Wednesday, October 26, 2011

#237 More on Netflix


The day after I read this article, Netflix shares lost 30% of their value in trading sent downwards by news of massive customer defections. Copy and paste this link to read the article.

http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/can-netflix-regain-lost-ground-10192011.html?chan=magazine+channel_top+stories

Sunday, October 23, 2011

#236: A Taxing Debate

Martha Teichner presents a balanced view from both sides of the aisle regarding the need for tax reform. Draw your own conclusion!

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Re: #232: Ben Stein Advocates Raising Postage

I'm not sure $1 for a first class stamp will fly, but I agree with the idea of increasing the price of stamps.

#235 Business Week Special Issue: Steve Jobs


This link must be copied and pasted. It links to a wonderfully comprehensive issue on Steve Jobs and his growth as both a human and a visionary leader.

http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/11_42.html

Friday, October 7, 2011

#232 No GAAP for Postal Service

or any other federal agency for that matter!

http://redtape.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/10/07/8191425-twisted-government-accounting-behind-postal-service-woes

#231 From MSNBC - If You Had Bought Apple in 1997...


...when Steve Jobs returned to Apple. This track record qualified him as the most successful CEO in America at the time of his retirement.

By Allison Linn
While much of the tributes to the late Steve Jobs have focused on his innovation, we're guessing folks on Wall Street are going to miss him for a related, but different, reason.
He made investors a lot of money.
Shares in Apple rose more than 6,000 percent between the time Jobs took back the helm at Apple in September 1997 and the time he stepped down in August of 2011.
Jobs, who died earlier this week, returned to the company he had co-founded as many were questioning whether Apple could even survive. Shares in the company were trading around $5.
On Aug. 24, the day Jobs resigned, shares in Apple closed at around $376.
In the years in between, Jobs reinvigorated the company’s computer line and oversaw the invention of the iPod, the iPhone and the iPad.
Last year, Harvard Business Review named him the best-performing CEO in the world, citing the $150 billion increase in market capitalization between 1997 and 2010, when the list came out.
“It may come as no shock that Steve Jobs of Apple tops the list,” Harvard Business Review wrote.
Jobs was known for being deeply involved in the minutiae of product development, but experts said this week that they expect the company will continue to be successful without Jobs. Investors are surely hoping for that.

http://lifeinc.today.com/_news/2011/10/07/8191385-good-graph-friday-steve-jobs-wall-streets-darling

#788: How to Outsmart Shoplifters