Roku’s official iPhone remote app is available, has gesture control and channel selection for all

Roku's official iPhone remote app is available, has gesture control and channel selection for all

Roku’s official iPhone remote app is available, has gesture control and channel selection for all

Daily scoreboard

America’s Daily Scoreboard-1-8-10- The Geithner Question

Final score: GOOD 14, EVIL 11. 1. From News Busters: “Obama Tells 60 Minutes ‘Damaging Behavior on Wall Street’ Was Legal, Wasn’t Asked Who Enacted Such Laws.” Barack Obama lays down the foundation for the case to not prosecute his buddy, Democrat Jon Corzine, for doing to MF Global what he did to the state …

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Fed won’t bail Europe out, Bernanke tells lawmakers

Fed won't bail Europe out, Bernanke tells lawmakers

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told Republican senators on Wednesday the Fed can’t and won’t provide bailout funds to support European banks or nations, lawmakers said. “We’re all concerned, is the American taxpayer going to be bailing out European nations and banks,” Senator Lindsey Graham told reporters after a meeting with the Fed chairman. “He said, no, he doesn’t have the intention or authority to do that,” Graham said. (Reporting By Mark Felsenthal and Pedro Nicolaci da Costa; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)

P.I.D. Radio 10/30/11: All Hallows’ Eve

P.I.D. Radio 10/30/11: All Hallows' Eve

IT’S HALLOWEEN weekend, a holiday that has become one of the biggest on the calendar of many Americans. What lies behind the costumes? We discuss the chapters we contributed to the new book God’s Ghostbusters Also: Syria’s Assad warns interference will burn the region; Eurozone bailout likely to fail; 3 million without power in early snowstorm; Girl Scouts allow boy to join troop because he’s living like a girl; and mind-controlling parasites. Check out links to the news stories we discuss at the P.I.D. News page at Facebook

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Software Process and Measurement Cast: SPaMCAST 154 – Bill Fox, 5 Minutes to Process Improvement Success

real software process enjoy part 1

Welcome to the Software Process and Measurement Cast 154! The SPaMCAST 154 features my interview with Bill Fox.  We discussed process improvement and his publishing project, 5 Minutes to Process Improvement Success. 5 Minutes to Process Improvement Success provides a wealth of process improvement advice and information.   Bill is a project management and performance improvement consultant. Progressive organizations seeking to gain extraordinary value and results through performance improvement value his ability to focus and manage their improvement efforts on the right priorities. Bill is an expert at managing change projects in a way that builds momentum and enthusiasm throughout the organization while keeping the focus on delivering results. Born out of frustration with the way most organizations attempt to improve their operations, Bill created and publishes the popular 5 Minutes to Process Improvement Success interview series. In this work, Bill has established himself as an authority on uncovering and leveraging the best performance improvement strategies and tactics of top consultants from around the world. Bill openly shares and promotes these strategies and tactics to advance the state of the industry to the benefit of all. Bill also combines his performance improvement work with his passion for flying and aerial photography to help organizations gain a higher perspective for advancing their organizations to higher levels of performance.  Bill is originally from Western Pennsylvania and earned a BS degree at Penn State after serving in the US Navy Nuclear Submarine Service. He has over 25 years of experience working as a consultant, project manager, analyst and developer. Bill and his wife are proud parents of two amazing daughters and a high-spirited daschund. He lives in Northern Virginia near Dulles Airport. When he’s not reading one of the fifty or more books he reads each year, he enjoys flying, photography, cycling and running. Bill invites you to download his latest free interview series 5 Minutes to Process Improvement Success Interested in sponsoring or getting involved with the Software Process and Measurement Cast?  Have a comment or a rant? Mastering Software Project Management: Best Practices, Tools and Techniques In the SPaMCAST 155 I will feature an essay discussing system thinking and process improvement!

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U.S. Ducks Recession For Now

