The Eye @ Wordpress.com

Good morning

Posted in Blogging by eyebee on November 21, 2010

image

It’s another crazy day here in the High Desert.

Tagged with: , ,

Public finances: demolition or restoration?

Posted in Uncategorized by eyebee on October 7, 2010
Amplify’d from www.guardianpublic.co.uk

Public finances: demolition or restoration?

Cutting services to reduce current debt levels is not the way forward, argues Colm Reilly, individuals are balancing their own household budgets without drastic action and the government shou

d take note

  • Colm Reilly
  • Public,

    Thursday 30 September 2010 09.14 BST

scaffolding

Better to start constructing rather than demolition to help the country’s finances

‘Do less, with less’ is the simple and conventional answer to reducing government debt.

That is the equivalent of saying “the roof is leaking, so I’ll move out of the top floor so the rain doesn’t bother me”.

It is a short-term fix but meanwhile the damp spreads from the top floor to the whole building, creating a much bigger and more expensive problem.

The “we need to cut services to reduce current debts” response is the same kind of approach, based on the view that the situation is so urgent that we must do something now, and that we can worry about the long term economic repairs some other time.

That assessment is correct, but only to a point.

The spending review is not about spending (the name is misleading), it is about rebalancing the resources in our economy which have become scarcer due to the global fiscal crises and as a result of poor fiscal management here in the UK.

This means the review should be used as the opportunity to build a scaffolding around the economic building both to manage the current position (as deficit reduction is essential) but also to start on the longer term action to get growth back into the UK economy.

The repairs are the critical defining factor for its success. If the review is used only to cut spending, with no real plan for future growth and the kind of public services needed to support the economy, it will lead to a period of slow growth and ongoing pain.

Government services

However, if the review undertakes a clear sighted examination of the future shape of government services, how we can move to a lower cost operating model and of the levers that can be used to stimulate growth then it will be a major step forward in fixing the fundamentals of the economy.

There will be hard decisions in the short term but there are ways of improving the decision making process by greater citizen involvement.

Citizens have already shown that they know how to do this by making hard decisions to balance their own household expenses during the recession (“I’ll paint the living room myself, instead of hiring a painter – because I’d rather have the cash than the free time”).

As a result, they are managing the effects of the recession on their personal finances better than we are managing the public finances. So there is a need to engage in a dialogue with broader society and ask the citizen which services they are prepared to compromise on and which they world rather pay extra in taxation to preserve.

Consultation, focus groups and online forums all give the citizen a voice in the reconfiguration of the services that matter most to them.

The consultation mechanism does not imply that citizens have a veto but gives them a voice, and this voice would be a tangible sign of a Big Society.

In parallel to this work, there is a whole range of longer term actions needed to build resilience and sustainable recovery into the economy for the future.

An important starting point is to address the fundamental flaws in the banking sector. There needs to be real reform to create a balanced approach to risk, not the pendulum swing from high risk to no risk that we have seen in the past three years.

The current attempts at reform through [capital and liquidity reform package] Basel 3 and other changes are missing the point.

The proposals, devised by bankers for bankers, incorporate further process related requirements. However, processes never fix behavioural flaws of any industry and careless risk taking, when you do not have to bear the costs, seems a relatively easy option.

The causes of the reckless behaviour leading up to the crisis and the levers that drive the approach to risk in banking have not been tackled. Unless they are, we risk seeing history repeat itself.

Then there needs to be real change in the support available for enterprise. This should include providing incentives for the formation and growth of truly global companies who are set up to export from the outset.

Intelligent business tax

For example, an intelligent business tax where the level of contribution to economic growth your industry makes could be used to reduce the tax rate would encourage a more ambitious approach to how businesses go to the global market.

Exports need to drive our economic activity in the next decade. The Made in Britainlogo needs to be seen in markets across the world. This kind of focus will sharpen our economic performance and strengthen national competitiveness.

Government, as the key facilitator of change, has to take a fundamental look at the way it operates and drive real change.

The way government manages its own workforce is rigid and complex. Flexible resourcing would create pools of people within government departments who could turn their hand to a much wider range of tasks.

As a result, they could respond to changes in demand over time more quickly and without the need for lengthy and expensive recruitment of a different skill set with every change in policy or service requirements.

So while the short-term pressures are considerable, it is essential that the spending review is used to repair and rebuild the economy and create sustainable growth for the future. We are going through a rough patch at the moment but it is also a time of renewal and refocus and the opportunity to build a more robust economy which benefits us all.

Colm Reilly is head of government practice at PA Consulting Group

Read more at www.guardianpublic.co.uk

 

Untitled

Posted in Uncategorized by eyebee on October 4, 2010
Amplify’d from mylifescoop.com

Erica Swallow

from Mashable

Erica Swallow is an Assistant Editor at Mashable, working primarily on writing, editing and managing…

Read articles from Erica…

 
 
 

 
  • vintagemack @bakerella got my book and tshirt ready for oct 28…. See you in Dallas!!!!
  • multipowered Gadgets – WSJ.com: Inhabitat’s Week in Green: speed demon saws …: Inhabitat’s Week in Green: speed demon saws, e… http://bit.ly/9ubKcZ
  • Modo_Verde Freitag Store is World’s Tallest Shipping Container Structure!: Read the rest of Freitag Store is World’s Tallest … http://bit.ly/bV17e4

 

7 Ways to Handle Digital Life After Death

By Erica Swallow (from Mashable) on October 4, 2010



MashDeathPOV.jpgDeath is a fact of life. When someone dies, they’re no longer physically here, but their digital self lives on. There are over 5 million accounts on Facebook that are inactive due to
death,
according to the calculations
of BlackBook Media’s Executive Editor Chris Mohney. And that’s just
Facebook. Think about all of the other social sites and online services
out there – the number of abandoned accounts due to death must be
enormous.

