For India’s railway children, a dangerous life by the tracks

For India’s railway children, a dangerous life by the tracks

Tuesday, February 18, 2014 – 14:11

Reuters

NEW DELHI – The young boys huddled over a fire between two tracks just beyond the platforms of New Delhi railway station, oblivious to the trains rolling past. They were trying to boil some water to make tea.

One, a grime-encrusted urchin wearing a filthy baseball cap at a jaunty angle, said this was their home. He had run away after his mother died and he could take no more beatings from his alcoholic father. Read more of this post

Gold smuggling in India to accelerate if import curbs stay

Updated: Tuesday February 18, 2014 MYT 2:56:44 PM

Gold smuggling in India to accelerate if import curbs stay

MUMBAI/SINGAPORE: Gold demand in India is expected to be robust in 2014, likely leading to a further jump in smuggling if curbs on bullion imports remain, the World Gold Council (WGC) said.

Indian gold consumption is expected to be 900-1,000 tonnes in 2014 on strong jewellery and investment purchases, according to the WGC, still slightly behind top buyer China, whose demand is expected to be 1,000-1,100 tonnes. Read more of this post

Housing cost of monthly tenants outstrips homeowners’ for first time in Seoul metro area

Housing cost of monthly tenants outstrips homeowners’ for first time in Seoul metro area

2014.02.18 16:28:00

South Korea’s housing cost of tenants paying monthly rents surpassed that of homeowners for apartments in Seoul and the surrounding areas for the first time, as monthly rents have risen while interest rates fell, according to a survey.
As the real estate market shows clearer signs of recovery, the increasing burden on tenants and reducing burden on purchasing houses are forecast to drive up the demand for buying home. Read more of this post

Justice never sleeps, literally; Judges’ grueling work hours ― key to how Korean courts handle heavy workload

2014-02-17 18:10

Justice never sleeps, literally

Judges’ grueling work hours ― key to how Korean courts handle heavy workload
By Kim Da-ye
More than 6 million lawsuits are filed every year across all courts in Korea, which together employ some 2,500 judges.
The Korean Supreme Court received 35,777 new cases and handled more than 36,200 in 2012. Although data for direct comparison isn’t available, over 7,700 cases were filed in the U.S. Supreme Court in the 2011 term ending in October 2012. Seventy-nine cases were argued and 73 were disposed. Read more of this post

Wireless charging is promising and has been promised for several years. But it is a mess of competing standards and technologies. Will this tangle of cords ever get unraveled?

FEBRUARY 17, 2014, 12:35 PM  9 Comments

Wireless Charging: Still Plenty of Kinks in the Cord

By MOLLY WOOD

As personal devices proliferate — smartphones, wearable fitness bands, Kindles, tablets, smart glasses — our charger collections are starting to look like the electrical outlet in the movie “A Christmas Story.”

Wireless charging to the rescue? Not quite. The concept has been caught in a slow-moving standards war. Read more of this post

Television: More power to the cord; Comcast’s bid for Time Warner Cable is raising consumer concerns over broadband pricing

February 17, 2014 6:57 pm

Television: More power to the cord

By Emily Steel

Comcast’s bid for Time Warner Cable is raising consumer concerns over broadband pricing

Marshall Maher is wreaking havoc on the media business. The 38-year-old Manhattan marketing executive is an avid television watcher. He is a fan of theNetflix original political drama House of Cards, keeps up with the HBO series True Detective and calls Sunday Morning, the weekly news programme on broadcaster CBS, “like church for me.” Read more of this post

This Math Formula Shows Why the Comcast-Time Warner Cable Deal Should Be Blocked

2/13/2014 at 10:59 PM

This Math Formula Shows Why the Comcast—Time Warner Cable Deal Should Be Blocked

By Kevin Roose

Late last night, CNBC’s David Faber broke the news that Comcast had made a bid to acquire Time Warner Cable for $159 per share, or about $45 billion. TV watchers everywhere sighed, assuming that combining the biggest and second-biggest cable companies in America to create a single conglomerate would only make their already-bad customer experiences even worse. Read more of this post

TWG founder in tussle with major shareholder OSIM

TWG founder in tussle with major shareholder OSIM

POSTED: 17 Feb 2014 19:55
The founder of luxury tea company TWG has filed a lawsuit against majority shareholder OSIM International.

SINGAPORE : The founder of luxury tea company TWG has filed a lawsuit against majority shareholder OSIM International, alleging that the Singapore lifestyle firm and some of its directors had conspired to dilute his stake in the firm he had built up.
Manoj Murjani and his company The Wellness Group have asked the Singapore High Court  to reverse recent corporate developments at TWG Tea Company that had resulted in OSIM raising its stake in TWG Tea to 70 percent from 53.7 percent.
Besides OSIM, Murjani is also suing several individuals including OSIM founder Ron Sim and TWG Tea’s other founder Taha Bou Qdib.
OSIM acknowledged receipt of the lawsuit on Monday but said the allegations were “unmeritorious and groundless”. Read more of this post

Lush versus Amazon: a big foe can unite teams

February 17, 2014 4:13 pm

Lush versus Amazon: a big foe can unite teams

By Andrew Hill

The possibility that a senior Amazon executive may find his name on a range of “non-medicated toilet preparations” has considerably brightened my week. Not that I have anything against Amazon. But Lush, the British handmade cosmetics company, does.

