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Terr says...

What’s the fundamental question at the core of capitalism? “The question of how you have the right sort of performance with integrity,” said Ben W. Heinman, former General Counsel for GE and Senior Fellow at Harvard University’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs. 

I think of performance with integrity in terms of the “social purpose” of corporations – a concept that has three key ingredients:

1. Return on Integrity: Telling the truth and being transparent, establishing an “ethical balance sheet”, and ensuring accountability among directors and executives through good governance.

2. Responsible Products and Services: Ensuring that what you make or do has as small an impact on the environment as is possible, choosing suppliers whose operations align with your environmental and social priorities, and marketing what you do in a way that isn’t manipulative – especially among children or others that may be easily influenced.

3. Social Impact: Aligning with social issues and social organizations that resonate with who your company is and what is does, demonstrating the social outcomes of your investments in the community, and understanding and addressing the needs of your employees.

Have you defined and operationalized the social purpose of your business?

More on this topic (What's this?)

GE Sets Up Comcast Venture With Buy of Vivendi’s NBC Universal Stake (Money Morning, 12/1/09)

New Technology Turns Coal Into Clean, High-Powered Gas (Money Morning, 11/19/09)

Read more on General Electric Company at Wikinvest

Filed under: Services

I'm always accused that i give some of my best ideas away for free. i know i do but hey, i could fall over and die tomorrow and then my not sharing would be like a bedroom dj with the best mix in the world but nobody gets to hear it. While putting together audiogravity for the 29th of October (yes i know i'm mega behind - catching up today/tomorrow) i had a link for a twitter user lv who is a designer at twitter. Apart from his lightweight personal website i noticed this icon/branding on his account top right. I've seen it before, the translators are doing different language versions of twitter.

But it got me thinking. Surely, the way forward for twitter to make money (this staying alive) is to build a system so that people who use twitter can do micro versions of what sites like ebay, linkedin already do and mash them together with similar things like foursquare, dopplr do - i'm talking about a geo located bunch of products and services to allow me as a verified, social grid authentic user to be able to put together actions. below are some of the actions i suggest could work really well.

barter/trade/swap
I want to barter, trade or swap something - you charge me a fee and people who are looking for this stuff can message or DM an account with things they have and get DM's from people making you offers, twitter could hook up with google checkout or build their own homebrew micropayments system to collect such payments. Maybe interface into ebay and other places in the same way that posterous can autopost to a variety of locations - why can we not do the same thing for being able to source stuff.

a faster freecycle model
you have the network of users, realtime search for stuff people are throwing away, mashups a plenty for stuff in your local area that you can have access too often for free.

work from geo location to geo location
this has been high on my list for some time, would it not be fantastic to have already scheduled meetings or meetups with people along your geo route or on your travels. i had been hoping dopplr might have done this some time ago but i have yet to see it. twitter could be used as the perfect event management tool for setting up location meetings, pair or otherwise and could be used as the middleman to take payment - even down to the meeting actually swapping codes to authorise payments when you had got the work done by the person you met. this could then feed back into your skills rating system that would be on display to other twitter users so you can see who you worked with thus boosting your potential to get more work. a real time cv of your skills and services for your social grid to see. imagine having a journey from one town to another but having to stop two or three times on route to fit in a few hours work or skills before you got to your destination. twitter could be your personal gps work guide, managing your workflow between events and doing all your micro billing for you dependant on a rate/workload that you suggest your prepared to do between two points. huge potential for recruitment agencies that can shift to realtime, realtime billing and supply and demand for workers.

I've got a ton more of these. If interested. Give me a job! :)

Filed under: services

unugurn says...

ServiWin 1.38: displays the list of installed drivers and services on your system. http://bit.ly/1mGn5W

Filed under: services

BobDeMarco says...

This should be disconcerting to investors. Could be an indication of storm clouds on the horizon.

Original content Bob DeMarco, All American Investor

Subscribe to All American Investor via Email

Kindle: Amazon's 6" Wireless Reading Device

Original content Bob DeMarco, All American Investor

Filed under: services

txc says...

