luni, 29 noiembrie 2010

Ce sa cumperi si ce sa nu cumperi sfarsitul acesta de an!

     Daca te gandesti sa iti cumperi un televizor te anuntam ca sfarsitul acesta de an vine cu reduceri semnificative. Companiile mari au decis sa reduca pretul. Daca doresti un televizor LCD sau chiar LED este un moment bun pentru a cumpara, dar in schimb daca doresti sa cumperi un televizor 3D te sfatuiesc sa mai astepti pentru ca tehnologia este la inceput, toshiba deja are televizoarele care nu necita ochelari si preturile vor scadea semnificativ anii viitori.
     Daca te gandesti sa achizitionezi un telefon si esti cu ochii pe noul iphone 4 iti recomand la fel ca pentru tehnologia 3d sa mai astepti pana la anul , dar in schimb daca doresti un telefon cu sistem android  (in special 2.2) este un moment bun pentru a cumpara. Eu personal as recomanda un model de la HTC.
 
Sursa imagine: www.mobilissimo.ro

     Pentru cei care doresc sa isi cumpere un tablet PC (iPad sau Galapy Pad), recomand la fel sa mai astepte pana anul viitor, la noul iPad se preconizeaza multe imbunatatiri inclusiv o camera foto.
    

Korea de Nord VS Korea de Sud + SUA

     Conform celor de la puterea.ro care citeaza agentia France-Presse situatia efectivelor din Korea de Nord si Sud este urmatoarea:
COREEA DE SUD
Nivelul efectivelor este de 655.000 de militari activi şi 4,5 milioane de rezervişti.
Tancuri - 2.300.
Vehicule blindate - 2.400.
Sisteme de artilerie - 5.400.
Avioane de vânătoare - 490.
Nave de război - 140.
Submarine - 10.
Coreea de Sud nu deţine arme nucleare.

FORŢELE AMERICANE DIN COREEA DE SUD
Nivelul efectivelor este de 28.500 de militari.
Tancuri - 50.
Vehicule blindate - 130.
Avioane de vânătoare - 90.
Elicoptere militare - 90.
Rachete, inclusiv de tip Patriot - 100.
Statele Unite nu au arme nucleare staţionate în Coreea de Sud.

COREEA DE NORD
Nivelul efectivelor este de 1,2 milioane de militari activi şi 7,7 milioane de rezervişti.
Tancuri - 3.900.
Vehicule blindate - 2.100.
Sisteme de artilerie - 13.600.
Avioane de vănătoare - 840.
Nave de război - 420.
Submarine - 70.
Rachete - 1.000, dintre care unele care au rază de acţiune de peste 3.000 de kilometri. Phenianul a efectuat trei teste cu rachete intercontinentale de tip Taepodong.
Arme chimice - între 2.500 şi 5.000 de tone.
Arme nucleare - conform analiştilor, Phenianul ar avea suficient plutoniu pentru fabricarea a şase - opt bombe nucleare.


     Este foarte clara suprematia Korei de Nord comparativ cu cea de Sud. Intrebarea ar fi daca in caz de incepere a razboiului cei din SUA pot sa poarte un asemenea razboi (aici ma refer la faptul ca SUA este implicata in mai multe conflicte armate care si asa macina bugetul tari)?


Sursa: puterea.ro

ROMANIA - wikileaks - SUA

     Astept cu nerabdare sa vad continutul documentelor publicat de catre wikileaks. Nu toate binenteles, doar cele cu Romania. Potrivit celor de la gandul.info din totalulu urias de peste 250000 de documente 1022 au legatura cu Romania. Nu ne intereseaza toate cel putin pe mine nu petru ca trei sferturi sunt nimicuri, doar cele care sunt clasificate ca si secret si confidential.
    Pana voi avea mai multe informatii despre aceste documente postez un eveniment de la TED in care Julian Assange fondatorul wikileaks vorbeste despre importanta acestui site si despre ceea ce el doreste sa insemne.




UPDATE 01: Diplomati SUA spioneaza oficialii ONU.

     In iulie 2009 sub directiva lui Hillary Clinton se da o directiva de culegere de informatii inclusiv BIOMETRICE. Tinta au fost oficiali de rang inalt din ONU, inclusiv secretarul general Ban Ki-moon si reprezentanti consiliului permanent al ON: China, Rusia, Franta si Marea Britanie.
   Washington-ul a dorit informatii privind: numarul cartilor de credit, adrese de mail, numerele de telefon, fax si pager, date biometrice inclusiv ADN, aprente si scanarea irisului, informatii biografice. 
     Aceste "culegeri" de informatii nu a vizat doar membri si reprezentanti ONU ce si a altor state iar informatiile care se doreau a fi obtinute difereau de la caz la caz.

Sursa: theguardian.co.uk 

UPDATE 02: Abdullah regele Saudit solicita SUA ca sa atace Iranul.

     Din documente reiese ca regele Saudit in repetate randuri solicita Statelor Unite sa atace Iranul pentru a pune capat programului lor nuclear. Intr-o intalnire din aprilie 2008 ambasadorul Saudit la Washington il citeaza pe rege "Cut off the head of the snake," adica in traducere sa se taie capul sarpelui.

