Loading...
Symbols:
Get Seeking Alpha Free Stock Alerts by Email!
Get Free Stock Alerts by Email!
Transcripts
- Pacific Sunwear F3Q08 (Qtr End 11/1/08) Earnings Call Transcript
- Mad Catz Interactive, Inc. F2Q09 (Qtr End 09/30/2008) Earnings Call Transcript
- Provectus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. The Wall Street Analyst Forum Call Transcript
- Point Blank Solutions, Inc. Q3 2008 (Quarter End 9/30/08) Earnings Call Transcript
- Navios Maritime Holdings Inc., Q3 2008 Earnings Call Transcript
- Gran Tierra Energy Inc. Q3 2008 (Qtr End 09/30/08) Earnings Call Transcript
- Oxygen Biotherapeutics, Inc. The Wall Street Analyst Forum Call Transcript
- ArvinMeritor, Inc. F4Q08 (Quarter End 9/28/08) Earnings Call Transcript
- Saks Incorporated Q3 2008 (Qtr End 11/01/08) Earnings Call Transcript
- Omega Navigation Enterprises, Inc. Q3 2008 Earnings Call Transcript
-
Editors' Picks
-
Most Popular
- GM Could Benefit from Bankruptcy
- Throwing in the Towel on This Market?
- General Electric: Genuine Risk of Collapse?
- Food: Against Self-Sufficiency
- The Fed: Now the World's Largest Private Bank
- Key to the Global Equity Market: Trend and Cycle Analysis of U.S. Retail
- Full list of Editors' Picks »
- General Electric: Genuine Risk of Collapse? »
- Should We Really Bail Out the Big Three Automakers with $73.20 Per Hour Labor? »
- Memo to Warren: AmEx Preferred at 15%, Warrants at $12 »
- Jim Rogers on China »
- Peak Oil's Bell Is Ringing »
- UltraShort ETFs: At a Tipping Point? »
- The Pickens Plan Changes Its Strategy »
- The Biggest Problem Detroit's Big Three Face »
- Tech May Be a Wreck, But This Isn't 2001 »
- 11 Stocks Selling Below Cash »
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News »
Hedge Fund Jobs
Job Seekers: Search jobs by category, get job alerts by email or live feed, apply online See full list of jobs »
Employers: See all recruitment options, get applications online or by email Post a job »
kindwarrior
5 Comments
Did Reagan End the Era of Free Markets?
Can't speak for mister Kim but I'm a big fan of Reagan. That does not mean that a well intentioned executive decision could not have evolved into something less than desirable.
We have seen throughout the history of our country systematic large scale attacks on our currency. It would seem prudent, in the emergence of high speed trading, to assemble experts on currency and financial markets to do threat assessment and propose systematic countermeasures. It is also easy to see how such a group could be perverted into the ultimate "insiders" club.
We are over centralized and ultimately, if the federal government is not divested of power, it will be our undoing. The solution to currency attacks and market swings has always been, will always be, diversity. If we want to protect ourselves from financial swings we need to devaluate brokers, and dispose of the Federal reserve. The momentum of a pendulum is directly correlated to its mass.
That being said, I object to Mr. Kim expounding on a mountain of circumstantial evidence w/o citing a single pebble of that mountain. It is clear that Markets have been manipulated on a large scale over the last 10 years or so. It is not so clear that this has anything to do with Executive order 12631. The name George Soros comes up a lot, does he have anything to do with financial markets?
Apple Hits $200, Rumors Abound
Beijing's Hybrid Hypocrisy
Apple's Numbers: Innovative, User-Friendly Spreadsheet Application
I remember "Glider Pro" it was written by a fellow HyperCard developer "John Calhoon". Your reference made me do some web research. John did in fact sell the game to Casady & Green (and yes I did misspell it above). There's an article on the game here.
<b>
This caused my to search for "Spreadsheet 2000" and, sure enough, there's an article here (with a screen shot and a mention of Prograph)
The Prograph link will take you here where you can learn that the idea of prograph is not entirely dead. According to the article BTW the author of Prograph was Pictoius not Peregrine -- I may simply have been wrong here but something vague in my memory is telling me that there's more to the story.
Apple's Numbers: Innovative, User-Friendly Spreadsheet Application
An interesting aside: Spreadsheet 2000 was written in an obscure programming language called Prograph which was a total departure from other programming languages; I experimented with Prograph; It took a while to get accustomed to the metaphor: inputs were represented as nodes (little circles) at the top of a project window, outputs as little circles at the bottom processes were little hexagonal icons that you dragged into the window and connected to inputs and outputs. The right side (I may have this reversed) of the hexagon could be double clicked to show the processes methods (the definitions of it's inputs and outputs) the double clicking the other side opened up a project window for that process -- and that's all there was to the language. It was impossible to make a syntax error in Prograph since you were just dragging lines and icons around. Inputs and outputs could auto-validate while connecting them (can't connect a string output to a number input). The language was intrinsically multi-threaded (in fact, you needed to draw a special connecting line if and I/O connection could not be allowed to be executed in parallel with other processes -- because, perhaps it needed data from another process that may or may not have executed). I have been convinced since working with Prograph that it is the right way to build programs but, like Spreadsheet 2000 it was never widely adopted therefore the libraries were small which probably meant you'd end up having to use some other language in conjunction with Prograph to get anything meaningful done so the technology languished. The 90s was a period where Microsoft prospered by breaking emerging standards. If you knew some Microsoft engineers during that time then you've surely heard the "Embrace and destroy" joking comments or, my favorite, "It ain't done 'til Lotus won't run" although that dates me. What this meant to the small emerging developer's like Cassedy and Greene and Peregrine (the makers of Prograph) was that they could not afford the endless revision cycles necessary to keep their tools running on the shifting sands that were the underlying standards of the '90s let alone advance the quality of their products. Ultimately they died.<b>
I'm cautiously hopeful about Apple's iWork suite, Google’s web productivity suite and the open source projects that are trying to compete with Microsoft now. Microsoft can no longer "own" the standards and people are innovating again. Having worked with the Newton, OpenDoc, Spreadsheet 2000, and Prograph, I cannot help but wonder what marvelous tools we would have now if we had somehow prevented the Microsoft monopoly. It has been my life lesson from my involvement in the industry that even while governments, and banks and Financial houses love monopolies (and monopolies need all three to exist) the free market doesn't and ultimately, the way water breaks a boulder, free markets tear monopolies apart. None of this of course erases the damage they do during their reign.