Heart and soul resolutions; Something simple and meaningful can make a real difference in somebody’s life.

Updated: Sunday December 29, 2013 MYT 7:20:50 AM

Heart and soul resolutions

BY SOO EWE JIN

Something simple and meaningful can make a real difference in somebody’s life.

OKAY. It’s that time of the year when columnists like us are granted the licence to offer some New Year resolutions to others. We can be serious, or we can be funny. But the reality is that few people will take our suggestions seriously unless they strike a chord within us. In the spirit of this column, which draws on many real-life experiences I go through myself, I would like to offer 10 resolutions that are up to us, as individuals, to fulfil. They do not depend on others doing their part first. The power, as we say, rests solely in our hands. Read more of this post

Famous Writers’ Sleep Habits vs. Literary Productivity, Visualized

http://www.brainpickings.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/sleepproductivitywriters_1500_1.jpg

Famous Writers’ Sleep Habits vs. Literary Productivity, Visualized

“In both writing and sleeping,” Stephen King observed in his excellent meditation on the art of “creative sleep” and wakeful dreaming, “we learn to be physically still at the same time we are encouraging our minds to unlock from the humdrum rational thinking of our daytime lives.”

Over the years, in my endless fascination with daily routines, I found myself especially intrigued by successful writers’ sleep habits – after all, it’s been argued that “sleep is the best (and easiest) creative aphrodisiac” and science tells us that it impacts everything from our moods to our brain development to our every waking moment. I found myself wondering whether there might be a correlation between sleep habits and literary productivity. The challenge, of course, is that data on each of these variables is hard to find, hard to quantify, or both. So I turned to Italian information designer Giorgia Lupi and her team at Accurat – who make masterful visualizations of cultural phenomena seemingly impossible to quantify – and, together, we set out to explore whether it might be possible to visualize such a correlation.

First, I handed them my notes on writers’ wake-up times, amassed over years of reading biographies, interviews, journals, and other materials. Many came from two books – Daily Rituals: How Artists Work by Mason Currey and Odd Type Writers: From Joyce and Dickens to Wharton and Welty, the Obsessive Habits and Quirky Techniques of Great Authors by Celia Blue Johnson – as well as from the Paris Review interviews and various collections of diaries and letters. We ended up with a roster of thirty-seven writers for whom wake-up times were available – this became the base data set, around which we set out to quantify, then visualize, the literary productivity of each author. One important caveat is that there is an enormous degree of subjectivity in assessing a literary – or any creative – career, but since all information visualization is an exercise in subjective editorial judgment rather than a record of Objective Truth, we settled on a set of quantifiable criteria to measure “productivity”: number of published works and major awards received. Given that both the duration and the era of an author’s life affect literary output – longer lives offer more time to write, and some authors lived before the major awards were established – those variables were also indicated for context. Lastly, I reached out to Wendy MacNaughtonillustrator extraordinaire and very frequent collaborator – and asked her to contribute an illustrated portrait for each of the authors. The end result – a labor of love months in the making – is this magnificent visualization of the correlation between writers’ wake-up times, displayed in clock-like fashion around each portrait, and their literary productivity, depicted as different-colored “auras” for each of the major awards and stack-bars for number of works published, color-coded for genre. The writers are ordered according to a “timeline” of earliest to latest wake-up times, beginning with Balzac’s insomniac 1 A.M. and ending with Bukowski’s bohemian noon. The most important caveat of all, of course, is that there are countless factors that shape a writer’s creative output, of which sleep is only one – so this isn’t meant to indicate any direction of causation, only to highlight some interesting correlations: for instance, the fact that (with the exception of outliers who are both highly prolific and award-winning, such as like Bradbury and King) late risers seem to produce more works but win fewer awards than early birds.

sleepproductivitywriters_1500_1

Texas Man Arrested For Not Returning A Library Book

Texas Man Arrested For Not Returning A Library Book

WILL WEISSERTASSOCIATED PRESS
DEC. 27, 2013, 7:19 PM 4,220 23

Have an overdue library book? It could get you fined — even jailed — in Texas, other states

