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March 30, 2007

The Poisonwood Bible

There have been few novels in my life that after finishing them I could say they changed me. Changed the way I looked at a subject, a place or a people. Given me a perspective I never would have had had I not read the book. Great characters are more effective teachers than any lecture, essay or non-fiction narrative will ever be. Great characters don’t preach. They teach by example, by living. This is the ultimate irony. How can fictional characters live? Yet they do. Slowly as you read a well written novel, the characters invade your consciousness. They become real. Unforgettable.

The only characters more alive than the ones you read in a good book are the ones you write in your own stories. Those characters are your children.

I just finished Barbara Kingsolver’s The Poisonwood Bible. This book is just beautiful. It is powerful. I read The Fate of Africa earlier this year. In that book, I learned the sad history of modern Africa, but in the Poisonwood Bible I lived Africa, breathed it in and was changed.

Orleanna Price, one of the novel’s characters, said, “Listen. To live is to be marked. To live is to change, to acquire the words of a story, and that is the only celebration we mortals really know.”

March 26, 2007

Windows Shopping

Here is what I learned Friday night when I stopped at Best Buy looking for a replacement laptop for LaPriel. We already have several Macs at home so we just need something basic that can run a few specialized PC only programs LaPriel uses.

1. Best Buy suggests you spend an additional $129 after you purchase a computer so they can slave away for 3 hours removing all the trial software such as AOL. Apparently the offending programs are now so entrenched in Windows Vista operating system it requires professional assistance to remove them.

2. Even though Best Buy sells $500 to $700 laptops, they highly recommend you don’t buy one because it takes 20 minutes for the thing to boot up with Windows Vista and even after the laptop boots up, it doesn’t work very well.

Is it any wonder why people are switching to Apple in droves. Buying a Windows laptop from a retail store is a worse experience than buying a used car.

March 22, 2007

The Next 4 Billion

According to this study just released by the IFC, the private sector arm of the World Bank Group, and World Resources Institute, 4 billion people who live in poverty (i.e. per capita income of less than $3,000) have a collective purchasing power of $5 trillion. The study calls these 4 billion people, 60% of the world’s population, the Base of the Pyramid (BOP). The next pyramid layer is the 1.4 billion people with per capita income between $3,000 and $20,000. If you care to see where you rank in the pyramid check out the Global Rich List and how it is calculated.

One of the challenges of our time is to find ways to incorporate this 4 billion into the global marketplace without destroying the environment. One can only look at China’s pollution woes to see the downside of non-sustainable poverty reduction. 34% of children in China have blood-lead levels that exceed the World Health Organization limit according to a study by researchers at the Peking University Health Science Center as mentioned in this Wall Street Journal article.

The World Bank study states, “Most people in the BOP lack good access to markets to sell their labor, handicrafts or crops and have no choice but to sell to a local employer or to middlemen who exploit them.” They often pay higher prices for basic goods and services and the quality is less.

Reducing poverty will require a creative, market-based approach. One that focuses more on “enabling opportunity and less in terms of aid.” One that address market failures and impediments so that “BOP households can find their own route out of poverty.”

Many of the market-based solutions will be what Clayton Christensen calls “catalytic innovations - simpler, good enough solutions aimed at underserved groups,” such as the micro-irrigation technologies developed by KickStart.

March 19, 2007

This is Not Investment Advice

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I rarely comment on investments here. There are too many SEC rules that could get me in hot water. Still, I thought the above chart is a fine commentary on why most individuals and many professionals make for lousy investors. They are always chasing yesterday's winner.

The graphs breaks the U.S. stock market into size quintiles with quintile 1 being the smallest U.S. companies (as measured by market capitalization) and quintile 5 being the biggest U.S. companies.

Then for each quintile, I plotted the price earnings ratio based on estimated earnings over the next twelve months. The price earnings ratio represents what investors are willing to pay for one dollar worth of earnings.

Back in March 2000 when we were living in a new paradigm and the Internet was going to solve all the world's problems, investors were willing to pay $40 for each dollar of earnings for the biggest companies in the U.S. The twisted logic at the time was the biggest companies had the resources to take advantage of the new paradigm including the ability to use their expensive stock to make acquisitions. Meanwhile, small companies were unloved one trick ponies who couldn't compete with the big boys.

Of course, the conventional wisdom was wrong and large company stocks have underperformed small cap stocks for the past seven years.

Now the unloved stocks are the biggest companies in the U.S., which are 67% cheaper than they were in 2000 while the smallest stocks are 11% more expensive.

It is only a matter of time before the present trend reverses and the biggest companies will outperform smaller ones.


