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Private and Confidential
August Comment
As usual in August, the world of money went on vacation, as many people
took holidays and postponed decisions until colleagues return; but the
world of nature was busy – northern temperate climates, as we have,
experience full growth and weeding, cleaning and harvesting peak. The
development of the organic garden at Ballin Temple is showing real promise
and rewarding us with an amazing selection
of fruit and vegetables, like black tomatoes (delicious), purple potatoes
and spaghetti squash! But the bounty from the garden is partly symptomatic
of a key issue facing us all today: climate change. For the first time
in as long as I remember we have harvested deliciously ripe figs in Ireland
(we are north of Quebec City!). Their ripening may have been encouraged
by dry, warm weather in April and May, but there seems to be increasing
media attention to climate change. Climate change issues
were highlighted in cover stories by BusinessWeek
and National
Geographic. The other issue on our minds is the price of oil.
The high oil price is affecting business and politics – and winter
is only around the corner. This issue is in the media daily. Both
climate change and oil are covered below.
The Olympics were a great success and wonderful to watch.
Although doping featured highly, this is a sign of increased diligence,
at last. Sport world insiders have known of the prevalence of doping for
years and it will continue as long as sports success is lucrative enough
to pay for the covering up. Watching some of the Olympic heats reminded
me of “Asterix and the Olympic Games” in which athletes all
take a potion - they all win, crossing the line simultaneously! That is
not in the Olympic spirit and if the modern Olympics were to readopt a
more amateur philosophy (i.e. love of sports) there would be less encouragement
of doping.
Another shame of the Olympics is the nationalism that surrounds its whole
presentation – the national tally of medals seems all important,
not the performance or prowess of athletes. Although results are occassionally
a result of dedication, as in the Kenyan clean sweep in the steeplechase,
national performance is driven by national wealth, rather than individual
commitment. But it was refreshing to see the ethnic diversity in the biggest
posse - the US seemed to have representation from oriental, occidental,
south Asian, African and other groups.
What is less talked about is the irreversible damage to the environment
by the Athens Olympics and the failure to live up to promises made in
Greece's 1997 bid for the games. The WWF, the environmental group, reports
on an environmental assessment of the Games, marking the Athens games
against the 2000 Sydney 'clean and green' Olympics and gives the 2004
Games 0.77 out of four for achievement. The lowest scores were given to
the protection of fragile cultural and wildlife ares, water conservation
and the use of environmentally friendly technologies. Green spaces are
cherished amidst the urban sprawl of modern day Athens, but WWF claims
that prized green fields have been razed to make way for, amongst other
things, the table-tennis hall.
Activities
Although August was generally quiet we made good progress in developing
our portfolio advisory activities. We expect to publish our expanded coverage
and portfolio in mid-September which will coincide with increased stock
market activity as professionals return to the market. Clients can access
data in the members section. (See below for market comment.)
Spirit in
Business will hold its annual gathering in Zurich in October
and you are encouraged to see the agenda and consider participation.
Many exceptional leaders of sustainable business, triple bottom line
investing and business development will be there. The
programme is here (pdf).
Among the visitors we received in August, one, an aspiring professional
golfer, sported a Q-Link and attested to its positive
effect on his state of mind and golf game. The Q-Link, introduced to us
via our Cogbusiness relationship,
is a non-herztian resonance producing device. Though the Q-Link is based
on frontier science and appears to be supported by empirical evidence
rather than accepted scientific wisdom, we are attracted by the idea of
its method of working. Our simple analogy is with Indian music which is
built on a different mathematical framework than western music (eg no
octaves) but can uplift one's mood and consciousness. And Indian and western
can work together well as Ravi Shankar and Yehudi Menuhin have shown.
Perspective and Market Commentary
Climate Change
The news on climate change struck us because it came from various
sources and was presented with more urgency and less hype than usual.
Most of us will have experienced or seen media reports on climate
volatility in recent weeks from Florida storms to Bangladesh
floods. Three reports are summarised here. For a broad business
review see the BusinessWeek
article. For pictures go to National
Geographic (the graphic shown depicts the north pole ice cap in 1979
and 2003). The Ecologist also had a special report on climate change in
February which focuses on China.