U.S. Ducks Recession For Now

WASHINGTON (Lucia Mutikani) – Consumers and businesses pulled the sickly U.S. economy back from the brink of recession in the third quarter but don’t pop the champagne just yet. After wobbling early in the quarter, the economy regained some footing, with retail sales rising solidly in September and labor market conditions improving. Business spending has held up despite volatility in financial markets and factory activity has kept expanding. Economists now estimate U.S. gross domestic product grew at an annual pace of between 2.3 and 2.7 percent in the July-September period, a sharp step up from the 1.3 percent logged in the first quarter and a far cry from what some feared just a few weeks ago. “The economy held up surprisingly well in the third quarter but it’s too early to celebrate,” said Ryan Sweet, a senior economist at Moody’s Analytics in West Chester, Pennsylvania. Much of the re-acceleration in growth reflects the fading of disruption to motor vehicle production and sales after the big March earthquake in Japan. A surge in auto sales contributed to a solid 1.1 percent rise in retail sales in September. Declining gasoline prices, which stretched household budgets in the second quarter and crimped consumer spending, are also seen supporting third-quarter economic growth. But those factors should prove temporary, and with Europe’s economy likely to slow as it battles its debt crisis and the U.S. labor market still weak, economists believe the fourth quarter will prove weaker, with some fearing a contraction in the first half of 2012. “The euro zone debt crisis is still playing out. That remains a dark cloud on the horizon that can present a direct hit to the U.S. economic recovery,” said Anthony Karydakis chief economist at Commerzbank in New York. Although European leaders sound determined to come to grips with the debt crisis and could announce a bold plan in the next couple of weeks, analysts worry they might once again move too slowly for jittery financial markets. “A bold plan would require some form of centralized fiscal policy, which means years of voting and changing the treaty and voting in individual parliaments,” said Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial in Chicago. “It’s not clear whether financial markets will have the patience for them to execute on it because you don’t have the ability in Europe to move as quickly on it and they have always been a day late in dealing with the crisis.” U.S. exports to the euro zone account for only about 2 percent of U.S. gross domestic product, but a worsening of the debt crisis could lead to a financial panic, with ripple effects on American banks and consumers. The euro zone turmoil has already led to tightening in credit availability, weighing on spending and employment. Economists at Goldman Sachs see U.S. growth slowing to a pace between 0.50 percent and 1 percent in the next two quarters, with the risk of a recession at about 40 percent. Others, however, think another recession is far fetched. “The economy is not in great shape but it is hardly falling apart,” said Joel Naroff, chief economist at Naroff Economic Advisors in Holland, Pennsylvania. “We are in a slow, steady, grinding recovery that is not creating lots of jobs.” Naroff, like many other economists, draws solace from the solid rise in retail sales in September reported on Friday and the need for auto manufacturers to replenish inventories after production was disrupted early this year. “Some of the momentum in final demand growth could carry into the fourth quarter. Early indications suggest that auto sales, which were an important element in third-quarter growth, are holding up well in October,” said Michael Feroli, an economist at JPMorgan in New York. “And while energy prices have backed up in recent days it should still be the case that moderation in headline inflation could give some lift to consumer spending power.” Much as Europe’s shadow looms large over the U.S. economy, belt tightening at home also poses a risk to growth, with a payroll tax cut and an extension of emergency unemployment benefits scheduled to expire in December. While economists expect the payroll tax cut to be extended, many doubt whether the emergency jobless benefits will be renewed, which would undercut already weak household income. “If political parties are unable to agree on any of these measures, that could be the straw that breaks the camel’s back,” said Harm Bandholz, chief U.S. economist at UniCredit Research in New York. “The spending cuts would impact growth not only directly via lower disposable incomes, but also indirectly via a massive loss of confidence in the ability of policymakers to steer events in the right direction in these critical times.” Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions

Early-stage angel investment rises, but early-stage VC funding falls

Early-stage angel investment rises, but early-stage VC funding falls

Angel investment in new companies rose during the first half of 2011, according to the University of New Hampshire’s Center for Venture Research, even as early-stage venture capital funding declined, as reported by Dow Jones LP Source; also, HeartWare slides, Thoratec gains; KCI details Apax financing; EDAP’s Q3 prelims predict top-line boost; analysts downgrade Natus Medical on missed guidance; and Sanuwave surges on trial results. Venture capital investment is on the wane, but angel investment is increasing, according to a pair of recent reports. The University of New Hampshire’s Center for Venture Research reports that angel investment rose nearly 5 percent during the first and second quarters, to $8.9 billion, compared with the same period last year. Health care and medical device firms took the lion’s share of the angel cash (25 percent, according to the report), which usually comes from the proverbial “high net worth individuals” or in early-stage funding rounds.

