<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title>Netvouz / emmineb / tag / biz</title>
<link>http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb/tag/biz?feed=rss&amp;pg=2</link>
<description>emmineb&#39;s bookmarks tagged &quot;biz&quot; on Netvouz</description>
<item><title>Clay Shirky’s Writings About the Internet  - Economics &amp; Culture, Media &amp; Community, Open Source</title>
<link>http://www.shirky.com/</link>
<description>NEC@Shirky.com -- Networks, Economics, and Culture NEC is a mix of essays written for the list, essays written for other outlets, drafts of ideas I’m pursuing, and reader commentary (re-printed only with permission, of course). The list will be very low volume, with an approximately twice-monthly frequency, and the contents will also be archived on shirky.com. &lt;&lt;management&gt;&gt;</description>
<category domain="http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Sun, 18 Mar 2007 10:24:50 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>In the Next Industrial Revolution, Atoms Are the New Bits | By Chris Anderson | Wired Magazine</title>
<link>http://www.wired.com/magazine/2010/01/ff_newrevolution/all/1</link>
<description>Chris Anderson, the editor of Wired, has a very good article in his magazine on the desktop manufacturing revolution.  It&#39;s definitely worth the read and is complimentary with thinking being done on this blog re: resilient communities.     Thus the new industrial organizational model. It’s built around small pieces, loosely joined. Companies are small, virtual, and informal. Most participants are not employees. They form and re-form on the fly, driven by ability and need rather than affiliation and obligation. It doesn’t matter who the best people work for; if the project is interesting enough, the best people will find it.</description>
<category domain="http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Thu, 28 Jan 2010 16:15:32 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>Military Leadership - Recent</title>
<link>http://www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil/military-leadership/</link>
<description>Leadership and the military are practically inseparable. Military leadership and leadership development are foundational concepts for Army personnel. It permeates military culture beginning with every recruit learning the leadership-oriented Warrior Ethos to the leader development programs offered to the Army’s general officers. It is no surprise, then, that SSI conducts research on military leadership, leadership development, and the military culture. Dr. Leonard Wong is our military leadership specialist.</description>
<category domain="http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Sun, 29 Oct 2006 13:17:49 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>Recipe for Disaster The Formula That Killed Wall Street - by Felix Salmon | Wired Tech Biz</title>
<link>http://www.wired.com/techbiz/it/magazine/17-03/wp_quant?currentPage=all</link>
<description>For five years, Li&#39;s formula, known as a Gaussian copula function, looked like an unambiguously positive breakthrough, a piece of financial technology that allowed hugely complex risks to be modeled with more ease and accuracy than ever before. With his brilliant spark of mathematical legerdemain, Li made it possible for traders to sell vast quantities of new securities, expanding financial markets to unimaginable levels.</description>
<category domain="http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Wed, 25 Feb 2009 08:38:59 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>Resilient Communities a SANER future - Sustainable, Asymmetric, Networked, Effective, Resilient</title>
<link>http://resilientcc.ning.com/</link>
<description>We&#39;re committed to growing resilient communities. As the global economic and political system begins to devour itself, we need communities that can withstand those system shocks, and provide us the means to live secure, comfortable, and sustainable lives. Our goal is to provide a place where people who are engaged in this work can share their experiences, tools, and presence</description>
<category domain="http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Fri, 05 Feb 2010 20:14:39 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>subprime works</title>
<link>http://docs.google.com/TeamPresent?docid=ddp4zq7n_0cdjsr4fn&amp;skipauth=true&amp;pli=1</link>
<description></description>
<category domain="http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Mon, 17 Mar 2008 16:38:45 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>Summer Readings Prof. Michael B. McElroy (last updated, December 2005)</title>
<link>http://legacy.ncsu.edu/classes/ec348001/SummerReading2005.htm</link>
<description>The Travels of a T-Shirt in the Global Economy: An Economist Examines the Markets, Power, and Politics of World Trade, by Pietra Rivoli ||The Company of Strangers: A Natural History of Economic Life by Paul Seabright ||Freakonomics by Steven Levitt ||Stephen Dubner: The Wisdom of Crowds by James Surowiecki ||Paul Blustein: The Chastening: Inside the Crisis that Rocked the Global Financial System and Humbled the IMF + And the Money Kept Rolling In (And Out):  Wall Street, the IMF, and the Bankrupting of America. ||William Easterly&#39;s The Elusive Quest for Growth: Economists&#39; Adventures and Misadventures in the Tropics ||Russell Roberts&#39;s The Choice: A Fable of Free Trade and Protectionism + The Invisible Heart: An Economic Romance</description>
<category domain="http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Sat, 07 Oct 2006 07:36:58 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>The Art of Measurement The Agonist</title>
<link>http://agonist.org/ian_welsh/20061009/the_art_of_measurement</link>
<description>I want to talk a bit about management measurement. I’ve spent a number of years now in a good sized multinational, and I’ve watched management trying to gain control through measurement. And mostly I’ve watched as they’ve gained the wrong sort of control; as they’ve crystallized behaviour in ways that lose more from employees than they gain.</description>
<category domain="http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Tue, 10 Oct 2006 10:07:06 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>The Long Tail - Why the future of business is selling less of more</title>
<link>http://www.thelongtail.com/the_long_tail/</link>
<description>Wired editor Anderson declares the death of &quot;common culture&quot;—and insists that it&#39;s for the best. Why don&#39;t we all watch the same TV shows, like we used to? Because not long ago, &quot;we had fewer alternatives to compete for our screen attention,&quot; he writes. Smash hits have existed largely because of scarcity: with a finite number of bookstore shelves and theaters and Wal-Mart CD racks, &quot;it&#39;s only sensible to fill them with the titles that will sell best.&quot; Today, Web sites and online retailers offer seemingly infinite inventory, and the result is the &quot;shattering of the mainstream into a zillion different cultural shards.&quot; These &quot;countless niches&quot; are market opportunities for those who cast a wide net and de-emphasize the</description>
<category domain="http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Mon, 23 Oct 2006 08:57:50 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>The once and future e-book on reading in the digital age - Ars Technica By John Siracusa  |</title>
<link>http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/news/2009/02/the-once-and-future-e-book.ars#</link>
<description>A veteran of a former turning of the e-book wheel looks at the past, present, and future of reading books on things that are not books. I was pitched headfirst into the world of e-books in 2002 when I took a job with Palm Digital Media. The company, originally called Peanut Press, was founded in 1998 with a simple plan: publish books in electronic form. As it turns out, that simple plan leads directly into a technological, economic, and political hornet&#39;s nest. But thanks to some good initial decisions (more on those later), little Peanut Press did pretty well for itself in those first few years, eventually having a legitimate claim to its self-declared title of &quot;the world&#39;s largest e-book store.&quot;</description>
<category domain="http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2009 06:34:12 GMT</pubDate>
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