoveries of yesterday are the truisms of tomorrow, because we can add to our knowledge but cannot subtract from it.”
The Power of I Don’t Know (22nd May 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
“There seems to be a widespread presumption that writing is prescriptive (or proscriptive) rather than simply observational or meditative,” writes Tim Kreider in his New York Times op-ed.
|
|
|
|
Bill Gates: My 13 favorite talks (4th December 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
When we asked Bill Gates to curate a list of his favorite talks, his first response was, “There are too many to pick, really.” Here, he's whittled it down to 13 essentials.
Kill the Password: Why a String of Characters Can’t Protect Us Anymore (3rd December 2012) Contributed by Abhay Bhagat
It’s not a well-kept secret, either. Just a simple string of characters—maybe six of them if you’re careless, 16 if you’re cautious—that can reveal everything about you.
Microsoft Said to Speed Windows Upgrades to Once a Year (3rd December 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Microsoft aims to upgrade the software more frequently, about once a year, rather than every two or three years as it’s done in the past, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the product plans are private. The company plans to unveil the first of these updates in 2013, one of the people said.
Frozen Water and Organic Material Discovered on Mercury (30th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
For the first time, scientists have confirmed that the planet Mercury holds at least 100 billion tons of water ice as well as organic material in permanently shadowed craters at its north pole.
Seeing the light: Ed Boyden's tools for brain hackers (27th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Ed Boyden, an engineer turned neuroscientist, makes tools for brain hackers. In his lab at MIT, he's built a robot that can capture individual neurons and uses light potentially to control major diseases -- all in his quest to 'solve the brain'.
The Scientific Blind Spot (26th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
In 1870, German chemist Erich von Wolf analyzed the iron content of green vegetables and accidentally misplaced a decimal point when transcribing data from his notebook.
Having Broken CO2 Speed Limit, World Now "Stepping on the Gas" (26th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The United Nations Environment Program warns that global emissions of greenhouse gases are opening up a widening gap between reality and climate change goals
Galaxy Might Be Most Distant Seen Object (26th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Thanks to gravitational lensing by a cluster of galaxies, the light emitted by a small galaxy 13.3 billion years ago has reached Earth. John Matson reports
Global Energy: The Latest Infatuations (24th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
In energy matters, what goes around, comes around—but perhaps should go away
Solar storm as desert plan to power Europe falters (24th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
An ambitious plan to provide 15% of Europe's power needs from solar plants in North Africa has run into trouble. The Desertec initiative hoped to deliver electricity from a network of renewable energy sources to Europe via cables under the sea.
In His Own Words: Bill Gates Dishes on Computers, Religion and Being Smart [Excerpt] (24th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Bill Gates in His Own Words readers get a glimpse of the visionary Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist's philosophy on business, technology and life via some of his most memorable quotes
European Exoplanet-Hunting Space Telescope Nears Its End (23rd November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
A pioneering European space telescope that discovered the first rocky extrasolar planet is on its last legs, Nature has learned.
Planting Seeds of Dementia (23rd November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
A cascade of misfolded proteins may trigger Alzheimer's By Carrie Arnold Researchers have untangled some of the neurological events that may ultimately lead to Alzheimer's disease. Two new studies show that a protein implicated in this form of dementia can infect other neurons to spread disease across the brain. These problematic proteins clump together, which can lead to cognitive problems.
Galapagos' Extinct Tortoise Species Could Come Back to Life (23rd November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
A species of giant tortoises from the Galapagos Islands could be brought back from extinction despite the death earlier this year of the famed "Lonesome George," a tourist magnet and conservation icon who was the last of his kind.
Hunt for Life under Antarctic Ice Heats Up (23rd November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
On the heels of a Russian drilling effort that reached Lake Vostok, British and American teams also aim to penetrate ancient subglacial lakes By Quirin Schiermeier and Nature magazine
Curiosity Rover’s Secret Historic Breakthrough? Speculation Centers on Organic Molecules (21st November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The report comes by way of the rover’s principal investigator, geologist John Grotzinger of Caltech, who said that Curiosity has uncovered exciting new results from a sample of Martian soil recently scooped up and placed in the Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) instrument.