Sursa: reuters.com   

UPDATE 03: Arme pentru Iran via Beijing cu origine si tehnologie Nord Koreana.
     Ceva interesant din nou in documentele facute publice de cei de la WikiLeaks. In 2007 apare un document semnat de catre Condoleezza Rice in care ea cere ca China sa opreasca urgent un transport de racheta balistice cu provenienta Nord Koreana care se indreapta spre Iran. Acest nefiind singurul transport de acest gen care a fost finalizat (mai fiind in jur de zece). SUA are anumite temeri in legatura cu aceste racheta balistice care pot fi folosite ca si bombe atomice daca Iranul ar putea sa produca sau ar detine asemenea armament.

Sursa: theguardian.co.uk

Un interviu cu Ray Kurzweil

NUMISMATICA BNR

Emisiune numismatica:
     Banca Națională a României va pune în circulaţie, în scop numismatic, începând cu data de 29 noiembrie 2010, o monedă din argint, dedicată poetului Grigore Alexandrescu.

Pentru mai multe informatii vizitati site-ul BNR

Ascensiunea Asiei

vineri, 26 noiembrie 2010

Chris Anderson despre: Cum promovează filmele postate pe internet inovaţia globală

Daca aveti timp ... Romania vazuta din afara

"Geopolitical Journey, Part 3: Romania is republished with permission of STRATFOR."
 
Editor’s note: This is the third installment in a series of special reports that Dr. Friedman will write over the next few weeks as he travels to Turkey, Moldova, Romania, Ukraine and Poland. In this series, he will share his observations of the geopolitical imperatives in each country and conclude with reflections on his journey as a whole and options for the United States.
By George Friedman
In school, many of us learned the poem Invictus. It concludes with the line, “I am the master of my fate, I am the captain of my soul.” This is a line that a Victorian gentleman might bequeath to an American businessman. It is not a line that resonates in Romania. Nothing in their history tells Romanians that they rule their fate or dominate their soul. Everything in their history is a lesson in how fate masters them or how their very soul is a captive of history. As a nation, Romanians have modest hopes and expectations tempered by their past.
This sensibility is not alien to me. My parents survived the Nazi death camps, returned to Hungary to try to rebuild their lives and then found themselves fleeing the communists. When they arrived in America, their wishes were extraordinarily modest, as I look back on it. They wanted to be safe, to get up in the morning, to go to work, to get paid — to live. They were never under the impression that they were the masters of their fate.
The problem that Romania has is that the world cares about it. More precisely, empires collide where Romania is. The last iteration was the Cold War. Today, at the moment, things seem easier, or at least less desperate, than before. Still, as I discussed in Borderlands, the great powers are sorting themselves out again and therefore Romania is becoming more important to others. It is not clear to me that the Romanians fully appreciate the shift in the geopolitical winds. They think they can hide in Europe, and perhaps they can. But I suspect that history is reaching for Romania again.

Geopolitics and Self-Mutilation

Begin with geography. The Carpathian Mountains define Romania, but in an odd way. Rather than serving as the border of the country, protecting it, the Carpathians are an arc that divides the country into three parts. To the south of the mountains is the Wallachian Plain, the heart of contemporary Romania, where its capital, Bucharest, and its old oil center, Ploesti, are located. In the east of the Carpathians is the Moldavian Plain. To the northwest of the Carpathians is Transylvania, more rugged, hilly country.

