All of a sudden the regular internet was just...slammed. The other lab was testing their regular internet connection by pinging yahoo or something and couldn't get a response. Well, massive amounts of dropped packets, anyway. Then my wife called back and said another plane hit the towers and their base was now on lockdown. Then I realized I couldn't get a response from any news website, either.
We had set up a multicast "over net" delivered via satellite to a number of smaller ISPs with Yahoo! Broadcast content. Subscribers to those ISPs were able to watch multicast streaming media news regarding 9/11.
CableLabs is now working on a "Multicast ABR" mechanism, so it is all coming back now!
The OECD published 87 concrete recommendations for reducing administrative burdens in Greece, which are an unnecessary 3 billion Euro burden on Greek businesses annually.
Some of the OECD suggestions include things like "simplify annual leave records", "streamline start-up notifications to the Labour Inspectorate for construction sites", "establish a clear VAT registration threshold at EUR 10 000", "remove inactive VAT taxable persons from the VAT register", "simplify the periodic VAT return", "Allow full electronic submission of all notifications to Registry (company changes and annual financial statements)", "simplify financial statements of small and micro companies","Streamline payment process for all GEMH notifications to allow payments without visiting an office", etc.
Of course the OECD was not willing to say the most reasonable thing - Greece should have labor laws like the US. Fire people whenever you want, no crazy contracts, no crazy severance pay or vacations.
We know that the Hartz Reforms on labor regulations is what brought German unemployment rates down from 10% in the early part of the 2000's and is why they survived the financial crisis so well.
I concur that Greece ranks last in the Eurozone in Transparency International's corruption ratings. However I believe that corruption thrives when unclear and burdensome regulations make doing reasonable business impossible without paying someone off.
The MESS is caused by the baby boom and Greece's liberal government funded pensions
I'd argue that this MESS is caused by the high level of labor and business regulation in Greece.
Ireland got into a big debt crisis as well, but because it has a high level of economic freedom, it was able to exit its rescue program due to economic growth (despite "austerity").
Spain has just begun to reform its labor and business regulations, and it is finally showing some return to economic growth
Germany had the Hartz labor Reforms before the economic crisis, so it never needed a rescue.
Greece remains last in the Eurozone in economic freedom rankings and highest in the Eurozone for corruption rankings.
Germany has benefitted a lot by the economic union.
Germany has benefitted a lot due to the Hartz labor reforms. That is what brought down the unemployment rate, unlike what is happening in France/Greece/Italy/etc.
For example, few economists (11%) agree with the statement "'Buy American' has a positive impact on manufacturing employment", whereas 75% of the public feel that way.
94% of economists feel that NAFTA was a good idea, only 46% of the public agree.
I marvel at the idiocy of our citizens, it's not the government's fault, in not having insisted on keeping and improving rail since the 40's.
Actually the US has the world's best rail system. But that system is for freight, not for passengers. You can't have HSR and freight on the same tracks, so the US railways chose freight.
LAX to SJC via air: $330 roundtrip, $165 one way ~90 minutes in the air each way, ~30 minutes boarding, ~30 minutes TSA (but you generally give ~60 minutes in case of emergency).
So 3 hours each way by air (the Uber/Taxi at the end would be about the same for the train).
This article claims that the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in Green Bank, WV, has the "cafeteria's microwave oven is kept in a shielded cage" and "Large chambers designed to absorb radio waves - including a 5,000-square-foot conference room - have been built to make sure that, as Sizemore tells it, "radiation generated in the building stays in the building."
I visited NRAO once and got to drive a diesel '69 Checker cab (no spark plugs).
. Working to provide access to clean water leads to healthier people with a little more free time to think about starting a business or overthrowing a dictator.
I don't see any evidence that aid-based efforts have ever been effective at enhancing levels of economic freedom in developing countries.