Brainwave-Controlled Helicopter Lands on Kickstarter (21st November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The system uses a NeuroSky MindWave Mobile EEG headset to record brainwave data, which is then sent to software on either a tablet/smartphone or on a specially designed pyramid-shaped base. The software converts the brainwave data to flight commands, which control the flight of the spherical helicopter,
'Super-Jupiter' Discovery Dwarfs Solar System's Largest Planet (20th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
In a rare direct photo of a world beyond Earth, astronomers have spotted a planet 13 times more massive than Jupiter, the largest planet in our own solar system.
Humans, chimpanzees and monkeys share DNA but not gene regulatory mechanisms, scientists report at ASHG 2012 (12th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Human Shares ove 90 % of their DNA with their primate cousins. The expression or activity patterns of genes differ across species in ways that help explain each species' distinct biolgy and behavior.
Mini Mover and Shaker: Single-Molecule "Engine" Vibrates Macro Object (12th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The random motion of a hydrogen molecule can drive the oscillation of a much larger structure By John Matson
Spooky Science: Make a Ghostly Illusion (12th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Halloween is a time for sharing ghost stories and watching spooky movies. But have you ever thought about the science behind some of these uncanny experiences? Haunted houses, for example, take advantage of the way your brain uses sensory information.
Climate Change Threatens Legacy Coffee (12th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Rising seas and severe storms are the most talked-about threats of climate change. But here's another: no more coffee. Because rising temperatures may cripple wild populations of Arabica coffee—the most cultivated species in the world.
Can Concrete Be Bendable? (10th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The notoriously brittle building material may yet stretch instead of breaking
Undead-End: Fungus That Controls Zombie-Ants Has Own Fungal Stalker (9th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
A specialized parasite fungus can control ants' behavior. But that fungus also faces its own deadly, specialized parasites
The Energy Opportunity in Wasted Heat (9th November 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
For every one unit of energy that is converted into electricity in power plants today, two units of energy are thrown away. This wasted energy is primarily in the form of heat – or thermal energy – and, there is technology available today that can turn this waste into a usable energy stream.
|
|
|
|
7 Highly Effective Habits (1st March 2013) Contributed by chetan parikh
This is the first study to examine what factors are associated with an increased follower-count on Twitter over an extended period of time. Hutto et al. (2013) studied 507 Twitter users over 15 months and half-a-million tweets
Famous Resolution Lists: Jonathan Swift, Susan Sontag, Marilyn Monroe, Woody Guthrie (2nd January 2013) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
“Stay glad. Keep hoping machine running. Love everybody. Make up your mind.”
Ravi Venkatesan: Winning in India Can Help Companies Win Globally (15th June 2012) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Under Ravi Venkatesan's leadership from 2004 to 2011, Microsoft India's revenues grew fivefold and the country became one of the fastest growing geographies for the software firm.
Churchill and Drucker: Perfect Together (23rd October 2010) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Ties between the two men go way back. In May 1939, Churchill reviewed Drucker's first major book, The End of Economic Man, for The Times Literary Supplement, praising him as "one of those writers to whom almost anything can be forgiven because he not only has a mind of his own, but has a gift of starting other minds along a stimulating line of thought."
Excerpt: The Drucker Lectures (25th September 2010) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Most people know Peter Drucker through his books and articles. But Drucker was also a great speaker, especially in the classroom, where his students would sit rapt, listening as he pulled facts from his encyclopedic mind and shared insights on countless subjects. This side of the "father of modern management" is captured in The Drucker Lectures, (McGraw-Hill, 2010). Edited by Rick Wartzman, executive director of the Drucker Institute and a columnist for Bloomberg Businessweek, The Drucker Lectures features 33 of his most important talks. The earliest was delivered in 1943. The latest were given at Claremont Graduate University in 2003, two years before Drucker died. The excerpt below, on "The Future of the Corporation," comes from one of those final lectures.
Activists get help from SEC (25th August 2010) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
It's a good time to be a corporate gadfly.