And this is the geopolitical tragedy of Romania. Romania is one nation divided by its geography. None of the three parts is easy to defend. Transylvania came under Hungarian rule in the 11th century, and Hungary came under Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian rule. Wallachia came under Ottoman rule, and Moldavia came under Ottoman and Russian rule. About the only time before the late 19th century that Romania was united was when it was completely conquered. And the only time it was completely conquered was when some empire wanted to secure the Carpathians to defend itself.
Some of us experience geopolitics as an opportunity. Most of humanity experiences it as a catastrophe. Romania has been a nation for a long time, but rarely has it been a united nation-state. After becoming a nation-state in the late 19th century, it had a precarious existence, balanced between Austria-Hungary, the Ottoman Empire and Russia, with Germany a more distant but powerful reality. Romania spent the inter-war years trying to find its balance between monarchy, authoritarianism and fascism, and it never quite found it. It sought safety in an alliance with Hitler and found itself on the front lines in the German invasion of Russia. To understand Romania as an ally one must bear this in mind: When the Soviets began their great counterattack at Stalingrad, they launched it over Romanian (and Hungarian) troops. Romanians maneuvered themselves into the position of fighting and dying for the Germans, and then got their revenge on the Germans by being slaughtered by the Soviets.
All of this led to Romania’s occupation by the Soviets, toward whom the Romanians developed a unique strategy. The Hungarians rose up against the Soviets and were crushed, and the Czechoslovaks tried to create a liberal communist regime that was still loyal to the Soviets and were crushed. The Romanians actually achieved a degree of autonomy from the Soviets in foreign affairs. The way the Romanians got the Soviets to tolerate this was by building a regime more rigid and oppressive than even that of the Soviet Union at the time. The Soviets knew NATO wasn’t going to invade, let alone invade through Romania. So long as the Romanian regime kept the people in line, the Russians could tolerate their maneuvers. Romania retained its national identity and an independent foreign policy but at a stunning price in personal freedom and economic well-being.
Contemporary Romania cannot be understood without understanding Nicolae Ceausescu. He called himself the “Genius of the Carpathians.” He may well have been, but if so, the Carpathian definition of genius is idiosyncratic. The Romanian communist government was built around communists who had remained in Romania during World War II, in prison or in hiding. This was unique among the Soviet Union’s Eastern European satellites. Stalin didn’t trust communists who stayed home and resisted. He preferred communists who had fled to Moscow in the 1930s and had proved themselves loyal to Stalin by their betrayal of others. He sent Moscow communists to rule the rest of the newly occupied countries that buffered Russia from the West. Not so in Romania, where native communists ruled. After the death of the founder of communist Romania, Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, another Romanian communist who stayed in Romania ultimately took over: Ceausescu. This was a peculiarity of Romanian communism that made it more like Josip Broz Tito’s Yugoslavia in foreign policy, and more like a bad dream in domestic policy.
Ceausescu decided to pay off the national debt. His reason seemed to flow from his foreign policy — he didn’t want Romania to be trapped by any country because of its debt — and he repaid it by selling to other countries nearly everything that was produced in Romania. This left Romania in staggering poverty; electricity and heat were occasional things, and even food was scarce in a country that had a lot of it. The Securitate, a domestic secret police whose efficiency and brutality were impressive, suppressed unrest. Nothing in Romania worked as well as the Securitate.
Herta Muller is a Romanian author who writes in German (she is part of Romania’s ethnic German community) and who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2009. One of her books, The Appointment, takes place in Romania under the communists. It gives an extraordinary sense of a place ruled by the Securitate. It is about a woman who is living her life, working at her job and dealing with an alcoholic husband while constantly preparing for and living in dread of appointments with the secret police. As in Kafka, what they are looking for and what she is hiding are unclear. But the danger is unrelenting and permeates her entire consciousness. When one reads this book, as I did in preparing for this trip, one understands the way in which the Securitate tore apart a citizen’s soul — and remembers that it was not a distant relic of the 1930s but was still in place and sustaining the Romanian regime in 1989.
It was as if the price that Romania had to pay for autonomy was to punch itself in the face continually. Even the fall of communism took a Romanian path. There was no Velvet Revolution here but a bloody one, where the Securitate resisted the anti-communist rising under circumstances and details that are still hotly debated and unclear. In the end, the Ceausescus (Nicolae’s wife Elena was also a piece of work, requiring a psychological genius to unravel) were executed and the Securitate blended into civil society as part of the organized-crime network that was mistaken for liberalization in the former Soviet empire by Western academics and reporters at the time.
Romania emerged from the previous 70 years of ongoing catastrophe by dreaming of simple things and having no illusions that these things were easy to come by or things Romanians could control. As with much of Eastern Europe but perhaps with a greater intensity, Romanians believed their redemption lay with the West’s multilateral organizations. If they were permitted to join NATO and especially the European Union, their national security needs would be taken care of along with their economic needs. Romanians yearned to become European simply because being Romanian was too dangerous.

The Redemption of Being European

In thinking of Romania, the phrase “institutionalized prisoner” comes to mind. In the United States it is said that if someone stays in prison long enough, he becomes “institutionalized,” someone who can no longer imagine functioning outside a world where someone else always tells him what to do. For Romania, national sovereignty has always been experienced as the process of accommodating itself to more powerful nations and empires. So after 1991, Romania searched for the “someone else” to which it could subordinate itself. More to the point, Romania imbued these entities with extraordinary redemptive powers. Once in NATO and the European Union, all would be well.
And until recently, all has been well, or well in terms of the modest needs of a historical victim. The problem Romania has is that these sanctuaries are in many ways illusions. It looks to NATO for defense, but NATO is a hollowed-out entity. There is a new and ambitious NATO strategy, which sets a global agenda for the organization. Long discussed, it is an exercise in meaninglessness. Countries like Germany have no military with which to fulfill the strategy, assuming that any agreement to act could be reached. NATO is a consensual organization, and a single member can block any mission. The divergent interests of an expanded NATO guarantee that someone will block everything. NATO is an illusion that comforts the Romanians, but only if they don’t look carefully. The Romanians seem to prefer the comforting illusion.

