Watch Japan’s Killer Quake on PBS. See more from NOVA.
Anything You Do To Make Your Self Valuable Will Pay Off: Warren Buffett
Scrap Thoughts from Warren Buffett’s Management Secrets
- How To Handle Employees Who Break The Law: You will risk a lot by breaking the law. You need to make sure that you mind the store, if you do not contact the authorities immediately, then you are an accessory to the crime.
- Dealing With Your Mistakes: learn from your mistakes but don’t dwell on them.
- Avoid Interacting With Other People, You need to find the No, Man.
- Learn from missed opportunities: mistakes of omission are the worst but they go unnoticed. Miles Davis: lesser artists borrow, great artists steal. You need to see what someone is doing right, and what someone is doing wrong.
- Pick Out Associates That Are Better Than You: we are who we hangout with.
- Anything You Do To Make Yourself Valuable Will Payoff. The more education, and experienced, the more you make money. You need education and experience. Everyone starts at the bottom. Nothing beats your potential to earn. If you have a unique profession will allow them to charge more for their services.
- Managing Personal Borrowing: Stay away from debt. Being conservative with money is the best way to invest. Don’t be materialistic.
[This is the last précis of Warren Buffett’s Management Secrets.]
Mitt Romney Ad
How many hours did it take this Aussie to create this video? All of the footage compiling, splitcing, and timing. Then the lyrics for humour. I guess have could have gone through transcripts to spot keywords. All the clips he used are available via YouTube. Basically, it would have taken over 150 hours to create this video. Was it worth it?
Language/Empire Correlations With Facebook
Facebook’s ability to replicate language barriers is admirable. We meet people we can understand. The future will be for people to connect with eachother without having met, and without speaking the same language, and through their connection they will create valuable exchange. What this diagram shows is that the nation-state linguistic barriers remain a powerful means of delimiting the human experience. This needs to change, and a company that does not exist today will make it possible.