joi, 25 octombrie 2012

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


Pool Fails Compilation 2012 [Video]

Posted: 25 Oct 2012 11:15 AM PDT


The best (most painful) swimming pool fails of the year, all in one video.


Hot Girls of the Electric Daisy Carnival 2012

Posted: 25 Oct 2012 10:15 AM PDT

300,000 fans gathered at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway for Electric Daisy Carnival 2012. The EDC is an international annual electronic dance music festival held in the summertime in the United States and Puerto Rico.












































































Shishi-Maru Cat is the Star of Instagram

Posted: 25 Oct 2012 09:50 AM PDT

Shishi-Maru is a Scottish fold cat, which means he has a gene mutation that makes his ears bend forward and down. This cute cat has become an internet sensation!












































































32 Childhood Crushes Then And Now

Posted: 25 Oct 2012 09:13 AM PDT

There's nothing like your first celebrity crush. You probably developed a love for them before you even formed a love for boys you actually knew and their posters covered every inch of your wall despite your parents protests. So, do you still have the hots for them?
































































Via Buzzfeed


Music in the Cloud [Infographic]

Posted: 25 Oct 2012 08:44 AM PDT

Much like the Rock n Roll Hall of Game, the cloud music scene is full of rockstars with unique 'personalities.' This infographic takes account of which cloud music service has no ads, offers no ads with payments, has a mobile app, is usable offline, allows you full library access and also includes the number of songs they have in their service, users and just how much it'll cost you to be a member.

Click on Image to Enlarge.

Via Visual.ly


The Science of Dogs

Posted: 25 Oct 2012 08:33 AM PDT

This comic is most likely based on personal experience with dogs, and we can all agree its conclusions are valid. And we love them anyway.

Click on Image to Enlarge.

Via thedoghousediaries


What Does "X% of Queries" Mean?

What Does "X% of Queries" Mean?


What Does "X% of Queries" Mean?

Posted: 24 Oct 2012 08:00 PM PDT

Posted by Dr. Pete

Over the past few months, we’ve seen a number of public statements from Google regarding algorithm updates that sound something like this:

Tweet from Matt Cutts - "0.3% of English queries noticeably affected"

Tweet from Google - "Fewer than 0.7% of queries noticeably affected"

Notice the carefully chosen phrase “X% of queries noticeably affected”. Those statements sound very specific, but once you stop to think about them, you’re inevitably left with a couple of questions: (1) percent of which queries?, and (2) exactly how much is “noticeably”?

Percent of Which Queries?

When most of us hear “X% of queries”, I think we naturally assume unique queries (different keyphrases), but there are really two interpretations: (1) unique queries, and (2) total query volume.  Here’s an example, from a conversation I posted on Google+ - let’s say that we live in a world where there are only four searches anyone ever uses:

  1. “iphone 5”
  2. “justin bieber”
  3. “platypus pants”
  4. “charlie sheen”

If we ran 100 searches on our parallel universe version of Google, the volume would be distributed to our four keyphrases as follows:

  1. 50
  2. 40
  3. 9
  4. 1

That's right - suck it, Charlie Sheen. Now, let's say that query (c) is impacted by an algorithm update. By definition #1, this would affect 25% of queries. By definition #2, that same algo update would only affect 9% of queries.

I’ve put this question to Google a couple of times, and while they didn’t reply directly, a few people were kind enough to repeat it. Jacob Klein’s tweet to Matt Cutts got the following reply:

Tweet from Jacob Klein

Tweet (reply) from Matt Cutts

It’s not quite an official statement, but I’ll take it. In most cases, Google is talking about overall query volume. I wouldn’t read too much into the “typically” – Matt naturally doesn’t want to commit to “% of queries affected” only ever having one meaning when uttered by any Google employee. I’m comfortable, though, that Google’s recent statements refer to query volume. This also makes sense from the way Google views the data – overall volume is probably much easier to measure than unique queries.

I don't think Google is being deliberately cryptic in this particular case – the statement is simply ambiguous. As SEOs, we naturally think of "queries" in terms of unique keywords, because that's what we track. Google thinks in terms of overall search volume and each query is a discrete unit..

