Friday, May 9, 2014

Droppin' Beats

Apple Is Buying Beats, But Why?
Why is Apple buying Beats?  Seems pretty self-evident. Complementary product that they already sell a ton of through their retail business.  No one bats an eye when Apple buys a complementary software company. 
I suspect they are buying Beats because they see money in it. 

I wouldn't buy those headphones, because (a) I'm 40 and (b) they're overhyped crap. But millions of spendthrift teens crave them. And if Apple can turn them (relatively cheaply) into overhyped great headphones, there's a ton of money to be made. And if this deal goes through, I suspect they think they can. I wouldn't bet against them.
I suppose it's worth thinking about why Apple might want Beats in the first place. Maybe it wants to take over Beats Music, the company's relatively small streaming service, and build it into a competitor of Spotify and Pandora. Maybe, as Peter Lauria suggests, Tim Cook wants to work with Beats co-founder Jimmy Iovine. Or maybe Apple just wants to buy a company that brings in a reported $1 billion in annual revenue, and whose flagship product is massively popular among young people. (For what it's worth, I live next to a middle school – every seventh-grader has Beats headphones.)

Others have since speculated on Beats Music (streaming service) as the reason for the acquisition.  That could also be; I wasn't even aware it existed, but then as noted above, I'm 40.

Rising Wealth Inequality In America: A Broken and Unsustainable System

Professor Krugman this morning:
Yet before we dismiss the report as nothing new, let’s think about what it means that these 25 men (yes, they’re all men) made a combined $21 billion in 2013. In particular, let’s think about how their good fortune refutes several popular myths about income inequality in America.
First, modern inequality isn’t about graduates. It’s about oligarchs. Apologists for soaring inequality almost always try to disguise the gigantic incomes of the truly rich by hiding them in a crowd of the merely affluent. Instead of talking about the 1 percent or the 0.1 percent, they talk about the rising incomes of college graduates, or maybe the top 5 percent. The goal of this misdirection is to soften the picture, to make it seem as if we’re talking about ordinary white-collar professionals who get ahead through education and hard work.
But many Americans are well-educated and work hard. For example, schoolteachers. Yet they don’t get the big bucks. Last year, those 25 hedge fund managers made more than twice as much as all the kindergarten teachers in America combined. And, no, it wasn’t always thus: The vast gulf that now exists between the upper-middle-class and the truly rich didn’t emerge until the Reagan years.
Second, ignore the rhetoric about “job creators” and all that. Conservatives want you to believe that the big rewards in modern America go to innovators and entrepreneurs, people who build businesses and push technology forward. But that’s not what those hedge fund managers do for a living; they’re in the business of financial speculation, which John Maynard Keynes characterized as “anticipating what average opinion expects the average opinion to be.” Or since they make much of their income from fees, they’re actually in the business of convincing other people that they can anticipate average opinion about average opinion.
This is about a tiny, tiny sliver of the population that have hijacked our system for their own benefit.  With the GOP as a wholly owned subsidiary and a minority stake in the Democratic Party, they have skewed tax policy and regulatory policy to their own benefit - at the expense of all of us.  They have a legion of pundits (see,e.g., the execrable David Brooks) constantly shilling for their preferred policy choices.  And now that they have acquired a majority stake in the Supreme Court, not only are corporations considered people, but money is considered speech.

We are on the precipice.  With a seemingly insatiable avarice, our 0.001%ers don't seem to understand that some share of society's wealth must pay for society.  For the Kochs and the Waltons and the Pete Petersons of the world too much is never enough.  They want it all, every last penny.  And it's not enough to have every material thing they could ever want.  They need to see the poor suffer for their crime: being poor.  It is pathological.

We are approaching Bastille and guillotine territory. We need some significant policy changes, now, or this will end very badly.  I call it . .  . the Aristocrats!
 

Spring Has Sprung

2nd Place and Smith Street, facing west.
Finally getting back to green.  Another week or two and the whole neighborhood will be filled with leafy green shade for the sunny days ahead.  We're back!