After someone passes away, their digital assets live on in the form of computer files and data online. For some, that’s not a big deal. But for others, the thought of leaving digital assets unattended for eternity after death is unthinkable. Luckily, there are a number of services that allow you to delete, update, or transfer account information after you – or someone you care about – is gone.

Here are seven services that help manage a digital life after death. If you’ve heard of other services that also handle these services, add your thoughts in the comments below.

Read more at mylifescoop.com

 

Nother late one

Posted in Blogroll by eyebee on September 30, 2010

image

Well it is for me. Usually asleep by now!

Tagged with:

Goodnight!

Posted in Happening by eyebee on September 21, 2010

image

Time to call it a night!

Tagged with: , ,

SABMiller introduces Kozel beer to UK

Posted in Uncategorized by eyebee on September 20, 2010

Wouldn’t be my choice of beer. Weak lagers are to be avoided in my experience…

Amplify’d from www.brandrepublic.com

SABMiller introduces Kozel beer to UK

By Gemma Charles,
marketingmagazine.co.uk,
20 September 2010,
11:00AM

SABMiller is releasing a 4% ABV beer in the UK to capitalise on consumer demand for lower strength lagers.

Kozel: Czech beer comes to the UK (credit: One Red Eye/Jason Alden)

Kozel: Czech beer comes to the UK (credit: One Red Eye/Jason Alden)

Kozel is a Czech lager which is brewed in the village of Velké Popovice, near Prague.

It will be launched in draught at 100 selected sites from the end of September. A number of outlets will host consumer sampling events.

Kozel, which means “goat” in Czech, has been brewed in Velké Popovice since 1874. Families from the village have worked at the brewery for generations.

Nick Miller, managing director of Miller Brands, said: “Last November we announced our intention to expand our portfolio. We’ve carried out rigorous and extensive research to establish exactly which brand would be the best fit.

“Kozel offers an authentic Czech taste, with genuine and distinctive provenance and proposition.

“Our research also showed that drinkers are looking for something slightly lower in strength and at 4% ABV, Kozel satisfies this demand.”

This article was first published on
marketingmagazine.co.uk

Read more at www.brandrepublic.com

 

U-verse continues expansion, rolls out service in Charleston, S.C.

Posted in Uncategorized by eyebee on September 20, 2010

AT&T is continuing to extend the reach of its U-verse IPTV service, saying today that it would begin rolling out the product in the Charleston, S.C. area. The operator said services offered would include high-speed Internet as well as voice services.

Amplify’d from www.fierceiptv.com
U-verse continues expansion, rolls out service in Charleston, S.C.

U-verse continues expansion, rolls out service in Charleston, S.C.

AT&T is continuing to extend the reach of its U-verse IPTV service, saying today that it would begin rolling out the product in the Charleston, S.C. area. The operator said services offered would include high-speed Internet as well as voice services.

South Carolina in 2006 passes a statewide video franchise law that allows local governments to opt into the U-verse network. AT&T, shortly after the law was enacted, announced plans to spend $250 million upgrading its network there and expanding Internet technology and broadband deployment. The state was the first of the former BellSouth states in which AT&T rolled out U-verse bundled services.

“Cable has been the only game in town for too long, and we’re excited to change that today in Charleston,” said Alison Hall, vice president and general manager, AT&T North and South Carolina. “We know Charleston customers want a better choice to break free from cable, and AT&T U-verse is the answer. And we’ll continue to make U-verse TV even better for customers with regular upgrades and new cool applications that enhance your TV experience.”

U-verse provides users the ability to:

  • Manage recordings, and download and watch hit TV shows from a qualifying smartphone with U-verse Mobile (watch the video);
  • Manage and playback recorded programs from a single DVR on any U-verse connected TV in the house with Total Home DVR;
  • Choose and watch up to four channels at one time with the exclusive My Multiview app (watch the video);
  • Program DVR recordings from a Web-connected mobile phone or PC;
  • Set up personalized, on-screen weather, sports, traffic and stock information via AT&T U-bar; and,
  • Check the current weather conditions and forecasts in any U.S. city with Weather On Demand, as well as other services.

Packages include a range of speeds, with the fastest downstream speeds up to 24 Mbps. All AT&T U-verse High Speed Internet packages include wireless home or office networking at no extra cost, and access to the entire national AT&T Wi-Fi network included in their plan at no extra charge.

AT&T also recently announced improvements in its network that will allow users to simultaneously watch up to four HD streams in their homes at one time.

U-verse added more than 209,000 users in the second quarter this year, passing the 2.5 million subscriber mark, and hit $1 billion in revenue, a first for the service.

For more:
– see this release

Related articles:
U-verse iPhone app gives users TV episodes, program guides, DVR
AT&T U-verse subscribers get customizable version of My Multiview

Read more at www.fierceiptv.com

 

Not much

Posted in Blogroll by eyebee on September 12, 2010

I don’t write much here at all, really.

Tagged with: ,

London in the blitz: How crime flourished under cover of the blackout

Posted in Uncategorized by eyebee on August 30, 2010

Interesting story about the underworld in WW2 Britain

Amplify’d from www.guardian.co.uk

London in the blitz: How crime flourished under cover of the blackout

As the 70th anniversary of the start of the blitz approaches, Duncan Campbell reveals how black marketeers, thieves and looters took advantage of the misfortunes of war

Read more at www.guardian.co.uk

 

For The Real Man

Posted in Humor by eyebee on February 27, 2010
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.