BusinessWeek introduces the issue as follows: "Global Warming: Consensus
is growing among scientists, governments, and business that they must
act fast to combat climate change The idea that the human species could
alter something as huge and complex as the earth's climate was once the
subject of an esoteric scientific debate. But now even attorneys general
more used to battling corporate malfeasance are taking up the cause. On
July 21, New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer and lawyers from seven
other states sued the nation's largest utility companies, demanding that
they reduce emissions of the gases thought to be warming the earth. Warns
Spitzer: ``Global warming threatens our health, our economy, our natural
resources, and our children's future. It is clear we must act.'"
National Geographic's position is: "There's no question that the
Earth is getting hotter—and fast. The real questions are: How much of
the warming is our fault, and are we willing to slow the meltdown by curbing
our insatiable appetite for fossil fuels?" It may be irrelevant whether
or not its humans' fault - we may just have to change behaviour to survive
nature's volatility. Either way, behaviour change is necessary.
At the EuroScience Forum in Stockholm, at a briefing by the International
Geosphere-Biosphere Programme entitled Beyond Global Warming: Where On
Earth Are We Going? Professor Schellnhuber says the most important environmental
issues for humans are among the least understood. 12 "hotspots"
have been identified so far, areas which acted like massive regulators
of the Earth's environment, and if these critical regions are subjected
to stress, they could trigger large-scale, rapid changes across the entire
planet. But not enough is known about them to be able to predict when
the limits of tolerance are reached. One example of a hotspot was the
North Atlantic current, the ocean circulation pattern responsible for
bringing warmer air to northern Europe, the collapse of which could lead
to a very large regional climate shift. Others were the West Antarctic
ice sheet, the Sahara desert, and the forests of the Amazon basin. Yet
another hotspot, Professor Schellnhuber said, was the Asian monsoon system.
The world has barely begun to recognise the danger of setting off rapid
and irreversible changes in some crucial natural systems.
Scientists have begun to realise that change could be sudden, not gradual
- in some cases it could happen within a few decades. Professor Schellnhuber
urged a coordinated global effort to improve understanding and monitoring
of Earth's "Achilles' heels". He said: "Such an effort
is every bit as important as Nasa's valuable asteroid-spotting programme
designed to protect the planet from collisions. If we can afford to gaze
up at the sky looking for asteroids, we should be able to watch our own
planet with as much care."
Coincidentally the UK's Royal Society also launched an investigation
into the rising acidity of the world's oceans due to pollution from the
greenhouse gas carbon dioxide. The investigation by the Royal Society,
the UK national academy of science, will probe the potential impact of
this rising ocean acidity on marine life - which at present is largely
unknown. Increasing use of fossil fuels means more carbon dioxide is going
into the air. Most of it will eventually be absorbed by seawater, where
it reacts to form carbonic acid. The Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission
reports that some 20-25 million tonnes of carbon dioxide are being added
to the oceans each day. Researchers believe such dramatic changes in the
carbon dioxide system in surface waters have not been observed for more
than 20 million years of Earth history.
Geopolitics
"What kind of man would put a criminal in charge of a major branch
of government? Apart from, say, the average voter?" -- from Going Postal by Terry Pratchett.
In Venezuela incumbent Chavez won a referendum to remain in office. The
result is a poor signal of democratisation of Latin America and surveys
suggest that it is becoming less popular than in the mid-1990s. In Chile,
Mexico, Uruguay, Ecuador, Argentina, Panama, Costa Rica and others, the
support for democracy is decreasing since 1996. This means that less and
less people answer "yes" to the question "democracy is
preferable to any other kind of government". This is worrying, but
the rich are protesting that it was rigged. Although observers, like the
Carter Center, said the election was fair, it is not evident and a dispute
remains.
The US is gearing up for its election in November and ballot issues may
also be an issue. A New
York Times editorial reports: "...when voters cannot locate their
polling places, elections officials are often just as much to blame. This
month, Claude Hawkins went to four Kansas City, Mo., polling sites, trying
to vote, only to be told he was in the wrong place. No poll workers, however,
could direct him to the right place. The Board of Elections phone lines
were busy or not answered all day. At his fourth stop, Mr. Hawkins cast
a provisional ballot, which was disqualified - because he had voted at
the wrong polling place."
(Interesting reading and links are repeated here: American
Dynasty by Kevin Phillips, Martin Wolf's new highly acclaimed Why
Globalisation Works. On public policy, Alan Kay's perspective on public-interest
polling and the election comes in a small book, called "Spot
the Spin - the Fun Way to Keep Democracy Alive and Elections Honest".