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Cecily McMillan Conviction A Travesty of Justice

Pussy Riot Supports Cecily McMillan
This is not justice.
Cecily McMillan was on Monday found guilty of deliberately elbowing officer Grantley Bovell in the face, as he led her out of a protest in March 2012. She was convicted of second-degree assault, a felony, and faces up to seven years in prison. She was denied bail and is being detained at Riker's Island jail. However, nine of the 12 jurors who unanimously reached the verdict have since taken the unusual step of writing to Judge Ronald Zweibel to request that he not give her a prison sentence on 19 May…

Hard to believe this is what passes for justice in NYC.  It is a travesty.

Fox News: Jes' Regular Folks

Geraldo Rivera Caught Pretending That Fox Business Hosts Are Regular People
This is amazing, even by the low standards of Fox News.
"Rivera's segment features two New Yorkers who criticize the government agency's decision to retain the porn-obsessed slacker. "You can't get away with that in private industry. There's just no way, you know what I'm saying?" says an outraged guy. "It does create a hostile work environment and if anybody should be walking by and kind of look over the shoulder to see what's going on, it's absolutely harassment," explains his offended female friend. The pair's names were not displayed on screen. Luckily, Carlson was there to identify them for her audience. It turns out that the man and the woman were Charlie Gasparino and Lori Rothman, both of whom are hosts at Fox Business. As Carlson began to point that out, Rivera cut her off. "Well, we snagged a lot of them," he explained. "They're right next door." A sister station's employees don't count as regular people, even if  no one reallywatches them on television."

This is not a news outlet, it is a disinformation operation.

New Lawsuit Over SUNY's LICH Scoring: Community Groups and Doctors Head Back to Court

I'd say the saga of LICH is never ending, but I'm all too aware that if the state had it's way, the story would have ended a year ago with padlocks on the doors of our hospital and bulldozers idling outside.  The fact that we're still here is a point of pride, but it's a damn shame that we have to fight this hard to see the right thing done.

The Brooklyn Eagle has the latest:
Attorney Jim Walden, of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher told the Brooklyn Eagle that the coalition filed a motion on Thursday “to disqualify certain scores” turned in by panelists ranking the nine suitors vying for LICH.
According to the legal settlement, panelists on the “Technical Committee” were supposed to rank proposals providing full-service hospitals higher than proposals offering fewer medical services.
Several panelists, however, appeared to thumb their noses at these instructions. Six of the evaluators gave their highest score to non-hospital operators, none of whom offered any of the minimum medical services, such as an ICU.
One evaluator gave every one of the four hospital proposals a score of zero, and gave developer Fortis, a non-hospital bidder failing to meet the minimum healthcare requirements, a perfect score of 70.
Technical Committee members chosen by SUNY gave their top collective scores to three non-hospital proposals.
Throwing out the non-compliant votes would maintain the current first-place hospital bidder -- Brooklyn Health Partners (BHP) -- in the pole position, but would move the Prime Healthcare Foundation’s $220 million bid into second-place.
The Prime Healthcare Foundation, together with its affiliate Prime Healthcare Services, operates 25 hospitals across six states, and is in the process of acquiring three hospitals in New Jersey. Prime proposes to operate LICH from four core buildings, immediately return services to previous levels and beyond, and improve efficiency. Prime also commits to investing $40 million in infrastructure improvements and capital expenditures.
SUNY rejected BHP’s bid on Monday, and has already started negotiations with developer Peebles Corporation, which came in second under the contested bidding process.
Click through to Brooklyn Eagle for the full story.

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Pedestrian Fatalities In City Down Sharply - NY Daily News

It's too early to draw conclusions, but this data is very, very encouraging.  We've got more work to do to make NYC's streets safe for everybody. This is a good start. 

"The number of pedestrians hit and killed by cars dropped by a third in the first four months of 2014, data obtained by the Daily News show.

Forty pedestrians were killed by cars between Jan. 1 and Sunday, compared with 60 in the same span last year, according to figures the NYPD provided.

While the number of pedestrians killed plummeted, the number injured dropped by nearly 8%, from 4,195 to 3,870, the figures show.

Chief Thomas Chan, who oversees traffic safety for the police department, said cops were writing more tickets as part of Mayor de Blasio's "Vision Zero," a plan to end traffic deaths overall."