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Posts Tagged ‘failure’

8 Mistakes of Internet Marketers

If you wish to be a successful Internet marketer you will want to avoid these 8 mistakes: 1. Failure to prepare properly. Many Internet marketers are simply lazy and will not make the effort to prepare properly. Refrain from being overly anxious as if you’ll miss the boat if you do not market your website [...]

Kit Gallant: Congressman Courtney on Healthcare: “Failure Is Not An Option”

This afternoon, I spoke with Representative Joe Courtney (CT-02) about the America’s Affordable Health Choices Act — the most promising health care reform legislation in…

Govt grilled over ‘security failure’


ISLAMABAD – While the opposition members staged walkout from the Upper House against Senator Raza RabbaniÂ’s remarks on Tuesday, Federal Minister for Postal Services Israr Ullah Zahri grilled the government for its failure in controlling the growing incidents of target killing and undue harassment of masses in the name of security check in the province.
Pandemonium was witnessed in the Senate when Salim Saifullah Khan of PML-Q and Raza Rabbani of PPP exchanged harsh words on the issues of membership of Planning Commission and Balochistan crisis.
However, Presiding Officer Col (Retd) Syed Tahir Hussain Mashhadi expunged these words from the proceedings.
Later, Rabbani apologized on the floor of the House and said that he withdrew his words about Salim Saifullah.
Earlier, Rabbani on a point of order of Senator Zahid Khan said that the government would take every step for removing reservations about Balochistan and other small provinces relating to provincial autonomy and membership of Planning Commission. He said that the issue of Balochistan was very critical and the government was taking it seriously.
He ensured the House that representation would be given to Balochistan and other smaller provinces in the Planning Commission. He added that he also wrote two separate letters to the Prime Minster in this regard.
He said that comprehensive recommendations about financial, law and order and other issues in consultation with Balochistan Governor and Chief Minster had been presented in the Committee constituted by the Prime Minster.
The unruly situation in the House was witnessed when Salim Saifullah said after RazaÂ’s point of order that delivering lecture and point securing is not needed in the House. On it, harsh words were changed between both the Senators.
On the remarks by Raza Rabbani, the opposition walked out from the House as a protest.
Later, Senators Abdul Malik and Hasil Bizenjo on a point of order said that the incident of target killing in Qutta was continuing and young people were being kidnapped. They claimed that the FC was harassing the masses in the name of security check.
Federal Minister for Postal Services Israrullah Zahri admitted this on the floor of the House and said that the FC was harassing the people in the name of security. “The police arrested the culprits of targeting killing, however, a law enforcement agency personnel influenced the police for getting them released,” he claimed.
Later, talking to media persons at the Assembly cafeteria, Leader of Opposition in Senate Wasim Sajjad and other Q-League Senators Salim Saifullah Khan and Jamal Leghari came down hard on the ruling party and the way it was conducting the proceedings of the Upper House. They said that so far Opposition had shown a lot of decency in the conduct of the proceedings of the Upper House but the way the ruling coalition had started misbehaving with them, they would be forced to not let the house function in smooth fashion.
Wasim Sajjad regretted the tone and tenor adopted by Rabbani against Salim Saifullah who had not let him speak to clarify his position on the points he had raised against him and the previous government for mishandling the issues relating to smaller provinces. He further said that they would continue their boycott till the time Rabbani tendered apology to Saifullah on the floor of the House.
Talking on the occasion, Saifullah said that he was not expecting such a rude behaviour from a veteran politician like Rabbani and he was deeply hurt the way he was treated unceremoniously. He recalled when Rabbani and his party were sitting on Opposition benches, they used to listen to their criticism with open heart. He said that the PML-Q Senators would not go back to the House as they were there for legislation and not to get into brawls with their colleagues.
Jamal Leghari said that Rabbani was doing all this to secure ministerial slot in the federal cabinet and he should tender apology to one of the senior members of the House for his misbehaviour.
In the meantime, when the temper of Rabbani cooled down, he rose to his seat and asked the chair to expunge the barbs he had exchanged with Saifullah and regretted for what had happened in the House. He also took back his words saying that he thought what unpleasant words he had exchanged with Saifullah were below the parliamentary norms.
But the Q-League Senators never turned up in the Senate till the time of its adjournment for Wednesday afternoon.