  
(download)

I am offering my services/profession to the public. Please hire me as an editor, indexer, researcher, or maker of bibliographies for psychology textbooks.

Filed under: services

Fred Jame says...

Dropbox is a great service: it allows users to keep everything (yes, everything) in sync between multiple devices. I daily use Dropbox in my workflow to backup my Yojimbo library and share stuff with my friends and co-workers, and I’m very satisfied. If you’re new to Dropbox, you can signup with this referrall link and, besides testing the service, you’ll make me earn 250 extra MB. (and I will thank you in one way or another)

Filed under: services

netlex says...

Consultation publique jusqu’au 31 décembre 2009 sur le rapport de Bruno Deletré sur le thème du contrôle du respect des obligations professionnelles à l’égard de la clientèle afin d’assurer une meilleure protection des consommateurs de produits et de services financiers. Les principales propositions soumises à consultation sont :

– obligation transversale de loyauté à l’égard de la clientèle : le rapport propose d’introduire dans la loi une nouvelle disposition exigeant des banques, des assurances et de tous les intermédiaires financiers qu’ils mettent en place les procédures leur permettant de s’assurer qu’ils agissent de manière loyale vis-à-vis de leur clientèle. Le rapport propose que le respect de cette obligation soit soumis à supervision de la part des autorités de contrôle ;

– le rapport propose que cette obligation de loyauté soit déclinée au moyen de « recommandations concertées » qui seraient approuvées par les autorités de contrôle, après concertation avec les consommateurs et les professionnels ;

– renforcement du contrôle des intermédiaires financiers : le rapport propose de confier à des associations professionnelles représentatives des intermédiaires financiers le contrôle de leurs adhérents à la condition que ces associations soient préalablement agréées puis contrôlées au fil de l’eau par les autorités de contrôle et de supervision du secteur financier.

source : 3 novembre 2009 - Christine Lagarde lance une consultation publique sur les propositions du rapport de la mission de Bruno Deletré sur la commercialisation des produits financiers www.economie.gouv.fr

____________________

Rapport (pdf)

 

Filed under: services

(This is not my graphic. If someone can tell me the source, I will certainly link to give creator credit.)

[EDIT: Thanks to @640k for providing me the link to the article the above graphic came from. As it's from Gizmodo, I would've found it in my feed later tonight, but I'm glad to update now anyway: http://gizmodo.com/5391707/losing-net-neutrality-the-worst-case-scenario - looks like the original source is here: http://bit.ly/2CT0bm]

Just a great example to explain to people what losing the Net Neutrality fight is all about. In the same way you WISH you could get every channel in a cable television package, but have to pay extra, the picture above shows what the net WILL resemble when ISPs start to package tiers of services ON TOP of your existing broadband speeds.

If there was ever a reason to rally people behind Net Neutrality, the ominous threats of inequity, cost-for-access, and price gouging are just some we need to worry about. I fear the Information Age is going to become laden with explicit Information Tolls.

Ask not for whom the web tolls - it will toll worldwide.

Filed under: services

Terr says...

SDialogue announced today that the National Association of Mothers’ Centers (NAMC) was the winner of the firm’s “S Contest.” SDialogue will work with NAMC in an engagement of up to two months, worth $10,000 in sustainability strategy and communications services.

  Linda Juergens, Executive Director at NAMC, said “There is no way to underestimate how crucial a sustainability strategy is for organizations, particularly non-profits which are facing increasing challenges in the current economic environment.  The NAMC is thrilled to have this opportunity to work with a firm like SDialogue to accomplish our mission of supporting care giving work.”

  SDialogue had promoted the contest and voting process through various social media platforms, advertising and the press. The contest began with 40 entrants, describing why their organizations were worthy of such services and how winning could benefit them.  The winner was selected through a community vote at an online SDialogue contest page, after SDialogue narrowed the field to five finalists.

  The contest ended with over 2,000 votes coming in for the five finalists and NAMC clearly taking the lead. Beth Bengtson, partner at SDialogue, said “We’re thrilled with the level of participation and the quality of the entrants. While we felt that all of the finalists were great organizations and worthy of our services, the community spoke and chose NAMC. We look forward to the opportunity of working with them and furthering their cause.”