March 17, 2007

Collections

As a child I collected postage stamps. They sit in a binder on my bookshelf. As a teenager I collected beer cans. The collection lies decaying somewhere in the Rumpke landfill. As an adult I collect domain names. They sit, unused for the most part, in cyberspace. I don’t register the names hoping to resell them and make a few bucks. I’m not a cybersquatter. Collecting domain names is a way to dream. The names represent business endeavors not yet realized, charity projects still incubating and nonsensical web addresses that seemed to make sense at the time I registered them.

Occasionally, I let the names expire, releasing them back into the Internet wilderness. For the most part, though, I dutifully renew the names each year and await the day when I’ll launch the sites and fulfill some dreams.

Imagini

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Imagini is a UK based website that determines your "visual DNA" by having you select from a series of images. It then uses that visual DNA imprint to help you select gifts or to meet others with similar backgrounds.

Results were mixed. My visual DNA for finding friends seemed spot on. The gift finder was a bit dubious. It suggested I would be ecstatic to receive a new set of cutlery and some tea.

March 13, 2007

In Case You Get Bored Mr. President

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Mr. President, I see you are holding two days of talks with Presidente Calderon at Hacienda Temozon, one of the hotels we stayed at on our recent trip to Mexico.

In case you get bored or if you run out of things to talk about, here are a few suggestions for activities.

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We highly recommend the pool. Not too deep so no need to worry about drowning. There are several nice employees who will give you a free foot massage poolside. If you ask in Spanish, one of the masseuses will tell you how her father used to work at this hacienda processing henequen before the industry collapsed and it was turned into a hotel.

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If you're not in the mood to swim, you can take a train car ride pulled by a Democratic donkey past the abandoned henequen fields to visit a distant cenote.

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Just walking the grounds enjoying the fauna can be relaxing and will take your mind off the latest scandal plaguing your Administration.

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A siesta in a hammock is also enjoyable. Or you can play Nintendo DS like Breanna. Unfortunately, they don't have Fox News on the television so you'll have to watch CNN.

For dinner, we recommend los panuchos. Rice pudding for dessert would be a wonderful way to top off the day.

Que tenga un buen viaje.

March 12, 2007

Twittering

So I posted a Twitter badge on this blog’s sidebar about a week ago. Twitter, as I understand it, is a simple way to stay connected with your social network by answering the question, “What am I doing?" Updates to that question can be made via text messaging, the web or via instant messenger.

There’s only one problem. I don’t have a social network of people who really care about what I’m doing at any given moment of the day. Okay, well my kids ask me what I’m doing a lot, but it seems rude to tell them to go look it up on Twitter.

Since I’m in Idaho and my coworkers are in Ohio, they often ask me what I'm doing via instant messenger, but it’s easier to just answer on instant messenger than via Twitter.

John Edwards has an account on Twitter. I suppose if you like John Edwards it would be helpful to know what he’s doing. I’m not a big John Edwards fan.

There’s a public timeline so you can see a constant stream of updates from complete strangers about what they are doing. Now that can be entertaining for a few minutes. It at least allows me to practice my Spanish. The same public timeline also provides updates on breaking news, new podcasts, and other miscellanea.

Here’s a few snippets from the public timeline:

Someone named RLTZ says in Spanish she’s doing homework, listening to antidoping and about to cry. Apparently antidoping is a Mexican reggae group.

Somebody named Book2 writes, "Because she never let them in, Mr Deasy said solemnly." A closer looks shows Book2 has decided to post James Joyce Ulysses line by line via Twitter. That's ambitious.

Lot of folks are eating, going to bed, going running, and doing things I wasn’t aware existed. Now I suppose that is a benefit of Twitter. Learning new things.

On the other hand, it all seems just a bit narcissistic. Which is why I haven’t updated what I am doing for four days.

March 10, 2007

Saturday Morning To Do: Make Sure Blog isn't Censored in China

I'm pleased to report to all my potential mainland China readers that this blog has not been blacklisted by your country's servers and is freely available for your reading pleasure. Not that I have anything particularly relevant that you would find of interest.

For those that want to test their own blogs, go to Greatfirewallofchina.org. (DC, I'll be interested to see if your blog makes it through.)

March 7, 2007

Vegas

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Wynn Hotel Fountain via Cell Phone


I just got back from a few days in Las Vegas. I hadn’t been there in six years. The city is noticeably busier, particularly the taxi lines. I won't be the first to point out Las Vegas is one giant amusement park with scaled replicas of New York, Paris, Venice, etc. While this appeals to many visitors, I prefer the authentic and original. I stayed at the Venetian, a multi-million dollar knockoff of Venice. The room was comfortable, but the hotel seemed to be trying too hard to be luxurious. Imitators rarely succeed.

