Sterling Creations Blog


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Staying in touch!

Welcome to our blogs! A page where you will find a selection of articles, editorials, and human interest stories.
We strive to bring you information that will keep you in touch with the rest of the world and we offer you an opportunity to let the rest of the world keep in touch with you through your very own contributions.

you can make your own submissions at no cost and if your submission is chosen, it will be published along with your name and any other information that you wish us to publish.
All submissions will be reviewed to ensure appropriateness before they are published.
So, time for you to keep in touch!

Enjoy and don't forget to send your feedback to us at info@sterlingcreations.ca.!

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Multi lingual day care workers in demand

Top of the day to you!  I'm Donna J. Jodhan, president of www.sterlingcreations.ca and www.translationpeople.com.
Today, I am going to help by putting out a call for multi lingual day care workers.  They are being called to fulfill a very acute shortage of professionals.
 

Multi lingual day care workers in great demand

 

I bet that many of you reading my blog today would be very interested to read this from me.  Yes, I am extremely serious and here is why.

With more and more families speaking more than one language at home, it is becoming more and more of a necessity for day care workers to be able to converse in more than one language.  There was a time that if you could communicate with the pre-schoolers, and you had the proper qualifications, you could probably expect to enter into a very rewarding career; either as a day care worker or as a day care business.  That was when English was the primarily spoken language of our land.

 

That was then and this is now and the landscape has changed drastically over the past few years.  Why you may ask?  Because there are more and more multi lingual pre-schoolers entering the system today and this trend is only going to increase with the passing of time as America becomes home to a continuing influx of families from foreign lands. 

 

More and more parents are demanding that their little ones be taken care of by persons who can converse in their language and this is opening up a whole new window of opportunity for those who can speak a second or even third language.  Let us think of it in this way.  Yes, it may be a bit more work to obtain the necessary qualifications to be a day care worker along with being able to speak a second language, but at the same time being able to master these two skills can potentially bring you a lot of personal as well as financial reward.  Whereas in the not too recent past day care workers were not on the higher end of the pay scale, with these new changes taking place the status and value of a bilingual or multi lingual day care worker is going to rise appreciably.

 

I see this as a tremendous opportunity for someone who is not too sure which career to pursue.  A career or business that has the potential to attract a lot of multi lingual consumers and at the same time take advantage of real demand.  It is something worth considering.

 

 

I'm Donna J Jodhan wishing you a terrific day.

Donna J Jodhan is the president of Sterling Creations

Now you can view blogs and editorials written by Donna at:

http://www.donnajodhan.blogspot.com (Donna Jodhan!  advocating accessibility for all)

 http://numpadplus.com/blog/?page_id=7 (access and accessibility)

http://www.accessibilitynews.ca/acnews/editorials/donna.php (accessibility issues in Canada)

http://www.accessibilitynewsinternational.com (accessibility and disability issues on the international scene)

http://www.onestopbookcafe.com (under the café talk link) 

http://www.untappedwealth.com/businessdesk.html (important answers to consumers concerns)

http://www.sterlingcreations.ca/magazine.html (monthly editorial)

http://www.sterlingcreations.ca/blog/blog.html (blogs for language professionals and special needs business consultants)

Monday, March 30, 2009

Who Wants A Cement Company That Has Direct Exposure To China?

Hello there and a happy Monday to you out there! 
We your Business team at www.sterlingcreations.ca would like to start your week with a very exciting article that shines the spotlight on China and the enormous opportunities that await you in the midst of all of the bad news.
Want to read more?  Then look no further.
We wish you a great day.
Your Business team
 
Who Wants A Cement Company That Has Direct Exposure To China? EVERY Investor Who Executes The Positions In PURE PROFIT, That's Who!!!
CEMENT, IT'S IN THE BAG!
 

Construction in China seemingly has no end. There are well over 100 metropolitan areas in China with a population well over 1 million. And these areas are growing fast!  They are consuming all the cement they can lay their hands on.
 

One area, called Chongqing (formerly Chungking), has a population in excess of 37 million. No typo!  That's about the population of California, and 30% larger than the population of Peru at 29 million. The population of Chongqing is growing (births plus immigration, minus deaths) at about 1,500 people per day. They need a place to live and that's just one illustration of why there's a construction boom in China.
 
Check this out: Anhui Conch Cement Company Limited ("Conch Cement"), China's largest cement producer has grown from producing 2 million tons of cement in 1996, to producing 65 million tons of cement in 2006.  This all by the means of mergers, acquisitions and scale expansions. They are the largest producers of cement in China for 10 consecutive years. But here's the kicker: they are the largest supplier of cement and clinker in ASIA, and the 4th largest globally. So you tell me, what's the down side???
 
GRYPHON'S PURE PROFIT WILL ONCE AGAIN OUT DUE ITSELF!  When was the last time you came across a business - any business - that churned out a 2100% profit margin in 3 years?
 
That's exactly what you get with this company and its wealth-producing cement and clinker.
 
MINIMUM RISK & UNLIMITED RETURN
 
At present, 60% of the global cement market is concentrated in the hands of the top 50 cement manufacturers worldwide. The Chinese mandated the elimination of 250 million tons of outdated cement production capacity by 2010. This industry consolidation will not only accelerate, but market shares and industry profiles will be concentrated to the strong companies, adding additional value created by acquisition opportunities because of the consolidation.
 
PURE PROFIT ESTIMATES China's cement industry concentration will be improved to 181% respectively just in 2008 alone!!!
 
A Tale of 3 cities???
 
Allow PURE PROFIT to illustrate the tremendous money-making power of the cement strategy. I think you'll like what I have to say.
 
An extremely large Swiss cement company HOLCIM recently raised its claim in the Chinese market. PURE PROFIT expects to raise its stakes to profit gains from 265% to 400% pretty much over night.
 
That's not all...
 
Anther cement giant with direct exposure to China and a listing on NYSE is Ireland's CRH. It's greener than the rolling hills and PURE PROFIT's information tells us that earlier this year CRH invested over $300 million for a 26% stake in JILIN YATAI GROUP, and if that's not enough they have an option to acquire an additional 23%. CHR stock has pounded lately!  It's currently trading at less than 6 times its earning, which makes it even cheaper than the industry giant CEMEX!
 
Who wants a cement company that has direct exposure to China? EVERY investor who executes the positions in PURE PROFIT, that's who!!!
 
When it comes to using cement, China dwarfs everyplace else on the planet. Here is a revealing graph from our friends at The Oil Drum:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Listen to what a few PURE PROFIT subscribers have to say:
"At 76 yrs. old you have to know how to be able to make the right investments. I have doubled my IRA account with PURE PROFIT. Thanks Gryphon."  Jessie Briggs Tyler, TX
 
"You have to see it to believe it! No one was more skeptical than me. With the worry of loosing my entire life savings at the age of 63, Pure Profit has shown me the way toward financial indepence."
 
Harold Rothstein, Florida NY
 
Heck of a graph, huh? Can you believe the comparison of China with everyplace else? The bottom line in all of this is that cement is a growth industry, maybe a growth industry on steroids?
 
PURE PROFIT investors know that being ideally positioned to capitalize on this earning growth is worth 70% Profit every year for the next 3 years - If You're Serious about Making Money...
 
So you probably noticed no one mentioned any special offers, no discounts. At just $799.00 per year or $1499.00 for two years - we won't sell it for a penny less. Serious investors know that $799 for just a taste of the profits you can earn as a PURE PROFIT subscriber is worth thousands.
 
In all fairness to you, please don't participate in PURE PROFIT if you're at all skeptical, and think this is just a shiny report. I urge you to move along if $799.00 isn't worth its weight in cement, this may not be for you!  Consider alternative newsletters.
 
THIS IS EXTENDED TO SERIOUS INVESTORS WHO ARE LOOKING TO MAKE A STEP TOWARD REAL WEALTH RIGHT NOW!!
 
