Monday, August 31, 2009

News & Links List

"Android, Not Apple, Is The Big China Deal" BNET

"Is Hulu Watched More Than Time Warner Cable?" Fast Company

"Clive Thompson on the New Literacy" WIRED Magazine

"Do You Know Who’s on Twitter?" eMarketer



"For Him, the Web Was No Safety Net" NYTimes
Good story on the highs and lows of one entrepreneur

"Is Speculating On What Private Companies Are Worth A Good Idea?" by Fred Wilson
Response to Scoble's post on Twitter being worth $5 billion to $10 billion. Scoble shows again the gaps in his knowledge and why he just shouldn't write about some things. So he would probably buy a Snickers for about $10 to $1000 depending upon his mood?

"Stephanopoulos: Kennedy Would Have Agreed To Ditch The Public Option" TPM

Friday, August 28, 2009

Limited Edition Sam Yoon Tees

From Thrillist Boston:

"While Menino complacently sits mumbling away on the throne, mayoral candidate Sam Yoon cleverly makes his move for the (kind of) influential youth vote, with limited edition tees playing on his name, from the Uncle Sam'd "I Want Yoon" to a Kevin Youkilis recalling "Yoooon" number in Sox colors to a black and white "Yoonies" tee, which begs the question: One Eyed Willy come out for a comprehensive review of public health?"

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

News & Links List

"US ranks 28th in Internet connection speed: report" Yahoo! Tech

"The Challenge of The Ideal First Round Term Sheet" by Brad Feld

"Seed is the new Series A for VCs" VentureBeat's Entrepreneur Corner
Good piece by Caine Moss, a partner at Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati

"How LinkedIn's founder got started" Fortune

"LG ARENA Wows the Mobile World by Hitting One Million Sales" LG

"Paul Allen, DCM and others invest $29M in Smith & Tinker" TechFlash

"The Top Online Meat Markets" Forbes
I initially got excited because I thought this was about steaks and pork not dating :)

"Estimate for 10-Year Deficit Raised to $9 Trillion" NYTimes

"Nemazee, Political Fundraiser, Charged With Fraud" Bloomberg
Fundraiser for President Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton was arrested on a bank fraud charge

"Free Health Care Plan Costs Add Up"

Love this graphic...


$239 billion will be added to the Federal Deficit. I assume this added cost is not included in the recent announcement from the White House:

"Estimate for 10-Year Deficit Raised to $9 Trillion" NYTimes

Wired Seoul, The World's Most Networked City

Time magazine has a good piece on Seoul, the world's most wired city. I lived in Seoul from 2000 to 2004 where I really learned that most behaviors related to technology usage are not culturally bound but dependent on the availability and ubiquity of technology. Some of my thoughts are in an old piece, "Where Technology Is Ubiquitous, Opportunity Abounds."

"Seoul: World's Most Wired Megacity Gets More So" TIME

"Wired Seoul" (photo essay)

The systems ensure that the city's 20 million residents live within one giant hot spot, where wireless access is available from almost anywhere for a small fee.

News & Links List

"Why Craigslist Is Such a Mess" Wired

"What Is Really Happening to the Venture Capital Industry?" by Bill Gurley

"Are social networks making students more narcissistic?" USAToday

"Upgrading the workforce"
McKinsey Quarterly

"Former P&G Ad Chief Describes Sex Addiction That Plagued His Career" BNET

"Lessons from the (Soccer) Field
Part 1: Thriving in Uncertain Times"
InsideWork, Glen McMahan

"The Funded Publishes Ideal First Round Term Sheet"

Great effort and much needed move by Adeo Ressi. Article from TechCrunch:

Adeo Ressi, founder of The Funded, a site where people rate venture capitalists and the Founder Institute, an incubator of sorts, has long ranted about what he calls “the atrocities of investors.”

Now, a lot of people, including prominent angel investors and venture capitalists, are starting to listen to him. Tomorrow Ressi will announce a new, basic term sheet for use by investors and founders. The goal is to protect founders and reduce legal fees, which average $50,000 or more per venture round...


