2011-07-01

On Fri, Jul 1, 2011 at 4:29 AM, Mark Moriarty  wrote:
Dad,

They do have a chance!

To one doubter I said,"Mark Moriarty 
 Are you on it? ...thought so. It's in trial mode. Yeah, it's attracted a lot of sarcastic comments, esp given Wave/Buzz fail, but since I'm such a Google addict anyway I'm quite excited to give it a shot. Notifications straight from gmail which I'm in all the time, group video chat (that skype charges for) with YT, a much more selective feed (called "stream"), better online photo editing, and a bunch more features show they're taking this effort seriously. They're defo taking FB head-on this time, unabashedly copying what's worked, but also trying to improve. We'll see. Anything Googlish gets my vote. Thanks Akshay for getting me into it!
"
Integration with Google is a huge plus for me, though not a general attraction to the same extent. 

Most outstanding is how easy it is to share with select people, and find out about the people you care about. Like you, this is an issue I've given A LOT of thought to - though I failed to make any world-famour blogging/publishing/reader service from my idea. I knew it was a matter of time before someone got it very right, (I figured Google would be the first to do it really right) and it seems that moment has now come. I'm relieved as well as happy!
Attached I show you how if I was in "Feed" view I can select who I want to hear about, and when I post on my own wall I can easily see who gets to see it by seeing which "circles" of friends I'm publishing to. You see I did one publicly, then one restricted to specific people.

I think a fair summary of G+ is copying what they see is working, combining other people's ideas, and throwing in a few of their own. After Microsoft buying skype for 6bn they won't be happy to hear Google offering free group video calls! Google voice is already similarly priced to skype (though I get free SMS messages on my laptop through GMail / GVoice here in the USA, and some free national calls too). Skype has the edge in terms of quality and smoothness and nice features - for now! I love to see Google taking on so many things though. How they try to shoulder Skype out of it will be interesting. 
The thing that the "hangout" feature offers is the public (or selective) broadcasting of the fact that, say, "Mark and Phelim are hanging out" - whereas if we were just skyping each other, no one else would know. This excites me. On its own, "Mark is hanging out" means, in skype talk, "Mark is online" - but it'll get far more interesting if you can track people beginning to talk. 

Success attracts success too, as always... The more Google-Glued I am (I mean the more different things I do through Google) the more the friends' circles will be beneficial, the more I'll appreciate getting G+ updates in my gmail inbox, the more +1 badges (or YT thumbs ups) around the place will contribute to my "profile"... I'm now beginning to see why the luanchers at Google were calling it more of an "extension of Google... Google+" rather than a brand new separate "sharing site like Facebook". I actually stumbled onto G+ territory once or twice today without planning to, just by clicking!

Your link raises an interesting issue about ownership - that was the last thing on my mind... which is very bad... 
Tell Mom to join Google Plus so, she'll have fewer things to complain about now!

I hope, esp with the hangouts, that it doesn't get so good that I end up rushing home to my computer to socialize! (It definitely happened tonight!)

Love,

Mark


I'm going to copy this to my blog now to see if it integrates automatically with my G+ profile! 


On Fri, Jul 1, 2011 at 4:08 AM, Thomas wrote:
http://www.zdnet.com/blog/networking/five-things-to-love-about-google-/1216

Mark,

My first reaction was that Facebook was so established that there was no way for Google to take the market from them.  But I like what I'm hearing about Google+ so far.  They've already implemented a couple of "my" ideas, including c
ircles, so you can share some stuff with some people, other stuff with others.  I like the policy that says I still own my copyright.  And I like the idea that I can download all "my" stuff.  They may have a chance.
     Yours sincerely,
 
          Thomas Moriarty

--

In order to attain the impossible, one must attempt the absurd. - Miguel de Cervantes


2011-04-02

The “BREAK GLASS IN CASE OF EMERGENCY” Money

Here are some quotes and comments from March 28 2011 RTE Prime Time's discussion following the Central Bank stress tests on the Irish banks, which show that another €24bn will be pumped into the struggling Irish banking system.

...the “Break glass in case of emergency” money... 
well, it's broken now, 
says Richard Crowley, as he asks,
Who will be forced to pay for the sins of the past?

Having borrowed over a hundred billion Euro from Europe, Irish taxpayers are being asked to continue to cough up so much bank-recovery money that we could have instead bought 100 hospitals, 23,500 schools, or enough mosquito nets for every single person at risk of Malaria in Africa 14 times over...

It's hard to be reassured by announcements that we'll pump more money into the banks and then our woes will be over. Thankfully the most recent plan also outlines some specifics as to how banks are to sell off their "non-core" activities. 

“We've moved the bank debt to the state again. We have a theory that we're going to create two good banks here going forward: that's not going to happen. The international market will not lend to these banks because they're domiciled within a state that is struggling, so if they won't lend to the state then they won't lend to the banks... so the whole policy in my view is flawed,” said Peter Brown, Irish Institute of Financial Trading. “I don't think these institutions can recover. I think it's years and years before they'll ever go back into the market to raise funds on their own. It's a bad day.”