As for the European Union, there is a deep structural tension in the system. The main European economic power is Germany. It is also the world’s second-largest exporter. Its economy is built around exporting. For a country like Romania, economic development requires that it take advantage of its wage advantage. Lower wages allow developing countries to develop their economy through exports. But Europe is dominated by an export superpower. Unlike the postwar world, where the United States absorbed the imports of Germany and Japan without needing to compete with them, Germany remains an exporting country exporting into Romania and leaving precious little room for Romania to develop its economy.
At this stage of its development, Romania should be running a trade surplus, particularly with Germany, but it is not. In 2007, it exported about $40 billion worth of goods and imported about $70 billion. In 2009, it exported the same $40 billion but cut imports to only $54 billion (still a negative). Forty percent of its trade is with Germany, France and Italy, its major EU partners. But it is Germany where the major problem is. And this problem is compounded by the fact that a good part of Romania’s exports to Germany are from German-owned firms operating in Romania.
During the period of relative prosperity in Europe from 1991 to 2008, the structural reality of the EU was hidden under a rising tide. In 2008 the tide went out, revealing the structural reality. It is not clear when the tide of prosperity will come rolling back in. In the meantime, while the German economy is growing again, Romania’s is not. Because it exists in a system where the main engine is an exporter, and the exporter dominates the process of setting rules, it is difficult to see how Romania can take advantage of its greatest asset — a skilled workforce prepared to work for lower wages.
Add to this the regulatory question. Romania is a developing country. Europe’s regulations are drawn with a focus on the highly developed countries. The laws on employment guarantees mean that Europeans don’t hire workers, they adopt them. That means that entrepreneurship is difficult. Being an entrepreneur, as I well know, means making mistakes and recovering from them fast. Given the guarantees that every worker has in Europe, an entrepreneur cannot quickly recover from his mistakes. In Romania, the agility needed for risk-taking is not readily available under EU rules drawn up for a mature economy.
Romania should be a country of small entrepreneurs, and it is, but there is extensive evasion of Brussels’ — and Bucharest’s — regulations. It is a gray market that creates legal jeopardy and therefore corruption in the sector that Romania needs the most. Imagine if Germany had the regulations it champions today in 1955. Could it possibly have developed into what it is in 2010? There may be a time for these regulations (and that is debatable), but for Romania it is not now.
I met a Romanian entrepreneur who marketed industrial products. In talking to him, I raised the question of the various regulations governing his industry and how he handled them. There was no clear answer or, more precisely, I didn’t realize the answer he had given me until later. There are regulations and there are relationships. The latter mitigate the former. In Germany this might be called corruption. In Romania it is survival. A Romanian entrepreneur rigorously following EU regulations would rapidly go out of business. It may be that Romania is corrupt, but the regulatory structure of the EU imposed on a developing economy makes evasion the only rational strategy. And yet the entrepreneur I talked to was a champion of the European Union. He too hoped for the time when he could be a normal European. As Rousseau said, “I have seen these contradictions and they have not rebuffed me.”
It is difficult to for an outsider to see the specific benefits of NATO and EU membership for Romania. But for the Romanians, membership goes beyond the specifics.

