Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Punish

God creates men.
Men create challenge.
Men destroy God.
Men give birth to me.
I conduct punishment to others that face me.
"Punishment by L" becomes rule

/L out

Thursday, March 12, 2009

I saw Watchmen.

Definitely, my movie of the year.

[edit] so far...

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Help the big guys

Yesterday, Friday, I was sent on an assignment. I was sent to fix the problems with my team's work for a convergence to gather new customers.

I was sent by my team. No one else could be sent for me as I was the one that knew how to fix it.

It is an odd feeling on being the salvation element of a team.

Too bad they don't reward people for the importance they have.

Friday, March 6, 2009

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Credit Bubble Burst (for Dummies)


2000
People work and gain money.
People save money in a bank.
Banks become very wealthy.
Banks support corporations.
Corporations make advertisements.
People see advertisements.
Advertisement causes wishes.
People want to buy more than they can afford.
People ask for loans to the banks.
Loans are given to anyone.
People buy big and are happy.

2002
People work and gain money.
People save money in a bank minus the money they owe to the bank.
Banks become quite wealthy but not as much as before.
Banks support corporations.
Corporations make advertisements.
People see advertisements.
Advertisement causes wishes.
People want to buy more than they can afford.
People ask for loans to the wealthy banks.
Loans are given to anyone.
People buy big and are happy.

2004
People work and gain money.
People can't save money in a bank because all goes to paying out the loans.
Banks are not wealthy.
Banks support corporations.
Corporations make advertisements.
People see advertisements.
Advertisement causes wishes.
People want to buy more than they can afford.
People ask for loans to the banks.
Loans are given to anyone.
People buy big and are happy.

2006
People work and gain money.
People don't gain enough money to survive in the month, so they don't pay the loans.
Banks are not wealthy.
Banks support corporations.
Corporations make advertisements.
People see advertisements.
Advertisement causes wishes.
People want to buy more than they can afford.
People ask for loans to the banks.
Banks ask other banks for loans to give people credit.
Loans are given to anyone.
People buy big and are happy.

2008
People work and gain money.
People don't gain enough money to survive in the month, so they don't pay the loans.
Banks bankrupt because the loans they give are not paid back.
Banks fail to pay their own loans to other banks.
Banks bankrupt.
Banks can't support corporations.
Corporations lose their money.
Corporations bankrupt.

But still...
People see advertisements.
Advertisement causes wishes.
People want to buy more than they can afford.

Recipe for 2010?
The Government put people's tax money back in banks.
And delay the next, inevitable, burst.

Is this the right way to go? Let me pinpoint the issue.
Advertisement causes wishes. <-
People want to buy more than they can afford. <-
Loans are given to anyone. <-

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Printed papers


It's been a long time since a dollar per newspaper could afford the printing, production and logistics; not to mention the digging up of stories, maintenance of sources by reporters and all the other jobs and costs related to the stories out in the newspapers.

In modern times, a dollar helps almost nothing in the process.
So how can papers keep alive ?

Simple: with advertisement. Full printed posters with fashion models, perfumes or cellphones, lowers or nulls the cost of a printed paper. Most newspapers are given if not hand-forced to you because the higher the distribution, the higher the advertisement gains.

This has been a good life for papers in the late 1990s and early 2000s.But what about digital newspapers? I know, for sure, that I do not read printed papers any longer. I watch TV and read news online. This creates a whole new market, also supported, in majority, by advertisement. Are printed papers being cast out of existence?

In the new millennium, has anything not distributed digitally any chance of surviving?

Speaking with a Lia Moreira, Journalist and specialized in newspaper reporting, she believes the main cause of this increasing "paper disease" is related to the reading habits:
"Reading papers is progressively becoming a habit of the most senior."

An example given was the picture of the "morning coffee and paper", which is not present in the daily lives of the youngsters:
"Young people want to keep informed too. However, they take the chance to do so once they are in the computer, probably at their work place, where they can do other things at the same time."

Questioned about the future of the printed "press", her words reflect some sadness when she agreed that the smaller papers will die first:
"Not the free city papers. Those are given to you and you unlikely will say 'No'. We will see those for some time still.
However, the local papers that depend on money will disappear. If the company is large enough, it may migrate to digital distribution and other sources of revenue and survive. Smaller companies will not make the cut."


About the future for journalism she shares a deep concern with her fellow journalists:
"The printed press, in general, is continuously reducing the new hires and investment in this area - which only worsens the situation."

The "new media" concept is changing information for everyone. Just a few years ago, my TV didn't come through my Internet.