On the other hand, the Wynn Hotel is incredibly original. The colors were rich and beautiful and the outside fountain and light show spectacular. I find it ironic the tile mosaics on the Wynn’s lobby floor was more creative then the mosaics on the outside of the Venetian, which I believe is suppose to be a replica of the Doge's Palace. Except that the real Doge’s Palace is stunning in its detail, which is evident even in the poor quality cell phone photo below from my 2004 visit. Detail is what makes something authentic. Everyone can do bold brush strokes, but it’s the fine lines that distinguish masterpieces. The Venetian was missing the details. Even the water in the fake canals was the wrong color.

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Doge's Palace, Venice via Cell Phone

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Wynn Hotel Mosaic Floor via Cell Phone

I wandered the floors of the casinos in somewhat of a stupor. All those flashing lights and ringing bells. The games confuse me. I don’t seem to be wired for gambling. I think I lost too much money playing childhood carnival games. One too many of the rings I tossed trying to win a stuffed animal failed to encircle the target. For me, the joy of the occasional slot machine win doesn’t compensate for the pinprick of persistent losses.

Yet for others, there must be some appeal. Why else would 39 million people have visited Las Vegas in the past year?

March 6, 2007

Sprout

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I don't play many video games, but I thought this cute little flash game called Sprout was fun. The best part is it challenges your logic rather than your reflexes. That and you can win the game in 20 minutes and never have to play again. Enjoy.

March 4, 2007

Life Expectancy

I imported United Nations world population statistics into DabbleDB, an online database application I use. I thought this table was interesting as a follow up to my post on Zimbabwe from the other day.

While government can't ensure a long life, corruption and ineffective leadership sure can lower the averages.

Netvibes

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Netvibes is my favorite free web service. I've been using it for about a year as my web browser start page. It's brilliant because they keep making it better. Founded in Paris, the company launched its service only 15 months ago. It now has 10 million users in 60 different languages.

Netvibes allows you to pull data from all over the web and organize it on your desktop. You can pull in RSS feeds from newsites and blogs, pictures, email accounts, and other web services, such as Box.net, Flickr, delicio.us. and many others. Information can be organized on separate pages with tabs, using customized column widths and layouts.

I use Netvibes to track close to 100 blogs, newspapers, and other web sources, all of which sit nice and tidy on my desktop. The consolidation of all this data in one place is perfect for me, because deep down I'm a mess when it comes to organization. I despise paperwork, because it just piles and piles up, and then I lose things. So now I do everything I can to digitize and store things in cyberspace. As long as it is out there, then I don't have to worry about it cluttering up my office.


March 2, 2007

The Case of the Missing Slips

Breanna and I went shopping this afternoon at the local mall. Our goal was to find a yellow dress for Breanna to wear to her cousin’s wedding reception tomorrow. I don’t mind shopping but I prefer doing it in a bigger city where I have more than three department stores from which to choose. Shopping in Idaho is a little like gambling, which is not something I enjoy, even though I’m off to Las Vegas on Sunday. Here’s a replay of our trip:

Department store number one (Dillard’s) has no yellow girls dresses. Breanna is tall for her age so I try the juniors section where we find one yellow dress in the smallest size available. No go. It makes Breanna look too grown up. She needs a girl dress.

Department store number two (Macy’s). No yellow dresses.

Department store number three (JC Penney’s). Jackpot. Three styles of yellow dresses. We find the perfect fit and then go looking for a slip since the dress fabric is sheer.

We can’t find any.

I approach the saleswoman who is ringing up a customer’s purchase from behind the counter. “Where can we find girls slips?”

“They’ve been recalled,” says the saleswoman.

“Recalled?” I said, thinking I hadn’t heard right.

“Yes, recalled.”

“Why?”

“I don’t know. There are no slips in the entire mall.” She begins to help another customer.

Breanna looks up at me. “What does recalled mean?”

“It’s when a company takes all their merchandise back because there’s something wrong with it, like if a toy breaks easily and becomes a safety hazard.”

“But what could be dangerous about slips?” Breanna turns to a different saleswoman and explains the predicament.

This attendant also has no idea what is wrong with the slips, but confirms they are not available. “Perhaps you can get them online,” she offers.

A woman behind us, overhearing our conversation, expresses her dismay. She’s been to numerous stores in the city looking for slips and was told JC Penney carried them.

A different woman whispers to me that she heard there were some at Wal-Mart. She acts as if were trying to buy contraband. I being to wonder if rebellious teenagers have found some drug related use for slips, leading them to be pulled from the shelves.

After checking at Target, who no longer sells girls slips according to the saleswoman, we try Wal-Mart. I ask one saleslady and she seems quite confident they have girls slips somewhere among the four million items stocked at the superstore. She consults the girls department supervisor, who says they haven’t had slips in stock since Christmas. She calls after us that girls don’t wear slips anymore. We follow the first sales lady to the women’s department. We find a 24 inch half slip, which I know will be too long for Breanna’s dress. I’ll have to cut it down and figure out how to hold it up for the wedding tomorrow.

Does anyone know where all the girls slips have gone?