An online version is here together with
Dr Kay's polling critic. Some amusing skits of political flavour can be
seen at these sites: www.JibJab.com, www.bushin30seconds.org,
www.moveon.org/front/.)
Terror Risk and War
Most of us have formed our views on Iraq and these will only change with
new information. Issues like Abu Gharib, the financial costs, the hostages,
the number of deaths and the evidence of WMD may influence opinions. Melodrama
like Fahrenheit 911
is unlikely to sway, unless it offers new information. Though some opinions
are changing: Doug Bereuter of Nebraska, a senior retiring Republican
lawmaker who until earlier this month was the vice chairman of the House
Intelligence Committee said the military strike against Iraq was "a
mistake," and he blasted a "massive failure" of intelligence
before the war. "I've reached the conclusion, retrospectively, now
that the inadequate intelligence and faulty conclusions are being revealed,
that all things being considered, it was a mistake to launch that military
action, especially without a broad and engaged international coalition.
... The cost in casualties is already large and growing, and the immediate
and long-term financial costs are incredible." This admission reflects
a mature, positive step towards rebuilding a coalition.
A collaborative solution in Iraq is needed. An orderly exit would bring
a semblance of "success" to this war despite going well over
budget on time, money and lives lost. There is however, still a long way to go. Almost a year after Congress
approved an American contribution of more than $18 billion to rebuild
Iraq, little of this money has been spent. Very little has actually been
built in Iraq, and most of what has been done has been paid for out of
Iraq's own revenues.
In the last days of August Bush
hinted at a more collaborative stance: saying he had "miscalculated"
the post-war mood in Iraq and commented on the War on Terrorism - "I
don't think you can win it". These statements struggle to explain
elements of the US pursuit of terrorists around the globe that have not
gone to plan. Democrats, of course, accused Mr Bush of "uncertain
leadership", trying to turn one of the President's perceived strengths
against him. The mud-slinging of the election does not bode well for a
collaborative approach although it would help to have compromise in the
US and globally to resolve Iraq, the middle-east and other geopolitical
hot-spots.
In an attempt to present a more positive face of the war we reflect on
what's good about the war in Iraq. While the way in which events have
been handled is unsatisfactory, the attention drawn to the failures has
given momentum to improvements in process and more equitable and honest
policy development. It has drawn attention to the dangers of relying on
cheap oil and promoted attention to alternative energy. It has raised
the level of critical thinking among the electorate in the US and in developed
economies.
Investment Management and Venture Capital
As August ends we enter September, the worst month for
stock performance of all 12. According to the Stock
Trader's Almanac, since 1950 there are three months that have averaged
negative returns: February, August, and September, with an average return
over that 53-year span of -0.7%. September has a bit of a streak going:
five market declines in a row.
For longer term investors interested in index investing, analysis suggests
that markets are expensive and economic fundamentals
do not bode for improvement. Generally conditions are not favourable -
interest rates are low, demand is stable, job growth is slim. Emerging
markets will be more attractive as economic growth is better founded.
The line between conglomerate (especially bank conglomerate)
and hedge fund is increasingly blurred. While businesses seek
better returns by taking venturesome positions and structuring for tax
transparency there is a danger that the risks associated will not be
appropriately considered. Investors in hedge funds should
similarly beware of hype and ensure that decisions are based on process
and culture as much as current performance. It is rare for
managers to follow a good year with another and consistent performance
is derived from flexible, appropriate process rather than individual
analysis.
The French market for socially responsible investment
products has risen by 75% in the past year, according to Novethic, the
SRI resource centre. Novethic releases a quarterly
barometer on the French SRI market and covers the entire SRI field:
assets under management, funds, extra-financial rating agencies and indicies.
It reported that on 30 June the total assets managed by open-ended funds
available in the French market reached €4.9 billion, up from €2.8
billion a year earlier.
Environment officials in Beijing have warned Chinese
managers that if they fail to meet pollution reduction deadlines, they
will be banned from raising stock market capital for three years. The
announcement comes as the director of Beijing City’s Pollutant Control
Office has announced to local media that 28 companies have been informed
that they are on watch regarding their sulphur and dust emission targets.