I urge you to act fast! This offer will only be extended to the first 100 only!
 
If you would like to learn more about us and the services we offer, then please visit www.sterlingcreations.ca
If you would like to keep abreast of some of the most important happenings affecting your lives today, then please visit www.untappedwealth.com/businessdesk.html.  There you will get the latest news roundups on such topics as:
Stress, anxiety, and depression. News for retirees, seniors, and aging baby boomers.  Security tips for home computer users.  Home business opportunities, Internet business opportunities, small business opportunities, business opportunities in Asia.  You will also learn how to obtain tremendous personal and financial satisfaction by selling your knowledge and experience.
 

 
 

Saturday, March 28, 2009

The PDF challenge

Hello there!  This week, we the team at www.sterlingcreations.ca are delighted to bring you an editorial written by our president Donna J Jodhan.  This editorial addresses isues of access to PDF content.
We hope you find it insightful.
We wish you a great weekend.
 
 The PDF challenge
By Donna J. Jodhan
 
The world seems to have gone PDF crazy and what we are finding now is that the majority of those websites with something to say are using PDF formats to convey their information.  All well and good for those who can read PDF files but for blind and visually impaired persons it is a virtual nightmare.  Why is this?  Very simple!
 
PDF files are image-based and blind and visually impaired persons are unable to read anything that is image-based.  That is, PDF files, and anything on a website that contains an icon or an image.  True it is that Adobe continues to  work very hard with content developers to make PDF files more user-friendly to blind and visually impaired persons, but if these files are not properly tagged, if the file is not correctly coded, then everything is inaccessible to us.  There is yet another problem that we face even if the PDF file is correctly coded and that is:  If we do not possess the right combination of access technology then we are doomed.
 
Yes, the right combination of access technology and for the majority of blind and visually impaired persons, this is a huge problem because without financial assistance it is practically out of reach.  In summary, more content developers need to be aware of using appropriate code in order to make PDF content more accessible.  More financial assistance needs to be made available to those who do not have the right combination of access technology in order to access PDF content. 
 
I'm Donna J. Jodhan wishing you a terrific day and weekend.
To reach me, please send an email to info@sterlingcreations.ca and I would be delighted to send you an electronic copy of our latest newsletter.
 
Here is a complete list of where you can view Donna's blogs and editorials.
Donna Jodhan!  advocating accessibility for all
http://www.donnajodhan.blogspot.com 
a weekly feature on important answers to consumers concerns
http://www.untappedwealth.com/businessdesk.html
Weekly blogs for language professionals and special needs business consultants
http://www.sterlingcreations.ca/blog/blog.html
a monthly editorial on business issues and concerns
http://www.sterlingcreations.ca/magazine.html 
weekly editorials on accessibility issues in Canada
http://www.accessibilitynews.ca/acnews/editorials/donna.php
Editorials:  An International perspective on issues of accessibility and disability
http://www.accessibilitynewsinternational.com
A general perspective on issues of access and accessibility
http://numpadplus.com/blog/?page_id=7 
 
 

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Canada must lead by example on human rights

Hello there!  We your Accessibility team at www.sterlingcreations.ca would like to shine the spotlight on Canada!   A nation that needs to start addressing its Human Rights situation.  Arguably so, Canada is by far not as bad as other countries when it comes to its Human Rights record but there is certainly room for improvement.
We hope you find this article insightful.
We bid you a pleasant day.
 
 
Canada must lead by example on human rights
 
Lloyd Axworthy and Alex Neve
Ottawa Citizen , Feb. 5, 2009
 
As part of a new United Nations review process, Canada's human rights record
has just been examined. Much is at stake in how we respond. It is a time for
strong Canadian leadership.
 
For decades, UN human rights reviews have been politicized and inconsistent.
Powerful countries have brushed off criticism. Countries with few friends
have been easy targets. Israel has received far more attention than any
other country. Many countries with serious problems have never made the
list. Discussions have often focused more on avoiding scrutiny than facing
up to problems.
 
This new "universal periodic review" process is an effort to break through
these shortcomings and actually put human rights at the
heart of the UN human
rights system.
 
The key is that the new process is "universal." For the first time, the
human rights record of every country in the world will be reviewed, once
every four years. That applies whether a country is big or small;
well-respected or a pariah.
 
The review is carried out by other governments which means politics are
still front and centre. That will be a problem as many countries will have a
"you scratch my back, I'll scratch yours" mindset.
 
It is also a great advantage, however, in that the recommendations might be
taken more seriously by governments because they come from their peers.
Canada championed the adoption of this new process when it was debated
within the UN in 2005 and 2006. That is all the more reason for Canada to
model the best possible approach.
 
Sixteen countries will come under the human rights microscope this week and
next. This week that includes our own human rights record. Next week China
is slated for review. Both pose challenges for Canada. Both offer great
opportunities.
 
The review of China's human rights record is much anticipated. This is the
first time that governments have scrutinized China's record at the UN.
Previously China was always able to marshal enough countries to its side to
fend off any criticism. This time it can be different. Countries must
demonstrate that despite China's economic clout, they are prepared to raise
difficult issues. The spirit of exchange should be constructive, but must
face up to China's
human rights reality.
 
We will be looking to Canada to lead the way. Also on the list are other
powerful countries that generally escape international critique, such as
Russia and Saudi Arabia. Some are close allies of Canada, including Mexico
and Germany. Others are countries with well-documented human rights
problems, such as Tajikistan and Cuba. Canada must take each review
seriously.
 
Canada is well-placed to be a leader because of the fact that our own record
is being examined.
 
That is a first for us as well. Canada's human rights record has never
before been assessed by a group of governments.
 
One of the most meaningful contributions we can make, therefore, is to go
through our own review ready to hear the criticisms and to implement the
recommendations that emerge.
 
But for a country that is the envy of the world when it comes to human
rights, Canada's rate of complying with UN human rights recommendations is
shamefully low. Over the past 30 years, UN human rights experts have made
recommendations to Canada dealing with many pressing concerns: aboriginal
peoples; poverty and homelessness; women and children; refugees, migrants
and racial minorities; people living with disabilities; counter-terrorism
practices and more.
 
But those recommendations have come back to Canada and become lost in a maze
of government departments and in the complexities of federalism. Very few
have been implemented and there has been no meaningful public reporting as
to why.
 
It is time for a new approach to how Canada lives up to its international
human rights obligations. With overlapping jurisdiction among federal,
provincial and territorial governments, that new approach needs to be
innovative and it needs political champions. There has not been a meeting of
federal, provincial and territorial ministers responsible for human rights
in this country since 1988. Such a meeting is long overdue.
 
The first item for ministers at a human rights meeting should be the
recommendations that come out of the review in Geneva. They should adopt an
implementation plan that is well-co-ordinated, publicly transparent, and
backed up with clear political accountability.
 
Canada's global voice as a human rights champion must ring true this week
and next. Looking to others, we must be ready to pose hard questions.
 
Looking to ourselves, we must be ready to accept criticism and heed advice.
 
Lloyd Axworthy is former Canadian minister of foreign affairs and Alex Neve
is secretary general of Amnesty International Canada.
 
 
If you would like to learn more about us and the services we offer, then please visit www.sterlingcreations.ca
If you would like to keep abreast of some of the most important happenings affecting your lives today, then please visit www.untappedwealth.com/businessdesk.html.  There you will get the latest news roundups on such topics as:
Stress, anxiety, and depression. News for retirees, seniors, and aging baby boomers.  Security tips for home computer users.  Home business opportunities, Internet business opportunities, small business opportunities, business opportunities in Asia.  You will also learn how to obtain tremendous personal and financial satisfaction by selling your knowledge and experience.
 