How Much is “Noticeably”?

So, now that we know we’re talking about query volume, what’s this “noticeably affected” bit all about? Does any change count, or does it have to be significant? Hat tip to Matt McGee for reporting on a follow-up conversation that sheds some light on this one:

Tweet from Rob Watts

Tweet from Matt Cutts

It’s not quite cut-and-dry, and the definition of “noticeable” may be a little complex, but basically they’re talking about Page 1 changes and probably even flux in the first few rankings. A query where the #32 ranked keyword drops to #34 isn’t going to be counted as “noticeably affected” by an algorithm update.

Knowing Is X% of the Battle

So, when Google refers to “X% of queries noticeably affected” they mean the total volume of queries and a significant change in the Top 10. Since we don’t see the entire universe of queries that they do or really know the relative volume, this still leaves a lot to interpretation, but I think any little bit of transparency helps at this point. It’s a useful gauge of relative impact as Google uses the same metric across multiple updates.

Keep in mind, though, that any given query either impacts you or doesn’t impact you. Don’t rely on the aggregate statistics – pay attention to what matters to you. Look at it this way – unemployment was just under 8% in the US in September, but you and I either have a job or we don’t. That 8% may be a useful gauge of economic prosperity or the effectiveness of our leaders, but ultimately we have to be aware of our own situation. If an update only impacts 0.3% of queries, but your money term was one of them, knowing that 99.7% of queries were untouched won’t be of much comfort to you.

For reference, I've recently added Google's impact percentages to the MozCast Events page. This page lists recent algorithm updates, along with the severity as measured both by MozCast temperature and Google's publicly stated percentage, to allow for easy comparisons.


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A Chat with Jay Leno

The White House Your Daily Snapshot for
Thursday, October 25, 2012
 
A Chat with Jay Leno

President Barack Obama jokes with host Jay Leno in-between segments of "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" in Burbank, Calif., Oct. 24, 2012. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

President Barack Obama jokes with host Jay Leno in-between segments of "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" in Burbank, Calif., Oct. 24, 2012. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

Get Tickets for the 2012 National Christmas Tree Lighting

On December 6th, we'll celebrate the lighting of the National Christmas Tree on the Ellipse just outside the White House. You can watch the whole event online, but if you'll be in Washington, DC, you can get tickets to be there in person.

Learn more about the lighting of the National Christmas Tree, and how to attend.

In Case You Missed It

Here are some of the top stories from the White House blog:

United Nations Day
On October 24, 1945, 67 years ago yesterday, 51 founding member states came together to form the United Nations.

Data Set for Entry-Into-Force of the U.S.-Panama Trade Promotion
On Monday, U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk and Panamanian Minister of Commerce and Industry Ricardo Quijano exchanged letters setting a date for the entry-into-force of the U.S.-Panama Trade Promotion Agreement (TPA).

Weekly Address: Congress Should Join the President to Help Responsible Homeowners
President Obama urges Congress to act to build on the momentum we are seeing in the housing market by helping responsible homeowners refinance, saving $3000 a year.

Today's Schedule

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (EDT).

6:50 AM: The President arrives Tampa, Florida

8:45 AM: The President delivers remarks at a campaign event

9:50 AM: The President departs Tampa, Florida

12:05 PM: The President arrives Richmond, Virginia

1:15 PM: The President delivers remarks at a campaign event

2:30 PM: The President departs Richmond, Virginia

4:25 PM: The President arrives Chicago, Illinois

5:10 PM: The President votes early in-person

7:00 PM: The President departs Chicago, Illinois

7:30 PM: The Vice President attends a prayer service for Senator George McGovern

8:15 PM: The President arrives Cleveland, Ohio

8:25 PM: The President delivers remarks at a campaign event

9:35 PM: The President departs Cleveland, Ohio

10:50 PM: The President arrives Joint Base Andrews

11:05 PM: The President arrives the White House

Get Updates


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Seth's Blog : The only purpose of 'customer service'...

 

The only purpose of 'customer service'...

is to change feelings. Not the facts, but the way your customer feels. The facts might be the price, or a return, or how long someone had to wait for service. Sometimes changing the facts is a shortcut to changing feelings, but not always, and changing the facts alone is not always sufficient anyway.