The great successes of Asian Tigers, China, and Chile do not seem to line up with aid-based efforts. In fact these all depended on new dictators coming to power, with perfection only after a peaceful transition to democracy (China is still working on it).
I believe that this is a lack of understanding of the global benefits of free market capitalism among students.
While all of these "engineers without borders" and "development engineering" things are nice, they are pretty insignificant in terms of actually enhancing the wealth and well-being of poor people in developing countries versus good old capitalism - where those poor people have the opportunities to make things and perform services of value to other people.
Deng opening up China to the global market has brought hundreds of millions of Chinese out of absolute poverty (making under $1 per day) through market exchanges. China did not have large amounts of foreign aid. They just made it OK to carry on capitalist trade.
Instead of setting up Wi-Fi in a poor village, it would be far better to teach the local people about the importance of secure property rights, the needs to reduce regulation to reasonable levels for a poor country which both enhances commerce and reduces the level of corruption, the needs to allow for free trade for imports and exports. And hopefully they can change their democratic government to enhance economic freedom, and if their government is not democratic, other solutions may be required.
If you want to know why a country is still poor, go read its entry in the Index of Economic Freedom.
How does your "personal belief" explain the millionaire Osama bin Laden, the computer programmer "Jihadi John", the hijackers with Ph.D.s who flew jets into the World Trade Center, the millions upon millions of dollars funneled into building rockets and tunnels in Gaza, etc. ?
It is true that many terrorists are highly educated by the socialist college systems, but unable to be employed because of the lack of industry in the socialist Arab countries.
But you also allude to the large amount of government money spent on AQ/ISIS by Arab socialist governments and of course Hamas by Iran.
Well 18 people were killed (10 burned to death) during the 3-14 riots in Tibet.
My personal belief in the cause of middle east terrorism is the extreme lack of economic freedom. Those countries are all extremely socialist. This includes the lack of secure private property in the occupied Palestinian lands as well.
Stupid people tend to have a lot more kids than smart people. Citation: Idiocracy
Also smart people now tend to only meet other smart people on Match.com, etc. In 1960 25% of men with university degrees married women with degrees; in 2005, 48% did. As a result, the Gini rose from 0.34 in 1960 to 0.43 in 2005.
Assortative mating means we diverge into really smart and really dumb people.
This study says "Each point increase in IQ test scores is associated with $202 to $616 more income per year...The median net worth for people with an IQ of 120 was almost $128,000 compared with $58,000 for those with an IQ of 100."
My understanding of H1B visas is that they are sponsored and that if you leave the sponsored job, you have to go back to wherever you came from. That's what makes it so attractive for employers.
H-1B Visas are attractive for employers because they are the easiest way to bring in foreign workers, especially from China and India.
The Employment Based (EB) Visas are limited to 140,000 per year, but more importantly they are limited to 9,800 per country.
For example, the Visa Bulletin says that for China, they are now working on EB-2 & EB-3 Visa applications from 2011, and for India they are now working on EB-2 applications from 2007 and EB-3 applications from 2004. Hey, what's a 10 year wait?
In FY 2012, 136,890 H-1Bs were issued for initial employment and 125,679 were issued for continued employment.
That is great news, the self-driving cars will now be able to test themselves against more drunk & rowdy pedestrians in Austin!
All of a sudden the regular internet was just...slammed. The other lab was testing their regular internet connection by pinging yahoo or something and couldn't get a response. Well, massive amounts of dropped packets, anyway. Then my wife called back and said another plane hit the towers and their base was now on lockdown. Then I realized I couldn't get a response from any news website, either.
We had set up a multicast "over net" delivered via satellite to a number of smaller ISPs with Yahoo! Broadcast content. Subscribers to those ISPs were able to watch multicast streaming media news regarding 9/11.
CableLabs is now working on a "Multicast ABR" mechanism, so it is all coming back now!
The OECD published 87 concrete recommendations for reducing administrative burdens in Greece, which are an unnecessary 3 billion Euro burden on Greek businesses annually.