 

 
 
 
 

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Blogging hits crossroads

Hello everyone!  We your Research team at www.sterlingcreations.ca would like to share some enlightening news with you today.  News that concerns the world of blogs and bloggers.  Our selection of article for today will definitely help you to understand this busy and complicated world a bit more after you have read it.
We wish you a great day.
 
 
Blogging hits crossroads
 
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
An old colleague of mine used to joke he was one of millions whose job it was to "feed the internet." This past November, an alumnus of a prestigious writing program in Louisville, Ky. told soon-to-be-alumni his blogging career was short-lived because, like a bad girlfriend, his blog constantly needed him.
 

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Editor's Note: Editor's Note: The people who defined blogging are losing heart for a complex tapestry of reasons. It's as though those adventurous American pioneers so long ago took one look at the Rockies and said forget it. The author suggests there is a blogging promise land, reserved for those with the will and creativity to find it. What do you think? Wishful thinking or inspiring pep talk? Tell us in the comments section. 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Those heralded A-listers we all looked to over the past few years? Many of them are hanging it up. Mike Arrington: handed over the TechCrunch reins to hired staff. Jason Calacanis: moved to email. Their chief complaints: fame. Too many haters, too much spit in the face.
 

Dan Lyons This week's quitter is Dan Lyons, the Newsweek writer who rocketed to blogsopheric recognition because of his satirical blog, The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs, now soured on "another high-tech fairy tale." His reason: there's no money in blogging. The day the New York Times blew his Fake Steve Jobs cover, Lyons says, "more than 500,000 people hit my site—by far the biggest day I'd ever had—and through Google's AdSense program I earned about a hundred bucks. Over the course of that entire month, in which my site was visited by 1.5 million people, I earned a whopping total of $1,039.81. Soon after this I struck an advertising deal that paid better wages. But I never made enough to quit my day job."
 
Every tech blogger's Silicon Valley heyday nemesis—which has reduced staff to exactly one blogger—Valleywag was quick to note Lyons scored a book deal out of his little experiment with popular anonymity. And it was well deserved. The Fake Steve Jobs idea was a well-played stroke of genius.
 
This crop of A-listers aren't the first to have blog-related meltdowns. They may be, though, the first to really go and stay gone. Self-proclaimed original blogger Dave Winer is known for periodic threats to stop blogging. Yet, he still blogs. Robert Scoble, chief among the famous-for-blogging-and-I-wrote-the-book-on-blogging elite, is prone to emotional denouncements of the craft and self-imposed mental health hiatuses. Yet, he still blogs, though to a lesser degree.
 

Some people just can't help it. They have to blog. Like it's a sickness. Some are victims of their own success. Fame isn't, by nature, for everyone, even if fifteen minutes has been edited down to five public-commentary-abusive ones. And still yet others are disillusioned victims of hype and zeitgeists.
 
This list of types could go on and on. There are as many reasons to blog, or not to blog, as there are people. One thing is for certain: we seem to be at a blogging crossroads. Sadly (but perhaps naturally), pivotal, transformational (and sometimes bloody) moments are often misconstrued as deadly ones. Blogging has reached a crucial moment in its evolution, one where competition for money, credibility, and attention has never been fiercer. The weak, those whose prime devotion is getting rich, getting famous, getting laid, or getting approval will be culled. In the end, as in the beginning, it's about purity and (some type of) artistic integrity.
 
When I was in the fifth grade I joined the basketball team along with 40 of my friends. I was a chubby ten year old counted among the first who would give up when faced with laps and suicide sprints and leg lifts, pushups, and sit-ups as the coaches sought to weed out the weak and uncommitted (and produce a more manageable basketball team). And, after a week, I nearly ran home to enjoy Grandma's gravy and biscuits in my-body-doesn't-hurt peace. My mother, though, reminded me of my commitment, and by the middle of the season—when the coach had become fed up with his starting fast little waifs—I earned my starting forward position and never felt better about myself.
 
Blogging, I think, is at a similar moment in its development, a moment all writers (and other content producers) must struggle through until they form a key component of their wills that says never give up.
 
I find it interesting that as soon as negativity about the economy set in, especially among those tech bloggers who thrive on bubbles and print journalists suddenly out of a decent-paying job who are forced to turn to blogging or dry cleaning, the negativity surrounding blogging also set in. Not enough money. Too many haters. A waste of time and energy. All hype no delivery. A cause of undue stress, obesity, and myocardial infarction. These were the same people, back when that bubble was still good and cozy, once so jazzed about The Secret, this century's remake of Norman Vincent Peele's The Power of Positive Thinking.
 
True, the average blogger pulls in a mere $5,000-$6,000 per year, and that average is obscenely skewed by the top one percent of bloggers pulling more than $200,000. True, there are more abandoned blogs than active ones. True, content in a world that values cheap, short, and easy has been reduced to embarrassing values (I saw one ad on craigslist offering $1.50 per "article"). True, there is worldwide competition for diffused and dwindling ad dollars. True, there has been a deluge of marketers, spammers, and professional bloggers (a.k.a. writers) and "mainstream" media types pushing out the wild and wooly (and unreliable and piggybacking and libelous) amateur, citizen journalists. True, viewers, readers, and fans can be nasty.
 
 
If you would like to learn more about us and the services we offer, then please visit www.sterlingcreations.ca
If you would like to keep abreast of some of the most important happenings affecting your lives today, then please visit www.untappedwealth.com/businessdesk.html.  There you will get the latest news roundups on such topics as:
Stress, anxiety, and depression. News for retirees, seniors, and aging baby boomers.  Security tips for home computer users.  Home business opportunities, Internet business opportunities, small business opportunities, business opportunities in Asia.  You will also learn how to obtain tremendous personal and financial satisfaction by selling your knowledge and experience.
 

 

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Wanted! More manual in multi languages

Top of the day to you!  I'm Donna J. Jodhan, president of www.sterlingcreations.ca.
Today, I would like to put out a call for more manuals to be produced in multi languages.
 

Wanted!  More manuals in multi languages

 

Today I would like to put out a call for more manuals to be produced in multi languages.  What we have right now is that the majority of manuals are produced in English but truth be told the world is made up of more non English-speaking persons.  So, why is it that we can't seem to understand why we should be producing more manuals in multi languages?

 

Almost every person who buys a product would prefer to read a manual in their first language and it only becomes more frustrating when they are unable to do so.  In addition, almost everyone would prefer to read a manual that is well written, easy to understand, and well translated.  In a recent survey published in the United States, the following frustrations were revealed.  This survey was carried out among over three thousand persons, the majority being non English-speaking persons.

 More often than not:  Manuals are poorly translated, is not produced in the language of the purchaser, and the translation often does not accurately describe the product.

Food for thought.

 

 

I'm Donna J Jodhan wishing you a terrific day.

Donna J Jodhan is the president of Sterling Creations

Now you can view blogs and editorials written by Donna at:

http://www.donnajodhan.blogspot.com (Donna Jodhan!  advocating accessibility for all)

 http://numpadplus.com/blog/?page_id=7 (access and accessibility)

http://www.accessibilitynews.ca/acnews/editorials/donna.php (accessibility issues in Canada)

http://www.accessibilitynewsinternational.com (accessibility and disability issues on the international scene)

http://www.onestopbookcafe.com (under the café talk link) 

http://www.untappedwealth.com/businessdesk.html (important answers to consumers concerns)

http://www.sterlingcreations.ca/magazine.html (monthly editorial)

http://www.sterlingcreations.ca/blog/blog.html (blogs for language professionals and special needs business consultants)

Monday, March 23, 2009

As General Motors Goes, So Goes the Nation

Hello there!  We your Business team at www.sterlingcreations.ca would like to share an article that will help to paint a clearer picture for you.  A picture of how the woes at General Motors are greatly affecting the health and welfare of our economy.
We feel that this article is a must read for you and its source is an impeccable one.
We wish you a great day.
 