If a customer service protocol (your call center/complaints department/returns policy) is built around stall, deny, begrudge and finally, to the few who persist, acquiesce, then it might save money, but it is a total failure.

The customer who seeks out your help isn't often looking to deplete your bank account. He is usually seeking validation, support and a path to feeling the way he felt before you let him down.

The best measurement of customer support is whether, after the interaction, the customer would recommend you to a friend. Time on the line, refunds given or the facts of the case are irrelevant. The feelings are all that matter, and changing feelings takes humanity and connection, not cash.



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miercuri, 24 octombrie 2012

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis


Eurozone Downturn Deepens, PMI at 40-Month Low; Manufacturing Weakness in Germany; Considerable Service and Manufacturing Contraction in France

Posted: 24 Oct 2012 12:19 PM PDT

This morning Markit released Eurozone, France, and Germany preliminary PMI reports. All show further deterioration.

Germany

Markit Flash Germany PMI® shows Manufacturing weakness behind moderate drop in German private sector output during October.
Summary

At 48.1 in October, the seasonally adjusted Markit Flash Germany Composite Output Index was down from 49.2 during September and signalled a further moderate reduction in overall private sector business activity. The index has now posted below the neutral 50.0 value for six consecutive months. With the latest reading close to the average for Q3 2012 (47.9), the latest survey suggests an ongoing lack of momentum across the German private sector economy.

Lower levels of output were recorded in both the manufacturing and service sectors during October, with the former indicating the sharper decline over the month. The slight drop in services activity followed signs of stabilisation during September, while the sub-50 index reading for manufacturing production was the seventh in as many months.

Manufacturers pointed to a sharp and accelerated decrease in new orders intakes during October, thereby extending the current period of decline to 16 months. Reports from survey respondents overwhelmingly cited weakness in export markets, especially southern Europe. A number of firms also mentioned subdued demand from the automobiles sector. Some panel members pointed to signs of a slowdown in Asia, especially for investment goods. Overall levels of new work from abroad in the manufacturing sector dropped at the second-fastest rate since April 2009 (only exceeded by the fall this August).

Comment

Commenting on the Markit Flash Germany PMI® survey data, Tim Moore, Senior Economist at Markit said:

"Germany's private sector suffered a disappointing lack of momentum in October, reversing the signs of a step in the right direction during the previous month. The 'flash' output index fell back from September's four-month high largely in response to a sharper drop in manufacturing production.
France

Markit Flash France PMI® shows further marked contraction of French private sector output at start of Q4.
Summary

The performance of the French private sector economy remained weak in October. The latest Flash PMI® data signalled only a slight easing in the rate of decline of output from September's three-and-a-half year record. The Markit Flash France Composite Output Index, based on around 85% of normal monthly survey replies, registered 44.8, showing only a small rise from the previous figure of 43.2.

Although moderating since the previous month, rates of contraction remained considerable for both services and manufacturing output.

Panellists generally attributed lower activity levels to a further drop in incoming new business. The index measuring overall new work was only marginally above September's 41-month low, and remained indicative of a steep pace of decline. Anecdotal evidence pointed to weak demand conditions amid a difficult economic climate. There were reports that clients, especially some firms in the autos sector, had postponed orders and reined in investment due to a lack of confidence in the outlook. Manufacturers again recorded a particularly steep drop in new work, primarily reflective of domestic weakness but also affected by the fastest fall in export sales since May 2009.

The rate of decline in employment in the French private sector remained marked in October, holding steady from September's 33-month record. Job shedding was broad-based across the manufacturing and service sectors.
Eurozone Downturn Deepens, PMI at 40-Month Low

Markit Flash Eurozone PMI® shows the Eurozone downturn deepens at start of fourth quarter as PMI hits 40-month low.
Key Points

  • Flash Eurozone PMI Composite Output Index at 45.8 (46.1 in September). 40-month low.
  • Flash Eurozone Services PMI Activity Index at 46.2 (46.1 in September). Two-month high.
  • Flash Eurozone Manufacturing PMI at 45.3 (46.1 in September). Two-month low.
  • Flash Eurozone Manufacturing PMI Output Index at 44.8 (45.9 in September). Two-month low.

