Friday, December 2, 2011

Hypo Venture Capital Headlines: EU determined to ensure eurozone financial stability

http://hypoventurecapital-research.com/

ZURICH: The European Union is “resolutely determined” to ensure the financial stability of the eurozone, the bloc’s President Herman Van Rompuy said Wednesday.
“We are resolutely determined to guarantee the financial stability of the eurozone, the stability of the eurozone is also vital for the world economy,” he told reporters after a meeting with Swiss President Micheline Calmy-Rey in Zurich.
Among topics raised during the discussions were bilateral relations between Switzerland and the European Union, as well as the eurozone debt crisis.
Calmy-Rey also signalled Switzerland’s support for Brussels in its fight to contain a public debt crisis, saying that it is in Bern’s interest that solutions are found “as the crisis is impacting our country on several counts.”
European stocks closed sharply lower Wednesday over fears that Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s decision to resign spells months of political uncertainty for Italy.
In a speech later Wednesday at the University of Zurich, Van Rompuy also stressed that Brussels’ key “aim is to keep the eurozone together with all the 17 participants on board.”
Beyond guaranteeing stability, it also needs to boost growth.
“Our duty is not only to guarantee the financial stability of the euro area. It is also and at the same time to stimulate economic growth. Another major challenge,” he said.
“In the end, only sustained economic growth can bring back confidence, create jobs and absorb debts,” he added.
At the same time, Van Rompuy also called on the EU’s trading partners to do their bit in preventing the world from sliding back into recession.
“It is the own self-interest of non-euro players that we put the eurozone’s difficulties behind us,” he said.
“But inversely, it is also in Europe’s interest that the US stabilises its public debt situation, or that China stimulates its domestic demand and make its exchange rate more flexible.
“Growth is a global responsibility. Some tend to forget this,” noted Van Rompuy.

Hypo Venture Capital Headlines: Debate on modern technology in the classroom needs a reboot

http://hypoventurecapital-financialideas.com/


There’s no doubt that technology brings with it some scary things. The scariest of them all is the uncertainty.
Human beings are creatures of habit and the introduction of anything new typically raises an eyebrow (at least) or pitchforks (more often). It’s a somewhat common theme that is tiresome to me, but one that provokes debate throughout the times.
The common gripe against smartphones and mobile devices is that they are shackles that handcuff an employee to their work – 24 hours a day and seven days a week.
While your boss may have an expectation that because you have a BlackBerry you should be responding to emails at 6 a.m. on a Saturday (emergency or not), this is less about your boss’s disposition and more about a lack of education as to how to use technology to get the best results.
Many people are shocked to hear my iPhone never makes a peep. I get one silent vibrate for text messages (and I’m quick to block those that I do not know) and two vibrations for a phone call.
My iPhone will not beep, vibrate or blink when emails, tweets or Facebook updates arrive. Why? It’s my job to best manage my technology (and not the other way around).
The people I work with know that email is the best form of communication with me and that if it’s an emergency, to please call.
On the other side of this communication, I check my emails (and other digital notifications) when I want to (not in the moment that they happen). The phone does ring, but it’s only on a rare occasion (for those emergencies).
There’s a macro lesson here: If you think your kid is spending too much time on their iPad and not enough time outside getting some exercise, don’t blame the iPad.

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Hypo Venture Capital: Hypo Venture Capital Zurich Headlines:Obama sees C...

Hypo Venture Capital: Hypo Venture Capital Zurich Headlines:Obama sees C...: http://hypoventurecapital-research.com/2011/05/hypo-venture-capital-zurich-headlinesobama-sees-china-as-a-partner-in-mars-mission/ WASHIN...

Hypo Venture Capital Zurich Headlines:Obama sees China as a partner in Mars mission

http://hypoventurecapital-research.com/2011/05/hypo-venture-capital-zurich-headlinesobama-sees-china-as-a-partner-in-mars-mission/


