Janal Kalis' Radio Weblog
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Thursday, July 10, 2003

 


7:35:03 PM    comment []

CHECK OUT HTTP://WWW.SOHU.COM

SARS, blamed by all manner of firms around the world for recent losses, provided a surprise profit for one. Sohu.com, a leading Chinese internet portal, reaped the rewards as millions went online at home, rather than run the risk of contracting the disease after a trip outside.



7:30:50 PM    comment []

US PATENT OFFICE FEES TO INCREASE 15-25 PERCENT

Yesterday the full House Judiciary Committee amended and approved H.R. 1561, the bill that raises USPTO fees by about 15 to 25 percent. The committee amended the bill to require the USPTO to conduct a pilot program before outsourcing patent searches to commercial firms.


7:26:30 PM    comment []

LANCE ARMSTRONG IS MY HERO

Lance will have to make his break-away within the next few days, in the mountains.  He is the stuff of mythology and it is an honor to live in the same time as him.  You can have your fat-ass baseball players, dumb-ass basketball players, candy-ass football players.  Give me the endurance athletes, the men and women of steel and heart.


7:23:05 PM    comment []

QUOTE OF THE DAY:

"The economy is an engine of creative destructiion."--Joseph Schumpeter

The term "new economy" has, more than anything, come to mean a
technological transformation, and in particular its embodiment in the
computer and the internet. These technologies are more human capital
intensive than earlier ones and have probably hastened the pace of the shift
in the U.S. economy towards the service industries. The new economy is also
commonly associated with economic "globalization" as reflected in the
expansion of trade and the integration of capital markets, but this can be
viewed as much as a symptom of technological change as an independent
phenomenon.
Upon reflection, however, it is clear that the new economy is not entirely
"new." There have always been new technologies, and each has, on the whole,
demanded new skills. Technologies that have driven "new" economies of the
past include steam, electricity, the internal combustion engine,
antibiotics, and chemicals, and these were in turn refined in a host of
smaller innovations. Here we will draw upon this rich past to see what
today's new economy may hold in store.
The evidence shows quite clearly that we are in the midst of a major episode
of Schumpeterian-style creative destruction, something like the
electrification episode 100 years ago that Paul David describes. Moreover,
far more than electricity, we believe that information technology or "IT"
represents an "invention in the method of inventing," as Zvi Griliches put
it when describing the advent of hybridization. This means that we will
probably see a wave of new products, new firms, and faster productivity
growth worldwide than we saw during the 20th century.


3:26:14 AM    comment []



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Last update: 6/30/2004; 7:04:31 PM.
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