I watched that yesterday when I was off work (after working the weekend because of the fires). Then, I saw a few hours later that tweetlater.com added Twitter keyword alerts via email and smiled. - Sonya Smith
Tweetlater? I'll check that out. Thanks Sonya. - Hutch Carpenter
haha...yeah, I too post stuff looking for some help / insight and get nothing. It's confounding, no? Hope you get things worked out Ms. Anika. - JA Castillo
This happens when you have two 302's that bounce between them indefinetly (like an .htaccess and your DNS entry). You must've changed your blog URL and now Wordpress is in an endless loop. - Jorge Escobar
Zee- yeah. i had some "technical difficulties" and was forced to close the other account. i'm just happy to be back and that i got my old username back. now i'm having to rebuild my FF. i promise to make it bigger, better, faster, harder, and all that good stuff this time around! :) - Matt Musgrave
“I assume this is something twitter needs to do but is there anyway to have your twitter feed exclude replies to people? Conversion tends to flood quite a bit and its somewhat useless to people to only see half the conversion”
Harvard President Drew Gilpin Faust told stakeholders that research service Moody's projected "a 30 percent decline in the value of college and university endowments in the current fiscal year," - Mitchell Tsai
via Bookmarklet
If any investor could have avoided the credit catastrophe, it should have been Harvard. Harvard, the ultimate long-term investor (it's been compounding assets for more than 350 years). - Mitchell Tsai
The 13-F http://sec.gov/Archives/edgar/... shows Harvard with some 231 positions worth nearly $2.9 billion, highly concentrated in popped macroeconomic bubble plays. The top 10 holdings, which Bloomberg helpfully breaks out, account for 70 percent of the value of the disclosed holdings. - Mitchell Tsai
As HMC's asset-allocations data http://hmc.harvard.edu/investm... show, the endowment allocated about 11 percent of its total to emerging market stocks. (By contrast, nearly half of the portfolio described in HMC's 13-F was in emerging market stocks.) - Mitchell Tsai
But it does show that even the best, most experienced, and highly regarded long-term investors can get suckered into new-era thinking and make investments that turn out to be highly risky bets. The 13-F shows that the managers running this Harvard portfolio were huge believers in the decoupling theory—i.e., that emerging markets would continue to thrive even as the United States stalled—and in the notion that commodities would keep booming. - Mitchell Tsai
See Harvard's allocation strategy for $45 billion (as of 6/30/08) http://friendfeed.com/e/c51c0a... - 33% US/World equilty, 13% Private equity (up 2%), 18% Absolute return, 8% Commodities, 9% Timber/Land, 9% Real Estate, 11% bonds (down 4%), -3% Cash - Mitchell Tsai
See Cap Gemini's World Wealth Report 2008 http://www.us.capgemini.com/wo...http://friendfeed.com/e/de0c18... From 2006 to 2008, HNWIs shifted to more cash & fixed income (up 13%) and less real estate & alternative investments (down 16%) - 33% Equities, 27% Fixed Income (up 6%), 18% Cash/Deposits (up 7%), 11% Real Estate (down 5%), 11% Alternative Investments (down 11%). - Mitchell Tsai
If it's the lighter app, I will LOL. *edit: THANK GOD - Mona N.
Trism is the only paid iPhone app that I fire up every day, and thus the only one that hasn't inspired at least a little buyer's remorse. - Roger Benningfield