Romania’s Choice

August and September are bad months in Europe. It is when wars and crises strike. August and September 2008 were bad months. That August, Russia struck Georgia. In September, the financial crisis burst wide open. In the first, Russia delivered a message to the region: This is what American guarantees are worth. In the European handling of the financial crisis in Eastern Europe, the Germans delivered a message on the limits of German responsibility. Both NATO and the European Union went from being guarantors of Romanian interests to being enormous question marks.
In my conversations with Romanians, at all levels and almost universally, I have found the same answer. First, there is no doubt that NATO and the European Union did not work in Romania’s favor at the moment. Second, there is no question of rethinking Romania’s commitment to either. There are those Romanians, particularly on the far right, who dislike the European Union in particular, but Romania has no strategic alternative.
As for the vast majority, they cannot and will not conceive of a Romania outside the confines of NATO and the European Union. The mere fact that neither is working well for Romania does not mean that they do not do something important: NATO and the European Union keep the anti-democratic demons of the Romanian soul at bay. Being part of Europe is not simply a matter of strategic or economic benefits. It represents a transitional point in Romanian history. With membership in the European Union and NATO, Romania has affirmed its modernity and its democratic institutions. These twin amulets have redeemed Romania’s soul. Given this, I suppose, an unfavorable trade balance and the absence of genuine security guarantees is a small price to pay. I am not Romanian, so I can’t feel their ineffable belief in Brussels.
Romanians do acknowledge, again almost universally, the return of Russia to the historical stage, and it worries them. Of particular concern is Moldova, a region to the east that was historically Romanian, taken by the Soviets in a treaty with Hitler and the rest of which was seized after World War II. Moldova became an independent country in 1991 (a country I will be visiting next). For much of the post-Cold War period it had a communist government that fell a few years ago. An election will be held on Nov. 28, and it appears that the communists might return. The feeling is that if the communists return this time, the Russians will return with them and, in the coming years, Russian troops will be on Romania’s borders.
Romanian officials are actively engaged in discussions with NATO officials about the Russians, but the Germans want a more active involvement of Russia in NATO and not tension between NATO and Russia. The Western Europeans are not about to be drawn into Eastern European paranoia fed by nostalgic American strategists wanting to relive the Cold War, as they think of it.
I raised two strategic alternatives with Romanian officials and the media. One was the Intermarium — an alliance, perhaps in NATO, perhaps not — of Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria. (To readers who asked why I did not go to Bulgaria on this trip, it was simply a matter of time. I will go there as soon as I can.) Very interestingly, one official pointed out substantial levels of cooperation on military planning between Hungary and Romania and discussions between Romania and Poland. How serious this is and whether it will go beyond the NATO context is unclear to me. Perhaps I can get a better sense in Warsaw.
But military planning is one thing; the wherewithal to execute military plans is quite another. The Romanians are now caught in a crisis over buying fighter planes. There are three choices: the Swedish Gripen, the Eurofighter and used American F-16s. The problem is that the Romanians don’t have the money for any of these aircraft, nor does it seem to me that these are the defense measures they really need. The Americans can provide air cover in a number of ways, and while 24 F-16s would have value, they would not solve Romania’s most pressing military problem. From where I sit, creating an effective mobile force to secure their eastern frontier is what is needed. The alternative I’ve heard was buying naval vessels to block a very real Russian naval buildup in the Black Sea. But if Romania has trouble buying 24 fighters, naval vessels are out of the question.
The Romanians are approaching defense planning from a NATO perspective — one used for planning, not implementation, and one that always leads to sophisticated systems while leaving the basics uncovered. This may seem like an unnecessary level of detail for this essay, but the Romanians are deep in this discussion, and questions like this are the critical details of strategies growing out of geopolitics. It is the difference between planning papers drawn up by think tanks and the ability to defend a nation.
The Black Sea is a critical part of Romania’s reality, and the rise of Turkey makes the system of relationships interesting. Turkey is Romania’s fourth-largest export target, and one of the few major trading partners that imports more from Romania than it exports. I pointed out to Romanians that it is the great good fortune of Turkey that it was not admitted to the European Union. Turkey’s economy grew by an annualized rate of 12 percent in the first quarter of 2010 and has been surging for years.
Turkey is becoming a regional economic engine and, unlike Germany, France and Italy, it offers compatibilities and synergies for Romania. In addition, Turkey is a serious military force and, while not seeking confrontation with Russia, it is not subservient to it. Turkey has adopted a “360 degree” strategy of engagement with all countries. And since Turkey is a NATO member, as are Hungary, Slovakia and Poland, there is no incompatibility with a dual strategy of the Intermarium and the Black Sea. For now, they fit. And the irony of Romania reaching out to the heir to the Ottomans is simply that and no more. This is the neighborhood that Romania inhabits. These are the options it has.
What doesn’t fit for Romania is the NATO/EU system alone. Perhaps this is part of a rational mix, but it cannot be all of it. For Romania, the problem is to move beyond the psychological comfort of Europe to a strategic and economic understanding that accepts that the post-Cold War world is over. More important, it would be a move toward accepting that Romania is free, responsible for its future and capable of managing it.
It is this last step that is the hardest for Romania and many of the former Soviet satellites — which were also bound up with World War I and Hitler’s disaster — to come to terms with. There is a connection between buying more expensive German cars than you can afford, and more of them than you need, and the novels of Herta Muller. The appointment can be permanently canceled, but the fear of the interrogation is always with you. In this region, the fear of the past dominates and oppresses while the confident, American-style military planning and economic restructuring I suggested is alien and frightening.
The Romanians emerged from a world of horror, some of it of their own making. They fear themselves perhaps more than they fear others. For them, becoming European is both a form of therapy and something that will restrain the demons within and without. When you live with bad memories, you live with the shadows of reality. For the Romanians, illusory solutions to haunting memories make a great deal of sense.
It makes sense until war comes, and in this part of the world, the coming of war has been the one certainty since before the Romans. It is only a question of when, with whom and what your own fate will be when it arrives. The Romanians believe with religious fervor that these things will be left behind if they become part of Europe. I am more skeptical. I had thought that Romania’s problem was that it was part of Europe, a weak power surrounded by stronger ones. They seem to believe that their solution is to be part of Europe, a weak power surrounded by stronger ones.
I leave Romania confused. The Romanians hear things that I am deaf to. It is even at a pitch my Hungarian part can’t hear. I leave now for another nation, Moldova, which has been even more exposed to history, one even stranger and more brutal than Romania’s.


Geopolitical Journey, Part 3: Romania is republished with permission of STRATFOR.

Criza?!?!

Care criza? :)))) deci ma prapadesc de ras. In Sua conform gandul.info corporatiile au profituri record, profituri imense (subliniez record adica nemaintailnite pana acuma). Este al saptelea (7) trimestru consecutiv cu profituri.
Ii jenant...

joi, 25 noiembrie 2010

Cele doua Korei ....

