Is this CBS's answer to Hulu?
CBS has been the lone major-network hold out from Hulu, the Internet TV service backed by News Corp, Disney, and Comcast-NBC Universal. However, going up against rivals collectively 13 times its size isn't easy. Once viewers go to Hulu for their Internet TV, what will draw them away to Clicker? If CBS has a great show or 2 people might come but when they settle in for the evening it'll be Hulu on their screen and CBS will be missing out. (Mashable article)
Monday, March 7, 2011
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Fox News Looking for Trouble on Electric Autos
Fox News criticized the U.S. Department of Energy’s decision to hand nearly $1billion in loans to energy-efficient car developers Fisker Automotive and Tesla Motors. The reason? Both California companies currently produce expensive cars that are made in Europe, not America, Fox News noted on its programs. Not so fast, says HybridCars.com: “While the all-electric Tesla Roadster is currently being built in England, and components of the Fisker Karma plug-in hybrid are made in Finland, Fox neglected to fully explain that the loans will be used to establish US manufacturing facilities for more affordable future models.” A deeper analysis on this can be found at non-profit Media Matters. (WSJ VC Blog)

Thursday, September 3, 2009
Payback!
Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. Cuts Moody's Corporation's Stake To 16.98%-Reuters
Thursday, 23 Jul 2009 10:15am EDT
Reuters reported that Berkshire Hathaway Inc lowered its stake in Moody's Corporation. Berkshire sold 7.99 million shares of the parent of Moody's Investors Service for $217.6 million, or an average $27.25 per share, on the open market this week, according to a U.S. regulatory filing late Wednesday. Moody's Downgrades Berkshire Hathaway, Inc.'s AAA Credit Rating-AP
Thursday, 9 Apr 2009 02:50am EDT
The Associated Press reported that Moody's Investors Service lowered Berkshire Hathaway, Inc.'s rating to Aa2 from Aaa.
Monday, August 24, 2009
Pfizer, AmEx, Cisco Lead Charge Against Hourly Legal Billing
With the recession crimping legal budgets, some big companies are fighting back against law firms' longstanding practice of billing them by the hour.
The companies are ditching the hourly structure -- which critics complain offers law firms an incentive to rack up bigger bills -- in favor of flat-fee contracts.Pfizer Inc., which spends more than $500 million a year on legal matters, says it expects to reduce its domestic law-firm spending by 15% to 20%, largely through flat-fee arrangements. It will pay 16 law firms lump sums to handle various portfolios of work, such as litigation and tax matters. "I have told firms you cannot make your historical profit margins" on Pfizer work, said the pharmaceutical giant's general counsel, Amy Schulman.
At Sidley Austin LLP, Sara Gourley, a partner, said changes made by Pfizer have given her more freedom to put the best mix of lawyers on a legal matter. Pfizer used to have a rule that no lawyer with an hourly rate higher than a second-year attorney's could bill the drug company for legal research. Now that costs are fixed, Ms. Gourley says, she has been able to assign a senior associate to perform Pfizer legal research who could get the answers much more quickly than a junior lawyer might. (WSJ)
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Gut Reactions: Moral Conviction, Religiosity, and Trust in Authority
Gut Reactions: Moral Conviction, Religiosity, and Trust in Authority
Daniel C. Wisneski, Brad L. Lytle, and Linda J. Skitka
Psychological Science: Research, Theory, & Application
Morality and religiosity are often thought to go hand-in-hand, but theories in moral development suggest that religious beliefs tend to require the ongoing presence of external leaders and rules, while moral beliefs are held even in the absence of such authorities and institutions. New research shows morality and religiosity also have different effects on our trust in political leaders. When volunteers were asked about a controversial issue, those with stronger moral convictions expressed greater doubt that political authorities would make the "right" decision about the issue, while religious people had more trust in the political authorities. Results also suggest that these opinions stem from gut reactions rather than deliberation. (Psychological Science)

Daniel C. Wisneski, Brad L. Lytle, and Linda J. Skitka
Psychological Science: Research, Theory, & Application
Morality and religiosity are often thought to go hand-in-hand, but theories in moral development suggest that religious beliefs tend to require the ongoing presence of external leaders and rules, while moral beliefs are held even in the absence of such authorities and institutions. New research shows morality and religiosity also have different effects on our trust in political leaders. When volunteers were asked about a controversial issue, those with stronger moral convictions expressed greater doubt that political authorities would make the "right" decision about the issue, while religious people had more trust in the political authorities. Results also suggest that these opinions stem from gut reactions rather than deliberation. (Psychological Science)
Monday, July 27, 2009
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
As EMC choses McAfee over its own RSA Security division for Mozy security, EMC's head of RSA, Coviello, says McAfee is all wrong
"Anti-virus software is less effective every year" because of the
speed with which malicious hackers now generate new viruses to test
vulnerabilities, declares Arthur Coviello, president of RSA, the
security division of EMC Corp. "By the time a security company sees it and figures out an anti-virus [software fix], there are 30 more viruses."
Coviello is not giving up on winning. His point is that security must evolve beyond protecting a network's perimeters--hard points to determine as big data centers interconnect more frequently. And there are ever more types of devices for accessing a network. Security must be augmented with a means of organizing and protecting the most critical data in a system, he says, by putting that software into the management layer that controls the core of the system, and having it guard the most vital information. That way even if attackers penetrate the system the most important stuff is protected with security software that, among other features, looks for anomalies in the way the data are being used--such as, for example, if someone is seeking to transfer sensitive files to previously unknown computers in Latvia.
According to Coviello, ensuring that key data are protected by a close tie to the management layer of a data center is not something a security company can do on its own but only in conjunction with a larger provider of software and services for the network. In this world, he says, "there is no reason for an independent security industry to exist." (Forbes, ChannelWeb)
speed with which malicious hackers now generate new viruses to test
vulnerabilities, declares Arthur Coviello, president of RSA, the
security division of EMC Corp. "By the time a security company sees it and figures out an anti-virus [software fix], there are 30 more viruses."
Coviello is not giving up on winning. His point is that security must evolve beyond protecting a network's perimeters--hard points to determine as big data centers interconnect more frequently. And there are ever more types of devices for accessing a network. Security must be augmented with a means of organizing and protecting the most critical data in a system, he says, by putting that software into the management layer that controls the core of the system, and having it guard the most vital information. That way even if attackers penetrate the system the most important stuff is protected with security software that, among other features, looks for anomalies in the way the data are being used--such as, for example, if someone is seeking to transfer sensitive files to previously unknown computers in Latvia.
According to Coviello, ensuring that key data are protected by a close tie to the management layer of a data center is not something a security company can do on its own but only in conjunction with a larger provider of software and services for the network. In this world, he says, "there is no reason for an independent security industry to exist." (Forbes, ChannelWeb)
Interestingly, McAfee's CEO happens to be a former EMC exec.
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