Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Homes for Sale in Sanibel – A Worthy Long Term Investment

August 27, 2009

Sanibel Homes for Sale – A Worthy Long Term Investment

When was the last time you had considered taking a long relaxing vacation somewhere near the coastline of Florida? You could stay all day long under the warm and beautiful rays of the sun. Birds would be flying about and frolicking near the waves or frantically soaring against the sky afraid of the presence of like-minded human counterparts who only wish to savor the wonderful feeling of Sanibel. It might be love or it might be the calming sound of the waves crashing against the shore, but this is a special place where the peace and tranquility surpasses any feeling of stress or anxiety. You can make it a permanent part of your life by purchasing available homes for sale in Sanibel.

Whether or not it’s for the purpose of permanent residence or merely a summer vacation house, it would serve as a worthy long term investment. Often people have a habit of diving in on the action without any inhibitions whatsoever. There is something special about Sanibel. It could be in the air or just the collective feeling that you can release yourself here. That’s why a lot of people who have built up their tension levels to unhealthy heights often go here for the occasional pampering and the recovery of their energy reserves.

There is much that could be done there. While Miami may have had its fair share of television shows and movies showcasing the area, Sanibel is no less beautiful. In fact many tourists and residents who have already enjoyed the local scenery would even openly declare it as the best in beach and summer destinations.

The homes for sale in Sanibel aren’t too shabby either. You have your fair share of houses lined up perfectly in a neat row behind white picket fences and you have houses just some distance away from the shores. If you purchase a home there, it won’t be long until you can have daily walks along the ocean. As waves encroach on the shore, you could soon be spending time napping under the sun or playing a game of Frisbee with your dog.

Kids and teens are also likely to have fun while basking under the radiance of the sun. Hours could be spent walking on the soft sands trying to look for the best sea shell they can find. As a rich deposit in seashells and other flotsam, Sanibel is regarded as a viable tourist destination for the whole family. You and the gang could have your own little adventures. Parents could have romantic getaways as their children engage in little adventures or misadventures of their own, searching for buried treasure.

It’s all so beautiful there that’s hard to reject of the claims written here. If you are still skeptical, try to check out a few sites and photographs that are floating in the internet. Aside from that, you could always exercise the option of buying one of those homes for sale in Sanibel. It’s a decision you won’t regret.

Internet addiction storm breaks in China:

August 14, 2009

For several years ‘internet addiction’ has been promoted by the Chinese government as a serious mental illness affecting large numbers of young people, but in recent months it has started to pull back, seemingly due to the growth of a widespread, poorly regulated and abusive system of internet addiction ‘treatment’ centres.

Firstly, let me say that most of my sources on this issue are from China Daily, a state-run news service, but whether this reflects the reality or not, it is clear that the Chinese authorities are becoming worried about how the problem is being dealt with.

For example, the Chinese authorities recently shut down an unlicensed internet ‘boot camp’ style clinic and arrested 13 employees after a 15-year-old boy was beaten to death by camp counsellors for apparently running too slowly.

This follows news that the Chinese Ministry of Health has recently banned electroshock therapy for ‘internet addiction’. The same state media source reported that in Linyi Psychiatric Hospital alone, 3,000 young people had been ‘treated’ in this way. Both Chinese and Western media report that electroshock was also used as a punishment (note that some reports portray it as mild electrical current while others specifically describe it as electroconvulsive therapy).

The clinics seems to be a mixture of private clinics, of which 400 or so are estimated to exist, and government run clinics of an indeterminate number.

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The approach of one of the most prestigious state-run clinics is described in this article:

Co-founded by the Central Committee of the Communist Youth League of China and Beijing Military Region General Hospital in 2004, Tao’s clinic in the suburbs of Beijing has treated nearly 5,000 Internet-addicted youths and says 75 percent have been cured.

At the clinic, young addicts receive “comprehensive therapy” including medication, psychological counseling and low-intensity military training. They also take interactive courses with their parents to learn communication skills.

Tao also uses psychotropic drugs to treat patients suffering from mental illnesses such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, anxiety and depression.

This clinic seems to be the only one to have admitted Western journalists and it has been featured in TV and radio news reports, which, at times, make for quite disturbing viewing.

The recent admission of abuses in ‘internet addiction’ treatment centres is a significant change in tack as previous reports have typically discussed the internet in rather alarming terms, variously claiming that it has caused schizophrenia, led to drug addiction, resulted in job loss and the like. State media claims that about 10% of young net users are addicts.