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Call it throwing the book at the bookworms. A Texas man who was arrested for failing to return an overdue library book ignited an online flurry of snarky comments and headlines about the Lone Star State extending its tough-on-crime bravado to books. But such cases aren’t unheard of, and many communities faced with shrinking budgets and rising costs have ordinances calling for fines or even arrest warrants when library property isn’t returned. In Texas alone, the issue has cost libraries an estimated $18 million. Read more of this post

Next-gens might feel that the older generation aren’t doing enough to help them develop a good relationship with the family firm. But they can take matters into their own hands.

LOVE THE FAMILY BUSINESS

ARTICLE | 27 DECEMBER, 2013 09:30 AM | BY SARAH MICHAELS

Next-gens might feel that the older generation aren’t doing enough to help them develop a good relationship with the family firm. But they can take matters into their own hands. CampdenFB takes a look.

There is more to successfully taking over a family business than being given a big office and a few shares. Successions only work if the next generation feel a strong bond with the business. Such a bond doesn’t just happen, but can only be the result of concerted efforts and detailed plans, which have to be worked at for many years. So say two academics from Barcelona’s IESE business school, Josep Tapies and Lucia Cela, who asked next-gens how they felt about their family businesses, and wrote a paper about the results, titled A Model of Psychological Ownership in Next-Generation Members of Family-owned Firms. Read more of this post

To Optimize Talent Management, Question Everything

To Optimize Talent Management, Question Everything

by John Boudreau, Ravin Jesuthasan and David Creelman  |   11:00 AM December 27, 2013

Should you hire as if your workforce will stay a month, a year, or their entire career?  The answer makes a big difference in the qualifications you set, how well candidates must “fit” with the job, the team or the organizational culture, and the “deal” you offer.  A traditional employment model may work for some, while a model based on short-term employment may work for others.  At the extreme, it may be best never to “hire” your workers at all, or to “fire” and “hire” them several times.  Leaders need solid principles to build talent strategies that fit the situation, with an optimization approach.  Too often the necessary principles for optimization are lost in the chorus of divergent views and pithy examples.  This chorus can also obscure the need to question long-held assumptions.  Letting go of those assumptions may be the key to seeing new options that make optimization possible. Read more of this post

3M has a plan to keep the Post-it note relevant to young smartphone addicts

3M has a plan to keep the Post-it note relevant to young smartphone addicts

By John McDuling @jmcduling December 26, 2013

3m-consumer-office-product-sales-2-688_chartbuilder

Newspapers, magazines and telephone directories are all paper products that have fallen prey to the rise of digital technology. But the humble Post-it note has thus far dodged the bullet. These small squares of paper with a strip of adhesive on their rear, which have been selling for more than three decades, have proven indispensable to many offices and households. And they’ve continued to earn nicely for their maker, industrial conglomerate 3M. Read more of this post

Low Bordeaux winery prices attract Chinese buyers

Low Bordeaux winery prices attract Chinese buyers

Staff reporter

2013-12-29

The Chinese are lining up to buy vineyards in France, eyeing the lucrative business opportunities that come from selling wine in China given the country’s expanding wine consumption. Read more of this post

Guangzhou said it will stick to housing cooling measures, a day after an official said it was mulling ways to withdraw

Guangzhou Holds back Plans to Lift House Restrictions

12-26 12:15 Caijing

Guangzhou said it will stick to housing cooling measures, a day after an official said it was mulling ways to withdraw from such measures.

