I so needed this. I will be applying this to my entrepreneurial toolkit! Please note how it says do one thing at a time. So much for multi-tasking.
via the swiss-miss blog
I just stopped over at my friend BB’s blog and had to chuckle upon discovering the-above-oh-so-familiar photo. It’s the »How to Work Better« Mural is by Swiss artists Fischli & Weiss and covers an office building in Zurich-Oerlikon. You can prominently see it from the train when you get into Zurich station.
Fonte: herbrainsdailychurn
► Lightroom Before & After Shots. Via Flickr: Interior Architecture
Looks like it came straight out of Mirror’s Edge.
Fonte: cubagallery
Per aiutare gli stati in crisi i ricchi vogliono essere tassati di più:
- Come si fa a pagare le tasse?
- Bisognerà informarsi.
(da Hebdo)
Fonte: ilfascinodelvago
Shamablanca
Questo finisce nella mia wishlist su Amazon:
“ Tutti sono dei falsi-gettoni. Tutti degli ipocriti. Una banda di coglioni degenerati che non si rinnovano. Una banda di tarati che scorreggiano più in alto di tutti i sederi riuniti. Lei mi fa arrabbiare…Eccola, 28 anni, il Rolex di chi puo’, il matrimonio che uccide, stabilizza e quindi l’autorizza a non fermarsi: “Allora cara, quando è il tuo turno? Non resti che tu”. (…) Hamza è un marocchino medio a tutti i livelli, dalla semplicità cubica: famiglia, dio, patria. Un ragazzo con gli occhiali dissimulati dietro alle sue certezze: studi, lavoro, far piacere a sua madre, sposarsi, costruire una casa, acquistare un auto, generare, acquistare un auto più grande, assicurarsi, un credito, generare, diversi crediti, un altra assicurazione, preghiere, riscattare i suoi peccati, morire. Nel corso della vita, dimenticare di vivere”.
Molto altro qui.
Fonte: glynnthomas
Crazy Montreal Nights by Big Killa-EF on Flickr.
Killa EF
Fonte: badlyseen
Planned economy, USA version
These guys come straight from USSR planned economy mindset:
The president’s vision for Solyndra was backed by taxpayer guarantees to the tune of $535 million. TheNew York Times reports that $527 million of the guaranteed loan has already been spent. Solyndra is now filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. So much for propelling our economy. I was particularly struck by a quotation in the New York Times from a Department of Energy bureaucrat justifying the Solyndra loans:
“The project that we supported succeeded,” insisted Damien LaVera, a spokesman for the Department of Energy.
“The facility was producing the product it said it would produce, and consumers were buying the product,” he said. “The company struggled because the market has changed dramatically.”
The project “succeeded?” As Saturday Night Live’s Seth Meyers might say, “Really!?!”
Solar-industry analyst Peter Lynch explained to the Associated Press the chief problem faced by government-funded Solyndra:
“You make something in a factory and it costs $6, you sell it for $3, but you really, really need to sell it for $1.50 to be competitive,” Lynch said of Solyndra. “It was an insane business model. The numbers just don’t work, and they never did.”
For more background, see my article, “It’s Alive: Alternative energy subsidies make their biggest comeback since Jimmy Carter,” detailing the sad failed history of government energy RD&D subsidies.
It’s scary.
Amazing video.