WASHINGTON — U.S. President Barack Obama views China as a potential partner for an eventual human mission to Mars that would be difficult for any single nation to undertake, a senior White House official told lawmakers.Testifying May 4 before the House Appropriations subcommittee on commerce, justice and science, White House science adviser John Holdren said near-term engagement with China in civil space will help lay the groundwork for any such future endeavor. He prefaced his remarks with the assertion that human exploration of Mars is a long-term proposition and that any discussion of cooperating with Beijing on such an effort is speculative.
“(What) the president has deemed worth discussing with the Chinese and others is that when the time comes for humans to visit Mars, it’s going to be an extremely expensive proposition and the question is whether it will really make sense — at the time that we’re ready to do that — to do it as one nation rather than to do it in concert,” Holdren said in response to a question from Rep. Frank Wolf, R-Va., a staunch China critic who chairs the powerful subcommittee that oversees NASA spending.
Holdren, who said NASA could also benefit from cooperating with China on detection and tracking of orbital debris, stressed that any U.S. collaboration with Beijing in manned spaceflight would depend on future Sino-U.S. relations.
“But many of us, including the president, including myself, including (NASA Administrator Charles) Bolden, believe that it’s not too soon to have preliminary conversations about what involving China in that sort of cooperation might entail,” Holdren said. “If China is going to be, by 2030, the biggest economy in the world … it could certainly be to our benefit to share the costs of such an expensive venture with them and with others.”
Wolf, who characterizes China’s government as “fundamentally evil,” said it is outrageous that the Obama administration would have close ties with Beijing’s space program, which is believed to be run primarily by the People’s Liberation Army, or PLA.
“When you say you want to work in concert, it’s almost like you’re talking about Norway or England or something like that,” an irate Wolf told Holdren, repeatedly pounding a hand against the table top in front of him. “As long as I have breath in me, we will talk about this, we will deal with this issue, whether it be a Republican administration or a Democrat administration, it is fundamentally immoral.”
Holdren said he admired Wolf’s leadership in calling attention to China’s human-rights record, but noted that even when then-U.S. President Ronald Reagan referred to the former Soviet Union as “the evil empire” in the late 1980s, he continued to cooperate with the communist bloc in science and technology if doing so was deemed in the U.S. national interest.
“The efforts we are undertaking to do things together with China in science and technology are very carefully crafted to be efforts that are in our own national interest,” Holdren said. “That does not mean that we admire the Chinese government; that does not mean we are blind to the human rights abuses.”
Holdren said that as White House science adviser, his capacity to influence the president’s diplomatic approach to Beijing is limited.
“I am not the person who’s going to be whispering in the president’s ear on what our stance toward China should be, government to government, except in the domain where I have the responsibility for helping the president judge whether particular activities in science and technology are in our national interest or not,” Holdren said.
Recently enacted legislation prohibits U.S. government collaboration with the Chinese in areas funded by Wolf’s subcommittee, whose jurisdiction also includes the U.S. Commerce and Justice departments, the National Science Foundation and the National Institute of Standards and Technology.
When asked how he interpreted the new law, part of a continuing resolution approved in April that funds federal agencies through Sept. 30, Holdren said the administration will live within the terms of the prohibition.
“I am instructed, after consultation with counsel, who in turn consulted with appropriate people in the Department of Justice, that that language should not be read as prohibiting actions that are part of the president’s constitutional authority to conduct negotiations,” Holdren said. “At the same time there are obviously a variety of aspects of that prohibition that very much apply and we’ll be looking at that on a case by case basis in (the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy) to be sure we are compliant.”
Rep. John Culberson, R-Texas, who joined Wolf last fall in opposing an official visit to Beijing by Bolden, accused Holdren and the White House of plotting to circumvent the law.
“It’s not ambiguous, it’s not confusing, but you just stated to the chairman of this committee that you and the administration have already embarked on a policy to evade and avoid this very specific and unambiguous requirement of law if in your opinion it is in furtherance of negotiation of a treaty,” Culberson said. “That’s exactly what you just said. I don’t want to hear about you not being a lawyer.”
Holdren said a variety of opinions and legal documents indicate the president has exclusive constitutional authority to determine the time, scope and objectives of international negotiations and discussions, as well as the authority to determine the preferred agents who will represent the United States in those exchanges.
Culberson reminded Holdren that the administration’s civil research and development funding flows through Wolf’s subcommittee, and that funding could be choked off if the White House fails to comply with the law.
“Your office cannot participate, nor can NASA, in any way, in any type of policy, program, order or contract of any kind with China or any Chinese-owned company,” Culberson said. “If you or anyone in your office, or anyone at NASA participates, collaborates or coordinates in any way with China or a Chinese-owned company … you’re in violation of this statute, and frankly you’re endangering your funding. You’ve got a huge problem on your hands. Huge.”

Monday, August 29, 2011

Hypo Venture Capital: Hypo Venture Capital Zurich Headlines: Apple, Noki...

Hypo Venture Capital: Hypo Venture Capital Zurich Headlines: Apple, Noki...: http://hypoventurecapital-research.com/ Following Google’s purchase of Motorola, a new report claims that Apple is still interested in a...

Hypo Venture Capital: Hypo Venture Capital Zurich Headlines: Raising Cap...

Hypo Venture Capital: Hypo Venture Capital Zurich Headlines: Raising Cap...: http://hypoventurecapital-research.com/2011/07/hypo-venture-capital-zurich-headlines-hacker-pleads-guilty-to-att-ipad-breach/ I’ve been ...

Hypo Venture Capital Zurich Headlines: Apple, Nokia show continued interest in InterDigital patents

http://hypoventurecapital-research.com/



Following Google’s purchase of Motorola, a new report claims that Apple is still interested in acquiring InterDigital, as are Nokia, Qualcomm and others in the wireless industry.
Citing sources familiar with the situation, Reuters reported Wednesday that “several companies” are “pondering bids” for wireless telecom specialist InterDigital Inc. The forthcoming auction of the company will be postponed from next week until sometime after Labor Day.
More time is necessary because potential bidders have reportedly asked for more times to analyze the company’s patents. Companies in the wireless industry are interested in securing those inventions as patent infringement lawsuits involving all of the major industry players continue to mount.
Sources also reportedly said it’s unknown whether Google will remain in pursuit of the InterDigital patents. The search giant was previously named as a potential bidder, but the announcement that it will buy Motorola for $12.5 billion may have changed those plans.
Apple was first named as a likely bidder on InterDigital in July. The company has 1,300 patents related to wireless device technologies that would be of prime interest to any smartphone maker.
The industry-wide desire for patents was predicted to drive up the price of InterDigital by as much as 50 percent. But shares of the company dropped on Monday following the news that Google will buy Motorola, as investors are now less certain that Google will make a play for the InterDigital portfolio.