Cassidy Turley taps distressed debt expert

Cassidy Turley taps distressed debt expert

Commercial brokerage firm Cassidy Turley, which has been on a hiring binge in recent months, just added a new executive to its bourgeoning capital markets practice in New York.Stephen Pearlman was appointed senior managing director in the capital markets group, joining two other executives who joined the firm earlier this year. Mr. Pearlman was formerly a director at Houlihan Lokey, a Los Angeles-based investment bank, best known for its work on restructurings. There he specialized in real estate and was most recently focused on working out distressed deals. In his new role, he will be responsible for investment sales, debt placements, restructuring and property sales.The Brooklyn native said he joined Cassidy Turley in part to expand the type of transactions he works on beyond primarily distressed assets. He added that he also was drawn to the company, which has been expanding in New York and throughout the country.“I like the vision of this place,” said Mr. Pearlman, who has been involved in over $8 billion of transactions in his 28 years of experience in real estate banking. “There is a commitment to building a capital markets group around the country.”Mr. Pearlman’s tasks will be centered on New York, however. And he knows he faces stiff competition from the likes of CB Richard Ellis Group Inc., Eastdil Secured, Jones Lang LaSalle and Cushman & Wakefield Inc., which all already have well-established teams in the market.“It is going to be hard because they are all very good,” he conceded. “But we have out own client base and we are building a team.”In the last month, Cassidy Turley has acquired two brokerages’ businesses, giving it offices in Boston, Mass., Atlanta, Ga., and Tampa, Fla. It also hired two top executives in the New York office: Joseph Swingle, who joined as a managing principal after being the head of Grubb & Ellis’ New York office, where he managed the tri-state region. Katherine Mahon joined as vice president of brokerage services. She was formerly at CB Richard Ellis.In 2008, four firms—including what was Colliers ABR in New York City—merged to form the joint holding company that eventually became Cassidy Turley. The firm was formally launched on March 1, 2010 with the unification of nine regional firms across the U.S. Today, Cassidy Turley has 940 brokers in 60 offices across the country.