 
Dear Investor,
 

 My name is Michael Warren, I am a partner of the firm Gryphon Financial and head of equity Hedge Fund strategies as well as managing our offshore Hedge Fund and Structured products division.  Since 1993 I have played a integral role in the developement of Gryphon Financial the Newsletter Division.  I am a graduate from Columbia University and The Wharton School of Business. I come from a long line of investors and Traders, as a matter of fact five generations.  It's my personal opinion that we can outperform any Newsletter in the business. I would be more than happy to help with any questions.   I can be reached at 1-800-828-9921 or 212-859-5088.
 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 

As General Motors Goes, So Goes the Nation
 

General Motors was founded in 1908 in Flint, Michigan and grew to be the largest corporation in the world. Its market capitalization reached $50 billion in 2000. In the past week its market capitalization dropped below $1 billion to levels last seen during the 1920's. The story of General Motors is the story of America. In 1953, at the peak of its dominance, its President Charles Wilson declared before Congress that what was good for the country was good for GM and vice versa. Its rise to power and decline towards insolvency parallel the rise and fall of the Great American Republic. Overconfidence, hubris, lack of courage, foolish decisions made, and crucial decisions deferred have been the hallmarks of GM and U.S. GM's stock price reached at $1.77 last week, a 71 year low. It peaked at $100 during the Dot Com boom in 2000 and was still at $50 in 2007. The market has voted and it says GM is bankrupt.
 
 
 
American carmakers have seen their market share drop from 85% in 1985 to 43% today. GM's market share peaked at almost 50% in the 1960's. It reached a historic low of 19.5% in January. Their sales plummeted 49% from a year ago. GM has too much debt, too much bureaucracy, too many plants, too many car lines, too many employees, and too many future healthcare and pension obligations. Of course, the only way a company can be in such a disastrous position is through decades of mismanagement. The only logical solution is for GM to enter a pre-packaged bankruptcy with financing provided by the U.S. government if bank financing is unavailable. Shareholders and bondholders will be wiped out. They made a bad investment. Plants will be closed, UAW contracts restructured, management replaced, employees fired, debt written off and future obligations reduced. A much smaller viable company that can compete in the 21st Century would exit bankruptcy in a year or two. A profitable, low market share is preferable to a high market share with billions in loses.
 
 
 
Source: Automotive Data Center & R.L. Polk
 
The decline of GM is a testament to how poor strategic decisions over the course of decades will ultimately lead to collapse. The United States has followed the GM model of failure for the last three decades. The U.S. has too much debt, too much bureaucracy, too many government supported industries, too many agencies, too many employees, and $53 trillion of unfunded future liabilities. See any similarities to GM? Can the U.S. avoid the fate of GM, or is it too late? If we can learn the important lessons of the GM decline, it may not be too late to reverse our course. Or we can continue on the current path and follow the advice of Will Rogers.
 
"If stupidity got us into this mess, then why can't it get us out?"
 
Meteoric Rise
 
By the early 1920s, General Motors had surpassed Ford Motor Company as the largest car company in the U.S. under the leadership of Alfred P. Sloan. He created the concept of annual styling changes that kept consumers coming back. He also established a pricing structure for each of GM's brands from lowest to highest (Chevrolet, Pontiac, Oldsmobile, Buick and Cadillac). The idea was to keep a family coming back to GM over time as they become wealthier. He was a pioneer who drove GM to become the largest and most profitable industrial enterprise the world had ever known. His words reflect that spirit.
 
"There has to be this pioneer, the individual who has the courage, the ambition to overcome the obstacles that always develop when one tries to do something worthwhile, especially when it is new and different."
 
In the midst of the Great Depression, Mr. Sloan was able to keep General Motors profitable. That is an indication of a smart, realistic businessman who didn't make poor decisions during the Roaring 20s. GM's results during the heart of the Depression, when one-third of all dealers went broke, according to Automotive Daily News were:
 
1929 Net sales - $1,504,404,472               Net income - $248,282,268
 

1930 Net sales - $983,375,137                  Net income - $151,098,992
 

1931 Net sales - $808,840,723                  Net income - $96,877,107
 

1932 Net sales - $432,311,868                  Net income - $164,979
 
By 1936, GM managed to increase car sales to 1.7 million and to 2 million by 1941, before converting operations to military requirements. Only an executive like Sloan comfortable in his own skin and tolerant of other opinions would speak the following words.
 
"If we are all in agreement on the decision - then I propose we postpone further discussion of this matter until our next meeting to give ourselves time to develop disagreement and perhaps gain some understanding of what the decision is all about."
 
The best business decisions are made after open debate that includes dissenting opinions and arguments. Only great leaders allow this type of decision making. Alfred Sloan led GM for over 30 years, retiring in 1956. GM's profit in 1955 had reached $1.2 billion ($8 billion in today's dollars). It was on top of the world.
 
On Top of the World
 
During World War II General Motors produced armaments, tanks, vehicles, and aircraft to help the Allies to victory. During the 1950s, GM became the largest corporation in America and became the 1st company to pay taxes over $1 billion in a single year. In 1955, GM employed 624,000 Americans. In the copy of the 1955 GM Annual report below, it shows that only 27 cents of every dollar of revenue was paid to employees. The GM business model was very profitable. Their market share peaked at 54% in 1954, the same year they sold their 50 millionth automobile. After the retirement of Sloan, a visionary leader failed to materialize. GM began to show signs of overconfidence as the 1960s arrived. They started to believe their own press clippings. They failed to heed the advice of another well known auto man Lee Iacocca.
 
"The most successful businessman is the man who holds onto the old just as long as it is good, and grabs the new just as soon as it is better."
 
 
 
Peter Drucker, the world renowned management guru, wrote a detailed analysis of General Motors in 1946 called Concept of the Corporation. His suggestions to management and the UAW were scoffed at by both parties. He suggested the automaker might want to reexamine a host of long-standing policies on customer relations, dealer relations, and employee relations. Among his specific recommendations was for GM's hourly workers to assume more direct responsibility for what they did, adopting a "managerial aptitude" and operating within a "self-governing plant community." The UAW's powerful president, Walter Reuther, greeted that notion this way: "Managers manage and workers work, and to demand of workers that they take responsibility for what is management's job imposes an intolerable burden on the working man." Reuthner did not fall into the "visionary" category.
 
Glory Days
 
As the 1960s began GM began decades of reacting to competitors rather than showing the way. As the European car makers introduced smaller cars, GM introduced the Chevrolet Corvair. This car later was attacked by Ralph Nader, who wrote book Unsafe at Any Speed, which led to congressional auto safety hearings. Speed took precedence over safety. GM continued to maintain its worldwide dominance through the 1960s into the 1980s. New car controversy plagued the company during these decades. Every decade, a major new product line was launched with defects of one type or another showing up early in their life cycle. In every case improvements were eventually made to fix the problems, but the resulting improved product ended up failing in the marketplace as its negative reputation overshadowed its eventual quality. Again, Lee Iacocca's wisdom went unheeded at GM.
 
"In the end, all business operations can be reduced to three words: people, product, and profits."
 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
 

 
 
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Renaissance Center - GM Headquarters
 
 
 
Source: Wikipedia
 
GM forgot that superior products developed by superior people lead to profits. The 1970's were marked by more disastrous product launches. Who could forget the Vega? Quality was not job one for GM. The last major strike by the UAW also occurred in 1970. After that, management continually gave in to the union demands in all future contract negotiations. They promised tremendous pension benefits, lifetime healthcare benefits, huge pay increases, and onerous work rules that gave management no flexibility. GM evidently didn't have any bean counters who could extrapolate past a five year horizon. If they had, they would have seen that they would eventually have an unsustainable cost structure with more retirees being paid than workers on the assembly line. The troubling facts were ignored because GM still had a 45% market share during the 1970's. GM's U.S. employment reached 618,365 in 1979, making it the largest private employer in the country. Worldwide employment broached 853,000. It has been downhill ever since.
 