Reading all the stories on ‘internet addiction’ in China, both from Chinese and Western media, I was struck by how it consistently reflected the idea that the popularity of the ‘treatment’ is being driven by parents’ anxieties about their children not conforming to the social pressures of family and academic achievement.

This is remarkably similar to what seems to drive the concept in the Western world and while our stereotype can often be that ‘internet addiction’ is simply a tool of Chinese state repression of free speech, it is worth bearing in mind that it may be closer to home than we like to believe.
Link to TV news report on ‘internet addiction’ in China.
Link to China Daily on shut down of illegal clinics.

Fallout 3 Game Performance

August 14, 2009
Daniel Saltman

Bethesda’s latest game uses an updated version of the Gamebryo engine (Oblivion). This benchmark takes place immediately outside Vault 101. The character walks away from the vault through the Springvale ruins. The benchmark is measured manually using FRAPS.

Fallout 3 - 1680 x 1050 - Medium Quality

The gaming performance of the 965 BE is excellent, it actually managed to outperform even the i7 965 in our Fallout 3 test.

Left 4 Dead

Left 4 Dead - 1680 x 1050 - Max Settings (No AA/AF/Vsync)

In lightly threaded titles, clock speed and larger caches seem to be the biggest boons to performance. The 965BE is second only to the Core i7 965.

FarCry 2 Multithreaded Game Performance

FarCry 2 ships with the most impressive benchmark tool we’ve ever seen in a PC game. Part of this is due to the fact that Ubisoft actually tapped a number of hardware sites (AnandTech included) from around the world to aid in the planning for the benchmark.

For our purposes we ran the CPU benchmark included in the latest patch:

Far Cry 2 - 1680 x 1050 - Playback (Action Scene) - Medium Quality

FarCry 2 is another example of a title well optimized for Intel’s architectures and thus we see that the 965BE can’t even win against its Q9550 competition. Thankfully for AMD, I do not believe FarCry 2 is representative of the majority of titles on the market.

Crysis Warhead

Crysis Warhead - 1680 x 1050 - Mainstream Quality (Physics on Enthusiast) - assault bench

Crysis performance is virtually tied between the i7 920 and the 965BE.

Goldman’s Outrage

July 14, 2009

How the Wall Street giant used your money to make $3.4 billion in profits.

goldmansachs1

They will never admit to this at Goldman Sachs (they don’t really fess up to much over there at the Big G) but in the fall of 2008, just after the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy gave the world a lesson in systemic risk, Goldman, the world’s greatest risk taker, was finished too.

That’s right, it was toast. Finished. Kaput. Until, that is, the firm that was built on wheeling and dealing in some of the most esoteric investments the world of high finance had ever seen, needed a government bailout to stay afloat, which included $10 billion in cash from the Treasury Department (granted by its former CEO, then-Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson) and more importantly, full access to the Federal Reserve’s discount window to be a commercial bank.

Goldman Sachs, which was bailed out by the federal government, is now using the bailout to resume some of the same risk-taking activity that got it in trouble in the first place.

Goldman, of course, is a commercial bank like no other. You won’t confuse Goldman with the ol’ Bailey Building & Loan. It has no customer deposits—which are what the access to the discount window was first set up to protect—and you won’t be getting a toaster or a debit card from Goldman Sachs anytime soon.

But being a bank has its rewards. With full access to the discount window, Goldman can now borrow cheaply and massively from the Fed in a pinch, and because of that access, it can borrow more cheaply in the credit markets. It’s a loophole that has allowed Goldman to turn back the clock and once again resume much of its risk-taking activities, only this time it’s being financed by the American taxpayer.

goldmansachs

There are, of course, many urban legends about Goldman and how it uses its clout in Washington and in the financial business (both Paulson and another former CEO, Robert Rubin held the Treasury secretary post) to advance its allegedly nefarious corporate agenda.

Recent reports have the firm gaming the energy markets, creating the dot-com bubble, and the subprime-debt crisis that took down Wall Street, and then for a time benefitting from its implosion when it “shorted” subprime-related investments, a trade that allowed the bank to profit from the downward spiral. (Hell, I’m sure there are people who also believe Goldman was somehow behind the swine-flu epidemic to corner the market on drug stocks.)

Some of these stories have a basis in fact and some don’t—I’ll leave it up to the reader to figure this out—but what is true is equally disturbing: Goldman Sachs, which was bailed out by the federal government, is now using the bailout to resume the many of the same risk-taking activities that got it in trouble in the first place.