Summary

The Markit Eurozone PMI® Composite Output Index fell for a third successive month, down from 46.1 in September to 45.8 in October, according to the preliminary 'flash' reading based on around 85% of usual monthly replies. Output has fallen continually since September of last year with the exception of a marginal increase in January.

Output continued to fall in response to a further marked contraction in new orders. The rate of decline in new business eased slightly since September, which had seen the largest drop since June 2009.

PMI vs. GDP



Comments

Commenting on the flash PMI data, Chris Williamson, Chief Economist at Markit said:

"The Eurozone has slid further into decline at the start of the fourth quarter. The survey is running at a level which is historically consistent with the region's economy contracting at a quarterly rate of over 0.5%. Official data have shown surprising resilience over the summer compared to the survey data, but the underlying business climate has clearly deteriorated markedly in recent months. While GDP may decline only modestly in the third quarter, a steeper fall looks to be on the cards for the fourth quarter."

"The financial markets may have cheered the positive developments from policymakers in seeking to resolve the region's debt crisis, notably the promise of bond market intervention by the ECB, but business appears to have been less impressed. Sentiment about prospects for the year ahead are now the gloomiest since early-2009,
when the post-Lehman Brothers crisis was in full swing."

"In addition to worries about the health of domestic markets, companies are also seeing demand weaken further afield, notably in Asia and, to a lesser extent, the US. Worries about the outlook have translated into further job losses, suggesting companies are moving increasingly into cost-cutting mode. Even Germany is not immune, with October seeing the first back-to-back monthly fall in employment since early-2010."
Agreement with Markit

For a change, I am in 100% agreement with Chris Williamson. European GDP has been resilient but do not expect it to last. Germany has been resilient and do not expect that to last either.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com


Draghi Defends Bond Purchases With Warning of Deflation; Lies From Draghi on ECB Mandate and Mopping Up Liquidity

Posted: 24 Oct 2012 08:52 AM PDT

If you are going to tell a lie, make it as big and credible as you can by wrapping the lies with a platitude of half-truths. ECB president Mario Draghi did just that today with a spirited defense of bond purchases, coupled with a warning about deflation.

Paragraphs in italics below are from the above Bloomberg link. My comments follow immediately.

The ECB's so-called Outright Monetary Transactions "will not lead to inflation," Draghi told lawmakers in Berlin in a closed-door session, according to a text provided by the ECB. "In our assessment, the greater risk to price stability is currently falling prices in some euro-area countries," he said. "In this sense, OMTs are not in contradiction to our mandate: in fact, they are essential for ensuring we can continue to achieve it."

The problem with such nonsense is you cannot break the law while screaming you are upholding it. Draghi now sounds and acts like hypocrite US presidents of both political parties.

Both president Bush and president Obama (as well as the treasury departments under each administration) have shown little concern for the law. Increasingly presidents are of the mind "we have to destroy capitalism to save it" or as President Bush stated (and Obama practices)"I've abandoned free-market principles to save the free-market system."

For further elaboration, please see The Most Redeeming Feature of Capitalism is Failure.

"OMTs will not lead to disguised financing of governments," Draghi said. "All this is fully consistent with the Treaty's prohibition on monetary financing. Moreover, they will focus on shorter maturities and leave room for market discipline."

Translation: The OMT is disguised financing of governments. Moreover, should "market discipline" get out of line with what the ECB wants, rest assured maturities will be extended on the "whatever it takes" mandate.

Draghi explained that the ECB's intervention is necessary "because confidence in the euro has been disturbed," said Priska Hinz, the Green party's budget spokeswoman.

Confidence is disturbed because the euro is fundamentally flawed and it's too late to fix it. Certainly one huge nanny-state led by Brussels is not going to fix anything. The nanny-state will only make things worse.

Draghi said the program won't compromise the ECB's independence because it requires governments to agree to conditions. The program doesn't create "excessive risks" for euro-area taxpayers, he added, according to the ECB text.