In 1983, in an epilogue to 1946's Concept of the Corporation, Peter Drucker wrote: "GM may, within a decade, develop into a true transnational company that integrates markets of the developed world and their purchasing power with the labor resources of the Third World." And while it is much too early even to guess what GM's labor relations will look like," he added, "the assembly line, that symbol of industry during the first half of the century, will, by the year 1990 or the year 2000, probably have faded into history." Mr. Drucker underestimated the lack of vision and foresight of GM management. They continued to follow the old ways until it was too late. Japanese carmakers arrived like a freight train during the 1980s and have never let up. GM has essentially been in a death spiral for the last 30 years. Throughout the 1980s, GM rolled out more duds like the Chevrolet Citation, Chevrolet Cavalier, and Pontiac Sunfire.
 
Bruce Springsteen touched on the future of the U.S. auto industry in his classic Glory Days.
 
My old man worked 20 years on the line
And they let him go
Now everywhere he goes out looking for work
They just tell him that he's too old
I was 9 nine years old and he was working at the
Metuchen Ford plant assembly line
Now he just sits on a stool down at the legion hall
But i can tell what's on his mind
Glory days yeah goin back
Glory days aw he ain't never had
Glory days, glory days
 
Decline of an Empire
 
Roger Smith ran GM from 1981 until 1990. During his reign, GM's market share dropped from 46% to 35%. His biggest claim to fame is being the subject of Michael Moore's first documentary Roger & Me, which was extremely critical of his laying off of thousands of employees in Flint, Michigan. He took over GM in 1981 while it was losing $750 million, its 1st loss in 60 years. Poor product quality, labor unrest and lawsuits over unsafe vehicle designs affected sales volumes in the early 1980's, which led to GM losing market share at an alarming rate to foreign automakers. In 1981, U.S. Union autoworkers responded to the Japanese threat by bashing Japanese automobiles with sledgehammers. I'm sure this made them feel better, but it was a futile and useless gesture. Smith attempted to institute Japanese manufacturing techniques, but the ingrained bureaucracy resisted change and foiled his efforts. A culture of mediocrity and poor quality led to continuous decline rather than continuous improvement. The acquisition of EDS from Ross Perot in 1984 was a failure. Perot attempted to change the culture of GM, but failed. Perot liked to say that getting GM moving again was like teaching an elephant to dance.
 
General Motors had a chance to take a commanding lead in the mid 1990's. They developed the 1st electric car the EV1 in 1996. Instead of taking advantage of this opportunity to change the automotive world, GM scrapped this car and destroyed all of the models. They decided the future was in trucks, SUVs, and Hummers. They continued to roll over to the unions every time a contract came up for renegotiation. This ultimately led to an average hourly labor cost of $73.26 for GM by 2006, a 65% premium to what the Japanese pay their autoworkers.
 
 
 
GM sold its soul to the devil of debt and high margin, low mileage vehicles. SUVs generated a profit of $10,000 to $15,000 per vehicle, even with GM's bloated cost structure. Rather than improve their assembly line efficiency, product design & quality, or solidify their balance sheet, they chose to use their GMAC subsidiary to make loans to subprime borrowers at 120% of the car's value. After 9/11, GM showed their dedication to the flag by giving cars away with 0% financing. Amazingly, when you provide 0% financing to people with 550 credit scores you can sell millions of Escalades and Hummers. While Rome was burning GM management continued to fiddle. There hundreds of Presidents, Vice-Presidents, and Directors continued to fly around in their fleet of 7 corporate jets. As Rick Wagoner and his top cronies secluded themselves in executive suites on the 14th floor of their palatial headquarters, eating steak and lobster in their executive dining room, served by minions, GM was rotting from within.
 
 
 
Source: Autoblog.com
 
Giving away cars for free was so successful, GM decided to parlay their expertise into giving homes away for free. They bought Ditech in 1999, just in time to catch the greatest housing bubble of all time. Ditech was a pioneer in offering 125 percent loans, in which the borrower could get more than the property was worth. It specialized in no-documentation mortgages and stated income loans. How could lending someone 125% of a home's value with no proof of income or assets possibly go wrong? To quote Claude Rains from Casablanca, "I'm shocked, shocked to find that gambling is going on in here!" GMAC surprisingly lost $8 billion in the last two years. Luckily, the American taxpayer has stepped in to provide GMAC with $5 billion of TARP so they can continue to allow GM to sell more cars at a $2,000 loss per car. No need to worry, they've hired some Wall Street wizards from Citicorp who have figured out that they can make it up on volume. Paul Kedrosky recently provided a fascinating look at how two decades of profits could be wiped out in seven months. With 260,000 remaining employees, the end is near for this fallen giant.
 
 
 
Source: Paul Kedrosky Infectious Greed
 
A corporate governance study at ragm.com sums up the reasons for GM's decline.
 
"The history of GM is an instructive story in how success can breed failure; how being the biggest and the best can lead to arrogance and an inability to adapt. GM was the premier car company in the world for so long that it failed to see the need for change. The company was so used to being leader that it couldn't contemplate following others. It was this mindset, this overwhelming belief that it was GM's divine right to be the most successful automobile company on earth that condemned the company to two decades of disaster. When GM did finally see the need to adapt, it did so with wild ineptitude, spending tens of billions in the 1980s for little reward."
 
General Motors has lost $72.5 billion in the last three years. Why is the American taxpayer propping up this failed entity?
 
Long Road to Ruin
 
Bill Gross, one of the wisest and deepest thinkers in the financial world, wrote a report in May 2006 that compared the plight of GM with the plight of the United States. Mr. Gross' words almost three years ago ring even truer today.
 
"I think it is important to recognize that General Motors is a canary in this country's economic coal mine; a forerunner for what's to come for the broader economy. Their mistakes have resembled this nation's mistakes; their problems will be our future problems. If the U.S. and General Motors have similar flaws and indeed symbiotic fates, they appear to be conjoined primarily by the un-competitiveness of their existing labor cost structures and the onerous burden of their future healthcare and pension liabilities. Perhaps the most significant comparison between GM and the U.S. economy lies in the recognition of enormous unfunded liabilities in healthcare and pensions. Reportedly $1,500 of every GM car sold in dealer showrooms goes to pay for current and future health benefits of existing and retired workers, a sum totaling nearly $60 billion. The total future healthcare liability for all U.S. citizens can be measured in the tens of trillions."
 
General Motors failed to find a solution to their problems. CFO Fritz Henderson admitted in 2006 that, "I have a social security system hooked to our balance sheet." The reason he had a social security system hooked to his balance sheet was because previous management had made commitments that could never be kept in the long run in order to keep the party going in the short run. Sounds like GM management would do extremely well in government jobs.
 
 
 
Source: PIMCO
 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
 

ATTENTION SERIOUS INVESTORS:
 
Part 1 of 5
 
MOVE YOUR MIND TOWARD MONEY, AND IT
 
 WILL COME!
 
Do you wish to change your life? Are you a person who seeks money? Have your past failures in the market dictated your future loses?
 
Which category do you fit?
 
The person who seeks money for the value in itself, or one who worships it like a GOD- are you that fool, who mistakes the symbol for reality? Or are you the person who denies yourself the pursuit and desire for money because, too much equals evil, likewise a fool indeed.
 
The wisest person is the one who seeks money as a symbol behind something else, something more, a person that is not captivated by mistaking it as substance, either good or bad. One who sees money as a symbol of almost everything that one may obtain from the outside world we reside in, and respects it as such. A PERSON THAT DOES NOT SEEK AND STRIVE AFTER MONEY, IS A PERSON THAT DEVOIDS ALL THAT LIFE HAS TO OFFER-PERIOD!
 