Matthew Elderfield, Irish Financial Regulator, defended the plan, yet acknowledged the need for a modern-day 'secularisation'. “The banks' and the government's finances are joined at the hip and really need to separate to box off the cost of the banking crisis to convince... the financial markets... that you don't have to worry about leakage from the banks into the government's financial position.”
Karl Lannoo, (Chief Executive, Centre for European Policy Studies) slated Ireland's rash decision to unilaterally “and without consulting Europe” guarantee the banks the way we did in 2008.

The Irish banking crisis is going to set a record for one of the worst, if not the worst, in history.

Miriam O'Callaghan (as usual) framed it well: 
“The European Central bank has lent our banks 117bn. Our own Central Bank has lent another 71bn.
Is it conceivable we can EVER pay that money back, ourselves?”
Matthew Elderfield struggled to reassure me.

Richard Curran (Sunday Business Post) gut-wrenchingly predicted we may get a measly 20bn of the 70bn back.
In the meantime, we'll continue to pay one of the highest interest rates in the world on that little sum.

So, this 16,000 Euro for every man woman and child in the country... who's paying?
Can we force some bondholders of the big banks to take a hit?
We're not even imposing “burden sharing” on the senior bond-holders in Anglo.
Pearse Doherty TD (Sinn Fein) is in favour: “Burning unguaranteed bonds will reduce your interest rates but more importantly reduce the capital required of tax payers to go into the bank. Today [March 28 2011] we put 2.5bn of taxpayer's money into Anglo Irish Bank. There's 3bn of unguaranteed bonds in that bank, that is senior bond-holders: we haven't even touched it. There's nothing to stop us legally from imposing burden-sharing on those bonds. That would mean that we wouldn't have to have borrowed from the markets at 5.8%.”
Donal Donovan countered, “For the few hundred million it would save, it is not worth deterring the world from investing in Irish banks.” He certainly has a point (that I've been hearing for 2 years now) that it's largely about building confidence in our banking system.
Pearse Doherty clarified, “it's not hundreds of millions, we're talking about billions of Euros.”

If what we're doing is not sustainable though, says Karl Lannoo, “we have to stop this 100% support of the banking system. At some stage we have to send a signal: private sector will contribute to saving a financial system.”


There's no easy answer and there's no clear answer as to how we can get ourselves out of this toxic situation. One thing's clear for the near future: it will continue to be the ordinary tax-payer who feels the pain of these past mistakes.
(These stress tests themselves cost tens of millions.)


2011-01-22

"Grand" in the way non-Irish people mean it, this Canyon is!

En route to the Grand Canyon (on a day trip), was one of those times when I thought the bus ride itself was as worthwhile as the destination. That was, until we got there. Despite having Googled the bejeezus out of it in advance, I was taken aback at its breadth and overwhelmingness. The GC is indeed one of those things that are simply too ginormous to fit into any photograph. Here, not even the finest HD TruLife UltraFine 3D PhotoShop'd panoramic print can even come close to representing reality. I'm afraid my own set of pictures looks particularly fake, but you'll just have to take my word for it that I was there, and that it's not a backdrop. (If only I had brought my passport... I could have got it stamped at the Kolb photography studio / book store.)

Now in the interest of time I dump a load of photos for your purusal.


















We went here on Jan 11 2011. I'll edit this post in future. Perhaps.

Winter Day in Yosemite

Yosemite (Finally)!
Yesterday we travelled from SF to Yosemite, and back.
Our Amtrak travel experience was wonderful.
Since this is my first blog, I'm going to let the images do the talking.

Above you see a view I had from the bus as our bus penetrated the park. 
Simply being onboard the bus was fantastic - my first battery was almost depleted before I got off the bus!

Near the Visitor Center, we were dwarfed by the 3-tiered Falls. A lovely Jane Call preserved the moment for us.

At the base of the Lower Falls, the sun shone resiliently through the cool January mist.

You didn't even have to look at the snowcapped peaks or tumbling falls to see beauty.

A free shuttle service circles through 21 stops. We got off at stop 17 to to walk behind Half Dome to Mirror Lake, which was frozen over. Along the way, thankfully, we were awash with reflections from the river.

Beauty even in the muddy bed! The famous Half Dome, thousands of feet high, is reflected in a pool inches deep.



We almost didn't make it to Yosemite. We were actually put off by the season, the fact that most rental car companies don't allow you to put chains on your tyres, while January normally means you must have chains to enter the park. In fact no vehicle needed chains on our visit, and I can't imagine a more beautiful time of year to appreciate the scenery.


Note: Because of lack and skill and time, none of these photos have been photo-shopped. You can assume the same for all future pictures, unless stated otherwise.