FFI Plain Preferred Term Sheet -

Monday, August 24, 2009

News & Links List

"The Truth: What’s Really Going On With Apple, Google, AT&T And The FCC" TechCrunch

"Super design collaboration yields 'Jet ski for the skies'"
core77

"Five most popular apps on Facebook" ZDNet

"Advertising And User-Targeting Network Lookery Heads To The Deadpool" TechCrunch

"Couldery Shouldery" Scott Rafer's Blog
CEO of Lookery's insights into its shutdown

"Payback time" TheDeal
Buying back their shares from Softbank Capital, their VC

"An Angel Investor Group Move That Makes Me Vomit" Brad Feld

"Top 20 Franchises To Start
Want to be an instant entrepreneur? These names will give you the best bang for your start-up buck."
Forbes

"Why GM Will Go Bankrupt Again" Forbes, Andrew Winston

"Mullen joins US Lockerbie fury
The top US military officer has joined in condemning Scotland's release of Lockerbie bomber Abdulbaset al-Megrahi."
BBC

"Gov. David Paterson blames calls for him to step aside on race" Daily News

"Gangsters and Thugs, Criminals and Hoods" Ask a Korean!
Analysis of organized crime in Korea

"The Whole Foods Alternative to ObamaCare"

Older article, but this deserves a complete repost...

The Whole Foods Alternative to ObamaCare


The Wall Street Journal
By JOHN MACKEY



“The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out
of other people’s money.”

—Margaret Thatcher

With a projected $1.8 trillion deficit for 2009, several trillions more in deficits projected over the next decade, and with both Medicare and Social Security entitlement spending about to ratchet up several notches over the next 15 years as Baby Boomers become eligible for both, we are rapidly running out of other people’s money. These deficits are simply not sustainable. They are either going to result in unprecedented new taxes and inflation, or they will bankrupt us.

While we clearly need health-care reform, the last thing our country needs is a massive new health-care entitlement that will create hundreds of billions of dollars of new unfunded deficits and move us much closer to a government takeover of our health-care system. Instead, we should be trying to achieve reforms by moving in the opposite direction—toward less government control and more individual empowerment. Here are eight reforms that would greatly lower the cost of health care for everyone:

• Remove the legal obstacles that slow the creation of high-deductible health insurance plans and health savings accounts (HSAs). The combination of high-deductible health insurance and HSAs is one solution that could solve many of our health-care problems. For example, Whole Foods Market pays 100% of the premiums for all our team members who work 30 hours or more per week (about 89% of all team members) for our high-deductible health-insurance plan. We also provide up to $1,800 per year in additional health-care dollars through deposits into employees’ Personal Wellness Accounts to spend as they choose on their own health and wellness.

Money not spent in one year rolls over to the next and grows over time. Our team members therefore spend their own health-care dollars until the annual deductible is covered (about $2,500) and the insurance plan kicks in. This creates incentives to spend the first $2,500 more carefully. Our plan’s costs are much lower than typical health insurance, while providing a very high degree of worker satisfaction.

• Equalize the tax laws so that that employer-provided health insurance and individually owned health insurance have the same tax benefits. Now employer health insurance benefits are fully tax deductible, but individual health insurance is not. This is unfair... (full op-ed)

Tech Support Cheat Sheet

HatTip to Sam N. Amusing...

Friday, August 21, 2009

News & Links List

"Why 'Joe Facebook' wants to cash out" CNET's The Social

"Tech giants unite against Google"
BBC

"Posterous Makes iPhone Photoblogging Ingenious" Fast Company

"Should You Look For Work In China?" Forbes

"Currents Below The Surface Endanger U.S. Stocks" Forbes

"Pull the Plug on ObamaCare
It's the best cure for what ails the Obama presidency."
WSJ

"Liberal Lies About National Health Care: First in a Series" by Ann Coulter

Lil'Grams Launches, The Baby Book for Modern Parents

Lil'Grams recently launched and looks like a Twitter for baby updates. It's is a company founded by Gregarious Narain and Ranvir Gujral. More from the press release:

Lil’Grams (lilgrams.com) announces the public launch of the Lil’Grams service, the easiest, most convenient way for parents to capture and organize their baby's most precious moments and share them with friends and family. Lil’Grams designed its service to deliver “Grams,” which are short messages or updates about special moments or milestones in a baby’s life.