Some of the OECD suggestions include things like "simplify annual leave records", "streamline start-up notifications to the Labour Inspectorate for construction sites", "establish a clear VAT registration threshold at EUR 10 000", "remove inactive VAT taxable persons from the VAT register", "simplify the periodic VAT return", "Allow full electronic submission of all notifications to Registry (company changes and annual financial statements)", "simplify financial statements of small and micro companies","Streamline payment process for all GEMH notifications to allow payments without visiting an office", etc.
Of course the OECD was not willing to say the most reasonable thing - Greece should have labor laws like the US. Fire people whenever you want, no crazy contracts, no crazy severance pay or vacations.
We know that the Hartz Reforms on labor regulations is what brought German unemployment rates down from 10% in the early part of the 2000's and is why they survived the financial crisis so well.
I concur that Greece ranks last in the Eurozone in Transparency International's corruption ratings. However I believe that corruption thrives when unclear and burdensome regulations make doing reasonable business impossible without paying someone off.
The MESS is caused by the baby boom and Greece's liberal government funded pensions
I'd argue that this MESS is caused by the high level of labor and business regulation in Greece.
Ireland got into a big debt crisis as well, but because it has a high level of economic freedom, it was able to exit its rescue program due to economic growth (despite "austerity").
Spain has just begun to reform its labor and business regulations, and it is finally showing some return to economic growth
Germany had the Hartz labor Reforms before the economic crisis, so it never needed a rescue.
Greece remains last in the Eurozone in economic freedom rankings and highest in the Eurozone for corruption rankings.
Germany has benefitted a lot by the economic union.
Germany has benefitted a lot due to the Hartz labor reforms. That is what brought down the unemployment rate, unlike what is happening in France/Greece/Italy/etc.
Indeed, there also is a large gap between the viewpoint of the public and economists.
For example, few economists (11%) agree with the statement "'Buy American' has a positive impact on manufacturing employment", whereas 75% of the public feel that way.
94% of economists feel that NAFTA was a good idea, only 46% of the public agree.
I marvel at the idiocy of our citizens, it's not the government's fault, in not having insisted on keeping and improving rail since the 40's.
Actually the US has the world's best rail system. But that system is for freight, not for passengers. You can't have HSR and freight on the same tracks, so the US railways chose freight.
LAX to SJC via air: $330 roundtrip, $165 one way
~90 minutes in the air each way, ~30 minutes boarding, ~30 minutes TSA (but you generally give ~60 minutes in case of emergency).
So 3 hours each way by air (the Uber/Taxi at the end would be about the same for the train).
This article claims that the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in Green Bank, WV, has the "cafeteria's microwave oven is kept in a shielded cage" and "Large chambers designed to absorb radio waves - including a 5,000-square-foot conference room - have been built to make sure that, as Sizemore tells it, "radiation generated in the building stays in the building."
I visited NRAO once and got to drive a diesel '69 Checker cab (no spark plugs).
. Working to provide access to clean water leads to healthier people with a little more free time to think about starting a business or overthrowing a dictator.
I don't see any evidence that aid-based efforts have ever been effective at enhancing levels of economic freedom in developing countries.
The great successes of Asian Tigers, China, and Chile do not seem to line up with aid-based efforts. In fact these all depended on new dictators coming to power, with perfection only after a peaceful transition to democracy (China is still working on it).
I am as scared as religious environmentalism as I am of any religious tinged political issue.
I believe that this is a lack of understanding of the global benefits of free market capitalism among students.
While all of these "engineers without borders" and "development engineering" things are nice, they are pretty insignificant in terms of actually enhancing the wealth and well-being of poor people in developing countries versus good old capitalism - where those poor people have the opportunities to make things and perform services of value to other people.
Deng opening up China to the global market has brought hundreds of millions of Chinese out of absolute poverty (making under $1 per day) through market exchanges. China did not have large amounts of foreign aid. They just made it OK to carry on capitalist trade.