Any sane individual who desires money, really desires all the many and great things that money will purchase, a necessity for wellbeing and happiness. WITH IT ALL DOORS BECOME OPEN TO MANY MORE OPPORTUNITIES, AND WITHOUT IT ONE CAN PRACTICALLY ACCOMPLISH NOTHING! Does this make sense to you?
 
ISN'T MONEY THE TOOL THAT AIDS US TO CREATE MOSTLY ALL THINGS AND ENABLES US TOWARD NOT BEING HELPLESS?
 
READ ON....
 
 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Eroding Competitiveness
 
The United States peaked as a manufacturing economy in 1960, with manufacturing employees making up 26% of the workforce. They now make up less than 10% of the workforce. Total manufacturing jobs peaked at 19 million in the late 1970's and now have plummeted  below 14 million and continue to fall. The U.S. decided to outsource manufacturing jobs because we were going to do the thinking for the world. Why get your hands dirty creating things when our brilliant MBA trained geniuses could turn loans to deadbeats and frauds into AAA rated Mortgage Backed securities? The U.S. decided to take the easy path of financial engineering rather than the hard path of creating products that other countries would buy.
 
The trade deficit caused by decades of choices by government and industry reached $677 billion in 2008. These deficits were always unsustainable. Borrowing from the Chinese and Japanese to buy stuff produced by China and Japan could never go on forever. Instead of realizing this imbalance and taking actions to gradually rebalance the world financial system, our financial leaders and Federal Reserve reduced interest rates and encouraged the imbalance to grow, until it collapsed in 2008. Now their solution is to lower rates to 0%, devalue the currency, and encourage further borrowing. Sounds like choices made by GM in 2001. The Sage of Omaha, Warren Buffett explained the dilemma.
 
 "In effect, our country has been behaving like an extraordinarily rich family that possesses an immense farm. In order to consume 4 percent more than we produce—that's the trade deficit—we have, day by day, been both selling pieces of the farm and increasing the mortgage on what we still own."
 
The mortgage is now due.
 
 
 
Source: US Census Bureau
 
Uncompetitive Labor Costs
 
By devaluing the currency and producing never ending inflation while manipulating the CPI statistics to understate true inflation, the government and Federal Reserve attempt to keep America competitive through gimmicks rather than hard work and sacrifice. When the country produced products that the world wanted, median family income rose at an annual rate of 3.7% above inflation. Since 1970, using government manipulated inflation statistics median family income has been stagnant. If a true inflation factor was applied, the median family has lower income today than they had 30 years ago. The only way people have "achieved" a better life is through the use of debt, which has been encouraged by the government, Federal Reserve and banks. This encouragement led to the collapse of the great American Ponzi scheme in 2008.
 
 
 
American families will see their real household incomes plunge in the coming years to 1970 levels. The backlash against immigrants, both legal and illegal is likely to intensify over the next few years. The decades of allowing our economy to be hollowed out and shipped to China is coming home to roost. Besides weapons and movies, what does America produce that anyone wants? Our financial geniuses have essentially brought down the worldwide financial system by selling foreign countries MBSs, CDOs, etc. That has been our contribution to the world in the last eight years. Now, we have delegated the responsibility of our corporations to the U.S. government bureaucracy. Lee Iacocca explained years ago how well the government runs things.
 
"One of the things the government can't do is run anything. The only things our government runs are the post office and the railroads, and both of them are bankrupt."
 
Let's See How Far We've Come
 
The lyrics to the Matchbox 20 song Let's See How Far We've Come, describe the country's $56 trillion unfunded liability dilemma.
 
I believe the world is burning to the ground
Oh well I guess we're gonna find out
Let's see how far we've come
Let's see how far we've come
Well I, believe, it all, is coming to an end
Oh well, I guess, we're gonna pretend,
Let's see how far we've come
Let's see how far we've come
 
Rather than address the structural problems of our healthcare and social security systems, our government politicians push off the issues until after the next election. They have been doing this for 30 years. This is why David Walker has described these cowardly politicians as displaying "laggardship" rather than leadership. Our elected leaders flounder from crisis to crisis using stopgap methods to plug holes in the ship of state while ignoring the huge iceberg on the horizon. There is one thing I am sure of. The deficits projected by the CBO over the next four years will be hundreds of billions higher. They haven't taken into account emergency stimulus packages 2 & 3.
 
 
 
Source: PerotCharts.com
 
While the U.S. Titanic steams full speed ahead toward the iceberg of unfunded Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid liabilities, our politicians spend our tax dollars on digging holes and then filling them up again. As these future unfunded liabilities continue to rise, the government's solution is to print money, keep interest rates at 0%, devalue the dollar, and hope for the best. The U.S. depends on foreigners to buy more than 50% of our newly issued debt. When you owe $10.7 trillion to others, you usually don't get to dictate the terms. Today, the U.S. is asking foreigners to lend us money for 30 years at 3.5% while telling them that we will pay them back in dollars that will be worth 30% less in the next five years. Even a Wall Street CEO could figure out this isn't a good investment. The U.S. will default on this debt. It is just a matter of when.
 
 
 
Source: PerotCharts.com
 
Bill Gross laid out the choices for the U.S. in 2006.
 
"How are we to pay for this future burden of healthcare and social security expenses? Aside from contractual legislative changes to both areas (which are surely just around the corner), the way a reserve currency nation gets out from under the burden of excessive liabilities is to inflate, devalue, and tax."
 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 

 
 
 
 

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If you would like to keep abreast of some of the most important happenings affecting your lives today, then please visit www.untappedwealth.com/businessdesk.html.  There you will get the latest news roundups on such topics as:
Stress, anxiety, and depression. News for retirees, seniors, and aging baby boomers.  Security tips for home computer users.  Home business opportunities, Internet business opportunities, small business opportunities, business opportunities in Asia.  You will also learn how to obtain tremendous personal and financial satisfaction by selling your knowledge and experience.
 

 

 

Saturday, March 21, 2009

The PDF challenge

Good morning!  We the team at www.sterlingcreations.ca would like to bring you an editorial written by our president Donna J. Jodhan.
We hope you find this thought-provoking editorial of value and interest.
We bid you a great weekend.
 
 
The PDF challenge
 
The world seems to have gone PDF crazy and what we are finding now is that the majority of those websites with something to say are using PDF formats to convey their information.  All well and good for those who can read PDF files but for blind and visually impaired persons it is a virtual nightmare.  Why is this?  Very simple!
 
PDF files are image-based and blind and visually impaired persons are unable to read anything that is image-based.  That is, PDF files, and anything on a website that contains an icon or an image.  True it is that Adobe continues to  work very hard with content developers to make PDF files more user-friendly to blind and visually impaired persons, but if these files are not properly tagged, if the file is not correctly coded, then everything is inaccessible to us.  There is yet another problem that we face even if the PDF file is correctly coded and that is:  If we do not possess the right combination of access technology then we are doomed.
 
Yes, the right combination of access technology and for the majority of blind and visually impaired persons, this is a huge problem because without financial assistance it is practically out of reach.  In summary, more content developers need to be aware of using appropriate code in order to make PDF content more accessible.  More financial assistance needs to be made available to those who do not have the right combination of access technology in order to access PDF content. 
 
I'm Donna J. Jodhan wishing you a terrific day and weekend.
To reach me, please send an email to info@sterlingcreations.ca and I would be delighted to send you an electronic copy of our latest newsletter.
 