Financial Executives International (FEI)
released a report
surveying 224 US-listed firms with average revenues of $2.5 billion that
finds compliance costs and employee hours required to
comply with Section
404 of Sarbanes-Oxley higher than earlier estimates. According to
the surveyed firms, average cost per firm of compliance is $3.14 million,
an increase from the $1.93 million earlier average cost estimate. The
firms also say that complying with Section 404 requires more than twice
the employee hours (25,000) than previously estimated (12,000). However,
this is a small percentage of annual revenues and if it significantly
reduces "Enron risk" shareholders would welcome the costs.
VC investment volume is decent though seems to be weighted
to favoured sectors like biotech and security, while seed and start-up
opportunities are finding it more difficult to raise capital. This reflects
a more cautious mindset and the scandals of the past years.
Google Inc., a
Mountain View, Calif.-based online search company, closed its first day
of public market trading up at $100.34 per common share. The company priced
its IPO at $85 per share Nasdaq today, after pricing over 19.6 million
common shares at $85 per share. That represents a total IPO take of approximately
$1.67 billion., but opened trading at $100.01 per share. Google previously
had raised approximately $40 million in VC funding from Sequoia Capital,
Angel Investors LP and Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. This includes
a $25 million deal in 1999 at a post-money valuation of approximately
$62.5 million, and a $15.18 million deal in 2000 at a post-money valuation
of approximately $445 million. Neither Sequoia nor Kleiner Perkins sold
shares as part of the IPO.
The initial flurry of activity in Business Development Companies
has abated for a while. The result of Apollo’s BDC aftermarket lethargy
has been the disintegration of institutional investor interest in other
prospective BDCs. Firms like Blackstone and KKR have shifted their strategies,
withdrawing or postponing plans. Renewed interest in BDC's (from traditional
PE firms) can be expected after Apollo has begun to issue some meaningful
distributions later in the year or early next year.
Money
to Burn by Dan Primack presents data supporting a funding
overhang which may destabilise VC investment opportunities. Jesse
Reyes, director of research for Thomson Venture Economics (publisher of
VCJ), says that VC market overhang at the end of 2001 stood at approximately
$98 billion. This is nearly double historical averages (adjusted for market
size fluctuations), and was exacerbated by an unprecedented decline in
VC disbursement levels. Not surprisingly, returns stumbled. The average
internal rate of return (IRR) for a U.S.-based VC fund raised in 2001
stands at -18.2%, with a median IRR of -31.4 percent. Reyes estimates
that the VC market overhang has shrunk to $60 billion. "I think that
we could get to $50 billion by year-end, which is a historically healthy
level, although that assumes that [disbursements] are increasing,"
Reyes says. "So a better number right now would be around $25 billion
or $30 billion, but we're clearly moving in the right direction."general
partners have done an admirable job in aligning their fund sizes with
the decreased capital requirements of entrepreneurs limited partners are
causing a new type of extended overhang to be visited upon the VC market.
And, unlike last time, this latest incarnation will not be soothed by
fund cuts, but by poor returns.
Jonathan Demme’s remake of The Manchurian Candidate,
which originally involved Korean War veterans being brainwashed for nefarious
purposes by the Chinese government (the real-life inspiration had been
a group of U.S. soldiers who opted to remain in North Korea following
the war, prompting allegations of brainwashing). This time around it’s
Desert Storm vets, and the mind-scrambler is a "private equity firm"
named Manchurian Global Corp. The firm does all sorts of nasty things,
including a good deal of murder and an attempted domestic coup.
The opportunity to profit in poor areas where development is needed
was highlighted by The Economist
in an article Profits
and poverty. The Economist highlights "The Fortune at the
Bottom of the Pyramid. Eradicating Poverty Through Profits" a book that
seems destined to be read not just in boardrooms but also in government
offices. It is "a rallying cry for big business to put serving the world's
5 billion or so poorest people at the heart of their profit-making strategies".
"If we stop thinking of the poor as victims or as a burden and start
recognising them as resilient and creative entrepreneurs and value-conscious
consumers, a whole new world of opportunity will open up."Of course,
this is a world that we operate in and it is encouraging to see mainstream
players adopt the rationale as it will accelerate development of opportunities.
Trade
As noted in last month's comment, at the end of July the WTO
reached tentative agreement on how to move trade negotiations forward.