Instead of setting up Wi-Fi in a poor village, it would be far better to teach the local people about the importance of secure property rights, the needs to reduce regulation to reasonable levels for a poor country which both enhances commerce and reduces the level of corruption, the needs to allow for free trade for imports and exports. And hopefully they can change their democratic government to enhance economic freedom, and if their government is not democratic, other solutions may be required.
If you want to know why a country is still poor, go read its entry in the Index of Economic Freedom.
How does your "personal belief" explain the millionaire Osama bin Laden, the computer programmer "Jihadi John", the hijackers with Ph.D.s who flew jets into the World Trade Center, the millions upon millions of dollars funneled into building rockets and tunnels in Gaza, etc. ?
It is true that many terrorists are highly educated by the socialist college systems, but unable to be employed because of the lack of industry in the socialist Arab countries.
But you also allude to the large amount of government money spent on AQ/ISIS by Arab socialist governments and of course Hamas by Iran.
ESPN averages 2.28 million million viewers in primetime, making it the #1 cable network.
ESPN coverage of the college football championship game was last year's most-watched cable telecast at 25.75 million viewers.
NFL Monday Night Football on ESPN averages 13.23 million viewers.
Forbes says "ESPN's sports rights costs jumped from $2.8 billion in 2009 to $4.1 billion last year [2013]."
That is $35/year per US television household (but obviously ESPN is paying for more than just US rights).
Well 18 people were killed (10 burned to death) during the 3-14 riots in Tibet.
My personal belief in the cause of middle east terrorism is the extreme lack of economic freedom. Those countries are all extremely socialist. This includes the lack of secure private property in the occupied Palestinian lands as well.
It doesn't matter how they're cut, they just don't grow back.
Actually spinal cord nerves can regrow with appropriate treatment.
Here in the old world (.fi) we have different bins for stuff like glass and metal.
Here in LA, homeless people go through our trash, extract the actually valuable recyclables, then take them to the recycling centers and make cash.
Even if you assume greater profits from increased monopoly abuse by a combined Comcast/TWC,
Comcast Profit Margin (Quarterly):10.86% for Dec. 31, 2014.
Apple Profit Margin (Quarterly):24.16% for Dec. 31, 2014
Google Profit Margin (Quarterly):26.28% for Dec. 31, 2014
Stupid people tend to have a lot more kids than smart people. Citation: Idiocracy
Also smart people now tend to only meet other smart people on Match.com, etc. In 1960 25% of men with university degrees married women with degrees; in 2005, 48% did. As a result, the Gini rose from 0.34 in 1960 to 0.43 in 2005.
Assortative mating means we diverge into really smart and really dumb people.
It took from 1973 to 1978 for human work on in-vitro fertilization to work well. And still today, most embryos developed for IVF do not "take".
Indeed, people with high IQ are less likely to get divorced.
This study says "Each point increase in IQ test scores is associated with $202 to $616 more income per year...The median net worth for people with an IQ of 120 was almost $128,000 compared with $58,000 for those with an IQ of 100."
My understanding of H1B visas is that they are sponsored and that if you leave the sponsored job, you have to go back to wherever you came from. That's what makes it so attractive for employers.
H-1B Visas are attractive for employers because they are the easiest way to bring in foreign workers, especially from China and India.
The Employment Based (EB) Visas are limited to 140,000 per year, but more importantly they are limited to 9,800 per country.
For example, the Visa Bulletin says that for China, they are now working on EB-2 & EB-3 Visa applications from 2011, and for India they are now working on EB-2 applications from 2007 and EB-3 applications from 2004. Hey, what's a 10 year wait?
In FY 2012, 136,890 H-1Bs were issued for initial employment and 125,679 were issued for continued employment.
Employers can file I-140 to extend those on H1-B visas beyond the six year limit, but it doesn't change their immigration status.