“We are in business to make parents’ lives easier,” said Gregarious Narain, Lil'Grams co-founder. “Children create cherished memories everywhere and all the time, at home or on the go. We give parents peace of mind that those memories will be stored and that loved ones will get updates the way they want them.”

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Wokai, A Donation-Microloan Hybrid in China

Great innovation and story from China. Since Kiva or a Kiva-like platform couldn't be launched in China due to its monetary policy, two entrepreneurs started Wokai, a nonprofit organization. More from Springwise:

"Dedicated to raising capital from around the world for entrepreneurs in rural China, Wokai works with field partners to select candidates for loans. Using a system that's similar to Kiva, people can browse a list of potential borrowers on Wokai's website, donate their chosen amount, and then track the recipient's progress through Wokai. Since they can't be paid back to the donor, loans are recycled: when a recipient pays back a loan to Wokai, the donor can select another farmer or entrepreneur to support. So far, Wokai has raised USD 42,766 for loans to 159 recipients. Many donors have business or family ties to China."

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

News & Links List

"Seeking
How the brain hard-wires us to love Google, Twitter, and texting. And why that's dangerous."
Slate

"MySpace’s iLike buy raises questions about Facebook" VentureBeat

"How a 'Made' Startup Was Clipped" Gawker
iLike went from a "billion dollar winner" to a fire sale company in 2 years. Ah, life in the startup fast lane...

"Android v. iPhone Religious Battle Rages Within TechCrunch"
Very amusing...

"Jeff Jarvis Tries To Save Local News (With Spreadsheets!)" TechCrunch

"The Fallacy Of The Link Economy" paidContent.org

"It Ain't The Link, It's What You Do With The Traffic" TechDirt

"On the link economy" Jeff Jarvis

"Google's Varian: Search scale is 'bogus'" CNET

"The rise of the $299 Wal-Mart laptop" CNET

"Evoking the romance of space travel, 1940s style" CNET's Geek Gestalt

"Japan emerges from recession" CNN

"Turnaround Firm Fills Coffers To Fund Troubled Start-Ups" WSJ


"5 Personal Core Competencies for the 21st Century" BNET

"Valerie Jarrett Heckled By Some At Netroots Nation" The Huffington Post

"Palin Wins
If she's dim and Obama is brilliant, how did he lose the argument to her?"
WSJ, James Taranto

"Conservative columnist Robert Novak dies at 78" Chicago Tribune

"The Robert Novak I Knew" The Washington Post's PostPartisan

"Bye-Bye, Dubai" Fast Company

"Success in Afghanistan lies where religion and politics meet
US counterinsurgency strategy must take account of Pashto-Islamist justice."
by Chris Seiple

"Young Muslims: The Battle for Hearts and Minds" The Washington Post's The Faith Divide

"Bolt lowers 100-meter mark to 9.58" ESPN

"All-Time Greatest Golfers" Golf.com

Monday, August 17, 2009

Trendsspotting Handbook of Online India

Drawloop Provides Free Legal Electronic Signatures

Drawloop, which my CEO invested a minority stake in, recently launched free electronic signatures. This is an added feature to their core product, LoopApps, which allows you to convert and combine multiple file types (i.e. xls, ppt, doc) into one PDF document. It's free and easy to use. A couple brief reviews here:

"Free Legally Binding Electronic Signatures with Drawloop" BNET

"LoopApps is a Multipurpose PDF Tool"
Lifehacker

TEDx's YouTube Channel

TED has launched their TEDx channel on YouTube:

In the spirit of "Ideas Worth Spreading," TEDx is a program that enables schools, businesses, libraries or just groups of friends to enjoy a TED-like experience through events they themselves organize, design and host. We're supporting approved organizers by offering a free toolkit that includes detailed advice, the right to use recorded TEDTalks, promotion on our site, connection to other organizers, and a little piece of our brand in the form of the TEDx label.