"Such risks would only materialize if a country were to run unsound policies," Draghi said.

Unsound policies, like the ones they are running now?

Bond purchases won't fuel inflation because the ECB will absorb the liquidity created by those interventions, Draghi said.

That is a direct lie as is his opening gambit of claiming that breaking the treaty is within mandate. Yes, the ECB sterilizes the bonds it buys. However, the ECB will also accept those bonds right back as collateral for cash, thereby pumping up base money supply. The ECB has no intention of absorbing liquidity in actual practice.

Real Problem is Not Deflation

By the way, I would be remiss if I failed to point out the problem is not "deflation". Rather, deflation only seems bad because of the excess leverage that the Fed and the ECB allowed to build up.

The real problem is unsound money and fractional reserve lending coupled with misguided policies of central banks and out of control budgets everywhere one looks.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com


Romney Way to Left of Paul Krugman, Erza Klein, and President Obama on Trade Issues; An Idea Whose Time Never Was; Half-Right Better Than All-Wrong

Posted: 24 Oct 2012 12:52 AM PDT

As amazing as it may seem, alleged conservative Mitt Romney's position on trade with China is now way to the left of that taken by leading liberal Democrats including Erza Klein who writes for the Washington Post, and Paul Krugman and his New York Times "Conscience of a Liberal" blog

Paul Krugman comments on An Issue Whose Time Has Passed written just prior to the debate on foreign policy between Romney and Obama.
Chinese currency manipulation may come up in tonight's debate — and as someone who wanted the US to take a tougher line back in 2010, I guess I should weigh in.

Basically, as Ezra Klein says, this is an issue whose time has passed.

In 2010 an undervalued renminbi was a significant drag on advanced economies, including the United States. Since then, however, two big things have happened: relatively high inflation in China, and some appreciation of the renminbi against the dollar. As a result, the real exchange rate of China against the United States (based on consumer prices), has appreciated significantly:



At the same time. China's surplus has come way down:

Odd Times Indeed

The conclusion of Krugman's article is most amusing.

Krugman stakes out a claim that Romney's position is based on politics: "This is an odd time to be making confrontation over China's currency a centerpiece of your economic policy — unless, of course, it's just bluster aimed at making voters think you're tough."

On that score, Krugman may very well be correct. I can even spell out the politics in four simple characters "OHIO".

However, it is also possible Romney is not the economic wizard most Republicans think he is.

Certainly, when it comes to trade, Romney is no conservative or even a moderate. Rather Romney has staked out a claim that has union "progressives" cheering. Either he is a free-trade dunce or he is playing politics. I leave it to the reader to decide.

Amusingly, this seems to be an equally "odd time" for Krugman and Klein to come out of the blue to be more tolerant of free trade. Had Obama been threatening to label China a currency manipulator and Romney supportive of free trade, would Krugman and Klein have chimed in?

An Idea Whose Time Never Was

I seldom agree with anything Klein writes but his Washington Post article Five Facts You Need to Know About China's Currency Manipulation is well written and basically but not entirely correct.

My problem with this debate is simple: free trade is always a good idea. It was a good idea in 2000, 2004, 2008, and now. There was never a good time to start a trade war with China.

Also note that Klein and  Krugman are merely way more tolerant of free trade, not exactly free trade advocates.

In Praise of Cheap Labor

In Fair Trade is Unfair; In Praise of Cheap Labor; Are Bad Jobs at Bad Wages Better than No Jobs at All? I laid out a claim why free trade is always good.

Please read the article if you haven't already, it contains a nice surprise in regards to my stated position.

In that article, I also asked another question "Are Paul Krugman and Mitt Romney On the Same Page?" On that score I erroneously concluded they were. Apologies offered to Paul Krugman.

Half-Right Better Than All-Wrong

Even though free trade is always good, at least Krugman and Klein see no compelling reason to start a trade war with China now. Romney on the other hand does.

Thus, (politics or not) the current positions of Krugman and Klein are far more reasonable than the pro-union position of Romney.

Whether Romney hopes to appease Ohio union voters or he is a free-trade dunce, the essential point is Romney is simply "all wrong" when it comes to China.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com

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