The appearance of the Group of 20 developing countries - representing
22 per cent of world agricultural production and 70 per cent of rural
workers - made a big difference to reaching this agreement. The G20 has
established itself as an indispensable player in the search for a balanced
solution to the agricultural conundrum. As Dr Lehmann Professor of International
Political Economy IMD and Founding Director of The
Evian Group notes: "While celebrating this milestone, let us
be clear that (to paraphrase Winston Churchill) this is the end of the
beginning and not the beginning of the end. We are roughly where we should
have been a year ago. There are still many obstacles. ... The case for
a sustainable, equitable, robust and dynamic global market needs to continue
to be made. This is not a time for individual persons or institutions
to cultivate their own gardens. We all need to cultivate the global garden
of the global community in which the global market must thrive."
Energy
Oil prices remain high and this is making alternative
energy economically attractive, even without pollution taxes (like carbon
tax). Even National Geographic has taken up the refrain with a cover story:
Living Without Cheap Oil. In light of the lead time to install new capacity,
it is good business for big business to gear up for alternative energy
sources sooner rather than later.
Japan seems to be putting more emphasis on nuclear power
(currently providing 25% of electricity) which is a convenient
choice. However, the safety track record is poor and the short
term optimism may be replaced by long term problems, not to mention the
questionable economics of nuclear. Taiwan (23%) and South Korea
(40%) are also high users of nuclear and may face similar challenges.
The immediate effect of costly energy is to dampen consumer
demand, which is under pressure anyway as fiscal and monetary stimuli
have already been applied. Industries like transport (especially
airlines) will be adversely affected, but our great dependency on
fossil fuels (>90%) leaves few businesses unaffected. Even
agriculture will feel the pinch as significant costs of industrial
agriculture are fuel for machinery and petrochemical ingredients.
Will prices stay high? It seems so. They are still only 50% - 70% of
inflation adjusted prices in 1980. The demand for energy, especially in
developing economies like China, is growing. The costs of pollution are
becoming unavoidable. It may be that insiders, like oil companies, producing
countries and their friends, are colluding to keep prices high because
it is profitable to do so (costs have not changed). And it seems that
the US election would be an incentive to keep prices down, although perhaps
political mudslinging is keeping consumers distracted. The burgeoning
alternative fossil fuel is natural gas, whose liquification and transport
costs are now competitive, which is filling a demand gap. However, renewable
technology is increasingly competitive in current economics and even more
so from a strategic planning perspective.
Clean wind energy is the fastest growing energy in
the world. The New World Trade Center (WTC) 'Freedom Tower' will use Wind
Turbines. The Freedom Tower will cost $2 Billion to construct, and will
be the tallest, most advanced building in the World with Wind Turbines
at the top as a source of clean power. Companies that are presently financing
Wind Farms include Shell, BP, Warren Buffet, Franklin Templeton, Chevron
Texaco.
Solar energy is
receiving renewed interest. With production costs approaching
6c-8c per kwh the economics are becoming attractive even in the
US. Capital costs are also approaching the $ 1 per watt
level. Although Jimmy Carter tried to boost the industry in 1979,
cheap oil in the US stalled development. Europe and Japan,
however, have developed the technology and now companies in the US
especially California are tapping into demand. The growth in unit
sales has been around 35% per annum since the mid-1990s supporting
attractive investment fundamentals.
On the other hand the World Bank’s board endorsed
a statement of policy committing to continued investment in the fossil-fuel
and mining industries, ending a controversial independent Extractive Industries
Review of the bank’s role conducted by Emil Salim, the former Indonesian
environment minister. Salim’s report called for the bank to phase
out all investment in oil and mining by 2008, a recommendation rejected
by the bank management. The bank invests more than $500 million a year
in oil and mining projects, about 3% of its total lending. However,
it should be noted that developing economies do not recognise the opportunity
cost of selling crude, a limited resource, which is fueling transport,
agribusiness, pharmaceuticals as well as energy industries in developed
economies. It would be more appropriate for developed economies to install
alternative energy sources while developed economies may be allowed to
benefit from relatively cheap (polluting) energy. The Bank's head, Wolfensohn,
said energy and mining resources were essential to many poor countries’
development goals, and should not be excluded from the bank’s remit.
“The harsh reality is that some 1.6 billion people in the developing
nations still do not have electricity, and some 2.3 billion people still
depend on biomass fuels that are harmful to their health and the environment,”
he said. “That underscores the need for our continued but selective
engagement in oil, gas and coal investments.”