Women respond differently to heart failure treatment than men

Women are likely to respond differently to heart failure treatment than men, according to a new study.
The study raises concerns over whether current practices provide the best care to the sufferers.
The researchers have found that striking differences in the risk factors for developing heart failure (HF) and patient prognosis between men and women.
“Current practice is [...]

This is how we let it happen, Ma’am …

A group of eminent economists has written to the Queen explaining why no one foresaw the timing, extent and severity of the recession.

The three-page missive, which blames “a failure of the collective imagination of many bright people”, was sent after the Queen asked, during a visit to the London School of Economics, why no one had predicted the credit crunch.

Signed by LSE professor Tim Besley, a member of the Bank of England monetary policy committee, and the eminent historian of government Peter Hennessy, the letter, a copy of which has been obtained by the Observer, tells of the “psychology of denial” that gripped the financial and political world in the run-up to the crisis.

The content was discussed at a seminar at the British Academy in June that was attended by economic heavyweights including Treasury permanent secretary Nick MacPherson, Goldman Sachs chief economist Jim O’Neill and Observer economics columnist William Keegan. The letter explains that as low interest rates made borrowing cheap, the “feelgood factor” masked how out-of-kilter the world economy had become beneath the surface, with some countries, such as the United States, running up enormous debts by borrowing from others, including China and the oil-rich Middle Eastern states, that were sitting on vast piles of cash.

Despite these yawning imbalances, they say, “financial wizards” managed to convince themselves and the world’s politicians that they had found clever ways to spread risk throughout financial markets – whereas “it is difficult to recall a greater example of wishful thinking combined with hubris”.

“Everyone seemed to be doing their own job properly on its own merit. And according to standard measures of success, they were often doing it well,” they say. “The failure was to see how collectively this added up to a series of interconnected imbalances over which no single authority had jurisdiction.”

That meant when the reckoning came it was extreme, starting in summer 2007 and culminating in the near-collapse of the entire world financial system after the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers last autumn.

“In summary, Your Majesty,” they conclude, “the failure to foresee the timing, extent and severity of the crisis and to head it off, while it had many causes, was principally a failure of the collective imagination of many bright people, both in this country and internationally, to understand the risks to the system as a whole.”

Besley stressed that the experts had not been in “finger-wagging mode” and had agreed that the causes of the credit crunch were extremely complex. “There was a very complicated, interconnected set of issues, rather than one particular person or one particular institution.”

Other experts at the seminar last month included Paul Tucker, deputy governor of the Bank of England, Vernon Bogdanor, the constitutional expert from Oxford University, and HSBC’s chief economist, Stephen King.

A spokesman for Buckingham Palace said the Queen has displayed a particular interest in the causes of the recession, summoning Bank of England governor Mervyn King to a private audience earlier this year to explain what he was doing to tackle it.

Official figures published on Friday revealed that Britain’s economy has now been contracting for 15 months, and the recession is deeper than any since the 1930s, outside of wartime.

Robin Jackson, chief executive and secretary of the British Academy, said: “The global recession is a huge development, and it is reasonable to ask to what extent it could have been foreseen. What’s more, we can’t say ‘never again’ if we don’t fully understand what occurred. The academy forum was an opportunity to get an exceptional range of experts, participants and commentators in one room, sifting fact from fiction and shedding light on what had gone on. We hope Her Majesty – and indeed others – will find our letter informative.”

The academy plans to hold a second seminar later in the year to ask how best to prevent another such crisis occurring. Besley denied that economics as a profession had been discredited by the scale of the crisis, but admitted that unconventional ideas – about how herd psychology and bouts of irrationality can grip financial markets, for example – had sometimes received “less play” during the boom years.

He said the academy hopes to provide a forum for airing economic differences: “What we need is a forum where people can come together on a very open basis, to provide challenges and have a debate.”