It has just won a London court case against the US-based internet group’s UK and Luxembourg arms for using the word “lush” to direct search engine users to cosmetics on its site, even though Amazon does not sell Lush products in Britain. Read more of this post

Stratechery: Microsoft Vs Microsoft

MICROSOFT V MICROSOFT

Friday, February 14, 2014

Stratechery

In his first column for the New York Times, Farhad Manjoo advocated relying on Apple, Google, and Amazon:

When you decide what to use, you’ve got to play every tech giant against the other, to make every tech decision as if you were a cad — sample every firm’s best features and never overcommit to any one.

I rather agree with and follow Manjoo’s advice, and my reasoning is all about the incentives that arise from Apple, Google, and Amazon’s business models: Read more of this post

Google Thinks It Can Replace Passwords With Inaudible Sounds Only Your Phone Can Hear

Google Thinks It Can Replace Passwords With Inaudible Sounds Only Your Phone Can Hear

JIM EDWARDS TECH  FEB. 17, 2014, 8:24 AM

Google has acquired SlickLogin, an Israeli startup that has developed an ingenious solution to the pain-in-the-butt that is “two-factor authentication” (when you have topunch in your password and a code from a text message

on your phone to access a web site or app).

The company lets your phone “listen” to a web site, and the confirmation of the unique inaudible sound confirms it’s you trying to get access, not a hacker in a remote location. Read more of this post

Will the Internet of Things make us slaves to our lesser natures?

Will the Internet of Things make us slaves to our lesser natures?

BY JAMES ROBINSON 
ON FEBRUARY 17, 2014

As we get further into the “year of the Internet of Things,” breathless announcements of still mostly hypothetical products in development are coming thick and fast.

Today, Philips announced that in Düsseldorf, Germany it is piloting a “connected retail lighting system” in a single physical location. The rub of it is this: the lights in the store have built in beacons, a potential shopper can open up the store’s app and see a map of the store, tracking their location in real time and getting directions toward their planned purchase. Read more of this post

2014 a good year for wearable tech: institute

2014 a good year for wearable tech: institute

By John Liu, The China Post
February 18, 2014, 12:19 am TWN

TAIPEI, Taiwan — As demand for PCs and notebooks dwindles and the growth potential of smartphones and tablets is expected to decline, wearable devices such as smart watches and bracelets are expected to take the market in 2014, a local research institute said yesterday.

The Industrial Economics and Knowledge Research Center (IEK) under the Industrial Technology Research Institute (ITRI, 工研院) held a press conference yesterday to explore critical issues in the Information and Communication Technology (ICT) industry today. Read more of this post

Data pioneers watching us work; Employers are tracking what their staff do in ever greater detail

February 17, 2014 6:18 pm

Data pioneers watching us work

By Hannah Kuchler

In a back street in San Francisco’s start-up dominated SoMa district, a rapidly growing business is busy studying how millions of employees behave each day. Its computers know in real time why a worker was hired, how productive they are and can even follow them as they move to a new job.

Evolv is a leader in the nascent Quantified Workplace movement, where big data analytics companies are springing up to measure how we work. “Every week we figure out more things to track,” says Max Simkoff, Evolv’s co-founder and chief executive, who claims it can help improve productivity by at least 5 per cent in two-thirds of jobs. Read more of this post

MediaTek announces short-form merger with Ralink

MediaTek announces short-form merger with Ralink

By Ted Chen, The China post
February 18, 2014, 12:19 am TWN

TAIPEI, Taiwan — MediaTek (MTK, 聯發科) yesterday announced that its board of directors has approved an initiative to acquire Ralink (雷凌科技) via a short-form merger.

Also referred to as a parent-subsidiary merger, the short-form merger may be utilized by a parent company to acquire its subsidiary. The process does not require approval of the shareholders of the subsidiary. Read more of this post

LED lighting systems that can observe people and gather data are being introduced worldwide, but some experts say there is potential for misuse.

At Newark Airport, the Lights Are On, and They’re Watching You

By DIANE CARDWELLFEB. 17, 2014

image001-19

Hugh Martin, chief executive of Sensity Systems, says “there is a lot of value, I think, if we do it right, to this information.” This LED-based light fixture can gather and transmit data for automated analysis.

Visitors to Terminal B at Newark Liberty International Airport may notice the bright, clean lighting that now blankets the cavernous interior, courtesy of 171 recently installed LED fixtures. But they probably will not realize that the light fixtures are the backbone of a system that is watching them. Read more of this post

432 Vietnamese SOEs set to conclude equitization by 2015

432 Vietnamese SOEs set to conclude equitization by 2015

 

HANOI, Feb. 18 (Xinhua) — Vietnam has set to conclude equitization of 432 state-owned enterprises (SOEs) by 2015, said a government official.