The question I have, of course, is why is the Obama administration, which has decried corporate greed whenever it’s politically feasible, allowed Goldman all the advantages of a bank, when it is really a big hedge fund?

The Treasury Department won’t say and it’s obvious why Goldman is doing what it is doing: Money, and lots of it. The firm announced Tuesday morning that net income for the second quarter was $3.44 billion, while its biggest rival, Morgan Stanley, is likely to announce a quarterly loss.

And it all comes down to risk, or to be more precise, how much risk Morgan is willing to take on the taxpayers’ dime compared to what Goldman Sachs is now taking. Morgan Stanley’s CEO John Mack, chastened by the firm’s own near-implosion last year when it too was forced to become a bank, has radically reduced the amount of borrowing, or “leverage,” Morgan is taking in trading. People inside the firm say it’s difficult to meet client demands without borrowing money.

matt-taibbi-goldman-sachs

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“We just can’t get anything done,” said one senior Morgan Stanley executive, speaking on the condition of anonymity. Borrowing to finance trades amplifies gains, but it also amplifies losses when trades go bad. During the first quarter of 2009, Morgan borrowed just $11 for every dollar it had in capital (by comparison during the Wall Street boom, firms borrowed as much as $35 for every dollar in capital), while Goldman borrowed a significantly higher amount—close to $15 for every dollar it has in capital. “Our leverage is the result of risk-taking on behalf of our clients,” Goldman spokesman Lucas van Praag says about the strategy.

And keep in mind this is only for the first quarter. Goldman’s second-quarter leverage is likely much higher given the fact that interest rates have remained remarkably low. Those low interest rates have had another benefit—it has allowed Goldman to make winning bets in the bond markets (bond prices rise when interest rates fall), the same place that decimated Wall Street in 2007 and 2008.

Of course, there are lots of reasons for Goldman’s success. The firm has amazing intellectual capital; some of the smartest people in the world of finance work there. It also knows how to game the system better than any firm on the face of the earth. Case in point: In mid-September 2008, when the world was crashing following Lehman’s bankruptcy, Goldman held $13 billion in highly risky mortgage bonds known as collateralized debt obligations. These bonds were insured by American International Group, which itself was about to go bankrupt.

Without that insurance, Goldman itself would have imploded because the bonds would have been marked down to just pennies on the dollar. The rescue of AIG was supposed to prevent a large-scale crash of the financial system, but it also prevented a crash of Goldman Sachs, which bought those crappy CDOs from Merrill Lynch, which was forced to find a buyer (Bank of America) because it too held the same sludge.

The Goldman purchase of the Merrill CDOs is proof positive that the geniuses at Goldman screw up like everyone else. And I don’t buy van Praag’s spin on the firm’s famous hedges that minimized its losses because the smart money in the markets didn’t at the time. Goldman’s shares were in a freefall, bottoming out at around $50 in the fall of 2008, compared to close to $235 just a year earlier.

Now with all the government help, Goldman is marching its way back up to $235 a share—trading at around $150 Monday—by embracing much of the same risk that nearly led to its demise. It would be nice, though, if the next time Goldman losses money taxpayers didn’t foot the bill.

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VIDEO: UFO – The greatest story ever denied

December 18, 2006

The official denial and the ridicule began in 1942 with the Battle of Los … all » Angeles, where a UFO was fired upon by our military that could not bring it down. The release of this film brings an end to over sixty years of official denial.

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Five-day work week will double Congress’s workload – boo hoo

December 18, 2006

US Democrats, who will take control of Congress next month, have outraged some of their colleagues by their decision to work five days a week, which will almost double their workload.

According to an announcement made by the next Democratic majority leader, Steny Hoyer, representatives will have to be present to vote Monday through Friday.

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Nintendo Wii Sports causes ridiculous knee dislocation (w/ pictures)

December 18, 2006

This is why you don’t play Wii games in high heels.

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Even after DIGG effect — Verizon Still Quoting .002 CENTS per KB (AUDIO)

December 18, 2006

They quote you CENTS, but will charge you DOLLARS. Then when you complain their customer support will not even know the difference. I thought they would have learned this 3rd grade math lesson by now.

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Mini-Jet Engine Powered bike

December 17, 2006

What else to say?

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iPod Flea

December 17, 2006

Check out the ad for Apple’s soon-to-be-released iPod Flea.

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