Professor Luis Garicano, to whom the Queen directed her question when she visited the LSE in November last year, said: “She seemed very interested, and she asked me: ‘How come nobody could foresee it?’ I think the main answer is that people were doing what they were paid to do, and behaved according to their incentives, but in many cases they were being paid to do the wrong things from society’s perspective.”

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Hughes’ latest failure puts more pressure on Aussies

Australian opener Phil Hughes’ latest failure has heaped yet more pressure on skipper Ricky Ponting ahead of next week’s Third Test at Edgbaston.
Opener Hughes made just 10 in a warm-up game at Northampton on Friday and remains horribly out of touch just when Ponting needs him to start firing.
England’s fast bowlers gave him a real [...]

John Geyman: Individual Mandates: Expensive Policy Failure And Bonanza For Insurers And Market Stakeholders

Mandates have not resulted in universal coverage in any state. They are complex, very expensive, not sustainable, and have unforeseen unintended consequences.

10 Concerns We Have About Google Chrome OS

The hype over this operating system has been so heavy that failure would be a heavy blow. Google introduced Chrome OS July 7, promising a lightweight, Linux-based operating system for netbooks that will enable speedy Web applications. The move was a major shot at Microsoft, whose Windows desktop operating system Google intimated was antiquated. We at eWEEK have already provided 10 reasons why we are excited about Google’s Chrome OS. But in the tradition of weighing the cons with the pros, there are some concerns about the new Chrome OS as well.
– …


Gershon Hepner: Failure of Success

Michael Jackson teaches us about the failure of success. Excess is rarely worth the fuss we make about it. Less is more, but we don’t…

Head of $25 Billion Templeton Fund: Derivatives Will Cause Another Crisis

I have repeatedly warned that credit default swaps are not meaningfully being reigned in, and that the failure to do so will cause future problems.Mark Mobius – executive chairman of the $25 billion dollar Templeton asset management fund – agrees:A new…

Ponting trying to divert attention from Oz failure: Flower

Reacting for the first time after a spellbinding climax in the Cardiff Test, coach Andy Flower has said that Australian skipper Ricky Ponting by accusing the England team of delaying tactics, is trying to deflect attention from Australia’s failure to take the wicket they needed to go ahead in the Ashes series
The England’s [...]

Jerry Cope: The Failure of Democracy in West Virginia: Redefining “Alternative” Energy

Alternative energy is a standard reference to energy sources that are not carbon based. But in West Virginia, many of the designated “alternative” energy sources contribute not only significantly more GHG emissions than the dirtiest conventional coal fired plants, they emit toxic pollutants as well.

Hannah Clark’s Heart Heals Itself After Transplant

LONDON — British doctors designed a radical solution to save a girl with major heart problems in 1995: they implanted a donor heart directly onto her own failing heart.

After 10 years with two blood pumping organs, Hannah Clark’s faulty…

Jeff Schweitzer: A Comical Failure of Moral Values: Twisted Ideas of Theory and Practice in the Republican Party

The appeal to God to promote a political agenda does not work. Republicans are all the proof we need. We need a new way.

Scott Atran: The Moral Failure of Our National Intelligence

A new government report on the Bush administration’s surveillance of personal commmunications reveals a familiar pattern of intellectual deafness and moral abuse of the country.

Collaboration can’t cure #swineflu, but it can fight filter failure

Perhaps you’ve noticed a bit of activity online the last few days related to a certain not-quite-pandemic bug that’s going around.
Swine Flu.
Or, to put it in microblogging terms, #swineflu.
The wonderful thing about the ease of communication online is that anyone can start a discussion, carry it on, pass along information, retweet it, forward an e-mail, [...]

False Steve Jobs Heart Attack Report on CNN’s iReport Is a Failure of Open Systems

Someone posted a false report that Steve Jobs had heart attack to CNN’s citizen journalism site iReport. The fallout (which could include an SEC investigation) lead to the inevitable question of whether this is a failure of citizen journalism.
It’s not. It’s a failure of open systems.
As Sarah Perez points out at ReadWriteWeb, ANYONE can become [...]