The economics of alternative energy were also presented
in a more attractive light by a report
from the University of Missouri. Imported crude oil has essentially
zero taxes imposed on it, while a barrel of domestic synthetic crude oil
has corporate, personal income, FICA, state income, local sales, and other
taxes applied before workers and investors realize earnings, according
to Galen Suppes, associate professor of chemical engineering. "In
modern society, a nation must be able to commercialize new technology
to maintain high worker productivity and an industrial base that is critical
for national security," says Suppes. "When national policies
inhibit this commercialization, the future of a country is inevitably
compromised."
In related news affecting energy companies, eight states and New York
City filed suit against five of the largest power companies in the U.S.,
which they say are responsible for roughly 10 percent of the country's
carbon dioxide emissions. The suit is filed under a relatively
obscure federal common law of public nuisance, which, according to the
group's press release, "provides a right of action to curb air and
water pollution emanating from sources in other states." The attorneys
general are not seeking financial restitution but rather want to force
the companies to substantially cut their CO2 emissions. The suit represents
a direct attack by states on the current administration's policy on climate
change, which makes emission reductions largely voluntary. "We can't
afford to wait," said Tom Dresslar, spokesperson for California Attorney
General Bill Lockyer. Grist Magazine
reported that the utilities responded with a flurry of PR, saying, CO2
is not a pollutant, everybody breathes it, we're just five little companies,
this is election-year politics, and so on and so forth!
Asia
Ongoing excellent coverage of the election and development of democratic
process in Hong Kong, China is to be found at Civic
Exchange, founded by Christine Loh.
The proposed demolition of a major building in Hong Kong
by private developers has become the centre of attention for environmentalists
who say it will set a bad environmental example. “Hong Kong’s
landfills will reach their full capacity within the next decade; the estimated
200,000 tonnes of construction and demolition waste will over-burden Hong
Kong’s rapidly dwindling landfill capacity," Greenpeace said.
"Adding insult to injury, Hong Kong taxpayers will have to pay the
developers an additional HK$25 million ($3.2 million) in waste treatment
costs. Over the last decade, in excess of 130 million tonnes of construction
and demolition waste has been created … which Hong Kong taxpayers
have had to pay HK$16.3 billion ($20.9 million) to dispose of.”
On the mainland similar concerns are being voiced.
Pan Yue, a deputy director of the State Environmental Protection Administration,
has warned that the mainland will be a junkyard rather than the workshop
of the world if authorities fail to promote sustainable development, saying
that fears of the country becoming a junkyard were not unfounded. This
coincides with an increase in pressure to clean up before the Beijing
Olympics in 2008.
Thailand continues to impress us with statements of
sustainability initiatives. The government has announced an incentive
package to attract makers of “eco-cars” to the country. The
plan is to encourage car makers to relocate, with the help of an excise-tax
regime that keeps the price of fuel-efficient cars low, encouraging greater
sales, both in Thailand and in overseas markets.
The Thai government is also offering eligible manufacturers a 40% subsidy
on investments in solar-cell technology. The government grant will be
bolstered by loans that may be extended to cover the remaining 60% of
investments into solar energy technologies. The programme is intended
to encourage the Thai manufacturing sector, the country’s biggest
energy user, to convert to solar power to reduce energy costs and environmental
problems. The National Science and Development Technology Agency, which
is behind the initiative with the Industry Ministry, has patented a new
solar technology that produces electricity and can heat water to 70 degrees
Celsius, which will be used in a pilot programme.
India reported an newly launched cooperative as 268
small cotton producers become shareholders in Central India. They have
received shares to a value of 1000 rupees each and consequently they
become owners of the company that purchases their cotton and provides
the much in demand education and consulting in organic farming.
IT and CT
Open Source Risk Management [OSRM], which claims to be “The Industry’s
only Vendor-Neutral Provider of Risk Mitigation Consulting and Protection
for Open Source Users,” released a study that found no less than
283 issued software patents in the Linux kernel.
A third of these patents are held by Linux-friendly corporations like
Cisco, HP, IBM, Intel, Novell, Oracle, Red Hat and Sony, the study said,
while 27 are held by Microsoft, rather less friendly.