Why Corporate Governance Matters to Everyone (18th August 2010) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
So many of the problems we face today result from poor decision-making by private corporations. Prominent examples include the Gulf oil spill and the seriously weakened financial sector, which is imperiling the rest of our economy. However, so many who describe themselves as liberals or progressives seek to address such problems with more government regulation and programs instead of by preventing the bad decisions at the source, which is likely to be more efficient from a resource utilization perspective.
Relational Letter to Occidental Petroleum (10th August 2010) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
This letter to Occidental Petroleum’s board of directors from Ralph Whitworth of Relational Investors (VII, September 30, 2009) and Anne Sheehan of the California State Teachers’ Retirement System outlines why the activist investors are seeking to replace at least four board members: “[T]he board, as currently composed, suffers from entrenchment and ossification, which renders each of its members incapable of functioning as vigorous and independent shareholder representatives.”
How to Make an American Job Before It's Too Late: Andy Grove (6th July 2010) Contributed by Abhay Bhagat
Recently an acquaintance at the next table in a Palo Alto, California, restaurant introduced me to his companions: three young venture capitalists from China. They explained, with visible excitement, that they were touring promising companies in Silicon Valley. I’ve lived in the Valley a long time, and usually when I see how the region has become such a draw for global investments, I feel a little proud.
The new pluralism (22nd March 2010) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Power in modern society is progressively being diffused, moving away from central government to interest groups, even to single individuals. Society and the body politic in democratic societies are becoming pluralist in new ways. This phenomenon was analysed by management guru and social science professor Peter Drucker in his book The New Age. A clear understanding of this development would help political and social leaders to cope with changing electoral aspirations.
The Drucker School of Management Honored as an 'Excellent Business School' by Eduniversal (24th April 2009) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
The Peter F. Drucker and Masatoshi Ito Graduate School of Management was recognized as an “Excellent Business School” by EDUNIVERSAL, an organization that helps students choose the best business schools worldwide. The Drucker school was honored to be among the 1,000 selected business schools in the world because of its strength in the US and international influence.
Peter Senge (21st November 2008) Contributed by Rohan M. Shah
Peter Senge (born 1947) studied aerospace engineering at Stanford University before moving into the field of organisational behaviour and becoming director of the Centre for Organisational Learning at MIT’s Sloan School of Management. He is credited with developing the idea of the learning organisation, based on his study of social systems and the relationship of the whole to its constituent parts. A learning organisation, he once said, “is continually expanding its capacity to create its future”.
Economic Depressions: Their Cause and Cure (3rd October 2008) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
We live in a world of euphemism. Undertakers have become "morticians," press agents are now "public relations counsellors" and janitors have all been transformed into "superintendents." In every walk of life, plain facts have been wrapped in cloudy camouflage.
Peter Drucker's "Unfinished Chapter:" (6th August 2007) Contributed by Abhay Bhagat
The influence the CEO has on people--individually and collectively.
Management: A movie guide (6th July 2007) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
I've read about shamrock organisations, horizontal organisations and federal organisations. I've read about intelligent enterprises and spider-web organisations. The most-quoted management guru Peter Drucker said that managing an information-based organisation is more like conducting a symphony orchestra than running a business on traditional lines. Others have compared it to running a jazz combo, and then there are those who say it's like running a sports team.
Q&A with management guru Jim Collins (18th June 2007) Contributed by Abhay Bhagat
The bestselling author answers our readers' questions about business, leadership - and mountain climbing.
Beware the 'Walking Dead': Analyzing Customer Data from a Multi-Service Firm (14th June 2007) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Think of them as the "walking dead," a type of customer who currently maintains service with a particular company, but whose next action will most likely be to discontinue that relationship, according to a new study that examines how the customers of a telecommunications firm acquire and discard services over time. The paper -- "Modeling the Evolution of Customers' Service Portfolios," by Wharton marketing professors Peter Fader and Eric Bradlow and a former Wharton PhD student -- focuses in part on whether it is possible to predict future purchasing patterns by looking at past buying behavior.