Cred ca este un subiect lung si greu dar voi incerca sa imi formez o opinie.
     Problema este mai mare decat intre cele doua Korei. China vorbeste de ceva vreme (din ce stiu eu inca inainte de 2008) de creearea unei noi monede care sa inlocuiasca dolarul ca principala moneda de rezerva a statelor.
Trebuie sa tinem cont ca China are cea mai mare rezerva valutara din lume si aceasta este predominanta in dolari.
     Zhou Xiaochuan spunea in “lucrarea” Reform the international monetary system sa se acorde o atentie si conceptului creat de catre FMI – Special Drawing Rights (SDRs). El spune ca acest sistem care momentan este folosit doar intre state si institutii internationale sa fie extins si folosit ca si o moneda acceptata. China se pare ca a gasit sustinatori destul de repede la acest sistem (Rusia, India, Brazilia).
      China a incheiat acorduri cu diferite state prin care se renunta sa mai lucreze cu dolarul si vor folosi yenul (aici intra Argentina, Belarus, Indonezia, Korea de Sus, Hong-Kong sau Malaezia).
China inca nu a demonstrat (efectiv) ca este o forta militara ce sa impus ca si o putere economica.
      In concluzie sunt mult mai multe date, care cred ca ar trebui luate in calcul cand ne gandim la acest conflict…
Urmeaza...

luni, 22 noiembrie 2010

Cresterea populatiei explicata simplu

PREVIZIUNI

La prima vedere!?

     Am citit azi un articol pe siteul Think Outside The Box, doream de mult sa abordez un subiect pe aceasta tema "Eticheta vs Personalitate. Il face haina pe om?" parerile sunt impartite si depinde de foarte multe elememte. Dar personal cred ca la prima impresie, in primul moment cand te uiti la cineva sunt cateva elemente principale pe care le observi printre care si imbracamintea. Poate ca nu este primul lucru la care se uita lumea dar cu siguranta se uita. Discutia referitoare la marca la cat de scumpe sunt hainele este discutia care produce sa spun asa conflict. Este gresita cred parerea ca doar daca te imbraci cu haine scumpe (de marca) poti arata bine (elegant, clasic, modern, trendy) si cu haine care nu sunt scumpe. 
... se actualizeaza

joi, 11 noiembrie 2010

CHINA VS SUA ?

     De ce este suparata China pe Banca Centrala din SUA?
     Cui Tiankai, negociatorul şef chinez, este de părere că decizia Fed-ului de a pompa din nou bani în economia americană nu reprezintă nimic altceva decât economie planificată. O agenţie de rating din China a scăzut solvabilitatea Statelor Unite. SUA acuza China ca manipuleaza yuanul pentru a il tine la o valoare cat ma scazuta(asta inseamna ca, China cumpara foarte multe valuta), pentru a putea beneficia de avantajul economic de a oferi un pret mai scazut decat orice alt competitor. China fiind cel mai mare exportator catre SUA. China a intrecut deja Japonia ca a noua economie mondiala iar in urmatori 10 - 15 se preconizeaza ca va intrece si SUA ceea ce va insemna prima schimbare de loc unu dupa ce SUA a inlocuit Marea Britanie in 1894. La aceasta intalnire G20 se va marsa pe economiile emergente care comparativ cu statele dezvoltate care au probleme economice, financiare cu taieri bugetare agresive in anii care urmeaza, economii ca cea a Indiei (9,67% crestere economica pentru 2010), Turcia, Brazilie, Argentina (7,5 % crestere economica pentru 2010), Indonezia, Korea de Sud (6% crestere economica pentru 2010), Mexic (5% crestere economica pentru 2010) sau Rusia (4% crestere economica pentru 2010).
     India vine si ea puternic din spate si se preconizeaza ca pana in 2015 va fi in primele 10 puteri economice mondiale dupa PIB. La acest summit se va discuta incheierea razboiului valutar, dar cred ca dupa incheiere fiecare isi va continua aceeasi politica financiara. Ministri de finante vor incerca in continuare sa devalueze monedele lor.
     Acuzatii reciproce nu doar din partea celor doi mari jucatori economici (SUA si China) dar si din partea Argentinei, Braziliei, Korei de Sud care anunta ca razboiul valutar este in plina desfasurare iar daca acesta nu se rezolva repede va avea un efect de domino.

miercuri, 10 noiembrie 2010

Mai mult de jumate din intreprinderile din UE sunt inovatoare

   
     Conform raportului 166/2010 publicat in data de 10.11.2010 de catre Eurostat se arata ca in UE 27, 52% dintre intreprinderi din industrie si servicii au raportat activitati inovatoare intre 2006 si 2008.
     Intre statele UE27 care au raportat rata cea mai mare se afla Germania (80% dintre intreprinderi), Lucemburg (65% dintre intreprinderi), Belgia si Portugalia (amadoua cu 58% dintre intreprinderi), Irlanda (57% dintre intreprinderi). Cele mai mici rate le-au statele Letonia (24% dintre intreprinderi), Polonia (28% dintre intreprinderi), Ungaria (29% dintre intreprinderi), Lituania (30% dintre intreprinderi), Bulgaria (31% dintre intreprinderi) si ROMANIA cu (33.3% dintre intreprinderi). 
     Acest studiu a fost realizat in statele membre a Uniuni Europe plus Croatia si Norvegia.


Sursa: EUROSTAT

luni, 8 noiembrie 2010

Care laptop este potrivit pentru mine?