On the MS front, games, security software and popular business programs
are clashing with Microsoft's long-awaited security update for Windows
XP. Since SP2 was released to business users, reports have circulated
about programs behaving differently once the upgrade is in place. Microsoft
has drawn up a long list of programs that do not sit well with SP2.
While GRI Equity's systems are Linux based for stability and security
reasons, we have noticed on one financial website the following warning:
Windows XP Service Pack 2: If you have installed this service pack,
you may encounter problems with the trading process on our site. We continue
to investigate this compatibility problem with Windows XP Service Pack
2 and will give you an update through this page as soon as we know more.
Sorry for any inconvenience caused.
And Linspire Linspire (a user friendly Linux distribution) has laid out
some of the consumer issues of MS's latest challenge to Linux - a free
"starter kit":
|
|
Linspire |
XP
Starter Kit |
| Intended
Use |
Business,
School, Home |
Home
Only |
| Resolution |
No limits |
800x600 |
| Languages
|
52 Language Packs |
3
(Thai, Malay, Indonesian -
for less than 6% of the world) |
| Price |
Under
$10 (OEM) |
Under
$50 (OEM) |
| Simultaneous
Programs |
Limited
only by memory |
3 |
| Networking |
Full |
Limited
(no PC-PC, shared printers) |
| Help |
Multimedia Tutorials |
Bonus
CD |
| Shared
PC (multi-user) |
Yes |
- |
| Availability |
Now |
October
or later |
Buyers of the Starter Kit will still be paying a significant premium
over Linspire. They will also receive a product that is quite limited
when compared with its Linux counterpart. Also, Microsoft appears to have
very judiciously selected only minor languages. What happens when they
want to offer a product to India who requires it in English? Microsoft
will be hard pressed to offer them a product since there will almost immediately
be a grey market where it is re-imported into the US and other places.
The good news is that these are the seeds of healthy competition slowly
germinating. Microsoft claims to have 600 people working on Starter, which
is alot since Linspire has less than 100 employees and have made a product
that compares very favorably to the full-featured version of of XP, let
alone the version shown in the chart above. Perhaps it's time for Microsoft
to consider a Linux product of their own!
LOHAS
Although
the US is more traditional than Europe, its liberal values are catching
up. Openness to relationships is growing – Will and Grace is a popular
TV show that is based around alternative relationships and gay marriage
is likely to stay in the US. Even the Vice-President is involved.
Cheney is against the ban on gay marriage – his daughter is lesbian so
the family is familiar with the issue and he advocates "individual
freedom, freedom for everyone". And openness in religion is
finding a voice: a new book by Sam Harris, "The End of Faith: Religion,
Terror, and the Future of Reason" paints a bloody picture of religion
from the Spanish Inquisition to suicidal terrorists and notes that
"even the least educated person among us simply knows more about
certain matters than anyone did 2,000 years ago - and much of this
knowledge is incompatible with scripture". Harris is bold in
stating that religious moderation is a delusion - tolerate others'
beliefs but once your own have become unfounded give them up. Globally we see a long-term social trend toward European-style secularism, while economy and constitutional
politics are becoming more American-style .
Healthy lifestyles are in the media again and not because
of the death of oversized Dr Atkins. The movie Super Size Me, which has
grossed more than $11 million in 13 weeks in the US, shows its maker,
Morgan Spurlock, eating only from McDonald’s for a month, always
accepting a supersize option or additional item if it was suggested by
staff, and eating every item on the menu at least once. He added 5% to
his body mass within the first week. He experienced heart palpitations,
nausea, fatigue, depression, and diminished energy and sex drive. At the
end of the 30 days, he had gained 24 pounds and his cholesterol had rocketed.
McDonald’s has run a series of advertisements in UK newspapers telling
consumers it agrees with the central claim of the documentary
Super Size Me – that eating too much and doing too little is bad
for you, though it notes that its average customer would take six years
to eat the number of burgers Spurlock ate.
For concerned parents that have non-stick pans in their
kitchen some disappointing news. Perfluorooctanoic acid, a key chemical
component of Teflon and Scotchguard, has been found polar bears in Alaska
and birds in the Pacific Ocean. Researchers at the University of Minnesota
have detected traces of the compounds in two remote lakes in the Voyageurs
National Park in far-northern Minnesota, including one lake that is 11
miles from the nearest road. Fluorochemicals have raised concerns because
they do not break down and it is unclear how they become so widespread.