  The five finalists were as follows:
·     icouldbe.org
icouldbe.org is a pioneer in the emerging online mentoring industry reaching young people who do not have access to quality educational resources, using a dynamic virtual learning environment to connect them to mentors who offer practical and individualized advice, information and expertise.
·     People Capital
People Capital is an early-stage, socially-responsible firm that aims to address the funding gap between higher education costs and federal loans and grants - a $113 billion market.
·     National Association of Mothers' Centers
The NAMC has a 35 year history of life-changing mother-to-mother support and connections, addressing mothers’ unique needs and experiences within a unique culture of mutual respect. Our programs impact not just mothers, but children and families too.
·     Speak Shop
Speak Shop provides face-to-face Spanish tutoring via webcam with teachers in Guatemala and Nicaragua. Customers schedule lessons at their convenience and pay about $10 per one-hour lesson. Teachers gain business and technology skills while working at a fair wage as micro-entrepreneurs.
·     Sweetriot
Sweetriot is an activist candy company based in New York City and is creating a sweet movement to FIX the world! Sweetriot sources and produces our cacao directly in Latin America and uses recyclable, reusable packaging which features emerging artists.

  About SDialogue: SDialogue is an award-winning, full-service sustainability strategy & communications firm. Founded in 2003, well before the recent green marketing craze brought everyone on the bandwagon, SDialogue has helped clients that have included Ben & Jerry’s, National Geographic, Working Assets and Yale University, among dozens of others. www.sDialogue.com

  About NAMC: The National Association of Mothers’ Centers recognizes the challenges, realities and value of mothering and advocates for support of care giving work. Since 1975 their community-building model has laid the foundation for hundreds of programs in local centers, in libraries and in the workplace. These programs offer mothers, fathers and other caregivers a sense of camaraderie, peer support, empathy, information, and resources. http://www.motherscenter.org/

Filed under: Services

divia says...

Click here to download:
First_Letters.workflow.zip (42 KB)

Lately I've been somewhat into memorizing some of my favorite quotations from books. The most effective method I've found for doing so has been converting each word of whatever text I'm trying to memorize to just the first letter, and trying to reconstruct the passage from that. Here's the theory behind why this is helpful:

This is the crucial concept of any type of memorization. The act of reading something you want to memorize fires different connections than the act of recalling. This means that simply reading a particular piece of text over and over again is going to be the long road to memorization. You need to let your brain practice recalling the data so it can strengthen the same pathways that will fire when you need to remember the information later on. You can’t practice recalling until the information is at least partially contained in your short term memory.
-How to Memorize Verbatim Text

So, say I want to memorize this passage from Pawn in Frankincense by Dorothy Dunnett:

The woman sitting there, straight and still on the bright velvet cushions, was not young; nor was she less than beautiful. The black hair, loose and shining, and deep, fell back over her shoulder and forward down to her waist; her chin was high above the pure line of her neck, which you could have held in one hand. Her eyebrows were black, and arched in pride, or surprise, or over some deep, long-held thought; and below the black, silky lashes, the wide eyes were packed full of straw.

Here's what it gets converted to:

T w s t, s a s o t b v c, w n y; n w s l t b. T b h, l a s, a d, f b o h s a f d t h w; h c w h a t p l o h n, w y c h h i o h. H e w b, a a i p, o s, o o s d, l-h t; a b t b, s l, t w e w p f o s.

The website that describes this method provides a helpful JavaScript tool for performing this conversion, but before too long I was finding copying text into the box on the website a little unwieldy. So, I grabbed the relevant regular expression from the JavaScript code (str.replace(/(\w)\w*/g,"$1")) and turned it into an OS X Service, a transformation that, luckily for me, Snow Leopard has made very easy. All the service does is grab some text, run a simple sed replace command (sed 's/\([a-zA-Z0-9]\)[a-zA-Z0-9]*/\1/g'), and output it.

In case this tool I've created could be at all useful to anyone else, I figured I might as well upload it.  To install it, just put it in either /Library/Services or ~/Library/Services.

Filed under: Services