     De cativa ani laptopul inlocuieste batranul desktop de acasa si de anul acesta intra in forta tablet pc-urile. (iPad-ul de la Apple sau Galaxt tab-ul de la Samsung). In zilele noastre laptopul este o necesitate incepand de la copii si pana la adulti.
     Trebuie sa iti pui cateva intrebari inainte sa achizitionezi un nou laptop. Pentru ceea ce il vei folosi?  Ce sistem de operare dorim sa folosim? Ai nevoie de durata lunga a bateriei? Ai nevoie sa fie usor? (sa il poti muta cu usurinta de colo colo). Apoi in functie de ceea ce iti doresti de la el te gandesti la o configuratie si un pret. Un notebook folosit doar pentru navigare pe internet, filme, muzica (adica multimedia) se poate achizitiona linistit de la 1500 ron, iar unul pentru gameri de exemplu sau pentru editare audio foto poate ajunge si la peste 15000 ron.
     Este foarte important sa stim ce dorim de la laptopul nostru.
      Apoi urmeaza procesor, hard, memorie, placa grafica, wi-fi, bluetooth, camera web, tastatura iluminata, boxe, ecran (rezolutie, marime). Lista este destul de lunga iar producatorii incearca sa multumeasca toate categoriile de clienti. Cu o cercetare amanuntita a pietei se poate cumpara un laptop cu performante excelente la un pret bun.
  • Procesor: recomandabil un procesor din generatia noua de la intel i3, i5 sau i7;
  • Memorie: preferabil minim 4 GB dar in functie de aplicatiile pe care le foloseste se poate si cu 2 GB;
  • Hard Disk-ul: la fel preferabil undeva la minim 3290GB;
  • Placa Grafica: aici chiar depinde doar de necesitatile fiecarui utilizator in parte (la ceea ce va folosi laptopul);
  • Ecranul: in functie de cat de usor si de portabil dorim sa fie. Daca dorim sa inlocuim vechiul desktop de acasa cu un laptop si nu ne vom deplasa cu el (deci nu avem nevoie de portabilitate) putem sa alegem un monitoe de dimensiuni mari 18";
  • WI-FI si Bluetooth-ul: obligatoriu ar trebui in special WI-FI;
  • Camera Web: mai nou toate laptopurile vin dotate cu camera web;
  • Tastatura numerica: daca suntem contabil sau lucram intre-un domeniu unde avem nevoie de multe calcule este indicata tastatura numeri pentru ca iti usureaza munca.
Aici este un site unde sunt realizate teste, review-uri, stiri si informatii tehnice despre laptopuri si componentele de laptop: NOTEBOOKCHECK

Investitii straine directe (ISD) - 2009

     Investitii straine directe (ISD) in cursul exercitiului financiar din 2009. Studiul a fost realizat de Banca Naţională a României în colaborare cu Institutul Naţional de Statistică.

1. Fluxul net de investiţii străine directe în anul 2009 a atins nivelul de
3 488 milioane euro, din care:
  • 1 729 milioane euro participaţii la capital (49,6%);
  • 1 759 milioane euro credit net primit de la investitorii străini (50,4%).
2. Soldul final de investiţii străine directe la 31 decembrie 2009 a înregistrat valoarea de
49 984 milioane euro, din care:
  • 35 600 milioane euro participaţii la capital, inclusiv profitul reinvestit (71,2%);
  • 14 384 milioane euro credit net primit de la investitorii străini (28,8%). 
     Principalele ramuri ale economiei care s-au dezvoltat au fost industria prelucrătoare (31,1% din total), în cadrul acesteia cele mai bine reprezentate ramuri fiind: prelucrare ţiţei, produse chimice, cauciuc şi mase plastice (6,3% din total), metalurgia (5,2%), industria mijloacelor de transport (4,7%), industria alimentară, a băuturilor şi tutunului (4,1%) şi ciment, sticlă, ceramice (3,3%). 
     Pe lângă industrie, activităţi care au atras importante ISD sunt intermedierile financiare şi asigurările, care cuprind activitatea bancară, a instituţiilor financiare nebancare şi de asigurări şi reprezintă 19% din totalul ISD, construcţiile şi tranzacţiile imobiliare (12,9%), comerţul cu amănuntul şi cu ridicata (12,3%), tehnologia informaţiei şi comunicaţii (6,5%).
     Repartizarea investiţiilor străine directe pe regiuni de dezvoltare

milioane EUR % din TOTAL
TOTAL, din care: 49 984 100,0
BUCUREŞTI 31 699 63,4
CENTRU 3 703 7,4
SUD 3 576 7,2
VEST 3 095 6,2
SUD-EST 2 938 5,9
SUD-VEST 2 058 4,1
NORD-VEST 1 940 3,9
NORD-EST 975 1,9 
     
     Repartizarea investiţiilor străine directe pe ţări de origine
milioane euro % din TOTAL
TOTAL, din care: 49 984 100,0
Olanda 10 907 21,8
Austria 9 037 18,1
Germania 6 718 13,4
Franţa 4 259 8,5
Grecia 3 281 6,6
Italia 2 528 5,1
Cipru 2 344 4,7
Elveţia 2 115 4,2
Belgia 1 115 2,2
Statele Unite ale Americii 1 054 2,1
Spania 841 1,7
Ungaria 810 1,6
Luxemburg 638 1,3
Cehia 580 1,2
Turcia 569 1,1
Alte ţări * 3188 6,4
* ţări a căror investiţie este mai mică de 500 de milioane de euro


