There is a line literally around the block for this new grilled cheese sandwich shop that just opened in San Francisco. It looked to be at least an hour wait so these millennials could pay $7 and more for a grilled cheese sandwich then blog about it. It’s right in the middle of where all the Internet start-ups are located on Second Street.
Apple’s CEO took it upon himself to lead the huddled masses of ‘old media’ through the perceived revenue desert of the web and into the promised land of increased revenue and ultimately, more wealth for aging media barons. To achieve this, first up on Jobs’ hit list was Adobe’s Flash software, but it seems two media firms, Time Warner and NBC Universal, are revolting against Apple’s dear leader’s vision.
In an embarrassing public spat with Adobe, Jobs seemingly lost any grip on reality he may have had after resorting to just about any excuse he could think of to justify banning Adobe’s Flash on Iphone OS devices, which include the Iphone and the Ipad.
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Apparently the two entertainment industry giants told Apple that retooling themselves to support the Ipad would be “expensive and not worth it” citing the popularity of Flash on the web. The studios might, for once, have the support of those web users that have yet to be indoctrinated into Jobs’ cult.
Things are looking increasingly desperate for the fruit themed toymaker, as one executive told The New York Post that media firms are not happy at Jobs’ dictatorial style and that Google TV will further diminish any bargaining power Jobs might have.
In other Apple news, Japan and Europe are going nuts over the iPad.
Five young teenagers got pregnant after playing games with their school mates from a lower secondary school in the town of Ostroda, northern Poland.
Students, aged 14-15, played a game called “the sun” or “a star”. “Girls lay on the floor in a circle with their heads together and eyes closed and boys copulate with them, taking turns. The winner was the boy who managed to finish the intercourse last,” one of the students revealed.
The game resulted in several pregnancies. “This year five girls got pregnant, two of them have already given birth,” said Anna Czarnocka, the school’s headmaster.
The prosecutors who are investigating the case complain that parents and teachers of the teenagers from Ostroda are not willing to cooperate. Nobody talks about sex at school and there is no psychologist who would explain to the students that such games can lead to pregnancy.
President Barack Obama used the growing oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico to renew his pitch for alternative energy Wednesday, arguing that the unfolding environmental disaster “gives you a sense of where we’re going” without comprehensive reform.
The federal government is “going to bring every resource necessary to put a stop” to the spill, the president said during a visit to a solar panel manufacturing facility in Fremont, California. “We will not rest until this well is shut, the environment is repaired, and the cleanup is complete.”
But, he added, “a lot of damage has been done already. The spill in the Gulf, which is just heartbreaking, only underscores the necessity” of seeking alternative fuel sources. A failure to enact comprehensive energy reform, he argued, would pose a threat to national security and the economy, as well as the environment.
The decision is a major blow to Royal Dutch Shell PLC, which had planned an ambitious oil-drilling program in the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas off Alaska this summer. Shell has been arguing to regulators that its operations in Alaska would face a lower risk of the kind of problems faced by BP PLC in its ill-fated Gulf of Mexico operation.
Is this enough? Not enough? Too much? Do you agree BP should be running the cleanup instead of the government? Given BP is the most knowledgeable on such things, despite never having tested some of their methods, is there a choice? What do you think about suspending drilling? Are you in the conspiracy camp that says the explosion was on purpose to further alternative energy? What other steps would you take?
The Foxconn factory in the southern Chinese boom town of Shenzhen is so vast that walking around its outer perimeter takes two hours. Its workers turn out components that are supplied to big Western electronics brands including Nokia, Hewlett-Packard and Dell. And it is here that most of the parts for Apple’s iPhone, and the much-awaited iPad, which goes on sale in the UK this week, are manufactured.
Yesterday, Li Hai, a 19-year-old employee of the firm, jumped from the top of the building in Shenzhen to his death. It brought the number of suspected suicides at the factory this year to 10. There have been another two attempted suicides.
All of the deaths have been of youngsters between 18 and 25 years old. Li Hai had only been working at the plant for 42 days. The incidents have prompted intense soul-searching in China, about conditions in its factories and the social cost of breakneck economic development.
If this was a Nike factory or a place associated with Kathy Lee Gifford, the media would be all over it. But Dell? Apple? Steve Jobs? Off limits.
Here is the latest conversation I had with money manager Andrew Horowitz…. new insights for anyone who invests in anything. This week the market does a zig zag and the Euro falls. Why??
For Kindle and with free ePub version. Only $9.49 Great reading.
Here is what Gary Shapiro CEO of the Consumer Electronics Association (CEA) said: Dvorak's writing sings with insight and clarity. Whether or not you agree with John's views, he will get you thinking and is never boring. These essays are worth the read!