Local authorities in Guangzhou made a retreat yesterday from a statement that it would consider lifting government controls in the real estate sector, after It was found conflicting with a central government order to keep these policies in place. Read more of this post

China’s Economy: Five Barometers of Change in 2014

Dec 27, 2013

China’s Economy: Five Barometers of Change in 2014

By Richard Silk

China’s economy had a roller-coaster 2013, with a rosy start giving way to a slowdown and widespread gloom, before a rebound in the third quarter brought things full circle. The full-year growth figures, due to be released in January, will likely clock in around 7.6%. While that kind of pace would be stupendous for developed countries currently stuck in the doldrums, it would mark China’s slowest growth since 1999. China’s new leaders, who took office earlier this year, claim to be okay with that. They say the economy needs structural reform to steer it away from an unsustainable path that has led to rapidly mounting debt and spawned a huge expansion of heavy industry at the expense of the consumer. Here are five places to look in the new year for signs of just how serious China’s leaders are about change – and how well the economy is handling it. Read more of this post

Beijing bans Electronics Arts’ “Battlefield 4: China Rising” for ‘cultural aggression’

Beijing bans Battlefield 4: China Rising for ‘cultural aggression’

Staff Reporter

2013-12-28

The latest expansion of Battlefield 4, a video game developed by Electronic Arts, has been banned by the Chinese government who have accused the game of threatening its national security and discrediting China’s image in a form of “cultural aggression,” according to tech website ZDNet and Malaysia’s Oriental Daily News. Read more of this post

80% China’s bank shares fall below net asset value; scepticism prevails with reported figures and NPL problem

80% China’s bank shares fall below net asset value

Staff Reporter

2013-12-29

Although the banking industry is one of the most profitable sectors in China, investors have suffered losses in the stock market as more than 80% of banks’ shares listed in China A-shares closed at prices that were lower than their net asset value on exchange on Thursday. Read more of this post

Overseas Investors Spurn Indonesian Debt

Overseas Investors Spurn Indonesian Debt

By Yudith Ho, Kyoungwha Kim & Liau Y-Sing on 4:16 pm December 28, 2013.
Jakarta/Singapore/Kuala Lumpur. Indonesia’s elections and current account deficit are deterring Western Asset Management and PineBridge Investments from snapping up 2013’s worst-performing developing nation bonds. Read more of this post

Indonesian Property Developers Cutting Back on Concerns of Policy and Economic Uncertainty

Property Developers Cutting Back on Concerns of Policy and Economic Uncertainty

Stricter mortgage rules and an election might act as brakes on the housing market

By Francezka Nangoy & Ely Rahmawati on 2:12 pm December 26, 2013.
Property developers often take their projects to shopping malls, like this one in Semarang, Central Java, to attract potential customers and mock-up models prove popular in getting their ideas across. However, many firms are predicting slower economic growth in the year ahead. (JG Photo/Dhana Kencana)

The government’s tougher mortgage policy and uncertainty on the direction the economy is moving may prompt property developers to hold off expansion next year, industry executives say. Read more of this post

Indonesia to Regulate Metal Exports for Miners With Smelters

Indonesia to Regulate Metal Exports for Miners With Smelters

By Yoga Rusmana & Eko Listiyorini on 1:46 pm December 27, 2013.
[Updated at 6:11 p.m.]

Indonesia, the world’s largest mined nickel producer, will proceed with a plan to ban mineral-ore exports for mining companies without smelters next month, while regulating shipments by miners that do process ore. Read more of this post

India gold tax hits bridal budgets; smuggling up

Originally published December 27, 2013 at 6:18 PM | Page modified December 27, 2013 at 6:47 PM

India gold tax hits bridal budgets; smuggling up

Thanks to hikes in import duties on gold, brides in India are paying a 20 percent premium for their wedding finery this season. But the higher duties are designed to help India’s economy by stanching outflows of money that come with gold buying.