 
Here is a complete list of where you can view Donna's blogs and editorials.
Donna Jodhan!  advocating accessibility for all
http://www.donnajodhan.blogspot.com 
a weekly feature on important answers to consumers concerns
http://www.untappedwealth.com/businessdesk.html
Weekly blogs for language professionals and special needs business consultants
http://www.sterlingcreations.ca/blog/blog.html
a monthly editorial on business issues and concerns
http://www.sterlingcreations.ca/magazine.html 
weekly editorials on accessibility issues in Canada
http://www.accessibilitynews.ca/acnews/editorials/donna.php
Editorials:  An International perspective on issues of accessibility and disability
http://www.accessibilitynewsinternational.com
A general perspective on issues of access and accessibility
http://numpadplus.com/blog/?page_id=7 

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Seniors facing an accessibility gap

Hello there!  We your Sterling Creations team are delighted to bring you an editorial by our president Donna J. Jodhan.  This editorial speaks directly to a very real and growing concern among our seniors.
We hope you find it interesting.
Have a great weekend.
Your Sterling Creations team
 

Seniors facing an accessibility gap

 

There is a very interesting yet concerning problem that seems to be deepening these days and I am referring to the accessibility gap being faced by our seniors at the present time.  It appears that as more and more seniors begin to lose their vision they become less and less able to access information because of the following reasons.

1.  They are unable to access the Internet because they either do not possess the technology to do so or simply because they do not know how to access the Internet.  Many of these persons grew up in the pre-Internet era and accordingly they are very hesitant to try new technology. 

2. Many of them no longer have sufficient vision to read the newspapers let alone read their own personal mail.

3. Many of them are extremely hesitant to learn new technology that may enable them to read their mail and newsprint.

4. Many of them are unable to read what they write.  They did not need to use Braille while they were fully sighted and now they are finding it extremely difficult to adjust to learning Braille or using an accessible note taker. 

5. Many of them face financial barriers when it comes to being able to learn and purchase new technology.

 

For any company or individual listening in:  This may be an excellent time for you to look at these facts more closely and see the possibilities and opportunities just waiting for you to explore and develop.  There is not just an accessibility gap facing seniors as far as this picture is concerned, there is also a gap in what is being demanded and what is being supplied at the moment and here is where you can use your creativity and imaginations to design and develop services to meet these types of demands.  For make no bones about it, these demands are only going to increase as time marches on.  In addition, there are some very important big hitters and stakeholders who are also going to be pushing this demand; namely the American government, other global governments, the health industry, the legal profession, plus many others.

 

So in summary we have the following picture:

More and more persons losing their vision at a later age.

They are unable to access information for several reasons among them being; Inability to use modern technology, a hesitance to learn new technology, unable to afford to learn and purchase new technology.

Seniors are facing an ever widening accessibility gap and this is mainly due to demand outstripping supply.

 

As I see it, this problem is going to become more serious as time marches on and it may be time for us to work on a solution to find a way for our seniors to stay in touch with the rest of the world.  The earlier we find a solution; the better it would be for all of us because we are all going to become seniors one day in the future and chances are that many of us will end up losing various degrees of vision.

 

 

I'm Donna J. Jodhan wishing you a terrific day and weekend.
To reach me, please send an email to info@sterlingcreations.ca and I would be delighted to send you an electronic copy of our latest newsletter.
 
 
Here is a complete list of where you can view Donna's blogs and editorials.
Donna Jodhan!  advocating accessibility for all
http://www.donnajodhan.blogspot.com 
a weekly feature on important answers to consumers concerns
http://www.untappedwealth.com/businessdesk.html
Weekly blogs for language professionals and special needs business consultants
http://www.sterlingcreations.ca/blog/blog.html
a monthly editorial on business issues and concerns
http://www.sterlingcreations.ca/magazine.html 
weekly editorials on accessibility issues in Canada
http://www.accessibilitynews.ca/acnews/editorials/donna.php
Editorials:  An International perspective on issues of accessibility and disability
http://www.accessibilitynewsinternational.com
A general perspective on issues of access and accessibility
http://numpadplus.com/blog/?page_id=7 

Thursday, March 12, 2009

A Software Populist Who Doesn't Do Windows

Hello there!  We your Accessibility team at www.sterlingcreations.ca are here today to bring you a very insightful article.
An article that probes into the thoughts of others and tells you what they are thinking about when it comes to a very important topic within the technology arena.
We hope you find it interesting.
Have a great day.
Your Accessibility team
 
 
A Software Populist Who Doesn't Do Windows
 
By ASHLEE VANCE
New York Times January 11, 2009
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/11/business/11ubuntu.html?th&emc=th
 
THEY'RE either hapless pests or the very people capable of overthrowing
Windows. Take your pick.
 
In December, hundreds of these controversial software developers gathered
for one week at the Google headquarters in Mountain View, Calif. They came
from all over the world, sporting many of the usual signs of software
mercenaries: jeans, ponytails, unruly facial hair and bloodshot eyes.
 
But rather than preparing to code for the highest bidder, the developers
were coordinating their largely volunteer effort to try to undermine
Microsoft's Windows operating system for PCs, which generated close to $17
billion in sales last year.
 
All the fuss at the meeting centered on something called Ubuntu and a man
named Mark Shuttleworth, the charismatic 35-year-old billionaire from South
Africa who functions as the spiritual and financial leader of this coding
clan.
 
Created just over four years ago, Ubuntu (pronounced oo-
BOON-too) has emerged as the fastest-growing and most celebrated version of
the Linux operating system, which competes with Windows primarily through
its low, low
price: $0.
 
More than 10 million people are estimated to run Ubuntu today, and they
represent a threat to Microsoft's hegemony in developed countries and
perhaps even more so in those regions catching up to the technology
revolution.
 
"If we're successful, we would fundamentally change the operating system
market," Mr. Shuttleworth said during a break at the gathering, the Ubuntu
Developer Summit.
"Microsoft would need to adapt, and I don't think that would be unhealthy."
 
Linux is free, but there is still money to be made for businesses flanking
the operating system. Companies like I.B.M., Hewlett-Packard and Dell place
Linux on more than 10 percent of the computers they sell as servers, and
businesses pay the hardware makers and others, like the software sellers Red
Hat and Oracle, to fix any problems and keep their Linux-based systems up to
date.
 
But Canonical, Mr. Shuttleworth's company that makes Ubuntu, has decided to
focus its near-term aspirations on the PCs used by workers and people at
home.
 
The notion of a strong Linux-based competitor to Windows and, to a lesser
extent, Apple's Mac OS X has been an enduring dream of advocates of
open-source software.
They champion the idea that software that can be freely altered by the
masses can prove cheaper and better than proprietary code produced by stodgy
corporations. Try as they might, however, Linux zealots have failed in their
quest to make Linux mainstream on desktop and notebook computers. The often
quirky software remains in the realm of geeks, not grandmothers.
 
With Ubuntu, the devotees believe, things might finally be different.
 
"I think Ubuntu has captured people's imaginations around the Linux
desktop," said Chris DiBona, the program manager for open-source software at
Google. "If there is a hope for the Linux desktop, it would be them."
 
Close to half of Google's 20,000 employees use a slightly modified version
of Ubuntu, playfully called Goobuntu.
 
PEOPLE encountering Ubuntu for the first time will find it very similar to
Windows. The operating system has a slick graphical interface, familiar
menus and all the common desktop software: a Web browser, an e-mail program,
instant-messaging software and a free suite of programs for creating
documents, spreadsheets and presentations.
 
While relatively easy to use for the technologically savvy, Ubuntu - and all
other versions of Linux - can challenge the average user. Linux cannot run
many applications created for Windows, including some of the most popular
games and tax software, for example. And updates to Linux can send ripples
of problems through the system, causing something as basic as a computer's
display or sound system to malfunction.
 
Canonical has tried to smooth out many of the issues that have prevented
Linux from reaching the mainstream.
This attention to detail with a desktop version of Linux contrasts with the
focus of the largest sellers of the operating system, Red Hat and Novell.
While these companies make desktop versions, they have spent most of their
time chasing the big money in data centers. As a result, Ubuntu emerged as a
sort of favored nation for those idealistic software developers who viewed
themselves as part of a countercultural movement.
 