Although the US Environmental Protection Agency does not currently consider
fluorochemicals harmful, the agency is still investigating whether they
pose any environmental or health risks.
3M, the original maker of PFOA, stopped production of fluorochemicals
in 2000 and reformulated its Scotchguard fabric protectors to remove the
compounds. DuPont, which manufacturers PFOA at a plant in North Carolina,
uses the chemical to produce Teflon and other coatings. The company has
come under fire for not reporting to the EPA the results of tests it conducted
showing the presence of PFOA in the blood of some of its pregnant workers
and water supplies near its plants in Ohio and West Virginia. This
is of greater concern especially since the company is a member of the
WBCSD and its Chairman and CEO authored Walk
The Talk.
Education continues to get worthy coverage. A Stanford
Graduate School of Business study of 800 students earning their MBA degrees
at 11 top-ranking North American and European schools finds that 97 percent
would accept a lower salary to work for a firm with a strong reputation
for corporate social responsibility (CSR). The survey finds that the average
amount that students say they are willing to forgo is 14 percent of their
expected income. The survey also asked the students to rank 14 attributes
they look for when making employment decisions, finding that the top three
factors are intellectual challenge, financial package, and reputation
for CSR.
And from Germany, which boasts the largest economy of Europe, and has
sent so many to America in academic capacities, that now Germans make
careers in the US. Experts attribute the emigration to higher internationally
ranked, multi-tiered American universities that, unlike their German counterparts,
enjoy a great degree of autonomy and tend to run their institutions like
a business. In a bid to reverse the brain drain, some experts believe
the German system must emulate aspects of the American system, starting
with granting German universities more autonomy and the freedom to choose
their own students and faculty.
In the UK the education system is under increasing
scrutiny. With more people getting good grades observers believe
standards are coming down rather than education improving. This
is also supported by the fact that a quarter of children do not learn
to read or count properly.
Recent research suggests that qualifications are not the
appropriate way to screen for aptitude. It appears that a
country's state economic development has more to do with aptitude
levels than test performance. And aptitude is better screened by
character analysis and hands-on experience.
Frontier science is taking another step to discovering
the Big Picture.
An international panel of particle physicists has decided the high-energy
linear collider - a £ 3 bn (€4.4bn) machine for smashing matter
against antimatter - will use revolutionary superconducting technology
to shed light on the origin and nature of the universe. Plans for the
International Linear Collider have still to be finalised, but scientists
hope construction of the underground machine will begin in six years'
time. The collider will be housed in a dead-straight tunnel up to 40km
long. It will set a precedent by becoming the first truly globally owned
instrument built by all the major countries of the world. Last year, physicists
accurately measured for the first time how the universe is composed. They
found only 4pc of it was made up of visible atoms, with the rest being
mysterious dark matter and dark energy - neither of which entities can
be seen.
Consciousness is making inroads to major US companies, albeit through a
"back door" in India. K.N. Somayaji is a corporate astrologer
who offers advice to some of India's top high-tech companies. Mr Somayaji
has no formal business training and has never had a conventional education,
but to judge by his crowded waiting room the market for his guidance is
considerable. Mr Somayaji does not set rates for his services but accepts
donations. American companies such as Amway, Dunkin' Donuts and 3M have
consulted him about entering the Indian market.
In Brazil a prison has successfully instituted music and craft in Brazil
to reassimilate prisoners. This is the right kind of
initiative to rehabilitate people.
Denmark has raised the bar in healthy eating and will
ban enriched cereals including Kellogs corn flakes. This comes as Kellogs
is initiating a "low sugar" version of Frosties.
In other news on the food and health front, a study on "mad
cow" disease suggests that susceptibility may be high among
the largest genetic subgroup and that symptoms of the disease may take
longer than expect to show. James Ironside, from the National CJD Surveillance
Unit in Edinburgh, who took part in the study said: "This finding
has major implications for future estimations of numbers of vCJD cases
in the UK, since individuals with this genotype constitute the largest
genetic subgroup in the population. It's absolutely possible that there
may be a new epidemic, because the cases we've seen so far may be only
those who are unusually susceptible or have the shortest incubation periods.
I'm not in the business of scaremongering, but quite clearly the idea
that this problem is on the way out is unfortunately not the case at all."
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