At 3M, A Struggle Between Efficiency And Creativity (4th June 2007) Contributed by Abhay Bhagat
How CEO George Buckley is managing the yin and yang of discipline and imagination
Here Today, Discounted Tomorrow: Strategic Shoppers Know When to Buy, and at What Price (1st June 2007) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Some shoppers just can't help themselves and buy mostly on impulse without regard to price. Others are die-hard bargain hunters, who only open their wallets for a discount. Then there are the strategic consumers, who are willing to buy full-price sometimes, but at other times they will wait for a bargain. According to new research by Gérard P. Cachon, professor of operations and information management at Wharton, and doctoral student Robert Swinney, it's these customers that retailers need to focus on in order to reap the full benefits of lean retail inventory management and variable pricing.
Marketers For Charity: Peter Drucker (1st June 2007) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Few have had as great an impact on the business world as Peter Drucker. So, it is more than fitting to have his work amplified on Branding Strategy Insider during this years Marketers For Charity effort.
The best business books of all time? Here are the choices of our panel of CEOs and experts (25th May 2007) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Robert Bruner still remembers the first book he read as a manager. It was 1988, and Bruner, now the dean of the Darden School of Business at the University of Virginia, was an up-and-coming professor, respected for his work in finance. But he'd never managed people before. And when he was charged with overseeing the first year of the school's M.B.A. program, Bruner began to struggle.Under fire, Bruner scrambled for guidance. He found it in Peter Drucker'sThe Effective Executive. In the book, published two decades earlier, the dean of management thinkers—known for his study of GM under Alfred Sloan—offered advice to managers burdened with exactly Bruner's problems.
Strategies: Pray for a public buyer (21st May 2007) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
If you own stock in a company that is ripe for takeover, you should hope the company is not acquired by a private equity firm.
A New Take on Corporate Governance and Anti-Corruption Crusades (18th May 2007) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
Most people assume that good corporate governance benefits shareholders, and that corruption in a banking system should be rooted out. But just how much benefit does a company really get when it improves its accounting and puts a few outsiders on its board of directors? And when does an anti-corruption crusade start to backfire, causing a chilling effect that denies loans to credit-worthy borrowers? India offers a chance to study both questions, which were the subject of papers presented at a global conference on India's Financial System held in April at Wharton. The conference was organized by Wharton's Financial Institutions Center with the Centre for Analytical Finance at the Indian School of Business in Hyderabad and the Stockholm-based Swedish Institute for Financial Research.
Adobe's Shantanu Narayen: India and Other Emerging Markets Are Going to Drive Trends in Software Evolution (18th May 2007) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
While a number of Indian IT companies are expanding globally, several major U.S. IT firms are increasing their presence in India. Among them is Adobe Systems, which views India as an important development center and a growing market for its products. In the second of a two-part interview with Knowledge@Wharton, Adobe president and chief operating officer Shantanu Narayen discusses the company's strategy regarding India and global expansion. In the first part of the interview, published in Knowledge@Wharton, he talks about Adobe's product strategy for the emerging trend of rich Internet applications.
Shantanu Narayen on Adobe's Future Direction: Product Strategy for the Next Generation of the Web (17th May 2007) Contributed by Chetan Parikh
A key element of what has been called "web 2.0" -- along with ideas such as user-generated content and social networks -- is the concept of "rich Internet applications," which use the web as a platform for innovative types of online experiences. A new generation of Internet-connected applications is beginning to emerge led by such companies as Adobe Systems. Knowledge@Wharton recently interviewed Adobe president and COO Shantanu Narayen about the company's latest product introductions. In the second part of this interview, published in India Knowledge@Wharton, Narayen talks about the key role that India will play in the company's global growth strategy.
|
|
|
|
Hedge Fund
Hedge Fund Tools offers the only reverse bidding platform for hedge fund services. Hedge Fund Tools expert team helps setting up your hedge fund or for jobs.
iManage Knowledge Management System Software
Knowledge management systems and knowledge management software
for business growth & communication
The Real Warren Buffett
The website of James O’ Loughlin, author of "The Real Warren Buffett".
The General Center for Internet Services Inc. ( GCIS )
The General Center for Internet Services Inc. ( GCIS ) is one of Canada's oldest and largest Internet services provider and e-commerce application developer. Originators of the famous Pagina+ (tm) Search Engine Optimization service, GCIS is in business since 1996.
|
|
|
| |
| |
|
|