Obituary: Fred Bush Jr. ’39

Healthy Body = Functional Body. Hollywood Look Side Effect: Healthy Function

31Jan11 – In his own words, Fred M. Bush, Jr. was a plowboy, a sailor and a lawyer. Others would add leader, public servant, confidante, advisor, patriarch and friend. A member of that “Greatest Generation,” he served his family, his country, his community with all his heart and talent. After celebrating his 94th birthday with family, including all three sons, he died at home on January 26, 2011 with family and caregivers by his side. He was 94 years and 1 day old. As one son put it, the cause of death was “being 94.”
Born January 25, 1917 in New Hebron, Mississippi, he was the son of Fred M. Bush, a lawyer, farmer and a State Senator, and Elizabeth Buck Bush, a school teacher. He was baptized Frederick Marshall Bush, Jr. in St. Andrew’s Episcopal Cathedral but as a boy was known as “Fred Marshall,” the name he used for his lifetime. He graduated from New Hebron High School; Hinds Junior College; United States Naval Academy; and University of Mississippi School of Law, where he stood number one in his class.
In 1935, Bush received an appointment to the United States Naval Academy, graduated in 1939 and was ordered to sea duty on the USS WEST VIRGINIA where he served one year. Duty in destroyers followed, first on the USS GRIDLEY in 1940 and 1941, operating out of Pearl Harbor. His ship was with Admiral Halsey’s task force ferrying fighter planes to Midway. It was scheduled to return to Pearl Harbor on Saturday, December 6, 1941. As fate would have it, a heavy storm delayed their return by one day. At the time the Japanese attacked from the north, his ship was 100 miles south of Pearl Harbor.
Service followed as gunnery officer on the USS KNIGHT in 1942 where combat missions included the landing of General George Patton’s troops in Africa and the invasion of Sicily and Italy. He was promoted to Executive Officer in 1943 and made several trips escorting convoys across the Atlantic. He was ordered to the USS MADDOX in the summer of 1944 as Executive Officer, and returned to the Pacific on the MADDOX in 1944 to operate with Admiral Halsey’s first carrier task force. In the Okinawa Campaign the ship took a kamikaze. The ship was with Admiral Halsey’s task force that lost three destroyers in a typhoon.
In 1945, at the young age of 28, Bush took command of the USS KIDD with its complement of 30 officers and 300 men. He described this wartime assignment as the most responsible, most challenging, most important and most fun job he ever had. He stayed with the KIDD until August 1946.
Shore duty after World War II included two years at the NROTC unit at the University of Mississippi and a brief tour in the Bureau of Naval Personnel. He resigned on November 11, 1948 to attend law school. He remained active in the Naval Reserve for many years, retiring with the rank of Captain.
While a midshipman at Annapolis he had a blind date with the lovely and talented Katie Ruth Field, also from Mississippi. After that first date, he told his roommate that he had met the girl he was going to marry. Long periods of separation caused by sea duty in the Pacific made his task more difficult, but he had met his match and they were married in the Naval Academy Chapel on May 8, 1942. He always said it was the happiest day of his life. They were married for 66 years.
Fred and Katie traveled happily with friends and classmates, including cruises, class reunions, trips to Mexico, Europe and Alaska, and some more rustic outings as floating the Grand Canyon and going to fishing lodges in Montana, Canada and Alaska. Fred usually took one trip a year that was more rugged, on horseback, backpacking or camping. He estimated that he had arranged more than 40 major fishing trips and other outings to Montana, Idaho, Michigan, Missouri, Canada and Alaska with family, classmates, fellow lawyers and assorted friends.
A prominent courtroom lawyer in Mississippi for some 50 years, Fred Bush was a partner in three law firms: Fant and Bush, Holly Springs, Mississippi 1950-60; Mitchell, McNutt, Bush, Lagrone and Sams, Tupelo, Mississippi 1961-89; and Phelps Dunbar, Tupelo, Mississippi from 1989 until his retirement and afterwards maintained an office as “of counsel” until his death.
His interest and talent for promoting industrial development led to his appointment by the Governor to Director of the Mississippi Agricultural & Industrial Board, the predecessor of the Mississippi Department of Economic Development, from 1960-61. When he resigned to return to the practice of law, the Governor asked him to remain on the executive committee, to which he agreed. Bush continued his interest in economic development, serving on the Executive Committee of the A and I Board for many years and on similar boards devoted to Economic Development, in all serving from 1952 until 1984 under appointments from five Mississippi Governors.
Over the course of his career, he served as President of the Mississippi State Bar, the Lee County Bar Association, the First District Bar, the Mississippi Bar Foundation, the Lamar Order, and the Mississippi Defense Lawyers Association. He was a member of the House of Delegates to the American Bar Association for many years.
Civic activities included Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway Development Authority; Rotary Club; Boy Scouts; USO; Community Development Foundation; Mississippi Economic Counsel; Naval Reserve and the Republican Party.
He was an active and devoted member of All Saints Episcopal Church for 50 years, serving as vestryman, warden and on numerous committees. In his retirement years he, Katie and his son Carl took a special interest in the church building projects.
Fred Bush has left a priceless gift to his family: in 1999, at the age of 82 while on vacation with friends and Naval Academy classmates, he dictated his thoughts and memories of his life–complete with war stories, memorable lawsuits, child rearing and more, which he published privately for family and friends. It is in this document that he gives his own description of his life. It is entitled “Random Recollections of a Plowboy-Sailor-Lawyer.” His friends, family and especially his grandchildren would add “fly fisherman” to this list. When asked to name a favorite time with their grandfather, each grandchild cherished the times he took them fishing.
He is survived by his three sons, Frederick Marshall (Mike) Bush, III of Jackson and New York, Carl Jennings Bush of Jackson, Richard Stewart Bush and wife, Arla of Irvine, California; six grandchildren. Frederick Marshall Bush, IV and his wife, Yara de Vlieger of New York and Miami, Grant Hansen Bush of Los Angeles, Jason Richard Bush and wife, Courtney of Jackson, Lisa Christina Bush and husband, Enrique Avila of Calgary Canada, Andrew Jennings Bush and wife, Jennifer of Jackson, and Matthew Edward Bush of Atlanta; great-grandchildren, Anna Claire Bush, Caroline Elizabeth Bush, Arabella Marguerite Bush and Nina Madeliefje Bush; by his sister, Ann Bush Dale; and by six nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his wife, Katie Ruth Bush; by his mother, Elizabeth Buck Bush; by his father, Fred M. Bush; and by his brothers, Hamilton C. Bush and Charles B. Bush.
During his later years, he was attended by many loving caregivers: Lisa Aldridge, James Warren, Linda Thompson, Donna Freeman, Mary Elzie, Dorothy Parker, Chiquita Riley, Lorraine Bowers and Carla Johnston.
Asked to summarize his life, one of his sons said: “He was born good and just kept getting better.”
Funeral services will be at All Saints Episcopal Church, 608 West Jefferson Street, Tupelo, Mississippi, on Monday, January 31, 2011, at 2:00 p.m. with visitation beginning atLOAD-DATE: January 29, 2011
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
PUBLICATION-TYPE: Newspaper
JOURNAL-CODE: jak
SECTION: OBITUARIES
LENGTH: 1272 words
Copyright 2011 The Clarion-Ledger
All Rights Reserved
The Clarion-Ledger (Jackson, Mississippi)
January 28, 2011 Friday

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MassDevice Big 100 Regional Roundtable West featuring Michael Mussallem, Scott Huennekans and Joe E. Kiani set for December 12

MassDevice Big 100 Regional Roundtable West featuring Michael Mussallem, Scott Huennekans and Joe E. Kiani set for December 12

MassDevice.com is proud to announce the MassDevice Big 100 Regional Roundtable West

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