By KAY JOHNSON

The Associated Press

MUMBAI, India — With India’s wedding season in full swing, the glass sales counters in Mumbai’s famed Zhaveri gold bazaars are crowded with customers eyeing elaborate headpieces, nose rings and necklaces. No one does jewelry quite like an Indian bride, who by tradition wears all the gold she can stand up in and her family can afford. Read more of this post

“I think the most important thing I learned from my time there is the importance of being compassionate, patient and tolerant to other people regardless of how different or weird they may seem.” An Ultra-Exclusive High School In California Is Producing Some Of Today’s Top Startup Founders

An Ultra-Exclusive High School In California Is Producing Some Of Today’s Top Startup Founders

ALYSON SHONTELL

DEC. 27, 2013, 9:48 AM 7,668 4

Mark Suster, a venture capitalist who lives in Southern California, is helping his child apply to local high schools. One of his top choices is a private school called Crossroads, which costs tens of thousands per academic year. His child will have to compete for one of 48 slots; most openings are given to children of the school’s 3,000+ alumni. Read more of this post

Uber, LeCab And Others Now Have To Wait 15 Minutes Before Picking You Up In France

Uber, LeCab And Others Now Have To Wait 15 Minutes Before Picking You Up In France

Posted 5 hours ago by Romain Dillet (@romaindillet)

At first, it was just an idea, but this bill is now very real — urban transportation services like Uber and LeCab will now have to wait 15 minutes in France before letting a customer in the car. Back in October, the French government mentioned this piece of legislation as these new services would hurt traditional cab drivers. But nothing was set in stone until the AFPspotted the new bill today — and this news comes as a surprise. Read more of this post

Reddit Is Pouring Resources Into Its New Gift Exchange In An Attempt To Become Profitable

Reddit Is Pouring Resources Into Its New Gift Exchange In An Attempt To Become Profitable

GERRY SHIHREUTERS
DEC. 28, 2013, 7:21 AM 1,777 1

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Social news hub Reddit snagged an interview with Barack Obama last year. The big get for 2013 was reaching 90 million unique visitors a month, according to the company, on par with the likes of eBay. This season, even Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist Bill Gates joined its Secret Santa gift exchange. Read more of this post

Reading Your Palm for Security’s Sake; The use of biometric scans for consumer identification is growing, but some experts are concerned about the data being hacked or misused

December 28, 2013

Reading Your Palm for Security’s Sake

By ANNE EISENBERG

29-NOVEL1-popup

The technology can be used at a public library for checking out a book without the need for a library card

They aren’t taking any chances at Barclays Bank in Britain. Stating an account number and other bona fides isn’t enough to get to your money at the bank’s wealth and investment management service. As an additional safeguard, a program analyzes customers’ voices when they call in, to make sure they match a voice print on file. Read more of this post

Moms Have Taken Over Facebook, And Teens Want Nothing To Do With It

Moms Have Taken Over Facebook, And Teens Want Nothing To Do With It

DANIEL MILLERTHE CONVERSATION UK
DEC. 28, 2013, 4:18 AM 7,453 12

What does 2014 hold for your online life? If you’re young, it probably won’t involve Facebook that much. This year marked the start of what looks likely to be a sustained decline of what had been the most pervasive of all social networking sites. Young people are turning away in their droves and adopting other social networks instead, while the worst people of all, their parents, continue to use the service. Read more of this post

Market Prophit Finds Predictability in Social Media; A new feature on Market Prophit’s site ranks bloggers who tweet on their ability to be correct

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28, 2013

Market Prophit Finds Predictability in Social Media

By THERESA W. CAREY | MORE ARTICLES BY AUTHOR

A new feature on Market Prophit’s site ranks bloggers who tweet on their ability to be correct.

Is there predictability in the stock market in social media? Igor Gonta of Market Prophit believes so, and has introduced a new feature to his company’s website that helps you find financial bloggers who have crystal balls that are polished and ready to go. Read more of this post

Ex-Google Engineer Reveals How Google Maps Figures Out Destination Times

Ex-Google Engineer Reveals How Google Maps Figures Out Destination Times

PAUL SZOLDRA 

DEC. 28, 2013, 6:56 PM 4,458 

When you search for directions using Google Maps, there are a variety of factors at play in determining when you’ll actually arrive, according to a former Google engineer. In a post on Quora recently spotted by 9to5Mac, ex-Google engineer Richard Russell reveals more of what that is: Read more of this post

Brainlike Computers, Learning From Experience

December 28, 2013

Brainlike Computers, Learning From Experience

By JOHN MARKOFF

COMPUTE-articleLarge

Kwabena Boahen holding a biologically inspired processor attached to a robotic arm in a laboratory at Stanford University.

