Ouch!
Sen. Jeff Sessions (R., Ala.), seeking to discredit Judge Sonia Sotomayor’s judicial philosophy, cited her 2001 “wise Latina” speech, and contrasted the view that ethnicity and sex influence judging with that of Judge Miriam Cedarbaum, …
Ouch!
Sen. Jeff Sessions (R., Ala.), seeking to discredit Judge Sonia Sotomayor’s judicial philosophy, cited her 2001 “wise Latina” speech, and contrasted the view that ethnicity and sex influence judging with that of Judge Miriam Cedarbaum, …
Is it all over for the business trip?
THE “Face of Opportunity” contest that British Airways launched on July 14th, giving American business travellers the chance to win a free flight, is a “stimulus to jump-start US business” by helping to “keep entrepreneurship alive and kick up fresh potential for economic growth”. Well, maybe. But it also sounds awfully like a cry for help from an airline that has bet big on business travel and which is now extremely worried that it has bet wrong.
This autumn BA will fly 1,000 businesspeople free from New York, Los Angeles and Chicago to London. Once there, they will participate in a “networking event”, then be flown to another destination of their choice—if they can convince BA’s judges (who include Reid Hoffman, the founder of LinkedIn, and Bob Lipp, a former chairman of JPMorgan) that doing so would give them a chance to win business that otherwise would be lost. …
The Treasury Department continues to work out the details of its mammoth stimulus plan combating the financial crisis. Since its onset, the government has become…
Russia, a country of 140 million, is trying to reinvent itself to become a global player. But it’s also an Orthodox Christian country. That makes carving out a space for Jewish life a continual challenge.
One of the major challenges CIOs face is the deployment and security of smartphones in the enterprise. It’s important for CIOs to assess how their organization should secure the smartphones employees use to access corporate resources. Here, Knowledge Center contributor Chris De Herrera explains how CIOs can deal with some common security concerns regarding smartphones deployed in the enterprise, including Apple iPhone, RIM BlackBerry, Windows Mobile, Google Android and Palm Pre devices.
– If
you are a CIO, you face several challenges when it comes to deploying
smartphones in your enterprise. Among the most important, you must
determine the security requirements of your organization. Just like
laptops and notebooks used in the enterprise, smartphones often contain
corporate data …
EVERYDAY IN THE MORNING
WHEN YOU GET UP AND CRAWL OUT OF BEDÂ…
Kottke |
Though known primarily for his finger-knotting acoustic guitar prowess, Leo Kottke also writes some pretty unique, memorable songs. Sung in an inviting low grumble, his tunes often possess lyrics as snaky and strange as his tunings and hopping melodic sense. Today’s Monday Melody captures the faint wisps of dream speech that carry over into the first moments after the alarm clock roars. Taken from 1989′s My Father’s Face, Kottke greets the day with a thin grin and haunted images of Santa Claus, kids with faces like walnuts and of course, his father’s face looking back him in the mirror. Wipe the sleep from your eyes, the working week is here again.
Over the last decade, CBS’s perennial summer-filler voyeurism-fest Big Brother has lowered its rock-bottom contestant standards into the lowest depths of Hell in search of…
Super hot sportscaster Erin Andrews shouldn’t participate in any activities where balls fly at her face — “Clueless” anyone? — because a line drive hit her perfect mug last night during the Mets/Dodgers game.
Andrews — who serves as a side…
‘Managing change in the face of adversity’ sounds like a good theme for a conference that examines the state of the auto industry in 2009. There would certainly be no shortage of topic items for the programme.
And there are plenty of interesting case studies to look at.
General Motors has just cleared an important hurdle in its efforts to emerge from court administration as a leaner and fitter company later this month. It won’t be entirely without controversy, but the potentially very damaging consequences of a full-scale GM liquidation are at least avoided. The fallout from that would have hit the whole US auto industry very hard.
There’s now just the small matter ahead of making the new company fly at a time when conditions are far from favourable. We had confirmation last week with June’s figures that the US light vehicle market is not getting any worse, but with a SAAR of around 10m units, it’s still a very tough place. For all the talk of ‘green shoots’, bullish investors and economic recovery around the corner, it will be a while yet before the real economy comes back in a meaningful way.
On this side of the Atlantic, we have just had another reminder of an example of ‘change management’ that was, well, little short of disastrous. I don’t want to drag up the long and sorry history of British Leyland/Austin Rover/MG Rover yet again, but the subject has reared its head this week with the news that an official government inquiry into the events surrounding the MG Rover demise in 2005 has been completed. But we aren’t being told what’s in it because the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) is now going to get involved.
I don’t know whether the directors of MG Rover acted with what could be termed blatant impropriety, but they did – according to reports – do quite well for themselves with things like very big pensions.
Looking back now, their involvement in the final incarnation of Rover looks more like negligence than anything else. You had a supposedly volume car company making just 200,000 units a year, with almost zero investment in new product while also spectacularly failing to find a suitable long-term partner. It’s the last area where they really screwed up (Tata, already helping MG Rover with a rebadged Indica, was unsurprisingly miffed when SAIC emerged as a much trumpeted ‘partner’ – but that SAIC deal subsequently fell apart).
And the British government’s role? Not exactly covered in glory, which is why it’s not busting a gut to see that inquiry published. Indeed, now the SFO is involved, it may not see the light of day until after the next general election in 2010.
Is it surprising that the final echoes of the decades long industrial car crash that was Rover should be played out in such an unsatisfactory way? Not really. Let’s hope that in ten years’ time we don’t have a similar farce going on in America.