Pham Viet Muon, deputy head of the Permanent Steering Committee for Innovation and Enterprise Development of Vietnam, said at a conference on implementing tasks of SOEs restructuring during 2014- 2015 period in capital Hanoi on Tuesday that the country must speed up equitizing SOEs in the coming two years as the number of SOEs finishing equitization remained low after three years of implementation. Read more of this post

Veteran Taiwanese singer Frankie Kao Ling-feng dies

Veteran Taiwanese singer Frankie Kao Ling-feng dies

image001-18

Tuesday, February 18, 2014 – 10:02

Taiwanese singer Frankie Kao Ling-feng, who was stricken with leukaemia, died on Monday evening. He was 63 years old.

Cancer did not stop Gao Ling Feng from performing in S’pore concert Read more of this post

The Singapore Institute of Technology (SIT) will become the Republic’s fifth autonomous university after Parliament passed a Bill on Monday.

SIT to be Singapore’s fifth autonomous university

By Leong Wai Kit 
POSTED: 17 Feb 2014 23:35
The Singapore Institute of Technology (SIT) will become the Republic’s fifth autonomous university after Parliament passed a Bill on Monday.

SINGAPORE: The Singapore Institute of Technology (SIT) will become the Republic’s fifth autonomous university.

This comes after Parliament on Monday passed a Bill that Minister for Education Heng Swee Keat said gives more young Singaporeans a wider choice in pursuing a degree here. Read more of this post

Richard N. Cabela: Big-Time Retailer and Big-Game Hunter

Richard N. Cabela: Big-Time Retailer and Big-Game Hunter

SHELLY BANJO

Feb. 17, 2014 10:58 p.m. ET

Richard N. Cabela, a larger-than-life big-game hunter who was outspoken about the right to own guns and co-founded a chain of stores that capitalized on their sale, has died.

Mr. Cabela, 77 years old, died at his home in Sidney, Neb., his company, outdoor-gear retailer Cabela’s Inc., CAB 0.00% said Sunday.

He had served as chairman of the retailer’s board until June 2013, when his brother Jim Cabela took over the post. Read more of this post

Ruling May Curb Lawyers’ Mobility; Partners at struggling law firms may find it harder to jump ship after a new ruling increased the risk of lawsuits against firms that hire them.

Ruling May Curb Mobility of Lawyers at Struggling Firms

Judge’s Ruling Raises Risk of Suits Against New Employers

JENNIFER SMITH

Feb. 17, 2014 7:19 p.m. ET

Partners at struggling law firms may find it harder to jump ship in the future after a new ruling raised the risk of lawsuits against the firms that hire them.

Firms that hire lawyers from bankrupt law firms have long been subject to “unfinished business” claims, which seek to recover profits from ongoing legal work that partners take with them to their new homes. Such claims have typically been confined to firms that take on lawyers once a firm has shut down, under the theory that pending matters are assets that rightfully belong to the failed firm. Read more of this post

Big IPOs Don’t Mean Big Gains in China

February 17, 2014, 9:59 a.m. ET

Big IPOs Don’t Mean Big Gains in China

China’s newly reopened initial public offering market shows that large deals don’t necessarily lead to big gains for investors.

Although all 45 companies that have listed in China since its securities regulator ended a more than yearlong moratorium on IPOs in late December are trading above their listing prices, it is companies in the consumption and information-technology sectors championed by Beijing, or those that were priced cheaply, that are posting the sharpest gains. Read more of this post

Time to change the narrative about nation building in Singapore

Time to change the narrative about nation building in Singapore

Tuesday, February 18, 2014 – 09:00

Tham Yuen-c

Singapolitics

The tale of how modern, independent Singapore was built is one familiar to most Singaporeans.

It starts with the country being thrust into statehood in 1965, after a brief flirtation with the Federation of Malaysia ended in a painful split. And it continues with the young Republic’s transformation from rags to riches.

At the centre of the story is the first generation of leaders, including founding prime minister Lee Kuan Yew and his key lieutenants like Dr Goh Keng Swee, Mr S. Rajaratnam and others. Read more of this post

JB folk cash in with ‘illegal rooms’

JB folk cash in with ‘illegal rooms’

Monday, February 17, 2014 – 11:45

New Straits Times

JOHOR BAHRU – Some unscrupulous homeowners in Johor Bahru have been caught extending and renovating their houses illegally to build more rooms to be rented out.

There are cases where three-room single-storey semi-detached houses were transformed into double- storey units with 24 rooms in each unit. Read more of this post

Run on Thai Bank Linked to Rice Subsidy Points to Strain on Economy

Run on Thai Bank Linked to Rice Subsidy Points to Strain on Economy

Government Says Protests Will Cause Economy to Slow in Months to Come

WARANGKANA CHOMCHUEN and NOPPARAT CHAICHALEARMMONGKOL

Updated Feb. 17, 2014 12:03 p.m. ET

BANGKOK—Depositors have withdrawn nearly $1 billion from a bank linked to a foundering rice-subsidy program, the bank said Monday, in one of the first signs that Thailand’s months-old political stalemate is starting to affect the economy. Read more of this post