PALO ALTO, Calif. — Computers have entered the age when they are able to learn from their own mistakes, a development that is about to turn the digital world on its head. Read more of this post

Taiwan competitors aim to capitalize on Bitcoin ban in China

Taiwan competitors aim to capitalize on Bitcoin ban in China
Sunday, December 29, 2013
By Ted Chen , The China Post

TAIPEI, Taiwan — Following the announcement by the Chinese central bank that Bitcoin would not be permitted as legal tender, a Taiwanese company has stepped up efforts to capitalize on the vast mainland market’s potential electronic commerce revenues denominated in the fledgling digital currency. Read more of this post

Anti-Venom Shortage Hurts Myanmar’s Snake Campaign

Anti-Venom Shortage Hurts Myanmar’s Snake Campaign

By IRIN/Jessica Mudditt on 3:12 pm December 25, 2013.
Public education about snakebites in Myanmar has been largely successful in shifting people away from dangerous traditional practices to clinical treatment, but the inability to produce enough anti-venom is stalling progress in one of the world’s most snakebite-affected countries. Read more of this post

Watch them in 2014: We present personalities we think are the likely movers and shakers of Malaysia’s corporate scene

Updated: Saturday December 28, 2013 MYT 1:13:07 PM

Watch them in 2014

movers2014

IT is generally going to be a challenging 2014 as the Government undertakes fiscal reforms to rein in on its budget deficit and address the shrinking trade surplus. Under this scenario, Malaysia’s corporate captains may need to re-look and up their game plans to ride out the tough times.  We present personalities we think are the likely movers and shakers of Malaysia’s corporate scene. Some of them have made headlines this year and will continue to be watched. We also present the outlook of key sectors of the economy in this special edition. Read more of this post

We must invest in SMEs to create a lasting recovery; Britain is struggling to nurture a Samsung or Google because of its failing finance structure

We must invest in SMEs to create a lasting recovery

The Government must focus on measures that will incentivise large businesses to invest the cash they have accumulated and to boost the confidence of small and medium-sized businesses

Britain is struggling to nurture a Samsung or Google because of its failing finance structure

By John Longworth

7:00PM GMT 28 Dec 2013

We have much to be optimistic about as we reflect on 2013, with the UK economy growing at its fastest rate for three years, a buoyant jobs market and lower borrowing forecasts. Read more of this post

The Insiders’ Game: The transition from power or money to power and money

The Insiders’ Game: The transition from power or money to power and money

By Steven Pearlstein, Saturday, December 28, 12:22 AM

I’d been at the Post only a few months in 1988 when the managing editor, Robert Kaiser, walked into my office, closed the door and tossed onto my desk the section from that day’s paper containing the list of recent home sales in the District. One sale was circled — mine. Read more of this post

Tan Sri Lin See-Yan: A peek at 2014; There is life after QE3

Updated: Saturday December 28, 2013 MYT 1:02:12 PM

A peek at 2014

BY TAN SRI LIN SEE-YAN

There is life after QE3

IT’S that time of the year again – to look back over the past 12 months, take stock and review, and assess the outlook for next year, especially for emerging Asia (EA) and Asean. The year 2013 was not a good one – most quarterly reviews ended with a downgrade. Read more of this post

Small ISS Change Shakes Up Boards; Tweak to Influential Shareholder Adviser’s Recommendations Has Directors Rethinking Proposals

Small ISS Change Shakes Up Boards

Tweak to Influential Shareholder Adviser’s Recommendations Has Directors Rethinking Proposals

LIZ HOFFMAN

Dec. 26, 2013 9:09 p.m. ET

MK-CI866A_ISSCH_G_20131226184504

When Verizon Communications Inc. VZ -0.02% agreed this month to a step that should give shareholders more influence over its board, the company said it was “committed to best practices in governance.” Read more of this post