SURSA: BNR

  

HTC HD7 — First Look

     Noul windows phone de la HTC este superb. Are un ecran de 4.3 inch cu o rezolutie de 480 x 800 WVGA care ofera o experienta cinematica deosebita. Filmeaza HD (mai exact 720p). Procesor de 1GHz, camere foto de 5 megapixeli cu autofocus si blitz dual LED. Wi-Fi: IEEE 802.11 b/g/n, GPS, EDGE, GPRS sau Bluetooth 2.1 este ceva subinteles la ultimele modele HTC.
     Dar partea cea mai interesanta este platforma Windows Phone OS 7. 
     Pret aproximativ in Europa 600 Euro.

marți, 2 noiembrie 2010

Pensie? care pensie?

HMM... Pensia un subiect delicat la noi.
     In Romania varsta reala de pensionare este de 55,5 ani in 2008 in loc de 63 cat ar trebui. Binenteles ca suntem tara din UE27 care are cetatenii cu cea mai mica varsta de pensionare. Pe deasupra in 2050 in Romania valoarea din PIB destina pensiilor va fi cea mai mare din EU27 dar din pacate este mare doar ca valoare din PIB si nu ca valoare reala pe care o primeste cetateanul (pensionarul) pe cupon. Binenteles fiind si aceasta cea mai mica din EU si in momentul actual. Solutii?
     Stati fratilor la munca nu asteptati pomana, nu se poate sa existe sate intregi pensionate de boala. Va imaginati sa mergeti in sate si toti barbatii din acel sat sa fie pensionarii ca are 45 ca are 50 ca are 80. Este aberant.
     Pentru noi tineri singura sansa este sa apelam la pensiile administrate privat.(aici ma refer la pilonul III) .Nu putem astepta ca statul sa rezolve toate problemele noastre, sa ne ofere o pensionare linistita fara grija zilei de maine. Dar oare cat ar trebui sa cotizam lunar pentru ca la 65 de ani sa avem o pensie decenta indiferent de cat este cea de la stat?
     Nimeni nu poate sa spuna cu exactitate care va fi randamentul pe o perioada de 40 de ani a unui fond de pensie. Depinde de foarte multi factori incepant de la gradul de risc al acestuia si pana la experienta pe piata a fondului. Luam un tanar in varsta de 25 de ani care nu demult a intrat pe piata munci si se hotaraste sa isi faca o pensie facultativa. El se hotaraste sa contribuie cu suma de 100 de ron lunar. Acesti bani sa convertesc de catre fond in unitati de fond dar inainte se scade comisionul care este de pana la 5% din suma care se depune. Sa nu calculam comisionul perceput de catre acestia asta inseamna ca intr-un an tanarul nostru aduna unitati de fond in valoare de 1200 ron/an * 40 de ani = 48000 ron la varsta de 65. Aici se mai adauga performantele pe care le obtine fondul anual care ar trebui sa fie undeva o medie pe la minim 10%/an. In concluzie daca cotizezi lunar 100 ron timp de 40 de ani poti primi o pensie lunara undeva la 800 - 1000 ron minim. Aceste calcule binenteles sunt ipotetice. Acuma ideea ar fi ca suma pe care fiecare o ecnomiseste sa nu jeneze cu nimic stilul de viata. In strainatate da se poate dar la noi si la cei care castiga minim salarul mediu pe economie 100 - 150 de ron reprezinta o parte importanta din salar. Sa nu mai punem la socoteala daca tanarul nostru se gandeste la achizitionarea unei locuinte in rate pe 30 - 35 de ani.
    
    

luni, 1 noiembrie 2010

Acord FMI

     Incearca oare guvernul sa renunte la acordul cu FMI? Este o posibilitate sa renunte la ei si ar fi si o mica lovitura de imagine pentru guvern. Sa avem un guvern care sa puna interesele romanilor peste interesele marilor corporatii si banci? Mda ar fi frumos dar putin probabil.
     Daca guvernul nostru are un pic de COJONES nu va renunta la ordonanta 50 in favoarea bancilor. Si asa acestea practica comisioane aberante si unele fara acoperire. Nici o banca nu va pleca din cauza efectelor ordonantei asta e sigur. Deci cojones frate... 

Inca un pic pic pic de autostrada

     Si in curand mai avem 10km autostrada in plus la statistici :) se poate si mai bine dar e bine si asa decat nimic :))) ma rog...
     Pentru cei care trec prin vama Bors si merg dupa Cluj este foarte ok. Era dezastru sa pierzi timpul prin Campia Turzi si prin Turda. Pierzi 30 min linistit daca o iei prin cele doua localitati dar asa nu mai cobori la Turda ce mergi pana la iesirea din Campia Turzi. O sa ajung mai repede la mare anul viitor, yupiiiiii!!