Friday, August 14, 2009

Portable Social Graphs Imagining Their Potential (FB Connect)

Presents the potential of portable social graphs with Facebook Connect as the primary example. Good presentation by Razorfish's Jesse Pickard.

Kollaboration Acoustic 3!

Our friends, PK and Roy, have their show, Kollaboration Acoustic 3, on August 22nd in LA. Kollaboration seeks to identify and empower up and coming Asian Americans in entertainment.



"Kollaboration Acoustic 3. Get your tickets now!! Michael Jackson's "Heal The World" performed by the artists of Kollaboration Acoustic III- Alfa, Mike Isberto, Jinah Kim, Gerald Ko, Megan Lee, Yoori Park, Susanna Yoon. Shot on various locations around the world. Directed by Roy Choi

Live performances on August 22, 2009. 7:30pm Ford Amphitheatre in Hollywood, CA. Special guest performance by Jane Lui.

Support our rising artists and purchase tickets here!"

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

News & Links List

"Google's Caffeine: A jolt to search rankings?" CNET

"Twitter backlash foretold" Reuters


"The Cost Of FriendFeed: Roughly $50 Million In Cash And Stock" TechCrunch

"Facebook buys FriendFeed: Is this a big deal?" CNET

"Mr. Clinton Goes to Pyongyang
Let’s not forget about Kim’s other hostages. They include more than 1,000 foreigners and 23 million North Koreans."
WSJ, Gordan Chang

"Question riles Clinton; translation might have been off" CNN

"Cynthia Tucker: 45-65% Of Townhall Protesters Are Racists" NewsBusters
Cynthia = genius... definitely.

"Health Care Reform: A Better Plan" by Charles Krauthammer

Hilter's Take on FriendFeed Acquisition

Love these spoofs of "Downfall."

Seven Aspects of Netflix Culture

HatTip to Patrick P.

Chicago Police Training Video

HatTip to Steve K. Chicago Police diversity training video. Eh?

"You should not assume that all Asians are recent immigrants..."

Yes, this is my hometown... well, specifically Northbrook but it's part of Chicago metro.

Cap the Doctors; Sky's the Limit for Lawyers

From George Gilder's newsletter...

Cap the Doctors; Sky's the Limit for Lawyers

By Philip K. Howard, July 31, 2009

"Health-care reform is bogged down because none of the bills before Congress deals with the staggering waste of the current system, estimated to be $700 billion to $1 trillion annually. The waste flows from a culture of health care in which every incentive is to do more -- that's how doctors make money and that's how they protect themselves from lawsuits.

Yet the congressional leadership has slammed the door on solutions to the one driver of waste that is relatively easy to fix: the erratic, expensive and time-consuming jury-by-jury malpractice system. Pilot projects could test whether this system should be replaced with expert health courts, but leaders who say they want to cut costs will not even consider them.

What are they scared of? The answer is inescapable -- such expert courts might succeed and undercut the special interest of an influential lobby, the trial lawyers. An expeditious and reliable new system would compensate patients more quickly and at a fraction of the overhead of the current medical justice system, which spends nearly 60 cents of every dollar on lawyers' fees and administrative costs.

Even more compelling, expert health courts would eliminate the need for "defensive medicine," thereby helping to save enough money for America to afford universal health coverage.

Defensive medicine -- the practice of ordering tests and procedures that aren't needed to protect a doctor from the remote possibility of a lawsuit -- is ubiquitous. A 2005 survey in the Journal of the American Medical Association related that 93 percent of high-risk specialists in Pennsylvania admitted to the practice, and 83 percent of Massachusetts physicians did the same in a 2008 survey. The same Massachusetts survey showed that 25 percent of all imaging tests were ordered for defensive purposes, and 28 percent and 38 percent, respectively, of those surveyed admitted reducing the number of high-risk patients they saw and limiting the number of high-risk procedures or services they performed.