"It is the same thing companies like Apple and Google have done well, which
is build not just a community but a passionate community," said Ian Murdock,
who created an earlier version of Linux called Debian, on which Ubuntu is
based.
 
Mainstream technology companies have taken notice of the enthusiasm around
Ubuntu. Dell started to sell PCs and desktops with the software in 2007, and
I.B.M. more recently began making Ubuntu the basis of a software package
that competes against Windows.
 
Canonical, based in London, has more than 200 full-time employees, but its
total work force stretches well beyond that, through an army of volunteers.
The company paid for close to 60 volunteers to attend its developer event,
considering them important contributors to the operating system. An
additional 1,000 work on the Debian project and make their software
available to Canonical, while 5,000 spread information about Ubuntu on the
Internet. And 38,000 have signed up to translate the software into different
languages.
 
When a new version of the operating system becomes available, Ubuntu
devotees pile onto the Internet, often crippling Web sites that distribute
the software. And hundreds of other organizations, mostly universities, also
help in the distribution.
 
The technology research firm IDC estimates that 11 percent of American
businesses have systems based on Ubuntu. That said, many of the largest
Ubuntu customers have cropped up in Europe, where Microsoft's dominance has
endured intense regulatory and political scrutiny.
 
The Macedonian education department relies on Ubuntu, providing 180,000
copies of the operating system to children, while the Spanish school system
has 195,000 Ubuntu desktops. In France, the National Assembly and the
Gendarmerie Nationale, the military police force, rely on Ubuntu for a
combined 80,000 PCs. "The word 'free' was very important," said Rudy Salles,
vice president of the assembly, noting that it allowed the legislature to
abandon Microsoft.
 
Without question, Ubuntu's rapid rise has been aided by the fervor
surrounding Linux. But it's Mr. Shuttleworth and his flashy lifestyle that
generate much of the attention Ubuntu receives. While he favors casual
attire matching the developers', some of his activities, including a trip to
space, are hardly ordinary.
 
"Look, I have a very privileged life, right?" Mr.
Shuttleworth said. "I am a billionaire, bachelor, ex- cosmonaut. Life
couldn't easily be that much better.
Being a Linux geek sort of brings balance to the force."
 
The first installment of Mr. Shuttleworth's fortune arrived after he
graduated from the University of Cape Town in 1995 with a business degree.
 
He had been paying bills by operating a small technology consulting company,
setting up Linux servers for companies to run their Web sites and other
basic operations. His business leanings and technology background inspired
him to try to capitalize on the rising interest in the Internet.
 
"I'm more of an academic than a cut-and-thrust wheeler- dealer," he said. "I
was very interested in how the Internet was changing commerce and was
determined to pursue it."
 
Mr. Shuttleworth decided to start a company called Thawte Consulting
(pronounced like "thought") in 1995 that provided digital certificates, a
security mechanism that browsers use to verify the identity of companies.
As a 23-year-old, he visited Netscape to promote a broad standard for these
certificates. Netscape, then the leading browser maker, bought into it, and
Microsoft, which makes the Internet Explorer browser, followed.
 
As dot-com mania surged, companies became interested in this profitable
outfit, based in South Africa. In 1999, VeriSign, which manages a number of
Internet infrastructure services, bought Thawte for $575 million.
(Mr. Shuttleworth had turned down an offer of $100 million a few months
earlier.)
 
Having owned all of Thawte, Mr. Shuttleworth, the son of a surgeon and a
kindergarten teacher, became very wealthy at just 26.
 
So what's a newly minted millionaire to do? Mr.
Shuttleworth looked to the stars. Paying an estimated $20 million to Russian
officials, he secured a 10-day trip to space and the International Space
Station on the Soyuz TM-34 in 2002 and became the first "Afronaut," as the
press described him.
 
"After selling the company, it wasn't a blowout yachts and blondes
situation," he said. "It was very clear that I was in a unique situation
where I should choose to do things that were not possible otherwise."
 
In the following years, Mr. Shuttleworth set up venture capital and
charitable organizations. Through investments in the United States, Africa
and Europe, he says, he has amassed a fortune of more than $1 billion.
 
He spends 90 percent of his time, however, working on Canonical, which he
considers another project that challenges what's possible.
 
"I have done well with investing, but it has never felt very fulfilling," he
said. "I fear getting to the end of my life and feeling you haven't actually
built something. And to do something people thought was impossible is
attractive."
 
CANONICAL'S model makes turning a profit difficult.
 
Many open-source companies give away a free version of their software that
has some limitations, while selling a full-fledged version along with
complementary services for keeping the software up to date. Canonical gives
away everything, including its top product, then hopes that companies will
still turn to it for services like managing large groups of servers and
desktops instead of handling everything themselves with in-house experts.
 
Canonical also receives revenue from companies like Dell that ship computers
with Ubuntu and work with it on software engineering projects like adding
Linux-based features to laptops. All told, Canonical's annual revenue is
creeping toward $30 million, Mr. Shuttleworth said.
 
That figure won't worry Microsoft.
 
But Mr. Shuttleworth contends that $30 million a year is self-sustaining
revenue, just what he needs to finance regular Ubuntu updates. And a free
operating system that pays for itself, he says, could change how people view
and use the software they touch everyday.
 
"Are we creating world peace or fundamentally changing the world? No," he
said. "But we could shift what people expect and the amount of innovation
per dollar they expect."
 
Microsoft had an estimated 10,000 people working on Vista, its newest
desktop operating system, for five years. The result of this
multibillion-dollar investment has been a product late to market and widely
panned.
 
Canonical, meanwhile, releases a fresh version of Ubuntu every six months,
adding features that capitalize on the latest advances from developers and
component makers like Intel. The company's model centers on outpacing
Microsoft on both price and features aimed at new markets.
 
"It feels pretty clear to me that the open process produces better stuff,"
Mr. Shuttleworth said. Such talk from a man willing to finance software for
the masses - and by the masses - inspires those who see open source as more
of a cause than a business model.
 
In his spare time, Agostino Russo, for example, who works for a hedge fund
at Moore Europe Capital Management in London, created a program called Wubi
that allows Ubuntu to be installed on computers running Windows.
 
"I always thought that open source is a very important socioeconomic
movement," Mr. Russo said.
 
Ultimately, however, parts of Mr. Shuttleworth's venture continue to look
quixotic. Linux remains rough around the edges, and Canonical's business
model seems more like charity than the next great business story. And even
if the open Ubuntu proves a raging success, the operating system will
largely be used to reach proprietary online services from Microsoft, Yahoo,
Google and others.
 
"Mark is very genuine and fundamentally believes in open source," said Matt
Asay, a commentator on open-source technology and an executive at the
software maker Alfresco. "But I think he's going to have a crisis of faith
at some point."
 
Mr. Asay wonders if Canonical can sustain its "give everything away" model
and "always open" ideology.
 
Canonical shows no signs of slowing down or changing course anytime soon.
 
"We already have a sense of where we need to compete with Windows," Mr.
Shuttleworth said. "Now the question is if we can create something that is
stylish and stunning."
 
In his personal life, he continues to test what is possible, requesting that
a fiber-optic connection be installed to his house on the border of London's
affluent Chelsea and South Kensington neighborhoods.
 
"I want to find out what it's like to have a gigabit connection to the
home," he said. "It is not because I need to watch porn in high-definition
but because I want to see what you do differently."
 
He says Canonical is not just a do-gooder project by someone with the time,
money and inclination to tackle Microsoft head-on. His vision is to make
Ubuntu the standard for the next couple of billion people who acquire PCs.
 
_____________________________________________
 
Portside aims to provide material of interest to people on the left that
will help them to interpret the world and to change it.
 

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