Defensive medicine is notoriously hard to quantify, but some estimates place the annual cost at $100 billion to $200 billion or more. Quantification is difficult because defensiveness is now embedded in the culture of American health care; it's hard to separate the financial incentives from the distrust of justice. Yet every physician, and most patients, can give examples. In a recent letter to the Wall Street Journal, a Texas doctor described how, since being unsuccessfully sued in 1995, he has "doubled and tripled the number of tests and consultations that I order."

A few years ago, I was not allowed to have minor knee surgery at an orthopedic hospital unless I went through a comprehensive "pre-operative examination." There was no financial incentive to the hospital because this pre-operative exam was to be done elsewhere. As it turned out, I had recently endured all those tests in my annual physical. But the orthopedic hospital would not accept month-old test results, nor even an explicit waiver by me of any liability. The result was pure waste: more than $1,000 spent on wholly unnecessary tests.

Health-care professionals live the reality of defensive medicine every day. Do an online search of the phrase "defensive medicine," and you will find scores of testimonials. But congressional leadership, amid all the talk of cost-containment, has assiduously avoided even mentioning the phrase.

Containing costs, as Rep. Jim Cooper (D-Tenn.) noted on "Face the Nation" recently, requires overhauling the culture of health-care delivery. Incentives need to be realigned. That requires a legal framework that, instead of encouraging waste, encourages doctors to focus on what's really needed. One pillar in a new legal framework is a system of justice that is trusted to reliably distinguish between good care and bad care. Reliable justice would protect doctors against unreasonable claims and would expeditiously compensate injured patients. The key is reliability. Traditional "tort reform" -- merely limiting noneconomic damages -- is not sufficient to end defensive medicine, because doctors could still be liable when they did nothing wrong.

The shifts in legal structure required to contain costs are hard to "score," using the terminology of the Congressional Budget Office. Only with experience can anyone quantify the real value of realigning incentives. But surveys and studies repeatedly confirm what every doctor knows -- that they go through the day ordering tests and procedures that aren't really needed.

As the nation debates health-care overhaul, not addressing defensive medicine would be a scandal, a willful refusal by Congress to deal with one of the causes of skyrocketing health-care costs. The real crisis here is not that health care is broken; people of good will could come together and create the conditions for rebuilding the incentive structure of health-care delivery. The real crisis is that Congress is broken, and that it answers to special interests instead of the needs of all Americans."

Friday, August 7, 2009

News & Links List

"Betting on the Real-Time Web
No one knows how the microblogging site and similar online social networks will make money, but investors see a new Web revolution"
BusinessWeek

"Murdoch: News Corp. Gets Paid For Its Content or Dies Trying" BNET

"Apple’s $1.2 billion tablet computer" Fortune, Philip Elmer-DeWitt

"TechStars Incubator Hatches 10 New Companies" TechCrunch

"Cash for clunkers: Most popular clunkers, new cars" Consumer Reports

"Six people, including P-D reporter, arrested at Carnahan meeting" St. Louis Post-Dispatch

"Surprise: Mary Robinson wasn't vetted" Israel Matzav

"The Korea Trap
Bill Clinton may have secured the release of two American journalists, but as our correspondent, a South Korea-based professor of North Korean studies, reports, his trip to Pyongyang has troubling consequences too."
The Atlantic

"Big Think Interview With Paul Saffo" Big Think
A conversation with the technology forecaster and essayist on business sustainability

RIP John Hughes, An '80s Icon

Movie director, John Hughes, passed away on Thursday from a heart attack. He wrote and directed such teen classics as "The Breakfast Club" and "Sixteen Candles." He also wrote and produced "Home Alone" which was one of the top grossing comedies of all time.

Hughes is from my hometown of Northbrook, IL and was an alum of my high school, Glenbrook North. My freshman year he filmed "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" at our school and I remember them filming the scene when Matthew Broderick picked up Mia Sara from school while pretending to be her father. It was very cool to watch as a young teenager.

His films were upbeat and fun, and many were the favorites from my youth. Rest in peace, John Hughes.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

News & Links List

"Arrington's CrunchPad Will Be 'A Real Hit', Says Best Buy Marketing Boss" Silicon Alley Insider

"Google buys videotech firm On2, but YouTube costs aren’t as high as rumored"
VentureBeat

"Cisco CEO sees positive economic trends" CNET

"Zune HD hands-on look, impressions, tears of joy" CNET

"Internet start-ups diversify their business models"


"A Collection of Social Network Stats for 2009" Jeremiah Owyang

"Outlook: How Gawker Ripped Off My Story and Why It's Destroying Journalism" The Washington Post, Ira Shapira

"Bill Clinton's 'rock star status' delivers in North Korea"
Christian Science Monitor

"Prepare for Ramifications from Clinton's N.Korea Visit" The Chosun Ilbo
HatTip to Chris A.

"Federal judges order California to release 43,000 inmates" LA Times

"HONORING AN AMERICA-HATER" New York Post

"In Brazil, Crime Still Pays" InsideWork, Glenn McMahan

"Picture This: Annie Leibovitz In Court
The acclaimed photographer is sued by creditors over a contract worth $24 million."
Forbes, Courtney Comstock

Loving the Lose It! iPhone App

Since I'm fat and need to lose weight my doctor of all people recommended a great iPhone app called Lose It!. She explained that a good method for people to lose weight is simply tracking their daily calories. No fancy diet shakes or eating methods. Just knowing what your maximum calorie intake should be based on your age, height and weight and working to eat below that. There are several online calorie calculators that you can use, such as this one from the Mayo Clinic.

I'm currently 6'1" and 222 lbs. My goal is 200 by the end of the year. Let's see how this goes. Anyway, I love Lose It!'s user interface and design, and being an iPhone app makes it so much easier to track your calories versus being limited to your laptop or desktop. More on Lose It! from FreshApps here:

Succeed at weight loss with Lose It! Set goals and establish a daily calorie budget that enables you to meet them. Stay on track each day by recording your food and exercise and staying within your budget.

Enter food and exercise easily using a searchable database. Quickly re-enter foods and meals you’ve had in the past. Lose It! is the most complete and streamlined weight loss application available for the iPhone.

Lose It! will be available for free during the first six months of its release. Get it now while it’s still hot!



Review of TEDGlobal 2009

Looks like TEDGlobal 2009 was a smashing success. Here are some thoughts and reviews about this TED conference...

"Where might Gordon Brown bump into scientists, poets, internet gurus, and even Cameron (Diaz, that is)? At TED, the festival of new ideas" The Observer, Carole Cadwalladr

"Science Grab Bag. Endangered food species and mind reading are hot topics at TEDGlobal." Forbes, Bruce Upbin

"Tech confab with a conscience goes global" USAToday

Monday, August 3, 2009

News & Links List

"The Little Secret of Web Startups" TechCrunch, Marcelo Calbucci
Good post and insights from an entrepreneur shutting down his startup.

"One Number to Ring Them All" NYTimes, David Pogue

"The FCC is asking Apple and AT&T all the right questions"
Fortune, Philip Elmer-DeWitt


"Seven (More) Reasons to Ditch Your iPhone" Fast Company

"New HIV Strain Discovered in Woman From Cameroon" ABC News

"A fridge for the developing world" AshokaTech

"Phelps 1st to break 50 seconds in event" ESPN

Surfacing the Solutions: A Critical Discussion of California’s Water Crisis

Upcoming event on California's water crisis, so save the date for those of you in SoCal. It's hosted by Coro's Southern California center, which is the leadership program I went through but in its St. Louis location.

The Water Conservation Luncheon
Surfacing the Solutions: A critical discussion of California’s water crisis

Thursday October 29, 2009 at 11:30am – 2:00pm
Location: TBD



An overview of Coro: