New
Bookmarks
Year 2001 Quarter 4: October 1-December 31 Additions to Bob
Jensen's Bookmarks
Bob Jensen at Trinity
University
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Choose a Date for
Additions to the Bookmarks File
December 20, 2001 December 10, 2001 December 3, 2001
November 23, 2001 November 14, 2001 November 7, 2001
November 1, 2001
October 24, 2001
October 18, 2001
October 10, 2001 October 2, 2001
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to view this week's new bookmarks.
For earlier editions of New
Bookmarks, go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
I maintain threads on various topics
at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/threads.htm
San Antonio Events and Regional
Links --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/sanantonio.htm
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here to search Bob Jensen's web site if you have key words to enter --- Search
Site.
This search engine may get you some hits from other professors at Trinity
University included with Bob Jensen's documents, but this may be to your
benefit.
Whenever a commercial product or
service is mentioned anywhere in Bob Jensen's website, there is no advertising
fee or other remuneration to Bob Jensen. This website is intended to be a
public service. I am grateful to Trinity University for serving up my
ramblings.
Bob Jensen's video helpers for MS
Excel, MS Access, and other helper videos are at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/
Accompanying documentation can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm
and http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
Bob Jensen's Commentaries,
Quotations, and Links Regarding the Latest U.S. War are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/JusticeAppeal.htm
December
20, 2001
This is the last edition of New
Bookmarks for the Year 2001. My wife and I will be spending the
holidays with my father in Algona, Iowa. Archived editions are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
My father (Vernon) is nearly 90 years
old and in the best of health considering his age. In 1995, he asked me to
write a story about his first trip away from the farm (when he was fourteen
years old). You can read the story about when life was difficult but, at
the same time, more genuine because few people had any money to waste on
anything.
See http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/vernon.htm
A Year 2001
message of love from my wife, Erika
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/erika/xmas01.htm
A
Year 2000 message of love from my wife, Erika.
She describes how a Munich street urchin became Cinderella filled with love and
joy --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/erika/xmas00.htm
Bob's Old Story About
Growing Up in Iowa
Short story entitled My
Glimpse of Heaven: What I learned from Max and Gwen
Brotherhood - in memory of the 343
fallen firefighters --- http://www.brotherhoodfdny.com/
Bob Jensen's threads on terrorism are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/JusticeAppeal.htm
The State Department
unveils a site dedicated to September's terrorist attacks, and it's surprising
some observers with its emotional tone, raising a question about propaganda
--- http://www.wired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,49067,00.html
Quotes of the Week
The ultimate
fate of any profession lies not in its rules, regulations, and controls. The
fate lies in the will and dedication of the majority of people who serve in that
profession --- the honest cops, the devoted doctors, the dedicated professors,
the faithful clergy, and the ardent auditors.
Bob Jensen in a message to his students following the Enron scandal.
To
Andersen's credit, it has long advocated a tighter rule. But that would
crimp the Big Five's clients --- companies and Wall Street. Accountants
have helped stall changes.
Enron's collapse may finally break that logjam. Like it or not, the Big
Five must accept new rules that give investors a clearer picture of what risks
companies run with SPEs.
Mike McNamee (See below)
Keep away from
people who try to belittle your ambitions. Small people always do that, but the
really great make you feel that you, too, can become great.
Mark Twain
Now, will you
please move that elephant? It's blocking the television.
Laura Palmer Noone & Craig Swenson, "5 Dirty Little Secrets in
Higher Education," (See Below)
Think now of
the youth camp traditions. Much of higher education is attached to a model
that privileges the baccalaureate student who is eighteen to twenty-two years
old, studying full-time to obtain a degree in four years, and residing in
institutional housing. These students are the privileged few--already a
minority in American higher education in actual numbers but still dominant in
the myths of what higher education is about. These privileged few are
granted a special opportunity in life: to spend four years of adulthood, mainly
withdrawn from productive employment, in the exploitation of their physical and
mental capabilities for their own purposes--some high-minded, some frankly bent
on the pleasures of youth--while being protected from most of the ordinary
consequences (often even the legal consequences) of irresponsible conduct.
(It is no accident that drug abuse has historically been a phenomenon among the
un-employed young--with the graciously un-employed upper-class youths buying
their supplies from the unwillingly un-employed lower-class youths. The
two groups have more in common than we like to imagine.) Dormitories and
fraternity/sorority houses and student ghettos are the scenes of a wide variety
of childish behaviors to which the denizens feel entitled. Many students
living in the same settings are disgusted by some of what they see and refrain
from much of the behavior around them, but they rarely succeed in overthrowing
the dominant culture.
James O'Donnell "Youth Camp: A Long Farewell" (See Below)
Nihilism is
the belief that all values are baseless and that nothing can be known or
communicated. It is often associated with extreme pessimism and a radical
skepticism that condemns existence. A true nihilist would believe in nothing,
have no loyalties, and no purpose other than, perhaps, an impulse to destroy.
While few philosophers would claim to be nihilists, nihilism is most often
associated with Friedrich Nietzsche who argued that its corrosive effects would
eventually destroy all moral, religious, and metaphysical convictions and
precipitate the greatest crisis in human history. In the 20th century,
nihilistic themes--epistemological failure, value destruction, and cosmic
purposelessness--have preoccupied artists, social critics, and philosophers.
Mid-century, for example, the existentialists helped popularize tenets of
nihilism in their attempts to blunt its destructive potential. By the end of the
century, existential despair as a response to nihilism gave way to an attitude
of indifference, often associated with antifoundationalism.
The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy --- http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/n/nihilism.htm

It's almost
springtime in Texas.
From our beloved Lady Bird Johnson
The Wildflower Center http://wildflower.avatartech.com/Plants_Online/Native_Plants/native.html
New
Bob Jensen's Threads on Return on Business Valuation, Business Combinations,
Investment (ROI), and Pro Forma Financial Reporting --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/roi.htm
A New Kind of
Cheating
Use of a cell phone for purposes of
cheating during an examination would seem to be an obvious problem. It
just never dawned on me until I witnessed it in a men's room on December 15,
2001. It was the beginning day of final examinations. I did not have
my final examinations scheduled until the following week. However, I
listened in while a student quite obviously was asking questions on a cell phone
and then waiting for answers.
Leaving books and crib notes in a
bathroom or hallway is a common problem. The cell phone idea, however,
just had never dawned on me. This could be a particular problem on makeup
exams. How often have you made a student leave books and notes in your
office and then put the student alone in a room to take a test? Have you
ever thought about that tiny cell phone that might be in a pocket?
I suspect the next best thing is having
a buddy with books and a computer hidden in one of the stalls such that it is
not necessary to make a phone call to the buddy.
Bob Jensen's threads on cheating are
at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/plagiarism.htm
Reply from Rohan Chambers [rchambers@CYBERVALE.COM]
How about this.....
Some students use
cell phones as calculators, and.....during the examination they send text
messages to each other!
Rohan Chambers
Lecturer in Auditing and Finance School of Business Administration
University of Technology, Jamaica
Reply from Andrew Priest [a.priest@ECU.EDU.AU]
Hi
We ban cell (mobile) phones from exam rooms and an
invigilator goes with student to the men's/women's room so as to minimise this
risk. However, I have often noticed some invigilator waiting outside the
toilet facility rather than discreetly inside.
Regards,
Andrew
Reply from Christine Kloezeman [ckloezem@GLENDALE.CC.CA.US]
I too bought 52 hand
held calculators from Pic and Save for the use in all my classes. Last
semester I found a student using her palmtop that had all the notes. I have a
container that keeps them in the division office so others can use them. The
bathroom trick has been very well used this semester so I told them for the
final they had to take care of business. I like the comment about when they
leave the room they have finished the test.
I do this to be fair
to those 60% that will not cheat. I have even been thanked by the students
because they felt studied hard and it wasn't fair to have student get good
grades without learning.
I like the idea of
re-developing an honor code. Many times we need to revisit these areas with
the students.
I wish there was a
site we could develop that would keep the instructors on top of the current
cheating techniques. It's like having teenagers. You can save a lot of
problems by being aware of the things they are trying to pull. Anybody know of
a site like that. I know I will visit it before each test.
Hi Christine,
I have updated a site concerning how
students plagiarize at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/plagiarism.htm
I am also trying to build up the above
site for cheating on examinations. I hope others will send me great ideas on how
to cheat.
Bob Jensen rjensen@trinity.edu
Reply from Patricia Doherty [pdoherty@BU.EDU]
What bothers me about
all this is the lengths to which we all go to prevent cheating. It is, as a
faculty member here described it, another "1% solution" in that for
the very few who would really cheat, we spend huge amounts of our time, and
restrict those who wouldn't cheat anyway. I used to have someone accompany
people to the rest room, but we frequently have so few proctors that I cannot
spare anyone, and began to feel silly about it, so now I do random checks. I
had never thought of the cell phone thing. I do know that the graphing
calculators provide ample opportunity to cheat, so we have resorted to buying,
as a department, 400 cheap calculators, which we pass out for each exam, then
collect. That restricts that avenue.
We used to check ID,
have not recently. So yesterday (yes, Saturday) while grading I found a
"fake" exam. Really irritated me that someone would waste our time
that way, and I plan to investigate further after we have grades in, with
little hope of success.
We give case exams in
managerial, which are harder to cheat on. And we do allow a page of
handwritten (no photocopies or printed) notes. I always question how far I am
willing to go to prevent cheating, and where I just say, if you are that
clever, go ahead, you'll get your "reward" someday.
I have updated my threads on
cheating with additional items at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/plagiarism.htm
An Old Kind of
Cheating
The first edition of New Bookmarks in
Year 2002 will feature sites where you can either purchase research papers or
download them for free. Since many of you are grading or have just graded term
papers, I thought it might be of interest to show how sophisticated these papers
are becoming --- cheating is becoming more difficult to detect.
For example, note the index on the left
margin at http://www.a1-termpaper.com/wom-gen.shtml
I clicked on Business to obtain the
index at http://www.a1-termpaper.com/bus-idx.shtml
I then clicked on Accounting and
obtained the listing at http://www.a1-termpaper.com/bus-acc.shtml
In the first Year 2002 edition of New
Bookmarks, I will relay a study by a student who used this and other services,
sometimes paying as much as $90 for papers and then examining the grades and
comments written by professors. For an advance view of this study, see http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/plagiarism.htm#SethStevenson
Note that most term papers are not free
online and, therefore, will not show up in Web search engines unless some
student was required by his instructor to put his or her term paper online.
You might be able to detect cheating in
a search engine if the clueless student did not even bother to change the title
of the paper (which can be found using search engines.)
I have updated my threads on
plagiarism with additional items at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/plagiarism.htm
This is a Good Idea
One way to actually make money off spam
is to sue the people sending it. That's what Bennett Haselton did under
Washington State's anti-spam law, and now he has $2,000 coming his way. Others
are doing the same to junk faxers. "Wham, Bam, Thank You Spam,"
by Jeffrey Benner, Wired News, December 12, 2001 --- http://www.wirednews.com/news/ebiz/0,1272,49089,FF.html
The IRS has released Revenue Procedure
2001-59, which includes the new 2002 tax tables as well as numerous
inflation-related changes to tax deductions, credits, and exemptions. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/66066
Computer Hero
of the Year
Professor. Herbert A. Simon, 1916-2001, Winner of the 1978 Nobel Prize in
Economics and the 1986 National Medal of Science. He was the fourteenth
foreign scientist to ever be admitted into the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Dr. Simon was a long-time professor of Political Science, Economics, Business,
and Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University
You can read a tribute to him in the
May/June edition of EDUCAUSE Review, pp. 26-27.
Also see one of his last, perhaps the
last, published paper entitled "What Makes Technology Revolutionary," EDUCAUSE
Review, May/June 2001, beginning on Page 28 --- http://www.educause.edu/pub/er/edreview.html
The paper was, however, written in 1987 in EDUCOM Bulletin and reprinted
in EDUCAUSE Review.
In the above article, Professor Simon
asserts that the steam engine was the start of the first industrial revolution,
and the computer was the start of the second industrial revolution.
Overwhelmed, underappreciated,
overexpectant, underdone--2001 was a year of dramatic extremes. Here are some
trends and strategies that flew high or flamed out. http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eFS80BcUEY04e0BD3g0A4
New Items on the Enron Scandal
Factoid: Enron's external "independent" auditors
made more from consulting and internal auditing at Enron than the firm's fees
from its "independent" audit.
"The Big Five Need to Factor in Investors," Mike
McNamee, Business Week, December 24, 2001, Page 32 ---
http://www.businessweek.com/ (not
free to download for non-subscribers)
At issue
are so-called special-purpose entities (SPEs), such as Chewco and JEDI
partnerships Enron used to get assets like power plants off its books.
Under standard accounting, a company can spin off assets --- an the related
debts --- to an SPE
if an outside investor puts up capital worth at least 3% of the SPE's
total value.
Three of
Enron's partnerships didn't meet the test --- a fact auditors Arthur Andersen
LLP missed. On Dec. 12, Andersen CEO Joseph F. Berardino told the House
Financial Services Committee his accountants erred in calculating one
partnership's value. On others, he says, Enron withheld information from
its auditors: The outside investor put up 3%, but Enron cut a side deal
to cover half of that with its own cash. Enron denies it withheld any
information.
Does
that absolve Andersen? Hardly. Auditors are supposed to uncover
secret deals, not let them slide. Critics fear the New Economy emphasis
means auditors will do even less probing.
The 3%
rule for SPEs is also too lax.
To
Andersen's credit, it has long advocated a tighter rule. But that would
crimp the Big Five's clients --- companies and Wall Street.
Accountants have helped stall changes.
Enron's
collapse may finally break that logjam. Like it or not, the Big Five
must accept new rules that give investors a clearer picture of what risks
companies run with SPEs.
The rest of the article
is on Page 38 of the Business Week Article.
"Let Auditors Be
Auditors," Editorial Page, Business Week, December 24, 2001 --- http://www.businessweek.com/
(not free to download for non-subscribers)
But
neither proposal (plans proposed by SEC Commission Chairman Harvey L. Pitt)
goes far enough. GAAP, the generally accepted accounting principles,
desperately need to be revamped to deal with cash flow and other issues
relevant in a fast-moving, high-tech economy. The whole move to
off-balance sheet accounting should be reassessed. Opaque partnerships
that hide assets and debt do not serve the interests of investors. Under
heavy shareholder pressure from the Enron fallout, El Paso Corp. just moved $2
billion in partnership debt onto the balance sheet.
Finally, Pitt should consider requiring companies to change their auditors who
go easy on them, as we have seen time and time again.
Bob Jensen's
commentaries and threads on the Enron scandal are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
"Arthur Andersen: How Bad Will It Get?" Business
Week, December 24, 2001, pp. 30-32 ---
http://www.businessweek.com/ (not
free to download for non-subscribers)
QUOTE
1
Berardino, a 51-year-old Andersen lifer, may find the firm's competence in
auditing complex financial companies questioned. While Andersen was its
auditory, Enron's managers shoveled debt into partnerships with Enron's own
ececs to get it off the balance sheet --- a dubious though legal ploy.
In one case, says Berardino, hoarse from defending the firm on Capitol Hill,
Andersen's auditors made an "error in judgment" and should have
consolidated the partnership in Enron's overall results. Regarding
another, he says Enron officials did not tell their auditor about a
"separate agreement" they had with an outside investor, so the
auditor mistakenly let Enron keep the partnership's results separate.
(Enron denies that the auditors were not so informed.)
QUOTE
2
Enron says a special board committee is investgating why management and the
board did not learn about this arrangement until October. Now that Enron
has consolidated such set-ups into its financial statements, it had to restate
its financial reports from 1997 onward, cutting earnings by nearly $500
million. Damningly, the company says more than four years' worth of
audits and statements approved by Andersen "should not be relied
upon."
Bob Jensen's
commentaries and threads on the Enron scandal are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
One of the most
prominent CPAs in the world sent me the following message and sent the WSJ link:
Bob, More on Enron.
It's interesting that this matter of performing internal audits didn't come up
in the testimony Joe Beradino of Andersen presented to the House Committee a
couple of days ago
"Arthur Andersen's 'Double Duty'
Work Raises Questions About Its Independence," by Jonathan Weil, The Wall
Street Journal, December 14, 2001 --- http://interactive.wsj.com/fr/emailthis/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1008289729306300000.djm
In addition to acting
as Enron
Corp.'s outside auditor, Arthur Andersen LLP also performed internal-auditing
services for Enron, raising further questions about the Big Five accounting
firm's independence and the degree to which it may have been auditing its own
work.
That Andersen
performed "double duty" work for the Houston-based energy concern
likely will trigger greater regulatory scrutiny of Andersen's role as Enron's
independent auditor than would ordinarily be the case after an audit failure,
accounting and securities-law specialists say.
It also potentially
could expose Andersen to greater liability for damages in shareholder
lawsuits, depending on whether the internal auditors employed by Andersen
missed key warning signs that they should have caught. Once valued at more
than $77 billion, Enron is now in proceedings under Chapter 11 of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code.
Internal-audit
departments, among other things, are used to ensure that a company's control
systems are adequate and working, while outside independent auditors are hired
to opine on the accuracy of a company's financial statements. Every sizable
company relies on outside auditors to check whether its internal auditors are
working effectively to prevent fraud, accounting irregularities and waste. But
when a company hires its outside auditor to monitor internal auditors working
for the same firm, critics say it creates an unavoidable conflict of interest
for the firm.
Still, such
arrangements have become more common over the past decade. In response, the
Securities and Exchange Commission last year passed new rules, which take
effect in August 2002, restricting the amount of internal-audit work that
outside auditors can perform for their clients, though not banning it
outright.
"It certainly
runs totally contrary to my concept of independence," says Alan Bromberg,
a securities-law professor at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. "I
see it as a double duty, double responsibility and, therefore, double
potential liability."
Andersen officials
say their firm's independence wasn't impaired by the size or nature of the
fees paid by Enron -- $52 million last year. An Enron spokesman said,
"The company believed and continues to believe that Arthur Andersen's
role as Enron's internal auditor would not compromise Andersen's role as
independent auditor for Enron."
Andersen spokesman
David Tabolt said Enron outsourced its internal-audit department to Andersen
around 1994 or 1995. He said Enron began conducting some of its own
internal-audit functions in recent years. Enron, Andersen's second-largest
U.S. client, paid $25 million for audit fees in 2000, according to Enron's
proxy last year. Mr. Tabolt said that figure includes both internal and
external audit fees, a point not explained in the proxy, though he declined to
specify how much Andersen was paid for each. Additionally, Enron paid Andersen
a further $27 million for other services, including tax and consulting work.
Following audit
failures, outside auditors frequently claim that their clients withheld
crucial information from them. In testimony Wednesday before a joint hearing
of two House Financial Services subcommittees, which are investigating Enron's
collapse, Andersen's chief executive, Joseph Berardino, made the same claim
about Enron. However, given that Andersen also was Enron's internal auditor,
"it's going to be tough for Andersen to take that traditional tack that
'management pulled the wool over our eyes,' " says Douglas Carmichael, an
accounting professor at Baruch College in New York.
Mr. Tabolt, the
Andersen spokesman, said it is too early to make judgments about Andersen's
work. "None of us knows yet exactly what happened here," he said.
"When we know the facts we'll all be able to make informed judgments. But
until then, much of this is speculation."
Though it hasn't
received public attention recently, Andersen's double-duty work for Enron
wasn't a secret. A March 1996 Wall Street Journal article, for instance, noted
that a growing number of companies, including Enron, had outsourced their
internal-audit departments to their outside auditors, a development that had
prompted criticism from regulators and others. At other times, Mr. Tabolt
said, Andersen and Enron officials had discussed their arrangement publicly.
Accounting firms say
the double-duty arrangements let them become more familiar with clients'
control procedures and that such arrangements are ethically permissible, as
long as outside auditors don't make management decisions in handling the
internal audits. Under the new SEC rules taking effect next year, an outside
auditor impairs its independence if it performs more than 40% of a client's
internal-audit work. The SEC said the restriction won't apply to clients with
assets of $200 million or less. Previously, the SEC had imposed no such
percentage limitation.
The
Gottesdiener Law Firm, the Washington, D.C. 401(k) and pension class action law
firm prosecuting the most comprehensive of the 401(k) cases pending against
Enron Corporation and related defendants, added new allegations to its case
today, charging Arthur Andersen of Chicago with
knowingly participating in Enron's fraud on employees.
Lawsuit Seeks to Hold Andersen Accountable for Defrauding Enron Investors,
Employees --- http://www.smartpros.com/x31970.xml
Bob Jensen's commentaries and
threads on the Enron scandal are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
The Public Oversight Board, the group
that oversees the peer review process required of all public accounting firms
that audit publicly held companies, has decided to take an active role in the
expanded peer review that Deloitte & Touche is providing to Andersen. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/65920
But We're Hanging in
There at a Reduced Rank 11 (Which is About in the Middle Among 23 Professions)!
A recent poll jointly conducted by CNN,
Gallup Organization, and USA Today ranked various professions according to how
members are perceived in terms of conveying honesty and ethics. Find out how
accountants ranked in comparison to members of other professions. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/66220
A recent
poll jointly conducted by CNN, Gallup Organization, and USA Today
ranked various professions according to how members are perceived in terms of
conveying honesty and ethics. In recent years, nurses and pharmacists have
monopolized the top positions on the annual survey.
This year, in the
wake of the September 11 events, firefighters took a decisive victory as
frontrunners in the poll. Accountants appeared in 11th position, with 41
percent of respondents giving the profession "High" or "Very
High" ratings for honesty and ethical standards.
Rounding out the top
10 were Nurses in second position, followed by U.S. Military Personnel,
Policemen, Pharmacists, Medical Doctors, Clergy, Engineers, College Teachers,
and Dentists.
Following Accountants
in the ranking of 23 professions were Bankers, Journalists, Congressmen,
Business Executives, Senators, Auto Mechanics, Stockbrokers, Lawyers, Labor
Union Leaders, Insurance Salesmen, Advertising Practitioners, and Car
Salesmen.
One thousand five
adults participated in the poll, which was conducted November 26 and 27.
Details are given at http://www.gallup.com/poll/releases/pr011205.asp
As promised, the Securities and
Exchange Commission has revisited the issues that concern publicly held
companies regarding Regulation Fair Disclosure, the ruling that requires
publicly held companies to provide information that could influence the purchase
of shares simultaneously to every potential investor. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/65824
Bob Jensen's commentaries and
threads on the Enron scandal are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.ht
New York's Mayor Rudy Giuliani plans to
start his own consulting firm when he leaves office in January. Reports are that
the new firm will have an affiliation with Ernst & Young and will receive
financial backing from the Big Five firm. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/66338
From the Free Wall Street Journal
Educators' Reviews for December 13, 2001
TITLE: Former Auditor of Superior Bank
Cites Grand-Jury Probe Into Collapse of Thrift
REPORTER: Mark Maremont
DATE: Dec 12, 2001
PAGE: C16
LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1008126509354552200.djm
TOPICS: Accounting, Accounting Fraud, Accounting Irregularities, Auditing,
Auditing Services, Bad Debts, Banking, Loan Loss Allowance
SUMMARY: Ernst & Young LLP, former
auditor of Superior Bank, is cooperating with a grand-jury investigation.
Superior Bank, which failed in July, is one of the largest banking institutions
to fail in recent years. A representative from the Office of Thrift Supervision
told Congress that Ernst and Young permitted improper accounting. Ernst and
Young contends that there were no accounting mistakes.
QUESTIONS:
1.) What actions has Ernst and Young taken in cooperation with the grand-jury
investigation? Is Ernst and Young required to take these actions? Are they
violating client confidentiality by surrendering working papers to a third
party? Under what circumstances is it acceptable to share client work papers
with a third party?
2.) What factors does Ernst and Young
contend contributed to the failure of Superior Bank? If Ernst and Young had
perfect foresight about these events, what changes in the financial reporting
would have been required? Is it reasonable to expect auditors to anticipate
changes in the economy? Why or why not?
3.) What factors does the Office of
Thrift Supervision claim contributed to the failure of Superior Bank? Discuss
two financial reporting issues that should have been considered by Ernst and
Young. Do you think that Ernst and Young allowed misleading financial reporting
by Superior Bank? Why or why not?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University
of Rhode Island
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University
From the Free Wall Street Journal
Educators' Reviews for December 13, 2001
TITLE: EPA Will Destroy Hudson River to
Save It
REPORTER: Bonner R. Cohen
DATE: Dec 12, 2001
PAGE: A18
LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1008121274639180560.djm
TOPICS: Financial Statement Analysis, Financial Accounting
SUMMARY: This commentary by a senior
fellow at the Lexington Institute provides environmental and civic arguments
against the EPA's recent decision to dredge the Hudson River to remove PCBs
legally dumped there by GE prior to 1977. Related articles provide the history
of GE's efforts to prevent this decision to dredge the river. Questions relate
to environmental remediation reporting requirements and assessing GE's
disclosure of this particular Superfund clean-up project.
QUESTIONS:
1.) What financial accounting standards address reporting requirements for
environmental liabilities? Specifically, describe the AICPA's statement of
position on this topic. What are the major points of disclosure and liability
recognition discussed in that document?
2.) Using the AICPA's statement of
position, summarize the environmental laws currently in effect in the U.S. What
is the Superfund Law?
3.) What is a "Superfund
site"? Who decides on the actions which must be taken in cleaning up a
"Superfund site"?
4.) Both the commentary by Bonner Cohen
and the related articles emphasize the fact that GE legally disposed of PCBs in
the Hudson River. If the company's actions have always been legal, then why must
GE pay for the cost of cleaning up the river, estimated to total $460 million?
5.) Obtain GE's 2000 annual report from
the company's web site. Note 21 provides disclosure related to liabilities
including their involvement in various environmental clean-up efforts. How
detailed are the disclosures of their obligations in this area? Compare this
disclosure to the requirements in the AICPA's statement of position. Do you
think the company has accrued any amount for the liability to clean up the
Hudson River? If so, how much? Cite any accounting standards you rely on to make
this estimate.
6.) How significant is the expected
cost of cleaning up the Hudson River under the EPA's plan relative to GE's
overall operations? Given the EPA's decision and based on the AICPA's statement
of position, what requirements do you think GE must meet in reporting its
results for the year ended December 31, 2001?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University
of Rhode Island Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University
--- RELATED ARTICLES --- TITLE: EPA
Orders Dredging of PCBs from the Upper Hudson River REPORTER: Matt Murray ISSUE:
Dec 05, 2001 LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1007497237159676640.djm
TITLE: U.S. Decision to Seek River
Clean-Up is Big Setback for General Electric REPORTER: Matt Murray And Tom
Hamburger ISSUE: Aug 02, 2001 LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB996670293589550385.djm
~ + ~ + ~ + ~ + ~ + ~ + ~ + ~ + ~ + ~ +
~ + ~ + ~ + ~ + ~ + ~ + ~ + ~ + ~ + ~ +
CPA2Biz Unveils Business Valuation
Resource Center --- http://www.smartpros.com/x31976.xml
The BV Center will
include resources and information from the American Institute of Certified
Public Accountants (AICPA) and industry experts on various factors affecting
the value of a business or a transaction, such as mergers and acquisitions;
economic damages due to a patent infringement or breaches of contract;
bankruptcy or a reorganization; or fraud due to anti-trust actions or
embezzlement. The BV Center will provide a comprehensive combination of
solutions that meet the professional needs of CPAs practicing business
valuation, including those who have achieved the AICPA's Accredited in
Business Valuation credential. The BV Center will also provide networking
communities for BV practitioners as well as a public forum for discussion of
business valuation trends, developments and issues.
"Tremendous
growth in the BV discipline, coupled with a dynamic group of factors affecting
business valuation, means that CPAs need a consistent, timely and relevant
vehicle through which BV-related information can be disseminated to
them," said Erik Asgeirsson, Vice President of Product Management at
CPA2Biz. "The BV Center on CPA2Biz will provide them with AICPA books,
practice aids, newsletters and software, along with industry expert literature
and complementary third-party products and solutions. Because the issues
associated with valuation impact CPAs in both public and private sectors --
auditors, tax practitioners, personal financial planners as well as BV
specialists -- the BV Center will have a powerful horizontal impact on the
profession."
"I think that
CPAs who practice in business valuation ought to go to the BV Center for
information and tools that are timely, relevant and easy to obtain," said
Thomas Hilton, CPA/ABV, Chairman of the AICPA Business Valuation Subcommittee.
"The BV Center is a source CPAs can use to offer their clients a higher
level of service, as well as to connect with other CPAs who provide valuation
services."
The CPA2Biz Website is at www.cpa2biz.com/
Bob Jensen's Threads on Return on Business Valuation, Business Combinations,
Investment (ROI), and Pro Forma Financial Reporting --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/roi.htm
News from Fathom
December 2001
Forward this
newsletter to a friend!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In this issue:
* Financing Terrorism
* Is Globalization to Blame for the Terrorist Attacks?
* Free Seminar: Manufacturing Anywhere
* Back by popular demand: Prospecting for Business Information
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* Columbia University
* The London School of Economics and Political Science
* Cambridge University Press
* The British Library
* The New York Public Library
* The University of Chicago
* University of Michigan
* American Film Institute
* RAND * Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
* The Natural History Museum
* Victoria and Albert Museum
* Science Museum *
~~~~~~~~~~~ IN THE
NEWS ~~~~~~~~~~~
Immediately after the
terrorist attacks of September 11, US officials began an intense effort to
freeze bank accounts and financial transactions linked to terrorist groups. As
the search continues with the help of foreign nations, investigators are
finding that Al Qaeda's network of assets is wider reaching and more complex
than they ever imagined, encompassing funds from private corporations,
charitable organizations, investment groups, and organized crime operations
around the world.
Jean-François Seznec,
adjunct professor of international affairs at Columbia University and
Raporteur to the UNESCO-Amar standing conference on relations between Islam
and the West, examines the financing behind terrorist operations and explores
ways to stop the flow of funds in the free feature "Financing Terrorism:
Channels for Depositing and Moving Money": http://www.fathom.com/link.jhtml?cid=603&page=feature&id=122459
FREE BUSINESS AND
ECONOMICS FEATURES ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
*** TERRORISM AND THE
DEVELOPING WORLD ... September 11 and the Dark Side of Globalization Lisa
Anderson, dean of the School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia
University, explores the dark side of globalization-- transnational networks
and underground markets nearly invisible from state governments: "The
World Bank estimates that half of the commercial transactions that take place
in Egypt every year are in the black market..." http://www.fathom.com/link.jhtml?cid=604&page=feature&id=122424
*** TERRORISM AND THE
DEVELOPING WORLD ... Terrorism, Imperialism and Globalization John Harriss,
director of the Development Studies Institute at The London School of
Economics and Political Science, considers the economic, political and
cultural contexts for the emergence of terrorist movements: "The enemy
that we are now fighting--terrorism--is to an important extent a creature
created by western imperialism, headed up by the US..." http://www.fathom.com/link.jhtml?cid=605&page=feature&id=122430
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ONLINE
COURSES ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* Free Seminar *
MANUFACTURING ANYWHERE, a free seminar from RAND, explores the changes the
21st century will bring to manufacturing. Learn about "Napsterization,"
postponement, outsourcing, vertical disintegration, and more. The seminar is
free; simply follow the checkout process to enroll: http://www.fathom.com/link.jhtml?cid=606&page=course&id=10701041
* Short
e-Course * PROSPECTING FOR BUSINESS
INFORMATION, a short online course from the
New York Public Library, is designed to help small business owners,
job-hunters, grant seekers, investors, advertisers and others navigate Web-
and library-based company information services for business research. Also
includes temporary access to databases from LexisNexis, infoUSA and Standard
and Poor's. Class starts December 19: http://www.fathom.com/link.jhtml?cid=607&page=course&id=49704700
* Short e-Course *
DEVELOPING YOUR CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT PLAN, a short online course from Columbia
University, is designed to help beginning teachers strengthen their classroom
management skills from the start. Enroll anytime: http://www.fathom.com/link.jhtml?cid=612&page=course&id=41704005
* Semester-Length
Course * CHILDREN'S MATERIALS: EVALUATION AND USE, an online course from the
University of Washington, is designed primarily for educators seeking an
endorsement as school library media specialists and teachers who want to build
a classroom collection of the "best of the best" in children's
literature. Enroll anytime: http://www.fathom.com/link.jhtml?cid=613&page=course&id=1406
Search for more
online courses in Fathom's Course Directory: http://www.fathom.com/link.jhtml?cid=614&page=directory
Search for more
online courses in Fathom's Course Directory: http://www.fathom.com/link.jhtml?cid=608&page=directory&id=0
THINKING IS
ENCOURAGED @ FATHOM.COM (TM) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If you use AOL, or
any of the above links don't work, please copy and paste the entire URL
address into your browser window.
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Search for more online courses in
Fathom's Course Directory: http://www.fathom.com/link.jhtml?cid=608&page=directory&id=0
You can listen to part of my August
2001 workshop in Atlanta devoted to Fathom at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/001cpe/01start.htm
Lesson Plans Library (K-12) --- http://school.discovery.com/lessonplans/index.html
Find hundreds of
original lesson plans, all written by teachers for teachers. Use the pull-down
menus below to browse by subject, grade, or both.
Lesson Plans for Assignment Discovery and TLC Elementary School
If you are searching for lesson plans to support Assignment Discovery and TLC
Elementary School programming, click here.
See NEW lesson plans for the fall! Click here.
EDUCAUSE Review,
November/December 2001
Table of Contents
Features
Excerpt
Departments
- techwatch
Information Technology in the News
[PDF format 128 KB]
- Leadership
Connecting IT Possibilities and Institutional Priorities
by John C. Hitt
[PDF format 134 KB]
- Inside
IT
Improving Service Quality with Benchmarks
by Ray Grant
[PDF format 142 KB]
- New
Horizons
Building "Open" Frameworks for Education
by M. S. Vijay Kumar, Jeff Merriman, and Phillip D. Long
[PDF format 63 KB]
- policy@edu
Balancing Copyright Concerns: The TEACH Act of 2001
by Laura N. Gasaway
[PDF format 90 KB]
- Viewpoints
Coordinated Autonomy
by Jim Davis
[PDF format 64 KB]
- Homepage
The EDUCAUSE Regional Conference Strategy
by Brian L. Hawkins
[PDF format 50 KB]
|
"To Youth Camp: A Long
Farewell," by James J. O'Donnell, EDUCAUSE Review, November/December
2001, pp 14-19 --- http://www.educause.edu/pub/er/erm01/erm016w.html
Excerpts are quoted below. Go to the above link to download the full
article.
Five
years ago, the revolution in "distance learning" (or
"distance-independent learning" or "distributed learning")
seemed to be upon us. Two or three years ago, the sounds of the
revolution could be heard in all quadrants of the sky. Yet as we go into
the fall of 2001, the rumblings are much quieter. What appeared
inevitable only a couple of years ago now looks puzzlingly remote. To be
sure, evidence of the revolution can be seen here and there: new products are
becoming available, many more courses are available in some
location-independent form, and Western Governors University already has its
first Chancellor Emeritus and an enrollment of five hundred students.
And there is wisdom in persistence and patience. If the dot-coms have
gone dot-bust, it's reasonable to think that the inflated expectations in the
not-for-profit sector1 would also deflate, and what was
overvalued two years ago would be undervalued today--making this a good time
to invest.
It
baffles some that the revolution has not occurred. But when a question
won't answer itself, chances are you're asking the wrong question.
Distance
learning was certainly high concept for the 1990s in higher education.
But like the "horseless carriage," this notion materialized through
an unimaginative extension of traditional forms. The key insight was
that networked information technology makes it possible to reorganize the
process of learning and to redistribute what takes place face to face so that
it takes place when learners and teachers are separated in space and time.
Traditional students could learn in new ways, and new kinds of students could
join the academic community for the first time.
Many of
those who felt keenly the clarity of that vision also thought that existing
institutions harbored some excess capacity of instructional time and attention
that could be sold cheaply in bulk. This was a shimmering dream, never
realistic. Much time and energy was spent trying to prove that concept,
with precious little to show as a result. Nobody has succeeded in
building outlet malls for the mind--offering cheap and serviceable merchandise
of sometimes dubious origin more or less protected by prestige name brands.
That is, in fact, good news. And even where more realistic projects were
put in notion, markets have been slow to evolve, faculty hard to recruit, and
production costs impossible to bring in line with the results that can be
demonstrated. At least one university that made a splash announcing its
for-profit subsidiary for distance learning has now quietly closed down the
operation.
Nothing
is as easy as it seems.
Think
now of the youth camp traditions. Much of higher education is attached
to a model that privileges the baccalaureate student who is eighteen to
twenty-two years old, studying full-time to obtain a degree in four years, and
residing in institutional housing. These students are the privileged
few--already a minority in American higher education in actual numbers but
still dominant in the myths of what higher education is about. These
privileged few are granted a special opportunity in life: to spend four years
of adulthood, mainly withdrawn from productive employment, in the exploitation
of their physical and mental capabilities for their own purposes--some
high-minded, some frankly bent on the pleasures of youth--while being
protected from most of the ordinary consequences (often even the legal
consequences) of irresponsible conduct. (It is no accident that drug
abuse has historically been a phenomenon among the un-employed young--with the
graciously un-employed upper-class youths buying their supplies from the
unwillingly un-employed lower-class youths. The two groups have more in
common than we like to imagine.) Dormitories and fraternity/sorority
houses and student ghettos are the scenes of a wide variety of childish
behaviors to which the denizens feel entitled. Many students living in
the same settings are disgusted by some of what they see and refrain from much
of the behavior around them, but they rarely succeed in overthrowing the
dominant culture.
Colleges
and universities are deeply and complexly attached to the infantilization.
The social position of higher education in European and American societies is
firmly rooted in a notion of prolonged and irresponsible childhood.
Though only a fraction of students actually have the opportunity to live such
a life, servicing their needs still provides the conceptual and bureaucratic
structure of higher education institutions. A new administrator in my
university asked me how "the typical student" gets computer
support-and when I pressed the question, I found that "the typical
student" is the undergraduate, even though undergraduates make up less
than 50 percent of our FTE population.
Parental
anxiety plays a significant part in encouraging institutions to establish and
preserve these patronizing cultures. Parents want levels of security
that would be unreasonable to expect if their eighteen-year-old son or
daughter instead moved off to the big city to get a job. They want to be
absolutely sure that their children have easy access to three super-abundant
meals a day and don't have to worry about paying for the food. They
expect health care, counseling, and other services that would be preposterous
to expect elsewhere, and colleges and universities compete aggressively to
deliver all these services.
So when
most people think of higher education, they think of something that happens to
people between the ages of eighteen and twenty-two and that lasts for about
four years. In reality, many students are already well into their
twenties, still working on a first degree while taking a responsible economic
role in society as well. Many others, in their twenties and thirties,
are engaged in professional education, whether for the academic Ph.D. or in
the myriad professional disciplines. Higher education institutions serve
a huge variety of adult learners, some working for a bachelor's degree, some
for professional degrees, some for continuing professional education, and some
for reasons of cultural and personal enhancement. But on the traditional
campus, all those adults are in one way or another made to feel marginal.
Even--one might say especially--the search for a parking space often reminds
them that they are second-class citizens.2
NOTES
1
I mean here
the deliberately not-for-profit sector, to distinguish traditional
colleges and universities from that new sector of the economy that would
really like to make a profit if they could, but...
2
Notice that
complaints about the failings of higher education rarely include the
astonishingly successful system of professional education. Although we
may argue about the specifics of curriculum and the focus in, say, law and
medical school, few dispute that those schools do what they do extraordinarily
well. Likewise, nobody writes best-sellers complaining about the quality
of community college education, yet few outside those institutions hear
anything about the extraordinary and beneficial impact they have on students'
lives.
Bob Jensen's documents
on distance education are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
From Syllabus News on December 11, 2001
Blackboard,
CollegisEduprise Expand Partnership
Blackboard Inc. and
CollegisEduprise, Inc. said they would bundle their respective tools and
services to strengthen their offerings to the higher education market. The
collaboration will blend the Blackboard 5 Learning System, software licensing,
application hosting and integration services from Blackboard with education
assessment, strategic planning, end-user help desk services, and faculty
pedagogical training from CollegisEduprise. Clients of both companies include
the Community College of Denver, Fairleigh Dickinson University, Montgomery
Community College, New York Institute of Technology, Norfolk State University
and the University of Baltimore.
The Bb homepage is at http://www.blackboard.com/
Bob Jensen's threads on Blackboard
are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/blackboard.htm
Seton Hall University
unveiled a program to provide technology resources and training to
economically disadvantaged people. Project SHUTTLE, for Seton Hall University
Technology Training for Lifelong Education, aims to provide technology
education, resources and training to people without a personal computer or
technological resources. The project will collaborate with the school's
Educational Opportunity Program (EOP) and Upward Bound Program to provide
laptop computers to participating high school seniors. The students receive
training in laptop use and are encouraged to take the computers home for
schoolwork and home use. EOP director Carol McMillan-Lonesome called SHUTTLE
"a conduit for families to embrace lifelong learning through technology,
understand the ... importance of higher education and achieve personal ...
aspirations."
For more information,
visit: http://academic.shu.edu/shuttle/index.html
eCollege Says
Courseware Exceeds Disability Standards
Courseware developer
eCollege said the software it will release this month will exceed Section 508,
the federal accessibility standard for information technology. The comany said
its software targets student users as well as disabled faculty authoring
online courses. It will also provide a support staff trained in assistive
technologies. The software will be available without requiring a new version
purchase, upgrade or implementatioin, the company said. Mike Gibson,
coordinator of the Professional Training in Adaptive Technology Program at the
Colorado Center for the Blind, said, "working with an e-learning company
that is proactive in understanding and meeting the needs of the blind helps us
to change what it means to be blind."
The eCollege homepage is at http://www.ecollege.com/
Bob Jensen's threads on course
authoring systems and shells can be found at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/290wp/290wp.htm
Pepperdine
University, eNeuralNet, and IBM Corp. have joined forces to open the Murray S.
Craig Digital Democracy Lab at Pepperdine's School of Public Policy. The lab
is dedicated to promoting political accountability via the use of artificial
intelligence software. eNeuralNet is donating its Minutes-N-Motion political
accountability software, a 50-seat license, and an IBM server. Craig, the
software's creator, will serve as a strategic advisor to lab director,
Pepperdine professor Mike Shires, in developing curriculum and research
applications.
For more
information, visit: http://www.pepperdine.edu
A Century of Drawing: Works on Paper:
Works on Paper from Degas to LeWitt (Art, History) ---
http://www.nga.gov/exhibitions/drawinginfo.htm
Evaluation of Websites
I recommend the comprehensive site at
http://www.prana3.com/tools/
A message from Ed Scribner
Here's a guide Susan Beck at the
NMSU Library has prepared for student evaluation of Web sites --- http://lib.nmsu.edu/instruction/eval.html
A message from Ron Tidd about
evaluation of Web Sites:
Also consider:
Bobby- http://www.cast.org/bobby/
web page validation for accessibility by people with disabilities (be
attentive and expand the community)
W3C- http://validator.w3.org/
free HTML validation service
Web Site Garage- http://websitegarage.netscape.com/
tune up your web page
Web Wonk- http://www.dsiegel.com/tips/
Tips for designers and writers
Web Shui at http://builder.cnet.com/webbuilding/0-3881.html?tag=st.bl.3880.dir.3881
Web sales have proven to be a small
slice of most sectors, so retailers are more selective about their investments
in Web initiatives. They're starting to view their Web sites like any other
store--now that it's built and functioning, what justifies spending more money
on it? http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eFS80BcUEY04e0BD3h0A5
Bob Jensen's bookmarks for
evaluation of Websites are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob4.htm#Evaluation
The Faculty of Arts
at the University of Alberta is pleased to accept applications for its Master
of Arts degree in Humanities Computing. The programme integrates computational
methods and theories with research and teaching in the Humanities. The Faculty
is committed to offering its students opportunities to combine their interests
in the Arts and emerging computing technologies, particularly in the areas of
information management, multimedia, electronic publishing, and distance
education. The new M.A. in Humanities Computing will help form students who
not only understand, create, and manage multimedia and technological projects,
but also understand the critical and intellectual traditions of Humanities
scholarship.
Please find enclosed
a poster and brochures that outline the programme, which should provide
interested students with the information they need to make an informed
decision. To be most widely considered for funding, applications to the
programme should arrive no later than January 7, 2002, although we will
continue to review all applications after this date.
Please circulate the
posters and brochures to interested departments, institutes, and potential
students. Thank you for your support of this new and exciting endeavour.
Yours truly,
Nasrin Rahimieh
Associate Dean (Humanities) Faculty of Arts 6-14
Humanities Centre University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2E5
Tel: (780) 492-9132 Fax: (780) 492-7251
Here's a guide
Susan Beck at the NMSU Library has prepared for students:
http://lib.nmsu.edu/instruction/eval.html
Ed Scribner
New Mexico State
For professional Website evaluation,
you might take a look at http://www.prana3.com/tools/
"5
Dirty Little Secrets in Higher Education," by Laura Palmer Noone
& Craig Swenson. EDUCAUSE Review,
November/December 2001, pp. 20-31 --- http://www.educause.edu/pub/er/erm01/erm016w.html
Dirty Little Secret #1
You Don't Have to Be a Researcher to Be a Good Teacher
Lest
there be any misunderstanding, let us make clear that we think research is a
good thing. We support it, benefit from it, and think the
"scholarship of discovery" to be a worthy pursuit.1
But let's all be honest: some researchers make great teachers, whereas
others--some of the most celebrated researchers, in fact--have no place inside
a classroom (if judged by their ability to facilitate learning). The
irony is that many in this second group don't want to be in the classroom
anyhow.
If a
"good researcher" is defined as someone who is a critical and
reflective observer, who asks good questions, who draws warranted conclusions
from data, and who understands the limits of prediction, we'll agree that the
researcher does indeed have a place inside the classroom. If, on the
other hand, a "good researcher" means what it usually means--that he
or she is publishing formal "academic" research--that's where we
part company.
The
pattern followed by most researchers leads them to learn more and more about
less and less. Narrow specialization often precludes interdisciplinary
breadth. The gift of so many great teachers, by contrast, rests in their
breadth of knowledge--in their ability to synthesize and communicate the ideas
of others and to inspire their students.
Dirty Little Secret #2
Professors Know a Lot about Their Disciplines but Very Little about Teaching
The
process of getting a doctorate has never been about learning how to teach.
Oh sure, most traditional doctoral programs require candidates to serve as
teaching assistants, but that usually means little more than assigning them to
classes. Faculty in most disciplines tend to look down their noses at
those who choose education (i.e., "teaching") as their discipline.
Doctoral candidates in most disciplines primarily learn their disciplines and
learn how to do research. Teaching is way down in the pecking order, and
everybody knows it.
Thus,
until very recently, there were few efforts to teach doctoral candidates how
to teach and even fewer to teach professors how to be better teachers.
And even though many institutions have now created centers to help instructors
teach better--a hopeful sign--directors of those centers state that relatively
small percentages of professors use these services. In addition, those
who do learn teaching techniques are probably ignorant about how those
techniques work. Simply put, those who do most of the teaching
don't know all that much about how their students actually learn.
Dirty Little Secret #3
Professors Know Even Less about Learning Than They Do about Teaching
See http://www.educause.edu/pub/er/erm01/erm016w.html
Dirty Little Secret #4
Part-Time Instructors Are Just as Effective as Full-Time Faculty Members
See http://www.educause.edu/pub/er/erm01/erm016w.html
Dirty Little Secret #5
Seat-Time Measures Don't Measure Seat Time
One of
the most widely used measures in higher education is the Carnegie Unit of
Instruction. Ostensibly, the Carnegie Unit measures "time on
task"--the amount of time that students spend with instructors.
Time on task is considered a "best practice" in undergraduate
education,6 but the dirty little secret is that student time
spent on a task is not generally what the Carnegie Unit measures. What
it usually measures is the amount of time for which a course is scheduled.
It doesn't measure time on task for the simple reason that attendance isn't
required at most institutions. In many traditional classes, a student
who shows up only for the mid-term and final exams, and hands in required
assignments, won't be directly penalized.
The
situation is more acute in this age of electronically mediated instruction.
Here the Carnegie Unit is an obvious anachronism. This realization is at least
partially behind the initiatives of accrediting bodies that now require a much
greater emphasis on assessing student learning--that is, on measuring the
outcome rather than the input.
But
measuring outcomes is difficult, as innovators have discovered. Like the
old saying about the weather, everybody talks about it, but nobody (or at
least a relatively small number) does anything about it. Inputs are easy
to measure, though, and so higher education clings to outdated measures like
the Carnegie Unit as if they were articles of faith. That presents a problem
if student learning is the goal: when we are concerned about how long a
student's rear end is in a seat, we are concerned about the wrong end of the
student.
Family Therapy
Well,
there it is--the elephant in the living room has been uncloaked. There
are likely a few more dirty little secrets lurking among us, but enough
already. Higher education will probably never be one big happy family.
We are an awfully diverse bunch, we tend to be argumentative by nature, and we
seem to like it that way. Besides, nothing says that we all have to be
the same--or that being the same would be a good thing. But we can learn
from one another, and the good news is that there is nothing particularly
earthshaking about the secrets revealed above. Higher education does not
have to give up its emphasis on research, which has, after all, built in the
United States and Canada the greatest research infrastructure and capability
in the world. What is needed is much greater attention to student
learning--how it happens, the conditions under which it occurs best, and how
to measure it. Then college and university faculty must prepare
themselves to manage that process.
Now,
will you please move that elephant? It's blocking the television.
Notes
1.
We here use
Ernest L. Boyer's term. See Boyer, Scholarship Reconsidered:
Priorities of the Professoriate (Princeton, N.J.: Carnegie Foundation for
the Advancement of Teaching, 1990).
2.
Stephen D.
Brookfield, The Skillful Teacher: On Technique, Trust, and Responsiveness
in the Classroom (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1990).
3.
Boyer, Scholarship Reconsidered.
4.
Judith M.
Gappa and David W. Leslie, The Invisible Faculty: Improving the Status of
Part-Timers in Higher Education (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1993).
5.
Edward E.
Lawler III, "Challenging Traditional Research Assumptions," in
Edward E. Lawler III et al., Doing Research That Is Useful for Theory and
Practice (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1985).
6.
See A. W.
Chickering and Z. F. Gamson, "Seven Principles for Good Practice in
Undergraduate Education," Wingspread Journal 9, no. 2 (1987).
See also AAHE Bulletin, March 1987.
External Auditing of
Information Security: Perception Versus Reality
A message from E. Scribner [escribne@NMSU.EDU]
One client's view of security-related
external audit procedures:
"Security Journal: Annual Audits
Target Security, But Miss Mark"
http://www.computerworld.com/itresources/rcstory/0,4167,KEY73_STO66354,00.html
Ed Scribner
New Mexico State
Jensen Comment: The above article
is very timely and very disturbing. A quotation is shown below:
Perception
vs. Reality
When I first started
working in the security world, I looked forward to external audits. I saw the
auditors as independent experts who could review objectively what I had been
trying to achieve and give me pointers on how to improve. I expected a strong
report that would help keep management support for my security initiatives.
Think you could do it
better as an information systems auditor? Pass the Certified Information
Systems Auditor exam and perhaps you’ll be providing companies like mine
with more thorough security assessments. This Web site includes conferences
and training programs as well as exam information.
Read Kevin Van
Dixon’s “Spoof Bounce” paper at the SANS Institute Web site to see the
kind of risk that having a predictable IP identification can cause.
This paper on TCP/IP
“spoofing sets” shows how technically esoteric bugs get, but the threat is
real.
The annual audit is
just one hoop security managers in financial services organizations must jump
through. These 23 other regulatory agencies all have an impact as well.
Anomaly-based
intrusion-detection systems are in their infancy, but interesting projects
such as these provide valuable security services.
Now I know the
process much better. I don't look forward to external audits; I just prepare
my list of user accounts and logical access controls. To be polite, I play the
game properly: The auditors come, and I provide an hourlong presentation about
our work this year: the deployment of personal firewalls to every desktop, the
extension of our intrusion-detection systems from signature-based to
anomaly-based, the automated virus update process and the delivery of dual
Internet connections to provide some protection against distributed
denial-of-service attacks.
They listen—the
fresh graduate auditor looking wide-eyed on his day out of the office to earn
some billable time, the older auditor looking harried and lost. Then they nod
and ask to run their cheapo in-house scanner software on our domain
controller. They don't ask to run it on our production domain controller, but
on our corporate desktop domain controller. Of course we refuse, because it's
untested software and we have a change-control process for that sort of thing.
They look surprised,
but we save the day by asking what information they require. They list the
usual: account name, privileges, last log-in and so on. We run a shiny report
from our vulnerability assessment systems and hand it over in hard copy. The
graduate looks crestfallen, realizing he'll be spending tonight reading it to
find something—anything—to report.
A week later, their
report arrives with a spurious "medium risk" assigned to information
security because, out of the thousands of accounts they reviewed, they found
one that hadn't been used for a few weeks.
I suppose I shouldn't
be bitter. If they did a proper job, they might find many problems, and we'd
look bad. And we'd never hire them again. It's a nice, comfortable arrangement
that helps both sides—the auditors don't have to do any real work (apart
from that poor graduate), and we don't get any real hassle. But how are we
supposed to get better unless we are under pressure?
I can't imagine what
it must be like on the other side of this farce—why would you become an
auditor? Now that I've seen the time they can allocate to their reviews, I
realize they just don't have the time to get to the bottom of anything until
external factors force them to investigate.
So will auditors who
are too underfunded to find anything guarantee me a nice, healthy bonus? I
wish. My management is well aware of the depth of investigation involved in an
annual audit. Instead, they will be measuring my performance based against my
objectives set at the beginning of the year.
The rest of the article is at http://www.computerworld.com/itresources/rcstory/0,4167,KEY73_STO66354,00.htm
Trinity University students may
access the article at J:\courses\acct5342\readings\ExternalAudits
My threads on related issues are in
"Opportunities of E-Business Assurance & Security: Risks in Assuring
Risk" at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/assurance.htm
If the Digital Millennium Copyright Act
is fully enforced, stations will be unable to afford to webcast their tunes
"Why college radio fears the DMCA,"
by Mark L. Shahinian, Salon, December 13, 2001 --- http://www.salon.com/tech/feature/2001/12/13/college_webcast/print.html
In the heady days of
the late 1990s, Internet radio broadcasts were a poster child for the free
flow of information over the Web. But if a 1998 federal law is fully enforced,
webcasting could be just a fond memory for college radio.
Under the terms of
the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), radio stations around the
country are supposed to pay thousands of dollars in annual fees to broadcast
streaming audio over the Web. Managers of college and community stations say
while their commercial counterparts may be able to pay the fees, their
stations don't have the cash and will shut down their webcasts.
The 1998 law came up
on Capitol Hill Thursday, as members of the House Subcommittee on Courts, the
Internet and Intellectual Property held an oversight hearing on how temporary
copies stored on computers should be counted when calculating copyright fees.
The hearing, said
congressional staffers, was an early skirmish in a battle to defang the DMCA
and transfer power from record companies back to broadcasters.
Webcasting was once
touted as an example of the Internet's leveling power -- it allows small local
stations to reach Internet users all over the world. And college stations,
which run tight budgets and eclectic playlists, fit the webcast bill
perfectly. But record companies don't like webcasting, with its potential for
copying and distributing unlimited digital copies of songs.
Under long-standing
U.S. copyright law, broadcasters pay a coalition of songwriters' groups to air
music over the Internet and the airwaves. But until the DMCA, performers and
record companies did not have the rights to royalties when stations played
their music. As part of the 1998 law, Congress allowed performers and record
companies to start collecting fees on songs sent over the web, said Joel
Willer, a mass communications professor at the University of Louisiana at
Monroe. There are still no performer fees for regular airwave broadcasts.
But until now, the
law has yet to be fully enforced. If it is, college radio on the Web will be
in trouble.
According to Bob
Kohn, founder of eMusic.com, and author of a book on music licensing, classic
Beltway dealmaking partially explains why radio stations are being asked to
pay performers for webcasts,
As the 1998 Digital
Millennium Copyright Act came together, says Kohn, the Recording Industry
Association of America (RIAA) and the Digital Music Association, or DiMA,
struck a deal: The DiMA, made up of webcasting heavies such as MTV, wanted to
shut small webcasters out of the market. The RIAA wanted money for its artists
and record companies.
The RIAA got their
fees -- and the fees effectively strangled the interest in small-time
webcasting, says Kohn. The fees may end up doing the same for college
webcasting.
Both the RIAA and the
DiMA strongly disagreed with Kohn's characterizations.
"That's just
pathetic," says Jonathan Potter, head of the DiMA. "The MTVs and
AOLs of the world have spent millions to argue for lower rates for
everybody." Agreeing to webcast fees was painful, and was only done
because members of the DiMA, faced with huge lawsuits over copyright
infringement, had their back to the wall, says Potter.
Will Robedee, general
manager of KTRU at Rice University in Houston, is trying to pull together a
coalition of college radio stations to change the DMCA. Some fees are
acceptable, but college stations shouldn't have to pay anywhere near what the
big commercial stations pay, says Robedee. The law makes some provision for
special treatment of nonprofit stations, but Robedee wants guarantees of
substantially lower fees
The law also includes
requirements that stations report every song played -- requirements, says
Robedee, that would be impossible for low-budget, nonautomated stations to
meet.
"There is a
public interest in having these stations webcasting," Robedee said,
citing exposure given to unknown bands, and the eclectic playlists that
characterize college radio.
Still, performers
deserve payment for their songs, says Jano Cabrera, spokesman for the RIAA.
"We think that the law makes sense because artists and record companies
who invest time, energy and resources should be compensated."
The fees, if
implemented, would mean the end of webcasting at KALX, the University of
California at Berkeley's radio station, says KALX general manager Sandra
Wasson.
KALX pays a total of
$623 per year to songwriters (as opposed to performers) to play music over the
Web. The fee is low, Wasson said, because KALX doesn't run advertisements. If
the recording industry's fee proposal goes through, KALX would have to dish
out $10,000 to $20,000 a year in webcasting fees, Wasson said. And the fees
would be retroactive to 1998.
"On our small
budget, there's just no way we can afford those amounts," says Wasson,
who also notes that KALX's $200,000 yearly budget is huge compared to most
college stations.
The recording
industry and broadcasters are battling in front of a federal arbitration panel
over just how high those fees should be. The RIAA, representing performers, is
asking for 0.4 cents per listener per song. Broadcasters want fees many times
lower. Record companies and performers will split the fees equally, Cabrera
said.
Robedee, at Rice,
hopes a new bill intended to gut the Millennium Copyright Act will include
protections for college stations.
The Music On-Line
Competition Act is designed to break the hammerlock the recording industry has
over music distribution, says Rep. Chris Cannon, R-Utah. Cannon co-authored
the bill along with Rep. Rick Boucher, D-Va.
Continued at http://www.salon.com/tech/feature/2001/12/13/college_webcast/print.html
Bob Jensen laments the DMCA from an
educator's perspective at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/theworry.htm
Innovation of the
Week
"Distributed computing's prime
moment," by Stephen Shankland, ZD Net News, December 13, 2001 --- http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,5100648,00.html?chkpt=zdnnp1tp02
A 20-year-old in Owen
Sound, Canada, has found the world's largest known prime number using a mere
desktop computer. But he didn't work alone: His system was part of a
210,000-machine quasi-supercomputer stretched across the globe. Using a
computer with an 800MHz chip from Advanced Micro Devices, Michael Cameron
found the prime number on Nov. 14, according to Entropia. The San Diego
company sells software to enable "distributed computing," which
harnesses the unused processing abilities of computers scattered across the
Internet.
Although the arrival
of profit motive has transformed distributed computing, its roots remain in
academic pursuits such finding optimal Golomb rulers or alien radio signals.
Cameron's computer
found the number, but he shares credit with others: George Woltman, who
founded the Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search (GIMPS) and wrote the search
software, and Entropia founder Scott Kurowski, who created the network system
called PrimeNet that governs the 210,000 computers that are part of the
effort.
Prime numbers, once a
mathematical curiosity but now crucial to encrypted communications, are
numbers greater than one that are divisible only by one and the number itself.
Cameron was participating in a project to search for a particular type of
prime number called a Mersenne prime.
The number that
Cameron discovered--2 to the 13,466,917th power minus 1--has 4,053,946 digits.
In order to cram his discovery onto a 29-inch-by-40-inch poster sold by
Perfectly Scientific, the number is printed in a tiny 1.37-point font and read
with a magnifying glass.
Mersenne primes are
named after Marin Mersenne, a French monk born in 1588 who investigated a
particular type of prime number: 2 to the power of "p" minus one, in
which "p" is an ordinary prime number.
Mersenne primes are
much rarer than ordinary primes. The GIMPS effort, exhaustively searching for
possible candidates since 1996, has been responsible for discovering the five
most recent examples. Altogether, 39 have been discovered so far.
Cameron's computer
took 42 days to verify that the number was a Mersenne prime. After that,
researchers using a workstation took three weeks to confirm the work.
Prime numbers are
needed for encrypted communications such as a Web browser's Secure Sockets
Layer (SSL) technology that makes it harder to sniff out credit card numbers
or other private information. But those systems typically use primes that are
merely 300 or so digits, said Stanford University mathematician Dan Boneh.
"The large
Mersenne primes are not very useful," Boneh said, though finding one will
grant a person 15 minutes of fame.
Mathematical
hobbyists have provided online versions of Cameron's number written out in
decimal form or in words.
Searching for
Mersenne primes is computationally intense, but it is a problem that's known
as "embarrassingly parallel," which means it can easily be broken
down into independent parts that separate computers tackle. Many supercomputer
problems take another form, requiring high-speed communication between
separate computers or requiring that a problem be solved one step at a time
with little opportunity for sharing among many systems.
Parallel computing
tasks aren't merely academic. Sun Microsystems and Intel use distributed
computing software to help design microprocessors, and companies such as
Entropia, Turbolinux, Platform Computing, Parabon Computation and United
Devices have software that can be used for work in genetics, pharmaceuticals
or financial services. Typically, this software is used within a single
corporation rather than on strangers' computers across the Internet.
The concept of
distributed computing is closely related to "grid" computing, which
unites computers and storage systems into a single pool of resources. The
National Science Foundation is among those interested in the concept, devoting
$53 million to one grid.
Continued at http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,5100648,00.html?chkpt=zdnnp1tp02
Innovation of the
Future
"A new spin on computing UC
scientists suggest way to harness electrons for processors," by Carl T.
Hall, San Francisco Chronicle, December 10, 2001 --- http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2001/12/10/MN230810.DTL
Some radically new ways
of building computers are starting to take shape as scientists venture ever
deeper into the weird realm of quantum mechanics.
A team of researchers
at the University of California at Santa Barbara has taken a key step by
suggesting for the first time a practical way to bring the elusive phenomenon
known as "electron spin" under precise control.
Experts said it opens
up a path toward a whole new style of computing, one that is expected to be
particularly useful at performing calculations that stymie conventional
machines, such as breaking complex codes and searching huge databases at
lightning speed.
"We're trying to
explore how to go about building real quantum devices," said David
Awschalom, a physicist and director of the Center for Spintronics and Quantum
Computation at UC Santa Barbara.
Although such devices
are a long way off, experts say the basic scientific foundation is being laid
for machines capable of exploiting the quirky behavior of matter at the scale of
individual atoms and subatomic particles.
"Quantum computers
are proving to be very difficult to build, for many reasons, but one of them is
how do you get these little quantum elements to behave the way you want them
to," said Mark Kubinec, a chemist at the University of California at
Berkeley.
Awschalom reported the
results of his latest adventures in the quantum world last week in the journal
Nature. The experiments were among the first under a $1.2 billion research
initiative launched by the state of California.
The high-profile
effort, announced last December by Gov. Gray Davis, includes corporate
partnerships and four new "Centers for Science and Innovation" being
created at UC campuses throughout the state.
Continued at http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2001/12/10/MN230810.DTL
PDA reliability has got to get better,
says David, but it won't until we stop thinking about PDAs as traditional
computers. http://clickthru.online.com/Click?q=0a-ZnBCIrrVci48ArtKshNYSOuR
Online Guide to Eastern Shorebirds
(Science, Ecology) http://www.a2z4birders.com/cgi-bin/birds
A "shopping list for terrorist
organizations" is being distributed by the Customs Service to businesses as
a guide to guard against future attacks --- http://www.wirednews.com/news/conflict/0,2100,48993,00.html
Book Recommendation: "'Good
Enough' isn't enough: Nine Challenges for Companies That Choose to Be
Great"
Mediocrity. It's the comfortable curse
that a company can live with...but not grow with. And according to business
writer, thinker, and consultant Alan Weiss, if mediocrity continues long enough,
it can deteriorate into paralysis and business failure. In "'Good Enough'
isn't enough," Weiss declares war on the shrug- and-smile culture that
maintains a sparkling appearance while allowing gross inefficiency and concealed
incompetence to fester. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0814405053/accountingweb
After a hired hacker proved the
Department of Interior websites were easy to penetrate, a U.S. district judge
orders all sites taken down. When they'll be back up is anybody's guess --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,48980,00.html
Web wanderers looking
for information on national parks, government mapping services or geological
disasters will need to get their information from non-official websites for a
while.
A hired hacker's
ability to easily penetrate computer systems operated by the Department of
Interior has resulted in a legal order taking the entire system offline until
the network can be secured.
U.S. District Judge
Royce Lamberth issued the order late Wednesday after a report showed that the
computer system which handles $500 million annually in royalties from Indian
land has major security holes that make it easy to access the system, alter
records and possibly divert funds.
Continued at - http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,48980,00.html
See also:
Suppression
Stifles Some Sites
Oh
Boy, an Indian Controversy
Bob Jensen's threads on security are
at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/assurance.htm
Four teenagers admit they wrote and
spread the Goner e-mail worm that created apoplexy among antivirus companies
last week --- http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,48969,00.html
Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative
--- http://early-cuneiform.humnet.ucla.edu/cdli.htm
The Cuneiform Digital Library
The Cuneiform Digital Library
Initiative (CDLI) represents the efforts of an international group of
Assyriologists, museum curators and historians of science to make available
through the internet the form and content of cuneiform tablets dating from the
beginning of writing, ca. 3200 B.C., until the end of the third millennium.
Despite the 150 years since the decipherment of cuneiform, and the 100 years
since Sumerian documents of the 3rd millennium B.C. from southern Babylonia
were first published, such basic research tools as a reliable paleography
charting the graphic development of cuneiform, and a lexical and grammatical
glossary of the approximately 120,000 texts inscribed during this period of
early state formation, remain unavailable even to specialists, not to mention
scholars from other disciplines to whom these earliest sources on social
development represent an extraordinary hidden treasure. The CDLI, directed by
Robert. K. Englund of the University of California at Los Angeles and Peter
Damerow of the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin, is
pursuing the systematic digital documentation and electronic publication of
these 3rd millennium sources. Cooperative partners include leading experts
from the field of Assyriology, curators of European and American museums, and
computer specialists in text markup. The CDLI data set will consist of text
and image, combining document transliterations, text glossaries and digitized
originals and photo archives of early cuneiform.
This electronic documentation should
be of particular interest to cuneiform scholars distant from collections, and
to museum personnel intent on archiving and preserving fragile and often
decaying cuneiform collections. The data will form the basis for the
development of representations of the structure of 3rd millennium
administrative and lexical documents, making the contents of the texts
accessible to scholars from other disciplines. A typology of accounting
procedures, graphical representations of formal structures of bookkeeping
documents, and extensive glossaries of technical terms later supplemented by
linguistic tools for accessing the primary sources by non-Assyriologists are
being developed. Data formats, including Extensible Markup Language (XML) text
descriptions, with vector-based image specifications of computer-assisted
tablet copies, will be chosen to insure high conformance with ongoing digital
library projects. Metadata-based lexemic and grammatical analysis of Sumerian
in the CDLI markup environment will not onl y put at the disposal of
specialists in the fields of Assyriology and Sumerology available cuneiform
documents from the first thousand years of Babylonian writing, but also
general linguists, semioticists, and historians of communication and
cognition, of administration and early state formation, will for the first
time have access to the form and content of these records.
In an initial three-year phase funded
by the Digital Library Initiative of the National Science Foundation and the
National Endowment for the Humanities (see text of funding proposal), project
staff and associates expect to complete the digitization of the early
cuneiform collections of the Vorderasiatisches Museum, Berlin, the Hermitage,
St. Petersburg, the Louvre, Paris, the Yale Babylonian Collection, New Haven,
and the University Museum of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
Approximately half of large holdings of the British Museum should be finished
in this period. Dual track internet presentations of these collections
(conforming on the one hand with individual museum presentation, on the other
with archival data sets of the CDLI) will be implemented in steps, beginning
in January 2001 with that of the Vorderasiatisches Museum. The ca. 3200
tablets of that museum represent one of the finest collections of early
cuneiform known to us, with representative text groups from all of the major
phases of writing in Mesopotamia. Project staff are currently preparing for
insertion in our internet pages the full image data sets of the Hermitage,
with its substantial archives of pre-Sargonic Lagash (ca. 2400-2350 B.C.) and
Ur III (ca. 2050-2000 B.C.) administrative documents, and of all collections
of tablets deriving from the period of proto-cuneiform (ca. 3200-3000 B.C.).
Such research tools as a reliable paleography of twelve hundred years of
cuneiform, and a lexical and grammatical glossary of the wide-ranging records
from the period of early Babylonian history will follow from the cooperative
research on these data sets sponsored by the CDLI.
Even members of the industry say it
will take years before Bluetooth wireless technology is adopted en masse. But
that doesn't mean we can't dream about its potential --- http://www.wired.com/news/wireless/0,1382,49023,00.html
Camera on the Tip of His Shoe
He was put on probation for taping
"upskirt" videos with a sneakercam ... but that didn't stop him from
taking it with him to his probation office --- http://www.wired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,49054,00.html
A man sentenced to
probation for using a tiny video camera in his sneakers to peek up women's
skirts also used the "sneakercam" to ogle women at his probation
office, prosecutors told a Florida court.
The allegations came
to light during a hearing on Tuesday after defendant Daniel Searfoss was
arrested a second time on voyeurism charges, the Tampa Tribune reported on
Wednesday.
Searfoss, a
43-year-old mechanic, was first arrested Dec. 31, 2000, on a misdemeanor
voyeurism charge at a Wal-Mart store in Plant City, Florida, near Tampa.
Police said he wired a camera hidden in his sneaker to a video recorder he
carried in a bag, using it to peek up women's skirts.
See also:
Reporters
Scowl at Face Scanners
Protesters
Wish for Cams to Scram
Hi Sarah,
I suggest that you begin with a free
online accounting history book by David A.R. Forrester. It is a great book and
has some great references to other books. You will find the link at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/theory01.htm#AccountingHistory
Although it is not accounting history
per se, I also recommend the book by Geoffrey Poitras that is also referenced
beneath the Forrester book.
Bob Jensen
-----Original
Message-----
From: Sarah Cheng [ACCT] [mailto:acsarah@inet.polyu.edu.hk]
Sent: Wednesday, December 12, 2001 4:24 AM
To: CPAS-L@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
; rjensen@TRINITY.EDU
Subject: Re: Accounting history
Any idea about a good
book on accounting history?
Regards,
Sarah Cheng
One-time Internet booster Henry Blodget,
who recently left Merrill Lynch, is reportedly one of several stock analysts
being probed for alleged conflicts of interest --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,48992,00.html
Which one factor is most important when
choosing a Web server (software) platform for your enterprise?
See Information Week's choices
at http://update.internetweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eFMQ0Bdl6n0V30BDq50Ao
Small town governments, church groups
and the Ohio State Senate have Web addresses that have been hijacked and held
ransom by pornographers lately in a growing trend.
"Sites Forlorn When Reborn as
Porn," by Jeffrey Benner, Wired News, December 10, 2001 ---
http://www.wired.com/news/ebiz/0,1272,48903,1162b6a.html
The website for the
city of Villa Hills, Kentucky, currently features a picture of 19-year-old
Tina clutching her bare breasts.
Images of "Euro
Teen Sluts" appear where Manchester, Iowa's city government information
used to be. And teachers looking for Home Education Magazine at its former
online address will find a link to "gang bang models," but
absolutely no helpful tips on home schooling.
These are just a few
of the growing number of local governments, church groups and nonprofit
organizations that have recently seen their homepages turned into smut dens.
The International
Lutheran Woman's Missionary League, the Nebraska Department of Education, the
Ohio State Senate and the Ballet Theatre of Annapolis, Maryland, have all
experienced the same fate, according to N2H2, a Web filtering company that
tracks porn on the Web.
"It's a trend we
started seeing several months ago," N2H2 spokesman David Burt said.
"It seems to be a couple of companies, one in Armenia. They buy up lapsed
domain names and convert them to porn sites."
The takeovers all
involve domain names whose registration has expired. Some owners just forgot
to renew. Others gave up ownership to their old address after switching over
to a new name.
The domain names may
have been snapped up by speculators who make a living trafficking in expired
domains, according to Ron Wiener, CEO of Snapnames. His company specializes in
purchasing expired names the instant they become available.
"All the good
new names are gone, so speculators feast entirely on (expiring) names,"
Wiener said. "Most are just trying to find a buyer for it."
In many cases, the
target market is the old owner.
The new owner of
Manchester, Iowa's old website -- replaced with links to porn after the city
inadvertently failed to renew its registration -- offered to sell it back for
$550. Manchester refused, and shifted its homepage to a new address instead.
The Good News Web
Designers Association, a Christian organization, has issued a warning to its
members not to let domains lapse, after numerous reports emerged of Christian
sites being bought by pornographers based in Russia and then held for ransom.
"Christian
ministry sites, Catholic Diocesan sites, Youth Ministry sites, children's
sites, Christian Web designers' own business sites, and amusement parks,"
have all been hit, the alert cautions.
Catholic Diocese in
Cleveland and Brooklyn were among the victims, according to United Press
International.
With roughly 1
million formerly registered domains opening up each month, Wiener said
trafficking in them has become big business, and most get purchased the
instant they're available. "This is one of the biggest stealth industries
around," Wiener said. "We have customers dropping $50,000 a day on
expired domains."
Continued at http://www.wired.com/news/ebiz/0,1272,48903,1162b6a.html
See also:
Homeschool
Gets Sex Education
Confusion
Is Domain Problem
Is
It Too Late for Sex.Coop?
Activists
Attack Porn Bill
Trinity University's
Student Managed Fund --- http://www.trinity.edu/smf/
Trinity's
Student Managed Fund manages over $500,000 of the University's endowment.
The year long class is responsible for actively managing the portfolio by
buying and selling stocks picked and voted upon by class members. The
objective of the class is to improve students' skills at investment
management, securities analysis, and team participation through practical
means. We invest exclusively in common stocks and use the S&P 500
index to gauge performance. Recent
Action in the SMF
A Xerox senior engineer's life is in
tatters after being charged with trading digital images of child pornography. He
says he's innocent, and government records show inconsistencies in the case ---
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,48946,00.html
CANANDAIGUA, New York
-- Larry Benedict is sitting cross-legged on the floor of his home in New
York's picturesque Finger Lakes region, surrounded by the detritus of a
once-happy life.
A pair of hermit
crabs scuttles about in an aquarium in the corner, left behind when his wife
and son moved out. Squirreled away in a cardboard box are 15 patents he was
awarded as a senior engineer at Xerox, which has told him he no longer has a
job. Closer
By far the most
prominent feature in the living room of Benedict's lakeside home is a pile of
paper that would reach 10 feet high if stacked. It's a record of his defense
against a criminal prosecution that began in 1995. The case has thrashed his
family, career and savings, and shows no sign of ending soon.
Uncle Sam has accused
the 44-year-old engineer of swapping computer disks containing images of
minors engaged in sexual activities.
Benedict has been
indicted on two counts of violating 18 U.S.C. 2252, which makes it a federal
felony to distribute images "of a minor engaging in sexually explicit
conduct." Because the proceedings against him are still underway,
Benedict remains free on $7,500 bond.
It should be no
surprise that Benedict insists he's innocent. In addition to the social
ostracism that a child porn conviction would bring, a prosecutor once informed
Benedict that he'd face up to 50 years in prison if a jury believed he was
guilty.
What is unusual,
however, is that a review of thousands of pages of court records, affidavits
and transcripts has uncovered a series of remarkable inconsistencies in the
criminal case that the federal government has assembled.
Police destroyed
vital evidence that could have shown Benedict was innocent. One investigator
incorrectly informed a grand jury that there was written evidence linking
Benedict to child pornography, even though none was ever found.
A postal inspector
told a grand jury that Benedict confessed to trading child pornography while
in the presence of state police witnesses. The state troopers insist it never
happened.
Files and entire
directories mysteriously appeared on seized computers while they were stored
in police evidence rooms. It took prosecutors nearly five years to uncover
illegal image files on Benedict's PC -- in an obvious, top-level directory
titled "GIF."
For its part, in
court filings as recently as Monday, the U.S. Attorney's office steadfastly
denies any wrongdoing.
Martin Littlefield,
the assistant U.S. Attorney in Buffalo, New York, in charge of Benedict's
prosecution, won't comment. "For me to engage in an out-of-court
dissertation about allegations would be unethical and inappropriate on
Continued at http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,48946,00.html
In Part 2 of a series, was a suspected
trafficker in child pornography a wronged target of an overeager postal
inspector? ---
http://www.wirednews.com/news/politics/0,1283,49013,00.html
A former Xerox engineer admits trading
pirated PC games with a convicted pedophile. But is that all they exchanged?
Part 3 of a series by Declan McCullagh, reporting from Canandaigua, New York ---
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,49083,00.html
Former Xerox exec Larry Benedict is
accused of trading child porn, but enforcement officials still can't produce any
evidence that images existed on his computers. Part 4 of a series by Washington
bureau chief Declan McCullagh ---
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,49132,00.html
Did Larry Benedict purposely swap child
pornography, or did he merely think he was swapping computer games? One lesson
in this seven-year saga is that proof isn't always clear when dealing with
electronic files. Part 5 of a series by Washington bureau chief --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,49141,00.html
Two groups that publish sexual content
on the Web challenge the Communications Decency Act, fearful the vagueness of
its obscenity provision leaves them vulnerable to charges --- http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,49044,00.html
Europeans still fret over what impact
actual euro currency will have on the continent, but auction sites think it'll
help facilitate cross-border transactions --- http://www.wired.com/news/ebiz/0,1272,49048,1162b6a.html
A message received from AccountingWeb
on December 14, 2001
Here is a sample of
the questions that have been posted this week. Check out all the questions at
our Q&A Forum and see if you can lend a hand. http://www.accountingweb.com/help/anyanswers.html
1. Is there a source
for determining what cities have grant money available for small businesses
planning to relocate? http://www.accountingweb.com/item/65595
2. How can one best
structure a lump sum damages settlement that involves a lawyer's contingency
payment? http://www.accountingweb.com/item/65731
3. What account
should be used to book rebates received on the purchase of PC's, cell phones,
and so on? http://www.accountingweb.com/item/66048
4. An individual tax
practice in Denver, CO is contemplating raising prices at least 30% but is
worried that the increase will cause many clients to leave. Are there any
statistics available that address this issue? http://www.accountingweb.com/item/66187
Bob Jensen's threads on helpers for
accounting practices and small business are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fees.htm
WHO ARE WE? We're
Internetseer.com, the worlds largest FREE website monitoring service. One
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As companies continue to grapple with
security and disaster recovery concerns brought about by the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks, the federal government is considering a broad set of security standards
that it will push its agencies and private industry to follow. Last week, the
Business Software Alliance, at its Global Tech Summit in Washington, issued a
"Cyber Security Blueprint" to guide collaborative government and
industry initiatives. The proposals include greater investment in enhanced
security tools, federal research and development investment in security
technology, and increased criminal penalties against computer crimes --- http://www.eweek.com/article/0,3658,s%253D701%2526a%253D19634,00.asp
MicronPC is giving a thumbs-up to new
security measures with a notebook computer launched Monday. The PC maker's new
Transport GX2 features a fingerprint reader to verify a person's rights to
access data inside the system. With the GX2, MicronPC becomes one of the first
manufacturers to build into a notebook so-called biometric security. http://clickthru.online.com/Click?q=34-pJJSIcdN1sbGQTBGltAkVn4R
A message from Peter C. Bruce [pbruce@statistics.com]
Raftery, Tanner &
Wells' new book "Statistics in the 21st Century" (Chapman &
Hall, 2002) is not, strictly speaking, new, in the sense that much of the
material has previously appeared in journal articles. Still, unless you know
that you will be stuck analyzing the same types of problems with the same
methods in the same job from here on out, it is a valuable addition to your
book shelf.
This book grew out of
a series of articles in the Journal of the American Statistical Association,
presenting 30 short review articles on the role of statistics in various
discplines, as well as 20 similar articles on recent methodological advances.
It will be of interest to several sorts of statisticians: -- Academics seeking
to understand whether methodologies developed mainly in the context of another
discipline might have applicability for their own; -- Researchers whose
statistical applications have been narrowly focused, and who want to expand
their understanding in a general way; -- Teachers who believe their students
may benefit from greater knowledge of how statistics is used in the world --
Independent consultants thinking of expanding their reach; -- Students
contemplating career choices and professionals thinking of a career change.
A large part of
statistics is measuring and understanding variability, and there is some
variability among these vignettes. David Oakes (survival analysis) packs an
enormous amount of statistical content into just over four pages, and the goal
of broad coverage is undermined a bit by detailed forays into theory that are
necessarily terse and jumpy. Peter Guttorp's piece on environmental statistics
has much less material to tackle and does it in more space, resulting in a
more readable "density index."
Bottom line: A
valuable resource for the statistician who wants a quick understanding of what
the rest of the profession is doing. Tons of references a good book to have
around.
The following
disciplines and topics are touched upon:
- Survival analysis -
Causal analysis in health science ("counterfactual approach") -
Environmental statistics - Capture-recapture - Predicting genetic merit in
animal breeding - Modeling toxicology - Assessing diagnostic tests (Receiver
Operating Characteristic Methodology) - Randomized clinical trials -
Epidemiology - Analysis of the gene - Financial markets - Market research -
Time series data - Statistics in political science and sociology -
Psychometrics - Forensic statistics - Demography - Climate and weather (global
warming) - Seismology - Measuring internet traffic - Data compression -
Reliability - Statistical Process Control
Methods Topics
- Log Linear models -
Bayesian statistics and Gibbs sampling (Markov Chain Monte Carlo) - Decision
theory - The bootstrap - Which variables to select for a model -
Nonparametrics - Generalized Linear Models - Missing Data - Robust statistics
- Likelihood - Measurement error models - Minimax decision-making
Reviewed by Peter
Bruce, statistics.com
Available at http://www.statistics.com/content/bookstore/
Wow!
Over 20 years of Usenet discussion groups to search, browse, and post messages
---
http://groups.google.com/
A popular search engine (Google) has
posted 20 years' worth of Usenet discussion group postings: more than 700
million entries in all. Included: American Taliban John Walker, screen name,
"doodoo." --- http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,49016,00.html
Teenager Training
for Terrorism: The Early Years
E-mails from a Traitor The young John
Walker left an enormous cache of nutty e-mails --- http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/000/669eqdyh.asp
From August 1995 to
August 1997, John Philip Walker Lindh, the Marin County jihadist, was a
frequent contributor to Internet newsgroups. As Newsweek reports http://www.msnbc.com/news/669825.asp
in its latest issue, he used the nom de plume "doodoo."
At the outset, he
pretended to be a rapper, critiquing the rhymes of another Internet poseur as
"some 13 year old white kid playing smart," which would actually be
a pretty fair description of himself, then a 14-year-old white kid trying to
pass himself off as black. Two years later, he was "Prof. J"
pontificating on the relationship of Judaism to Zionism in the newsgroup
soc.religion.islam.
In between, he seems
to have liquidated his comic books and video games in order to buy audio
equipment. But on July 29, 1996, he suddenly pulls up short: "I've heard
recently that certain musical instruments are forbidden by Islam," he
writes. And by September 21, 1996, he's placing an online want ad (WTB means
"wanted to buy") for recordings of Malcolm X speeches. He comes
across in many places as a budding totalitarian, though it should be noted
that many 15-year-old habitues of newsgroups try to sound imperious. Not that
many sign their e-mails "Br. Mujahid," however.
You can retrieve the
online oeuvre of the American Taliban for yourself by searching for
"doodoo@hooked.net" in the newsgroups archive at Google http://groups.google.com/groups?group=news&hl=en
. Or you can read them at http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/000/669eqdyh.asp
, reformatted in chronological order. The only editing I've done is to remove
the e-mail addresses of third parties and the more technical parts of the
address headers. The personal webpage he refers to, http://www.hooked.net/users/doodoo/index.htm
, seems no longer to exist.
Bob Jensen's Bookmarks on
"Discussion Groups, Newsgroups and Chat Rooms" are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#DiscussionGroups
Bob Jensen's search helpers are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.ht
News from New Media
on December 13, 2001
THIS WEEK'S NEWS
* BUSINESS Future of
Marketing for 2002: New Priorities, Part I The flash and excess that were the
mark of marketing in the 1990s are officially gone for good. Today, customer
knowledge and calculable returns rule. The following issues will be essential
to marketing success in the coming year: Multi-Channel Synchronization Today,
most businesses operate across many channels, from retail stores and catalogs,
to call centers and the Web. http://www.newmedia.com/default.asp?articleID=3265
We Came, We Saw, We
Did a Little E-Shopping In fact, 25 percent of us are finished buying gifts;
report finds last two weeks of November were the biggest so far this year for
online shopping. http://www.newmedia.com/default.asp?articleID=3261
Untapped Webizens:
Seeking Out the Gay and Lesbian Market Nowhere has the Web's potential to
galvanize had a stronger impact than in the gay and lesbian community, yet
little has been done to reach this market online. http://www.newmedia.com/default.asp?articleID=3257
Toys Continue to Top
E-Commerce Lists If the data from the Nielsen//NetRatings Holiday eCommerce
Index is any indication, there should be a lot of packages arriving at a lot
of homes that will make a lot of children very happy this holiday season. http://www.newmedia.com/default.asp?articleID=3254
Travel Joins the
Holiday Shopping Spree Online shoppers outspent their post-Thanksgiving
e-commerce purchases during the week ending Dec. 2. http://www.newmedia.com/default.asp?articleID=3251
DESIGN Making
Advertisers and Users Happier: A Case Study Making advertisers and users
happier: Has Lycos achieved the impossible? http://www.newmedia.com/default.asp?articleID=3263
How Web Designers
Sell Themselves Are you one of those Web designers who design quite well, but
don't have time to work on your own site? Savvy Web surfers looking for
designers expect a great deal from a site offering Web development/design. http://www.newmedia.com/default.asp?articleID=3262
Is Your Web Site
Qualified to Sell? Does your site pass the one page only indicator? Take this
test to find out. http://www.newmedia.com/default.asp?articleID=3256
Eight Things to
Consider When Choosing a CMS If you are a Web site owner you'll probably be
keen to do the job of keeping your Web site up-to-date yourself. We've been
producing content management systems for our clients for couple of years now,
but the main problem has been that these systems often cost more than the
original Web site. http://www.newmedia.com/default.asp?articleID=3253
Accommodating
Visually Impaired Shoppers Online retailing behemoth Amazon.com is making it
easier for the visually impaired to shop on the Internet by launching an
alternative version of its Web site designed for customers who use screen
access software. http://www.newmedia.com/default.asp?articleID=3249
/-------------------------------------------------------------------\
**JOB SECURITY --
CAREER GROWTH -- CHALLENGING POSITIONS** The internet.com Careers Channel is
the leading online Information Technology (IT) job board. Whether you need to
start your new job today, are searching for your dream job, or are just
wondering what your skills are worth, you'll find the tools you need to land
your next great job. Don't wait any longer! http://www.internet.com/sections/careers.html
* TECHNOLOGY Internet
Influencing All Aspects of Healthcare The Internet has provided efficient ways
for doctors to treat and communicate with their patients, but it's also
provided a platform for pharmaceutical companies and other organizations to
reach doctors, a study by The Boston Consulting Group and Harris Interactive
found. http://www.newmedia.com/default.asp?articleID=3264
Enterprises Continue
to Drive Wireless Applications Nearly half (46.1 percent) of development
managers at large corporations plan to develop applications for wireless
devices in the coming year, according to Evans Data Corp . That's more than
plan on developing B2B e-commerce applications and even security. http://www.newmedia.com/default.asp?articleID=3260
ISPs Barely Passing
Customer Service Tests A survey of more than 14,000 Internet users by the
National Regulatory Research Institute and BIGresearch found that almost half
(47 percent) of the respondents have complained to their ISP about the quality
of service. http://www.newmedia.com/default.asp?articleID=3258
Email Can Do That?
Email Can Do That? All the technology @d:TECH has to offer is being channeled
into your inbox. http://www.newmedia.com/default.asp?articleID=3252
Advanced Ad-Serving
Features, Part 2: Third-Party Ad Servers Advanced features of third-party ad
servers that meet the needs of advertisers & agencies. http://www.newmedia.com/default.asp?articleID=3250
MORE NEWMEDIA NEWS
(From the internet.com Network)
Sun To Find
Competition in New Intel Rack Units Setting themselves as the "Company Of
Choice," the popular chipmaker is betting increased flexibility is what
carriers, OEMs are looking for in a rack unit. http://www.internetnews.com/dev-news/article/0,,10_939031,00.html
Judge, Creditors
Approve @Home Extension Creditors at the nearly-defunct broadband ISP agreed
to keep its operations open until February 2002, saving millions of high-speed
customers from shutdown. http://www.internetnews.com/isp-news/article/0,,8_938361,00.html
President to Name
Tech Advisory Group A panel of technology marquee names, including AOL Time
Warner's Steve Case, could play an influential role in helping to shape the
administration and the government's technology policy. http://www.atnewyork.com/news/article/0,1471,8471_938721,00.html
TOP HEADLINES FROM
INTERNETNEWS.COM
Yahoo! To Snatch
HotJobs Out of the Clutches Of Monster.com http://siliconvalley.internet.com/news/article/0,2198,3531_939331,00.html
For Online Retailers,
It's Showtime http://www.internetnews.com/ec-news/article/0,,4_939511,00.html
Ciena Posts Net Loss,
Warns of More Losses http://www.internetnews.com/fina-news/article/0,,5_939451,00.html
CONTACT US!
Questions? Comments?
Please e-mail them to NewMedia Managing Editor Laura Rush
(lrush@internet.com). Please do not send unsubscribe requests to this
address--instructions for that appear at the very bottom of this newsletter.
You can also subscribe/unsubscribe directly from our Web site, at http://www.newmedia.com
Bob Jensen's
Tutorials on e-Commerce are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce.htm
Dmitri Sklyarov, the Russian hacker
arrested after DefCon earlier this year for cracking Adobe's e-book reader
security and publishing how he did it, makes a deal --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,49122,00.html
Subject: I AM A
STUDENT REQUESTING HELP
----- Original
Message -----
From: Jennifer Collins <jcollin2@OLIVET.EDU>
To: <CPAS-L@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU>
Sent: Thursday, December 13, 2001 3:27 PM
Subject: I AM A STUDENT REQUESTING HELP
I am a student at
Olivet Nazarene University in Kankakee, IL majoring in Accounting. I have been
asked to do a special project listing three > examples of how accounting
impacts some aspects of our society. If you can help me at all please
do. I have been asked to use the internet and/or >business professionals
therefore, I decided to combine the two. As I said > before, any
information that you can give me will be greatly appreciated.
Thank you.
Reply from Bob Jensen
I tend to agree with the President of
Harvard University when he stated the following:
****************************************
If one were writing a history of the American capital market, it is a fair bet
that the single most important innovation shaping that market was the idea of
generally accepted accounting principles. Lawrence Summers, President of Harvard
University and former Secretary of Treasury
***************************************
From FEI Express, May 24, 2001 ---
http://www.fei.org/newsletters/express/feiexpress62.cfm
LAWRENCE SUMMERS AT
THE FORBES CFO CONFERENCE Lawrence Summers, the President-elect of Harvard
University and former Secretary of Treasury, talked about what's new in the
"New Economy" and how those innovations have contributed to the
overall success of the global economy.
Three hallmarks of
our time: 1. Technology that brings people together; 2. The fact that we are
REALLY becoming ONE world; the coming together of our global economy; 3. The
power of free markets not only is clearly demonstrated but actually increasing
in importance.
Summers also talked
about the dramatic shift in capital allocation arising from shareholder
activism in the late '80s and through the '90s. He spoke about how the shift
of investors' dollars from unresponsive, under-performing management teams to
venture capitalists and private equity investment groups drove the dramatic
stock market performance in the '90s. Our capacity for creative destruction
and reallocation of capital underlies the ability to do this. Further, U.S.
companies have been the most aggressive in seeking out opportunities abroad.
As to the future, he
joked that economists are often advised to name a date or name a number, but
not both. How quickly the inventories are worked off is one key. Summers
thinks they were worked down nicely in the first quarter of this year, which
bodes well for the balance of the year. Equipment investment will be weak for
some time, in his view. There is still excess capacity and there is equipment
being sold off from busted companies at pennies on the dollar. Therefore,
investment will lag. Consumer spending is the final key component. Summers
thinks that most likely we will just barely avoid a technical recession, but
sluggish consumption and investment will continue for three quarters. He
thinks the tax cut is too small in the near term to have any impact on the
short-term economy.
The tax cut, in his
view, will not help in the current economy, and he thinks it's a big mistake
in the long run. In his opinion, there is a significant risk, and we can't
afford it. Smaller surpluses will lead to higher interest costs. He thinks it
will put us back into deficit spending. Second, we can't be sure what the
surplus or deficit will be in five or ten years. The error band around the
forecasts five years from now has a width of $600 billion. He thinks we
shouldn't lock in long-term cuts with that kind of uncertainty.
Globally, Japan is on
the downslide again. It must resolve the "mother-of-all" banking
crisis before its economy can rebound. Europe faces a real risk of diminished
expectations, feeling that 3% growth is just fine. However, Mexico is a bright
spot and appears poised for growth in his view. India and China are
experiencing substantial growth, while China's growth, is decelerating and
India's is accelerating. Brazil is looking at important elections in 2002 that
show worrisome signs of turmoil.
For the long run, his
view is that we are in a period of remarkable opportunity, but will be
challenged in the short term.
Summers emphasized
that the US should care more about what happens around the world than we have
historically. We are shifting to a world economy and therefore, he feels, we
should spend more resources to promote the raw materials for capitalism around
the world - an educated population and a culture that has the rule of law -
respect for property rights and enforceable contracts - are the raw materials
of capitalism.
He mocked the talk of
our new economy's improved "scientific control" of inventory.
Summers feels the truth is, in rapid expansion periods, that companies press
to get more product out, then overbuy from the suppliers, getting stuck when
the inevitable slowdown comes. It happens over and over again.
The great expansion
of the 90s came with little price increases for companies. He credited the
availability of imported products and the overall increase in competition in
our economy with keeping a lid on prices. More knowledge-based products that
are easily transportable have also provided price restraints.
Hope this helps a little.
Bob Jensen
Reply from Robert Walker
-----Original
Message-----
From: Robert B Walker [mailto:walkerrb@ACTRIX.CO.NZ]
Sent: Thursday, December 13, 2001 1:56 PM
To: CPAS-L@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU Subject:
Re: I AM A STUDENT REQUESTING HELP
This is an
opportunity too good to miss. Amongst other things it has flushed out an
interesting if not a little disillusioned piece from Todd Boyle which I will
have to think about.
I am not quite sure
why Todd disagrees with the basic accounting equation and the application of
double entry - I do not believe they are suffused with ideology in the way
that, say, the conceptual framework is said to be.
I also think we
should see accounting, qua double entry, as being beyond the overlay of
standardisation that has been imposed since the Great Depression. (By the way
the other history that I think is most illuminating is R & S Storey 'The
Framework of Financial Accounting Concepts & Standards' published by
FASB.)
I still suffer the
delusion attributed to Sombart - that double entry created Western economic
hegemony. Well at least I do in part, clearly the dynamic underlying
capitalism has something else in the mix beginning in Italy in the Renaissance
and finding its full flowering in the US of the 20th century.
Nonetheless the
impact of double entry is profound. Modern commercial and financial activity
cannot happen without it. Double entry enables, firstly, the creation of
artifical personality and, then, the capacity to combine a large number of
individual economic interests into that one entity. Banking is afterall only a
manifestation of double entry. Banking simply cannot exist without it (the
banking empire of the German Fugger family notwithstanding).
The general ledger in
a bank is its engine of production. It is the bank. Banks are the centrepiece
of our economic system. Double entry is therefore at its core.
If I may attribute
motive to Todd I suspect he perceives failure of the accounting model as
presently practiced in things such as the Enron scandal. I think, contrarily,
that is not accounting's failure. It is a failure to apply accounting (by
which I mean double entry) properly. There is a difference.
One final thought: so
far the correspondents have answered the student purely in commerical terms.
Accounting's impact on government is just as profound. An insight into this
can be gained in some measure by an IMF publication called 'How to Measure the
Fiscal Deficit' (ed. M Blejer). The history of government finance and its
accounting is as venerable as that pertaining to commerce. In fact the history
I referred to yesterday - that of O ten Have - hints that double entry was
first used in government as long ago as a thousand years, by Arabs of course.
They were demonstrably using ex post budget analysis as far back as that.
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting
theory can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory.htm
QUICK FACTS ABOUT
TRINITY UNIVERSITY
Trinity University's Homepage --- http://www.trinity.edu/
-
#1 (Top) University in
the West (offering Masters degrees): U.S.
News and World Report (2002).
-
#1 (Top) Best
Value/Western Universities: U.S.
News and World Report (2002).
-
#3 in nation for
individual attention from faculty: Kaplan/Newsweek College Catalog
(2002).
-
Top 20 in nation for
quality of student life: The Princeton Review, The Best 331 Colleges
(2001).
-
#20 Undergraduate
Engineering Program: U.S. News and World Report (2001).
-
Top 30 Value among
Private Colleges: Kiplinger's Personal Finance (2001).
-
Top 10 for number of
Ph.D. bound alumni in 1998; 35% of graduate immediately enroll.
-
3 students won
Goldwater scholarships in 1999-2000.
-
100% placement for
five-year bachelor and master's graduates (Education and Accounting).
-
One of the leading
providers of Peace Corps volunteers in the Southwest.
-
54% of Trinity's
classes enroll 20 or fewer students.
-
One of the nation's
largest undergraduate research programs in chemistry.
-
40% of 2001 graduate
studied abroad--on every continent except Antarctica!
-
45% of students
volunteer in community service programs.
-
Top 11 national
ranking in Division III Intercollegiate Athletics for last 3 years; Sports
Illustrated for Women named Trinity's programs among top 3 NCAA Division
(2000).
-
$3.5 million: amount
spent to renovate the Stieren Theatre.
-
$1.3 million: cost of
each year to insure that Elizabeth Coates Library has one of the most
extensive library collections among national liberal arts and sciences
colleges (900,000 volumes).
-
$750,000: amount of
endowment invested in the Student Managed Fund.--- http://www.trinity.edu/smf/
The link to the above information is at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TrinityQuickFacts.htm
Think Geek
Debbie Bowling suggests having a few laughs while you shop.
Here's a web site I
thought you would enjoy! It has all types of "geeky" things to buy!
http://www.thinkgeek.com/
Debbie
Forwarded by Denny Beresford
One of my colleagues observed that last Saturday was
the effective date of FASB Statement 142, prompting accountants across the
land to shout the following holiday greeting:
Peace on Earth and GOODWILL to men (but not to
expense)!
Reply from Bob Jensen
Unless, like now, it is being "impaired."
Forwarded by Auntie Bev
Double click
and go there for a good laugh --- http://www.whoohoo.net/resume/
Forwarded by Nancy Mills
Subject: Definitions
The meaning of words:
The Washington Post published a contest for readers in which they were asked
to supply alternate meanings for various words. The following were some of the
winning entries:
Coffee (n.), a person
who is coughed upon. Flabbergasted (adj.), appalled over how much weight you
have gained.
Abdicate (v.), to
give up all hope of ever having a flat stomach.
Pokemon (n), A
Jamaican proctologist. Esplanade (v.), to attempt an explanation while drunk.
Willy-nilly (adj.), impotent Negligent (adj.), describes a condition in which
you absentmindedly answer the door in your nightie.
Lymph (v.), to walk
with a lisp. Gargoyle (n.), an olive-flavored mouthwash. Flatulence (n.) the
emergency vehicle that picks you up after you are run over by a steamroller.
Balderdash (n.), a
rapidly receding hairline. Testicle (n.), a humorous question on an exam.
Rectitude (n.), the
formal, dignified demeanor assumed by a proctologist immediately before he
examines you.
Oyster (n.), a person
who sprinkles his conversation with Yiddish expressions.
Circumvent (n.), the
opening in the front of boxer shorts
Forwarded by Dick Haar
A man was going up to
bed, when his wife told him he'd left the light on in the garden shed - she
could see it from the bedroom window. But he said that he hadn't been in the
shed that day. He looked himself, and saw that there were people in the shed,
stealing things. He rang the police, but they told him that no one currently
was in his immediate area, and that, due to ongoing investigations it could be
several hours before someone would be available to respond. He said OK, hung
up.
He then counted to 30
and rang the police again. "Hello. I just rang you a few seconds ago
because there were thieves in my shed. Well, you don't have to worry about
them now, I've just shot them all."
Within five minutes
there were half a dozen police cars in the area, an Armed Response unit, the
works. Of course, they caught the burglars red-handed.
One of the policeman
said to this man, "I thought you reported that you'd shot them!"
The man replied,
"I thought they said there was no-one available!"
Forwarded by Auntie Bev
The Sex Of The
Computer
A language instructor
was explaining to her class that in French, nouns unlike their English
counterparts, are grammatically designated as masculine or feminine.
"House," in
French, is feminine-"la maison." "Pencil," in French, is
masculine-"le crayon."
One puzzled student
asked, "What gender is computer?" The teacher did not know, and the
word wasn't in her French dictionary. So for fun she split the class into two
groups appropriately enough, by gender and asked them to decide whether
"computer" should be a masculine or feminine noun.
Both groups were
required to give four reasons for their recommendation.
The men's group
decided that computers should definitely be of the feminine gender ("la
computer"), because:
1. No one but their
creator understands their internal logic
2. The native
language they use to communicate with other computers is incomprehensible to
everyone else
3. Even the smallest
mistakes are stored in long-term memory for possible later retrieval
4. As soon as you
make a commitment to one, you find yourself spending half your pay check on
accessories for it.
The women's group,
however, concluded that computers should be masculine ("le
computer"), because:
1. In order to get
their attention, you have to turn them on;
2. They have a lot of
data but they are still clueless
3. They are supposed
to help you solve problems, but half the time they ARE the problem
4. As soon as you
commit to one, you realize that if you'd waited a little longer, you could
have gotten a better model.
The women won.
Forwarded by Auntie Bev
Living on Earth is expensive,
but it does include a free trip
around the sun every year.
Birthdays are good for you;
the more you have, the longer
you live.
How long a minute is depends
on what side of the bathroom
door you're on.
Ever notice that the people who
are late are often much jollier
than the people who have to
wait for them?
If ignorance is bliss, why aren't
more people happy?
Most of us go to our grave with
our music still inside of us.
If Wal-Mart is lowering prices
every day, how come nothing
is free yet?
You may be only one person
in the world, but you may also
be the world to one person.
Some mistakes are too much
fun to only make once.
Don't cry because it's over;
smile because it happened.
We could learn a lot from
crayons: some are sharp,
some are pretty, some are dull,
some have weird names, and
all are different colors.... but
they all have to learn to live
in the same box.
A truly happy person is one who
can enjoy the scenery on a detour.
Happiness comes through doors
you didn't even know you left open.
Have an awesome day, and know that
someone has thought about you today!
Forwarded by Maria
MUD PUDDLES
AND DANDELIONS
When I look at a patch of dandelions, I see a bunch of weeds
that are going to take over my yard.
My kids see flowers for Mom and blowing white fluff you
can wish on.
When I look at an old drunk and he smiles at me, I see a
smelly, dirty person who probably
wants money and I look away.
My kids see someone smiling at them and they smile back.
When I hear music I love, I know I can't carry a tune and
don't have much rhythm so I sit self-consciously and listen.
My kids feel the beat and move to it. They sing out the
words. If they don't know them, they make up their own.
When I feel wind on my face, I brace myself against it. I
feel it messing up my hair and pulling me back when I walk.
My kids close their eyes, spread their arms and fly with
it, until they fall to the ground laughing.
When I pray, I say thee and thou and grant me this, give me that.
My kids say, "Hi God! Thanks for my toys and my friends.
Please keep the bad dreams away tonight. Sorry, I don't want to
go to Heaven yet. I would miss my Mommy and Daddy."
When I see a mud puddle I step around it. I see muddy
shoes and dirty carpets.
My kids sit in it. They see dams to build, rivers to
cross and worms to play with.
I wonder if we are given kids to teach or to learn from?
No wonder God loves the little children!!
"Enjoy the little things in life, for one day you may look
back and realize they were the big things."
My wish to you....Mud Puddles and Dandelions and may God
bless this day for you.
Forwarded by my cousin Donna Johnson.
I do not know who is the original author. I do not know who is the
original author, but the poem describes exactly how I felt as I addressed each
of our Christmas cards this year
There is a list of folks I know
All written in a book,
And every year at Christmas time
I go and take a look.
And that is when I realize that
these names are a part
Not of the book they're written in
But of my very heart.
For each name stands for someone,
Who has touched my very life sometime,
And in that meeting they've become,
The "Rhythm of the Rhyme"
I really feel I am composed of each remembered name,
And while you may not be aware,
My life is so much better,
Than it was before you came.
For once that you have known someone,
the years cannot erase,
The memory of a pleasant word,
Or a friendly face.
So never think my Christmas cards
Are just a mere routine,
Of names upon a list,
Forgotten in between.
For when I send a Christmas card
That is addressed to you,
It is because you're on that list
Of folks I'm indebted to.
And whether I have known you,
For many years or few,
In some way you have had a part,
In shaping things I do.
So every year when Christmas comes,
We just realize anew,
the Biggest Gift that God can give,
Is knowing friends like you!!!
Happy holidays to each and every one
of you. Pray God bless you all!
And
that's the way it was on December 20, 2001 with a little help from my friends.
In
March 2000, Forbes named AccountantsWorld.com as the Best Website on the
Web --- http://accountantsworld.com/.
Some top accountancy links --- http://accountantsworld.com/category.asp?id=Accounting
For
accounting news, I prefer AccountingWeb at http://www.accountingweb.com/
Another
leading accounting site is AccountingEducation.com at http://www.accountingeducation.com/
Paul
Pacter maintains the best international accounting standards and news Website at
http://www.iasplus.com/
How
stuff works --- http://www.howstuffworks.com/
Bob
Jensen's video helpers for MS Excel, MS Access, and other helper videos are at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/
Accompanying documentation can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm
and http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
Professor
Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134 Email: rjensen@trinity.edu


December
10, 2001
Quotes of the Week
"When you
lose, don't lose the lesson."
(Quoted near the bottom of this edition of New Bookmarks)
"It doesn't
matter if you're the greatest guitar player in the world. If you're not
enlightened, forget it."
George Harrison, quoted in "Zen Guitar"
"Enron chief
and Bush buddy grabs $150 million while employees lose their shirts. Probe
him."
Newsweek Magazine, December 10, 2001 on Page 6,
One of the really sad parts of the Enron scandal is that thousands of Enron
employees were not allowed to sell Enron shares in their pension funds and were
left hold empty pension funds. One elderly Enron employee on television
last evening lamented that his pension of over $2 million was reduced to less
than $10,000.
Enron: A
Message From the CEO of Andersen
Bob
Jensen's Commentary on the Above Message From the CEO of Andersen
(The Most Difficult Message That I Have Perhaps Ever
Written!)
This is followed by replies from other accounting
educators.
Lawsuit Seeks to Hold Andersen
Accountable for Defrauding Enron Investors, Employees --- http://www.smartpros.com/x31970.xml
WARNING:
Everybody reading this message should download the Parts 1 and 2 Washington
Post article immediately. Like most online newspaper articles, these
will not be available for downloading after a week or two (at least not for free
like now). The articles deal with new concerns about whether public
accounting firms are more self-serving than public-serving when conducting
audits. They dwell on some serious scandals.
Some quotations and links to the
full Part 1 and Part 2 articles can be found at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
The Big Five Firms Join Hands (in Prayer?)
Facing up to a raft of negative publicity for the accounting profession in light
of Big Five firm Andersen's association with failed energy giant Enron, members
of all of the Big Five firms joined hands (in prayer?) on December 4, 2001 and
vowed to uphold higher standards in the future. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/65518
The SEC's Response
Remarks by Robert K. Herdman Chief Accountant U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission American Institute of Certified Public Accountants' Twenty-Ninth
Annual National Conference on Current SEC Developments Washington, D.C.,
December 6, 2001 --- http://www.sec.gov/news/speech/spch526.htm
From the Free Wall Street Journal
Educators' Reviews for December 6, 2001
TITLE: Audits of Arthur Andersen Become
Further Focus of Investigation
SEC REPORTER: Jonathan Weil
DATE: Nov 30, 2001 PAGE: A3 LINK:
http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1007059096430725120.djm
TOPICS: Advanced Financial Accounting, Auditing
SUMMARY: This article focuses on the
issues facing Arthur Andersen now that their work on the Enron audit has become
the subject of an SEC investigation. The on-line version of the article provides
three questions that are attributed to "some accounting professors."
The questions in this review expand on those three provided in the article.
QUESTIONS:
1.) The first question the SEC might ask of Enron's auditors is "were
financial statement disclosures regarding Enron's transactions too opaque to
understand?" Are financial statement disclosures required to be
understandable? To whom? Who is responsible for ensuring a certain level of
understandability?
2.) Another question that the SEC could
consider is whether Andersen auditors were aware that certain off-balance-sheet
partnerships should have been consolidated into Enron's balance sheet, as they
were in the company's recent restatement. How could the auditors have been
"unaware" that certain entities should have been consolidated? What is
the SEC's concern with whether or not the auditors were aware of the need for
consolidation?
3.) A third question that the SEC could
ask is, "Did Andersen auditors knowingly sign off on some 'immaterial'
accounting violations, ignoring that they collectively distorted Enron's
results?" Again, what is the SEC's concern with whether Andersen was aware
of the collective impact of the accounting errors? Should Andersen have been
aware of the collective amount of impact of these errors? What steps would you
suggest in order to assess this issue?
4.) The article finishes with a
discussion of expected Congressional hearings into Enron's accounting practices
and into the accounting and auditing standards setting process in general. What
concern is there that the FASB "has been working on a project for more than
a decade to tighten the rules governing when companies must consolidate certain
off-balance sheet 'special purpose entities'"?
5.) In general, how stringent are
accounting and auditing requirements in the U.S. relative to other countries'
standards? Are accounting standards in other countries set in the same way as in
the U.S.? If not, who establishes standards? What incentives would the U.S.
Congress have to establish a law-based system if they become convinced that our
private sector standards setting practices are inadequate? Are you concerned
about having accounting and reporting standards established by law?
6.) The article describes revenue
recognition practices at Enron that were based on "noncash unrealized
gains." What standard allows, even requires, this practice? Why does the
author state, "to date, the accounting standards board has given energy
traders almost boundless latitude to value their energy contracts as they see
fit"?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University
of Rhode Island
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting
theory are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory.htm
Can Internal Auditors truly be
independent while being employed by the entity and seen as working for the
management to achieve organizational goals? In theory, External Auditors are
more likely to be perceived as independent, but is it not the case that Internal
Auditors appear to have little or no independence? http://www.accountingweb.com/item/65704
The Future of
Amazon.com: Unlike Enron, Amazon.com seems to thrive without profits.
How long can it last?
"Economy, the Web and E-Commerce:
Amazon.com." An Interview With Jeff Bezos CEO, Amazon.com, The
Washington Post, December 6, 2001 --- http://discuss.washingtonpost.com/zforum/01/washtech_bezos120601.htm
Amazon.com is pinning its hopes on pro
forma reporting to report the company's first profit in history. But wait!
Plans by U.S. regulators to crack down on "pro forma" abuses in
accounting may take a toll on Internet firms, which like the financial reporting
technique because it can make losses seem smaller than they really are.
"When Pro Forma Is Bad Form,"
by Joanna Glasner, Wired News, December 6, 2001 --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,48877,00.html
As part of efforts to
improve the clarity of information given to investors, the Securities and
Exchange Commission warned this week that it will crack down on companies that
use creative accounting methods to pump up poor earnings results.
In particular, the
commission said it will focus on abuse of a popular form of financial
reporting known as "pro forma" accounting, which allows companies to
exclude certain expenses and gains from their earnings results. The SEC said
the method "may not convey a true and accurate picture of a company's
financial well-being."
Experts say the
practice is especially common among Internet firms, which began issuing
earnings press releases with pro forma numbers en masse during the stock
market boom of the late 1990s. The list of new-economy companies using pro
forma figures includes such prominent firms as Yahoo (YHOO), AOL Time Warner
(AOL), CNET (CNET) and JDS Uniphase (JDSU).
Unprofitable firms
are particularly avid users of pro forma numbers, said Brett Trueman,
professor of accounting at the University of California at Berkeley's Haas
School of Business.
"I can't say for
sure why, but I can take a guess: They're losing big time, and they want to
give investors the impression that the losses are not as great as they
appear," he said.
Trueman said savvy
investors tend to know that companies may have self-serving interests in mind
when they release pro forma numbers. Experienced traders often put greater
credence in numbers compiled according to generally accepted accounting
principles (GAAP), which firms are required to release alongside any pro forma
numbers.
A mounting concern,
however, is the fact that many companies rely almost solely on pro forma
numbers in projections for future performance.
Perhaps the
best-known proponent of pro forma is the perennially unprofitable Amazon.com,
which has a history of guiding investor expectations using an accounting
system that excludes charges for stock compensation, restructuring or the
declining value of past acquisitions.
Invariably, the pro
forma numbers are better than the GAAP ones. In its most recent quarter, for
example, Amazon (AMZN) reported a pro forma loss of $58 million. When measured
according to GAAP, Amazon's net loss nearly tripled to $170 million.
Things are apt to get
even stranger in the last quarter of the year, when Amazon said it plans to
deliver its first-ever pro forma operating profit. By regular accounting
standards, the company will still be losing money.
Those results might
not sit too well with the folks at the SEC, however.
In its statements
this week, the SEC noted that although there's nothing inherently illegal
about providing pro forma numbers, figures should not be presented in a
deliberately misleading manner. Regulators may have been talking directly to
Amazon in one paragraph of their warning, which said:
"Investors are
likely to be deceived if a company uses a pro forma presentation to recast a
loss as if it were a profit."
Neither Amazon nor
AOL Time Warner returned phone calls inquiring if they planned to make changes
to their pro forma accounting methods in light of the SEC's recent statements.
According to Trueman,
few members of the financial community would advocate getting rid of pro forma
numbers altogether.
Even the SEC said
that pro forma numbers, when used appropriately, can provide investors with a
great deal of useful information that might not be included with GAAP results.
When presented correctly, pro forma numbers can offer insights into the
performance of the core business, by excluding one-time events that can skew
quarterly results.
Rather than ditching
pro forma, industry groups like Financial Executives International and the
National Investor Relations Institute say a better plan is to set uniform
guidelines for how to present the numbers. They have issued a set of
recommendations, such as making sure companies don't arbitrarily change what's
included in pro forma results from quarter to quarter.
Certainly some
consistency would make it easier for folks who try to track this stuff, said
Joe Cooper, research analyst at First Call, which compiles analyst projections
of earnings.
The boom in pro forma
reporting has created quite a bit of extra work for First Call, Cooper said,
because it has to figure out which companies and analysts are using pro forma
numbers and how they're using them.
But the extra work of
compiling pro forma numbers doesn't necessarily result in greater financial
transparency for investors, Cooper said.
"In days past,
before it was abused, it was a way to give an honest apples-to-apples
comparison," he said. "Now, it is being used as a way to continually
put their company in a good light."
See also:
SEC
Fires Warning Shot Over Tech Statements
Earnings Downplay Stock Losses
Change
at the Top for AOL
Where's the Money?,
Huh?
There's no biz like E-Biz
I added the following to my December 4,
2001 message from Phil Livinston to my threads on pro forma accounting
statements at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/roi.htm
Also see http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/theory/00overview/beresford01.htm
To: FEI Members and
Prospective Members From: Phil Livingston
Special FEI Express -
SEC Cautions Companies to Potential Dangers of "Pro Forma"
Financials
Today, the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) issued a cautionary advisory on the
use of pro forma earnings per share measures used in earnings press releases.
The SEC warned that companies issuing earnings press releases should always
include net earnings per share determined according to U.S. Generally Accepted
Accounting Principles (GAAP), and recommended that any use of pro forma
measures should be accompanied by a plain English reconciliation back to the
GAAP results. The SEC stated that companies not following these practices
could be subject to the anti-fraud provisions of laws governing corporate
financial reporting. The SEC advisory went on to recommend the guidance
provided by the "FEI/NIRI Earnings Press Release Guidelines."
FEI strongly
encourages companies to follow the "best practice" standard created
by our Committee on Corporate Reporting and the National Institute of Investor
Relations. These guidelines can be found on the FEI website at http://www.fei.org/news/FEI-NIRI-EPRGuidelines-4-26-2001.cfm
. SEC officials have broadly endorsed these guidelines and repeatedly
encouraged their use in public speeches. Current market and economic
conditions make it important for all of us involved in financial reporting to
take extra steps to make sure we are fully and fairly presenting our
companies' financial results to investors. As financial officers, we have that
extra duty to our shareholders, employees and creditors to provide highly
transparent and meaningful information.
The use of pro forma
earnings has become increasingly widespread and is drawing more attention.
Some say the increased use of pro forma measures results from the inadequacies
and limitations of measures currently defined by GAAP. Meanwhile, critics cite
cases of abuse where pro forma earnings have been used to distort reality and
provide an opaque view of a company's results. Be in the camp that uses pro
forma earnings in a constructive way to provide meaningful supplemental data
to the GAAP results. Please share this SEC release and the FEI guidelines with
the rest of your management team. Be a best practices company in financial
reporting.
Read the official
release from the SEC here: http://www.sec.gov/news/headlines/proforma-fin.htm
That's all for now,
Phil
Bob Jensen's threads on pro forma reporting can be found at the following
sites:
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/roi.htm
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/theory/00overview/theory01.htm
The Accounting Fraud Beat (This
article has some great examples.)
"Asset misappropriation comes in many forms: Enemies Within," by
Joseph T. Wells, The Journal of Accountancy, December 2001, pp.31-35 --- http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/dec2001/wells.htm
Sometimes, the truth
isn’t very pretty. Consider, for example, the American workforce. Although
regarded by many as the finest in the world, it has a dark side. According to
estimates, a third of American workers have stolen on the job. Many of these
thefts are immaterial to the financial statements, but not all
are—especially to small businesses.
Regardless of the
amounts, CPAs are being asked to play an increasingly important role in
helping organizations prevent and detect internal fraud and theft. Responding
to these demands requires the auditor to have a thorough understanding of
asset misappropriation. CPAs with unaudited clients can provide additional
services by suggesting a periodic examination of the cash account only.
Although “internal
theft” and “employee fraud” are commonly used, a more encompassing term
is “asset misappropriation.” For our purposes, asset misappropriation
means more than theft or embezzlement. An employee who wrongly uses company
equipment (for example, computers and software) for his or her own personal
benefit has not stolen the property, but has misappropriated it.
Employees—from
executives to rank-and-file workers—can be very imaginative in the ways they
scam their companies. But in a study of 2,608 cases of occupational fraud and
abuse, we learned that asset misappropriation can be subdivided into specific
types; the most prevalent are skimming and fraudulent disbursements.
Continued at http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/dec2001/wells.htm
Other links on accounting fraud can
be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
How to Report Crime and Fraud
Accounting
Fraud (including the Enron scandal on creative accounting) --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
When you
get a new suspect that sounds like consumer fraud, you probably
should investigate it and/or report it to http://www.consumer.gov/sentinel/
The
FBI's Internet Fraud and Complaint Center (IFCC FBI)
To thwart fraud on the Internet and terror in general, check in and/or
report to http://www1.ifccfbi.gov/index.asp
National
Infrastructure Protection Center (NIPC) --- Report security incidents
here.
Located in the FBI's headquarters building in Washington, D.C., the NIPC
brings together representatives from U.S. government agencies, state and
local governments, and the private sector in a partnership to protect
our nation's critical infrastructures.
http://www.nipc.gov/
(Added
this week!)
When you are sent some rather surprising "facts" or find some
rather surprising "facts," please investigate them before
forwarding information that may be false and misleading. At the
purportal.com site, users can search five of the most well-known
sites dedicated to setting the record straight: Snopes Urban Legends
Archive, About.com Urban Legends search, CIAC Hoax Database, CERT
Computer Security Database, and Symantec (Real) Virus Encyclopedia. http://www.purportal.com/
One of our local television
stations in San Antonio recommended the Private Citizen web site
for reducing the amount of junk phone calls and junk mail that you would
like to halt. The Wall Street Journal has also recommended
this web site. http://www.privatecitizen.com/
Bob Jensen's Threads on
Accounting Fraud --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
|
I received this advertisement by email.
Can anybody send me information good news and/or bad news about Capella?
Bob Jensen
Email: rjensen@trinity.edu
-----Original
Message-----
From: Capella University [mailto:capellauniv@e-mailprovider.net]
Sent: Wednesday, December 05, 2001 8:56 AM
To: rjensen@trinity.edu
Subject: Passionate about teaching? Earn a Master's or PhD for your passion.
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A message from Barbara McCartney [bmccartn@metz.une.edu.au]
Hi Bob
I am one of the '
interested sleepers' on the AECM listserve which is an excellent resource for
those of us with a bit of GI (geographical isolation). You helped me a couple
of years ago in getting an e-commerce course together and that course is
pretty strong now.
I'm hoping you can
also give a view on this: I've been working with a guy called Steve Smith from
UWV and we decided to put together a page of links on cybercrime and I was
wondering if I could get comment from the listserve before putting in the
headers and making it really public.
The idea of the page
is a resource page for educators - I'll be using it in my e-commerce course
for example.
Anyway here it is and
your view on whether it is suitable to go on the
listserve will be
most valued. It works best in IE at this stage
http://www-personal.une.edu.au/~bmccartn/index.htm
Kind regards
Barbara
How to Report Crime and Fraud
Accounting
Fraud (including the Enron scandal on creative accounting) --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
When you
get a new suspect that sounds like consumer fraud, you probably
should investigate it and/or report it to http://www.consumer.gov/sentinel/
The
FBI's Internet Fraud and Complaint Center (IFCC FBI)
To thwart fraud on the Internet and terror in general, check in and/or
report to http://www1.ifccfbi.gov/index.asp
National
Infrastructure Protection Center (NIPC) --- Report security incidents
here.
Located in the FBI's headquarters building in Washington, D.C., the NIPC
brings together representatives from U.S. government agencies, state and
local governments, and the private sector in a partnership to protect
our nation's critical infrastructures.
http://www.nipc.gov/
One of our local television
stations in San Antonio recommended the Private Citizen web site
for reducing the amount of junk phone calls and junk mail that you would
like to halt. The Wall Street Journal has also recommended
this web site. http://www.privatecitizen.com/
Bob Jensen's Threads on
Accounting Fraud --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
|
My latest contribution to Accounting
Information Systems
Document 1 (Introduction)
Document 1 contains an Overview and Timeline of OLAP, GML, SGML, HTML, XML, RDF,
and XBRL at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm
WEB
TIMELINE
Hypertext ---> PC ---> GUI,Mouse ---> GML,SGML --->Internet
--->Hypermedia --->HTML,HTTP,WWW --->
DYNAMIC WEB TIMELINE
CGI,Java,JavaScript,DHTML,ActiveX,ASP ---> XML --->RDF ---> OLAP
---> HBRL
Document 1 is especially devoted to a
summary of online analytic processes (OLAP) and the eXtensible Business Language
(XBRL).
Updates on Enrollments in Some Distance
Education Programs
E-MBA at the University of Florida
--- http://www.infowar.com/iwftp/edupage/00/Edupage,_September_10,_2001.shtml
E-MBA PROGRAMS
GRADUATE The first MBA graduates of the University of Florida, Gainesville, to
take all of their classes online will get their degrees in December. At UF,
the quality of the e-MBA is thought to be the same as the traditional,
in-class degree. The same professors teach the classes, and the standards and
admissions are the same as well. Most of the students in the online program
enroll because they already have full-time jobs. Electronic MBAs have
accreditation at UF; there is nothing to indicate whether an MBA is
Internet-based.
(Forbes Online, 30 August 2001)
Western Governors University ---
http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/erm0160.pdf
Western Governors
University already has its first Chancellor Emeritus and an enrollment of five
hundred students.
Wow Sites of the
Year
linkdup's set of links, news about
links, and reviews of links is quite good --- http://www.linkdup.com/
This is a great place to start when you
are looking for innovative Web site designs!
Bob Jensen's
Favorite (it was overlooked by linkdup):
I have to admit that my favorite site design is the FedScope linked at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm#OLAPextended
Bad and Frustrating
Website Designs
The Best and the Worst of Contingency
Designs --- http://www.37signals.com/dnf/
Wow Innovation
of the Week
From InformationWeek Daily on December
3, 2001
** INNOVATION:
Videoconferencing Gets Eyeballed
Imagine turning on
the news and seeing the anchor look down at his or her script during the
entire broadcast. "You'd tune out pretty quickly, wouldn't you?"
asks Steve McNelley, a psychologist and co-founder of Digital Video
Enterprises, a videoconferencing systems provider. The company, along with
Microsoft and a handful of other startups, is tackling a problem that's
hamstrung videoconferencing's popularity as a one-on-one communication tool:
the inability of conference participants to look each other in the eye.
Eye contact is among
the most important aspects of establishing trust, researchers and
psychologists say. But most desktop videoconferencing systems position the
camera above the monitor, making people appear to be looking down. Microsoft
Research is fine-tuning a program that gathers data about the position of a
person's head, eyes, and nose from the video stream of a camera placed under
that person's monitor. The program then transposes the video image onto a 3-D
computer-generated head that can be manipulated to appear as if it's looking
into the camera, rather than over it. Microsoft hopes to incorporate the
software into NetMeeting, its online Web-conferencing product. Microsoft is
ironing out the kinks of the program, which can distort facial images, says
Jim Gemmell, a Microsoft researcher.
Digital Video offers
custom-built videoconferencing systems that use half-silvered mirrors to
create the illusion of eye contact by aligning the camera with the images from
the monitor. The mirror is placed in front of the camera at a forward-tilting
angle, which lets it reflect the images from an upward-facing monitor
positioned just below the camera. It works much like TelePrompTers used in
television to feed lines to actors and anchors.
Digital Video is
negotiating production and marketing deals for the system. - Alorie Gilbert
For more on
videoconferencing, see Technology Brings Far-Flung Colleagues Together http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eFGg0BcUEY0V20ZlZ0AN
Perhaps This Should
Have Been the Wow Innovation of the Week
Apple's newest operating system sells
for more than $100. The latest upgrade costs under $20. A couple of programmers
discovered they could convert the upgrade into the full OS, and published the
information --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,48742,00.html
Bob Blystone clued
me in on this university registration crapshoot game link.
"God Doesn’t Play Dice, But the
Registrar Does Choosing Classes Is Hard When You Don’t Know the Rules of the
Game." by Tim Sullivan, Georgetown University's The Hoya,
August 31, 2001 --- http://www.thehoya.com/viewpoint/083101/view3.cfm
Playing games is fun.
The way I see it, there are few more relaxing and entertaining ways to spend a
warm summer afternoon than with your friends or family and a scintillating
board game. From tiddlywinks to Parcheesi to Operation, there’s nothing like
a good ol’ fashioned game.
But no matter what
game you’re playing, one universal rule applies: In order to succeed, you
have to know the rules. Think about it — if you didn’t know the rules,
you’d spend your days in a vain attempt to finish first in the Monopoly
beauty pageant or angling to inherit a skunk farm.
I say this because I
have been thinking a lot about how we students of Georgetown choose the
classes we want to take and then register for the ones we don’t. The reason,
I think, is fairly simple: Very few, if any, Georgetown undergraduates
understand what they need to do to get the classes they want.
In short, we’re all
playing a very, very important academic game, but under unpublished house
rules that Georgetown established sometime around the Garfield administration.
For example, let’s
say that as a junior English major, I want to take a 200-level English course.
I indicate that it is my top priority during pre-registration in the proper
manner, and don’t get into it. Now at the same time, a junior Culture and
Politics major also pre-registers for the same English course, which counts
for his or her major as well, and also lists it as his or her first priority.
Murphy’s Law being what it is, my friend gets the course and I don’t.
Fine. I can handle
losing a game by blowing a lay up or being out-thought by my opponent, but in
this case, I just keep asking myself, “Why?” What mechanisms were in place
that decided the outcome of this game?
So the questions I
have for the university, and specifically the registrar’s office are these:
How do you decide who gets what classes? Do seniors, as widely rumored, get
preference over sophomores and juniors? If two majors claim the same class,
who gets priority then? What are the tiebreakers? G.P.A.? School? Rank? Random
chance? How much weight does the preference you give to a class hold? I could
go on forever, but you get the gist: How does registration work?
This is, obviously,
no trifling matter. The type and quality of the classes we take constitutes
the bulk of what the degree we will leave here with will eventually mean.
But with a matter as
serious as this, the solution is a relatively simple one: a modicum of
transparency. Someone somewhere within this university must know how this
behemoth process works. Somebody had to have written the computer program that
makes these important decisions. Is it unreasonable to ask that the university
share this information with the people it affects?
Publishing the method
to this madness is one of many feasible steps that can be taken to improve the
class selection and registration process. Every professor should be asked to
post his or her syllabi online so prospective students can browse for classes
before the hectic add-drop period. Academic departments need to do a better
job updating their course description Web sites in time for pre-registration.
The Registrar’s Web site should include a search or include a sort function
that allows students to find classes that are still open after
pre-registration or that fit into the time slots they have available after
their other selections have been made.
None of these
measures would be particularly difficult to implement, and the tangible
benefits to students would be sizable to say the least.
You would think that
the nation’s oldest Catholic university would be against gambling and games
of chance, but to most people that is exactly what the scheduling process is
— a crapshoot. The only difference is that in that game, when you win you
get craps. In our game, that’s precisely how you describe your classes if
you lose.
Tim Sullivan is a
junior in the College and is a contributing editor, sports editor and member
of the board of directors for The Hoya.
Tax Warning
Beware if the tax benefit of a donation is higher than the true market value,
The IRS warns taxpayers to watch out for charities that are clamoring for used
car donations as the year winds down. The last month of the year is typically a
busy time for charities to collect from taxpayers who hope to generate a
year-end tax deduction. Find out how you can check to see if the charity is a
bona fide tax-exempt organization, and get tips on valuing your vehicle. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/65397
Key to career success: Keep up
with buzz words daily
BuzzWhack --- http://www.buzzwhack.com/
Wow Economics
Paper of the Week (Knowledge, Learning, and Conditional Probabilities)
I received a copy from Skip McGoun [mcgoun@bucknell.edu]
I think you can obtain a copy of the paper by contacting Skip at the email
address above. Skip sent along the following review by Chris Robinson.
Hi Bob,
I think this paper is
tremendously-important, and should make every one of us think more carefully
about what we assume when we use the current finance "knowledge" in
the classroom or in our own research.
As we accumulate more
'knowledge' in an area of science, we forget some of the earlier-acquired
parts of that 'knowledge.' I put 'knowledge' in single quotation marks,
because we only think we know; there exists no reality that is ultimately
knowable, understandable and agreed upon by everyone. We forget the
assumptions/beliefs/philosophies that underlie our 'knowledge.' In a more
direct sense, we forget the specific choices about what to believe that
subsequent 'knowledge' relies upon as its foundation. Such a process of
forgetting is both natural, and necessary. If we are to remember every single
foundational fact/assumption upon which our current understanding is built,
and to recall it every time we try to think about something, we will think
very slowly indeed!
As scientists, one of
our important tasks is to continue to remember what went before, lest we fail
to learn from it. The field of finance has placed very little value on
remembering its own past, and particularly the choices that were made. For
example, if Markowitz had chosen to work with semi-variance instead of
variance, would we have a very different view of asset pricing models today?
Everyone knows that alternative choice is perfectly reasonable and defensible,
and yet we do not see any research today pursuing it.
Bob James takes us
back to another seminal choice in finance and economics, the definition of
conditional probability. Let me quote from his conclusion:
"Ironically,
Samuelson's (1965) seminal article Proof That Properly Anticipated Prices
Fluctuate Randomly and Malkiel's (1990) famous book A random walk down Wall
Street may be among the most damaging publications in the efficient market
literature. Samuelson's article led economists to believe that expectations
follow martingales while Malkiel's book led the general population to believe
that asset prices can follow random walks over time. Both martingales and
random walks are stochastic processes that necessitate a fixed probability
space. If Bayesians are correct and information affects probabilities, neither
stochastic process is useful for describing expectations or asset
prices."
Our belief in
relatively efficient markets requires that we trust a large empirical
literature showing prices change quickly in response to all public
information. When we find a market that doesn't correspond to this belief, we
call it inefficient. Of course no such model is perfect, and we acknowledge
that there are a variety of "anomalies," but they don't affect our
belief that we can use a conditional model to determine the efficiency of a
market.
The problem that Bob
James explains lies in the nature of the conditional probability. If the
probability space itself is fixed, then we can rely on all the research of
efficiency, leaving aside the issue of testing market efficiency and a
return-generating model simultaneously. However, if every new observation
isn't merely further evidence of the same process, but causes us to change our
expectations for the distribution of the process, then none of this literature
can tell us about efficiency. This Bayesian approach to statistics and
probability theory has been around for a long time, but finance chose to take
the fixed probability space road, presumably because it is easier to get neat
results. Personally, I find Bob's arguments convincing, that Bayesian
revisions to probability spaces are more likely to be the underlying behaviour
of investors reacting to new information.
You could say that
all Bob does is take us back to the future, since Keynes argued this long ago.
That misses the point. We cannot continue to follow a path blindly, when we
know the choice that put us on the path is not necessarily the best choice. If
I could commission research to follow up Bob's paper, I would look in three
directions:
-A redevelopment of
the theoretical models in finance, using Bayesian probabilities for reaction
to information. This is a very challenging task, and I have no idea where it
would lead or if we can arrive at neat, compact models like the ones that
currently dominate the finance field. For example, I have been wondering for a
long time how valid it is for us to take a mean value of a time series of
returns of asset classes for use in personal finance planning. If every
period's drawing is from a different distribution, and investors react to the
observations by adjusting their view of the future probability space, the way
we analyze personal finance problems is not valid.
-A re-investigation
of market efficiency using empirical tests that allow for Bayesian revisions
of the probability space.
-A more direct
investigation of investor beliefs to see how they form probabilities and
whether they assume a fixed probability space or revise their estimate of the
space with new information. Perhaps researchers in "behavioural
finance" are already starting to address this third point.
Chris Robinson
From Syllabus News on December 4, 2001
UMass Lowell
Trains Faculty Online in Distance Learning
The University of
Massachusetts at Lowell has put on the Web the course it offers faculty to
train them in developing online course materials. "What better way to
have faculty understand the technology and the students' experience than to
take an online course themselves?'' said Dean Jacqueline Moloney. The six-week
online training pilot program will help 20 faculty adapt courses in a distance
learning format and complete a course outline. The program will provide both
technical and pedagogical skills development needed by faculty to migrate 10
courses online.
For more
information, visit http://continuinged.uml.edu
UCLA Report Pegs
Internet Usage Up, E-Commerce Down
A UCLA study on the
impact of the Internet shows that despite continued growth in usage,
enthusiasm for electronic commerce is down, and concerns about online privacy
and security remain steady. The study found that 72.3 percent of Americans
have Internet access, up from 66.9 percent in 2000. Users go online an average
of 9.8 hours per week, up from 9.4 hours in 2000. While Internet commerce
remains strong -- 48.9 percent of Internet users purchased online in 2001 --
it is down from 50.7 percent in 2000. Jeffrey Cole, director of the
university's Center for Communication Policy, said that "despite the
dot-com meltdown, we found that the Internet is more vigorous than ever."
For more
information, visit: http://www.ccp.ucla.edu
SAP Funds
Universities in E-Business Research
Eenterprise software
developer SAP, Inc. has started a program to fund university e-business
research projects. The company is currently committing more than $500,000 to
fund three projects at colleges and universities, with additional research
projects to be considered as the program progresses. The initial projects
include "Realizing the Process Enterprise," at Carleton University,
to study of the role of institutionalizing processes during enterprise system
implementations; "E- Business Solutions to Border Control
Challenges," at Rutgers University, a study of the information technology
requirements for international trade; and "Adoption of Web-Based New
Product Development Systems," at the Rochester Institute of Technology, a
study of business-to-business product development.
Congratulations to Emory University:
New Doctoral Programs at a Prestigious University
We need these new programs. According
to Page -3 of the Hasselback Accounting Faculty Directory 2002-2003, there were
only 74 doctorates awarded in accountancy in the Year 2000. This is down from
200 in 1993.
Graig Waymire sent me a letter
announcing a new doctoral programs in Accounting, Information Systems, and
Marketing. With the decline in the number of doctoral programs (for
example Rice University dropped its accounting doctoral program) in the U.S. and
the number of candidates in many existing programs, it is great to have a great
university launch some new programs.
See http://goizueta.emory.edu/degree/phd.html
It is not an easy
decision. You have decided to go to a graduate school of business and to
pursue a life of scholarship.You are seeking a doctoral program that does more
than prepare you for a life’s work. You want intellectual stimulation, the
opportunity to study and collaborate with motivated students and faculty who
make a difference-scholars who are excited about the changes in our world and
want to understand and shape the new forces at work in the economy.
One important goal of the Goizueta Business School is to educate the next
generation of business academics-leaders whose research and teaching will
influence future scholarship at the best business schools in the world. We
want to prepare our doctoral students to conduct innovative and significant
research, to publish in the top academic journals of their discipline, and to
teach bright students effectively and passionately.
The School. Goizueta Business School has a collaborative environment in
which faculty inspire students to ask important questions and to study new
business phenomena. We are a small faculty. Our doctoral program is designed
to be personal and individualized. Even though the program is organized into
areas of specialization, it is designed to encourage scholarly exchanges and
research collaboration across disciplines. We believe that disciplines grow
intellectually at their edges.
The Graduate School of Arts & Sciences. Emory’s Graduate School
of Arts & Science offers training and research opportunities for students
in 30 major fields of advanced study. Interdisciplinary graduate programs at
Emory offer another level of opportunity for advanced study in emerging fields
of inquiry. These competitive programs prepare graduates for careers ranging
from college and university teaching to research and administration in the
public and private sectors.
The University. Collaboration does not stop at the walls of the
Goizueta Building. We believe doctoral education must be connected to the
University as a whole, and that students should be exposed to contemporary
thinking in multiple disciplines, including economics, sociology, psychology,
political science, and statistics. It is our philosophy to encourage doctoral
students to participate fully in the intellectual currents of Emory University
by studying and collaborating with scholars in other fields and disciplines.
The City. And then there is the city of Atlanta, a vibrant laboratory
for the new economy and home to the fourth largest concentration of corporate
headquarters in the country. As the economic hub of the Southeast, the capital
of the state of Georgia, and one of the fastest growing technology centers in
the nation, Atlanta provides students with every opportunity to study current
business problems and practices. We have close ties to the Atlanta business
community, and our doctoral students are expected to take full advantage of
the resources of the city in their research and education.
The school is currently accepting applications from individuals interested in
any of three areas within the school.
· Accounting
· Information Systems
· Marketing
Students accepted into the program will commence full time studies in the Fall
of 2002. A fourth area of concentration in Organization and Management will be
offered beginning in the Fall of 2003 and a fifth area of concentration in
Finance will be offered in the 2004-2005 academic year.
The curriculum combines doctoral coursework in the social sciences and
quantitative methods, seminars on specific research topics, summer research
experiences, and a dissertation.
The School’s Doctoral Studies Committee oversees the program and includes
one tenured faculty member from each area of concentration. The Assistant Dean
of Doctoral Studies chairs this committee, and together with the Ph.D.
Coordinator, coordinates the day-to-day activities and curriculum of the
Program.
For a list of FAQ on Ph.D. Use these links.
Continued at http://goizueta.emory.edu/degree/phd.html
Reply from a doctoral student in
accounting
As a soon to be
graduate, I can easily substantiate the assertions of David Fordham. I think
the numbers at AAA were 255 posted positions and 62 posted resumes. Granted, I
am sure there are more people looking for positions who, for reasons of
confidentiality, did not list their resume. However, of the 255 positions
listed many are for multiple positions. While I narrowed my list to six
schools, those schools were actually interviewing for a total of 11 positions.
As one whose resume was listed, I could easily have accepted 50 to 60
interviews at the convention, and I still get about one or two unsolicited
emails every week.
On the other hand, my
school has had very few inquiries and applications for the doctoral program.
While this is purely
anecdotal, I can definitely say that the demand is there, and I am very happy
about that.
Chuck Pier
Reply from David R. Fordham [fordhadr@JMU.EDU]
I continue to be
puzzled by the accreditation agencies' emphasis on doctorates. Why do they
require the institutions to have minimums on the amount of "doctoral
coverage" -- on the *fundamentals* classes?
I fully understand
why you need some fairly heavy research credentials to teach advanced-level
courses. I fully understand why you need to be active, dynamic, and devoting
significant time to scholarly activity if you are teaching the top-tier
material, material which requires demonstrable analytical skill, tons and tons
of current, state-of-the-art knowledge, and a proven record of valid
interpretation and application.
But why, oh why, do
you need a doctorate to teach beginning business students the difference
between revenue and expense?
These students aren't
going to swim to the depths which would require their professor to be able to
analyze last week's EITF details, refute last quarter's JAR lead article, or
double-check last year's Horizons pieces for methodological errors. These
students are struggling to understand what a bond premium is and how common
stock differs from preferred stock. They aren't going to ask questions which
require empirical studies of Black's CAP-M, time-series data-mining,
orthogonal factor analysis, or a four-year longitudinal study of going-concern
indicators.
Our accreditation
team (we passed by the way!), complained about our only having 75% of our
Principles sections covered by doctoral faculty. They want more doctoral
faculty in those classes. Our two permanent, full-time non-doctoral professors
are always, consistently, ranked in the top three or four faculty (out of 15)
in the teaching ratings. Their students perform well in downstream courses.
Why are we being asked to replace them with doctoral faculty when they are
doing such a great job doing what we need them to be doing? How will merely
having a doctorate help them do even better?
It is the
accreditation agencies who are apparently driving the demand for Ph.D.'s.
And as long as our
dean demands that we stay accredited, we will play the game and will continue
to seek Ph.D.'s to fill our tenure-track positions. Once the accreditation
agencies stop emphasizing the doctorates, then we will be more realistic and
can hire more teachers like the Haydens, and like our own super-teachers Dinah
Gottschalk and Kim Richardson.
David Fordham
(another $0.02, once again...)
From the Scout Report on December 7,
2001
Re-envisioning the
PhD http://www.grad.washington.edu/envision/
This new site,
sponsored by the Pew Charitable Trusts, is home to the Re- envisioning the PhD
project, which is tasked with investigating change in doctoral education, in
particular, helping to expand the career choices available to PhD students. In
the Re-envisioning Project Resources section, visitors will find conference
materials, recommendations from studies, summaries of interviews, a
bibliography, career resources, and more. The Promising Practices section
contains information on the different ways in which groups (universities,
associations, organizations, and more) are responding to concerns about
doctoral education. The other two main sections of the site, National/
International Resources and News and Updates contain links to even more
resources, studies, current news, related projects, and more.
Toolkit to End Violence Against Women
http://toolkit.ncjrs.org/
Van Gogh and Gauguin (Art, Art History)
--- http://www.artic.edu/aic/exhibitions/vangogh.html
On occasion I forward informative
advertisements (without receiving any fees).
Every once in a
while, something comes along that is so unique and different that it warrants
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Web Design
Tools -- prana3 --- http://www.prana3.com/tools/
Welcome to prana3
Interactive Design's Web Tools. We are your central online source for
quality Web design and development information, tools, guides, tutorials,
links, free Web graphics and more. |
|
|
|
Bob Jensen's helpers for authoring
are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
Especially note http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/290wp/290wp.htm
A message from Richard Campbell on
December 7, 2001
Below is a link to a
presentation made with the new adding product for Powerpoint 2002 - Microsoft
Producer. I didn't upload the sound files to my Windows Media server, but they
play OK on my machine.
http://www.virtualpublishing.net/u4all_2/u4all_1a_files/default.htm
Question:
A big-time consulting firm -- so big it has its own song -- doesn't like
websites linking to it without permission. Naturally, this has spawned dozens of
unauthorized links. What firm is it?
Answer:
The answer is KPMG Consulting, but the
answer is a little complicated.
"Big Stink Over a Simple
Link," by Farhad Manjoo, Wired News, December 6, 2001 --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,48874,00.html
KPMG, an international services firm, prides itself
on its "e-business" savvy, and it charges companies boatloads to
improve their "new economy" businesses.
But this week several website owners were wondering
whether KPMG's Internet acumen was really worth anything at all, as it
announced a policy that seemed to breach the most basic freedom on the Web --
the freedom to link to any site you want to.
In a letter to a consultant in Britain who runs a
personal website that has not been especially nice to KPMG, the company said
it had discovered a link on his site to www.kpmg.com, and that the website
owner, Chris Raettig, should "please be aware such links require that a
formal Agreement exist between our two parties, as mandated by our
organization's Web Link Policy."
The letter added that Raettig should feel free to
arrange this "Web Link Agreement" with KPMG, but that until he has
done so, he should remove his link to the company's homepage. (The KPMG in
question here is a tax and audit firm that is no longer affiliated with KPMG
Consulting, the independent consulting firm at kpmgconsulting.com -- that firm
has no "linking policy.")
Raettig is one of those digital-age 22-year-olds who
know the Web inside out, and he's aware when he's being flimflammed. So he
penned a nice no-thanks letter back to the company, saying that "my own
organization's Web link policy requires no such formal agreement."
Raettig also stated the obvious big problem with
KPMG's policy: "If every hyperlink used on the Web required parties at
both sides of the link to enter into a formal agreement, I sincerely doubt
that the Web would be in existence today."
Raettig posted his correspondence with KPMG on his
online journal, and when others who run their own weblogs saw the item, they
decided to have a little fun with KPMG. They linked to KPMG's site -- just
like this -- to see what the company could do about it.
Within a day of Raettig's posting, several dozen
sites were linking to KPMG's front page, according to Blogdex, a weblog
indexing system. So many people visited Raettig's site that it was knocked
offline for awhile, which he found "very amusing."
Tom Coates, who runs a weblog at plasticbag.org, said
that KPMG was getting its just desserts. "On the Web, it's so easy for
people to make a farce out of companies like this, and these communities are
very strong and are prepared to say you're just dicking us around," he
said. "It's not an environment where big companies can easily throw their
weight around."
But George Ledwith, a KPMG spokesman, insisted the
company wasn't trying to harass anyone, and was just "protecting its
brand."
Asked if he was aware of the weblog backlash, he
answered: "What we are aware of is that individuals and others link to
our site without an agreement, and we have a Web policy clearly
outlined."
The policy he refers to -- posted on the company's
website -- states, "KPMG is obligated to protect its reputation and
trademarks and KPMG reserves the right to request removal of any link to our
website."
He said that this was not a new policy, nor was it
unusual. "We easily sent hundreds of these letters over the past
year," he said. Indeed, he wondered why this was considered newsworthy at
all, as "many organizations do this."
And Ledwith is right -- others have tried to enforce
linking rules. Last year, Ticketmaster alleged that a rival company,
Tickets.com, was violating its copyright by linking to "deep" pages
on its site -- that is, allowing people to bypass Ticketmaster's front page,
where its most lucrative ads were located.
But Ticketmaster lost that bid. "Hyperlinking
does not itself involve a violation of the Copyright Act," ruled U.S.
District Judge Harry Hupp. "There is no deception in what is happening.
This is analogous to using a library's card index to get reference to
particular items, albeit faster and more efficiently."
KPMG is not saying that only "deep links"
require approval, but that all links require its approval. Still, Ledwith was
steadfast in his defense of the policy, saying that "our brand is an
asset that deserves protection."
What exactly did Raettig do to KPMG to provoke its
brand-protection instincts?
Ledwith insists it was merely his link to KPMG's
site, but Raettig and others think the company got upset that Raettig has
posted KPMG's theme song on his website.
KPMG's theme song? Yes, its theme song -- a
several-minute long repetitive ditty called "Vision of Global
Strategy."
Continued at http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,48874,00.html
Reply from Ed Scribner
Bob,
There are so many
stars in the universe that there must be other planetary systems similar to
hours; thus there must be other planets like ours. Likewise, there are so many
web sites in the universe that there must be others with a no-link policy
similar to that of KPMG Consulting, and they're probably lurking somewhere
within the depths of your bookmarks! The rest of us on the list, therefore
(and I am unanimous in this, to quote Mrs. Slocombe of 'Are You Being
Served?'), retract our wholehearted support for BobWeb and disavow any
knowledge of your actions.
Ed
oooo
Ed Scribner
New Mexico State
Signs (Art, Advertising, Marketing,
History) --- http://www.pjchmiel.com/photo/signs.html
Bob Jensen's bookmarks for advertising
and marketing are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#022119Advertising%20and%20Marketing
'Mujihadeen' Hackers Take Out US
Government Sites, The Washington Post, November 30, 2001 --- http://www.newsbytes.com/news/01/172582.html
Two Web sites
operated by the United States government were attacked Thursday by a group
that threatened violence against Americans.
The hackers
vandalized the home page of the NOAA Office of High Performance Computing and
Communications, as well a Web server operated by the National Institute of
Health's National Human Genome Research Institute, according to a mirror of
the defacements captured by the Alldas defacement archive.
Both defaced pages
bore the flag of Saudi Arabia and contained titles that read, in Urdu,
"Allah is the greatest of all." At the bottom of the pages was a
sentence that read in Urdu "Americans be prepared to die."
The hackers did not
identify the name of their group but signed the pages "anonymous."
Officials from the
two U.S. organizations were not immediately available for comment. Both Web
sites, which were running the Apache Web server on the Linux operating system,
were unreachable today.
In the message at the
NIH site, the attackers called themselves "mujihadeens" and wrote
"we are not hacker, we are just cyberterrorist." On the NOAA site,
the group threatened "the greatest cyberterrorist attack against American
government"
Separately, a Web
site attacker from a group called World Of Hell today defaced a server
operated by the U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC).
The home page of the
Army's Waterways Experiment Station was replaced with the World of Hell logo
and a taunting message that included greetings to numerous other defacers.
The attacker, who
used the nickname Rivver, claimed to have obtained classified information that
he threatened to distribute.
According to a copy
of the original site cached at the Google search engine, the ERDC's mission is
"to conceive, plan, study and execute engineering investigations and
research and development studies in support of the civil and military missions
of the Corps of Engineers and other federal agencies."
Among the groups
listed in the "shoutz" section of the World of Hell defacement was
GForce, a Pakistani hacking crew that recently formed the Al-Qaeda Alliance to
attack Department of Defense sites. GForce defaced two military sites in
October.
A mirror of the NOAA
defacement is here: http://defaced.alldas.de/mirror/2001/11/29/hpcc.fsl.noaa.gov/
.
The NIH site
defacement is mirrored at http://defaced.alldas.de/mirror/2001/11/30/snoop.nhgri.nih.gov/
.
The Army site
defacement is mirrored at http://defaced.alldas.de/mirror/2001/11/30/www.wes.army.mil/
.
Reported by
Newsbytes, http://www.newsbytes.com .
Bob Jensen's threads on terrorism
are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/JusticeAppeal.htm
From The Journal of Accountancy,
December 2001, Page 21 --- http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/dec2001/news_web.htm
Business Resources
sites.krislyn.com
This home page is full of links to
“strictly business sites” such as online associations and e-zines. Users
can find industry-specific information on accounting, economics and
investments, to name a few. The business plans section of the site offers a
link to a bookstore where business people can find titles on writing and
implementing their plans. Visitors also can link to freebieclub.com, which
provides links to various discount and gratis promotional offers.
The Voice of Small Business
www.nfibonline.com
This National Federation of
Independent Business site includes a tools and tips section with articles for
small-business owners, such as “Six Ways to Keep Employees Safe on the
Road,” “The Small Business Owner’s Guide to a Good Night’s Sleep”
and “A Checklist for Starting a Small Business.”
A Big Site for Small
Companies
www.smallbusiness.com
Registration here is necessary but
free and lets users seek advice from peers, share experiences and publicize
their businesses with profile pages and listings in the site’s online
directory. Linked articles of interest cover topics such as business planning,
human resources, legal issues and raising capital. They are accompanied by
smallbusiness.com’s own rating system on the article’s helpfulness.
Free Articles Here
businessbookpress.com
If you’re buying, selling or
determining the value of your business, this Web site offers free articles on
all three of those subjects. Titles include “Finding the Right Business to
Buy” and “What Makes the Sale of a Business Fall Through?” There’s
also an “Ask the Expert” message board to help users get answers to tough
business questions.
Keep Up With Industry News
www.all-biz.com
This online resource center for small
businesses groups its free articles by “business zones” or sectors such as
advertising, communications, marketing and telecommunications. Registration is
free and comes with a subscription to a newsletter that offers business tips
and ideas.
Channel Surf Here
www.businesstown.com
Articles on business topics, a free
newsletter and special offers on reference materials are available here.
Channels include Internet, accounting and consulting. There’s no charge for
a subscription.
Business Plan Preparation
www.businessplans.org
This Center for Business Planning
site offers sample business plans, analyses of business strategies and
sections on writing and evaluating business and marketing plans. The site also
features links to other resources including a business directory and a
glossary.
A Site for Survivors
www.business-survival.com
How-to articles, surveys and reports
and an ask-the-experts section make up the bulk of the Small Business Survival
Center. Articles are broken down by categories such as starting and running a
business and dealing with technology. Titles include “10 Ways to Lower Your
Computer Support Bills” and “Top 10 Deadly Small Business Mistakes.”
Solutions for Growing
Businesses
www.entrepreneurmag.com
Users can access the current and
archived electronic versions of Entrepreneur magazine, as well as BizStartups
and HomeOfficemag, at this site. Visitors can get free subscriptions
to e-newsletters and access to Entrepreneur’s annual guide of more
than 400 start-up opportunities and the five-part guide, “How to Build a
Business Plan.”
Help for Small Businesses
www.businessknowhow.com
Visitors here have access to sample
business plans, classified ads, employment forms, model legal forms and
business agreements. Articles and guidance are also offered on topics such as
the Small Business Administration’s disaster-assistance program and
generating traffic for your company’s Web site.
Bob Jensen's Small Business
Bookmarks are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#022119Small%20Business
From The Journal of Accountancy,
December 2001, Page 21 --- http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/dec2001/news_web.htm
For the Discerning Consumer
www.consumerreview.com
This site features product reviews
written by the people who know these items best—the consumers who purchase
and use them. All candid reviews have strengths, weaknesses and summaries of
the products. Categories include auto, computer hardware, electronics, and
home and garden. These are further broken down into item-specific sections
like desktops, notebooks and personal digital assistants
Great Castles of Wales --- http://www.anzwers.org/free/castlewales/
Walking with Prehistoric Beasts - the
Discovery Channel (History, Science, Paleontology) ---
http://dsc.discovery.com/convergence/beasts/beasts.html
"Tenure Status And
Grade Inflation: A Time Series Approach, by Stephen F. Gohmann and
Myra J. McCrickard, Journal of the Academy of Business Education, Fall 2001, p.
1 (this journal is not online)
Abstract
In this paper we examine the influence of the tenure decision on a faculty
member's grading practices. Some academics have argued that the pressure
for tenure may influence faculty to lower grading standards in an attempt to
influence students to give them better evaluations, thus increasing the
chances of gaining tenure. If this hypothesis holds, we would expect
faculty to have inflated grade distributions as their tenure decision
approaches. However, other hypotheses exist to explain why untenured
faculty may have inflated grade distributions relative to tenured faculty.
One in particular is that untenured faculty have less experience in evaluating
students and tend to err on the side of lenient grades when a grade is
borderline. If this hypothesis is true, then we would expect a faculty
member's grades to be lower over time. We use cross-sectional
time-series data to examine the impact of the approach and passing of the
tenure decision on faculty members' grade distributions. Our results
indicate that faculty tend to give lower grades as the tenure decision
approaches, thus supporting the hypothesis that over time faculty learn how to
better distinguish among student performance.
The authors are both from The
University of Louisville. The study used data over an eight year period.
It's for the birds.
Operation Migration (Ecology, Science) http://www.operationmigration.org/
Top Ten Selling Books on AccountingWEB
--- http://www.accountingweb.com/item/63294
- Creating
Rainmakers: The Manager's Guide To Training Professionals To Attract New
Clients
- Million
Dollar Consulting, New and Updated Edition: The Professional's Guide to
Growing a Practice
- Developing
Knowledge-Based Client Relationships, The Future of Professional Services
- How
to Become a Rainmaker: The Rules for Getting and Keeping Customers and
Clients
- How
to Work a Room: The Ultimate Guide to Savvy Socializing in Person and
Online
- Business
by Referral: Sure Fire Way to Generate New Business
- How
to Become a Rainmaker: The People Who Get and Keep Customers
- The
I Hate Selling Book: Business-Building Advice for Consultants, Attorneys,
Accountants, Engineers, Architects, and Other Professionals
- How
to Maximize Fees in Professional Service Firms
- 422
Tax Deductions for Businesses & Self-Employed Individuals 3rd Ed.
Book Recommendation: First, Break
All the Rules: What the World's Greatest Managers Do Differently
The authors
expose the fallacies of standard management thinking. In seven chapters, the
two consultants for the Gallup Organization debunk some dearly held notions
about management, such as "Treat people as you like to be treated,"
"People are capable of almost anything," and "A manager's role
is diminishing in today's economy." "Great managers are
revolutionaries," the authors write. "This book will take you inside
the minds of these managers to explain why they have toppled conventional
wisdom and reveal the new truths they have forged in its place." http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0684852861/accountingweb
Books for Kids
Books of Wonder --- http://www.booksofwonder.com/
How to find books --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm
The flurry of virulent e-mail worms
that attack Outlook users can be prevented by a free patch on Microsoft's
website. The problem: It's impossible to find and cumbersome to install --- http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,48756,00.html
Experience Thailand (Travel and
Adventure) --- http://www.experiencethailand.com/
Marie's World Tour --- http://www.mariesworldtour.com/
2001 Antarctic Expedition --- http://www.biology.ucsc.edu/people/williams/antarctic/
Frozen Under (from National Geographic)
---
http://magma.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/data/2001/12/01/sights_n_sounds/media.1.2.html
The United States and New Zealand are a
world apart -- except on Antarctica, where their science bases are just a frozen
hill away.
"Where U.S., Kiwis Are Neighbors," by Kim Griggs, Wired News,
December 6, 2001 --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,48617,00.html
Rock and Rap
Paul's Boutique Samples and References List (Music?) http://www.moire.com/beastieboys/samples/
30 years of acclaimed printmaking and
sculpture. (Art, Art History) --- http://www.nga.gov/gemini/
Berlin Mitte --- http://uinic.de/berlin-mitte/
An expedition through space and time
in 260 photos.
The radical changes within Berlin
Mitte over the past 10 years are presented from an artistic perspective. Maps
of the locations photographed aid in orientation.
Question:
What are the search terms most frequently used in search engines?
Answer:
The Yahoo! Buzz Index --- http://buzz.yahoo.com/weekly
/
The Buzz Index varies over time. These are the hot ones this week.
What has the "Jennifer
Lopez" search phrase got that the phrase "Bob Jensen" is lacking?
Don't answer that!
Bob Jensen's search helpers are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm
From InformationWeek Daily on December
3, 2001
New Battle Begins
Over File-Sharing Programs
The next battle
between copyright owners and file-sharing programs has begun. A Dutch district
court judge has ordered KaZaA in Amsterdam to block its users from swapping
copyrighted music files or face fines of more than $40,000 a day. A similar
order in the United States against file-sharing company Napster Inc. resulted
in the company banning unapproved files and eventually suspending service. But
KaZaA says it can't comply with the order, since the nature of its software
makes it impossible to isolate users.
KaZaA, like its
sister programs Morpheus and Grokster, is based on technology from the Dutch
company FastTrack. Unlike Napster, which let users share music files through a
directory that resided on its own computers, the FastTrack technology uses a
distributed network, with no central servers to shut down or restrict.
"It's not even clear to me that [the judge's] order is feasible,"
says Aram Sinnreich, analyst at Jupiter Media Metrix. "Unlike Napster,
there's no centralized information server, so there's no switch you can flick
to stop people from sharing."
Sinnreich says the
new generation of distributed file-sharing programs may be beyond the scope of
litigation. "It is possible for a copyright to be violated without there
being a single individual or company responsible," he says. And
technological solutions aren't any better. "The only way to stop it would
be to monitor all consumer Internet activity, and that would be a clear
violation of privacy." The solution, Sinnreich says, is for companies to
attract consumers to a legal alternative by offering things such as guaranteed
file quality, ease of use, and rapid transfers. "They need to build a
better mouse trap," he says. "We don't see this as an impasse."
- David M. Ewalt
Read on: What The
Movie Industry Can Learn From Napster http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eFGg0BcUEY0V20bdF0A2
Has RIAA Blown
Royalties Issue Out Of Proportion? http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eFGg0BcUEY0V20bdG0A3
Bob Jensen's P2P file sharing
threads are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/napster.htm
This computer consists of DNA molecules
and lives in a test tube. It can't do much at all. But hey, it's a computer
nonetheless --- http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,48697,00.html
WhatUDo (advice for sexually active
teens) --- http://www.whatudo.org/
Ceil Pillsbury reminded me of the
following article that deals, among other things, with use of Excel's pivot
tables in financial reporting. My tutorials on videos on pivot tables,
including videos on how to use the pivot tables provided by Microsoft for
analyzing its own financial statements and in forecasting performance are given
in the following two sites:
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm#Excel
HOW MICROSOFT ADDS IT UP:
Accounting the Digital Way by Scott M. Boggs, Journal of Accountancy, May
1999 --- http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/may1999/boggs.htm
(An overview of Microsoft's FinWeb financial reporting database.)
TECHNOLOGY
IS dramatically
changing the role of the financial professional from that of
information recorder to business strategist—making the financial
manager much more critical to the success of an enterprise.
TO
KEEP PACE WITH these
changes, the financial professional is expected to provide accurate
and timely financial information that can be accessed and analyzed
quickly and easily. While digital technology may make it easier to
collect information and move it from one place to another, it also has
led to an incredible proliferation of data. Filtering, sorting,
compiling, analyzing and disseminating financial data in ways that add
real value to a corporation has become a daunting challenge.
MICROSOFT
CORP.—with
54 financial groups charged with providing financial support to more
than 85 global subsidiary operations—has struggled with these
challenges. Its answer is the financial “digital nervous system,”
an intranet-based environment that links all of the company’s
financial groups into a single, coherent system and provides its
employees with real-time access to information and financial reports
through the Internet.
|
FIVE
YEARS AGO, it
took Microsoft two weeks to close the books. Now it takes four days.
The company used to print and distribute 350,000 hard-copy management
reports each year. Today, none. Through FinWeb, a network of intranet
sites, its employees can submit travel-expense reports and be
reimbursed, purchase goods and services and transfer capital
assets—all from their desktops. They’ve reduced paperwork,
transaction time and publishing and distribution costs.
IT’S
POSSIBLE for
any of its employees who need financial information for decision
making to access detailed reports that are updated daily. The
financial system lets people drill down through layers of information
to get answers—quickly, easily and without computer programming
skills. None of the technology used to achieve the objectives is
beyond the reach of any organization—large or small.
AS A
RESULT, the
company is able to achieve something finance organizations strive for:
the ability to add more value at the strategic end of the business and
spend less time processing transactions.
|
SCOTT
M. BOGGS, CPA, is Microsoft’s corporate controller. Prior to joining
Microsoft, he spent eight years with Deloitte, Haskins & Sells as
a manager in the emerging business services group. |
Question:
What is the most important international tax issue?
Answer:
E&Y: Transfer Pricing Most Important Int'l Tax Issue --- http://www.smartpros.com/x31918.xml
NEW YORK, November
29, 2001 — While an overwhelming majority of multinational corporations (MNCs)
continue to rank transfer pricing as the most important international tax
issue, most companies "are losing out on opportunities arising from
proactive transfer pricing management of post merger integrations, e-commerce
and intellectual property," according to a new survey released by Ernst
& Young LLP.
Eighty-five percent
of the tax and finance directors responding to the 2001 Ernst & Young
Transfer Pricing Global Survey rank transfer pricing as their most important
current international tax issue.
Transfer pricing
involves the price at which transactions between units of multinational
companies take place, including the inter-company transfer of goods, property,
services, loans and leases.
"MNCs are
missing opportunities to build shareholder value by not integrating transfer
pricing up front in strategic business actions -- including mergers,
acquisitions, divestitures, e-commerce and intellectual property
management," warns John Hobster, CEO of Global Transfer Pricing Services
of Ernst & Young, adding that "there are encouraging signs that the
most progressive companies are beginning to understand how transfer pricing
can impact every phase of their business operations."
The Ernst & Young
survey found that only 29 percent of corporate parents consider transfer
pricing as part of their strategic corporate planning.
"Failing to
integrate transfer pricing policies in the case of mergers and acquisitions is
alarmingly common," said Hobster. "Half of all companies that
reported a merger or acquisition in the last two years simply applied the
dominant company's transfer pricing methodology, and 23 percent allowed
multiple systems to continue. This increases their risk of being taxed on the
same profits twice, and falls short of "best of class" behavior to
harness the opportunities presented by such events."
While e-commerce
transactions across borders continue to grow, two-thirds of parent companies
and half of subsidiaries surveyed by Ernst & Young do not consider the
transfer pricing issues related to their e-commerce activities, and only
one-fourth of parent companies expect the impact of e-commerce to become
significant to transfer pricing planning.
"Less than 30
percent of companies consider the transfer pricing-related issues around
e-commerce, despite the fact that in many industries, the development of
e-commerce is a major value enhancer," said Hobster.
Management of
intellectual property has been relegated to tracking and registering, not
tax-efficient exploitation, according to the survey, which found that there is
no widespread clear and coherent adoption of IP management strategies that
will optimize operating outcomes, minimize tax costs, or satisfy tax authority
inquiries.
"Simply
'managing' a company's IP does not equate to responsible planning," said
Bob Ackerman, Co-Director of Ernst and Young's Americas Transfer Pricing
Practice. "Failure to integrate business and tax strategies in the IP
arena leads to poor operating outcomes and overpayment of tax."
The survey also
revealed an increased zeal on the part of enforcement agencies combined with a
heightened capability to do their job. This is reflected in transfer pricing
audits, which are a major issue for companies around the globe, with nearly
two-thirds of respondents reporting having suffered a transfer pricing audit
somewhere in their organization in the past two years.
"In addition,
transfer pricing audits are generating more adjustments now than in 1999 at
the time of the last Ernst & Young Transfer Pricing Survey," said
Ackerman. "Adjustments are most prevalent in the field of technical and
management services."
The survey also
addressed the debate over the need -- or not -- for complete alignment of
transfer prices for both tax and management purposes. It found that 77 percent
of MNC parents use the same set of transfer prices for both tax and management
purposes.
According to
Ackerman, "This runs counter to the conventional wisdom that companies
tend to favor separate systems for tax and management purposes. We believe
that the two views can be reconciled. First, we found that a majority of
companies use the same set of transfer prices for tax and management purposes.
This is the case because it is too complicated and too confusing to maintain
multiple sets of books."
Of those using the
same transfer price, 52 percent use a compromise between satisfying tax
requirements and achieving management/operational objectives. And among those
using different transfer prices for tax and management purposes, 49 percent
start with the operational transfer prices, which they modify for tax
purposes.
"While every MNC
is different, in our experience, compromise systems rarely succeed. Operations
are often only partially motivated, pointing to transfer pricing restrictions
outside their control. Transfer pricing systems are often a calculated
risk--meeting some regulatory requirements, but not all," said Hobster.
Link forwarded by Patrick
Charles
"New Study Explains
Why Tax Harmonization Threatens America's Competitive Advantage In Global
Economy," Center for Freedom and Prosperity, November 27, 2001 --- http://www.freedomandprosperity.org/press/p11-27-01/p11-27-01.shtml
Dear Professor
Jensen,
The Carnegie Academy
for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning is now working with almost 200
campuses and twenty-some scholarly and professional societies. One aspect of
that work is to encourage and support activities that "go public."
In that spirit, I'm pleased to send along in this posting information about
two upcoming conferences.
The first, at
Rockhurst University this coming spring, aims at exploring disciplinary (and
interdisciplinary) styles in the scholarship of teaching and learning. It
builds on a forthcoming volume edited by Mary Taylor Huber and Sherwyn
Morreale, which will soon be available from the American Association for
Higher Education--Carnegie's partner in CASTL.
The second, at
Illinois State University next summer, focuses on "mission, values and
identity" at Research Intensive institutions, and includes attention to
the scholarship of teaching and learning in such settings. You may also be
interested to know that Illinois State recently announced the Cross Endowed
Chair for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning--a great idea and a
generous gift from K. Patricia Cross, whose work has taught us all so much
about how students learn.
Thanks for your
interest in the Carnegie Academy for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning.
-- Pat Hutchings
A message from Bill Schwartz
ADVANCES IN ACCOUNTING EDUCATION
is now going to accept manuscript submissions only by email attachment. Please
send the manuscript in two files prepared in WORD; one with the manuscript but
not a cover page and a second with the cover page only. In addition, mail one
hard copy with a submission check by regular mail. Continue to send empirical
manuscripts to Professor J. Edward Ketz ( k55@psu.edu)
and non empirical manuscripts to Bill Schwartz ( bschwart@iusb.edu
).
A message from Ed Scribner at New
Mexico State University at Las Cruces
Bob--You inspired me
to send a brief note of encouragement to our accounting students, which I
forwarded to some alumni. Here's a thoughtful response from one of them.
Ed
Raymond Bachert
wrote:
Hi Ed, good
job! In my experience in industry I couldn't agree more. I work with
SAP, the largest ERP Company in the world, and MS, the largest
software company; and in my experience what you say is absolutely true.
In industry most of the manual tasks of "bookkeeping" are
virtually eliminated with EDI, the web and other forms of
automation. The key to being successful in this environment is to
have high quality folks that understand business problems and the
proper application of accounting principles to new situations.
While at NMSU I
recall there being some discussion about preparing students to pass
the CPA exam vs. preparing them to understand the principles of
accounting. The later was chosen and I think this is absolutely the
right course of learning for new business professionals.
Industry is very
competitive and the time to make changes is smaller than ever. The
key is competent, reliable professionals working with integrity. In
my experience, companies that don't have this go out of business.
The application of technology only makes this process happen in a
more spectacular way.
Let me know if
there's anything I can do for you.
Best regards,
Ray Bachert
-----Original
Message-----
From: Ed Scribner [mailto:escribne@NMSU.Edu]
Sent: Tuesday, December 04, 2001 8:59 AM
Subject: Encouragement
Dear Alumni and
Friends, FYI, here's a copy of a message recently sent to our
accounting student listserv:
Dear Accounting
Students, I hope you're following the Enron scandal in the
business news. There are some severe accounting problems, among other
problems at Enron, that might discourage you about the profession.
Remember, though, that these problems only underscore the need for
competent, reliable information professionals working with integrity
to make sure such occurrences are minimized. These are the kinds of
professionals the employers consistently tell us are coming out of New
Mexico State.
Hang in there!
Ed Scribner
Accounting & BCS, NMSU
Bob Jensen's commentaries on the
Enron mess are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
The anticipated collapse of Enron will
have a weighty impact on the struggling business of bandwidth trading, which the
energy firm helped create at the height of the Internet boom --- http://www.wired.com/news/ebiz/0,1272,48732,1162b6a.html
I see that none of you nominated Bob
Jensen!
TIME's 2001 Global Influentials --- http://www.time.com/time/2001/influentials/
It appears that Camstudio has a
freeware video screen capture system that competes with the non-freeware
Camtasia (that I love) for capturing computer screen activity in to video.
The Camstudio software lacks many of the great features of Camtasia, especially
the feature that allows for conversion of the AVI files into RealMedia Files (to
both save space and avoid having to download a special player for playback).
Hi Bob,
We would like to
introduce our new freeware which can record screen activity into standard AVI
movie files. It is an ideal tool for developing videos to demonstrate features
of a new software, for creating movies used in user training or any other task
that requires the capture of desktop activity.
The program is easy
to use, and you can select an area or full desktop for recording. You can
adjust the video quality settings to reduce file size, use custom cursors and
add a soundtrack through your microphone.
[Name and version of
app ]
CamStudio 1.1
[Link to homepage of
app] http://www.atomixbuttons.com/vsc
[System requirements]
Microsoft Windows 98, Me, NT 4.0, 2000 or later. 400 MHz processor . 64 MB RAM
4 MB of hard-disk space for program installation.
[Download link] http://www.atomixbuttons.com/vsc/setup.exe
RenderSoft
Software [jupboo@pacific.net.sg]
The FAQ site has a nice explanation of
hardware acceleration problems that can arise when playing back any AVI files on
newer computers --- http://www.atomixbuttons.com/vsc/
When
I play back a full-screen AVI file using Windows Media Player by double
clicking it, the text and graphics becomes blurred.
There are two
main reasons for the movie being blurred.
One is that you are using Windows Media Player to play back a movie that has a
frame size that is as big or bigger than the screen.
In this case, Windows Media Player will shrink the picture to fit it on the
screen. This cause the text and graphics to be blurry. To view the movie
in full quality, you will need to switch Windows Media Player to full screen
playback, or switch your monitor to a higher resolution .
You may also record a smaller region to avoid this problem. Otherwise you may
need to use the Movie Player software that is distributed with the CamStudio
package to playback the movie.
Another reason for the cause of the unclear image is the use of Lossy
Codec as your compressor. This means the compressor will degrade the quality
of your picture to reduce the size of your AVI file.
To remedy this, you may either set the Quality settings in Video Options to a
higher value, or use a Lossless Codec for your compressor (e.g Microsoft RLE
is a lossless codec that is available only in the display mode of 256 colors).
When I press the F9 key to stop the recorder when the program is minimized,
the save dialog does not appear.
Try minimizing all other windows on your desktop. The save dialog window is
probably hidden behind them.
Can I use the AVI files recorded with CamStudio for commercial purposes ?
Yes, of course. The AVI files created with CamStudio may be used for any
purposes, including commercial purposes. You may sell your recorded .AVI files
or charge users for products that include those AVIs.
How come when I try to record something playing in Windows Media Player (or
Real Player or Apple QuickTime), it comes out blank?
This is because hardware acceleration is being used in these players. You may
want to disable hardware acceleration in these players :
Windows Media Player 7:
Choose Tools:Options (and select the Performance tab). Set the Hardware
Acceleration slider to None.
Windows Media Player 6.4 and earlier:
Choose View: Options : Playback. Set the Hardware Acceleration slider to
None.
Apple QuickTime:
Choose Edit : Preferences : Streaming Transport. Select Video Settings in
the combobox and uncheck all DirectDraw options.
RealPlayer G2:
Choose Options/Preferences (and select the Performance tab). Uncheck the
"Use Optimized Video Display" setting.
Disabling Hardware Acceleration System Wide
Another solution is to disable hardware acceleration for your whole system.
To do this on Windows 2000, go to the Control Panel, choose Display :
Properties : Settings : Advanced : Troubleshooting. Set the Hardware
Acceleration slider to None.
For other versions of Windows, go to the Control Panel, choose System, (and
under the performance tab), choose Graphics : Advanced. Set the Hardware
Acceleration slider to None.
When I record my DVD player, the output is blank.
DVD players usually require hardware acceleration to run. You may not be able
to capture movies from your DVD player.
My Win 2000 system freezes when I record with CamStudio.
Try turning off system wide hardware acceleration and reducing the input frame
rate of CamStudio.
Turning off system wide hardware acceleration :
Please read FAQ above on how to go about in disabling system wide hardware
acceleration.
Reducing Frame Rate:
In CamStudio, go to Options : Video Options and increase the value of
"Capture Frames Every __ milliseconds"
When I click the Record button, I get an "Error Creating AVI file"
message.
Try going to Options : Video Options, and select a different compressor.
I am recording a game with its sound effects and music. The video comes out
fine but how come the audio is missing ?
CamStudio 1.1 can only record audio from the microphone. If you need to record
the audio playing in the speakers, one suggestion is to place your microphone
near your speakers.
How can I optimize the video settings to get the best results ? Can you
suggest a good video setting ?
One setting which gives very good frame rates is to use 256 color display mode
with MS RLE as Compressor.
Futhermore, in Options: Video Options
- Set the Capture
Frame Every value to 5
- Set the Set Key
Frames Every value to be 200
- Set Playback
Rate to 200
In general, you should
adjust the Set Key Frames Every and Playback Rate to be equal
1000/Capture Frame Every. For example, if Capture Frame Every is
5, then the Playback Rate should be 1000/5 = 200.
However, if you are creating a time-lapse movie, (in which your Capture
Frame Every is a very large value), you may want to set the Playback
Rate to be around 20 to 30 frames/second.
I have fininshed recording with CamStudio and would like to trim/cut some of
the frames in the AVI. Are there any freeware video editors that can do this?
VirtualDub is a great freeware video editor for editing AVIs. Download it at http://www.virtualdub.org/index
I am trying to record a DOS application by switching to it from Windows, and
it seems to be impossible as all I get is some sort of fuzzy stuff in the
playback.
CamStudio cannot record your DOS application when it is running in full screen
DOS mode. Try recording your DOS application in windowed mode.
You can make your full-screen DOS application into a window by pressing
CTRL-ESC when you are in DOS mode. This will return you to the Windows screen.
If you look at the task-bar, you will notice a new item "MS-DOS
prompt". By right-clicking on this item, and selecting Properties, a
dialog box will be displayed. Choose the Screen tab and under Usage, select
Window and click "OK". Your DOS screen will now become a window. You
can start recording from here and the output should be fine.
Does CamStudio record DirectX, OpenGL applications and special windows such as
the Office Assistant in MS Word?
This actually depends on your system. For most cases, CamStudio should be able
to record DirectX and OpenGL programs if they are running in windowed mode
rather than full-screen mode.
( I successfully recorded the Office Assistant in one computer running Win Me,
but could not do so in another with Win 2000 installed. )
I need to save in the QuickTime or Mpeg format. How can I do that with
CamStudio ?
CamStudio does not save videos in the QuickTime or Mpeg movie format
directly. You will need third party software to do the conversion.
For Quicktime movies, you may use QuickTime Pro from http://www.apple.com/quicktime/.
For Mpeg, there is a free AVI to MPEG converter on the internet. Click
here for free AVI to MPEG1 converter
How can I convert AVI files to Windows Media files (.ASF .WMV) for
streaming on the Internet.
You may use the free Microsoft Windows Media Encoder 7 to convert AVI files to
ASF or WMV format.
Windows Media Encoder is available without charge at:
http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windowsmedia/en/wm7/encoder.html
When I record a large window, the computer becomes very slow. How can I
capture a large window fast enough?
Capturing a large frame and compressing it are time-intensive operations. Your
computer may not be fast able to handle such frame rates at these sizes.
You can try to
make the
size of the capture region smaller
reduce the
number of colors for the display mode
decrease
the input frame rate (by making the value of Capture Frame Every __
Milliseconds in Video Options larger)
I have downloaded your source code and found them very interesting. Would
you tell me how the function XXX in file YYY works ?
Please do not direct technical questions related to the source code to us.
I am a programmer. How can I implement the feature of adding text/graphics
overlay into the movie ?
You may want take a look at the functions
captureScreenFrame
InsertHighLight
in the file vscapView.cpp of the source code to see how we implemented the
drawing of highlights into a frame of the AVI movie. The addition of
text/graphics overlay should be very similar.
Bob Jensen's threads and a video
tutorial can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
Fun for Kids on the Computer
Build a Snowman --- http://www.funone.com/1new/11/snowman2/index.html
Drag the parts to the plain snow balls.
Maybe this isn't accounting, but on the
side you can assign standard costs of components and actual costs of components
and then solve for the standard cost variances. But who wants to do this?
Just have some fun at this site.
Forwarded by Bob Overn
If you like to drink
BEER (or if you don't) here is an interesting math exercise:
1. First of all, pick
the number of times a week that you would like to have a beer (try for more
than once but less than 10, girls can substitute their favorite drink)
2. Multiply this
number by 2 (Just to be bold)
3. Add 5. (for Friday
Night)
4. Multiply it by 50.
I'll wait while you get the calculator................
5. If you have
already had your birthday this year add 1751.... If you haven't, add 1750
..........
6. Now subtract ! the
four digit year that you were born. (if you remember)
You should have a
three digit number
Now here's the
kicker!!!!!!!!!!!
Are you
Ready???????????????
The first digit of
this was your original number! (i.e., how many times you want to have a beer
each week).
The next two numbers
are your age.
IMPRESSIVE ISN'T IT?
(2001 IS THE ONLY
YEAR THIS WILL EVER WORK, ISN'T THAT INTERESTING)
BOB
Forwarded by Dick Haar
Subject: Taliban
vs. Texas
A large group of
Taliban soldiers are moving down a road when they hear a voice call from
behind a sand-dune. "One Texas soldier is better than ten Taliban".
The Taliban commander
quickly sends 10 of his best soldiers over the dune whereupon a gun-battle
breaks out and continues for a few minutes, then silence.
The voice then calls
out "One Texan is better than one hundred Taliban".
Furious, the Taliban
commander sends his next best 100 troops over the dune and instantly a huge
gunfight commences. After 10 minutes of battle, again silence.
The Texan voice calls
out again "One Texan is better than one thousand Taliban".
The enraged Taliban
Commander musters one thousand fighters and sends them across the dune.
Cannon, rocket and machine gun fire ring out as a huge battle is fought. Then
silence. Eventually one wounded Taliban fighter crawls back over the dune and
with his dying words tells his commander,
"Don't send any
more men, its a trap. There's actually two of them."
The friend who sent me this does not
live in Rhode Island.
When you're from
Texas, people that you meet ask you
questions like,
"Do you have any cows?"
It's nice to be able to say yes.
They ask you, "Do you have horses?"
Yup.
"Bet you got a bunch of guns, eh?"
Of course. They all want to know if you've been to Southfork.
They watched the TV show called Dallas.
Have you
ever looked at a map of the world? Hell yes
you have. Look at Texas for me just for a second. That
picture, with the Panhandle and the Gulf Coast, and the Red River and
the Rio Grande is as much a part of you as anything ever will be. As
soon as anyone anywhere in the world looks at it they know what it
is. It's Texas.
Pick any
kid off the street in Japan and draw him a
picture of Texas in the dirt
and he'll know what it is. What happens if I show you a picture of
any other state? You'll get it maybe after a minute or two, but who
else would? Even if you do, does it ever stir
any feelings in you?
In every
man, woman and child on this little rock
the Good Lord put us on,
there is somewhere in them a person who wishes just once he could be
a real live Texan and get up on a horse
or ride in a pickup.
Did you
ever hear anyone in a bar go, "Wow... so
you're from Ok-la-homa.
Cool. Tell me about it?!"
( I don't think so )
There is
some bit of Texas in everyone. Do you know
why? Because Texas is Texas.
Texas is
the Alamo. Texas is 183 men standing in a
church, facing thousands of Mexican nationals, fighting for
freedom, who had the chance to walk out and save themselves, but
stayed. They stayed to change the name of Tejas to TEXAS...
We send
our kids to schools named William B. Travis
and Bowie and do you know
why? Because those men saw a line in the sand and they decided to be
heroes. John Wayne paid to do the movie
himself.
That is
Texas.
Texas is
Sam Houston capturing Santa Anna at San Jacinto.
Texas is Juneteenth and Texas Independence Day.
Texas is huge forests of Piney Woods like the Davy
Crockett National Forest.
Texas is breathtaking mountains in Big Bend.
Texas is shiny skyscrapers in Houston and Dallas.
Texas is world record bass from places like Lake
Fork.
Texas is
mexican food like nowhere in the world, even Mexico.
Texas is larger-than-life legends like Willie
Nelson and Buddy Holly, Earl Campbell and Nolan Ryan, Denton Cooley and
Michael DeBakey, Lyndon Johnson and George Bush.
Texas is great companies like Dell Computer and
Texas Instruments.
Texas is insurance companies and oil companies.
Texas is huge herds of cattle and miles of crops.
Texas is skies blackened with doves and leases
full of deer.
Texas is a place where towns shut down for Friday
night football and the streets are deserted.
Texas is beaches and deserts, lakes and rivers,
mountains and prairies.
If it
isn't in Texas, you don't need it. No one does anything bigger or better.
By
federal law, Texas is the only state in the U.S. that can fly its flag at
the same height as the U.S. flag. Think about that for a second. You fly the
Stars and Stripes at 20 feet in Maryland, or California, or Maine, and your
state flag, whatever it is, goes at 17. You fly the Stars and Stripes in
front of Pine Tree High in Longview at 20 feet, the Lone Star flies at 20
feet.
Do you
know why? Because we place being a Texan as high as being an American down
here.
Our
capitol is the only one in the country that is taller than the capitol
building in Washington, D. C.
We signed those in as part of the deal when we
came on. That's the best part right there.
WHEN WE CAME ON.
Texas was
its own country. The Republic of Texas.
Every
time I think of that I tear up. All of this makes you proud to be a Texan.
Forwarded by Brent and Betty Carper
(and rewarded slightly by Bob Jensen to put it into his Scandinavian roots)
In an apparent
copycat terrorist act, Norwegian terrorists Knute Jenson and Ollie Olson have
hijacked the Viking's Goodyear blimp.
So far they have
bounced off five buildings in Stockholm. Stay tuned for further developments!
Forwarded by Brent and Betty Carper
ONE. Give people more than they expect
and do it cheerfully.
TWO. Marry a man/woman you love to talk
to. As you get older, their conversational skills will be as important as any
other.
THREE. Don't believe all you hear,
spend all you have or sleep all you want.
FOUR. When you say, "I love
you", mean it.
FIVE. When you say, "I'm
sorry", look the person in the eye.
SIX. Be engaged at least six months
before you get married.
SEVEN. Believe in love at first sight.
EIGHT. Never laugh at anyone's dreams.
People who don't have dreams don't have much.
NINE. Love deeply and passionately. You
might get hurt but it's the only way to live life completely.
TEN. In disagreements, fight fairly. No
name calling.
ELEVEN. Don't judge people by their
relatives.
TWELVE. Talk slowly but think quickly.
THIRTEEN. When someone asks you a
question you don't want to answer, smile and ask, "Why do you want to
know?"
FOURTEEN. Remember that great love and
great achievements involve great risk.
FIFTEEN. Say "bless you" when
you hear someone sneeze.
SIXTEEN. When you lose, don't lose the
lesson.
SEVENTEEN. Remember the three R's:
Respect for self; Respect for others; and Responsibility for all your actions.
EIGHTEEN. Don't let a little dispute
injure a great friendship.
NINETEEN. When you realize you've made
a mistake, take immediate steps to correct it.
TWENTY. Smile when picking up the
phone. The caller will hear it in your voice.
TWENTY ONE. Spend some time alone. You
just may learn something about yourself
To this I might add TWENTY TWO
Dish out the choicest delights as often and as plentiful as possible.
Whatever you dish out, you will receive more of in return somewhere
at sometime when you least expect it.
And
that's the way it was on December 10, 2001 with a little help from my friends.
In
March 2000, Forbes named AccountantsWorld.com as the Best Website on the
Web --- http://accountantsworld.com/.
Some top accountancy links --- http://accountantsworld.com/category.asp?id=Accounting
For
accounting news, I prefer AccountingWeb at http://www.accountingweb.com/
Another
leading accounting site is AccountingEducation.com at http://www.accountingeducation.com/
Paul
Pacter maintains the best international accounting standards and news Website at
http://www.iasplus.com/
How
stuff works --- http://www.howstuffworks.com/
Bob
Jensen's video helpers for MS Excel, MS Access, and other helper videos are at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/
Accompanying documentation can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm
and http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
Professor
Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134 Email: rjensen@trinity.edu


December
3, 2001
Quotes of the Week
The ultimate
fate of any profession lies not in its rules, regulations, and controls. The
fate lies in the will and dedication of the majority of people who serve in that
profession --- the honest cops, the devoted doctors, the dedicated professors,
the faithful clergy, and the ardent auditors.
This is the concluding paragraph in a recent message sent to my graduate
students in accounting. (See below)
Our enemies
make us stronger.
Our friends make us forgiving.
I made this up, although I'm certain that these thoughts have been repeatedly
written down in various forms.
My wife, Erika, requested that I quote
the lyrics of one of her favorite songs. It is fitting for the world in
these troubled times. I should add that I cannot recall a single fight
between us. Hence, her interest in this song must be on a broader scale.
The Way Old
Friends Do --- http://members.fortunecity.com/abbalink/songs/lyrics/twofd.htm
You and I can share
the silence
Finding comfort together
The way old friends do
And after fights and
words of violence
We make up with each other
The way old friends do
Times of joy and
times of sorrow
We will always see it through
Oh I don't care what comes tomorrow
We can face it Together
The way old friends do
You and I can share
the silence
Finding comfort together the way old friends do
And after fights and words of violence
We make up with each other the way old friends do
Times of joy and
times of sorrow
We will always see it through
Oh I don't care what comes tomorrow
We can face it together the way old friends do
We can face it
together the way old friends do
I created a timeline of major
happenings (on a timeline) leading up to the eXtensible Business Reporting
Language (XBRL) and On Line Analytical Process (OLAP) systems. Overviews
of XML, VoiceXML, XLink, XHTML, XBRL, XForm, XSLT, RDF and the Semantic Web are
also provided --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/xmlrdf.htm
Researchers at Yale and the University
of Michigan have spent two years developing a new test to assess business school
candidates. The Successful Intelligence Assessment (SIA) test is not expected to
replace the GMAT any time soon, but may be offered as a supplement to the GMAT.
The SIA test assesses an applicant's potential for business success. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/64980
Wow Technology of
the Week
"Water drop holds a trillion
computers Devices with DNA: Software may one day be fitted into
cells," by John Whitfield, Nature, November 22, 2001 --- http://www.nature.com/nsu/011122/011122-11.html
If you wear the right
glasses, a lot of what you see inside the cell is computation," says Ehud
Shapiro of the Weizmann Institute in Rehovot, Israel. Now Shapiro and his
colleagues have turned the computational power of biological molecules to
their own ends1.
The researchers have
built a machine that solves mathematical problems using DNA as software and
enzymes as hardware. A trillion such biomolecular machines - working at more
than 99.8% accuracy - can fit into a drop of water.
Computers with DNA
input and output have been made before, but they involved a laborious series
of reactions, each needing human supervision. The new automaton requires only
the right molecular mix.
It's too early to say
whether biomolecular nanomachines will ever become practical. Optimists,
including the new machine's inventors, envision them screening libraries of
DNA sequences, or even lurking inside cells where they would watch for trouble
or synthesize drugs.
The new invention is
"an interesting proof of principle", says Martyn Amos, a
bioinformatics researcher at the University of Liverpool, UK. Amos questions
whether molecular automata could ever do anything complex enough to be useful,
but thinks they may find applications inside cells.
"DNA computing
needs to establish its own niche, and I don't think that lies in competing
with traditional silicon devices," says Amos. Biological computers would
be better suited to biological problems, such as sensors within organisms or
drug delivery, he believes.
Continued at http://www.nature.com/nsu/011122/011122-11.html
Cash Flow Versus Fair Value Hedges
-----Original
Message-----
From: hy hy [mailto:hy_5000@hotmail.com]
Sent: Sunday, November 25, 2001 5:04 AM
To: rjensen@trinity.edu
Subject: Fair Value >< Cash Flow Hedge
Dear Mr. Jensen.
I would like to
introduce my self, my name is Hery Yanto, I'm a student at Catholik University
of Atma Jaya Jakarta, Indonesia. I would like to asking you about derivative,
could you please answer my question since I'm interested to know about
derivative.
I would be very
grateful if you want answer my questions below. Thank you.
Regards,
Hery Yanto
QUESTION 1
What the different between fair value and cash flow hedge?
***************************************************************
Bob Jensen's Reply to Question 1
If a bond pays a fixed (coupon) rate of 12% semi-annually on a face value of
$1,000, then the cash flows are fixed at $60 every six months. The cash flows do
not vary, but the market value of the bond will fluctuate daily with changes in
interest rates. A fair value hedge would fix the value of the bond at a
contracted amount (such as $990) but the combined cash flow of the hedged item
(the bond) and the hedge would then be variable and no longer fixed at $60 every
six months.
If a bond pays a variable rate semi-annualy
on a face value of $1,000, the market value is fixed at a given level (such as
$990) but the bond's semi-annual cash flows will vary with interest rates. A
cash flow hedge will freeze the bond interest payments at a fixed level (such as
$60) but the fair value of the bond plus the fair value of the hedge will vary.
The point is that hedged items having
fair value risk and not cash flow risk can be hedged for fair value, but the
hedge will create cash flow risk that did not exist before the hedge.
Conversely, hedged items having cash flow risk but no fair value risk can be
hedged for cash flow risk, but the fair value of the hedged item plus the hedge
will now vary with interest rates.
***************************************************************
QUESTION 2
If I'm entered into forward currency contract, to exchange USD 1 with AUD 2 in
the specific date in the future, is it a cash flow hedge or fair value hedge.
(I have loan in AUD currency and it will due on the same date with the
contract)
***************************************************************
Bob Jensen's Reply
Bob Jensen's Reply to Question 2
Actually, you have foreign exchange (FX) risk that is best not viewed as cash
flow or fair value risk. If your expiring forward contract gives you AUD 2 for
USD 1 at time when the currency market is such that you could have received AUD
2.1 for only USD 1 without such a forward contract, then you have in a sense had
an opportunity cash flow loss of AUD 0.1 due to your hedge. However, your
hedge also allowed you to sleep nights knowing that you would receive AUD 2 for
each USD 1 no matter what happened in the FX currency markets.
Now consider the case where you must
purchase a gallon of fuel at an unknown USD price in six months. Suppose the
current price of a gallon of fuel is USD 1. Your FX hedge of USD 1 for AUD 2
does not hedge the price of the fuel. To hedge the price of fuel, you must
instead enter into a fuel price hedge in U.S. dollars. The only thing your FX
hedges against is the risk that in six months, AUD 2 will not get at least US 1
due to a decline in the AUD exchange rate. The USD 1 that you get for AUD 2 may
or may not buy an exact gallon of fuel, depending upon what the price of that
fuel becomes after six months. In other words, your FX hedge did not hedge
the price of fuel.
One of the best documents the FASB
generated for FAS 133 implementation is called "Summary of Derivative
Types." This document also explains how to value certain types.
It can be downloaded free from at http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/fasb/derivsum.exe
You find more examples of FAS 133,
FAS 138, and IAS hedging and accounting at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm
***************************************************************
Wow Book of the Week
--- http://come.to/Gratis-Economy/
TITLE: THE GRATIS ECONOMY:
PRIVATELY PROVIDED PUBLIC GOODS
AUTHOR: Andras Kelen
PUBLISHER: Budapest: Central European University Press, 2001
The book is not gratis
ISBN 963 9241 22 9 cloth HB $51.95 / £32.95 ISBN 963 9241 33 4 paperback PB
$24.95 / £15.95
Table of Contents
Preface
2
Theses to
Announce the Concept of Gratis Economy 12
The Main
Drivers of the Gratis Economy 14
Description of
the Ensuing Chapters 16
1. The
Traditional Gratis Economy – Uncharted Faces of Pro Bono Work 19
Heritage 24
Condescending
Medieval Charity 27
Enthusiastic
Messianism: The Central-East European Socialist Experience in
Volunteering 33
Modern
Applications of the Generalised Notion of Volunteering 47
Classical
Fields of Volunteering - the Receding Gratis Economy 68
The
Professionalisation of Sports 68
Laity in Office
Holding 85
Granting of for
Sponsors by Non-profits 91
2. The Virtual
Faces of the Gratis Economy – Business Operated Sizzling Gratuities 95
Free of Charge,
except for Advertising 95
Technology
Bringing Forth the Banner Model of Advertising 112
Banners at Wish
112
New Browser
Against Pop-up Advertising 113
Suppressors,
Filters 114
Bandwidth-adaptive
Advertising 118
We-pay-you
Advertising 121
Deep Linking
123
Ad Serving 125
Publishing Site
Using Site Model Ad Server 125
Third-party Ad
Server Using Network Model Ad Serving Solution 126
A Counting
Methodology for Third-party Ad Servers in a Proxy Server Setting 126
Online
Business’ Comparative Advantage as to Timing 127
Validation and
Visibility of Business Communication in Cyberspace 128
3. Free of
Charge, except for Commodifying Privacy 148
Between the
Right to Traceability and Anonymity 157
The Two Drivers
Coinciding - Privacy Predicated Targeting Tools 167
Conclusion:
Policy Deliberations 178
4. Gratuities
Embedded in Business Processes 197
The Setting of
the Exposure Threshold 197
Between
Profitability and Breaking Even – Content Provision as a Non-profit
Endeavour 216
Grants
Economics, Gift Economics 222
Gratis Models
226
The Public
Interest in the Gratis Economy – Gratuities Generated by Polity 240
5. The
State-run Gratis Economy 240
Collective
Goods 240
Patterns of
Time Release in the Economy 258
6. The
Informational Commons 267
The
Intellectual Property/Wide Access Trade-off 274
Alternatives to
Intellectual Property – Non-Proprietary Software Developers 285
Bites Out of
the Gratis Economy 295
Conclusions:
Policy Deliberations 309
7. Typology of
Business Intrusions that Cry for Political Remedy 314
Software Spying
on Its User 315
The „If it's
legal, someone will do it” Assault 319
Threatening
Free Speech 324
The Intricacy
of Data Commerce - Corporate Governance Standing Up To Excesses 326
Grassroots
Influencing Regulation 347
8. Toward the
Demise of Mass Culture in Cyberspace 352
One-to-one
Targeting 362
Space-shifting
367
Peer-to-peer
Sharing 370
“Gentle
Money”: Community-level Clearinghouses and Marketplaces 380
Implications
for Broad Public Policy 395
Literature 399
References 401 |
Main Findings
This
monograph, a reader book on the logics of toll free services,
generalizes the notions of
(1) voluntary
work,
(2) publicity driven business models such as ad-supported publishing
and
(3) “fair use” if intellectual property. The aim is to reach a
unique essayistic approach toward encompassing and protecting
everything that can be obtained free of charge in the world. The
author claims that this Gratis Economy – perhaps greatest wealth
creator in history – is integrating into the conventional non-profit
sector.
When examining
the social fabric, contextual perspective and manifold business models
that generate or enable gratis sevices, the title – a primer on one of
mankind’s very few anthropological constants - discovers numerous
unexpected and uncharted themes of decommodified labor ranging from (a)
time concessions granted by employers through (b) modeling the
multifarious world of non-pecuniary economic communication to the (c)
reconstructed typology of voluntary work based on a forgotten train of
Max Weber’s theory.
The
technological promise of online marketing is to refrain from force-fed
obtrusive advertising. If delivered, this could conclude the era of mass
communication in cyberspace. There is a technology analysis of whether
precision technologies such as one-to-one targeting of smart adverts
will ever bring about the demise of mass communication and mass
marketing. The following questions are treated with reviewing the
sociological arguments: will the business model of individually targeted
“smart” adverts in fact bring about the demise of mass culture? Will
the tollfree part of cyberspace ever integrate into the conventional
social economy, as we know the third sector today? Do the policy
implications of opting into an evidence-based knowledge management
scheme – the future mode of online advertising - yield a satisfactory
guaranty for netizens’ safe conduct and cybersecurity?
The author has
developed a sociological angle that is capable of handling diverse
aspects of the economy where the principle of “quid pro quo” is
buried into entrepreneurial value propositions or into a long forgotten
societal context. Ad-supported business models have suffered heavily in
the bubble burst of the New Economy. However, the importance of
cybertraffic in generating online revenue will remain with us even if
this eyeballs-centered aspect must yield to time-honored business
valuation processes and lose its exclusive character as the paramount
measure of business success.
The author
compares the sizzling methods of online targeting and weighs the policy
consequence of the „information striptease“ relevant advertising is
predicated on. Compromising on digital privacy is construed as a “quid
pro quo”, as the voluntary price for receiving evidence-based adverts
while online. In perspective, the emerging new personally tailored
services can operate only if users are ready “to give their name to
their otherwise anonymous browsing”: that is relinquishing traceable
information for commercial purposes. This covenant of “smart” ads is
interpreted as an integral part within the emerging global paradigm of
smart drugs, smart bombs, smart sanctions, etc.
The free nature
of the Internet is said to be lost to overarching business interest. I
contest this simplifying claim by showing that only the overall
non-profit character of cyberspace has been only limited or rather
contained. As the best stuff on the Web is still hidden behind
accessible unlisted databases, and little-known links, most of
cyberspace will remain free as long as business communication offers
compromises in matters of time-use and privacy. The author claims that
time-use and privacy – compromises on our attention focus and
information assurance - are the most important drivers that foster
non-charging business solutions. Other drivers of the Gratis Economy are
also identified.
|
Advances in
Accounting Reports --- Updates and Demos on XBRL
Bob Jensen's threads on XBRL are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/xmlrdf.htm
A listing of XBRL Demos from http://www.xbrlsolutions.com/Demos.htm
The following are
demos which XBRL Solutions makes available. For more information
regarding these demos, please contact CharlesHoffman@xbrlSolutions.com:
XBRL for tax filinings --- http://www.xbrl.org/Events/taxfilings.html
AICPA book link to XBRL Essentials
--- http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/tpcpa/june01/xbrl.htm
Multimart Web Financials Slide Show
(with a bit on ERP and XBRL) --- http://www.reportingtools.com/Present/Present_files/frame.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on XML, RDF,
and XBRL are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/xmlrdf.htm
Wow Site of the Week
--- Visualization of Math Formulas
A message from Scott Bonacker
I would like to make
a nomination for a WOW site of some week or another:
http://glinda.lrsm.upenn.edu/~weeks/pics.html
Scott Scott Bonacker,
CPA
McCullough, Officer & Company, LLC Springfield, Missouri moccpa.com
Wow Innovation of
the Week (Forwarded by Barbara MacAlpine [Barbara.MacAlpine@Trinity.edu]
This should be the
role model of all academic journals.
[This review] is also
available electronically to licensed subscribers through the MCB University
Press Emerald service [ http://giorgio.emeraldinsight.com/lhtn.htm
]
ABSTRACT
The Internet Journal
of Chemistry (IJC) ( www.ijc.com
) is an electronic-only electronic journal with the primary aim of publishing
the results of high-quality research in all areas of chemistry. Unlike
conventional e-journals in chemistry and other scientific disciplines, IJC
offers a wide variety of innovative features, functionalities, and content
that augment and enhance use and understanding of article text. Among these
are user annotation and commentary; data manipulation; electronic discussion
forums; electronic manuscript submission; font, format, and display control;
modeling; multimedia components; personalization; and reader participation.
IJC is an outstanding example of the 'eclectic journal', an emerging form of
the next- generation electronic journal.
Gerry McKiernan
Associate Professor and Science and Technology Librarian and Bibliographer
Iowa State University Library Ames IA 50011 gerrymck@iastate.edu
Reply from J. S. Gangolly [gangolly@CSC.ALBANY.EDU]
Bob,
I got very excited
when I got the above, and went immediately to their site only to find that the
contents are available only by subscription.
I think we already
have too many journals peddled by a handful of publishers at extortionary
prices, and those hurled at captive audiences at discriminatory prices (such
as AAA and similar journals).
I think a few months
ago I posted a message about the resignation of most of the editorial board of
the prestigious academic journal "Machine Learning" and setting up
of a rival new journal with open access, "journal of Machine Learning
Research". Kluwer, the publisher of the former did make amends, but came
too late (and too little); MIT Press, the publisher of the latter, does allow
free access.
I give below three
prestigious journals available for free to all. This short list reflects my
own rather narrow interests, and so is not representative of what is available
for free.
1. MIT Press: Journal
of Machine Learning Research http://www.ai.mit.edu/projects/jmlr/
2. Oxford University
Press Journal of Digital information http://jodi.ecs.soton.ac.uk/Articles/v02/i01/Miall/
3. Morgan Kaufman
Publishers journal of artificial intelligence research http://www.cs.washington.edu/research/jair/home.html
I am positive there
are many more. I have been searching to see if there is an index of free
academic journals. I hope some one on this listserv will post a message on
this.
Jagdish
Wow Article of the
Week
Note from Bob Jensen: This
demonstrates the growth of distance education and then questions some of the
pedagogy.
"A Virtual Revolution:
Trends in the Expansion of Distance Education," by Thomas J. Kriger, USDLA
Journal (a refereed journal of the United States Distance Learning
Association," November 2001 --- http://www.usdla.org/ED_magazine/illuminactive/NOV01_Issue/article02.html
This report describes
four major trends leading the growth of distance education. The purpose is not
to cover every provider but to draw a picture of the types of organizational
structures and educational activities that are on the rise. These include:
- Existing higher
education institutions that have or are developing distance education
programs, such as e-Cornell, NYU Online, the University of Illinois
On-line; University of Maryland University College, Rio Salado Community
College, the SUNY Learning Network and Virtual Temple;
- Full virtual
universities, such as the University of Phoenix Online, Western Governors
University, Andrew Jackson University, Cappella University, Jones
International University, Kennedy-Warren University;
- Corporate
university or training institutions, such as the members of Corporate
University Xchange and Click2learn.
Corporate-university
joint ventures. those that provide course management systems such as
Blackboard, Campus Pipeline, eCollege and Web CT, as well as those who package
and distribute courses or content from existing institutions such as UNext.com,
Cenquest, Fathom, Global Education Network, Quisic and Universitas 21;
What do we learn from
these descriptions? First, we learn that the variety of new ways to organize
DE and reach new students is enormous, as is the talent that can be brought to
bear in making education attractive in the new medium. But we also find that the
way distance education is being organized and conducted often poses
serious questions.
Much of the distance
education under study here, whether non-profit or for-profit, is built on
corporate ideas about consumer focus, product standardization, tight personnel
control and cost effectiveness (maximizing course taking while minimizing the
"inputs" of faculty and development time). These concepts are
contrary to the traditional model of higher education decision-making which
emphasizes faculty independence in teaching and research, academic control of
the curriculum, academic freedom in the classroom and collegial
decision-making.
While traditional
practices are not sacrosanct, academic decision making processes have been
very successful in producing quality higher education the best in the world.
Our concern is that some of the new trends and practices described in this
report may inhibit rather than promote good education. A number of specific
concerns arose:
- Education based
primarily on the marketplace and the model of "student as
customer" is too narrow. Student and industry preferences certainly
matter in designing curricula, but if pleasing the customer is the pre-eminent
value, there is a real danger that the curriculum will not be coherent,
rigorous enough or broad enough to meet the student's long-term interests.
- A central
characteristic of many DE providers is to "unbundle" the faculty
role so that different specialists develop the curriculum, teach the
course, evaluate student performance, etc. This allows for greater
standardization but it may not add up to better education.
- Standardization of
coursework also inhibits students from being exposed to the diverse views
of different faculty members with varying knowledge and perspectives. This
diversity is important in enabling students to hone their own ideas and
knowledge.
- Some programs
exhibited an inclination to increase class size as a means of increasing
the financial output of a course. The only proper consideration in fixing
class size is to maintain the best level to facilitate learning.
- Some programs rely
too heavily on testing for individual "outcomes" and
"competencies" while downgrading the importance of class time
and social interaction in developing deep knowledge about a subject. Along
the same lines, distance education providers too often dismiss the
importance of same-time same-place interaction rather than building it
into their programs whenever possible.
It is appropriate,
indeed essential, to present information for the DE marketplace in an
attractive, computer-friendly fashion. But over-attention to drawing
"customers" may result in technology driving the way teaching is
conducted-leading, for example, to models centered around bite-size,
"point and click" accumulations of facts rather than a more
reflective, less easily measured search for knowledge.
In the year 2000, AFT
published Distance Education: Guidelines for Good Practice. The guidelines lay
out 14 specific standards which, if observed, ensure high quality distance
education. (A synopsis of the guidelines appears in the report's conclusion.)
The guidelines advance AFT's belief that broad academic content, high
standards, personal interaction and professional control are the key elements
of educational quality. College faculty must insist on sound practice based on
a broad vision of education-one that recognizes education is about more than
facts, more than competencies, more than career ambitions.
Education, among
other things, is about broadening intellectual horizons, relying on facts and
reason when confronting life issues and learning to listen to others and
defend ideas by the force of argument. That is why education is the foundation
of a working democracy. Because distance education is ubiquitous and offers so
much promise, faculty are obligated to carry the banner for quality and good
practice while recognizing that this will sometimes require challenging
current trends and practices
Continued at http://www.usdla.org/ED_magazine/illuminactive/NOV01_Issue/article02.html
Bob Jensen's documents on distance
education are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
In particular, a related article on
"The Dark Side" of distance education is provided at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/theworry.htm
Online Pedagogy at the University of
Phoenix
Phoenix faculty work
in a highly structured environment. Course facilitators in traditional classes
are forbidden to lecture. Faculty are, instead, expected to closely follow
Phoenix's "teaching/ learning model," which begins with course
syllabi and detailed teaching modules developed by fulltime faculty on the
main campus. In this way, faculty responsibilities are broken down into a
series of discrete steps, such as when course development is detached from
teaching. Phoenix course modules "include guidelines for weekly
assignments, group activities and grading." Some course modules
contain classroom time-management guidelines broken down into 15-minute
intervals.
Phoenix defends its
practice of using these restrictive guidelines in the name of standardization.
The university's online catalog declares: "The standardized curriculum
for each degree program provides students with specified levels of knowledge
and skills regardless of the delivery method or classroom location."
Critics argue,
however, that Phoenix's course modules violate academic freedom because they
don't allow faculty members sufficient discretion. Milton R. Blood, managing
director of the American Assembly of the Collegiate Schools of Business, has
characterized Phoenix's standardized curriculum as "McEducation." He
explained, "It's a redefinition of how we go about delivering higher
education. The question is whether it's really higher education when it's
delivered in a franchised way."
Thomas J. Kriger, quoted from the Wow
Article of the Week above.
More from Kriger's article cited above:
Table 1
A Sampling of
Colleges and Universities that Offer
Online/Distance Education Programs
|
Institution
|
Characteristics
|
Number and
Type of DE Programs
|
DE Enrollment
|
Accreditation
|
e-Cornell
|
For-profit
spin off; no courses offered yet
|
Will offer
certificates, not degree programs
|
NA
|
Not
accredited as a separate entity
|
NYU Online
|
For Profit
spin off primarily for corporate market
|
Two graduate;
many corporate programs
|
166 (in
graduate programs)
|
Not
accredited as a separate entity
|
University of
Illinois Online
|
Umbrella
Organization for different U. of Illinois campuses
|
One
professional degree; 10 master's, bachelor's completion program
|
6,000 courses
taken online
|
North Central
|
University of
Maryland University College
|
Claims online
program is world's largest online university
|
12 bachelor;
10 graduate
|
7,955; UMUC
now claims enrollment of 40,000
|
Middle States
|
Rio Saldo
Community College
|
One of the
first and largest online community college programs
|
Six associate
degrees; 12 certificate
|
200 onpine
courses, 8,000 students per semester
|
North Central
|
SUNY Learning
Network
|
One of the
three largest DE programs in the country (with Phoenix and UMUC)
|
1,500 courses
from Accounting to Web design
|
Approximately
10,000 course enrollments per semester
|
Middle States
|
Virtual
Temple
|
For profit
spin off; no courses offered yet
|
NA
|
NA
|
Not
accredited as a separate entity
|
* Figures for
1999-2000, US Department of Education, Report to Congress on the
Distance Education Demonstration Programs, January 2001. Other
statistics reported directly by institutions.
|
Rio Salado Community
College (Table 1) offers one of the largest distance education programs at the
community college level. One of 10 separate institutions in the huge
(9,000-plus square miles) Maricopa Community College District in the greater
Phoenix area, Rio Salado was founded in 1978 as a center for adult education.
With no central campus, this self-described "college without
boundaries" originally offered courses in high schools, libraries and
community centers in the Phoenix area. In 1996, Rio Salado began to add online
programs to its extensive menu of distance learning courses and training
programs. Today, Rio Salado delivers 80 percent of its general education
courses via the Internet or other DE technologies. New course selections at
Rio begin every two weeks and students can study at their own pace, which
offers flexibility for working adults.[9] Rio Salado employs 18 full-time
faculty and 600 part-timers, and every faculty member is required to teach at
least one online course.
The faculty role at
Rio Salado is "unbundled," or broken down into a series of discrete
tasks. Design teams-which include a technical trainer, an editor, a
proofreader, and Web and content specialists create a curriculum and
standardized courses that are taught primarily by adjunct faculty.
Rio Salado College is
one of a handful of U.S. institutions that participate in the Pew Learning and
Technology Program's Grant Program in Course Redesign. This program was based
upon ideas found in the National Learning Infrastructure Initiative, in which
modular, online exercises, tutorials and quizzes would replace more expensive
direct contact with actual faculty in high enrollment introductory courses.
Links to these and many other online
programs can be found at the following sites:
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/updateee.htm
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/crossborder.htm
More from Kriger's article cited above:
Table 3
Corporate-University
Joint Ventures:
Hybrid Course or Content Providers
|
Institution
|
Characteristics
|
Number and
Type of DE Programs
|
Affiliations
|
Accreditation
|
Cardean
University / Unext.com
|
Create
courses in collaboration with prestigious business schools;
problem-solving based curriculum
|
MBA Programs
and 80 courses offered
|
Columbia,
Chicago, Stanford, Carnegie Mellon, and the London School of Economics
|
DETC
|
Cenquest
|
Offers
graduate business degrees and training
|
1 certificate
2 Master's program
|
Partnered
with Babson, U. of Texas, Oregon Institute, Adelaide University,
Monterey Institute of Technology
|
No
|
Fathom
|
Columbia's
for-profit spin-off; niche is to provide high-quality content, courses
to include arts and humanities
|
600 courses
listed; 75,000 registered users; several hundred students enrolled in
online courses
|
13 member
institutions including U. of Chicago, American Film Institute, London
School of Economics, NY Public Library
|
No
|
Global
Education Network
|
Brainchild of
Weilliams professor Mark Taylor and investment banker Herbert Allen;
trying to attract faculty with star power; will offer core curriculum
including arts and humanities
|
3 or 4
courses currently in development;
no degree programs available
|
Corses by
individual faculty from Williams, Wellesley, Brown, Amherst, Yale
|
Seeking
accreditation
|
Quisic
(formerly University Access)
|
Offers
undergraduate, graduate business courses, training; original focus
undergraduate DE
|
Clients
incoluding Cisco, United, Citigroup, Lexus, IBM
|
200 corporate
clients; university partners indlude Dartmouth, London School of
Economics, North Carolina, USC
|
No
|
Universitas
21
|
Global
network of 18 institutions; joint venture with Thompson Learning
|
In planning
stages
|
Seeking U.S.
institutional participants
|
No
|
Beginning with
specialized business courses in the summer of 1999, today Cardean offers a
complete online MBA and a total menu of almost 100 courses. Masters courses,
which require 25 to 30 hours, cost $500 each. Shorter quantum courses, each
requiring two to three hours, are priced at five for $380. Teaching at Cardean
is unbundled, with "senior" faculty planning the curriculum,
"advisory" faculty counseling students and supervising adjuncts, and
"adjunct" faculty members working with students by grading
assignments, answering e-mail and directing online discussions.
Another ambitious
online joint venture is Global Education Network (GEN) (Table 3), the product
of an alliance between Williams College humanities professor Mark Taylor and
investment banker Herbert Alan Jr. As with Fathom, GEN is one of the few
for-profit DE providers committed
to bringing the
"soft" subjects of the humanities online. GEN, in fact, plans to
offer a full undergraduate core curriculum in a few years, with faculty drawn
from small, prestigious liberal arts colleges, which are not usually
associated with distance education. Not surprisingly, GEN markets itself as a
high-quality DE access point; currently on the Web site are courses from
individual faculty at Williams, Wellesley and Brown. The privately owned GEN
reportedly has institutional relationships with Wellesley, Brown and Duke,
although many other institutions-including Williams (Taylor's home campus)
have chosen not to affiliate with GEN. The main objection at Williams was that
associating with a DE provider would hurt its quality reputation.[21]
Other distance
education joint ventures-some with significant outside funding-are attempting
to capture the estimated $4 billion that corporations spend each year on DE
training for their employees.[22] Founded in 1997, Cenquest (Table 3) offers
business courses and graduate degree programs in partnership with a number of
university MBA programs. Cenquest's original affiliates were the Oregon
Graduate Institute of Science and Technology and the University of Texas at
Austin.
Working with these
institutions, Cenquest adapts their courses for the DE market by dividing them
into shorter units, which are then offered on a rolling schedule either for
individual applications or degree and certificate programs such as accounting,
which are more readily standardized and modularized. In December 2000,
Cenquest affiliated with the prestigious Babson College to provide an MBA
program to Intel employees. Cenquest has been successful in attracting venture
capital. It began offering DE courses, which now number over 100, in 1998.
Update from Bob Jensen:
I think Quisic abandoned all or most of its college courses. You can read
more about Cardian and listen to some of its faculty discuss course development
and delivery from my August 2001 workshop in Atlanta --- http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/001cpe/01start.htm
Table 4
Virtual Universities
|
Institution
|
Characteristics
|
Number and Type of DE Programs
|
DE
Enrollment
|
Accreditation
|
Andrew Jackson University
|
Correspondence school offering
textbook study
|
3 bachelor's
3 graduate
|
400-450
|
DETC
|
Capella University
|
Offers traditional courses and
corporate training; partners include Honeywell, Lawson Software
|
36 certificate
1 bachelor's
11 graduate
|
1.049*
|
North Central
|
Jones International University
|
First fully accredited online
university
|
21 certificate
1 bachelor's
2 graduate
|
1,500
|
North Central
|
Kennedy-Western University
|
Markets to "mid-career
professionals"
|
13 bachelor's
12 graduate
12 Ph.D.
|
23,000
|
Not regionally accredited;
licensed by Wyoming State Dept of Ed
|
University of Phoenix Online
|
Fastest growing for-profit
university; now 25% online
|
8 bachelor's
10 master's
1 Ph.D.; certificate programs under development
|
18,500
|
|
Western Governor's University
|
Private university offering
menu of courses from other institutions and corporations
|
3 certificate;
4 bachelor's
1 graduate
|
208*
|
|
* Figures for 1999-2000, U.S.
Department of Education, Report to Congress on the Distance Education
Demonstration Programs, January 2001. Other statistics reported
directly by institutions.
|
A typical
undergraduate course at Phoenix lasts five weeks; graduate courses are six
weeks. Students attend one four-hour "workshop" per week or meet for
longer sessions on alternate weekends. Students also take classes
sequentially-one at a time-so they can better focus on the subject matter
while working full-time. An additional requirement is that students work in
teams. As Phoenix's online catalog explains,
The university
organizes each class into problem-solving teams of the type employed
successfully in business and industry. Thus, in addition to the development of
intellectual and technical knowledge, the student is able to grow emotionally
so that the potential for practical application of knowledge and skill is
optimized.[26]
An estimated 90
percent of Phoenix faculty (both online and classroom) teach part-time. At its
Northern California brick-and-mortar campus, Phoenix employs 20 full-time
faculty and 550 part-timers. These part-time "facilitators," as they
are called, must possess a graduate degree from a regionally accredited
institution and must work full-time in a field related to the courses they
teach.
Links to these and many other online
programs can be found at the following sites:
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/updateee.htm
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/crossborder.htm
Accreditation issues and other
matters of distance education can be found at the following site:
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
Quotations on the Dark Side from
Kriger's article can be found at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/theworry.htm
The Ohio CPA Journal (October 1,
2001) has published an in-depth article explaining the likelihood of CPAs being
faced with liability claims and how risk can be mitigated. The article explains
the expectations of insurance companies and offers six warning signs of an
impending claim. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/64075
The article suggests
that working with a risk advisor can increase the odds of:
- avoiding a claim
- controlling the
situation
- keeping a lid on
damages, or
- prevailing when
litigation occurs.
The article explains
the expectations of insurance companies, and offers six warning signs of an
impending claim:
- Clients who won't
pay
- Uncooperative
clients
- Fraud/embezzlement
defalcation
- Subpoenas
- Gray tax
positions/IRS audits
- Divorce or
partnership disputes
The complete article is at http://covia.yellowbrix.com/pages/covia/Story.nsp?story_id=25292158&category=Accounting&ID=covia&noad=1
ECCH Case Awards Reflect e-Commerce
Era --- http://www.ecch.cranfield.ac.uk/
Over the years, I have viewed a lot of
departmental Webpages for prospective students. Among those that I have
seen, I think to the designs of the Arizona State University pages for
prospective students are among the best available.
For example, see http://www.cob.asu.edu/acct/undergraduate/prospective/cis.cfm
There are ways that prospective
students pages can be improved at most any university. Several suggested
improvements are listed below:
- In a FAQ area, have short answers
but link to where students can find longer answers to questions.
- Add data on the number of graduates
in each concentration for the past three years.
- Provide information regarding job
placement or graduate school admissions (where relevant).
- Add outside links to where
prospective students can find more information about careers in the
concentration.
- Link to some alumni letters where
recent graduates discuss their job duties, travel, and other matters of
interest to prospective students who wonder what it is like out there for
recent graduates. It would even be better to have some video clips of
alumni being interviewed where they work.
- Provide short comments about what
particular faculty in the program bring to bear on particular courses and
then provide links to the faculty Web pages.
Why we stress that current and former
employees are the weakest link in IT security!
Two former Cisco Systems Inc.
accountants who admitted to stealing more than $5 million in company shares by
hacking into the company computer systems have been sentenced to two years and
10 months in prison. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/64703
"Education System Aims to Improve
Services for Special Needs Students," T.H.E. Journal, November 21,
2001, p. 38 --- http://www.thejournal.com/magazine/vault/A3712.cfm
Help4Life recently
launched PortEP, a new collaborative education system that seeks to improve
the way schools provide services to students with special needs. PortEP
enables educators to help students with behavioral health and learning needs
achieve improved results by reducing administrative and logistical barriers so
educators can identify, assess and provide interventions more efficiently and
with lower costs. The system offers three performance modules for general
education intervention,online team evaluations and special education tracking.
The general education component delivers a databased problem-solving process
that helps teachers identify and quickly help children before major problems
develop.
PortEP also
enables educators to coordinate student evaluations online, including input
from parents, teachers, psychologists and physicians. The evaluation module
makes collecting, organizing and acting on information more efficient, leaving
more time for educators to work directly with students and families. The
tracking module makes monitoring progress and making corrections less
time-consuming, and allows administrators to manage resources more
effectively. Help4Life, Nashville, TN, (866) 476-7863, www.help4life.com
.
If you think you're an Einstein, maybe
you just know a little bit more than those around you. If you think you're a dim
bulb but want to feel bright, surround yourself with people who know less.
Critics say the study is mentally challenged --- http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,48576,00.html
That sound you hear is audio e-books,
magazines and newspapers clamoring for attention.
"Audio E-Books Seek a Buzz,"
by M.J. Rose, Wired News, November 27, 2001 --- http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,48620,00.html
Audible's on-demand
audio files include top national newspapers and magazines, and both classic
and best-selling novels. They offer more than 32,000 hours of audio programs
and 165 content partners.
Audible hopes the
campaign, appropriately called Spread the Word, will increase its customer
base by 60,000 to 90,000 users.
To achieve this goal,
Audible has sent marketing kits to about 30,000 of its most dedicated
customers. In return for their customers' free marketing efforts, Audible will
give away free audio files and $5,000 worth of tech prizes.
Spread the Words
builds on the customer-referral volume the company has experienced informally.
"Our current
customers have already played an essential role in our rapid growth, which has
almost tripled our customer base within a year," said Donald Katz, CEO of
Audible, Inc.
Customers who spread
the word about Audible deserve to be rewarded, Katz said. In fact the kernel
of the Spread the Words idea came from a customer and shareholder.
Brainteasers
These links to quick brainteasers and workouts provide exercises you can easily
work into your daily routine. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/64193
Richard always likes to try out the
latest and greatest.
Below is a demo on
using Microsoft Agent - in this case just for fun. After the required files
are downloaded and installed - click on the link below to see Merlin in
action.
This Demo requires
the Microsoft Agent ActiveX Control and the Merlin character.
You can Download the
required files from the Microsoft Agent webring ( www.msagentring.org
) You need to download and install files from the MS Agent from step 1 and
step 2 on the Agent 2.0 page. You also need to download and install the Merlin
character in step 5.
Here is the link to
the demo: www.VirtualPublishing.NET/agent1.htm
Richard
Campbell [campbell@RIO.EDU]
From Syllabus eNews on November 27,
2001
Palm to Distribute
eBooks from HarperCollins
Palm, Inc. said it
reached an agreement to distribute the HarperCollins PerfectBound line of
eBooks through Palm Digital Media, its line of eBooks for handheld computers.
PerfectBound's eBook list includes a variety of popular fiction and
non-fiction. David Steinberger, president of corporate strategy for
HarperCollins, said Palm technology "lets us offer readers the editorial
and technological special features that are exclusive to PerfectBound eBook
editions, while also protecting our authors' copyrights." Palm also has
distribution agreements with top trade publishers Random House, Simon &
Schuster, St. Martin's Press and Time Warner Trade Books.
For more information, visit: http://www.palm.com/ebooks
(Bob Jensen's ebook threads are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ebooks.htm
)
Bookstore Operator
to Offer Adobe e-Book Guides
College store
operator Follett Higher Education Group said it would start offering study
guides and other course material in Adobe as well as Microsoft eBook formats.
The company's website, efollett.com, opened earlier this year with eBook
titles in Microsoft Reader format. Last week it said it would now add
thousands of titles in Adobe Acrobat eBook Reader format as well. Higher
education publishers participating in the launch with eBook study guides
include Thomson Learning Higher Education Group, Wiley Higher Education,
Houghton Mifflin College Division and Bedford, Freeman and Worth Publishers.
Follett is also working with OverDrive, Inc. to support course material
conversion into eBook formats.
For more information, visit: http://www.efollet.com
Louisville
Installs Advanced Smart Card Platform
The University of
Louisville has issued students an advanced smart card equipped with Java and
Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) security technology. The new card system,
provided by Tallahassee-based Cybermark Inc., will allow students to store
electronic currency for ATM- type transactions, use the card with their meal
plan, check out books in the library, and gain access to various buildings
around campus. The university will also use the platform to verify student
digital identities, check student status at multiple campus locations, as well
as host web-based student government elections. The card is the first to be
provided by CyberMark under a partnerhsip with card maker SchlumbergerSema.
At Britannica,
Print Makes A Comeback
After publishing
soley on the Internet and CD-ROM for almost a decade, Encyclopaedia Britannica
has just issued a revised printing of the venerable 32-volume encyclopedia for
the first time in four years. Editor Dale Hoiberg said the reason for the new
set is that demand for the books is strong. "Computers are great, but
many people still love the feel of paper and ink between two covers," he
said. "Books aren't as fast as the Internet, but they provide pleasures
and benefits that no other medium can." But despite the affection for
books, digital encyclopedias do have their advantages -- like cost.
Britannica's CD-ROMs and DVDs range in price from $39.95 to $69.95. In
contrast, the new print edition will retail for $1,295.
For more information, visit: http://www.britiannica.com
"e-cheating: Combating a 21st
Century Challenge," by Kim McMurtry, T.H.E. Journal, November 21,
2001, pp. 36-41 --- http://www.thejournal.com/magazine/vault/A3724.cfm
The early part of the paper is not
quoted here.
The Frequency of
Plagiarism
The purpose of this
article is not to discuss ethical issues or to examine the downfall of
American values, but let me give you some statistics. First of all, it's
impossible to determine the actual frequency of cheating. Out of the 61
students in my English composition classes in spring 1999, I caught five
plagiarists, all of whom had downloaded papers from the Web. That's 8 percent
and there may have been more plagiarized papers I did not catch, copied from
books or journals, sold by another student, etc. But we do have the
self-reports of students, which offer a glimpse of the problem. For example, a
1998 survey from Who's Who Among American High School Students reported that
of 3,123 students, 80 percent of them "admitted to cheating on an exam, a
10-point increase since the question was first asked 15 years ago" (Bushweller
1999). In addition, 50 percent of them "did not believe cheating was
necessarily wrong," and 95 percent of those who had cheated "said
they have never been caught" (Kleiner and Lord 1999). According to the
Center for Academic Integrity at Duke University, 75 percent of all college
students "confess to cheating at least once" (Kleiner and Lord
1999). This finding confirms earlier studies by Baird, and by Stern and
Havlicek, who reported that between 70 percent and 85 percent of American
college students "engaged in some form of cheating" (Lupton, Chapman
and Weiss vol. 75, no. 4).
Cheating and the
Web
There are several
ways a student can use the Internet to cheat on a writing assignment. The
easiest way is to type a topic into a search engine like Yahoo!, find a Web
page that someone has posted on that topic with the requisite number of words,
copy the text and paste it into a word processing program. Another possibility
is to share assignments with friends at other schools - one student can simply
e-mail a paper as an attachment to another student. For example, one of my
students submitted a paper that I found to be the text from an online magazine
article. When I confronted the student about it, he said he had never seen the
online article; a friend at another college had e-mailed him the paper, and he
assumed that his friend had written it. But the most blatant form of
e-cheating is the use of "Web paper mills," sites that collect and
distribute papers on the Web, either free or for a fee.
In a cursory search
for these paper mill sites, I found more than 30. Such sites are easy to find
- just type "free essays" into any Web search engine - and easy to
use. However, many of these sites duplicate the same database of papers for
whatever reason. For example, 15000Papers.com, Phuck School (www.phuckschool.com
) and T.O.P. Thousands of Papers (www.termpapers-on-file.com
) are all owned by The Paper Store and appear to offer the same collection of
papers.
And with names like
Evil House of Cheat, most of these sites claim to assist students in cheating
and boast slogans such as "Download your workload." However, some
offer interesting disclaimers, like this one from EssayWorld.com: "The
purpose of Essayworld.com is to provide an additional resource for students to
obtain information and additional ideas from the insights of fellow students.
Plagiarism is a serious offense and Essayworld.com does not condone or
encourage plagiarism. By continuing the use of this site, you acknowledge that
Essayworld.com will in no way, shape or form, be held responsible for the
improper use of the contents of this site. Information obtained from the
essays on Essayworld.com should be treated as if it were acquired from a book
and be cited in the references. Should you need instructions on how to cite
information obtained from essays on the Internet, please visit our Resources
section." Such disclaimers appear to be an effort to avoid liability.
Students perusing
these sites can find papers in any discipline, from biology to business, from
chemistry to computer science, from health to history, from philosophy to
physics. The majority of these sites, however, provide papers on high school
rather than college topics. For example, literature papers tend to focus on
books like The Great Gatsby and A Tale of Two Cities. In addition, many of the
sites, although apparently not owned by the same entity, offer the same
papers. For example, I found the same essay on irony in Kate Chopin's Story of
an Hour in EssayWorld.com, in Planet Papers (www.planetpapers.com
) and in Other People's Papers (www.oppapers.com
). Some of these sites even require you to submit a paper to gain access to
their collection of papers. I suspect what students have done is taken a paper
from a free site and submitted it to one of these sites, resulting in
duplications like this. The cost of papers from these Web paper mills ranges
from free to varying prices per page. The sites that require payment provide
abstracts of papers with particulars, including word count, number of sources
used, and sometimes grade received and course level. Many sites also offer
custom essays with costs ranging from $18.95 to $35 per page.
Combating E-Cheating
The ease of finding
and downloading papers from sites like these makes plagiarism very tempting.
How can an instructor combat e-cheating? I have eight suggestions:
Continued at http://www.thejournal.com/magazine/vault/A3724.cfm
Bob Jensen's threads on plagiarism
are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/plagiarism.htm
From Infobits on November 29, 2001
"Forget About
Policing Plagiarism. Just Teach" (THE CHRONICLE OF HIGHER EDUCATION,
vol. 48, issue 12, November 16, 2001, p. B24) by Rebecca Moore Howard,
associate professor of writing and rhetoric, and director of the writing
program, at Syracuse University.
Howard argues
that "[i]n our stampede to fight what The New York Times calls a 'plague'
of plagiarism, we risk becoming the enemies rather than the mentors of our
students; we are replacing the student-teacher relationship with the
criminal-police relationship. Further, by thinking of plagiarism as a unitary
act rather than a collection of disparate activities, we risk categorizing all
of our students as criminals. Worst of all, we risk not recognizing that our
own pedagogy needs reform. Big reform." The article is online to CHE
subscribers at http://chronicle.com/weekly/v48/i12/12b02401.htm
I can't buy this argument. It would
bother my conscience too much to give a higher grade to a student that I
strongly suspect has merely copied the arguments elsewhere than the grade given
to a student who tried to develop his or her own arguments. How can Professor
Howard in good conscience give a higher grade to the suspected plagiarist? This
rewards "street smart" at the expense of "smart." It also
advocates becoming more street smart at the expense of real learning.
I might be cynical here and hope that
Professor Howard's physicians graduated from medical schools who passed students
on the basis of being really good copiers of papers they could not comprehend.
What is not mentioned in the quote
above is the labor-union-style argument also presented by Professor Howard in
the article. She argues that we're already too overworked to have the time
to investigate suspected plagiarism. Is refusing to investigate really
being professional as an honorable academic?
My threads on plagiarism are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/plagiarism.htm
Reply from John Rodi [jrodi@IX.NETCOM.COM]
I think that
administration is the culprit in this situation. Many years ago when I first
began to teach if you caught a student cheating on a single examination or a
single paper the instructor could fail the student for the entire course. One
day a student protested over an issue of whether homework was copied. As a
result we have a three page document that we must now follow in order to
charge a student with cheating. One of the recommendations is to have a
witness to the cheating. Suddenly, I find that the integrity of the instructor
is at issue and not that of the student. How did the inmates get the keys?
John Rodi
Cal State Los Angeles
Reply from Merrie & John Hayden [m.j.hayden@PRODIGY.NET]
Again, I say, how
many textbooks and other educational writings out there would pass the
plagiarism test?
John Hayden, CPA
The PJA School
The recent news of Enron Corp.'s need
to restate financial statements dating back to 1997 as a result of accounting
issues missed in Big Five firm Andersen's audits, has caused the Public
Oversight Board to decide to take a closer look at the peer review process
employed by public accounting firms. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/64184
Once-mighty energy trader Enron faces
almost certain bankruptcy after its credit rating is downgraded to junk status,
scuttling a planned acquisition by smaller rival Dynegy --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,48696,00.html
"I believe we
all misunderstood how dramatic a credibility crisis can be in a recession in a
bear market," he said. "The speed at which Enron collapsed caught us
all off guard."
Enron, which earned
$979 million on $100.8 billion in revenue in 2000, last month revealed that
partnerships run by its executives had allowed the company to keep about half
a billion in debt off its books and allowed the executives to profit from the
arrangements. Enron's dealings with those partnerships are now the subject of
a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation.
The company ousted
its top financial officer in October, and several weeks ago restated its
earnings back to 1997 eliminating more than $580 million in reported income
over that span.
Bob Jensen's threads on the Enron
scandal are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
A Message from Duncan Williamson [duncan.williamson@TESCO.NET]
I'm sticking my neck
out a bit and offering you all a PDF file I put together on the Enron Affair.
I've taken a wide variety of sources in an attempt to explain where I think we
are with this case. What Enron does (or did), what has happened and so on.
It's a sort of position paper that attempts to explain the facts to non
accountants and novice accountants. It's 24 pages long but doesn't take that
much time to download. I have used materials from messages on this list and
hope the authors don't mind and I have credited them by name. I have used Bob
Jensen's bookmarks, too; as well as a whole host of other things.
I'd be grateful for
any comments on this paper, or even offers of help to improve what I've done.
I have to say I did it in a bit of a hurry and won't be offended by any
criticism, providing it's constructive.
I have tested my
links and they work for me: let me know of any problems, though. It's at http://www.duncanwil.co.uk/pdfs.html
link number 1
Incidentally, if you
haven't been to my site recently (or at all), you can see my latest news at http://www.duncanwil.co.uk/news0212.html
. I have a very nice looking Newsletter waiting for you: complete with Xmas
theme. Please check my home page every week for the latest newsletter as it is
linked from there (take a look now, you'll see what I mean). At the moment I
am managing to add content at a significant rate; and will point out that I
have developed several new features over the last three months or so, as well
as the materials and pages themselves.
My home page (sorry,
my Ho! Ho! Home Page) is at http://www.duncanwil.co.uk/index.htm
and is equally festive (well, with a name like Ho! Ho! Home Page it would have
to be, wouldn't it?)
Looking forward to
seeing you on line!
Best wishes
Duncan Williamson
Hi Joel,
I think the "state of
affairs" in the public accounting profession is balanced on much more
serious problems than the XYZ Credential and the 150-hour requirement.
Rhoda Icerman, bless her heart,
informed me that the same newspaper that forced President Nixon to resign in the
wake of The Watergate Scandal is going to run a two part series that all CPAs
and accounting educators should take a careful look at. I am taking the liberty
of quoting part of her message:
**************************************************************
Just came from AICPA
Group of 100 meeting where it was announced that the Washington Post will be
carrying a 2-part series, starting this Sunday (12/2), on the failure of the
auditing profession to serve the public's interest...Enron, PWC and
independence, POB's deferrals, et.al.
Thought you'd like an
early 'heads-up.'
Thanks for keeping us
current on so many issues. I thoroughly enjoy your AECM posts.
Warmest regards,
Rhoda
**************************************************************
Now we're beginning to encounter really
serious media concerns for this image of this profession.
Bob (Robert E.) Jensen Jesse H. Jones
Distinguished Professor of Business Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212
Voice: (210) 999-7347 Fax: (210) 999-8134 Email: rjensen@trinity.edu http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
-----Original
Message----- From: Joel Peralto [mailto:peralto@HAWAII.EDU] Sent: Friday,
November 30, 2001 1:29 PM To: AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU Subject: The UAA and
future of the "CPA"
I just spent an hour
on the telly with a small local accounting practitioner who is fuming angry at
the state of affairs within the profession and the apparent "selling of
the profession" (specifically, the trusted CPA designation) down the
river, "by the AICPA". I'm sure this is a scenario that is showing
it's ugly face all over the country lately. The points of greatest contention
are the 150 hour requirement, the new experience requirements, and the
"XYZ" designation, to name but a few. Does anyone care to comment,
relating to similar dialog occurring in your part of the country? Of
particular concern is the apparent absence of 5-year programs geared
specifically to the guidelines set forth by the AICPA. Thanks!
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Joel C. Peralto, CPA, CMA
Professor-Accounting,
Division Chair Business Education and Technology Division
UH-Hawaii Community College
Hilo, Hawaii 96720 Email: peralto@hawaii.edu
808-974-7327 Voice 808-974-7755 FAX
"The Internet Didn't Kill
Enron," By Robert Preston, Internet Week, November 30, 2001 --- http://www.internetweek.com/enron113001.htm
"We have a
fundamentally better business model."
That's how Jeffrey
Skilling, then president of Enron Corp., summarized his company's startling
ascendancy a year ago, as Enron's revenues were soaring on the wings of its
Internet-based trading model.
It was hard to find
fault with Enron's strategy of brokering energy and other commodities over the
Internet rather than commanding the means of production and distribution.
EnronOnline, its year-old commodity-trading site, already was handling more
than $1 billion a day in transactions and yielding the bulk of the company's
profits. At its peak, Enron sported a market cap of $80 billion, bigger than
all its competitors combined.
See Also Forum: Enron
E-Biz Meltdown: What Went Wrong? More Enron Stories
Today, Enron is near
bankruptcy, the status of EnronOnline is touch and go, ENE is a penny stock
and Skilling is out of a job. Last year's Fortune 7 wunderkind, hailed by
InternetWeek and others as one of the most innovative companies in America,
overextended itself to the point of insolvency.
So was Enron's
"better business model" fundamentally flawed? With the benefit of
20/20 hindsight, what can Internet-inspired companies in every industry learn
from Enron's demise?
For one thing,
complex Internet marketplaces of the kind Enron assembled are fragile. Enron
prospered on the Net not so much because it had good technology -- though the
proprietary EnronOnline platform is considered leading-edge -- but because
online customers trusted the company to meet its price and delivery promises.
As Skilling told
InternetWeek a year ago, "certainty of execution and certainty of
fulfillment are the two things people worry about with commodity
products." Enron, by virtue of its expertise, networked relationships and
reputation, could guarantee those things.
Once it came to
light, however, that Enron was playing fast with its financials -- doing
off-balance sheet deals and engaging in other tactics to inflate earnings --
customers (as well as investors and partners) lost confidence in the company.
And Enron came tumbling down.
Furthermore,
advantages conferred by superior technology and information-gathering are
fleeting. Competitors learn and mimic and catch up. Barriers to market entry
evaporate. Profit margins narrow.
Enron, short of
incessant innovation, could never hope to corner Internet market-making,
especially in industries, like telecommunications and paper, that it didn't
really understand. In its core energy market, perhaps Enron was too quick to
eschew refineries and pipelines for the volatile, information-based business
of trading.
But it wasn't
Internet that killed the beast; it was management's insatiable appetite for
expansion and, by all accounts, personal enrichment.
It's too easy to kick
Enron now that it's down. It did a lot right. The competition and deregulation
and vertical "de-integration" Enron drove are the future of all
industries, even energy. Enron was making markets on the Internet well before
its competitors knew what hit them.
Was Enron on to a
better business model? You bet it was. But like any business model, it wasn't
impervious to rules of conduct and principles of economics.
An important review article from The
Washington Post on the Enron mess
"At Enron, the Fall Came Quickly:
Complexity, Partnerships Kept Problems From Public View"
The Washington Post
By Steven Pearlstein and Peter Behr
Sunday, December 2, 2001; Page A01
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A44063-2001Dec1.html
Bob Jensen's threads on the Enron
scandal are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
A Message to My
Students in the Wake of Recent Auditing Scandals
I am forwarding a reply that I sent out
to Curt and the rest of our accounting graduate students at Trinity University.
I am certain that Curt was trying to be facetious is suggesting that outlook for
accounting careers is becoming so gloomy that graduates should consider forming
rock bands such as the Butthole Surfers (see his message below).
The Enron mess could not have happened
at a worse time when accounting majors are on the decline nationwide and
auditing is no longer viewed by many U.S. students as a profession of choice.
The Enron publicity, especially following the forthcoming December 2, 2001
Washington Post series (starting tomorrow), will only make it more difficult for
us to draw our top talent into majoring in accounting.
Perhaps every accounting educator
should consider communicating some of the good news to students along with the
recent bad news in the press. Perhaps we should also try to get some of our good
news into the media.
In any case, this is my reply to Curt.
Bob
-----Original Message-----
From: Jensen, Robert [mailto:rjensen@trinity.edu]
Sent: Saturday, December 01, 2001 8:25 AM
To: Jensen-B Subject: RE: Having second thoughts about accounting?
Hi Curt and your fellow accounting
majors,
I don't know if you know that one of
the founders of the band you refer to was Paul Walthall's son (the son who
dropped out of Trinity's MBA program to join Gibby in forming the band). His
name was Paul Walthall Jr., although his name somewhere along the line
apparently was changed to Paul Leary. I think "Leary" was his middle
name and was his mother's maiden name. Paul "Leary" graduated in Art
from Trinity and then went part way into the MBA program back in the days when
Trinity University had an MBA program. Paul "Leary" was never an
accountant (I'm not sure he ever completed a course in accounting). Gibby Haynes
did indeed major in and excel in accounting at Trinity. He subsequently worked
for a short time as a staff accountant with KPMG.
The senior Paul Walthall was a highly
dedicated professor of accounting for over 30 years at Trinity University. I
once asked Paul and Doris Walthall if they ever recited the name of the BHS Band
out loud. They said they spoke of it often during prayers at church.
The funny part of the history of this
band is that none of the four founders could read music or play a musical
instrument. They hammered out songs by rote. The main appeal seemed to be some
of the outrageous lyrics put to some really awful music. The songs were rarely,
if ever, broadcast in the U.S., because radio stations were not allowed to say
the name of the band on the air. The main success, and it was never a big
success, of the band came from European tours. On many occasions, parents of the
band members had to send money to whatever town the band was stranded in at the
time.
My son Marshall in his early teenage
years bought every record produced by the band --- sigh! After Marshall grew up,
he tossed all of those records in the trash and is now into classical music and
dances with a ballet company. The BHS Band mainly appealed to young teenagers in
the rebellion stage of life.
My advice is to stay with accounting.
For the most part, accounting is the path to success in a business career. There
are occasional scandals such as the Enron audit, but we must give credit to the
thousands upon thousands of auditors worldwide who do their jobs with diligence
and laudable ethics. There are scandals in medicine, law, engineering, the
clergy, academe, and government, but this is what being human is all about. It's
about being human with human frailties in any vocation.
What we have to do is shore up
professional systems to discourage falling from grace. The vexing problem at the
moment is that multinational firms have become so huge that it is very hard for
auditors to part ways with gigantic clients when intractable disputes arise
during the audit.
On December 2, the Washington Post will
run a two-part series that challenges whether the auditing profession continues
to serve in the public's best interest. I am certain that the articles will
rehash some old wounds. I just hope the articles give equal time to the
successes where auditors can hold their heads high and point to where they truly
did serve the investing public.
The ultimate fate of any profession
lies not in its rules, regulations, and controls. The fate lies in the will and
dedication of the majority of people who serve in that profession --- the honest
cops, the devoted doctors, the dedicated professors, the faithful clergy, and
the ardent auditors. These are the kinds of students we hope to continue to
graduate from Trinity University.
Hang in there and hold your heads high!
Dr J
-----Original
Message-----
From: Curt
Sent: Saturday, December 01, 2001 4:18 AM
To: Jensen-B (a listserv)
Subject: Having second thoughts about accounting?
Hey guys, I was just
surfing around some sites researching Trinity's famous band, the Butthole
Surfers and I found this quote in an article about them:
"But the
artistic grit and slime are only part of the Gibby Haynes story. In fact, his
squeaky clean past is as much a part of the Buttholes' lore as their albums
and shows. When he hooked up with guitarist Paul Leary at Trinity University
in the early eighties, Haynes was an ace student. Among his distinctions were
tenures as president of his fraternity and captain of the basketball team, and
the award for accounting student of the year."
Anyway, some of y'all
might have already knew about this, but if not, rest assured that if the
accounting profession fails us, we can always resort to show business.
-curt
p.s. here's the
website address of the article: http://www.addict.com/issues/2.08/html/lofi/Features/Butthole/BH-Story/
Another Message form a Student
Just wanted to share
a link to a recent speech made by Chairman of the SEC Arthur Levitt,
concerning what it means to be an auditor and where auditors derive their
value.
This speech
compliments my presentation, but in my mind it describes the issue in a more
eloquent fashion.
It is a little
lengthy, but I highly recommend that all of you at least skim through it,
especially paragraphs 5-13. The message is one not of despair but of striving
for betterment of the profession.
http://www.sec.gov/news/speech/spch399.htm
-Mike
Bob Jensen's threads on the Enron
mess are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
The Campus Computing
Project --- http://www.campuscomputing.net/
Begun in 1990, the
Campus Computing Project focuses on the use of information technology in
higher education. The project's national studies draw on qualitative and
quantitative data to help inform faculty, campus administrators, and others
interested in the use of information technology in American colleges and
universities.
The annual Campus
Computing Survey is the largest continuing study of the role of information
technology in US higher education. Each year more than 600 two-and four-year
public and private colleges and universities participate in this survey, which
focuses on campus planning and policy affecting the role of information
technology in teaching, learning, and scholarship.
Bob Jensen's threads on Lynne Cheney
and the ACTA Report
"Defending Civilization: How Our Universities Are Failing America and What
Can Be Done About It"
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book01q4.htm#LynneCheney
Instant Messaging Has Gone to Work It's
not a surprise that a Jupiter Media Metrix study found the time spent using
instant messaging applications was up 48 percent at home in the past year, but
it is a surprise to see the time spent instant messaging at work was up 110
percent. http://www.newmedia.com/default.asp?articleID=3217
Amy Dunbar utilizes instant
messaging extensively in her online tax courses. See http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book01q4.htm#dunbar
Cookies =
Applets that enable a web site to collect information about each user for later
reference (as in finding cookies in the cookie jar). Web Browsers like Netscape
Navigator set aside a small amount of space on the user's hard drive to record
detected preferences. Cookies perform storage on the client side that
might otherwise have to be stored in a generic-state or database server on the
server side. Cookies can be used to collect information for consumer profile
databases. Browsers can be set to refuse cookies.
Many times when you browse a website,
your browser checks to see if you have any pre-defined preferences (cookie) for
that server if you do it sends the cookie to the server along with the request
for a web page. Sometimes cookies are used to collect items of an order as the
user places things in a shopping cart and has not yet submitted the full order.
A cookie allows WWW customers to fill their orders (shopping carts) and then be
billed based upon the cookie payment information. Cookies retain information
about a users browsing patterns at a web site. This creates all sorts of privacy
risks since information obtained from cookies by vendors or any persons who put
cookies on your computer might be disclosed in ways that are harmful to you.
Browsers will let you refuse cookies with a set up that warns you when someone
is about to deliver a cookie, but this really disrupts Web surfing and may block
you from gaining access to may sites. It is probably better to accept
cookies for a current session and then dispose of unwanted cookies as soon as
possible so that cookie senders do not obtain repeated access to your private
information. Microsoft Corporation has added the following utilities to
the Internet Explorer (IE) browser according to http://www.cnn.com/2000/TECH/computing/07/21/ms.cookies.idg/
The Internet Explorer
5.5 changes include the following:
• Notifications
that Microsoft said will help users differentiate between first- and
third-party cookies, plus automatic prompts that inform users anytime a
third-party cookie is being offered by a Web site.
• A "delete
all cookies" control button that has been added to the browser's main
"Internet options" page to make it easier for users to get rid of
cookies.
• New topics that
have been added to Internet Explorer's help menu to better answer questions
about cookies and their management.
Instruction for cookies control using
Internet Explorer --- http://www.scholastic.com/cookies.htm
To accept cookies if you are using a
PC running Windows...
Internet Explorer 5 1. Click Tools,
and then click Internet Options.
2. Click the Security tab.
3. Click the Internet zone.
4. Select a security level other than
High.
-or-
Click Custom Level, scroll to the
Cookies section, and then click Enable for both cookie options.
5. Click on Apply.
6. Click on OK.
Other nations, notably in Europe, have
placed more severe restrictions on the use of cookies. See http://www.cnn.com/2000/TECH/computing/07/21/eu.spam.idg/index.html
Question 1:
How can you send email anonymously?
Answer 1:
Simply set up an email account under a fictitious name. For example, you
can send email under multiple fictitious names from the Yahoo email server at http://www.yahoo.com/
(Click on 'Mail" in the row "Connect")
Question 2:
How can you be totally anonymous on the Web such that cookie monsters do not
track your Web navigation at your site and bad guys cannot track your surfing
habits or get at your personal information such as medical records, name, mail
address, phone number, email address, etc.? (You can read about cookie
monsters at
Answer 2:
There is probably no way to be 100% safe unless you use someone else's computer
without them knowing you are using that computer on the Web. In most
instances, the owner of the computer (a university, a public library, an
employer, etc.) will know who is using the computer, but cookie monsters and bad
guys on the Web won't have an easy time finding out who you are without having
the powers of the police.
About the safest way to remain
anonymous as a Web surfer is to sign up for Privada from your IP Internet
provider that obtain your line connection from for purposes of connecting to the
Web. In most instances, surfers pay a monthly fee that will increase by
about $5.00 per month for the Pivada service (if the IP provider has Privada or
some similar service). To read more about Privada, go to http://industry.java.sun.com/solutions/company/summary/0,2353,4514,00.html
Privada Control
(Application)
Primary Market
Target: Utilities&Services
Secondary Market Target: Financial Services
Description Used with
Privada Network, PrivadaControl provides the consumer component of Privada's
services, and is distributed to end-users by network service providers. Users
create an online identity that cannot be linked to their real-world identity,
allowing them to browse the Internet with the level of privacy they choose
while still reaping the benefits of personalized content. PrivadaControl is
built entirely in the Java(TM) programming language and runs completely in a
Java Virtual Machine.
I added a
Special Section to the document entitled "Opportunities of E-Business
Assurance: Risks in Assuring Risk" at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/assurance.htm
For more information
about fraud, information warfare, and security, go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
To my ACCT 5342 Students
My assurance services and security
document is at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/assurance.htm
You should become very familiar with security seals on Web documents, especially
SysTrust, WebTrust, Truste, VeriSign, and BBB seals.
You know the difference between a virus
and a worm. You should be warned, however, that the media sometimes does not
distignuish the two concepts. I provide a very current illustration or a
fast-spreading worm below (note
the illustration also demonstrates how persons who do not install Microsoft
security patches on a regular basis are asking for trouble).
An e-mail worm that appears to be a
reworked version of the virulent Nimda infection is on the loose and in the wild
--- http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,48613,00.html
From InformationWeek
Daily on November 27, 2001
** Dangerous New Virus,
Same Old Hole
An old and well-known
security flaw in Microsoft's Internet Explorer is continuing to cause problems,
as a new worm that exploits the flaw spreads on the Internet.
The worm, known as
W32/BadTrans.B-mm, has been spotted in 50 countries, and is propagating rapidly,
says Dave White, technical manager for security company MessageLabs. It takes
advantage of a well-publicized hole in Explorer, the same vulnerability used by
the Nimda virus, which infected millions of computers earlier this fall.
A previous version of
the worm, BadTrans.A, spread in April, infecting users who opened an infected
E-mail attachment, but the new variant can infect users who merely read or
preview the message in Microsoft's Outlook E-mail program. Once activated, the
virus spreads by both replying to unread messages in the user's mailbox and
mailing everyone in the recipient's address book. It also installs a
Trojan-horse key-logging program on the user's computer, which collects
confidential information like passwords and E-mails them to another address.
"We're getting hit
quite hard," says Russ Cooper, surgeon general for security firm TruSecure
Corp. He says that a patch for the IE vulnerability has been available since
March, but that home users in particular have been slow to update their
security. "Unless they've had a bad experience before, they haven't learned
what they should and shouldn't do," he says. "The average person
doesn't even know that these things exist, so adoption is going to be
slow." - David M. Ewalt
For more virus
coverage, see Virus Definition Update Rings False Alarm On Nimda http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eE260BcUEY0V20aAT0AU
New, Slower Version Of Nimda Worm
Spreads http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eE260BcUEY0V20Zgm0AQ
Darn! From Now On They've Got
to Cover Up! --- U.S. Lessons Learned From the Taliban
The federal government will decide whether the Victoria Secret televised fashion
show was too lewd for TV
"FCC Poses as Fashion Model
Police," by Declan McCullagh, Wired News, November 24, 2001 --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,48571,00.html
The televised
Victoria's Secret fashion show may be mildly racy, but should it be illegal?
One prudish FCC
commissioner thinks so -- and has ordered the agency's "enforcement
bureau" to begin investigating whether the company's famous bikinis and
lacy unmentionables on TV could corrupt American youth.
Continued (without pictures) at
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,48571,00.html
"FBI's "Trojan horse"
program to grab passwords," Will Knight, New Scientist, November 21,
2001 --- http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99991589
The US Federal Bureau
of Investigation is developing a computer program that can steal the passwords
that suspected criminals use to lock encrypted messages, according to a source
cited by MSNBC.
The "Trojan
horse" program, known as Magic Lantern, could be sent to a suspect
attached to a seemingly innocent email message. After the program has
installed itself using a known software bug, it would capture the passwords
used to encrypt messages and send these to FBI officers.
Investigators might
then be able to decrypt and read secret email messages. But some computer
experts question how successful such a system would be.
Graham Cluley, an
anti-virus researcher at Sophos, says that some anti-virus software may detect
the program automatically. If not, the anti-virus software could easily be
configured to catch the program, he says.
"It would be
relatively trivial to write a detector for it", Cluley told New
Scientist. "Some customers may ask for a fix for it."
Continued at - http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99991589
An in-depth look at how Americans view
privacy after the tragic events of Sept. 11, including thoughts on how
individuals and corporations alike can help protect our right to privacy --- http://www.smartpros.com/x31810.xml
"Playboy says hacker stole
customer info," by Greg Sandoval and Robert Lemos, C|Net News Com, November
20, 2001 --- http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1007-200-7932825.html?tag=mn_hd
Playboy.com has
alerted customers that an intruder broke into its Web site and obtained some
customer information, including credit card numbers.
The online unit of
the nearly 50-year-old men's magazine said in an e-mail to customers that it
believed a hacker accessed "a portion" of Playboy.com's computer
systems. In the e-mail, a copy of which was reviewed by CNET News.com,
Playboy.com President Larry Lux did not disclose how many customers might have
been affected.
Playboy.com
encouraged customers to contact their credit card companies to check for
unauthorized charges. New York-based Playboy.com also said it reported the
incident to law enforcement officials and hired a security expert to audit its
computer systems and analyze the incident.
Continued at http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1007-200-7932825.html?tag=mn_hd
"The Google Attack Engine,"
by Thomas C Greene, The Register, November 28, 2001 --- http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/23069.html
Some clever
empiricist appears to have been abusing Google to attack Web servers, switches
and routers in a novel way, by crafting search terms to include known
exploits. Such a search will occasionally yield active Web pages used by
administrators. On top of that, a number of them have already been cached.
It's reasonable to surmise that a hacker has been using Google not merely to
search for vulnerabilities, but as a proxy to hide behind while executing
attacks.
SecurityFocus
researcher Ryan Russell discovered a wealth of such pages quite by accident,
while working on improved rules for Snort, a popular open-source IDS
(Intrusion Detection System).
"I was using
Google to check how common a particular string is on the Web, to gauge how
often a rule might cause a false-positive. Part of the process of deciding how
often the rule might cause a false positive is deciding how common the string
is that the rule searches for," Russell explains.
So while searching
Google for a vulnerability in Cisco IOS Web Server, Russell followed a link
and found himself in a switch belonging to a US .gov site.
The malicious use of
search engines is nothing new, as we reported in a story back in June of 2000;
but this does bring it to new levels of finesse. The significant thing here is
that the cache can be used to cover one's tracks, assuming there are no
graphics to be fetched.
Cruise control? So
how did all this stuff get indexed in the first place? Did Google's mighty
spiders do it all automatically, or did someone deliberately add the URLs?
Google offers
"an advanced search feature that allows you to look for sites that link
to a particular URL. When I looked for the URLs that are exploit attempts,
there were no links to them. This either means they were submitted manually to
Google, or possibly that the page that used to link to them has changed, and
Google has already re-indexed it," Russell says.
"The simplest
explanation is that they just went to Google's submit URL page, and typed it
in."
Continured at - http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/23069.html
A message from David R. Fordham [fordhadr@JMU.EDU]
Okay, here's a
question for those few of you who still read posts from me...
I would like to place
a "timer" on a PowerPoint screen.
Has anyone here done
this, or seen it done? I presume it will have to be an add-in, such as an
object from a third-party package, or possibly an "undocumented
feature" PowerPoint script or something.
Ideally, the timer
would begin counting down second by second as soon as the slide appears.
David
Replies from Bob Jensen and Richard
Campbell
You can also put a timer (along with
adding your voice over a microphone) using Camtasia's Producer. Camtasia can be
used to make video or a timed slide show. The "show" can be
"anything" that appears on your computer screen, including PowerPoint
slides. The audio is great for fleshing in the outline on each PowerPoint slide.
When you are not present, students can play the audio and watch the slide show.
When you are making a presentation, simply unplug the speakers.
I said "anything" in quotes,
because Camtasia recording at say 10 frames a second does not do too well when
the screens themselves are fast-moving video at over 20 frames per second.
Fortunately, PowerPoint slide shows move much slower.
See http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm#Video
Bob Jensen
Reply From: Richard
J. Campbell [mailto:campbell@RIO.EDU]
Sent: Tuesday, November 27, 2001 3:35 PM
To: AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: Re: Has Anyone Been There or Done That?
David:
Microsoft has a new product that is free for owners of Powerpoint 2002 called
Producer that should do what you want. I was a beta tester. See http://www.microsoft.com/office/powerpoint/producer/default.htm
Richard J. Campbell
President Bush has signed into law the
two-year moratorium on Internet access taxes. The bill effectively slows
progress on attempts by states to impose an Internet sales tax. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/64969
From Fathom --- http://www.fathom.com/
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*** ANTHROPOLOGY OF CHINA ... Exchange,
Bribery, and Gift-Giving The boundary between bribery and gift-giving is
sometimes unclear. Corruption can also be a moral act. Charles Stafford, a
specialist in anthropology at the London School of Economics and Political
Science, explores the social politics of exchange, bribery and gift-giving in
China and Taiwan: "Markets around the world are terribly different
precisely because of cultural factors..." http://www.fathom.com/link.jhtml?cid=559&page=feature&id=121974
*** CHALLENGES OF MODERN MANAGEMENT ...
Choice and Its Discontents: Challenges for the New Millennium Extensive choice
does not necessarily make one happier, more satisfied or more motivated to
purchase products, explains Professor Sheena S. Iyengar of Columbia Business
School: "While having the ability to choose when to take work breaks and
how to complete one's job is predictive of employee satisfaction and performance
among Anglo-Americans and African-Americans, it has no relevance to the work
satisfaction and performance of Asians and Latin American employees...." http://www.fathom.com/link.jhtml?cid=560&page=feature&id=35261
In November 2001, the new IASB issued
implementation guidance for IAS 39 --- http://accountingeducation.com/news/news2278.html
When the IASC Board
voted to approve IAS
39: Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement in December 1998,
it instructed the staff to monitor implementation issues and to consider how
IASC can best respond to such issues and thereby help financial statement
preparers, auditors, financial analysts, and others understand IAS 39 and
those preparing to apply it for the first time.
In March 2000, the IASC Board approved an approach to publish implementation
guidance on IAS 39 in the form of Questions and Answers (Q&A) and
appointed an IAS 39 Implementation Guidance Committee (IGC) to review and
approve the draft Q&A and to seek public comment before final publication.
Also, the IAS 39 IGC may refer some issues either to the Standing
Interpretations Committee (SIC) or to the IASB.
In July 2001, IASB
issued a consolidated
document that includes all questions and answers approved in final form by
the IAS 39 Implementation Guidance Committee as of 1 July 2001, including the
fifth batch of proposed guidance (issued for comment in December 2000). The
Q&A respond to questions submitted by financial statement preparers,
auditors, regulators, and others and have been issued to help them and others
better understand IAS 39 and help ensure consistent application of the
Standard.
There is also a
publication, Accounting
for Financial Instruments - Standards, Interpretations and Implementation
Guidance, which is available from IASB Publications. This book contains
the current text of IAS 32 and IAS 39, SIC Interpretations related to the
accounting for financial instruments as well as the IAS 39 Implementation
Guidance Questions and Answers.
In November
2001, the IGC issued a document
with the final versions of 17 Q&A and two illustrative examples that were
issued in draft form for public comment in June 2001. That document replaces
pages 477-541 in the publication Accounting for Financial Instruments -
Standards, Interpretations, and Implementation Guidance, which was
published in July 2001. Draft Questions 10-22, 18-3, 38-6, 52-1, and 112-3
were eliminated in the final document, primarily because the issues involved
are being addressed in the Board’s current project to amend IAS 39.
Pending the completion of the Board's current project to amend IAS 32 and
39, no further meetings of the IAS 39 Implementation Guidance Committee are
planned.
Bob Jensen's documents on IAS 39,
FAS 133, and FAS 138 are linked at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm
From Webmonkey Front Door on November
27, 2001
Having some difficulties with something Microsoft-made? (Huh!) You could call
Microsoft Tech Support, but you might just fare better with a Tarot-powered
reading from The Psychic Friends Network --- http://www.bmug.org/news/articles/MSvsPF.html
American Religion
Data Archive patrons,
The American Religion
Data Archive has changed its web address to www.TheARDA.com
. We will no longer be using www.arda.tm
and we cannot garuntee that arda.tm will continue to function in the future.
Please change your bookmarks and links to www.TheARDA.com.
The American Religion
Data Archive (ARDA) has recently updated our website ( www.TheARDA.com
). New features include, but are not limited to, report and mapping features
that allow users to analyze the breakdown of Christian adherents in most of
the major American denominations as well as view any changes from 1980 to
1990; additionally, there is also a new site design that should provide easier
access to the material on the ARDA website.
Thank you for your
continued interest in the ARDA and we hope the new additions to the website
meet patrons' needs.
Until the next ARDA
update,
Phil Schwadel
ARDA Research Associate
The American Religion Data Archive
Department of Sociology
The Pennsylvania State University
211 Oswald Tower University Park, PA 16802-6207
814-865-6258 Phone 814-863-7216 Fax www.TheARDA.com arda@pop.psu.edu
Meet Carla, a 14-year-old. She's also
Dana, 18. And Becky, 23. Turns out that teenage girls have more multiple online
personalities than any other age group, a study says --- http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,48716,00.html
The former CNN chief, Ted Turner,
believes that all the consolidation in the cable news business is depriving the
public of a diversity of opinion --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,48706,00.html
HooRah for Online
e-Commerce!
While sales in the offline world fell
in the third quarter of the year, online retailers saw their earnings rise a
bit, the U.S. government reported. It could be an encouraging sign for
end-of-year sales --- http://www.wired.com/news/holidays/0,1882,48687,00.html
The following is an updated definition
from my Technology Glossary at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm
Fiber optic=
Cable that carries light pulses instead of electrical current. A cable comprised
of a multitude of fine glass fibers has much more capacity than the previously
popular copper cable. (See also Information highway, Networks, and Sonet in the
above Technology Glossary.)
Fiber Optics Terms from
"Fiber to the School Desk," in T.H.E. Magazine, November
2001, p. 26 --- http://www.thejournal.com/magazine/vault/A3709B.cfm
FIBER OPTICS TERMS
Category 5e (Enhanced) - A
category of performance for inside wire and cable. Used in support of
signaling rates of up to 100 MHz over distances of up to 100 meters.
Calls for tighter twists, electrical balancing between pairs and fewer
cable anomalies. CAT5e is intended to support 100 Base-T, ATM and
Gigabit Ethernet.
Cisco IP/TV - A comprehensive
network video-streaming system for businesses, schools and governmental
organizations. Using network-efficient multicast technology it delivers
TV-quality live video programming.
Fiber Optics - A technology in
which light is used to transport information from one point to another.
More specifically, fiber optics are thin filaments of glass through
which light beams are transmitted over long distances carrying enormous
amounts of data.
Hub - The point of a network
where circuits are connected. Also, a switching node. In Local Area
Networks, a hub is the core of a star as in ARCNET, StarLAN, Ethernet
and Token Ring. Hub hardware can be either active or passive. Wiring
hubs are useful for their centralized management capabilities and for
their ability to isolate nodes from disruption.
IDF - Intermediate Distribution
Frame. A metal rack designed to connect cables, located in equipment or
in a closet. Consists of components that provide the connection between
the interbuilding and intrabuilding cabling, i.e. between the Main
Distribution Frame (MDF) and individual phone wiring. There's usually a
permanent, large cable running between the MDF and IDF. The changes in
wiring are done at the IDF, preventing confusion in wiring.
MDF - Main Distribution Frame.
A wiring arrangement that connects external telephone lines on one side
and the internal lines on the other. A main distribution frame may also
carry protective devices as well as function as a central testing point.
MTRJ - A small form-factor
style of fiber optic connector that is defined by its high-density
footprint and RJ45 locking mechanism.
Multimode - An optical fiber
designed to allow light to carry multiple carrier signals, distinguished
by frequency or phase, at the same time. (Contrasts with singlemode.)
SC - Designation for an optical
connector featuring a 2.5 mm physically contacting ferrule with a
push-pull mating design. This connector is recommended in the
TIA/EIA-568A Standard for structured cabling.
ST - Designation for the
"straight tip" connector developed by AT&T. This optical
connector features a physically contacting, nonrotating 2.5 mm ferrule
design and bayonet connector-to-adapter mating.
Singlemode - A fiber that
allows only a single mode of light to propagate. This eliminates the
main limitation to bandwidth, modal dispersion. |
From Infobits on November 29, 2001
NETWORKING ON THE
NETWORK
For many years Phil
Agre, associate professor in the UCLA Department of Information Studies, has
studied and written about how the Internet affects users and how users shape
the Internet. He believes that a "great deal of effort is going into
technical means for finding information on the net, but hardly anybody has
been helping newcomers figure out where the net fits in the larger picture of
their own careers." In his paper "Networking on the Network"
Agre seeks to remedy this situation for people (primarily graduate students)
in academic and research communities. Topics covered include constructive uses
of electronic communication, using the Net to build a professional identity,
and networks and job-hunting. Agre's paper is online at http://dlis.gseis.ucla.edu/people/pagre/network.html
Phil Agre also edits
the Red Rock Eater News Service mailing list. Most of the messages concern the
social and political aspects of computing and networking. For more
subscription information and links to archived messages, see http://dlis.gseis.ucla.edu/people/pagre/rre.html
THE TECHNOLOGY
SOURCE MOVES TO MICHIGAN VIRTUAL UNIVERSITY
The University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill has transferred ownership of THE TECHNOLOGY
SOURCE to the Michigan Virtual University. James L. Morrison, Professor of
Educational Leadership in the UNC-Chapel Hill School of Education, has agreed
to remain as editor-in-chief and MVU has agreed to continue publishing The
Technology Source as a free service to the educational community.
The purpose of The
Technology Source is to provide thoughtful, illuminating articles that will
assist educators as they face the challenge of integrating information
technology tools into teaching and into managing educational organizations.
Issues include commentaries, case studies, reports on faculty and staff
development, articles on the virtual university, and links to higher-education
websites. You can read the November/December issue of The Technology Source at
http://ts.mivu.org/default.asp?show=issue&id=45
RECOMMENDED
READING
"Recommended
Reading" lists items that have been recommended to me or that Infobits
readers have found particularly interesting and/or useful, including books,
articles, and websites published by Infobits subscribers. Send your
recommendations to carolyn_kotlas@unc.edu for possible inclusion in this
column.
THE GRATIS ECONOMY:
PRIVATELY PROVIDED PUBLIC GOODS by Infobits subscriber Andras Kelen Budapest:
Central European University Press, 2001; ISBN: 963-9241-22-9
"A work in the
relatively new field of economic sociology, this highly unconventional book
deals with the logics of toll-free services and generalises the notion of
voluntary work toward encompassing everything that can be obtained free of
charge in the world. . . . The Gratis Economy will be of interest to
professors and students of applied economics and business schools,
sociologists, to the e-business community, marketing practitioners,
webspinners, infonauts, netizens, software developers and decision-makers of
electronic media."
For more information see http://come.to/Gratis-Economy/
The Economy & Entrepreneurs
In part one of a two-part series, Don Sussis takes a fresh look at the state of
the U.S. economy, recent political events, and how it will all impact the future
of e-business entrepreneurs as venture capitalists become even more cognizant of
their potential investments. http://www.newmedia.com/default.asp?articleID=3218
Pattern Recognition from MIT
"Recognizing the Enemy," by Alexandra Stikeman, Technology Review,
December 2001 --- http://www.techreview.com/magazine/dec01/stikeman.asp
Of all the dramatic
images to emerge in the hours and days following the September 11 attacks, one
of the most haunting was a frame from a surveillance-camera video capturing
the face of suspected hijacker Mohamed Atta as he passed through an airport
metal detector in Portland, ME.
Even more chilling to
many security experts is the fact that, had the right technology been in
place, an image like that might have helped avert the attacks. According to
experts, face recognition technology that's already commercially available
could have instantly checked the image against photos of suspected terrorists
on file with the FBI and other authorities. If a match had been made, the
system could have sounded the alarm before the suspect boarded his flight.
From FEI Express on November 29, 2001
COPING WITH
TODAY'S ACCOUNTING AND REPORTING STANDARDS
Over the years, there have been increasing concerns that accounting and
reporting standards may have become too complex, too difficult, and too costly
to implement. PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP and the FEI Research Foundation would
like your help in exploring this important issue. Click here to complete a
brief on-line survey: http://www.fei.org/rf/survey/pwc/pwc_survey.cfm
Based on the survey
results, we may recommend actions for the standard setters and regulators. We
have received 140 responses so far. If you haven't already done so, please
respond by Friday, December 7, so that we can include your response also.If
you have any questions, please call Bill Sinnett at the FEI Research
Foundation (973-898-4604 or bsinnett@fei.org
).
LINKING HUMAN CAPITAL
TO THE BOTTOM LINE New data shows there is a cause and effect relationship
between human capital management and financial performance -- HR practices
drive financial success. Companies with best HR practices provide 3 times the
shareholder returns as companies with weak practices. For companies that are
currently justifying their HR expenses, this is a way to communicate in profit
and loss terms. Watson Wyatt's Human Capital Index study identifies exactly
which human capital practices yield the best financial return: http://www.watsonwyatt.com/homepage/us/resrender.asp?id=W-488&page=1
Also... read
HRFinance Alert, a newsletter focused on the finance side of HR issues: http://www.watsonwyatt.com/homepage/us/new/hrfinance/
MARKET CONDITIONS AND
NON-CONVENTIONAL RISKS Marsh's "New Reality of Risk" teleconference
series continues on Dec. 5 at 11:00 a.m. ET. Free to FEI members. To learn
more, go to: http://www.fei.org/news/RealityRiskTele.cfm
JOB POSTING: CFO: FEI
JOB #5492 Reporting to the COO, the CFO will direct the Firm in all areas of
financial matters. These duties include: development of timely and accurate
financial reports; preparation of budget models and financial projections;
analysis of compliance with financial plans and budgets; tracking of timely
payments to the Firm's creditors; and the many other necessary
responsibilities which will ensure the protection of the Firm's assets by
adherence to generally accepted accounting procedures. Contact
mreusser@shb.com.
To view more jobs, go
to http://www.fei.org/careers/agreement.cfm
Double Entries chooses the following
accounting "Book of the Week"
BOOK
OF THE WEEK
http://accountingeducation.com/
|
Accounting:
Themes, Keys, Formulas, Glossary of Accounting Terms for Your
Introductory College Course (Barron's
Ez-101 Study Keys) by David Minars and Davis A. Minars.
Amazon.com
reviewers give this introductory accounting guide a five star rating. If
you need an alternative text from your class recommendation to get you
through your intro/Accounting 101 classes, this might be the place to
go.
If you'd
like to obtain a copy of this book, why not order it directly from the Amazon.com
website by following the link provided.
|
Tax Changes That Your Family Should
Know About
From The Wall Street Journal
Accounting Educators' Review on November 29, 2001 Subscribers to the
Electronic Edition of the WSJ can obtain reviews in various disciplines by
contacting wsjeducatorsreviews@dowjones.com
See http://info.wsj.com/professor/
TITLE: Don't Just Sit There: Tax
changes are going to have a significant effect on almost every aspect of your
finances. It's time to get ready.
REPORTER: Frederic Wiegold , The Wall Street Journal
DATE: Nov 26, 2001
PAGE: R3
LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1006366653151356720.djm
TOPICS: Personal Taxation
SUMMARY: The new tax law, entitled the
Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001, was signed into law
last June. The article recommends that everyone should review his or her
year-end financial position and tax strategies based on various provisions of
the law. Topics covered include lower overall tax rates, the impact of the AMT,
and potential tax underpayment through withholding. The article provides a
summary of the law's major provisions.
QUESTIONS:
1.) Describe the major provisions of the tax cut enacted last June with respect
to personal income taxes and to estate taxes. What is the significance of the
year 2011?
2.) Why might the AMT prevent some
taxpayers from benefiting based on the new law? Why does the AMT particularly
affect taxpayers living in high tax states such as California and New York?
3.) How could a taxpayer end up with an
underpayment problem because of the tax rates dropping by half a percentage
point?
4.) What are the problems that can
arise because of the increasing amount of estate values that are exempt from tax
under the new law? How do the tax law changes, especially the year 2011, make it
difficult to write a will that is sure to have the outcome desired for a
surviving spouse and children?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University
of Rhode Island
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University
I updated some of my links to
accounting educator helpers.
Accounting
Educator Helpers
- Accounting
Fraud, Forensic Accounting, Securities Fraud, and White Collar Crime
- Opportunities
of E-Business Assurance: Risks in Assuring Risk
- A
Special Section on Computer and Networking Security
- Threads
on Firewalls
- Bob
Jensen's Technology Glossary
- Computers
in Accounting: Past, Present, and Future
- Bob
Jensen's Threads on the Decline in Accounting Majors in U.S. Colleges
- CPA --- Career Passed
Away
- Glossaries:
Accounting, Business, Finance, and Technologies
- Bob
Jensen's Threads on Real Options, Option Pricing Theory, and Arbitrage
Pricing Theory
(Includes My Links to the Muppet Screenplay)
- Bob
Jensen's Threads on Return on Investment (ROI)
- Threads
on e-Commerce and e-Business (eCommerce, eBusiness)
- Threads
on Webledger Systems for Networked Accounting and Business Services
- Data
Mining
- Threads
from Daring Professors
- Accounting
Theory Threads
- Excel, JavaScript, and Other
Helpers, Tutorials, and Videos --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
Bob Jensen's video files --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideosSummary.htm
Accompanying documentation can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm
and http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
- Other helpers for accounting
educators --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default3.htm
- Globalization Strategic Alliances
Roundtable (GSAR), Berlin, Germany, June 22, 2001 --- http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/GSAR2001/000start.htm
-
In an August 15, 2001
controversial address to the American Accounting Association, current AAA
President Joel Demski lamented the fall of accounting education (I think he
meant business education in general) from scholarship, joy, and an academic
curriculum. In particular, he blasted the current textbooks and publishers,
public accounting firms, accounting educators, administrators, and the
tendency for scholarship and curricula to become niched into specialty
topics with failing cross-communications between those specialties such as
tax accounting , capital markets studies, NFP accounting, managerial
accounting, AIS, etc. In particular he laments the way accounting curricula
have evolved to meet the career interests of public accounting firm
employers and the virtual failing of the five-year, 150-credit, requirements
to sit for the CPA examination. At the end of his address to the membership,
Joel announced a curriculum-design competition.
You can both read and listen to Joel
Demski's August 15 address to the AAA membership at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/001aaa/atlanta01.htm
Other Accounting Educator Helpers --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default3.htm
Bob Jensen's Threads --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/threads.htm
Archives of New Bookmarks --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Bob Jensen's Helpers for Educators in
General --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/
Forwarded by Bob Overn
Rules for Buying
Gifts for Men:
Rule #1: When in
doubt - buy him a cordless drill. It does not matter if he already has one. I
have a friend who owns 17 and he has yet to complain. As a man, you can never
have too many cordless drills. No one knows why.
Rule #2: If you
cannot afford a cordless drill, buy him anything with the word ratchet or
socket in it. Men love saying those two words. "Hey George, can I borrow
your ratchet?" "OK. By-the-way, are you through with my 3/8-inch
socket yet?" Again, no one knows why.
Rule #3: If you are
really, really broke, buy him anything for his car. A 99-cent ice scraper, a
small bottle of de-icer or something to hang from his rear view mirror. Men
love gifts for their cars. No one knows why.
Rule #4: Do not buy
men socks. Do not buy men ties. And never buy men bathrobes. I was told that
if God had wanted men to wear bathrobes, he wouldn't have invented Jockey
shorts.
Rule #5: You can buy
men new remote controls to replace the ones they have worn out. If you have a
lot of money buy your man a big-screen TV with the little picture in the
corner. Watch him go wild as he flips, and flips, and flips.
Rule #6: Do not buy a
man any of those fancy liqueurs. If you do, it will sit in a cupboard for 23
years. Real men drink whiskey or beer.
Rule #7: Do not buy
any man industrial-sized canisters of after shave or deodorant. I'm told they
do not stink - they are earthy.
Rule #8: Buy men
label makers. Almost as good as cordless drills. Within a couple of weeks
there will be labels absolutely everywhere. "Socks. Shorts. Cups.
Saucers. Door. Lock. Sink." You get the idea. No one knows why.
Rule #9: Never buy a
man anything that says "some assembly required" on the box. It will
ruin his Special Day and he will always have parts left over.
Rule #10: Good places
to shop for men include Northwest Iron Works, Parr Lumber, Home Depot, John
Deere, Valley RV Center, and Les Schwab Tire. (NAPA Auto Parts and Sears'
Clearance Centers are also excellent men's stores. It doesn't matter if he
doesn't know what it is. "From NAPA Auto,eh? Must be something I need.
Hey! Isn't this a starter for a '68 Ford Fairlane? Wow! Thanks."
Rule #11: Men enjoy
danger. That's why they never cook -- but they will barbecue. Get him a
monster barbecue with a 100-pound propane tank. Tell him the gas line leaks.
"Oh the thrill! The challenge! Who wants a hamburger?"
Rule #12: Tickets to
a Patriots game are a smart gift. However, he will not appreciate tickets to
"A Retrospective of 19th Century Quilts." Everyone knows why.
Rule #13: Men love
chainsaws. Never, ever, buy a man you love a chainsaw. If you don't know why
-- please refer to Rule #8 and what happens when he gets a label maker.
Rule #14: It's hard
to beat a really good wheelbarrow or an aluminum extension ladder. Never buy a
real man a step ladder. It must be an extension ladder. No one knows why.
Rule #15: Rope. Men
love rope. It takes us back to our cowboy origins, or at least The Boy Scouts.
Nothing says love like a hundred feet of 3/8" manilla rope. No one knows
why.
Forwarded by Auntie Bev
1. The first German
serviceman killed in the war was killed by the Japanese (China, 1937), the
first American serviceman killed was killed by the Russians (Finland 1940),
the highest ranking American killed was Lt. Gen. Lesley McNair, killed by the
US Army Air Corps.
2. The youngest US
serviceman was 12 year old Calvin Graham, USN. He was wounded and given a
Dishonorable Discharge for lying about his age. (His benefits were later
restored by act of Congress)
3. At the time of
Pearl Harbor the top US Navy command was Called CINCUS (pronounced "sink
us"), the shoulder patch of the US Army's 45th. Infantry division was the
Swastika, and Hitler's private train was named "Amerika". All three
were soon changed for PR purposes.
4. More US servicemen
died in the Air Corps than the Marine Corps. While completing the required 30
missions your chance of being killed was 71%.
5. Generally speaking
there was no such thing as an average fighter pilot. You were either an ace or
a target. For instance Japanese ace Hiroyoshi Nishizawa shot down over 80
planes. He died while a passenger on a cargo plane.
6. It was a common
practice on fighter planes to load every 5th round with a tracer round to aid
in aiming. This was a mistake. Tracers had different ballistics so (at long
range) if your tracers were hitting the target 80% of your rounds were
missing. Worse yet tracers instantly told your enemy he was under fire and
from which direction. Worst of all was the practice of loading a string of
tracers at the end of the belt to tell you that you were out of ammo. This was
definitely not something you wanted to tell the enemy. Units that stopped
using tracers saw their success rate nearly double and their loss rate go
down.
7. When allied armies
reached the Rhine the first thing men did was pee in it. This was pretty
universal from the lowest private to Winston Churchill (who made a big show of
it) and Gen. Patton (who had himself photographed in the act).
8. German Me-264
bombers were capable of bombing New York City but it wasn't worth the effort.
9. German submarine
U-120 was sunk by a malfunctioning toilet.
10. Among the first
"Germans" captured at Normandy were several Koreans. They had been
forced to fight for the Japanese Army until they were captured by the Russians
and forced to fight for the Russian Army until they were captured by the
Germans and forced to fight for the German Army until they were captured by
the US Army.
11. Following a
massive naval bombardment 35, 000 US and Canadian troops stormed ashore at
Kiska. 21 troops were killed in the firefight. It would have been worse if
there had been any Japanese on the island.
BIZARRE MILITARY
MISHAPS:
Two U.S. Air Force
F-15s shoot down two U.S. Army helicopters on a diplomatic mission over Iraq,
mistaking them for hostile aircraft in the "no-fly zone, " killing
26 people. No one was found criminally responsible.
A "siesta"
ordered by Mexican General Antonio Lopez de Santa Ana to his troops during a
conflict between the Mexicans and Texans caused the infantry to be overtaken
in just 18 minutes. Fort Douaumont at Verdun in France was captured in 1916 by
a single German soldier after French General Chretien forgot to pass on orders
to defend the fort to the last man to his successor.
The Russians tried to
wreak havoc on German Panzer divisions during the WWII by strapping bombs to
the backs of dogs and teaching them to associate food with the underneath of
their enemies' tanks. Unfortunately, the dogs only associated food with their
own tanks and forced an entire Soviet division to retreat.
Japanese soldier
Hiroo Onodo refused to stop fighting long after WWII was over, claiming that
stories of the war's ending were mere propaganda. It wasn't until his
commanding officer flew out to the remote Pacific island where Onoda was holed
up and ordered him to lay down his arms that he finally complied.
Probably the most
famous mistake in U.S. military history occurred in the Civil War, when
Confederate Gen. Stonewall Jackson was mistakenly shot by one of his own
troops after the Confederate triumph at Chancellorsville.
Forwarded by Dick Haar
How Old would Grampa
be? The answer is at the bottom...
One evening a
grandson was talking to his grandfather about current events. The grandson
asked his grandfather what he thought about the shootings at schools, the
computer age,and just things in general.
The granddad replied,
"Well, let me think a minute ...I was born, before television,
penicillin, polio shots, frozen foods, Xerox, contact lenses, Frisbees and the
pill.
There was no radar,
credit cards, laser beams or ball-point pens. Man had not invented pantyhose,
air conditioners, dishwashers, clothes dryers, and the clothes were hung out
to dry in the fresh air and man hadn't yet walked on the moon.
Your grandmother and
I got married first-and then lived together. Every family had a father and a
mother, and every boy over 14 had a rifle that his dad taught him how to use
and respect. And they went hunting and fishing together.
Until I was 25, I
called every man older than I, 'Sir'-and after I turned 25, I still called
policemen and every man with a title, 'Sir.'
Sundays were set
aside for going to church as a family, helping those in need, and visiting
with family or neighbors.
We were before
gay-rights, computer-dating, dual careers, daycare centers, and group therapy.
Our lives were
governed by the Ten Commandments, good judgment, and common sense. We were
taught to know the difference between right and wrong and to stand up and take
responsibility for our actions.
Serving your country
was a privilege; living in this country was a bigger privilege. We thought
fast food was what people ate during Lent. Having a meaningful relationship
meant getting along with your cousins.
Draft dodgers were
people who closed their front doors when the evening breeze started.
Time-sharing meant
time the family spent together in the evenings and weekends-not purchasing
condominiums.
We never heard of FM
radios, tape decks, CDs, electric typewriters, yogurt, or guys wearing
earrings.
We listened to the
Big Bands, Jack Benny, and the President's speeches on our radios. And I don't
ever remember any kid blowing his brains out listening to Tommy Dorsey.
If you saw anything
with 'Made in Japan' on it, it was junk. The term 'making out' referred to how
you did on your school exam.
Pizza Hut,
McDonald's, and instant coffee were unheard of. We had 5 & 10-cent stores
where you could actually buy things for 5 and 10 cents. Ice cream cones, phone
calls, rides on a streetcar, and a Pepsi were all a nickel.
And if you didn't
want to splurge, you could spend your nickel on enough stamps to mail 1 letter
and 2 postcards.
You could buy a new
Chevy Coupe for $600 but who could afford one? Too bad, because gas was 11
cents a gallon.
In my day, 'grass'
was mowed, 'coke' was a cold drink, 'pot' was something your mother cooked in,
and 'rock music' was your grandmother's lullaby.
'Aids' were helpers
in the Principal's office, 'chip' meant a piece of wood, 'hardware' was found
in a hardware store, and 'software' wasn't even a word.
And we were the last
generation to actually believe that a lady needed a husband to have a baby. No
wonder people call us "old and confused" and say there is a
generation gap.
...and how old do you
think I am -???
...This man would be
only 59 years old
Goodbye Art,
Superman can do it all on his own. Bob
Jensen receives a lot of help from friends and strangers. You were one of those
friends that both helped and challenged me Art. Best of luck to you in
retirement. May you find peace and happiness as the fruits of your years of
dedicated labor.
Please do not forget us while you are
listening to waves crashing on distant beaches. You might even send b-mail
(i.e., messages in bottles).
Bob
-----Original
Message-----
From: Art Joy [mailto:Joy_Arthur@COLSTATE.EDU]
Sent: Tuesday, November 27, 2001 1:19 PM
To: AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: Retirement
Dear AECM Confreres,
I will be retiring
from academe in just a few short weeks (at the end of the current semester.) I
have been a relatively inactive lurker on the AECM listserv for the past coule
of years, but, as I retire, I want to say thanks to Barry for providing the
list, to all of you who have contributed to the list and helped shed light on
my many areas of ignorance, and a special thanks to Bob Jensen for
demonstrating that Superman is not just a character in a comic book.
Best wishes to all of
you
Art Joy
Arthur C Joy
Associate Professor of Accounting Abbott Turner College of Business Columbus
State University Columbus, Georgia 31907-5645 706-562-1659; Fax 706-568-2184
email: joy_arthur@colstate.edu
And
that's the way it was on December 3, 2001 with a little help from my friends.
In
March 2000, Forbes named AccountantsWorld.com as the Best Website on the
Web --- http://accountantsworld.com/.
Some top accountancy links --- http://accountantsworld.com/category.asp?id=Accounting
For
accounting news, I prefer AccountingWeb at http://www.accountingweb.com/
Another
leading accounting site is AccountingEducation.com at http://www.accountingeducation.com/
Paul
Pacter maintains the best international accounting standards and news Website at
http://www.iasplus.com/
How
stuff works --- http://www.howstuffworks.com/
Bob
Jensen's video helpers for MS Excel, MS Access, and other helper videos are at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/
Accompanying documentation can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm
and http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
Professor
Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134 Email: rjensen@trinity.edu


November
23, 2001
Quotes of the Week
Long-time user of
"New Bookmarks" and admirer of your work and all you do for our
profession. It is apparent to me you never teach a class, never take a break for
lunch, have no family, and you sleep in your office. Otherwise, how could you
possibly get it all done!
Dr. Tommie Singleton, Chair Department of Accounting & Business Law,
University of North Alabama
(You've got that right Tommie!)
"The world
of auditing and accounting appears to be in crisis, driven in part by issues
such as intangibles, the complexity of derivatives and trading, and financial
engineering."
Paul Volcker, the former Federal Reserve Board chairman. (See Below.)
Professors are
people who talk in other peoples' sleep.
Forwarded by Phil Cooley
"God tells
me how the music should sound, but you stand in the way." --
Arturo Toscanini to a trumpet player
"Rossini
would have been a great composer if his teacher had spanked him enough on his
backside."
Ludwig van Beethoven
"No operatic
star has yet died soon enough for me."
Sir Thomas Beecham
"Vocation is
not a goal ... that is our birthright gift"
This is not an exact quote, but it is a paraphrasing of the quotation
given by Chaplain Nickle in the November 18 sermon in Parker Chapel. The
quotation is from Let Your Life Speak: Listening for the Voice of Vocation
by Parker J. Palmer --- http://www.wiley.com/Corporate/Website/Objects/Products/0,9049,221764,00.html
Dear Bob,
It was good to see you and Erika at worship yesterday! The Parker Palmer that
I quoted was: "Today I understand vocation quite differently -- not as a
goal to be achieved but as a gift to be received. Discovering vocation does
not mean scrambling toward some prize just beyond my reach but accepting the
treasure of true self I already possess. Vocation does not come from a voice
"out there" calling me to become something I am not. It comes from a
voice "in here" calling me to be the person I was born to be, to
fulfill the original selfhood given me at birth by God." from p.10 of Let
Your Life Speak: Listening for the Voice of Vocation, San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass, 2000.
Chaplain Stephen Nickle
(See below for more references of
Parker Palmer.)
I Am
Impressed With the Technology of This New AICPA Online Video
Click on the above link to view a thirty-minute archived webcast on
the AICPA's newly adopted rules.
After you view this webcast, we invite you to
participate on December 4 at 1 p.m. (Eastern Standard Time) in a live,
interactive web conference. During that web conference, a panel
consisting of representatives from the AICPA Professional Ethics
Executive Committee, the AICPA Ethics and State Societies and
Regulatory Affairs divisions and NASBA will address your questions
about the rules.
Please provide us your questions via e-mail
after viewing the archived
webcast. We will respond to those questions during the live
webcast on December 4.
To view/register for the live webcast on
December 4, click the "live webcast" button located on the AICPA
Video Player.
Added Note from Bob Jensen:
The FASB issued a video (the old
fashioned kind that must be played on a VCR) that focuses on the supreme
importance of independence in the CPA profession.
FASB 40-Minute Video, Financially
Correct (Quality of Earnings)
The price is $15.
|
In the midst of recent auditing scandals such as
the recent Enron's auditing scandal, independence is becoming more critical to
the survival of public accountancy's certified audits. To put the problem
more in perspective, see http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
Updates on Enron's Creative
Accounting Scandal --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
Big Five firm Andersen is in the thick
of a controversy involving a 20% overstatement in Enron's net earnings and
financial statements dating back to 1997 that will have to be restated. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/63352
One of the main
causes for the restatements of financial reports that will be required of
Enron relates to transactions in which Enron issued shares of its own stock in
exchange for notes receivable. The notes were recorded as assets on the
company books, and the stock was recorded as equity. However, Lynn Turner,
former SEC chief accountant, points out, "It is basic accounting that you
don't record equity until you get cash, and a note doesn't count as cash. The
question that raises is: How did both partners and the manager on this audit
miss this simple Accounting 101 rule?"
In addition, Enron
has acknowledged overstating its income in the past four years of financial
statements to the tune of $586 million, or 20%. The misstatements reportedly
result from "audit adjustments and reclassifications" that were
proposed by auditors but were determined to be "immaterial."
There is a chance
that such immaterialities will be determined to be unlawful. An SEC accounting
bulletin states that certain adjustments that might fall beneath a materiality
threshold aren't necessarily material if such misstatements, when combined
with other misstatements, render "the financial statements taken as a
whole to be materially misleading."
The world of
auditing and accounting appears to be in crisis, driven in part by issues such
as intangibles, the complexity of derivatives and trading, and financial
engineering."
Paul Volcker, the former Federal Reserve Board chairman. (See
Below.)
Independence and competence issues are
even more troublesome at a time when the CPA profession is seeking to expand (or
expend?) the profession into assurance services. I have added a section
below on new assurance service thrusts of the CPA profession.
A Great Summary of
Web Instruction Resources
Sharon
Gray, Instructional Technologist --- http://inst.augie.edu/%7Egray/
Augustana College, 2001 Summit Ave., Sioux Falls, SD
57197
gray@inst.augie.edu,
605-274-4907
For a GREAT comprehensive listing of
Web Instruction Resources, go to http://inst.augie.edu/~gray/WBI.html
Related Sites of Possible Interest
See the history of course authoring
technologies at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/290wp/290wp.htm
Advice to New Faculty and Bob Jensen's
Resource Summary can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/newfaculty.htm
Bob Jensen's Helpers for Educators at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm
Bob Jensen's Educator Helper Bookmarks
at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob.htm
Subject Index
to Literature on Electronic Sources of Information http://library.usask.ca/~dworacze/SUBJIN_A.HTM
Electronic Sources of
Information: A Bibliography http://library.usask.ca/~dworacze/BIBLIO.HTM
A new book on "The Invisible
Web" --- http://www.invisible-web.net/
Bob Jensen's threads of the invisible web are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm
Time Magazine's Choices for the Best
Inventions for the Year 2001 (which isn't even over yet)
--- http://www.time.com/time/2001/inventions/
I added a Special Section
to the document entitled "Opportunities of E-Business Assurance:
Risks in Assuring Risk" at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/assurance.htm
Parts of the Special
Section follow in this Edition of New Bookmarks.
My other electronic
Business links are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce.htm
Assurance
Services Opportunities and Risks
The AICPA's Assurance Services Website is at http://www.aicpa.org/assurance/index.htm
E-COMMERCE AND AUDITING FAIR VALUES SUBJECTS OF NEW INTERNATIONAL GUIDANCE
The International Federation of Accountants (IFAC) invites comments on two new
exposure drafts (EDs): Auditing Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures and
Electronic Commerce: Using the Internet or Other Public Networks - Effect on the
Audit of Financial Statements. Comments on both EDs, developed by IFAC's
International Auditing Practices Committee (IAPC), are due by January 15, 2002.
See http://accountingeducation.com/news/news2213.html
The IFAC link is at http://www.ifac.org/Guidance/EXD-Download.tmpl?PubID=1003772692151
The purpose of this International Standard on Auditing (ISA) is to
establish standards and provide guidance on auditing fair value measurements
and disclosures contained in financial statements. In particular, this ISA
addresses audit considerations relating to the valuation, measurement,
presentation and disclosure for material assets, liabilities and specific
components of equity presented or disclosed at fair value in financial
statements. Fair value measurements of assets, liabilities and components of
equity may arise from both the initial recording of transactions and later
changes in value.
Financial Statement
Assurance in an E-Business Environment
-
Risks
uniquely present in an e-business environment.
-
Networked
transactions
-
Changing
technologies that can tank a business overnight
-
Soft
assets dominate hard assets
-
Ever-evolving
series of mergers and acquisitions
-
Short
and high-risk product life cycles
-
Young
and inexperienced labor force
-
Success
or failure may ride on one person or a few key people
-
Lack
of management focus on cost control
-
Successions
of losses do not necessarily impair a going concern (provided
investors are willing to keep infusing the business with cash)
-
Substantive
testing in audits may not be practical or feasible (see Statement on
Auditing Standards [SAS] 80, Amendment to SAS 31, Evidential Matter)
|
New Forms of Assurance to
Facilitate E-Business
AICPA formed the
Special Committee on Assurance Services (SCAS) in 1994. After a
careful analysis of demographic and other trends, this committee
concluded the following:
Your
marketplace is changing. Multibillion-dollar markets for new CPA
services are being created. Investors, creditors, and business
managers are swamped with information, yet frustrated about not having
the information they need and uncertain about the relevance and
reliability of what they use. CPA firms of all sizes--from small
practitioners to very large firms--can help these decision makers by
delivering new assurance services. (AICPA Web site,
"Assurance Services," www.aicpa.org).
The Elliott
Committee (named after its chair, Robert K. Elliott) identified six new
service areas considered to have high potential for revenue growth for
assurance providers:
-
Risk
Assessment
-
Business
Performance Measurement
-
Information
Systems Reliability
-
Electronic
Commerce
-
Health Care
Performance Measurement
-
ElderCare
The work of the Elliott
Committee was followed by the appointment of the ongoing Assurance
Services Executive Committee, chaired by Ronald Cohen. This
committee is charged with the ongoing development of new assurance
services and the provision of guidance to practicing CPAs on
implementing the services developed.
- Information Systems
Reliability Assurance
- Electronic Commerce
Assurance.
Business-To-Consumer
Assurance
- CPA/CA WebTrust (Joint
Venture of AICPA and CICA)
-
Business
Practices and Disclosure--The entity discloses its
business and information privacy practices for e-business
transactions and executes transactions in accordance with its
disclosed practices.
-
Transaction
Integrity--The entity maintains effective controls to
provide reasonable assurance that customers' transactions using
e-business are completed and billed as agreed.
-
Information
Protection and Privacy--The entity maintains effective
controls to provide reasonable assurance that private customer
information obtained as a result of e-business is protected from
uses not related to the entity's business.
- Proprietary E-Business
Audits
- Privacy Audits
Business-to-Business
Assurance
- Assurances against service
disruptions and product shipments
- CPA/CA SysTrust (Joint
Venture of AICPA and CICA)
-
Availability--The
system is available during times specified by the entity.
-
Security--Adequate
protection is provided against unwanted logical or physical
entrance into the system.
-
Integrity--Processes
within the system are executed in a complete, accurate, timely
and authorized manner.
-
Maintainability--Updates
(upgrades) to the system can be performed when needed without
disabling the other three principles.
- SAS 70 Reviews of Service
Organizations (extended to B2B Risks)
SAS 70, Reports
on the Processing of Transactions by Service Organizations, was
issued to provide assistance in the auditing of entities that obtain
either or both of the following services from an external third party
entity.
-
Internal
Controls Risk
-
The
financial statement assertions that are either directly or
indirectly affected by the service organization's internal
control policies and procedures.
-
The
extent to which the service organization's policies and
procedures interact with the user organization's internal
control structure
-
The
degree of standardization of the services provided by the
third-party to individual clients. In the case of highly
standardized services, the service auditor may be best suited
to provide assurance: however, when the third-party offers
many customized services, the third-party auditor may be
unable to provide sufficient assurance regarding a specific
client.
SAS 70 provides
for two reports the service auditor can provide to the user auditor
concerning the policies and procedures of the service organization:
Other Potential New Services
to Facilitate E-Business
-
Value-Added
Network (VAN) Service Provider Assurance
-
Evaluation
of Electronic Commerce Software Packages
-
Trusted Key
and Signature Provider Assurance
-
Criteria
Establishment
-
Counseling
Services
The AICPA's Assurance Services Website is at http://www.aicpa.org/assurance/index.htm |
Major Constraints and
Considerations
Competencies
Required
Competition
Jeopardy to Public
Accountancy's Image of Independence and Professionalism
Legal Risks |
The AICPA's Assurance Services Website is at http://www.aicpa.org/assurance/index.htm
A Special
Section on Computer and Networking Security
The
FBI's Internet Fraud and Complaint Center (IFCC FBI) --- Report Internet frauds
and crimes here.
To thwart fraud on the Internet and terror in general, check in and/or report to
http://www1.ifccfbi.gov/index.asp
National
Infrastructure Protection Center (NIPC) --- Report infrastructure security
incidents here.
Located in the FBI's headquarters building in Washington, D.C., the NIPC brings
together representatives from U.S. government agencies, state and local
governments, and the private sector in a partnership to protect our nation's
critical infrastructures.
http://www.nipc.gov/
Computer
Emergency Response Team (CERT) --- Report computer invasions and viruses here.
The CERT® Coordination Center (CERT/CC) is a center of Internet security
expertise, at the Software Engineering Institute, a federally funded research
and development center operated by Carnegie Mellon University. We study Internet
security vulnerabilities, handle computer security incidents, publish security
alerts, research long-term changes in networked systems, and develop information
and training to help you improve security at your site. http://www.cert.org/
Cookies = Applets that enable a web site to
collect information about each user for later reference (as in finding cookies
in the cookie jar). Web Browsers like Netscape Navigator set aside a small
amount of space on the user's hard drive to record detected preferences.
Cookies perform storage on the client side that might otherwise have to be
stored in a generic-state or database server on the server side. Cookies can be
used to collect information for consumer profile databases. Browsers can be set
to refuse cookies.
Many times when you browse a website, your browser checks to see if you have
any pre-defined preferences (cookie) for that server if you do it sends the
cookie to the server along with the request for a web page. Sometimes cookies
are used to collect items of an order as the user places things in a shopping
cart and has not yet submitted the full order. A cookie allows WWW customers to
fill their orders (shopping carts) and then be billed based upon the cookie
payment information. Cookies retain information about a users browsing patterns
at a web site. This creates all sorts of privacy risks since information
obtained from cookies by vendors or any persons who put cookies on your computer
might be disclosed in ways that are harmful to you. Browsers will let you
refuse cookies with a set up that warns you when someone is about to deliver a
cookie, but this really disrupts Web surfing and may block you from gaining
access to may sites. It is probably better to accept cookies for a current
session and then dispose of unwanted cookies as soon as possible so that cookie
senders do not obtain repeated access to your private information.
Microsoft Corporation has added the following utilities to the Internet Explorer
(IE) browser according to http://www.cnn.com/2000/TECH/computing/07/21/ms.cookies.idg/
The Internet Explorer 5.5 changes include the
following:
• Notifications that Microsoft said will help users
differentiate between first- and third-party cookies, plus automatic prompts
that inform users anytime a third-party cookie is being offered by a Web site.
• A "delete all cookies" control button
that has been added to the browser's main "Internet options" page to
make it easier for users to get rid of cookies.
• New topics that have been added to Internet
Explorer's help menu to better answer questions about cookies and their
management.
Instruction for cookies control using Internet Explorer --- http://www.scholastic.com/cookies.htm
To accept cookies if you are using a PC running Windows...
Internet Explorer 5 1. Click Tools, and then click Internet Options.
2. Click the Security tab.
3. Click the Internet zone.
4. Select a security level other than High.
-or-
Click Custom Level, scroll to the Cookies section, and then click Enable
for both cookie options.
5. Click on Apply.
6. Click on OK.
Other nations, notably in Europe, have placed more severe restrictions on the
use of cookies. See http://www.cnn.com/2000/TECH/computing/07/21/eu.spam.idg/index.html
For more on cookies, see the following:
Question 1:
How can you send email anonymously?
Answer 1:
Simply set up an email account under a fictitious name. For example, you
can send email under multiple fictitious names from the Yahoo email server at http://www.yahoo.com/
(Click on 'Mail" in the row "Connect")
Question 2:
How can you be totally anonymous on the Web such that cookie monsters do not
track your Web navigation at your site and bad guys cannot track your surfing
habits or get at your personal information such as medical records, name, mail
address, phone number, email address, etc.? (You can read about cookie
monsters at
Answer 2:
There is probably no way to be 100% safe unless you use someone else's computer
without them knowing you are using that computer on the Web. In most
instances, the owner of the computer (a university, a public library, an
employer, etc.) will know who is using the computer, but cookie monsters and bad
guys on the Web won't have an easy time finding out who you are without having
the powers of the police.
About the safest way to remain anonymous as a Web surfer is to sign up for
Privada from your IP Internet provider that obtain your line connection from for
purposes of connecting to the Web. In most instances, surfers pay a
monthly fee that will increase by about $5.00 per month for the Pivada service
(if the IP provider has Privada or some similar service). To read more
about Privada, go to http://industry.java.sun.com/solutions/company/summary/0,2353,4514,00.html
Privada Control (Application)
Primary Market Target: Utilities&Services
Secondary Market Target: Financial Services
Description Used with Privada Network, PrivadaControl
provides the consumer component of Privada's services, and is distributed to
end-users by network service providers. Users create an online identity that
cannot be linked to their real-world identity, allowing them to browse the
Internet with the level of privacy they choose while still reaping the
benefits of personalized content. PrivadaControl is built entirely in the
Java(TM) programming language and runs completely in a Java Virtual Machine.
For discussion of other forms of protection, see Privacy
in eCommerce.
Question 3:
Where can you find great links to security matters in computing?
Answer 3:
Try Yahoo's links at http://dir.yahoo.com/Computers_and_Internet/Internet/World_Wide_Web/Security_and_Encryption/
- DomiLock
- online Lotus Domino security scanner.
- DShield
- provides a platform for users of firewalls to share intrusion
information.
- IDzap.com
- offers secure and anonymous web browsing products.
- KeyNote
Trust Management System - unified approach to specifying and
interpreting security policies, credentials, and relationships, allowing
direct authorization of security-critical actions.
- Netscape
Security (2)
- Publius
Censorship Resistant Publishing System - Web publishing system that is
highly resistant to censorship and provides publishers with a high degree
of anonymity, developed by researchers at AT&T Labs.
- Secure
Sockets Layer (SSL) Protocol (11)
- Shields
Up - Internet connection security analysis utility for Windows users.
- Shockwave
Security Alert - details potential security holes created by Shockwave
and solutions for them.
- Trust
Management on the World Wide Web - paper describing the philosophy for
codifying, analyzing, and managing trust decisions by Rohit Khare and Adam
Rifkin.
- Twenty
Most Critical Internet Security Vulnerabilities, The - based on
consensus from security experts at the SANS Institute, grouped into three
categories: general , Windows, and Unix vulnerabilities.
- FAQ
- World Wide Web Security
Question 4:
It is extremely dangerous to open email attachments. However, is it
dangerous to open an email message without opening any attachments?
Answer 4:
Generally the answer is no. However, it is a bit more complicated than
this. The following is stated at http://www.w3.org/Security/Faq/wwwsf2.html#CLT-Q11
For many years the
answer to this question was a resounding no and that is largely the
case now as well. There are a series of hoax chain letters that are seemingly
endlessly circulating around the globe. A typical letter is the "Good
Times" hoax. It will warn you that if you see an e-mail with a subject
line that contains the phrase "Good Times" you should delete it
immediately because the very fact of opening it will activate a virus that
will do damage to your hard disk. The letter will encourage you to send this
warning to your friends.
The "Good
Times" hoax, and many like it, are simply not true. However there are
enough people who believe these hoaxes that the messages are endlessly
forwarded and reforwarded. If you get a letter like this one, simply delete
it. Do not forward it to your friends, and please do not forward it to any
mailing lists. If you are uncertain whether the letter is a hoax, refer it to
your system administrator or network security officer.
Just to make life
complicated, however, there are some cases in which the simple act of opening
an e-mail message can damage your system. The newer generation of
e-mail readers, including the one built into Netscape Communicator, Microsoft
Outlook Express, and Qualcomm Eudora all allow e-mail attachments to contain
"active content" such as ActiveX controls or JavaScript programs. As
explained in the JavaScript and in the ActiveX
sections, active content provides a variety of backdoors that can
violate your privacy or perhaps inflict more serious harm. Until the various
problems are shaken out of JavaScript and ActiveX, enclosures that might
contain active content should be opened cautiously. This includes HTML pages
and links to HTML pages. Disabling JavaScript and ActiveX will immunize you to
potential problems.
In addition, there
are other cases where e-mail messages can be harmful to your health. In the
summer of 1998, a number of programming blunders were discovered in e-mail
readers from Qualcomm, Netscape and Microsoft. These blunders (which involved
overflowing static buffers) allowed a carefully crafted e-mail message to
crash your computer or damage its contents. No actual cases of damage arising
from these holes has been described, but if you are cautious you should
upgrade to a fixed version of your e-mail reader. More details can be found at
the vendors' security pages:
- Microsoft
- http://www.microsoft.com/security/bulletins/
- Netscape
- http://www.netscape.com/products/security/
- Qualcomm
- http://eudora.qualcomm.com/security.html
Finally, don't forget
that some documents do carry viruses. For example, Microsoft Word, Excel and
PowerPoint all support macro languages that have been used to write viruses.
Naturally enough, if you use any of these programs and receive an e-mail
message that contains one of these documents as an enclosure, your system may
be infected when you open that enclosure. An up-to-date virus checking program
will usually catch these viruses before they can attack. Some virus checkers
that recognize macro viruses include:
- McAfee VirusScan
- http://www.mcafee.com/
- Symantec AntiVirus
- http://www.symantec.com/
- Norton AntiVirus
- http://www.symantec.com/
- Virex
- http://www.datawatch.com/virex.shtml
- IBM AntiVirus
- http://www.av.ibm.com/
- Dr. Solomon's
Anti-Virus
- http://www.drsolomon.com/
Question 5:
How can I safely open up email attachments?
Answer 5:
One way is to save the attachment to a floppy disk or some other storage disk
that can be accessed by more than one of your computers. The open the
attachment in the computer that you least care about if there is a virus
infection. Even that computer, however, should have the latest updated
version of one of the virus detection programs listed above.
You can avoid macro virus damage (which is the most
common type of danger when opening email attachments) by installing QuickView
Plus from JASC. The good news is that you are totally safe from macro
viruses. The bad news is that QuickView Plus does not provide full
functionality apart from displaying the text and graphics. For example,
QuickView Plus will not run the macros that may be an integral part of an Excel
program. To read more about QuickView Plus, go to http://www.jasc.com/
Especially
note the Stein and Stewart FAQ site at http://www.w3.org/Security/Faq/www-security-faq.html
CONTENTS
- Introduction
- What's
New?
Recent
versions of the FAQ.
- Version 3.0.1, June
22, 2001
- Added information
on the MIME Headers, cache content flaw, and certificate
validation in Internet
Explorer 5.5.
- Added information
on the email tapping Netscape
6.
- Added information
on the Brown Orifice vulnerability in Netscape
4.0-4.74.
- Added new section
on Active Content Protection
- Version 2.0.1, March
24, 2000
|
- General
Questions
- Q1
What's to worry about?
- Q2
Exactly what security risks are we talking
about?
- Q3
Are some Web servers and operating systems
more secure than others?
- Q4
Are some Web server software programs more
secure than others?
- Q5
Are CGI scripts insecure?
- Q6
Are server-side includes insecure?
- Q7
What general security precautions should I
take?
- Q8
Where can I learn more about network
security?
- Client
Side Security
- Q1
How do I turn off the "You are submitting the contents of a form
insecurely" message in Netscape? Should I worry about it?
- Q2
How secure is the encryption used by SSL?
- Q3
When I try to view a secure page, the browser complains that the site
certificate doesn't match the server and asks me if I wish to
continue. Should I?
- Q4
When I try to view a secure page, the browser complains that it
doesn't recognize the authority that signed its certificate and asks
me if I want to continue. Should I?
- Q5
How private are my requests for Web
documents?
- Q6
What's the difference between Java and
JavaScript?
- Q7
Are there any known security holes in Java?
- Q8
Are there any known security holes in
JavaScript?
- Q9
What is ActiveX? Does it pose any risks?
- Q10
Do "Cookies" Pose any Security
Risks?
- Q11
I hear there's an e-mail message making the
rounds that can trash my hard disk when I open it. Is this true?
- Q12
Can one Web site hijack another's content?
- Q13
Can my web browser reveal my LAN login name and password?
- Q14
Are there any known problems with Microsoft Internet Explorer?
- Q15
Are there any known problems with Netscape Communicator?
- Q16
Are there any known problems with Lynx for Unix?
- Q17
Someone suggested I configure /bin/csh as a viewer for documents of
type application/x-csh. Is this a good idea?
- Q18
Is there anything else I should keep in mind regarding external
viewers?
- Server
Side Security
- General
- Q1
How do I set the file permissions of my server and document roots?
- Q2
I'm running a server that provides a whole bunch of optional
features. Are any of them security risks?
- Q3
I heard that running the server as "root" is a bad idea.
Is this true?
- Q4
I want to share the same document tree between my ftp and Web
servers. Is there any problem with this idea?
- Q5
Can I make my site completely safe by running the server in a
"chroot" environment?
- Q6
My local network runs behind a firewall. How can I use it to
increase my Web site's security?
- Q7
My local network runs behind a firewall. How can I get around it
to give the rest of the world access to the Web server?
- Q8
How can I detect if my site's been broken into?
- Windows NT Servers
- Q9
Are there any known problems with the Netscape Servers?
- Q10
Are there any known problems with the WebSite Server?
- Q11
Are there any known problems with Purveyor?
- Q12
Are there any known problems with Microsoft IIS?
- Q13Are
there any known security problems with Sun Microsystem's
JavaWebServer?
- Q14Are
there any known security problems with the MetaInfo MetaWeb
Server?
- Unix Servers
- Q15
Are there any known problems with NCSA httpd?
- Q16
Are there any known problems with Apache httpd?
- Q17
Are there any known problems with the Netscape Servers?
- Q18
Are there any known problems with the Lotus Domino Go Server?
- Q19
Are there any known problems with the WN Server?
- Macintosh Servers
- Q20
Are there any known problems with WebStar?
- Q21
Are there any known problems with MacHTTP?
- Q22
Are there any known problems with Quid Pro Quo?
- Other Servers
- Q23
Are there any known problems with Novell WebServer?
- Server Logs and Privacy
- Q24
What information do readers reveal that
they might want to keep private?
- Q25
Do I need to respect my readers' privacy?
- Q26
How do I avoid collecting too much information?
- Q27
How do I protect my readers' privacy?
- CGI
Scripts
- General
- Q1
What's the problem with CGI scripts?
- Q2
Is it better to store scripts in the cgi-bin directory or to
identify them using the .cgi extension?
- Q3
Are compiled languages such as C safer than interpreted languages
like Perl and shell scripts?
- Q4
I found a great CGI script on the Web and I want to install it.
How can I tell if it's safe?
- Q5
What CGI scripts are known to contain security holes?
- Language Independent Issues
- Q6
I'm developing custom CGI scripts. What unsafe practices should I
avoid?
- Q7
But if I avoid eval(), exec(), popen() and system(), how can I
create an interface to my database/search engine/graphics package?
- Q8
Is it safe to rely on the PATH environment variable to locate
external programs?
- Q9
I hear there's a package called cgiwrap that makes CGI scripts
safe?
- Q10
People can only use scripts if they're accessed from a form that
lives on my local system, right?
- Q11
Can people see or change the values in "hidden" form
variables?
- Q12
Is using the "POST" method for submitting forms more
private than "GET"?
- Q13
Where can I learn more about safe CGI scripting?
- Safe Scripting in Perl
- Q14
How do I avoid passing user variables through a shell when calling
exec() and system()?
- Q15
What are Perl taint checks? How do I turn them on?
- Q16
OK, I turned on taint checks like you said. Now my script dies
with the message: "Insecure path at line XX" every
time I try to run it!
- Q17
How do I "untaint" a variable?
- Q18
I'm removing shell metacharacters from the variable, but Perl
still thinks it's tainted!
- Q19
Is it true that the pattern matching operation $foo=~/$user_variable/
is unsafe?
- Q20
My CGI script needs more privileges than it's getting as user
"nobody". How do I run a Perl script as suid?
- Protecting
Confidential Documents at Your Site
- Q1
What types of access restrictions are available?
- Q2
How safe is restriction by IP address or domain name?
- Q3
How safe is restriction by user name and
password?
- Q4
What is user verification?
- Q5
How do I restrict access to documents by the IP address or domain name
of the remote browser?
- Q6
How do I add new users and passwords?
- Q7
Isn't there a CGI script to allow users to change their passwords
online?
- Q8
Using .htaccess to control access in individual directories
is so convenient, why should I use access.conf?
- Q9
How does encryption work?
- Q10
What are: SSL, SHTTP, Shen?
- Q11
Are there any "freeware" secure servers?
- Q12
Can I use Personal Certificates to Control Server Access?
- Q13
How do I accept credit card orders over the Web?
- Q14
What are: CyberCash, SET, Open Market?
- Denial
of Service Attacks
- Overview
- Q1
What is a Denial of Service attack?
- Q2
What is a Distributed Denial of Service
attack?
- Q3
How is a DDoS executed against a website?
- Q4
Is there a quick and easy way to secure
against a DDoS attack?
- Q5
Can the U.S. Government make a difference?
- Step-by-Step
- Q6
How do I check my servers to see if they are active DDoS hosts?
- Q7
What should I do if I find a DDoS host program on my server?
- Q8
How can I prevent my servers from being
used as DDoS hosts in the future?
- Q9
How can I prevent my personal computer from being used as a DDoS
host?
- Q10
What is a "smurf attack" and how do I defend against it?
- Q11
What is "trinoo" and how do I defend against it?
- Q12
What are "Tribal Flood Network" and "TFN2K"
and how do I defend against them?
- Q13
What is "stacheldraht" and how do I defend against it?
- Q14
How should I configure my routers, firewalls, and intrusion
detection systems against DDoS attacks?
- Bibliography
Corrections and
Updates
We welcome bug
reports, updates, reports about broken links, comments and outright
disagreements. Please send your comments to lstein@cshl.org
and/or jns@digitalisland.net.
Please make sure that you are referring to the most recent version of the
FAQ (maintained at http://www.w3.org/Security/Faq/);
someone else might have caught the problem before you.
Please understand
that we maintain the FAQ on a purely voluntary basis, and that we may fall
behind on making updates when other responsibilities intrude. You can help
us out by making an attempt to identify replacement links when reporting a
broken one, and by suggesting appropriate rewording when you have found an
error in the text. Suggestions for new questions and answers are welcomed,
particularly if you are willing to contribute the text yourself.
What are the
weapons of "information warfare?"
See at http://www.student.seas.gwu.edu/~reto/infowar/info-war.html
Also see denial of service attacks at http://www.w3.org/Security/Faq/wwwsf6.html
After four years
of haggling over the language, several countries including the United States
will sign a cybercrime treaty --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,48556,00.html
6:57 a.m. Nov. 21, 2001 PST
BUDAPEST -- A European convention to
be signed Friday will unite countries in the fight against computer criminals,
who have moved on from "innocent" hacking to fraud, embezzlement and
life-threatening felonies.
Interior ministers and law
enforcement officials from Europe, South Africa, Canada, the United States and
Japan will sign the milestone cybercrime convention, which has taken four
years to draft, in the Hungarian capital.
"Realistically, we can expect
some 30 countries to sign the convention," a Council of Europe official
told Reuters. "And this is a major achievement, given that many
conventions are signed by 10 to 20 countries at best."
The official said many people still
see computer hacking and other electronic crimes as mainly a moral issue,
without realizing the associated material damage and risk to life.
"There was a recent case when
someone took control of the computer system at a small U.S. airport and
switched off the landing lights," the official said. "This could
have killed many people."
Related
Wired Links:

Liberte,
Egalite ... E-Security?
Sep. 27, 2001
Congress
Covets Copyright Cops
July 28, 2001
Go
Ahead, Make Ashcroft's Day
July 23, 2001
Online
Crime a Tough Collar
July 11, 2001
Most
Hacking Hides Real Threats
July 3, 2001
U.S.'s
Defenseless Department
May 23, 2001
Brit
Cops Tackle E-Thievery
April 19, 2001
Complaints
involving the Internet crack the top 10 for the first time in a survey conducted
by two major consumer advocacy groups --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,48520,00.html
Associated Press 2:35 p.m. Nov. 19,
2001 PST
WASHINGTON --
Internet shopping and services have become a leading source of consumer
complaints, joining grievances about auto repair and telemarketing, a survey
finds.
Problems with auto
sales and household goods shared the top spot in the annual list of consumer
complaints released Monday by the National Association of Consumer Agency
Administrators and the Consumer Federation of America. Those categories ranked
second and third, respectively, in 1999 and have been in the top five since
1997
Consumer complaints
involving the Internet broke into the top 10 for the first time, sharing
eighth place with grievances about mail order shopping, telemarketing and
problems between landlords and tenants.
The most common
Internet complaints involved online purchases and auctions, according to
reports from 45 federal, state and local consumer agencies who participated in
the survey. The third most common type of Internet complaint involved service
providers.
"People don't
always get what they order over the Internet and sometimes they don't get
anything at all," said Wendy Weinberg, executive director of the NACAA.
"While there are many benefits to shopping over the Internet, consumers
need to be aware of the risks."
She recommended that
consumers use credit cards when shopping online, keep records of all
transactions and vary passwords among different websites.
The number of
Internet-related complaints has been surging for the last two years, Weinberg
said.
During the 1999
holiday season, many Internet sellers claimed they could ship extremely
quickly, but some failed to meet their promises. The Federal Trade Commission
fined companies more than $1.5 million in civil penalties.
The situation
improved last year, but the FTC said Monday it had sent warning letters to
more than 70 Internet retailers reminding them to live up to their claims.
"There's a lot
more consumers being impacted because there are simply more people shopping
online," said Harris Miller, president of the Information Technology
Association of America, a trade group. He said industry has to work to educate
consumers about Internet shopping.
"There are some
bad actors out there who prey on consumers and want to take advantage of the
excitement of buying online," Miller said. "Consumers have to be
smarter and have to go with reputable websites."
The categories
generating the most complaints in 2000 were auto sales and household goods,
which includes appliances, furniture, electronics and other retail items.
Complaints about
household goods involved defective merchandise, deceptive advertising and
failure to honor warranties or provide refunds.
Many of the
complaints with auto sales involved financing deals. Some consumers complained
they would take home a car with a good financing rate only to later get a call
from the dealer saying they have to return the car because they didn't qualify
for the rate.
The category of home
improvement services fell from first place on the list in 1999 to third, but
the survey ranked it as the type of business most likely to fail and reopen
under another name. Furniture stores and health studios were also types of
companies most likely to go out of business.
"Consumers need
to check out the company before they make any payments to business in these
industries," Weinberg said. "Consumers can lose large amounts of
money if a company that they are doing business with closes
See also:
Holiday
E-Sales Prospects Not Bad
Net
Shoppers Still Complaining
Ads
Stay Home for Holidays
There's no biz like E-Biz
Sleighbells &
Whistles: More tidings for the season
The Holidays at Lycos

One of the most significant and
controversial professional practice areas where Bob Elliott led accounting
profession into its new Song of SysTrust. I don't know if all accountants
have noticed the monumental and highly controversial change in attestation
services being proposed by the AICPA and the CICA for the public accounting
profession. Most certainly the lyrics are not familiar to non-accountants
other than attorneys who, while dancing in their briefs, have difficulty
containing their enthusiasm for this new Anthem of the Auditors. This
is the first major shift of the accounting profession into the attestation of
complete information services. Financial audits may eventually be but
a small part of the total attestation and assurance service symphony of
services. The proposed new "accounting"-firm service is called
SysTrust at http://www.aicpa.org/assurance/systrust/index.htm
.
Probably the best summary of SysTrust to date
is "Reporting on Systems Reliability," by Efrim Boritz, Erin
Mackler, and Doug McPhie in the Journal of Accountancy, November 1999,
pp. 75-87. The online version is at http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/nov1999/boritz.html.
(It might be noted that both Boritz and McPhie are from Canada --- SysTrust is a
joint venture with the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants and the AICPA
in the U.S.)
How can you protect confidential
documents at your Website?
Answer: See http://www.w3.org/Security/Faq/wwwsf5.html#Q14
Privacy in
eCommerce
For a brief period, Ziff Davis published the personal information -- including
credit card numbers -- of thousands of its subscribers on the Web. --- http://www.wired.com/news/ebiz/0,1272,48525,1162b6a.html
"A Tell-All ZD Would Rather Ignore," by Declan McCullagh, Wired
News, November 20, 2001
Because Ziff Davis'
1.3-MB text file included names, mailing addresses, e-mail addresses and in
some cases credit card numbers, a thief who downloaded it would have enough
information to make fraudulent mail-order purchases. An executive at one New
York magazine firm called the error "a bush-league mistake for a major
online publisher."
Zane said Ziff Davis
relies on EDS and Omeda
database technology to protect subscriber information. He refused to provide
details, except to say that "we were doing a promotion not using the EDS
and Omeda products."
In interviews, two
people who appeared on the Ziff Davis list said they had typed in their
information when responding to a promotion for Electronic
Gaming Monthly.
"I went to the
site and signed up for the free year, but did not sign up for the second year,
which was not free," said Jerry Leon of Spokane, Washington, whose Visa
number and expiration date appeared in the file. "I get the feeling that
this was one huge scam, but that card is now dead, and any charges made on it
will be refused."
"If it was just
a stupid accident, they are going to regret failing a community that worries
about this stuff ever happening, but if something less innocent has occurred,
they may as well fold the tents," said Leon, who signed up through
AnandTech's hot
deals forum.
Rob Robinson, whose
address information -- but not credit card number -- was on display, says he
subscribed to Electronic Gaming Monthly through a promotion on ebgames.com.
"I'm annoyed
that my home info as well as a valid e-mail is available to anyone. That's
quite a valuable list of gamers' personal data up for grabs. I feel really bad
for the poor folks who are going to have to cancel their credit cards,"
Robinson said.
It's not clear
whether Electronic Gaming Monthly subscribers were the only ones
affected by the security snafu, and Ziff Davis refused to provide details. The
file appeared at the address http://www.zdmcirc.com/formcollect/ebxbegamfile.dat
until around noon EST on Monday.
That address began
circulating around Home Theater
Forum discussion groups over the weekend, and Ziff Davis at first erased
the contents of the database at around 9 a.m. EST Monday. But its system
continued to add new subscribers to the public file until Ziff Davis
administrators blocked access to that address around midday Monday.
"Every week we
learn of new cases where companies used insecure technology or unsecure
servers to handle business that utilizes financial information or customer
information," says Jericho, who edits the security news site attrition.org.
"In the rush to be e-appealing for e-business they e-screw up time and
time again."
Jericho has compiled
a list of miscreant firms whose shoddy security practices have exposed
customer information. The hall of shame includes notables such as Amazon,
Gateway, Hotmail and Verizon.
Ziff Davis Media
publishes 11 print magazines. It is a separate company from ZDNet,
which is owned by CNET Networks.
See also:
HQ
for Exposed Credit Numbers
Students
Expose Bank ATM Hole
E-Commerce
Fears? Good Reasons
Privacy in eCommerce: Personal
Certificates
For discussion of cookies and how to Surf the Web anonymously, see Cookies.
For a general discussion of personal certificates, see http://www.w3.org/Security/Faq/wwwsf5.html#CON-Q12
What is WebTrust? What are its
major competitors?
Hint: See the following:
-
Question:
What makes WebTrust more "trusted" vis-a-vis its competitors (aside
from being CPA or CICA firms)?
Answer:
WebTrust is the only service that requires random site visits by independent
CPA firms to spot check if privacy policies are being adhered to by the
WebTrust client.
Question: What is the most
popular and less costly privacy seal alternative relative to WebTrust?
Answer: The Better Business
Bureau --- http://www.bbbonline.org/privacy/index.asp

Of the many challenges facing the Internet,
privacy has risen above them all as the number one concern (and barrier)
voiced by web users when going online. Participants in the BBBOnLine Privacy
Program are addressing this concern head-on with responsive and effective
self-regulation. By subscribing to responsible information practices,
BBBOnLine Privacy participants are promoting the vital trust and confidence
necessary for their own and future success of the Internet.
Taking advantage of the significant expertise the
Council of Better Business Bureaus wields in self-regulation and dispute
resolution, the BBBOnLine Privacy Program features verification, monitoring
and review, consumer dispute resolution, a compliance seal, enforcement
mechanisms and an educational component. The BBBOnLine Privacy Program
offers consumers a user-friendly tool that helps increase their comfort
while on the Internet and is a reasonably priced and a simple, one-stop,
non-intrusive way for business to demonstrate compliance with credible
online privacy
Question on Website (Provider)
Authentication
How can you find out that you are not at a phony site that pretends to be
legitimate?
Answer:
Look for a logo verification seal on at the site. Although the AICPA's
WebTrust seal is primarily a Web privacy seal (credit card information, medical
information, etc.), the WebTrust seal is also a seal that assures users that the
site is not a phony imitation of a real site --- http://www.aicpa.org/assurance/webtrust/princip.htm
The WebTrust privacy and logo verification seal contains the following image on
a document (the image below is for illustration only and is not valid on Bob
Jensen's Web documents).

A less costly logo verification
seal is the VeriSign seal if it appears on a document (the image below is for
illustration only and is not valid on Bob Jensen's Web documents).

VeriSign --- http://www.verisign.com/
Get VeriSign's free white paper at https://www.verisign.com/cgi-bin/clearsales_cgi/leadgen.htm?form_id=0714&toc=w093325300714000&email=
.
Learn From the
Experts VeriSign's Training Courses cover all areas of enterprise security
including Firewalls, PKI, VPNs, Applied Hacking, and Web Security. Our small
classes, hands-on labs, and world-class instructors ensure the highest level
of security for your networks. Download our FREE White Paper, "VeriSign
Internet Security Education: E-Commerce Survival Training" outlining the
benefits of security education.

The Better Business Bureau (BBB): Another Source of Website
(Provider) Authentication --- http://www.bbb.org/
ADVERTISING
REVIEW PROGRAMS |
|
ADVERTISING/SELLING
GUIDELINES |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
DISPUTE
RESOLUTION |
|
BUSINESS
GUIDANCE |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CONSUMER
GUIDANCE |
|
NEWS
AND ALERTS |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Although the BBB is best known as a place where consumers and businesses can
file complaints about unethical, deceptive, and illegal commerce and charitable
practices, the BBB also provides an Internet seal of Website (Provider)
Authentication.

Reliability
Seal Program --- http://www.bbbonline.org/reliability/index.asp
Helping Web users find reliable, trustworthy businesses online, and helping
reliable businesses identify themselves as such, through a voluntary
self-regulatory program that promotes consumer trust and confidence on the
Internet.
Privacy Seal Program
--- http://www.bbbonline.org/privacy/index.asp
Helping Web users identify companies that stand behind their privacy policies
and have met the program requirements of notice, choice, access and security in
the use of personally identifiable information.
For a general discussion of personal certificates, see http://www.w3.org/Security/Faq/wwwsf5.html#CON-Q12
Advantages of and risks of cookies ---
see Cookies.
What is user authentication?
Answer See Question 4 at http://www.w3.org/Security/Faq/wwwsf5.html#Q14
User verification is
any system that for determining, and verifying, the identity of a remote user.
User name and password is a simple form of user authentication. Public key
cryptographic systems, described below, provide a more sophisticated form
authentication that uses an unforgettable electronic signature.
Continued at at
http://www.w3.org/Security/Faq/wwwsf5.html#Q14
What Dollar Rental Car Company now
requires from persons who rent cars might be extended to people who conduct
transactions on Websites. Dollar Rent A Car is currently making customers
give a thumbprint before they give them the keys, another example of biometrics
being used for ID purposes.
"No Thumbprint, No Rental
Car," by Julia Scheeres, Wired News, November 21, 2001 --- http://www.wired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,48552,00.html
For more discussion of the
above issues, go to the document entitled "Opportunities of
E-Business Assurance: Risks in Assuring Risk" at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/assurance.htm
My other electronic
Business links are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce.htm
Crime and Justice Data
Online --- BJS http://149.101.22.40/dataonline/
Threads
on Firewalls
Note that firewalls are not generally
intended to protect against viruses. The protect against invasion of the
computer by hackers intent on doing bad things such as creating entry trap doors
to your systems. For more information on firewalls, go to http://www.w3.org/Security/Faq/wwwsf3.html#SVR-Q6
Zone Alarm --- http://www.zone-alarm-pro.com/
In reply to a message about installing a
firewall on a home computer, Chula King wrote the following in reply to a
firewall question posed by Amy Dunbar:
I too use Zone Alarm,
and have been quite pleased with it. I've also tried Black Ice Defender and
don't think that it does nearly as good a job as Zone Alarm.
While not anti virus
software, Zone Alarm will quarantine "suspicious" e-mail
attachments. In addition, it blocks both incoming scans to one's computer and
outgoing messages produced by spyware.
Chula King
The University of West Florida
Reply from Amelia Baldwin
Amy,
as for hacking and
such, another vote for zonealarm on your cable internet enabled computer. it
is not difficult to use. yes, your cable company probes your IP a few times a
day but that's NOTHING compared to the number of times you will get pinged or
probed or God know what else by seemingly random attempts from total
strangers. :o( Zonealarm blocks and tracks these things and if you weren't
frightened before you put up a firewall, you will be when you seen how many
accesses were going on or at least attempted!
as for anti-virus,
keep an anti-virus program running and keep it's virus signatures up to date
(the number of folks who have the software but never update it just astounds
me) and never ever open an email attachment that you are not expecting even if
it IS from someone you know. some viruses send seemingly random attachments
via the email software of the infected computer to folks on the address list,
thus you might actually receive what looks like a legitimate attachment from a
known user and it will have a virus.
just my $0.02
Amelia
Reply from Bill Spinks
If you have a high
speed continuous connection, you need a fire wall! (ZoneAlarm is free and
pretty good). I monitor my log of blocked hits and probably get 10 or 15 a day
during the week and 20 to 30 on a weekend days. Interestingly enough when I
have checked the reverse address of those URLs that are trying to connect with
my computer, a large number of them are from China, Korea, and Taiwan -- some
have even come from middleschool computers (or so it is reported on http://samspade.org
.)
If like stamp
collectors you like to travel the world in symbolic form, you can report your
"intrusion" back to the tech supervisor of those sites. Sometimes
you hear, most times you don't, but it makes for some interesting
correspondence from interesting places.
billspinks
You can read some Zone Alarm reviews
at
http://www.epinions.com/cmsw-Utilities-All-Zone_Alarm/display_~reviews
Reply from Brian Zwicker
In the Untouchables,
Sean Connery said something like: "... never bring a knife to a
gunfight" (I have removed the ethnic/racial slur)
Faced with the same
incredibly high number of approaches to my home computer setup, I decided to
bypass emulating a firewall, and go for the real thing - a firewall.
It turns out not to
be very expensive, because I used an older pentium 2 computer I nad in the
basement, a couple of ethernet cards, and some software from gnatbox. The
computer, by the way boots and runs from a floppy disk! You do not even need a
dedicated monitor, except for setting up. The whole system now runs from my
desktop computer and you can reset various parameters from there.
Some caveats are that
to do e-mail, I had to obtain the real address of my cable provider's mail
server, because the gnatbox software could not be made to work without this.
It also took a couple of weekends to get everything wotking. I also don't know
how, or even if, this would work with many educational computer networks.
On the plus side,
since the firewall computer talks to the outside world, and I talk to the
firewall, it seems it would take a verrrry determined hacker to get past this
setup, and although I did have a number of virus problems prior to the
firewall going in, I have had nothing since.
One other thing is
the list that gnatbox will show on demand of attempted accesses to the
firewall. It dumps the older attempts after 12 hours, but the available list
is always many screens long. I would say that if even 99.99% of all attempts
are benign, at least 4 or 5 each week would be a real attempt to get through
in order to damage something. Pretty scary.
Cheers,
Brian Zwicker
For more discussion of the
above issues, go to the document entitled "Opportunities of
E-Business Assurance: Risks in Assuring Risk" at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/assurance.htm
My other electronic
Business links are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce.htm
Crime and Justice Data
Online --- BJS http://149.101.22.40/dataonline/
"Promise of Touch
Technologies," BBC News, November 14, 2001 --- http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_1646000/1646909.stm
Takuya Nojima of
Tokyo University has developed a working model to show the potential of this
research.
His Smart-Tool system
allows people to feel the resistance between two surfaces whose boundaries are
normally impossible to sense, such as the boundary between oil and water.
The main implication
is for surgical operations
Takuya Nojima
"The sensor detects the conductivity of the liquids," says Mr
Nojima. "So, if you penetrate the oil layer, the conductivity is zero but
in the water, the conductivity increases."
In early experiments,
the researchers have used boiled eggs, with the Smart-Tool cutting through the
egg white, but stopping when it reached the yolk.
Such projects have
strong potential in biochemistry and medicine.
"The main
implication is for surgical operations," says Mr Nojima.
If a surgeon used a
scalpel enhanced with Smart-Tool technology, the real-time sensor on the blade
could sense what kind of tissue it is touching and rely the information back
to the doctor.
Also See Five Senses of the Future:
Threads on the Networking of the Five Senses (Sight, Sound, Smell, Touch, and
Taste) --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/senses.htm
Some Excel Helpers
High Powered Excel Spreadsheets
------------------------------
Conditional Formatting - http://www.cpanet.com/up/s0111.asp?ID=0247
The Automated Spreadsheet - http://www.cpanet.com/up/s0111.asp?ID=0248
Mr. Excel Tip of the Day - http://www.cpanet.com/up/s0111.asp?ID=0249
User Defined Functions - http://www.cpanet.com/up/s0111.asp?ID=0250
Pump Up Your Spreadsheets - http://www.cpanet.com/up/s0111.asp?ID=0251
Excel Tip Gallery - http://www.cpanet.com/up/s0111.asp?ID=0252
Microsoft Template Gallery - http://www.cpanet.com/up/s0111.asp?ID=0253
Bob Jensen's Excel Helper Videos ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideosSummary.htm
Imagery Sites
of the Week
Artificial Anatomy (Medical Science
from the Smithsonian) http://americanhistory.si.edu/anatomy/
People have always
sought better ways to illustrate and understand the structure and functions of
the internal body. Before the discovery of x-rays in 1895, the only practical
way to see inside the human body was to observe an operation or a dissection.
Cultural and religious beliefs about dissection often made the practice
illegal, and even when dissection was acceptable, cadavers were difficult to
obtain.
Moreover, lack of
refrigeration meant that bodies decayed swiftly. Dissections had to be
performed during the cooler months, and were impossible in warmer climates.
Frustrated in his studies, a young French medical student devised an elegant
solution—papier-mâché anatomical models.
Devices of Wonder (A History and
Entertainment Special from the J. Paul Getty Museum)--- http://www.getty.edu/art/exhibitions/devices/choice.html
Discover the
surprising and seductive ancestors of modern cinema, cyborgs, computers, and
other optical devices in this new exhibition at the Getty. The exhibits
feature "eye machines."
Levitated (Animations and Simulations
You Can Use and Modify for Science and Art) --- http://www.levitated.net/
Includes narratives.
Macro New York City --- http://www.macronyc.com/
Hoping to attract legal talent to the
firm, Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu has added an interactive e-brochure to its Web
site. The e-brochure uses Quick Time film and Flash animation to promote the Big
Five firm's Global Tax and Legal Services department. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/63247
Switcheroo Zoo (not as serious as the
above sites) http://www.switcheroozoo.com/
What activity provides a creative
outlet to people who can't draw or paint? Photoshopping, of course. Manipulating
digital images is more popular than ever --- http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,48342,00.html
From MIT
"The Next Computer Interface," by Claire Tristram, Technology
Review, December 2001 --- http://www.techreview.com/magazine/dec01/tristram.asp
The desktop metaphor
was a brilliant innovation—30 years ago. Now it's an unmanageable mess, and
the search is on for a better way to handle information.
Game, set, match:
Chief scientist David Gelernter of Mirror Worlds Technologies says the desktop
metaphor is over. (Photos by Timothy Archibald and Jonathan Worth)
"The desktop is
dead," declares David Gelernter. Gelernter is referring to the
"desktop metaphor"—the term frequently used for the hierarchical
system of files, folders and icons that we use to manage information stored on
our home or office computers. At the annual gathering of technophiles at
TechXNY/PC Expo 2001 in New York last June, he told the rapt crowd attending
his keynote speech that the desktop metaphor is nothing more than virtual
Tupperware. "Our electronic documents are scattered by the thousands in
all sorts of little containers all over the place," he said. "The
more information and the more computers in our lives, the more of a nuisance
this system becomes."
For the past decade
or so Gelernter has been campaigning for a new metaphor to overthrow the
desktop—first in research he carried out at Yale University, where he is a
professor of computer science, and now as chief scientist of his new company,
Mirror Worlds Technologies, with offices in New Haven, CT, and New York City.
In March, Mirror Worlds announced a novel metaphor called Scopeware, software
that automatically arranges your computer files in chronological order and
displays them on your monitor with the most recent files featured prominently
in the foreground. Scopeware is far more sweeping than a simple rearrangement
of icons, however: in effect, it transfers the role of file clerk from you to
the computer, seamlessly ordering documents of all sorts into convenient,
time-stamped files.
If you have ever
forgotten what you named a file or which folder you put it in, you probably
will agree that it's time for a change. The desktop metaphor is decades old,
arising from early-1970s work at Xerox's fabled Palo Alto Research Center, and
was never intended to address today's computing needs. Indeed, the product
that brought the metaphor to mass-market attention was Apple Computer's 1984
Macintosh; it had no built-in hard drive, and its floppy disks each stored
only 400 kilobytes of information. Today we're using the same metaphor to
manage the countless files on our ever more capacious hard drives, as well as
to access the virtually limitless information on the Web. The result? Big,
messy hierarchies of folders. Favorites lists where you never find anything
again. Pull-down menus too long to make sense of.
In other words, the
desktop metaphor puts the onus on our brains to juggle this expanding
collection of files, folders and lists. Yet "our neurons do not fire
faster, our memory doesn't increase in capacity and we do not learn to think
faster as time progresses," notes Bill Buxton, chief scientist of
Alias/Wavefront, a leading maker of graphic-design tools. Buxton argues that
without better tools to exploit the immense processing power of today's
computers, that power is not much good to us
Continued at http://www.techreview.com/magazine/dec01/tristram.asp
Thank you Paula and all the other
students and faculty who participated in the Trinity University Phonathon
Great news!
At 8 PM last night,
student callers turned in their final pledge cards and waited anxiously to
learn the outcome.
We're happy to report
that the grand total of this year's phonathon is $284,708 to which we added
$77,101, the results of a successful pre-Phonathon mailing. This brings the
grand total to: $361,809, which tops this year's goal of $360,000.
Paula Ward
Internet Guide to Engineering,
Mathematics, and Computing http://www.eevl.ac.uk/
A message from Professor XXXXX
I recently submitted
an article on Assessment Outcomes for distance education (DE) to "The
Technology Source". The editor suggested that I include a reference to
profiling the successful DE student because he was sure some research existed
on the subject. Well I have been looking for it casually for 3 years in my
reading and the 3-4 conferences per year that I attend, and never have come
across anything. Have spent the last week looking in InfoTrac and reviewed
close to 300 abstracts, without a single good lead. You are the man. So hoping
you can answer the question - is there any empirical research on the question
of profiling a successful DE student and in particular any research where an
institution actually has a hurdle for students to get into DE based on a
pedagogically sound questionnaire? Hoping you know the answer and have time to
respond.
Reply from Bob Jensen
Hi XXXXX,
I am reminded of a psychology
professor, Tom Harrell, that I had years ago at Stanford University. He
had a long-term contract from the U.S. Navy to study Stanford students when they
entered the MBA program and then follow them through their careers. The
overall purpose was to define predictors of success that could be used for
admission to the Stanford GSB (and extended to tests for admission into careers,
etc.) Dr, Harrell's research became hung up on "The Criterion Problem
(i.e., the problem of defining and measuring "success.") You
will have the same trouble whenever you try to assess graduates of any education
program whether it is onsite or online. What is success? What is the
role any predictor apart from a myriad of confounded variables?
You might take a look at the following
reference:
Harrell, T.W. (1992). "Some history of the army general classifications
test," Journal of Applied Psychology, 77, 875-878.
Success is a relative term.
Grades not always good criteria for assessment. Perhaps a C student is the
greatest success story of a distance education program. Success may lie in
motivating a weak student to keep trying for the rest of life to learn as much
as is possible. Success may lie in motivating a genius to channel
creativity. Success may lie in scores on a qualification examination such
as the CPA examination. However, use of "scores" is very
misleading, because the impact of a course or entire college degree is
confounded by other predictors such as age, intellectual ability, motivation,
freedom to prepare for the examination, etc.
Success may lie in advancement in the
workforce, but promotion and opportunity are subject to widely varying and
often-changing barriers and opportunities. A program's best graduate may
end up on a dead end track, and its worst graduate may be a maggot who fell in a
manure pile. For example, it used to be virtually impossible for a woman
to become a partner in a large public accounting firm. Now the way is
paved with all sorts of incentives for women to hang in there and attain
partnership. Success also entails being at the right place at the right time,
and this is often a matter of luck as well as ability. George Bush
probably would never have had an opportunity to become one of this nation's best
leaders if there had not been a terrorist attack that afforded him such an
opportunity. Certainly this should not be termed "lucky," but it
is a rare "opportunity" to be a great "success."
When it comes to special criteria for
acceptance in to distance education programs, there are some who feel that, due
to fairness, there should be no special criteria beyond the criteria for
acceptance into traditional programs. For example, see the Charles Stuart
University document at http://www.csu.edu.au/acadman/d13m.htm
You might find some helpful information
in the following reference --- http://202.167.121.158/ebooks/distedir/bestkudo.htm
Phillips, V., & Yager, C. The
best distance learning graduate schools: Earning your degree without leaving
home.
This book profiles 195 accredited institutions that offer graduate degrees via
distance learning. Topics include: graduate study, the quality and benefits of
distance education, admission procedures and criteria,
available education delivery systems, as well as accreditation, financial aid,
and school policies.
A review is given at http://distancelearn.about.com/library/weekly/aa022299.htm
More directly related to your question,
might be the self assessment suggestions at Excelsior College:
- Self-Directed Search
- Campbell Interest Survey
- Your Career Profile
- The Career Key
- Career Interest Checklist
- Transferable Skills Surveys
Another self assessment process is
provided by ISIM University at http://www.isimu.edu/foryou/begin/eprocess.htm
In self assessment processes, it is
sometimes difficulty to determine whether the motivation is one of promotion of
the program as opposed to assessment for having students self-select whether to
apply or not to apply.
You might be able to contact California
State University at Fullerton to see if they will share some of their assessment
outcomes of online learning courses. A questionnaire that is used there is at http://de-online.fullerton.edu/de/assessment/assessment.asp
Some good assessment advice is given at
http://www.ala.org/acrl/paperhtm/d30.html
A rather neat PowerPoint show from
Brazil is provided at http://www.terena.nl/tnc2000/proceedings/1B/1b2.ppt
(Click on the slides to move forward.)
The following references may be helpful
in terms of evaluation forms:
- Faculty
Course Evaluation Form
University of Bridgeport
- Web-Based
Course Evaluation Form
Nashville State Technology Institute
- Guide
to Evaluation for Distance Educators
University of Idaho Engineering Outreach Program
- Evaluation
in Distance Learning: Course Evaluation
World Bank Global Distance EducatioNet
A Code of Assessment Practice is given
at http://cwis.livjm.ac.uk/umf/vol5/ch1.htm
A comprehensive outcomes assessment
report (for the University of Colorado) is given at http://www.colorado.edu/pba/outcomes/
A Distance Learning Bibliography is
available at http://mason.gmu.edu/~montecin/disedbiblio.htm
Also see "Integration of
Information Resources into Distance Learning Programs" by Sharon M.
Edge and Denzil Edge at http://www.learninghouse.com/pubs_pubs02.htm
My bottom line conclusion is that I
probably did not help you with the specific help you requested. At best, I
provided you with some food for thought.
Bob Jensen's threads on assessment
are given at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/assess.htm
Bob Jensen
MIT's Open Source Sharing of Course
Materials is Catching On Elsewhere
"Open Source Objects for Teaching
and Learning," by Gerd Kortemeyer, Syllabus, November 2001, p. 32
--- http://www.syllabus.com/syllabusmagazine/article.asp?id=5671
Michigan State
University’s Learning Online Network with CAPA (Computer-Assisted
Personalized Approach) is building an open platform for the development and
distribution of online content. The network, dubbed LON-CAPA, would make
online content freely and openly available to any instructor in the sciences
or social sciences. LON-CAPA was developed at MSU’s Laboratory for
Instructional Technology in Education (LITE), and grew out of earlier MSU
initiatives, including the successful CAPA and LectureOnline platforms.
The online content is
composed of a resource pool of educational objects, applets, or small slices
of content that are written, created, and contributed by instructors
participating in the program. Gerd Kortemeyer, director of LITE and principal
investigator on the LON-CAPA team, describes the platform as a resource
assembly tool, “a shopping cart,” with which an instructor can go through
“aisles” gathering content until the entire instructional piece is
complete.
LON-CAPA is analogous
to a coursepak or a jigsaw puzzle, he says. Users decide how much content to
take: as little as a single animation, or as much as an entire semester’s
worth of material.
Think of LON-CAPA as
a digital library with an instructional management system built in. Currently,
it includes material for courses in physics, calculus, chemistry, biology,
food science, and psychology. Some disciplines, such as physics, contain quite
a lot of material, enough to fill entire semesters. The platform offers
automatic checking of homework problems, with helpful feedback available to
those who come up with incorrect answers.
Each component is
independent. “Instructors can choose the level of granularity desired,”
Kortemeyer says. Some teachers may want to select single GIF files,
animations, chapter sections, and problem sets, carefully crafting a
personalized approach to the course. Others can adopt online textbooks,
complete with problem sets and figures.
LON-CAPA’s
flexibility and adaptability are important features. Since anyone can
contribute content, there is unlimited potential for growth. The open source
platform is deliberately set up for ease of use, so that selecting and
adopting content is very simple. Rather than screen content before it is
posted, Kortemeyer’s group has opted to let users determine the quality of
each posting. “Much as visitors to Amazon.com post their reviews of books,
our users will evaluate material that is put into LON-CAPA and will not only
assess it but can actually make improvements to it,” he says.
“We have at least
10,000 physics resources,” Kortemeyer notes. Other disciplines contain fewer
content bits, but more is being added all the time. He notes that the platform
isn’t specific to the sciences and doesn’t deliberately exclude the
humanities. “It’s just that certain aspects of it, such as the automatic
checking of homework problems, lend themselves better to the sciences and
mathematics,” he says.
Users might draw from
LON-CAPA for a distance education course where all of the instruction is
delivered in a virtual environment, but they might just as easily use material
as part of a lecture course or as lab materials. The adaptability of the
platform makes it appropriate for all sorts of situations.
At first glance, one
might think that piecing together a course from a number of small fragments
would require a large investment of instructor prep time, but in actuality
that isn’t the case. Kortemeyer says that the granularity options allow
teachers to get as detailed in developing the course syllabus as they wish and
that building the syllabus takes as long as adopting a new textbook. Once the
course gets going, he notes, “there’s no homework to grade, which saves a
lot of time.” As with any online course, however, instructors using the
platform should expect to spend some time communicating with their students
via e-mail or the built-in communication tools.
At the moment, 18
institutions belong to the LON-CAPA network, and the group hopes to have at
least 30 partner institutions within a year. Kortemeyer hopes that in addition
to contributing content, many of the users will contribute open source tool
code as well, ensuring that the platform will be self-sustaining. Member
institutions have to agree to maintain a “library server,” storing some of
the content, and larger institutions host an access server as well.
Continued at http://www.syllabus.com/syllabusmagazine/article.asp?id=5671
Latest News on MIT's Open Courseware
(OCW) --- http://web.mit.edu/ocw/
The following milestones have been
set for OCW through 2003:
September
2002: |
Course materials
from 100 subjects released on the OCW web site |
March
2003: |
Course materials
from 250 subjects released |
September
2003: |
Course materials
from 500 courses released |
"Changing
the Interface of Education with Revolutionary Learning Technologies,"
by Nishikant Sonwalkar, Syllabus, November 2001, pp. 10-13 --- http://www.syllabus.com/syllabusmagazine/article.asp?id=5663
The paradigm shift in the pedagogical
design of online education will require much more in-depth study and analysis
of existing methods and evolving technologies. Clearly, education delivery is
not simply information transfer. There is much to learn, but we already know
much about the potential of the technology for multimodal delivery of learning
material to a variety of online learners.
The Five
Fundamental Learning Styles for Online Asynchronous Instruction |
Apprenticeship
A “building block” approach for presenting concepts in a
step-by-step procedural learning style. |
Incidental
Based on “events” that trigger the learning experience. Learners
begin with an event that introduces a concept and provokes questions. |
Inductive
Learners are first introduced to a concept or a target principle using
specific examples that pertain to a broader topic area. |
Deductive
Based on stimulating the discernment of trends through the
presentation of simulations, graphs, charts, or other data. |
Discovery
An inquiry method of learning in which students learn by doing,
testing the boundaries of their own knowledge. |
Recent developments
in digital imaging, streaming audio and video, and interactive human-machine
interfaces provide a wealth of opportunities to enhance the learning
experience. More important than the technologies, however, is the context in
which the multimedia enhancements are presented to learners. The design and
development of combined media components—text, graphics, audio, video,
animation, and simulations—for enhancing the learning process will depend on
the learning model appropriate for the delivery of given course content. A
list of a few potential multimedia enhancements might include:
- Audio annotations
to graphics
- Graphical
visualization
- Audio annotations
to video demonstrations
- Video
demonstration of graphical elements
- Animated graphical
frames (animated gifs)
- Audio annotations
for animated graphics
- Animation of
physical concepts
- Text annotations
to video frames
- Animated
simulations
- Numerical
simulations for parametric studies
- Graphical
simulation of mathematical equations
Video, animations,
and simulations offer exceptional potential for enhancing the interface of
education. Experimental demonstrations and real-life experiences and
situations can be captured on video and provided as digital video.
Continued at http://www.syllabus.com/syllabusmagazine/magazine.asp?month=11&year=2001
Bob Jensen's comments on how
traditional classroom materials must be modified for online use are given at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm
"Transforming
Learning--Reflections on the PITAC Report, by Judith Boettcher,
by Nishikant Sonwalkar, Syllabus, November 2001, pp. 14-16 --- http://www.syllabus.com/syllabusmagazine/article.asp?id=5664
Recommendations from the
2001 PITAC Report
Overarching Recommendation
Make the effective integration of information technology, with
education and training a national priority.
Supporting Actions
• Establish and coordinate a major research initiative focusing on:
– Learning technologies
and sciences – Information technologies for education and training
– Requirements for learning and teaching information technology
fluency
• Establish partnerships
involving government, university, industry, and foundations to support
the pursuit of the research initiative and to cofund and collaborate
in that research
• Enable educators and
related professionals to use information technology effectively
• Work with industry and
academia to develop technical standards for extendable component-based
technology and infrastructures that can be widely used in online
education and training.
PITAC Report (2001). “Using
Information Technology to Transform the Way We Learn.” Arlington,
VA, President’s Information Technology /Advisory Committee, Panel on
Transforming Learning. http://www.itrd.gov
|
"Co-Laborative Psychology
Online," by Ken Mcgraw et. al., Syllabus, November 2001, p. 34 --- http://www.syllabus.com/syllabusmagazine/article.asp?id=5672
Three University of
Mississippi researchers have collaborated on an award-winning Web site that
enables students and researchers from any campus to conduct an array of
psychology experiments from a growing online library of experiments and
datasets.
The project, dubbed
PsychExperiments, currently contains more than 30 unique psychology
experiments available without charge to researchers and students. Its
developers, psychology professor Dr. Ken McGraw, electrical engineering
professor Dr. Mark Tew, and clinical psychology graduate student John
Williams, describe the site as a “co-laboratory,” a resource that will
grow and develop with the contributions of its users.
PsychExperiments
includes replications of classic experiments as well as novel experiments
based on commonly taught psychological concepts. The site also offers archived
data and Excel macros that produce tables and charts from the raw data.
Instructors can conduct the experiments themselves and add their data to the
pool, broadening and diversifying the dataset.
The project was
launched after McGraw took a University of Mississippi faculty development
workshop taught by Tew. The subject, Macromedia’s Authorware, turned out to
be just the tool McGraw needed to build his own custom experiments. McGraw and
Tew began working with John Williams and soon discovered that they could
deliver Authorware programs over the Web: Thus, PsychExperiments was born.
According to McGraw,
PsychExperiments offers a number of benefits over running experiments in
isolation. “First of all, because all of the material is online, students
don’t have to go to a psychology lab at an appointed time to do lab
research. The Web site is available all the time,” he notes. “Second, we
offer convenience to instructors, who don’t have to purchase, set up, or
manage software or databases on their own lab computers.”
Says Tew: “For
instructors who use these experiments, there are no security issues and no
costs, because they aren’t storing the data on their own servers.”
The Web-based
laboratory offers researchers the chance to run experiments over large numbers
of subjects, often necessary for getting good results when variables such as
handedness, gender, or musical training are used. “We’re providing the
scientific community with larger datasets for some experiments that really
don’t work as well with a classroom-sized dataset,” says McGraw.
“Housing all of the accumulated data in one place allows instructors to
investigate phenomena that they might otherwise cover only in lecture rather
than experimentally.”
Last year, the site
won first place in the University of Minnesota’s Design Institute learning
software competition. More than 300 different classes around the country have
used PsychExperiments and at least 30 researchers have contributed
experiments. In addition to continuing to build the site, the three
collaborators regularly conduct user training sessions and are developing
written training materials.
Continued at http://www.syllabus.com/syllabusmagazine/article.asp?id=5672
"Taking Chemistry Online With
Digital Video," by Catherine Murphy, Syllabus, November 2001, pp.
28-19 --- http://www.syllabus.com/syllabusmagazine/article.asp?id=5665
The anticipated tidal
wave of 2 million new students entering higher education in 2010 has forced
institutions around the country to seek out ways to accommodate the influx and
resulting strain on campus resources. Anticipating a 43 percent increase in
full-time enrollment in less than 10 years, the University of
California-Berkeley has been considering a number of options, incorporating
technology where feasible to lessen the impact of high enrollments and expand
learning opportunities. Digital Chemistry 1a serves as an example.
Ebrary adds scientific, medical and
business titles from key professional publishers. Also: Struggling netLibrary
gets a lifeline, and book clubs unite, all in M.J. Rose's notebook --- http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,48480,00.html
Bob Jensen's links to electronic
libraries are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm
Acceptable use of
materials vs. plagiarism
Email message from Linda Specht to her
students
It has come to my
attention that some of you might have gotten a bit rusty about your use of
citations. The following link provides some good examples of acceptable use of
materials vs. plagiarism. http://www.usm.maine.edu/~kuzma/Ideologies/Plagerism.html
.
Although the authors
of this guide suggest a different form of citation than the one that we are
using, their guidance re the use of others' materials and the use of proper
citation form is relevant. Just because you have included a parenthetical
citation to another's work, does not mean that you can change one or two words
in his/her sentence and otherwise replicate the sentence or sentences. If you
are going to use another's words, you must indicate that the words are quoted.
At the same time, your paper should not simply be a string of quotes of
others' works. . .but your own work synthesized from your interpretation and
analysis of those other resources. Take a look at the link and I think you
will understand what I am trying to get across. Good luck. I am looking
forward to reading your papers.
Linda Specht
Bob Jensen's threads on plagiarism
are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/plagiarism.htm
From Syllabus@101communications-news.com
on November 20, 2001
eCollege Ranked as
54th Fastest Growing Tech Firm
Learning
software developer eCollege has been listed as the 54th fastest growing
company in North America on Deloitte & Touche Technology Fast 500, a
ranking of the 500 fastest growing technology companies. The rankings are
based on five-year percentage revenue growth from 1996-2000. eCollege's
revenue grew 10,996 percent during the period. The fast 500 list is compiled
from Deloitte & Touche's regional Fast 50 programs, nominations to the
Fast 500, and public company database research. eCollege partners with
colleges, universities, schools and corporations to design and build learning
communities. eCollege's partners include National University; Seton Hall
University; University of Colorado; DeVry University, Inc.; Kentucky Virtual
High School; and Microsoft Faculty Center.
(Note from Bob Jensen: The eCollege homepage is at http://www.ecollege.com/
. Competitors are listed at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/290wp/290wp.htm
and at http://inst.augie.edu/~gray/WBI.html.
Some competitors such as Pensare have ceased operations.)
Sun Lauds Canadian
High Performance Computing Lab
A high performance
computing virtual lab formed by four Canadian universities was chosen by Sun
Microsystems Inc. as a Sun Center of Excellence in Secure Grid and Portal
Computing. The High Performance Computing Virtual Laboratory (HPCVL), formed
by Carleton University, Queen's University, The Royal Military College of
Canada and the University of Ottawa, is building a secure grid environment and
portal-based interfaces to enable researchers from anywhere to access
resources they need. Ken Edgecombe, HPCVL executive director, said the group
will use the grant to "build a seamless secure environment that is
recognized as one of the best academic research environments in the
world." Kerry Rowe, vice principal for research at Queen's University,
called HPCVL a "demonstration of a successful partnership between the
private and education sectors."
For more information, visit: http://www.hpcvl.org
.
Florida School to
Open New Library, IT Center
Fort Lauderdale-based
Nova Southeastern University will open next month what it says will be the
state's largest library at full capacity, offering electronic and wirelesss
services to county residents. The library will house 20 electronic classrooms
with workstations equipped with flat-screened Dell computers, ISDN lines for
compressed video, and large overhead monitors. Teachers will have access to a
"smart podium," enabling them to control dual projectors, a VCR
system and the use of other peripherals. All library-card holders will also
have direct access to an online library catalogue for books and electronic
resources, including 10,000 full-text books online and hundreds of databases.
Elaine Blattner, NSU's director of library services, said the library
"will offer the most sophisticated technology to the community, while
retaining its intensely human element."
For more information, visit: http://www.nova.edu
Textbooks will never
be the same!
"The Many Forms of Digital
Text," Syllabus, November 2001, p. 41 --- http://www.syllabus.com/syllabusmagazine/article.asp?id=5676
The term
“textbook” no longer necessarily means a sturdy bound volume of sewn
pages. Today’s textbook may be that, or it may be an entirely online
product with hyperlinks in place of pages, or perhaps a combination of
CD-ROM, Web site, and printed handouts. The five companies highlighted here
publish and/or distribute digital texts, each with a unique approach.
Rovia, based in
Brookline, Mass., distributes copyrighted intellectual property online.
Rovia works with publishers to deliver online content to students while
protecting the publishers’ rights. Using the RovReader, a proprietary
browser plug-in, users can access and interact with their electronic
textbooks from any Internet-capable device. www.rovia.com
MetaText offers
completely online textbooks integrated with course management systems (CMS).
MetaText has partnered with several course management system providers,
including Blackboard, and also offers its own course management features
such as Course Editor and SyllabusEditor. www.metatext.com
Atomic Dog
Publishers has merged the roles of traditional print publisher and online
content provider into what they call “hybred” (as opposed to hybrid)
media publishing. Their titles are a combination of online content,
interactive media, and print component. Atomic Dog’s holistic approach
starts with the content, building technology tools such as video and
animation around the subject matter. www.atomicdog.com
Thinkwell
Publishers, based in Austin, Texas, offers textbook content in both CD-ROM
and online formats. Thinkwell’s titles (about 15 so far in the social
sciences and sciences) feature a complete set of video lectures (about 10
minutes each in length), illustrated notes to accompany the lectures, and
even transcripts of the lectures for those who need them. www.thinkwell.com
OpenMind publishes
customized, personalized learning materials. They work with authors to
publish original content or supplements to existing OpenMind content. Using
an open source model, OpenMind encourages authors and adopters to engage in
a collaborative process of continuously revising, improving, and customizing
content. www.ompg.com
Also see http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/newfaculty.htm
* Short e-Course *
DIGITAL LEARNING COMMUNITIES: PROMOTING DEMOCRACY THROUGH EDUCATION, a short
online course from Columbia University, provides a roadmap to the future of
education, in which the educational program will contain the school as well as
the home and the community. Enroll anytime: http://www.fathom.com/link.jhtml?page=course&cid=542&id=32702503
Search for more online courses in
Fathom's Course Directory: http://www.fathom.com/link.jhtml?page=directory&cid=544&id=0
From The Wall Street Journal
Accounting Educators' Review on November 8, 2001
Subscribers to the Electronic Edition of the WSJ can obtain reviews in various
disciplines by contacting wsjeducatorsreviews@dowjones.com
See http://info.wsj.com/professor/
TITLE: Basic Principle of Accounting
Tripped Enron
REPORTER: Jonathan Weil
DATE: Nov 12, 2001
PAGE: C1
LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB100551383153378600.djm
TOPICS: Accounting, Auditing, Auditing Services, Auditor Independence
SUMMARY:
Enron's financial statements have long been charged with being undecipherable;
however, they are now considered to contain violations of GAAP. Enron filed
documents with the SEC indicating that financial statements going back to 1997
"should not be relied upon." Questions deal with materiality and
auditor independence.
QUESTIONS:
1.) What accounting errors are reported to have been included in Enron's
financial statements? Why didn't Enron's auditors require correction of these
errors before the financial statements were issued?
2.) What is materiality? In hindsight,
were the errors in Enron's financial statements material? Why or why not? Should
the auditors have known that the errors in Enron's financial statements were
material prior to their release? What defense can the auditors offer?
3.) Does Arthur Andersen provide any
services to Enron in addition to the audit services? How might providing
additional services to Enron affect Andersen's decision to release financial
statements containing GAAP violations?
4.) The article states that Enron is
one of Arthur Andersen's biggest clients. How might Enron's size have
contributed to Arthur Andersen's decision to release financial statements
containing GAAP violations? Discuss differences in audit risk between small and
large clients. Discuss the potential affect of client firm size on auditor
independence.
5.) How long has Arthur Andersen been
Enron's auditor? How could their tenure as auditor contributed to Andersen's
decision to release financial statements containing GAAP violations?
6.) The related article discusses how
Enron's consolidation policy with respect to the JEDI and Chewco entities
impacted the company's financial statements. What is meant by the phrase
consolidation policy? How could a policy not to consolidate these entities help
to make Enron's financial statements look better? Why would consolidating an
entity result in a $396 million reduction in net income over a 4 year period?
How must Enron have been accounting for investments in these entities? How could
Enron support its accounting policies for these investments?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University
of Rhode Island
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University
RELATED WSJ ARTICLES
TITLE: Enron Cuts Profit Data of 4 Years by 20%
REPORTER: John R. Emshwiller, Rebecca Smith, Robin Sidel, and Jonathan Weil
PAGE: A1,A3
ISSUE: Nov 09, 2001
LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1005235413422093560.djm
TITLE: Arthur Andersen Could Face
Scrutiny On Clarity of Enron Financial Reports
REPORTER: Jonathan Weil
DATE: Nov 05, 2001
PAGE: C1
LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1004919947649536880.djm
TOPICS: Accounting, Auditing, Creative Accounting, Disclosure Requirements
Reply from E. Scribner [escribne@NMSU.EDU]
Although I very much appreciate and
am trying to respond to pleas from the accounting education change movement to
"reduce accounting content" in favor of developing other skills,
there's always something about allegations of accounting and auditing failures
in practice that makes me wonder if we're doing the right thing. I know that
these pleas, communicated most recently by the Steve (not to be confused with
Dave) Albrecht/Bob Sack study, originate from practice, so there may be
something I'm not fully grasping about the perceived needs of practitioners. I
know that critical thinking is important, but assertions that accounting is
now done by "technology" seem to me to confuse accounting with
bookkeeping and trivialize a challenging profession whose practice would be
enhanced by a significant period of immersion in the nuts and bolts as well as
the concepts of financial reporting. This is nothing new--everyone probably
feels this tension. Just some rambling reflections on a rare cloudy day here
in normally sunny New Mexico. Thanks for bearing with me!
Ed
Ed Scribner
New Mexico State
Reply from David Silberberg [davidis4@HOME.COM]
Or is the real
problem the inherent conflict between the independance of the auditor and the
fees that a particularly large client represents?
From what I've read
of the Enron case, the issues were not all that esoteric or subtle.
For Bob Jensen's threads on the
Enron scandal, go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
Hi Scott,
See http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/cpaaway.htm
In this era of auditor versus machine,
the above document is no longer as funny as once intended. I worry that careers
may indeed pass away if the human auditors become signers rather than
INDEPENDENT investigators.
There is no future for auditing careers
if the auditors sign anything on the papers put before them by management and/or
a management machine named HAL.
Original Message-----
From: Scott Bonacker [mailto:scottbonacker@moccpa.com]
Sent: Monday, November 19, 2001 11:30 AM
To: 'rjensen@trinity.edu'
Bob -
This is what I get
from a Google search on "bonacker style". Where did they get
"CPA Signers Wanted"??????
CPA Signers Wanted
... Message 3 from Scott Bonacker. Without trying to decide what is meant by
... It's still OK to work in the "traditional" style because there
are still quite a number ... www.trinity.edu/rjensen/cpaaway.htm - 94k -
Cached - Similar pages [ More results from www.trinity.edu ]
Scott
Scott Bonacker,
CPA McCullough, Officer & Company,
LLC Springfield, Missouri moccpa.com
Hi XXXXX,
Try http://www.iasplus.com/agenda/buscomb.htm
You can also find a wealth of
information at Paul Pacter's IAS Plus Website at http://www.iasplus.com/index.htm
Paul is probably the most knowledgeable
person in the world regarding IAS standards. His email address is ppacter@ix.netcom.com
Here are a few suggestions on goodwill
valuation and intangibles valuation in general:
Goodwill Impairment Testing is a
Two-Step Process http://www.fvginternational.com/SFAS/Goodwill_Impairment_Testing_is_a_Two-Step_Process.html
FEI Q&A --- http://www.fei.org/finrep/BusinessCombinationsQandA.cfm
M&A Tax Report --- http://www.robertwwood.com/m&a060105.htm
Grant Thornton --- http://www.grantthornton.com/downloads/15953.doc
If you want to become more esoteric on
intangibles valuation, to to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm
and http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/theory/00overview/theory01.htm
You might find my videos helpful at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/acct5341/jensen/realmedia/
Especially note the file called LevIntangibelsMetric.rm
Hope this helps.
Bob Jensen
-----Original
Message-----
From: XXXXX
Sent: Tuesday, November 20, 2001 7:15 AM
To: 'Jensen, Robert'
Subject: FAS 142
Hello Robert,
Long time no talk.
I am now looking at
what IAS is cooking in regards the Goodwill treatment. Have you done some
work on FAS 142 ?
Best Regards,
Professor XXXXX
"What Not to Say When Firing a
Worker," by Barbara Kate Repa --- http://www.smartpros.com/x31775.xml
One It can be tough to monitor your tongue while delivering the difficult news
of a firing, but it is necessary to avoid negative legal consequences. Here are
some of the most common -- and problematic -- slips.
Accounting graduates doing well in the
U.K. --- http://accountingeducation.com/news/news2258.html
(Actually they are doing quite well in the U.S. as well, and I hope we can keep
it that way.)
Barnes & Noble Textbook Home
Page The price all of our books below suggested retail price. Look for books
that have our Guaranteed Buy Back stamp and save even more! http://www.gis.net/~catb/textbooks.html
Bob Jensen's helpers for book buying
are under "Books" and "Electronic Books" at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm
From The Economist (Travel) --- Cities
Guide --- http://www.economist.com/cities/
From InformationWeek Daily on
November 20, 2001
Nokia Debuts New
Phones In Shrinking Market
Nokia Corp. launched
three new cell phones Monday, looking to give the slumping handset market a
jump-start with cutting-edge features and functionality.
New models include
the 7560, a high-end mobile with a color display, integrated digital camera,
and the ability to send multimedia text/photo instant messages. The phone
supports high-speed General Packet Radio Service technology, which allows for
an always-on Internet connection, as well as WAP, Bluetooth, and infrared
connections. Nokia expects to start shipping the handset to Europe and Asia in
the second quarter of 2002. Other releases include the lower end 6510 and 5210
phones, which will ship in the first quarter.
The new phones
debuted on the same day that a Gartner report showed sales in the global cell
phone market shrinking. Worldwide shipments were down 9% in the third quarter
of this year, plummeting to 94.4 million units from 103.2 million in the same
quarter last year. The report shows Nokia still on top of the industry in
terms of market share, accounting for 33.4% of all units shipped. Motorola
Inc. came in a distant second, with 15.7% market share, and LM Ericsson placed
third at 8%.
Gartner analyst Bryan
Prohm says the decline is due in large part to slumping sales in Western
Europe, where the market has matured much faster than in the United States.
"It's saturated. You've got 75% to 80% penetration," he says.
"There's not a huge pool of new subscribers." Prohm says the spread
of GPRS technology and other new features such as instant messaging will help
fuel future upgrade sales and keep the market going. - David M. Ewalt
For more on mobile phones, see Taking
Stock: Mobile Phone Companies Bounce Back After A Dismal Year http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eE210BcUEY0V20a410Ab
Nokia Says It's On Track To Launch 3G
Phones In 2002 http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eE210BcUEY0V20aAV0AR
Ken Blackburn's Paper Airplanes and
More --- http://www.paperplane.org/
Daypop (a search site for links to
daily newscasts) --- http://www.daypop.com/
Search 5800 News Sites and Weblogs for Current Events and Breaking News
Aimster launches its own file-trading
subscription service without all those pesky licenses that has kept the
recording industry returning to court --- http://www.wired.com/news/mp3/0,1285,48255,00.html
Bob Jensen's threads on file sharing
are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/napster.htm
Van Gogh and Gauguin: The Studio of the
South (Art, History) http://www.artic.edu/aic/exhibitions/vangogh/slide_intro.html
Message from Craig Polhemus
2002 AAA ANNUAL
MEETING
http://accounting.rutgers.edu/raw/aaa/2002annual/call.htm
The 2002 AAA Annual Meeting will be held in San Antonio, Texas on August
14-17. The theme of the meeting is "Reinvigorating Accounting
Scholarship." Electronic submissions of papers and special concurrent
sessions proposals, as well as applications to serve as moderators or
discussants, are now being accepted. Submissions are encouraged by December
14, 2001. Don't forget to enter the curriculum challenge contest--see the
guidelines at http://accounting.rutgers.edu/raw/aaa/challenge.htm
AAA LAUNCHES NEW ELECTRONIC
PUBLICATIONS WEB SITE
http://accounting.rutgers.edu/raw/aaa/pubs.htm
The American Accounting Association has launched a new
electronic publications system that provides current issues as well as a
searchable archive of recently published AAA publications, including all AAA
and Section journals and newsletters. This new system provides the opportunity
to browse or perform keyword searches for specific information, and also
accommodates library subscriptions and pay-per-article purchase options.
INVITATION TO VOLUNTEER FOR
COMMITTEES
http://accounting.rutgers.edu/raw/aaa/about/volcomm02-03.htm
President-Elect G. Peter Wilson is filling AAA committee
assignments for 2002-2003. If you are interested in serving on a committee or
want to suggest some type of committee activity, please feel free to do. All
suggestions and offers are welcome.
Knowledge Management (KM)
Knowledge Management Magazine - http://www.cpanet.com/up/s0111.asp?ID=0254
Measurement for KM - http://www.cpanet.com/up/s0111.asp?ID=0255
Knowledge Management World - http://www.cpanet.com/up/s0111.asp?ID=0256
What is Knowledge? - http://www.cpanet.com/up/s0111.asp?ID=0257
KM News - http://www.cpanet.com/up/s0111.asp?ID=0258
Total Knowledge Management - http://www.cpanet.com/up/s0111.asp?ID=0259
Knowledge in a Global Economy - http://www.cpanet.com/up/s0111.asp?ID=0260
Business Model Innovation - http://www.cpanet.com/up/s0111.asp?ID=0261
If you like Pink Floyd, you must go to
Echoes. --- http://pinkfloyd.hollywoodandvine.com/
Whitehousekids.gov http://www.whitehouse.gov/kids/index.html
From Double Entries on November 15,
2001
The American
Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) has released the exposure
draft for the AICPA/NASBA Uniform Accountancy Act and Uniform Accountancy Act
Rules, Third Edition (UAA). The Exposure Draft contains several additions and
revisions to the UAA and UAA Rules, including rules for disclosures that must
be made in connection with offering professional services via the Internet and
rules on notification under substantial equivalency. Additionally, revisions
are suggested to the education rules and changes are made to the Act and Rules
to conform the UAA to professional standards with regard to SSARS 8
compilations. The Exposure Draft is a joint project of the AICPA UAA Task
Force and NASBA UAA Committee. Comments are encouraged and welcomed by this
joint group through December 31, 2001. Click through to http://accountingeducation.com/news/news2257.html
for the download link
You can download the document by clicking
here
http://ftp.aicpa.org/public/download/states/uaa/uaa_expose.doc
A message from Ernst & Young on
November 14, 2001 --- http://www.ey.com/
Now there is a new
way to access the EYO Help Desk live right from your desktop, 24 hours a day,
six days a week. When logged onto the EYO site, simply click on the LiveHelp
link located at the top of the home page. An EYO support agent will respond
immediately to your request for help. You and the agent can have a real-time
dialogue about your question, right over the Internet using instant messaging
technology. EYO's LiveHelp is available globally. Why not give it a try and
see what you think of the online help experience? If you prefer to pick up the
phone, you can still contact the EYO Help Desk as you have previously.
"Instant Messaging: Threat or
Opportunity?" by John S. McCright, eWeek News, November 13, 2001
Instant messaging is
proving itself to be a highly effective tool for business communications. How
are IT departments going to make sure that it isn't also a highly effective
security hole for hackers?
IM software has gone
beyond the early-adopter stage and is fast becoming a part of corporate IT
environments. Paranoid IT managers rightly see the proliferation of consumer
IM clients from AOL, Yahoo and MSN as rogue elements on their networks. With
these little beasties there is no version control, no management oversight,
and in some cases they are vulnerable to viruses because they do not reside
behind a corporate gateway.
Amy Dunbar loves the instant
messaging pedagogy. See
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/updateee.htm#dunbar
American Roots Music (PBS, History) http://www.pbs.org/americanrootsmusic/
A message from Debbie Bowling on
November 15, 2001
Here's two really
good sites for radar around San Antonio.
Click
Here
http://wwwa.accuweather.com/adcbin/metro_radar_large.asp?partner=accuweather&nav=home&type=loop&nxsite=sat
*on the above metro
map site, click on the areas to show roads, etc.
Click
Here
http://wwwa.accuweather.com/adcbin/local_radar.asp?partner=accuweather&nav=home&type=loop&nxtype=R1&nxsite=ksat
They are two
excellent sites.
Debbie
Maps (including San Antonio Maps)
Note that in the second site listed above, there is a tab for maps
or go to http://www.accuweather.com/adcbin/maps_index?nav=home&partner=accuweather
Bed & Breakfast Suggestions for
Texas
Bed & Breakfast Texas Style --- http://www.bnbtexasstyle.com/
Texas Hill Country --- http://www.texasbedandbreakfast.com/
Frederickburg --- Gastehaus Schmidt (The Jensens Use This One A Lot)
--- http://www.fbglodging.com/
HAT --- http://www.hat.org/
Texas Travel --- http://www.virtualcities.com/ons/tx/txonsdex.htm
Bob Jensen's helpers for San Antonio
residents and visitors are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/sanantonio.htm
COMPUTER PRODUCTS FOR
EDUCATION is pleased to offer to you the best prices on ACADEMIC EDITION
SOFTWARE from MICROSOFT, ADOBE, MACROMEDIA and others - AT UP TO 84% OFF
RETAIL PRICES. If you are a Qualified Education Buyer (defined below) you can
purchase software products from CPE at HUGE DISCOUNTS!
Qualified Education
Buyers include K-12 and HIGHER EDUCATION STUDENTS, TEACHERS, FACULTY, STAFF,
and SCHOOLS.
Visit www.edu-software.com
or call us 800-679-7007.
"Debate continues over science's
role within Islam: Historic legacy weighs heavily on Muslim
scientists," BY GLENNDA CHUI, Mercury News, November 13, 2001 --- http://www.siliconvalley.com/docs/news/depth/issci111301a.htm
Against a backdrop of
war, political instability and economic problems, Muslim scientists are
seeking to reconcile their religion with the drive to modernize society.
Islam emphasizes the
pursuit of knowledge but also, in the eyes of many, requires unquestioning
belief.
In seeking to balance
these precepts, some scholars argue for a return to Islam as a basis for doing
science. Others call for a rejection of religious fundamentalism, which they
say stifles the curiosity and questioning that is at the heart of all
research.
One of the most
prominent proponents of that view is Pervez Hoodbhoy, a physicist at
Quaid-e-Azam University in Islamabad.
Since the Golden Age
of Islam ended in about AD 1600, he said, ``There is scarcely any Muslim
achievement to show in the sciences. To me, what that says is that if Muslims
want to get out of this dangerous phase of a feeling of failure, of
disappointment, they'll have to compete in the same areas that their
forefathers were good at.
``And the only way
they can do it is if they can get past this fundamentalism which is sapping
their energy and drive. It's an angry defense mechanism. Instead of opening up
and competing, it's withdrawing into a shell and just reflecting upon past
glories.''
Proponents of a
movement known as Islamic science, however, could not disagree more. In their
view, the Islamic intellectual tradition is a seamless whole that encompasses
religion and science, and they want to restore that sense of harmony.
"The Annual Interactive 500,"
by John McCormick ---
http://www.interactiveweek.com/article/0,3658,s%253D617%2526a%253D17766,00.asp
The Interactive 500
is more than a list of which companies generated the most hard dollars from
their web operations in the past year. It's also Interactive Week's annual
checkup on the state of e-commerce. And this year, surprisingly, the health of
the online economy appears to be a lot better than most people think.
Yes, some 330
Internet companies ceased operations in the first half of the year. And some
of the dot-goners — such as Quokka Sports and Streamline.com — had prime
positions on the two previous Interactive 500 listings. Other former
Interactive 500 companies, such as DLJdirect, have been merged out of
existence. And whole Internet groupings — such as the independent
e-marketplace sector that made such a strong showing on last year's
Interactive 500 — are being battered.
So where's the good
news? The aggregate revenue of this year's Interactive 500 is a downright
jaw-dropping $378.38 billion — more than double last year's total of $183.56
billion. Many of the dot-coms on the list are profitable, and traditional
businesses continue to be a dominating presence on Interactive Week's annual
ranking of e-commerce powerhouses.
Indeed, just about
every metric shows e-commerce is growing, becoming more profitable and, for
many traditional companies, a sharp competitive edge. Properly mastered, that
edge can cut new paths to online opportunity.
This year's
Interactive 500 special report tells those hard-won e-commerce success
stories. From manufacturing to energy to technology to wholesaling and
retailing, they show that the companies that have discovered the keys to
implementing Internet technologies and strategies are, more often than not,
market leaders.
Take, for example,
Office Depot, the leading office products' company: It's No. 30 on this year's
list, and is considered by many e-tail experts to be the company to watch in
the space. For its most recent quarter, ended Sept. 29, the company's overall
sales were relatively flat at $2.8 billion. But its worldwide e-commerce sales
grew 60 percent, to $402.0 million, while its profits surged 25 percent, from
$50.6 million to $62.5 million.
"We had decided
as a company from day one that the Web was going to be totally integrated into
our systems and our company. We viewed it as a strategic initiative,"
says Monica Luechtefeld, Office Depot's executive vice president of
e-commerce. "We viewed it as a critical business function."
Office Depot isn't
the only business using its Internet operations as a protective skin against
recessionary pressures. Some of the nation's most admired companies —
General Electric, IBM, Intel and others — say the Web is critical to their
success and that they'll continue to push hard on new Internet initiatives.
Lessons Learned
Most of the top
companies on this year's Interactive 500 have learned how to integrate their
supply chains, back-end databases, customer service operations and procurement
systems with their Web operations to get a jump on the competition. They
figured out how to get people to visit their Web sites and even buy something
once they're there. These companies also have developed more mature mechanisms
for determining whether they're getting payback from Internet expenditures.
Their efforts are
paying off. Two reports last month showed that business-to-business and
business-to-consumer e-commerce activity is healthy and strong. Despite the
current economic difficulties, GartnerG2, a research arm of Gartner, is
predicting happy holidays for e-tailers. The research house estimates that
worldwide online holiday shopping sales will hit $25.3 billion — a 39
percent increase over last year. On the B2B side, IDC expects the worldwide
value of business goods and services purchased online to skyrocket from $282
billion in 2000 to $4.3 trillion by 2005 — an incredible 73 percent compound
annual growth rate.
No wonder
corporations are dedicating more of their precious IT dollars to e-business
initiatives. In a research note published Sept. 13, John Gantz, IDC's chief
research officer, said there was a growing backlog of e-business-related
projects, and that Internet-related spending would grow from 15 percent of
overall corporate technology spending last year to 37.5 percent in 2005. That
compares with overall IT spending, which, depending on the source, is expected
to grow a scant 2 percent to 5 percent this year.
"The reality of
the situation is that any new technology development is based on Internet
technology," says Rick Villars, vice president of e-commerce strategies
at IDC.
Continued at http://www.interactiveweek.com/article/0,3658,s%253D617%2526a%253D17766,00.asp
Bob Jensen's threads on eCommerce
are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce.htm
Robert Morss Lovett, a professor of
English at the University of Chicago from the 1890s to the 1940s, was an
"ideal public intellectual," according to Princeton history professor
Anthony Grafton in the autumn issue of "The American Scholar." In the
article, Grafton presents Lovett as a model example for modern intellectuals, an
individual who flourished in both academe and society and took part in public
dialogue beyond the ivory tower.
Anthony Grafton recently spoke at the
New York Public Library about some other great learned figures in history:
Faustus, Agrippa and Christian magi. His lecture, "Christian Magic and
Jewish Mysticism in Renaissance Europe" is available exclusively on Fathom:
http://www.fathom.com/link.jhtml?page=feature&cid=540&id=122276
Search for more online courses in
Fathom's Course Directory: http://www.fathom.com/link.jhtml?page=directory&cid=544&id=0
"The
world of auditing and accounting appears to be in crisis," driven in part
by issues such as intangibles, the complexity of derivatives and trading, and
financial engineering.
Paul Volcker, the former Federal Reserve Board chairman.
From FEI Express on November 15, 2001
Highlights from FEI's Annual Current
Financial Reporting Issues Conference.
The annual Current
Financial Reporting Issues conference kicked off Monday, Nov. 12, at New
York's Waldorf-Astoria Hotel with a keynote address by Paul Volcker, the
former Federal Reserve Board chairman. Volcker, who now heads the
International Accounting Standards Committee, confessed to be something of a
neophyte in the accounting world, but said he was "impressed by the
difficulty of the issues" involved in trying to devise a single set of
global accounting standards. Indeed, he said, "The world of auditing
and accounting appears to be in crisis," driven in part by issues such as
intangibles, the complexity of derivatives and trading, and financial
engineering.
Volcker conceded that
achieving consensus on the 14-member International Accounting Standards Board
- which the IASC is charged with appointing - will be difficult. Different
countries are at different stages of development, he said, and it isn't clear
where the final authority for the standards would rest, especially if
political entities get involved. Still, a multilateral approach appears to be
the right one, he said. The former Fed chairman stressed that the IASB members
will be diverse, professional, experienced and independent.
Volcker said there
may be some disagreement over two competing philosophies - the U.S. approach
of setting standards in detail and the "European idea" of setting
out clear standards but leaving detail to practice and emerging issues. There
will be a continuing role for national standard-setting bodies, chiefly as
watchdogs, once the IASB does promulgate standards, Volcker added. Substantive
convergence of standards within five years, he argued, could be construed as
success.
He took a relatively
hard line on the controversial issue of options accounting, calling it a
difficult subject that won't be settled quickly. There may be different
expectations about the urgency of the issue, he added, but it can't be allowed
to dominate the board's agenda. Volcker added that he has seen the heavy use
of options lead to inconsistencies and abuses, as well as repricing
challenges.
IASB UPDATE The
conference's first general session featured a panel with Thomas Jones, the
vice chairman of the IASB; Edmund Jenkins, chairman of the Financial
Accounting Standards Board (FASB); and John Morrissey, deputy chief accountant
at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
Jones, the former
finance chief at Citicorp, argued that there is considerable diversity of
opinion on the IASB and that "no nation has a bloc." He maintained
that for international standards to work, there has to be a "three-legged
stool" with standards, audit and enforcement. Convergence clearly would
lower international borrowing costs, he said. Jones supported the European
model of creating less-detailed standards, then "going after those who
deviate" from them. He added that if real progress toward convergence
isn't made in three years, the effort "will have largely failed."
He, too, cautioned
that the options accounting issue is a volatile one, and its outcome isn't
clear. Europeans are already writing standards on options, he said, urging the
U.S. audience not to create "a frenzy" about it or become
inflexible. "This is a board that won't take to being bullied," he
said, and cautioned advocates of the current U.S. system not to withdraw
support of the IASB over this one issue.
Jenkins emphasized
the FASB's "unequivocal support" for the idea of high-quality global
standards, noting that the groundwork has been laid for some time. "Now
we have to get to the heavy lifting," he said. The FASB is already
working with eight national standards-setters, he said, but "won't
shortcut any processes in the search for convergence." Jenkins argued
that principle-based standards can be "problematic," and that
financial engineering is often the result of attempts to avoid detailed
standards.
FASB/EITF UPDATE A
second general session featured an update on projects being pursued by the
FASB and the Emerging Issues Task Force. Timothy Lucas, the FASB's director of
research and technical activities, walked the audience through the most recent
series of statements and projects, as he has in years past.
Lucas argued that the
four major FAS statements issued this year - 141 through 144 - are relatively
significant, especially when compared to those from a year earlier. Arguably
the biggest changes, the decisions in Business Combinations to eliminate the
pooling-of-interests method of accounting for mergers and to test goodwill for
impairment, were major improvements, Lucas argued. Pooling, he said, was
"non-accounting," tended to create wrong-headed incentives and
involved complex criteria. Moreover, he said, the previous treatment for
goodwill impairment was not operational, and goodwill amortization was not
meaningful.
Lucas detailed a
number of projects in the FASB pipeline. A "purchase method" project
will be the first done in concert with the IASB, he said, and a "new
basis/fresh start" effort will likely be led by the IASB.
The FASB does plan a
project on reporting financial performance, though Lucas said he saw little
relationship between the project and the controversy over pro forma
statements. He said the board wants to understand how companies use statements
to assess performance, looking at issues such as form, content,
classification, aggregation and display. The result might produce a better way
of relating cash flow to the income statement, he said.
PRO-FORMA EARNINGS
PANEL A luncheon panel discussion on pro forma earnings generated some sharp
opinions. Jonathan Weill, the accounting reporter for The Wall Street Journal,
was highly dismissive of many company practices and detailed some recent
evidence of abuses in this area. John Jessup, vice president and controller
with DuPont, agreed with some of Weill's contentions that there have been
excesses and abuses. He argued, however, that the notion of providing a 10Q
statement at the same time as an earnings report - which would provide an
additional check of the accuracy of earnings - is very difficult for most
companies, owing to the need to complete additional filing data and
management's discussion and analysis.
Chuck Hill, director
of research for Thomson Financial/First Call, argued that many of the recent
excesses were seen as far back as the 1960s, albeit at a smaller level. That
was especially true of new technology companies, many of which also had
startlingly high price/earnings ratios for a short time, he said. An
interactive "voting" session using devices at the audience's tables
elicited considerable support for pro forma statements - or at least non-GAAP
reporting. Surprisingly, however, a majority of those voting said they would
accept more SEC oversight in this area.
SEC DEVELOPMENTS The
session was moderated by Roger W. Trupin, vice president & controller,
Citigroup.
Robert Herdman,
newly-appointed chief accountant, Office of the Chief Accountant, U.S.
Securities & Exchange Commission discussed some of the Commission's
current priorities. "Everything we do at the SEC is geared towards
protecting the interests of investors," he said. "The message is
consistent with [Chairman] Harvey Pitt: "Government is a service
industry, there to serve the people."
He said that
improving the U.S. financial reporting system - already the best in the world
- is a top priority of Pitt. The basic framework of the system that came into
being some 70 years ago, is pretty much unchanged, he explained, except for
adding MD&A. "It can use a good dose of simplifying," said
Herdman. He's strong on leveraging technology as "a good enabler to
disseminate information and knowledge."
Herdman listed a few
financial reporting and accounting "hot button" issues: * Events of
Sept. 11 * MD&A for disclosures * Recession-related disclosures about
uncertainties * Implementation issues related to FAS 141 and 142 * Revenue
recognition (overstatements) - and he said he's pleased the IASB added revenue
recognition to its agenda and would like the FASB to do the same.
Charles D. Niemeier,
chief accountant, Division of Enforcement, U.S. Securities & Exchange
Commission said his department has been very busy lately - with 260 financial
fraud investigations underway. The division is receiving more information from
informants than ever before and the "big story" he said is the size
of the companies with financial fraud investigations: there are more Fortune
500 companies than 5 years ago. It's also significant to note that Big 5
accounting firms are auditors for three-quarters of the companies being
investigated.
He said that many
recent investigations stemming from disgruntled employees who "have an ax
to grind," are listened to "with a grain of salt" and combined
with other sources to see if the complaint is worthy of investigation. Fraud
investigations are underway in non-U.S. operations and into issues related to
companies' quarterly reports - not just annual reports. He expressed a general
concern with the "quality of audits."
"No company is
immune from financial fraud," said Niemeier, and "good people get
caught. It can happen to any one and any company." Companies get in
trouble for a variety of reasons including: top side adjustments for which
there is insufficient support, extreme pressure to make targets without
adequate controls, companies dependent on acquisitions to make revenue
results, and more.
How best to stay out
of trouble? Niemeier said, "Don't start - one thing leads to another.
And, when in doubt, disclose; communicate - early and often." Basically,
he said, "Investors want to know operating results of a company - is it
trending up or down?" And, on audit committees: "Audit committees
can be your friend." He said the management letter is a document to
memorialize what was said and done. It's protection.
Craig Olinger, deputy
chief accountant, Division of Corporation Finance, U.S. Securities &
Exchange Commission said with the economic downturn, his division's priorities
have shifted from looking into IPO issuances of "cheap stocks" to a
renewed focus on periodic reporting.
Some of the key
issues he advises registrants to give attention to include: revenue
recognition (SAB 101), financial statement classification and effects of
recently-issued accounting standards. Also, Olinger said there is a "long
list" of expected inputs in the aftermath of September 11 that
registrants will be addressing and advises companies to use their "best
efforts to file as timely and completely as possible." There is
information on the SEC's Web site that provides guidance.
Olinger said that
there are now over 1,300 foreign issuers in the U.S. For these new
registrants, new rules require filing annual reports and all other filings on
EDGAR to provide investors with the same information that U.S.-registered
companies provide. Approximately 18 percent of the foreign companies had
voluntarily done so and 81 percent already electronically file financial
statements.
Microsoft released Yet
Another Security Patch for IE, a full week after the dire security
compromise was discovered. Blame the lag time on Bill Gates, who got a holiday
job working
retail: The Great Cashier Himself rang up XBoxen at this week's launch.
Gemini G.E.L. online catalogue raisonne
http://www.nga.gov/gemini/
The Gemini
G.E.L. (Graphic Editions Limited) online catalogue raisonné presents
publications of the acclaimed Los Angeles print and sculpture workshop from
its beginning in 1966 through 1996. The catalogue is a work-in-progress with
forthcoming installments to document subsequent Gemini editions. Many of these
prints and sculpture are in the collection of the National Gallery of Art as
part of the Gemini G.E.L. Archive, which is intended to include one example of
each of Gemini's editions. Note that although a print or sculpture may be in
the National Gallery's collection, the online image does not always represent
this particular example, but can be an equivalent proof. The primary data
source for all catalogue raisonné entries is from documentation sheets that
correspond to each published edition. Gemini G.E.L. has compiled these records
since its inception, and the data has been reviewed, organized, and
transcribed by the National Gallery for this online catalogue raisonné.
Women in Academe – Still Hungry
After All These Years --- http://www.aaup.org/pr01613.htm
Women professors work
at a discount. According to a report released by the American Association of
University Professors, women professors earn 91 cents on the dollar compared
to male faculty.
"Women faculty
are making progress through the academic ranks and toward a goal of salary
equity, but we’re not there yet," said Professor Mary Gibson of Rutgers
University, chair of the Association’s Committee on the Status of Women in
the Academic Profession. The Committee released a report on salary equity,
"Faculty Salary and Faculty Distribution Fact Sheet, 2001 – 2002,"
prepared by Professor Marcia Bellas of the University of Cincinnati . . .
Cubergirl.com --- http://www.cybergrrl.com/
More Perfect Union (History of Japanese
Americans) --- http://americanhistory.si.edu/perfectunion/experience/
Semantic Interpretation for Speech
Recognition http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/WD-semantic-interpretation-20011116/
This document defines
the process of Semantic Interpretation for Speech Recognition and the syntax
and semantics of semantic interpretation tags that can be added to speech
recognition grammars to compute information to return to an application on the
basis of rules and tokens that were matched by the speech recognizer. In
particular, it defines the syntax and semantics of the contents of Tags
in the Speech Recognition Grammar
Specification.
Semantic
Interpretation may be useful in combination with other specifications, such as
the Stochastic Language Models
(N-Gram) Specification, but their use with N-grams has not yet been
studied.
Although the results
of semantic interpretation are describing the meaning of a natural language
utterance, the current specification does not specifically generate such
information in the Natural Language
Semantics Markup Language for the Speech Interface Framework. It is
believed that semantic interpretation can produce information that can be
encoded in the NL Semantics Markup Language, but this is not ensured or
enforced.
Bob Jensen's threads on speech
recognition are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245glosf.htm#Speech1
Due to competition between the two
companies, Accenture has decided to drop PricewaterhouseCoopers as its auditors,
effective upon completion of the current financial statements, which should be
finalized by the end of November. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/63246
*Free Seminar *
HOW TO READ JOYCE, a free seminar from Cambridge University Press, offers
a pathway to Joyce that attempts to bypass the intimidation of this brilliant
and inscrutable author. The seminar is free; simply follow the checkout process
to enroll: http://www.fathom.com/link.jhtml?page=course&cid=541&id=10701034
* Semester-Length Course *
READING LITERATURE, a semester-length course from the University of Washington,
focuses on techniques and practices in reading, interpreting and therefore
enjoying literature. Enroll anytime: http://www.fathom.com/link.jhtml?page=course&cid=536&id=1276
* Semester-Length Course *
SURVEY OF THE HISTORY OF THE US, an online course from the University of
Washington, aims to make students aware of their heritage of the past and more
intelligently conscious of the present. Enroll anytime: http://www.fathom.com/link.jhtml?page=course&cid=550&id=1342
Search for more online courses in
Fathom's Course Directory: http://www.fathom.com/link.jhtml?page=directory&cid=544&id=0
A message from Nathan Letourneau
Hi Professor Jensen.
My name is Nathan
Letourneau and I am a student at the University of Minnesota. I created a free
web site for students to go and compare prices on new and used textbooks at a
bunch of different online booksellers with one click. It also lists the cost
of shipping for each store and different coupons that the bookstores are
offering, so as to save the students more money. I was wondering if you would
put a link for my website on your page ( http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book99q3.htm
)? I know this is an old website, but I was wondering if you could post it on
there anyway (or your new one) because it still shows up on web searches. I
would appreciate it a lot! I see you have bigwords.com listed already. Thanks
for the consideration. My website is www.CampusBooks4Less.com
.
Thanks!
Nathan
Letourneau leto0023@tc.umn.edu
Reply from Robert B Walker [walkerrb@ACTRIX.CO.NZ]
I have just read Bob's up-date on the Enron affair.
Much as I enjoy the discomfort of organisations like Andersen's, I disagree
with what is quoted from Lynn Turner, an ex-SEC chief accountant.
Turner is cited as saying that issued shares should
not be taken up as receivables until the cash is received. This is utter
nonsense. In the jurisdiction in which I operate the issue of shares creates
an unequivocal claim against the shareholder until the issue value of the
shares has been paid either in cash or in assets where the assets are
transferred at fair value.
To create a receivable in such circumstances is no
different to booking a sale prior to receiving the cash. The simple questions
are: is there to a future economic inflow? - the answer is yes (subject to a
reliable value test see below) does the entity control the claim over the
shareholder? - by definition yes. does the claim arise as a result of a past
event? again by definition yes. There is an asset easily valued, in the first
instance, at issue value. One would need to subject the claims to a realisable
value test which would entail knowing something of the creditworthiness of the
shareholders holding unpaid shares but then that is a routine problem which
arises everyday in accounting for trade receivables.
If that is the measure of Andersen's sins then the
legal action that has begun against them won't be very successful.
For Bob Jensen's helpers in buying
traditional books and electronic books, go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm
Liberis offers an
innovative concept, one which is quite unique in Europe:
Available in 2
languages, Liberis is a whole site devoted to "Business to Business"
information, with a detailed database of companies whose customers are other
companies. Liberis is a "Business to Business" meeting place - a
place to build new contacts and forge new deals.
Liberis is your
answer to the difficulties of finding specialized and detailed information on
the Web. These days, it's becoming all but impossible to find in-depth
information using the traditional search engines: 2 or 3 lines and a few
keywords are by no means sufficient for quickly locating a company specialized
in a certain field. But at Liberis, all registered companies are displayed
with a complete description of their activities, products, and services, a
list of the brands they distribute, and a selection of their customers...
So don't wait a
moment longer! Surf to our site today at: http://www.liberis.com
Bob Jensen's threads on this topic
are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce.htm
The notorious and long-lived Snow White
virus hits an e-mail list of the American Muslim Council, and the group claims
it was deliberate. Antivirus experts aren't so sure --- http://www.wired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,48412,00.html
Antonin Scalia, one of the Supreme
Court's most conservative justices, says he would vote against a national ID
card if the issue went on the ballot --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,48419,00.html
American Political Development
(History) http://www.americanpoliticaldevelopment.org/home.htm
Hoping to attract legal talent to the
firm, Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu has added an interactive e-brochure to its Web
site. The e-brochure uses Quick Time film and Flash animation to promote the Big
Five firm's Global Tax and Legal Services department. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/63247
"Courts to hear rash of cell phone
suits," by Graeme Wearden ZDNet, November 14, 2001 --- http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2824451,00.html?chkpt=zdnnp1tp02
A lawsuit is due to
be filed in America on Wednesday alleging that a 34-year old man's brain
cancer was caused by mobile phone use. The case is likely to be followed by
dozens more in coming weeks. Lawyers acting on behalf of Michael Murray, a
former Motorola worker, are seeking both compensation and punitive damages.
The personal injury case will be heard at the District of Columbia Superior
Court, and will seek to prove that mobile phones cause brain tumors--a claim
consistently denied by the mobile industry.
Attorney Mayer
Morganroth has confirmed to reporters that this case will be filed on
Wednesday, adding that "others will be filed in the very near
future."
A spokesman for
Motorola's offices has said that there is no proof that mobile phone use
causes adverse health effects, and that Motorola only knew that Murray was
pursuing a "worker's compensation claim" against the company.
A flurry of similar
cases is expected to hit the U.S. courts in the coming weeks, according to
news Web site RCR Wireless News. Government bodies and regulators will both be
targeted in lawsuits that will claim they have acted negligently by not
promoting devices that could reduce exposure to emissions from mobile phones.
Murder and mayhem grip a dot-com
company after its CEO is found slumped over his chair, dead. It's a first-person
murder mystery, with you as the detective, vying to become the first monthly
gaming series --- http://www.wired.com/news/games/0,2101,48256,00.html
Latin American E-Commerce Still Has
Hurdles to Clear Online retailing revenues in Latin America are expected to
reach $1.28 billion by the end of 2001, more than double the $540 million from
2000, according to a report from the Boston Consulting Group. http://www.newmedia.com/default.asp?articleID=3209
Thanks to all of you
who responded to my question regarding the legality of the income tax and the
"usefulness" of arguments made by individuals who claim that we
don't have to pay if we don't want to. I came across a document posted on the
IRS web site, under the "What's Hot" section, which lays out the
response given by the IRS to such claims. I thought some of you would find it
interesting reading, as well as useful for students who raise the issue in
class.
The PDF document may
be downloaded from http://www.irs.gov/hot/index.html
. Just scroll down to the What's Hot section.
Here is a brief
description of its content:
Why pay taxes?
"The Truth About Frivolous Tax Arguments" responds to some of the
more common frivolous "legal" arguments made by individuals and
groups who oppose compliance with the federal tax laws. These arguments are
grouped under six general categories, with variations within each category.
Each contention is briefly explained, followed by a discussion of the legal
authority that rejects the contention. A final section explains the penalties
that the courts may impose on those who pursue tax cases on frivolous grounds.
Thank you again.
Best regards,
Brett A. Stone,
Ph.D., CPA
Assistant Professor of Accounting Faculty Advisor,
UNY New Paltz Accounting & Finance Association (AFA)
School of Business State University of New York at New Paltz
A Wired News Q&A with Fahad
Al Sharekh, whose company, Ajeeb.com, just rolled out what he claims is the
Internet's first free Arabic-to-English translation service --- http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,48260,00.html
The translation site is at http://www.ajeeb.com/
The English version is at http://english.ajeeb.com/
As chief executive of
Arabic and English portal site Ajeeb.com, Al Sharekh believes that the
error-prone technology known as machine translation has played a key part in
speeding the exchange of information between the English-speaking world and
the Middle East.
Four weeks ago, Ajeeb
introduced what its founder says is the first free online service that
instantly translates Arabic websites into English. The company, a division of
Arabic-language programming firm Sakhr Software, has been running an
English-to-Arabic translation service for more than a year.
Al Sharekh, a Kuwaiti
citizen educated in the United States, admits that machine translation --
despite momentous improvements in recent years -- is still far from perfect.
Any arguments to the
contrary are quickly disproved by a glance at the website of Arabic news
agency Al Jazeera, where translations of headlines range from the humorous:
"Concord returns to the service after a year of the stop" to the not
entirely intelligible: "An Israeli incursion is near an embryo and Buch
he refuses Arafat meeting."
But given the
voracious demand for news from abroad in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks, Al
Sharekh tells Wired News that users are learning to live with a little weird
grammar.
Continued at http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,48260,00.html
See also:
Does
Official Taliban Site Exist?
'Good
News' for Arabs on MSNBC
"9/11: The Psychological
Aftermath," by Sarah Graham, Scientific American, --- http://www.scientificamerican.com/explorations/2001/111201anxiety/
Anxiety is on the rise and experts
estimate that 100,000 people in New York alone are at risk for post-traumatic
stress disorder.
The count is so high
in part due to the nature of the attacks. Studies show that rates of PTSD are
greater following events caused by deliberate violence than after natural
disasters. "If an airplane had accidentally flown off course in a heavy
fog in New York and taken down one of the towers," Marmar explains,
"it would have been very traumatic but probably less traumatic than
knowing that somebody, or some group, wanted to kill everybody in those
buildings." It is this relationship to violence that may explain the
higher rates of PTSD observed in women. Compared with men, women are more
likely to suffer trauma after a physical or sexual assault.
Bob Jensen's threads on 9/11 are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/JusticeAppeal.htm
Email message from Glenn Meyer
Normally, I am not
moved to post many URLs but this one I thought was worth it.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,39104,00.html
Glenn Meyer
"Arm the Afghan Women," by
Wendy McElroy, Fox News, November 20, 2001
It is commonplace to
assume that toppling the Taliban will free Afghan women. But in an unstable
country where soldiers celebrate conquest by raping — and where there is
currently no guarantee that whatever form of government eventually assumes
control will not be equally oppressive toward females — women have to
protect themselves to remain free.
Afghan women need to
exercise the right of self-defense, including gun ownership. They also need to
be recognized as a force of armed resistance against oppressive regimes.
Freedom Fighters
In the 1970's, Afghan
women were among the most Westernized and liberated in the Islamic world.
Their pre-Taliban role as doctors, bankers, lawyers, and teachers has been
well documented. But almost no attention has been given to the part they
played as freedom fighters against the Soviets, or to their potential for
armed resistance against future oppressors who may again try to hijack the
country as the new government takes form. Yet the evidence indicates that many
Afghan women would fight to protect themselves and their families.
In October 1996, the
New Internationalist magazine interviewed Nooria Jehan, a mother who joined
the anti-Soviet mujahideen in guerilla warfare.
"I learned
explosive techniques and began supervising and teaching the younger men,"
Nooria recalled. "We would stick explosives and detonators under the
Russians' tables and chairs."
When asked what she
would do if the women-hating Taliban captured her city of residence, Kabul,
Nooria said, "We will fight them as we fought the Russians."
That is what some
women have done. In the Nov. 12 Newsday, journalists Matthew McAllester and
Ilana Ozernoy quoted a woman named Malika, a mother whose family lived on the
Taliban front line of Bagram just north of Kabul.
Continued at http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,39104,00.html
A Message from the American Association
of University Professors (AAUP) --- http://www.aaup.org/opedmb.htm
What Do the
Faculty Think?
The nation was
shocked into silence by the unimaginable images of deliberate carnage that we
witnessed on the morning of September 11, and for a time we wanted no
opinions--only the details of what had happened. And then we wanted the
stories of heroism and self-sacrifice. And we also wanted a time of silence to
mourn. I stood outside a packed church in downtown Washington at noon on
September 14 when the whole city was solemnly silent--except for the drone of
a passing helicopter from time to time. New words failing us, we turned to old
ones in hymns and prayers and patriotic songs. That time has passed, and now
we are back to our usual habits of analysis, criticism, and scorn. The pile-up
of details is not enough; as a rational species, we must push beyond them to
imagine causes, motives, remedies. And that is good. That is what we do as
citizens in America. That is what faculty do as professionals.
The faculty do not,
however, have a single brain that renders a unified opinion on matters of
public policy. We have, in our Congress, a Republican conservative former
professor of economics who wants to drill for oil in the Arctic, and we have a
liberal professor of physics who doesn't. Professors crowd our video screens
with opposing opinions about the budget, the genetic engineering, and cultures
of the Middle East, and we seem to accept their diversity in times of peace.
But in times of crisis, our tolerance of such diversity fades, and the words
of any one faculty member may be taken to be the words of all. It is
predictable that after we had passed through the initial phases of reaction to
September 11, we should want more subtle analyses. And so the discourses of
academics--passionate as well as cool--have commenced. And so have the voluble
reactions of those who believe that thinking out loud in our colleges and
universities is so subversive that it ought to be stopped, somehow.
A distrust of
intellectuals has always lurked beneath the surface of American popular
opinion. Now it has begun to leak out again--either through the frontal
assault in the partial reporting by the New York Post of a forum at the City
University of New York, or the sideswipes at "campus teach-ins" by a
respected columnist like Tom Friedman or others such as John Leo. Such
editorializing may be legitimate, but to demonize "the faculty" is
harmful. Further, there's a difference when the responses to faculty opinions
come from those who have the power to retaliate. White House press secretary
Ari Fleischer withdrew his ominous warning that public people should
"watch what they say," because the government has the power to
censor. Just so, the comments of some members of the board of CUNY, and of its
chancellor, should also be rethought. These warnings have been accompanied by
nods to academic freedom, but they still open the possibility of retaliation.
So, what do the
faculty think? They think many things about September 11. Some of them died in
the bombings; some lost loved ones. They disagree vociferously on ethics,
strategy, causes, and effects. From my own informal survey, faculty opinion
ranges from vengeful to conciliatory. That's why we cannot speak on the course
of war or peace for "the faculty" that we represent within the
American Association of University Professors. But we can speak for faculty on
one big thing--the necessity, as patriots and professors, to think and express
their views in freedom.
Mary Burgan,
General Secretary American Association of University Professors
October 5, 2001
One Thing About Lynne Cheney ---
She's Never Afraid to Speak Her Mind
"Mr.
Cheney's wife, Dr. Lynne V. Cheney, is well-known as an eloquent defender of
America's traditional cultural ideals. After serving as chairman of the
National Endowment for the Humanities, Dr. Cheney led the fight to reject the
imposition of ideologically biased U.S. history standards on the nation's
public schools -- standards that embraced every fever and fad of the
politically correct Left, while denigrating or omitting altogether vital core
elements of our national history and values.
SOURCE American Renewal --- http://www.d2kla.org/pipermail/d2kdiscuss/2000-July/000264.html
Cheney has written
and spoken about American education and the value of the humanities to one’s
professional and personal life. She has been featured on television news
programs and her articles have appeared in The New York Times, Newsweek,
The Wall Street Journal and many more.
Before the NEH,
Cheney taught at colleges and universities, was a magazine editor and a widely
published author. She has written two novels and co-authored a third. With her
husband, former Secretary of Defense Richard B. Cheney, she wrote a history of
the House of Representatives. A native of Wyoming, Cheney earned her
bachelor’s degree with highest honors from Colorado College and a master’s
degree from the University of Colorado. Her doctoral degree, with a
specialization in 19th century British literature, is from the University of
Wisconsin. She also holds more than a dozen honorary degrees.
Dr. Lynne V. Cheney http://www.northwood.edu/dw/1992/cheney.html
Cheney's Wife Praises
Appointment Of Homosexual Activist
Lynne Cheney, the
wife of Vice-President Dick Cheney, has spoken out in favour of President
George W. Bush's decision to install practicing homosexual Scott Evertz as
head of the White House office in charge of AIDS policy.
In an interview with
London's Telegraph newspaper, Cheney, one of whose daughters, Mary, is a
lesbian, said that although marriage and the family are "very good
things, I also think that a person who is gay should have every
opportunity."
"My personal
feeling is that the President is to be admired for appointing people who are
qualified and not focusing on what group they belong to," she said.
Catholic World News,
April 24, 2001 --- http://www.cwnews.com/browse/2001/04/15356.htm
"Yesterday
Vice President Dick Cheney came down with laryngitis so his wife had to
deliver a speech for him. After the speech, Cheney's wife had to spend the
rest of the day telling President Bush what to do."
Conan O'Brien --- http://politicalhumor.about.com/library/blcheneyquotes.htm
During the
Reagan and Bush administrations Cheney's wife, Lynne, was a superb chairwoman
of the National Endowment for the Humanities, where she was an astringent
critic of the dumbing down and political corruption of culture, especially in
higher education. But her husband's demeanor--that of a librarian in need of a
nap--will complicate Al Gore's only authentic campaign style--fright-mongering
about Bush's candidacy being a vehicle for various extremisms.
George Will --- http://www.jewishworldreview.com/cols/will1072700.asp
Remember that I am
only your mailman on this erupting volcano in academe. Please don't shoot the
delivery boy!
Having given her a tribute above, I
will now reveal the reason. The following is the highly controversial
report will have many professors (especially professors still bleeding over the
election of Bush and Cheney to lead the United States) on the warpath to
scalp Vice-President Cheney's wife, Lynne Chaney. Interestingly enough,
however, the other co-founder of ACTA is Senator Joseph Lieberman, Al Gore's
running mate. However, liberal faculty to date are venting their
hostilities more on Lynne Cheney than on Senator Lieberman.
"Defending Civilization: How Our
Universities Are Failing America and What Can Be Done About It" --- http://www.goacta.org/Reports/defciv.pdf
A quotation from the University of
Wisconsin's Scout Report on November 23, 2003
(Which is not one of the inflammatory critiques.)
Though short, this
report from The American Council of Trustees and Alumni (ACTA), a nonprofit
co-founded by Lynne Cheney and Senator Joseph I. Lieberman, has been getting
quite a bit of media attention. The report is a scathing condemnation of
universities for being "the weak link in America's response to the
[September 11th] attack," a label earned in part because faculty
"invoked tolerance and diversity as antidotes to evil" and did not
discuss the "difference between good and evil." The report charges
academia with disseminating the message to "blame America first."
ACTA states, "This is not an argument for limiting free speech on college
campuses. Indeed, the robust exchange of ideas is essential to a free society.
But it is equally important -- and never more so than in these unsettling
times -- to insist that colleges and universities transmit our history and
heritage to the next generation." The report concludes with an appendix
of named and numbered professors and organizations who are part of the
"weak link." Anyone interested in debates over the function of
universities or the composition of curricula will want to read this.
One of my colleagues informed me that
the "named and numbered" have been deleted from the report.
The flaming critiques will commence
appearing in the liberal press and in the ACLU press.. The national AAUP
position after the 9/11 attack was rather guarded in favor of motherhood and
apple pie. A Message from the American Association of University
Professors (AAUP) --- http://www.aaup.org/opedmb.htm
A Thoughtful Reply from Curtis Brown, Professor of Philosophy at Trinity
University
Bob Jensen recently sent a link to a report on
"Defending Civilization" produced by an organization (the
"American Council of Trustees and Alumni") founded by Lynne Cheney
and Joe Lieberman. Many of us have probably also read Harry Haines' long and
thoughtful response to this document in the recent Trinity AAUP newsletter.
I started to write a note to tigertalk about my
reactions to the report. Although I only scratched the surface of what I
wanted to say, it got too long to post to tigertalk.
If anyone's interested, my comments, unfortunately
somewhat rambling and incomplete, are available at http://www.trinity.edu/cbrown/defending.html
.
Here's the short version: The central flaw in the
report, in my view, is its absolute refusal to offer or consider evidence or
argument pertaining to the authors' views. Everything in the report reinforces
this refusal to reason about the issues: its criticism of faculty statements,
not on the grounds that they were not well supported, or that more compelling
considerations support an opposing view, but simply because the conclusions
disagreed with the authors' own views; its appeals to authority and polling
statistics, rather than evidence or reasons, in support of its own view; and
above all its collection of over 100 brief supposedly objectionable
quotations, taken from news reports of campus events, with absolutely no
consideration of the context of the quotations or the reasons offered for the
views they express, and with absolutely no attempt to provide a reasoned basis
for disagreeing with these quotations.
Curtis
Maybe Lynne Cheney is Correct
"The Pilgrims' Magna Carta: Americans
can't defend a history they don't know," The Wall Street Journal,
Review and Outlook, November 23, 2001 --- http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=95001503
How much is not taught was
painfully evident in its survey. The Council asked the Roper organization to
assess what college seniors know and don't know about American history and
Western civilization and which institutions of higher learning actually
required students to learn something of these subjects. The results may
surprise more than a few parents now shelling out $30,000 a year to send their
children to one of the nation's elite institutions of higher education. Just
three of the top-ranked 55 schools--Columbia, Colgate and the University of
the South--require a course in Western civilization. None of the 55 requires a
course in American history. (Click here for a full list.)
So at colleges such as
Amherst, Yale, Duke, Stanford, Dartmouth, Rice and the University of
Michigan--to name a few--graduates can now leave as ignorant of Western
civilization as they were when they entered. Other schools on the list do have
history "requirements" but it turns out these are the sort of
requirements that aren't in fact required. Rather, the student can satisfy
them by completing a high school history course or by choosing a non-history
college-level course. At Berkeley, students who earned a C or better in high
school history are exempt. At M.I.T., students can satisfy the historical
studies "requirement" by taking a course in Environmental Politics
and Policy.
All this goes a long way
toward explaining why the college seniors queried by Roper in an earlier
Council survey had so much trouble with even the most basic history questions.
No more than 22% had any idea that "government of the people, by the
people, for the people" came from the Gettysburg Address. More than half
could not identify the Constitution as the source of the separation of powers.
This being the day after Thanksgiving, we're too embarrassed to print the
percentage who thought the Magna Carta was what the Pilgrims signed on the
Mayflower. Remember, these are students from the nation's top 55 colleges.
Facts about America's wars
were also in short supply. Just four out of 10 seniors could identify the
Battle of the Bulge as having taken place in World War II. Only 34% knew
George Washington was the general commanding the Americans at Yorktown, the
ultimate battle of the Revolutionary War. A higher percentage--37%--thought it
might be Ulysses S. Grant.
About one fact most students
did seem clear--that they are citizens of a nation now at war. In turn,
university administrators, long cowed by the multiculturalists and pressure
groups hostile to anything that might smack of Western culture, ought to
consider getting up off their knees to provide young Americans with a serious
education in their history and civilization.
A message from Don Clark
... for more illumination of the cultural response to the tragic events of September 11th, following Bob Jensen's forwarding of Lynne Cheney's commentary on campus culture to Tigertalk, let me suggest the Borowitz Report, to be found at:
http://www.bushnews.com/borowitz.htm
Don Clark
A quotation from an inspiring Quaker
named Parker J. Palmer
As we go into these
five days together, let us remember one thing about the soul. It is like a
wild animal: tough, self-sufficient, resilient, but also exceedingly shy. Let
us remember that if we go crashing through the woods, screaming and yelling
for the soul to come out, it will evade us all day and all night. We cannot
beat the bushes and yell at each other if we expect this precious inwardness
to emerge. But if you are willing to go into the woods and sit quietly at the
base of a tree, that wild animal will, after a few hours, reveal itself to
you. And out of the corner of your eye, you will glimpse something of the wild
preciousness that this conference is looking for. I ask guidance for myself
and, as Quakers say, hold this entire conference in the light, to be here, to
be present to each other in the right spirit, speaking our truth gently and
simply, listening respectfully and attentively to the truth of others,
grounded in our own experience and expanded by experiences that are not yet
ours, compassionate toward that which we do not yet understand, not only as a
kindness to others but for the sake of our growth and our students and the
transformation of education. Amen.
In preparing these
remarks, I've asked myself what are we trying to do here? We know it's about
spirituality and education, but what does that mean? For whatever it's worth,
these are the images that have come to me as I've tried to put a larger frame
of personal meaning around this conference.
I think we are here
to seek life-giving forces and sources in the midst of an enterprise which is
too often death-dealing education. It may seem harsh to call education
death-dealing, but I think that we all have our experience of that.
I am always
astonished and saddened by the fact that this country, which has the most
widespread public education system in the world, has so many people who walk
around feeling stupid because they feel that they are the losers in a
competitive system of teaching and learning. It is a system that dissects life
and distances us from the world because it is rooted in fear.
We come out of
schools where learning turns out to be dull and we don t want to learn again.
Too many children have their birthright gift of love of learning taken away
from them by the very process that s supposed to enhance that gift. And so we
here seek forces and sources that are life-giving in the midst of a system
that is too often death-dealing.
Everyone here has had
his or her own encounter with the forces of death: racism, sexism, justice
denied. In my life, one of my face-to-face encounters with the forces of death
was in two prolonged experiences of clinical depression, passages through the
dark woods that I made when I was in my 40s, devastating experiences when it
was not clear from one day to the next whether I wished to be alive, or even
was still alive the darkness, face-to-face, immersed in it, hardly a spark of
life.
Continued at http://csf.colorado.edu/sine/transcripts/palmer.html
More
By This Author |
 |
 |
 |

Let
Your Life Speak: Listening for the Voice of Vocation ---
http://www.wiley.com/Corporate/Website/Objects/Products/0,9049,221764,00.html
The
Courage to Teach: Exploring the Inner Landscape of a Teacher's Life
(includes book, study guide, and video)
http://www.wiley.com/Corporate/Website/Objects/Products/0,9049,149523,00.html
Teaching
from the Heart: Seasons of Renewal in a Teacher's Life (VHS 30-minute
video), with Parker J. Palmer
http://www.wiley.com/Corporate/Website/Objects/Products/0,9049,149559,00.html
The
Courage to Teach, A Guide for Reflection and Renewal
http://www.wiley.com/Corporate/Website/Objects/Products/0,9049,105046,00.html
The
Active Life: A Spirituality of Work, Creativity, and Caring
http://www.wiley.com/Corporate/Website/Objects/Products/0,9049,221746,00.html
The
Courage to Teach: Exploring the Inner Landscape of a Teacher's Life
(includes book, study guide, and video)
http://www.wiley.com/Corporate/Website/Objects/Products/0,9049,222761,00.html
|
Once again, Wired News is garnering
votes for the year's most eagerly awaited vaporware: products and technologies
that were promised but never delivered --- http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,48515,00.html
Related Links:

Game
Arrives Only in Dreams
March 13, 2001
Vaporware
2000: Missing Inaction
Dec. 27, 2000
Vaporware
'99: The 'Winners'
Jan. 3, 2000
Vaporware
1998: Windows NT Wins
Dec. 29, 1998
Vaporware
1997: We Hardly Knew Ye
The Fourth Annual Inertia Awards,"
by Michael Swaine, webreview, November 12, 2001 --- http://webreview.com/swaine/2001/11_12_01.shtml
In the category of
computer companies, the award goes to Dell. In the words of the nominator,
"These guys can't think outside the box. They are great handling orders,
but innovate the hardware—no way."
In the category of
software companies, the award goes to Microsoft. One nominator says,
"Company has never had an innovative idea. If the rest of the software
industry went away, IE 22 released in 2030 would be promoting 'Even Smarter
Links.'" Other reasons cited include monopolistic practices, that Steve
Ballmer video clip in which he dances around the stage imitating an ape,
Clippy, My Documents, My Pictures, My Images, My Music, My Vomit, etc.
In the category of PR
firms, the award goes to Edelman. "These guys and their affiliates
organized a 'grass roots' campaign to the various state attorney generals that
resulted in them redoubling their resolve to fight Microsoft," a
nominator complains.
In the category of
Web sites, the award goes to Interwise for selling a product that requires
Netscape 4 or higher on a web site that requires Netscape 6 or higher, thus
making it impossible for many of the company's own customers even to contact
the company.
And in the category
of government agencies, the award goes to the popular favorite, the United
States Department of Justice, for spending millions of dollars of taxpayer
money to win an antitrust judgement against Microsoft and then negotiating a
settlement that largely lets the illegal monopolist off the hook.
In conclusion, the
management would like to point out that this year's winners are no more
deserving than many other candidates who failed to be considered solely
because nobody nominated them. The spirit of solidarity that has spread across
America in recent months like a virus, while it doubtless has its positive
side, has had a devastating effect on the grumpiness and petty nitpicking on
which this awards competition depends. You nominators, frankly, didn't rise to
the high level of crabbiness that you set in past years. We understand, we
really do, but we do hope to see a lot more grousing and kvetching next year.
Forwarded by Auntie Bev
Opera is where a guy gets stabbed in
the back, and instead of dying, he
sings."
-- Robert Benchley
Don't bother to look, I've composed all this already." -- Gustav
Mahler,
to Bruno Walter who had stopped to admire mountain scenery in rural
Austria.
"I would rather play Chiquita Banana and have my swimming pool than
play
Bach and starve." -- Xavier Cugat
"[Musicians] talk of nothing but money and jobs. Give me businessmen
every time. They really are interested in music and art." -- Jean
Sibelius, explaining why he rarely invited musicians to his home.
"The amount of money one needs is terrifying . . ." -- Ludwig van
Beethoven
"Only become a musician if there is absolutely no other way you can
make a
living."-- Kirke Mecham, on his life as a composer.
Flint must be an extremely wealthy town: I see that each of you bought
two or three seats."-- Victor Borge, playing to a half-filled house in
Flint, Michigan.
"God tells me how the music should sound, but you stand in the
way." --
Arturo Toscanini to a trumpet player
"Already too loud!" -- Bruno Walter at his first rehearsal with an
American orchestra, on seeing the players reaching for their instruments.
"Never look at the trombones. It only encourages them." -- Richard
Strauss
"I write as a sow piddles." -- Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
"He has an enormously wide repertory. He can conduct anything, provided
it's by Beethoven, Brahms or Wagner. He tried Debussy's La Mer once. It
came out as Das Merde." --Anonymous Orchestra Member on George Szell
"Madam, you have between your legs an instrument capable of giving
pleasure to thousands and all you can do is scratch it." --Sir Thomas
Beecham to a lady cellist.
"I liked the opera very much. Everything but the music."
--Benjamin
Britten on Stravinsky's The Rakes' Progress
"Her singing reminds me of a cart coming downhill with the brake
on."
--Sir Thomas Beecham on an unidentified soprano in Die Walkure
"In the first movement alone, I took note of six pregnancies and at
least
four miscarriages."--Sir Thomas Beecham on Bruckner's Seventh Symphony
Sir Thomas Beecham was once asked if he had played any Stockhausen.
"No,"
he replied, "but I have trodden in some."
"Rossini would have been a great composer if his teacher had spanked
him
enough on his backside." --Ludwig van Beethoven
"He'd be better off shoveling snow." --Richard Strauss on Arnold
Schoenberg.
"Why is it that whenever I hear a piece of music I don't like, it's
always
by Villa-Lobos?" --Igor Stravinsky
"If he'd been making shell-cases during the war it might have been
better
for music." --Maurice Ravel on Camille Saint-Saens
"No operatic star has yet died soon enough for me." --Sir Thomas
Beecham
"A composer is a guy who goes around forcing his will on unsuspecting
air
molecules, often with the assistance of unsuspecting musicians."
--Frank
Zappa
"Blues is easy to play, but hard to feel." --Jimi Hendrix
"Whoever is most impertinent has the best chance." --Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart
"Simple ain't easy." --Thelonious Monk
Out of the mouths
of babes comes the Dead Cat Test, a true story...........
A kindergarten pupil
told his teacher he'd found a cat.
She asked if it was
dead or alive.
"Dead," she
was informed.
"How do you
know?" she asked.
"Because I
pissed in his ear and it didn't move," said the child innocently.
"You did
WHAT?!?!?!" the teacher shrieked in surprise.
"You know,"
explained the boy, "I leaned over and went 'psssssst' and he didn't
move."
Politically Spirited Humor at the
Bush/Cheney Team's Expense --- http://politicalhumor.about.com/library/blcheneyquotes.htm
They really can laugh at themselves. Jokes by Jay Leno and others.
Friends should be close and relatives
distant.
Forwarded by Auntie Bev
THE SENILITY PRAYER
God grant me the senility to forget the
people I never liked anyway, the good fortune to run into the ones that I do,
and the eyesight to tell the difference.
Now that I'm 'older' (but refuse to
grow up), here's what I've discovered
ONE- I started out
with nothing, and I still have most of it.
TWO- My wild oats
have turned into prunes and All Bran.
THREE- I finally got
my head together; now my body is falling apart.
FOUR- Funny, I don't
remember being absent minded...
FIVE- All reports are
in; life is now officially unfair.
SIX- If all is not
lost, where is it?
SEVEN- It is easier
to get older than it is to get wiser.
EIGHT- Some days
you're the dog; some days you're the hydrant.
NINE- I wish the buck
stopped here; I sure could use a few...
TEN- Kids in the back
seat cause accidents.
ELEVEN- Accidents in
the back seat cause...kids.
TWELVE- It's hard to
make a comeback when you haven't been anywhere.
THIRTEEN- The only
time the world beats a path to your door is when you're in the bathroom.
FOURTEEN- If God
wanted me to touch my toes, he would have put them on my knees.
FIFTEEN- When I'm
finally holding all the cards, why does everyone decide to play chess?
SIXTEEN- It's not
hard to meet expenses... they're everywhere.
SEVENTEEN- The only
difference between a rut and a grave is the depth.
EIGHTEEN- These days,
I spend a lot of time thinking about the hereafter...I go somewhere to get
something and then wonder what I'm here after.
NINETEEN- I AM UNABLE
TO REMEMBER IF I HAVE MAILED THIS TO YOU BEFORE OR NOT
And
that's the way it was on November 23, 2001 with a little help from my friends.
In
March 2000, Forbes named AccountantsWorld.com as the Best Website on the
Web --- http://accountantsworld.com/.
Some top accountancy links --- http://accountantsworld.com/category.asp?id=Accounting
For
accounting news, I prefer AccountingWeb at http://www.accountingweb.com/
Another
leading accounting site is AccountingEducation.com at http://www.accountingeducation.com/
Paul
Pacter maintains the best international accounting standards and news Website at
http://www.iasplus.com/
How
stuff works --- http://www.howstuffworks.com/
Bob
Jensen's video helpers for MS Excel, MS Access, and other helper videos are at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/
Accompanying documentation can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm
and http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
Professor
Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134 Email: rjensen@trinity.edu


November
14, 2001
Quotes of the Week
If you can't be
kind, at least have the decency to be vague
Forwarded by Dick Haar.
Dick does not know it, but this has been the secret of journal referees for
decades.
As Kuhn saw it,
and several generations of scientists, historians and journalists have told it
since, new paradigms are accepted slowly, if not over the dead bodies of those
who grew up with the old ones. Kuhn documented one great scientist after
another, from Copernicus to Darwin to James Clerk Maxwell, who struggled
relentlessly against the resistance of mediocre minds and later was vindicated.
It was the German physicist Max Planck who set down the definitive words on the
subject: "a new scientific truth," Planck wrote, "does not
triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather
because its opponents eventually die, and a new generation grows up that is
familiar with it."
From "Rethinking the Paradigm Paradigm," by Gary Taubes, Technology
Review, November 2001 --- http://www.techreview.com/magazine/nov01/insight.asp
Free Speech in America Includes Promotion of Violent Terrorism
Below you will find two quotations from OpinionJournal on November
12, 2001. It begins with a quotation from Mary Ellen Keating, a
spokeswoman for Barnes & Noble http://www.barnesandnoble.com/ir/index.asp
, in response to public complaints about an appearance ( http://www.vicinity.com/bnoble99/searchevt.hm?FS=Bill+Ayers&sType=auth
) by Bill Ayers, an erstwhile and unrepentant Weather Underground terrorist.
Bill Ayers is now attempting, in a new book promoted by Barnes & Nobel, to
become wealthy promoting terrorism and justifying his previous bombing history.
*** QUOTE: From Mary Ellen Keating
Granted, we live in troubled times. The reprehensible
acts of the terrorists were designed to promote fear, divisiveness, even
hatred among fellow Americans. We cannot let them win. Removing Mr. Ayers'
book from our shelves or canceling a previously scheduled appearance is out of
the question. To do so would be to give in to our fears, and ultimately to
validate the position of our enemies.
*** QUOTE: From Editors of Opinion
Journal
Terrorists win if we don't let terrorists cash in
on their past crimes? This has got to be the most twisted use of the "we
can't let them win" cliché yet. One of our readers quips that he's
looking forward to the book signing for 101 Uses for a Dead Infidel by
Osama bin Laden at the local Barnes & Noble.
New From Bob Jensen
Video and Other Helper Tutorials --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideosSummary.htm
(New videos will be added steadily for the next several months. I love
Camtasia.)
My main tutorial page has shifted to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
I Love Camtasia
Camtasia Recording and Producing ---
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/Tutorials/
I prepared a Camtasia video on how I record Camtasia avi files and how I
"produce" a copy of the file as a rm RealMedia file that will play on
most computers without having to download the Camtasia Player. You can
read about Camtasia and download a free Camtasia player from http://www.techsmith.com/
(If you can play the rm RealMedia version, you do not need the player to view
the videos.)
Note that if you want to record audio as well as video in Camtasia, it is best
to have the microphone on a stand or clipped to your shirt. You will
probably need both hands free for use of the keyboard.
Also note that you should set up a hot key to toggle between "Record"
and "Pause" (I assigned the F9 key for this purpose). It is
common while you are recording to have to do something (such as taking time to
bring up another file or refresh you memory on how to perform a task) that you
do not want in the video. To pause the recording process, I simply click
on F9. When I am ready to commence once again, I click on F9 to renew the
recording process. I also assign the F10 key to end the recording process.
You can assign these "HotKeys" in the Camtasia Recorder menu choices
(Options, Preferences, Hotkeys).
Camtasia has panning and zooming options even though the video is not being
captured in a "camera." Panning effects are created by moving
the "camera" (usually from side to side) while keeping the subject in
the viewfinder. Zooming entails making the image more or less magnified.
Flesh in PowerPoint, Excel, or other presentations with video and audio.
Camtasia works great for both capturing dynamic computer screen presentations in
video accompanied by your audio explanations. Your video files may take up
more space that you are allowed on your Web server. However, you can save
them to CD-R or CD-RW disks that can be sold to students for around $1.00 per
disk. You can learn more about Camtasia from http://www.techsmith.com/
. You can make CDs by simply dragging files to a blank CD using Windows
Explorer if you first install Easy CD (http://www.roxio.com/en/products/ecdc/
).
One of the most frequently asked
questions asked in my education technology workshops is as follows:
"In what ways should course content materials be
modified for online learning?"
My quick and dirty response is that
faculty who develop content should learn how to use FrontPage or some other good
HTML editor and then learn how to screen capture and video capture themselves
rather than relying upon technicians. You can learn Microsoft FrontPage,
screen capturing, and Camtasia video capturing in just a few days with a little
help from your friends. With a little added effort, you can make your
online course materials more interactive by saving Excel worksheets as
interactive Webpages and by learning how to use JavaScript. You can learn
all of these things in less than a week if you have the correct software and
hardware.
- Use more screen captures, audio
captures, and video captures of things that you normally demo in lecture
presentations. Look under "Resources" at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/newfaculty.htm
Also see my tutorials at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
- MP3 Audio
Audio capturing is especially important since you can let students hear what
you like to say in lectures or case discussions. For example, in an
Excel spreadsheet you can add buttons that students can click on to hear
your explanation of what is going on in various cells of the spreadsheet.
Look under "Resources" at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/newfaculty.htm
- Camtasia AVI Versus RM Recordings
--- See http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideosSummary.htm
Flesh in PowerPoint, Excel, or other presentations with video and audio.
Camtasia works great for both capturing dynamic computer screen
presentations in video accompanied by your audio explanations. Your
video files may take up more space than you are allowed on your Web server.
However, you can save them to CD-R or CD-RW disks that can be sold to
students for around $1.00 per disk. You can learn more about Camtasia from http://www.techsmith.com/
. You can make CDs by simply dragging files to a blank CD using
Windows Explorer if you first install Easy CD (http://www.roxio.com/en/products/ecdc/
).
For video illustrations and tutorials, see http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideosSummary.htm
- Excel Saved as Webpages Can Add Interactivity In Imaginative Ways
Suppose that you want to have students make journal entries in a HTML
Webpage. Or suppose you want to see the impact of interest rate swap
valuations with changes in forward yield curve estimates.
Or suppose you want an interactive Excel chart imported into a HTML Webpage
where the chart will change when the reader changes the loan principal,
interest rate, or maturity date.
For illustrations on publishing Excel
workbooks, spreadsheets, or charts as interactive Webpages, see http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/dhtml/excel01.htm
For videos and tutorials, see http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideosSummary.htm
- JavaScript Calculations and
Interactivity
Try to make your online materials more interactive by saving Excel workbooks
as interactive Webpages and use of JavaScipt. For my JavaScript
tutorials, see http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
.
- Amy Dunbar's Online Pedagogy
Make a lot more use of online questions and answers that replace the
question and answer type of style that you probably use in lectures.
Amy Dunbar uses this approach extensively. You can read about how she
developed her first online course. See Example 1 below.
Motivations
for Distance Education
Little Red
Hen Motivations
(Those professors who go it alone without much institutional support.)
Example
1
Amy Dunbar's Online Tax Courses
I think all educators should
read at least the first 15 pages of "Genesis of an Online
Course," by Amy Dunbar at www.sba.uconn.edu/users/adunbar/genesis_of_an_online_course.pdf
You
Can See a Live Performance on How Amy Wows Her Online Students!
Amy Dunbar has consented to conduct a live workshop for educators in San
Antonio on August 13, 2002. She will perform in the Education
Technology Workshop that I organize annually as a CPE session two days
prior to the start of the American
Accounting Association Annual Meetings (which are in San Antonio
next August).
I just shared a platform with
Amy Dunbar in a workshop presented at Mercer University on November 9,
2001. I am amazed at what both Amy and her husband (John) are
accomplishing with online teaching of income tax and tax research.
- Although they are teaching
as full-time faculty at the University of Connecticut, both Amy and
her husband, John, teach online courses from their house. In
practice, they don't have to go to the campus except to check mail,
perform service activities, and work face-to-face with colleagues
and students when needed. In theory,
they could move to a California beach house or a cabin on top of a
Colorado mountain and still teach all their courses for the
University of Connecticut. I should note that the
students in this online University of Connecticut program are adult
learners who almost all have current jobs in the Hartford community.
Amy teaches all her courses online, and John teaches a summer course
online. Both professors teach taxation.
- Amy just won an
all-university teaching technology award from the University of
Connecticut. This is just another of her many all-university
teaching awards from the University of Texas in San Antonio, the
University of Iowa, and the University of Connecticut. She has
this rare ability of being rated perfect by virtually any student no
matter what grade she assigns, even a failing grade. Amy's
homepage is at http://www.sba.uconn.edu/users/ADunbar/Dunbaru.htm
- I don't have John's teaching
evaluation scores (I'm told they're excellent), but you can read
Amy's teaching evaluation scores on the last page (Exhibit 5) of the
document at http://www.sba.uconn.edu/users/adunbar/genesis_of_an_online_course.pdf
(Note that the highest possible rating is 10.00 in this University
of Connecticut evaluation form.
- I especially urge you to
read the student evaluation narratives at http://www.sba.uconn.edu/users/adunbar/genesis_of_an_online_course.pdf
- Amy developed all her own
online course materials and relies heavily on a question and answer
pedagogy using instant messaging.
- Amy's workshop presentations
and war stories about online education are AWESOME!
So what are Amy's highly
controversial conclusions from her online courses? Go to
Page 13 in "Genesis of an Online Course," by Amy Dunbar at www.sba.uconn.edu/users/adunbar/genesis_of_an_online_course.pdf
Example 2
An Innovative Online International Accounting
Course on Six Campuses Around the World http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/255light.htm
A highlight for me at the
November 6-7, 1998 AICPA Accounting Educators Conference was a
presentation by Sharon
Lightner from San Diego State University and Linard
Nadig from the University of Fribourg in Switzerland. This
presentation followed a ceremony presenting Professors Lightner and
Nadig with the $1,000 AICPA Collaboration
Award prize.
The course syllabus is located
at http://www.aznet.net/course/doors/
Bob Jensen's Web Link --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/255light.htm
|
Learning
Experimentation Motivations
Example 1 --- The
SCALE Experiments --- http://w3.scale.uiuc.edu/scale/
Quotes from Professor Burks
Oakley II,
Sloan Center for Asynchronous Learning Environments,
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Asynchronous
Learning Networking Promotes Greater Communication
- 51% of
students reported increased communication with instructor
- 43% of
students reported increased communication with other students
- 40%
reported increase in quality of interactions with instructor
Asynchronous
Learning Networking Enhances the Learning Environment
- 75% of
students rated their overall experience good, very good, or
excellent
- ALN
enables students
to "be more prepared for class,"
gives them "a lot of time to
learn out of class," and
allows them "to work at their own
pace."
Impact on
Course Grades in ECE 270, Fall 1994, 2 traditional sections versus 3
ALN sections
Course
Grade |
Traditional |
Computer
Based |
A
B
C
D
E |
17.4%
31.8%
35.^%
6.8%
8.3% |
38.1%
26.0%
21.5%
6.6%
7.7% |
Source: http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/255wp.htm#Illinois
For an August 2000 update,
download Dan Stone's audio file and PowerPoint file from http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/000cpe/00start.htm
Top K12's 100 Wired Schools
--- http://FamilyPC.com/smarter.asp
The winners are listed at http://familypc.com/smarter_2001_top.asp
Why (Some) Kids Love School ---
http://familypc.com/smarter_why_kids.asp
Dropout rates
are down and test scores are up. Students are engaged in learning and
their self-esteem is soaring. So what's really going on within the
classroom walls of the country's top wired schools? By Leslie Bennetts
Linda Peters provides a frank
overview of the various factors underlying student perceptions of online
learning. Such perceptions, she observes, are not only informed by the
student's individual situation (varying levels of computer access, for
instance) but also by the student's individual characteristics: the
student's proficiency with computers, the student's desire for
interpersonal contact, or the student's ability to remain self-motivated
---
Technology Source, a free,
refereed, e-journal at http://horizon.unc.edu/TS/default.asp?show=issue&id=44
IN THE SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2001 ISSUE
The Problem of Attrition in
Online MBA Programs
We expect higher attrition
rates from both learners in taking degrees in commuting programs and
most online programs. The major reason is that prior to enrolling
for a course or program, people tend to me more optimistic about how
they can manage their time between a full-time job and family
obligations. After enrolling, unforseen disasters do arise such as
family illnesses, job assignments out of town, car breakdowns, computer
breakdowns, job loss or change, etc.
The problem of online MBA
attrition at West Texas A&M University is discussed in
"Assessing Enrollment and Attrition Rates for the Online MBA,"
by Neil Terry, T.H.E. Journal, February 2001, pp. 65-69 --- http://www.thejournal.com/magazine/vault/A3299.cfm
Follow-up experiments also
showed that West Texas A&M's online students did not perform as well
as onsite students on examinations.
Assessment Issues, Case
Studies, and Research --- Detail
File
The Dark Side of the 21st
Century: Concerns About Technologies in Education --- Detail
File
|
New and
Expanding Market Motivations
Example 1 ---
Stanford University --- http://ww.stanford.edu/history/fulldesc.html
Stanford University shook up
the stuffy Ivy League and other prestigious schools such as Oxford and
Cambridge when it demonstrated to the world that its online training
programs and its online Masters of Engineering (ADEPT) asynchronous
learning degree program became enormous cash cows with nearly infinite
growth potentials relative to relatively fixed-size onsite programs.
In a few short years, revenues from online programs in engineering and
computer science exploded to over $100 million per year.
The combined present value of
the Stanford University logo and the logos of other highly prestigious
universities are worth trillions. Any prestigious university that
ignores online growth opportunities is probably wasting billions of
dollars of potential cash flow from its logo.
Virtually all universities of
highest prestige and name recognition are realizing this and now offer a
vast array of online training and education courses directly or in
partnership with corporations and government agencies seeking the mark
of distinction on diplomas.
Example 2 --- University of
Wisconsin --- http://webct.wisc.edu/
Over 100,000 Registered Online Students in The University of Wisconsin
System of State-Supported Universities
Having a long history of
extension programs largely aimed at part-time adult learners, it made a
lot of sense for the UW System to try to train and
educate adult learners and other learners who were not likely to
become onsite students.
The UW System is typical of
many other large state-supported universities that have an established
adult learning infrastructure and a long history of interactive
television courses delivered to remote sites within the state.
Online Internet courses were a logical extension and in many instances a
cost-efficient extension relative to televised delivery.
Example 3 --- Texas A&M
Online MBA Program in Mexico --- http://olap.tamu.edu/mexico/tamumxctr.pdf
Some universities view online
technologies as a tremendous opportunity to expand training and
education courses into foreign countries. One such effort was
undertaken by the College of Business Administration at Texas A&M
University in partnership with Monterrey Tech in Mexico. For
example, Professor John
Parnell at Texas A&M has been delivering a course for several
semesters in which students in Mexico City take the online course in
their homes. However, once each month the students meet
face-to-face on a weekend when Dr. Parnell travels to Mexico City to
hold live classes and administer examinations.
You probably won't have much
difficulty making a guess as to what many students say is the major
reason they prefer online courses to onsite courses in Mexico City?
Example 4 --- The University
of Phoenix --- http://www.phoenix.edu/index_open.html
The University of Phoenix
became the largest private university in the world. Growth came
largely from adult learning onsite programs in urban centers across the
U.S. and Canada.
The popular CBS television show
called Sixty Minutes ran a feature on the growth and future of
the newer online training and education programs at the University of
Phoenix. You can download this video from http://online.uophx.edu/onl_nav_2.asp#
The University of Phoenix
contends that online success in education depends upon intense
communications day-to-day between instructors and students. This,
in turn, means that online classes must be relatively small and
synchronized in terms of assignments and projects.
Example 5 --- Partnerships
Lucrative partnerships between universities and corporations seeking to
train and educate employees.
The highly successful Global
Executive MBA Program at Duke University (formerly called GEMBA) where
corporations from around the world pay nearly $100,000 for one or two
employees to earn a prestigious online MBA degree --- http://www.fuqua.duke.edu/admin/gemba/index.html
UNext Corporation has an
exclusive partnership with General Motors Corporation that provides
online executive training and education programs to 88,000 GM managers.
GM pays the fees. See http://www.unext.com/
The U.S. Army has a program
developed and managed by the consulting division of an accounting firm
(PwC) to deliver online training and education opportunities to every
soldier. Courses are delivered from 24 accredited colleges and
universities across the nation. The Army pays the fees. Two
links of interest are shown below:
The U.S. Internal Revenue
Service has a program for online training and education for all IRS
employees. The IRS pays the fees for all employees. The IRS
online accounting classes will be served up from Florida State
University and Florida Community College at Jacksonville --- http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A60881-2001May7.html
Deere & Company has an
exclusive partnership with Indiana University to provide an online MBA
program for Deere employees. Deere pays the fees. See
"Deere & Company Turns to Indiana University's Kelley School of
Business For Online MBA Degrees in Finance," Yahoo Press Release,
October 8, 2001 --- http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/011008/cgm034_1.html
The University of Georgia
partnered with the consulting division of PwC to deliver a totally
online MBA degree. The program is only taken by PwC employees.
PwC paid the development and delivery fees. See http://www.coe.uga.edu./coenews/2000/UGAusnews.htm
The Dark Side
In spite of the successes noted
above, most attempts to offer online training and education programs by
corporations, private universities, and state-supported colleges and
universities have either failed or struggle on with negative net cash
flows from the online operations.
Aside from the success story at
the University of Phoenix, it appears that reputation and prestige of a
university are necessary but not sufficient conditions for high success
in online programs. Online programs at Carnegie-Mellon University,
Columbia University, Stanford University, Harvard University, University
of Wisconsin, University of Michigan, and other top-name schools have
attracted students who want those logos on their transcripts. The
is the main reason why many corporations partner with those particular
schools for training and education courses. This "prestige
criterion" makes it very difficult for startup education companies
or colleges with less prestigious names to expand markets with Internet
courses.
Many new online programs have
failed to attract sufficient numbers of tuition-paying students to break
even on the cost of developing and delivering those programs.
- Some like the online teacher
education program at McGill University have ceased operations.
- Some like Western Governors
University struggle on with miniscule classes while supporting
operations with outside funding or funding diverted from onsite
training and education programs --- http://www.wgu.edu/wgu/index.html
- Monterrey Tech (which is to
Mexico what MIT is to the US), has a multimillion dollar distance
education program. The main campus has a 12-story glass tower
(a beautiful building indeed) equipped with production and delivery
equipment that constitutes one of two main transmitting facilities
of the Monterrey Tech Virtual University --- the University
that delivers courses daily to 29 campuses, 1,272 sites in Mexico,
and 159 sites in 10 Latin and South American Countries.
Although this is one of the most successful distance education
programs in the world, the number one problem still remains in
finding more qualified students who are both willing and able to pay
the fees. See http://www.ruv.itesm.mx/
Even in established
universities that offer fully-accredited degree programs, expanding the
market through online programs has been a hard struggle. The
University of Washington found that even free-course promotions did not
attract large numbers of students. http://www.outreach.washington.edu/about/releases/20010521freecourse.asp
The Fathom program largely run
by Columbia University finds that many of its free courses have sparse
enrollments. See http://www.fathom.com/
Links to ventures that became
financial disasters are given in the following document:
The Dark Side of the 21st
Century: Concerns About Technologies in Education --- Detail
File
The Bright
Side
The bottom
line seems to be that for many universities seeking to expand markets
with online programs, the best solution to date entails partnering with
corporations or government agencies who both pay the fees and promote
the programs among their employees.
For urban
areas such as Mexico City locked in traffic jams, online education
appears to have glowing prospects.
Since the
terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, it will probably be more
difficult for some foreign students to become students on campuses of
developed nations such as the U.S. and the U.K. Online education
has bright prospects of reaching those students.
Open share
initiatives such as the new open share program in which MIT will make
learning materials from virtually all of its courses available for free
online, will greatly expand learning opportunities for nearly all people
in the world.
|
Cost
Savings Motivations
Example 1 ---
Stanford University --- http://stanford-online.stanford.edu/main.html
It is possible to save enormous
amounts of money using online versus onsite education delivery.
But to save enormous amounts of money, the circumstances probably must
be highly unique in which students can succeed with very little
communication and human interaction in every course.
One such unique situation is
the ADEPT online Masters of Engineering degree program at Stanford
University. The students are mature and are all graduates in
engineering or science from top colleges in the world. The
students are generally highly motivated since a Stanford masters degree
greatly improves their career opportunities, especially in economic
downturns where competition for jobs becomes more intense. Most
importantly, the students are all extremely intelligent since Stanford
can be highly selective regarding admittance into the ADEPT program.
The unique type of student
described above allows ADEPT program to rely upon a video pedagogy where
students to proceed at their own paces with very little demanded in the
way of instructor supervision and communication. It's
the day-to-day instructional communication and supervision that comprise
most of the cost of online training and education.
Online programs that minimize this cost will probably make money as long
as sufficient numbers of students are willing to pay the fees for the
online course materials and the prestige of the course transcripts.
Example 2 --- UNext Corporation
--- http://www.unext.com/
UNext Corporation is not a
low-cost training and education venture and is not yet a profitable
venture. However, UNext adopted a strategy that seeks to combine
education prestige with lower cost delivery. One of its headline
programs entailed partnering with five prestigious universities
(Stanford, Chicago, Carnegie-Mellon, Columbia, and the London School of
Economics) to develop and continue to own and monitor 15 courses for an
Executive MBA degree. Each course's transcripts will carry the
logo of the university that "owns" that course. However,
each course will be delivered by specially-trained instructors who hire
out at much lower rates than faculty from prestigious schools that
developed the courses. In some cases the UNext instructors have
doctoral degrees, but in many cases these instructors are highly trained
specialists who do not have doctorates. These instructors perform
the labor intensive day-to-day communication and supervision duties.
The prestigious universities who "own" the courses, however,
must monitor education standards in the courses since the names of those
universities will appear on the course transcripts.
You can listen to UNext faculty
and the course designer for Columbia University's accounting course at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/001cpe/01start.htm
The Dark Side
All that glitters is not gold
in terms of cost savings and profits from distance education. Many
of the startup ventures are having difficulty changing faculty attitudes
and attracting paying students. To me this is not surprising since
faculty by nature are suspicious beings, and most potential customers of
distance education are not yet adequately connected to the Web.
David Noble, however, sees the early failings of many ventures as
ominous warnings that distance education is by nature inferior and
over-hyped by profit mongers.
And now, in
the year 2001, these latest academic entrepreneurs of distance
education have begun to encounter the same sobering reality earlier
confronted by UCLA and THEN, namely, that all that glitters is not
gold. Columbia University's high-profile, for-profit venture Fathom is
reported to be "having difficulty attracting both customers and
outside investors" compelling the institution to put up an
additional $10 million - on top of its original investment of $18.7
million - just to keep the thing afloat. According to Sarah Carr's
report in the Chronicle of Higher Education, Columbia's
administrators remain behind the venture whether or not it makes
money.
Howevermuch
it might enable administrators to restructure the institutions of
higher education to their advantage vis a vis the professoriate, the
investment in online education is no guarantee of increased revenues.
"Reality is setting in among many distance education
administrators", Carr reports. "They are realizing that
putting programs online doesn't necessarily bring riches".
Ironically, among those now preaching this new-found wisdom is none
other than John Kobara, the UCLA vice chancellor who left the
university to run Arkatov's company, which was founded upon the
expectation of such riches. "The expectations were that online
courses would be a new revenue source and something that colleges had
to look into", Kobara remembered. "Today", he told
Carr, " [chancellors and presidents] are going back and asking
some important and tough questions, such as: 'Are we making any money
off of it?' 'Can we even pay for it?' 'Have we estimated the full
costs?'" Barely eight years after Lapiner and his UCLA colleagues
first caught the fool's gold fever, Kobara mused aloud, "I don't
think anybody has wild notions that it is going to be the most
important revenue source".
David F. Noble, "Fools Gold" --- http://communication.ucsd.edu/DL/ddm5.html
|
Learning
Curve and Left-in-the Dust Motivations
Example 1 ---
Railroad Companies Versus Transportation Companies
In the middle of the 20th
Century, just after World War II, the railroad industry was in pretty
good shape. Passenger trains were nearly always full going from
coast-to-coast. The freight business was highly lucrative.
New opportunities arose
(especially airplanes and freight trucks) into which railroad companies
could have diversified. But the railroads decided that they were
in the business of hauling people and freight on steel rails rather than
in newer 'transportation" alternatives.
And what happened?
Airlines, automobiles, and buses stole the entire passenger market from
the railroads in the United States (except for urban commuter lines) and
about the only long-haul passenger service had to be subsidized and run
by the Federal Government. Even the commuter lines lost huge
market shares to automobiles.
Many colleges and universities
are now facing the question of whether they are to remain only onsite
(railroad) educational institutions or whether they will enter into
distance education (transportation) missions. Some colleges that
have quality living accommodations and reputations as onsite campuses
for full-time students will probably survive long into the future just
like some railroad companies continue to hall freight and make money.
However, those colleges have minimal growth potential vis-a-vis colleges
that expand into distance education.
Example 2 --- The Learning
Curve Thing
Even colleges currently
resisting all opportunities for expanding into distance education
nevertheless find it utterly stupid not to embrace newer educational
technologies. Their new students are arriving on campus with
technology skills that they want to expand upon while in college.
College graduates must have technology skills for admissions to graduate
schools and employment careers.
Faculty must have technology
skills if they are to help their students improve in technology skills.
And faculty soon discover that technology skills do not come easily.
They increasingly are making demands upon their institutions to provide
hardware, software, and technicians who can help in education
technologies.
Colleges behind in the
technology learning curve are now scrambling to catch up in terms of
electronic classrooms, instructional support services, course delivery
shells such as Blackboard and WebCT, laptop computers for students and
faculty, wireless networking, etc.
Having progressed upward on the
learning curve, taking on a mission of distance education becomes more
of a possibility. Faculty who increasingly rely upon chat rooms,
discussion boards, virtual classrooms and other utilities in WebCT or
Blackboard catch on to the fact that they could be doing the same things
for distant students that they are doing for campus residents. The
opportunities for grant money and/or release time to develop a distance
education course are no longer as frightening when faculty progress
further and further along the technology learning curve. Improved
performances of technology-savvy students add more incentives.
|
Motivations
to Show the World How To Do It Right
(Duke University Decides to Be in
the Education Business Rather Than Merely the Classroom Business)
"THE HOTTEST
CAMPUS ON THE INTERNET Duke's pricey online B-school program is winning
raves from students and rivals," Business Week, October 27,
1997 --- http://www.businessweek.com/1997/42/b3549015.htm
Update: The Duke MBA ---
Global Executive MBA Program (formerly called GEMBA) --- http://www.fuqua.duke.edu/admin/gemba/index.html
As of Fall Semester 2001, there have been over 600 graduates from over
38 nations. In terms of enthusiasm and alumni giving, this program
is a real winner for Duke University.
The Duke MBA
- Global Executive is every bit as academically demanding as Duke's
other two MBA programs. Global Executive uses the same faculty base,
the same rigorous grading standards, and provides the same Duke
degree. However, the content has been adjusted to include more global
issues and strategies to serve a participant population that has far
more global management experience.
- Like most
other Executive MBA programs, the Global Executive program is a
lock-step curriculum, meaning that all students take all courses.
The courses are targeted at general managers who have or will soon
assume global responsibilities. The program is designed for those
who want to enhance their career path within their existing
company.
- International
Residencies: International residencies are an important ingredient
in a global MBA program as they add to the value and richness of
the classroom component by providing various lenses (social,
economic, cultural, etc.) through which to view various economies
and systems. Instead of simply studying about an economy, Fuqua
provides an experiential component which adds value to the
learning experience ...
- Global
Student body: Unlike traditional Executive MBA programs which
usually have a regional draw, the flexibility of Global Executive
accommodates a student body from around the globe. Not only are
the students diverse geographically, but they are also diverse in
the types of global management experiences that they bring to the
classroom.
For the class
entering in May 2001, tuition is $95,000. Tuition includes all
educational expenses, a state-of-the-art laptop computer, portable
printer, academic books and other class materials, and lodging and
meals during the five residential sessions. The tuition does not
include travel to and from the residential sites.
You can learn a great deal
about the extend of distance education in this program by looking at
the academic calendar at http://www.fuqua.duke.edu/admin/gemba/global_cal2001.htm
Update: Duke's Online
Cross-Continent MBA --- http://www.fuqua.duke.edu/admin/cc/cc_home.html
In Fall Semester 2001, there were 220 students tied into two distance
education centers (in Durham, N.C. and in Frankfurt) for the
Cross-Continent MBA program.
While in Germany in the Summer
of 2001, I had dinner with Tom Keller, former Dean of Duke's Fuqua
School of Business and Dean of Duke's Cross-Continent MBA Program.
Tom spent two years in the Frankfort headquarters of Duke's
Cross-Continent MBA Program. This program is quite different from
the online Global Executive MBA Program, although both are asynchronous
online programs and used some overlapping course materials.
The Duke MBA
- Cross Continent program allows high-potential managers to earn an
internationally-focused MBA degree from Duke University in less than
two years, utilizing a format that minimizes the disruption of careers
and family life. It is designed for individuals with three to nine
years professional work experience.
The Duke MBA
- Cross Continent program will contain course work with a global
emphasis in the subject areas of Management, Marketing, Operations,
Economics, Finance, Accounting, Strategy and Decision Sciences.
Students will
complete 11 core courses, four elective courses and one integrative
capstone course to earn their MBA degree. Two courses will be
completed during each of the eight terms of the program. Depending
upon their choice of electives, students may choose to complete the
one-week residency requirements for their sixth and seventh terms at
either Fuqua School of Business location in North America or Europe.
The two
classes - one on each continent - will be brought even closer together
through a transfer requirement built into the program. During the
third term, half of the class from Europe will attend the North
American residential session and vice versa. In the fourth term, the
other half of each class trades locations for one week of residential
learning. After the transfer residencies, the students resume their
coursework using the same Internet mediated learning methods as
before, but with global virtual teams that have now met in a
face-to-face setting
World-Class
Resources
When you're linked to Duke University's Fuqua School of Business,
you're connected to a world of resources residing on a network with
robust bandwidth capabilities. Duke MBA students have secure access to
the Duke and Fuqua business library databases as well as a network of
Duke faculty and outside experts.
World-Wide
Content Delivery
The virtual classroom can take on many different forms. Here, a
faculty member prepares a macroeconomics lecture for distribution via
CD ROM and/or the Internet. Students will download this lecture in a
given week of study and follow up with discussion and team projects.
Bulletin
Board Discussion
Rich threads of conversation occur during this asynchronous mode of
communication. Professors and guest lecturers can moderate the
discussion to keep learning focused.
Real-Time
Chat Session
Occurs between students and classmates as well as faculty. Here, a
student in Europe discusses an assignment with a professor in the
United States.
|
The topic of
motivations is continued at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/updateee.htm
I am very sad to report that some of
the following course developers for prestigious universities have ceased or
greatly modified operations:
- Pensare was one of the
highest-quality developers for such universities as Harvard and Duke.
I understand that Pensare has ceased operations..
- University Access acquired a
twenty-year veteran AACSB executive named Chuck Hickman. University
Access then changed its name to Quisic. At one time Quisic was
delivering pre-MBA courses that it developed in partnership with leading
professors from such schools as the University of Chicago and the University
of North Carolina. There is no longer any mention of such courses at
Quisic's Website at http://www.quisic.com/
.
Although the Quisic Website
claims that Quisic is still in operation for corporate training courses, I
am told that Quisic no longer develops custom
course content for colleges and universities as it had intended in its
strategic plan. For example, Quisic was in the process of developing
courses for a new online global MBA program at the University of North
Carolina. I am told that Quisic ceased this development operation part
way into that contract. It appears, however, that Quisic still
has some outsourcing partners for development of training materials.
On August 12, 2000 in Philadelphia, I
organized a workshop that included Chuck Hickman when he was the Academic
Vice-President of Quisic. At that time he was very positive about Quisic's
course design staff and strategies for developing online college courses.
You can listen to his presentations and download his PowerPoint slides by going
to http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/000cpe/00start.htm
Wow Technology
of the Week --- "Beam Me Up Scottie!" ---
http://www.teleportec.com/products.html
Teleporters
Our "teleporters"
are the systems where the life size image of the presenter is captured and
transmitted as a digital signal. The presenter has a workspace that is 40
inches wide and 30 inches high, which is large enough to display the upper
body of a person with arm movements.
Teleportec Podium
The system presents a
teleported person within the volume of space behind the podium. This system is
designed to feature a teleported presenter for an audience from a few to
several hundred.
Teleportec
Portable Systems
Both the Teleportec
teleporters and the podiums can be produced as portable systems. They can be
shipped anywhere in the world using air freight. The portable systems can be
wheeled through a single door for access to virtually any room.
Teleportec Theatre
Our largest system is
20 feet across with a teleportation zone of 11 feet wide. This system is
capable of displaying a group of people head to toe. In addition to permanent
installations we can produce Teleportec Theatres that can be transported. The
Teleportec Theatres can be used for concerts and special events where the
celebrities or performers will be able to make eye to eye contact with the
people in the remote locations.
Content for
presentations
Teleportec is working
with KMA Interactive Media of York to develop presentations and interactive
training programs. These custom productions provide clients with unique
capabilities to present their message effectively.
Compatibility with
Videoconference Standards
Teleportec systems
operate on either H320 or H323 videoconference standards for transmission of
the life-size images. Clients can select from a wide range of videoconference
codecs to connect to the Teleportec products. Teleportec products can be added
to existing videoconference networks and can be operated with existing
videoconference codecs.
Wow Computers of the
Future
Nanocomputing is a step closer as
scientists make circuits and transistors at the molecular scale. The components
are so small, in fact, they exhibit quantum effects. Could they be the building
blocks for super-powerful quantum computers?
"Nanocomputers Get Real," by
Geoff Brumfiel http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,48278,00.html
Ever since Nobel
Prize winner Richard Feynman suggested that people could build machines the
size of atoms, nanotechnology has been on the minds of scientists and sci-fi
fans alike.
Nanophiles envision a
futuristic world filled with teeny robots that can build diamonds out of the
carbon atoms in a sheet of paper, or fly through your body scraping
cholesterol off of your artery walls.
These and other
spectacular promises have yet to materialize, but two articles published in
this week's issue of Science magazine report significant advances in the
sub-field of nanoelectronics.
First, a group at
Lucent's Bell Labs built a Field-Effect Transistor (FET) from a single
molecule.
"FETs are the
powerhouse of modern electronics," said team member Jan Hendrik Schön.
Creating a molecular-sized FET is the first step in building a nanocomputer.
The team's transistor
is an organic molecule about 50,000 times smaller than the width of a human
hair. It has the added benefit of bonding to plastics and other synthetic
materials, something present-day silicon technologies cannot do.
Schön said this
special ability might allow computer circuits to become integrated into credit
cards and clothing. The fact that the molecule can be stored easily in a
liquid solution also opens up the possibility of using ink-jet type technology
to "print" processors on sheets of plastic.
The second paper
describes how researchers based at Harvard University made semiconducting
nanowires that assembled themselves into simple circuits.
"Self assembly
is a concept that's been present in biology for billions of years," says
Charles Lieber, the leader of the Harvard team.
To apply the
self-assembly concept to their DNA-sized nanowires, the researchers grew the
wires in a liquid and then squirted it over an array of electrical contacts.
The wires attach to specialized glues on the contacts, arranging themselves
into complex grids whose intersections behave like miniature FETs. By
depositing layers of glues, liquids, and wires, the team was able to create a
nanocircuit that could perform basic addition operations.
"I think that
eventually you will be able create structures that are so integrated that they
go right off the existing roadmap (of existing technology)," Leiber says.
But Leiber also sees some long-term potential in quantum computing --computers
based on the bizarre laws of quantum mechanics.
"When you make
things very small," he explained, "the quantum mechanical features
show up."
The nanowires used by
the Harvard team are small enough to have quantum mechanical properties.
"We don't know how to manipulate those properties very well, but they're
there," he said. And with extensive research they might be able to use
the wires in a future quantum computer.
"These are
impressive achievements," says Ralph Merkle, a principal fellow at Zyvex,
the world's first molecular nanotechnology company. Merkle believes that the
compact size and enormous processing potential of these technologies might
change the way we interact with computers.
"One of the
things that's quite remarkable is the extent to which computers have become a
vital part of our everyday lives when essentially they are just a box, a
screen, and a keyboard," he said.
Molecular processors,
he explained, could allow computers to see, hear and interact with humans much
more directly. "Rather than us sitting down in front of a shrine, called
a monitor, computers will do things in our world," he said.
But do we really need
to develop technology so powerful that it can cram all present-day computer
power into a space no larger than a sugar cube?
Merkle seems to think
so. "Every time people say 'Gosh, what do we need more computer power
for?' somebody comes up with a new application. Just take a look at Windows:
we're going to need these molecular computers to run Windows 2015."
See also:
It
Works: Really Super Tiny Chips
Nanotech Looms Large for Meds
Tiny
Capsules Float Downstream
Quantum
Mechanics' New Horizons
Mega
Steps Toward the Nanochip
Read more Technology news
Also see Bob Jensen's threads on
Invisible Computing, Ubiquitous Computing, and Microsoft.Net --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ubiquit.htm
Training technologies continue to
develop as rapidly as the rest of the technology world. The Internet is offering
a whole new range of possibilities for CPA firm trainers. What is this
"Online Training," and what does it consist of? http://www.accountingweb.com/item/61825
Bob Jensen's guides for online
global training and education --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/crossborder.htm
Several electronic services are to be added to the IRS Web site in time for
the 2002 tax filing season. One of the goals of providing these services is to
reduce the amount of telephone time required of IRS agents. Taxpayers
"won't have to call us up," said IRS Commissioner Charles Rossotti.
"This coming tax season takes away all the reasons not to file
electronically." http://www.accountingweb.com/item/63243
"A Parent's Guide to Insurance for College Students," by: Financial
Planning Association --- http://www.smartpros.com/x31657.xml
The Financial Planning Association homepage is at http://www.fpanet.org/
Bob Jensen's financial planning threads are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fees.htm
Related to FAS 133 and IAS 39 Issues --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm
Updates on Enron's Creative Accounting
Scandal
From The Wall Street Journal
Accounting Educators' Review on November 8, 2001
Subscribers to the Electronic Edition of the WSJ can obtain reviews in various
disciplines by contacting wsjeducatorsreviews@dowjones.com
See http://info.wsj.com/professor/
TITLE: Arthur Andersen Could Face
Scrutiny On Clarity of Enron Financial Reports
REPORTER: Jonathan Weil
DATE: Nov 05, 2001
PAGE: C1
LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1004919947649536880.djm
TOPICS: Accounting, Auditing, Creative Accounting, Disclosure Requirements
SUMMARY: Critics argue that Arthur
Andersen LLP has failed to ensure that Enron Corp.'s financial disclosures are
understandable. Enron is currently undergoing SEC investigation and is being
sued by shareholders. Questions relate to disclosure quality and auditor
responsibility.
QUESTIONS:
1.) The article suggests that the
auditor has the job of making sure that financial statements are understandable
and accurate and complete in all material respects. Does the auditor bear this
responsibility? Discuss the role of the auditor in financial reporting.
2.) One allegation is that Enron's
financial statements are not understandable. Should users be required to have
specialized training to be able to understand financial statements? Should the
financial statements be prepared so that only a minimal level of business
knowledge is required? What are the implications of the target audience on
financial statement preparation?
3.) Enron is facing several shareholder
lawsuits ; however, Arthur Anderson LLP is not a defendant. What liability does
the auditor have to shareholders of client firms? What are possible reasons that
Arthur Anderson is not a defendant in the Enron cases?
4.) What is the role of the SEC in the
investigation? What power does the SEC have to penalize Enron Corp. and Arthur
Anderson LLP?
SMALL GROUP ASSIGNMENT: Should
financial statements be understandable to users with only general business
knowledge? Prepare an argument to support your position.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University
of Rhode Island
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University
Related to FAS 133 and IAS 39 Issues
From The Wall Street Journal
Accounting Educators' Review on November 6, 2001
Subscribers to the Electronic Edition of the WSJ can obtain reviews in various
disciplines by contacting wsjeducatorsreviews@dowjones.com
See http://info.wsj.com/professor/
TITLE: Behind Shrinking Deficits: Derivatives?
REPORTER: Silvia Ascarelli and Deborah Ball
DATE: Nov 06, 2001 PAGE: A22
LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1004996045480162960.djm
TOPICS: Derivatives
SUMMARY: An Italian university professor and public-debt management expert
issued a report this week explaining how a European country used a swap contract
to effectively receive more cash in 1997. That country is believed to be Italy
although top officials deny such "window dressing" practices. 1997 was
a critical year for Italy if it was to be included in the EMU (European Monetary
Union) and become a part of the euro-zone. To qualify for entry, a country's
deficit could not exceed 3% of gross domestic product. In 1996 Italy's deficit
was 6.7% of GDP, however, the country succeeded in "slashing its budget
deficit to 2.7%" in 1997. The question now is whether Italy accomplished
this reduction by clamping down on waste and raising revenues or engaging in
deceptive swaps usage.
QUESTIONS:
1.) Why was the level of Italy's budget deficit so critical in 1997? How did
Italy's 1997 budget deficit compare with its 1996 level?
2.) What is an interest rate swap? How can the use of swap markets decrease
borrowing costs? What is a currency swap? When would firms tend to use these
derivative instruments?
3.) Does the European Union condone the use of interest rate swaps by its
euro-zone members as a way to manage their public debt? According to the related
article, who are the biggest users of swaps in Europe? Do the U.S. and Japan use
them to manage their public debt?
4.) According to the related article, interest-rate swaps now account for
what proportion of the over-the-counter derivatives market? Go to the web page
for the Bank of International Settlement at www.bis.org
. Select Publications & Statistics then go to International Financial
Statistics. Go to the Central Bank Survey for Foreign Exchange and Derivatives
Market Activity. Look at the pdf version of the report, specifically Table 6.
What was average daily turnover, in billions of dollars, of interest-rate swaps
in April 1995? 1998? and 2001? By what percentage did interest-rate swap usage
increase from 1995-1998? 1998-2001?
5.) According to the related article, how did the swaps contract allegedly
used by Italy differ from a standard swaps contract? What was the "bottom
line" result of this arrangement?
6.) Assume Italy did indeed use such measures to "window dress"
their financial situation and gain entry into the euro-zone. What actions should
be taken to prevent such loopholes in the future?
Reviewed By:
Jacqueline Garner, Georgia State University and Univ. of Rhode Island
Beverly Marshall, Auburn University
Peter Dadalt, Georgia State University
--- RELATED ARTICLE in the WSJ ---
TITLE: Italy Used Complicated Swaps Contract To Deflate Budget in Bid for
Euro Zone
REPORTER: Silvia Ascarelli and Deborah Ball
ISSUE: Nov 05, 2001
LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1004908712922656320.djm
In spite of my highly negative views on
pro forma statements (see http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/roi.htm
), I will share a more positive case for pro forma forwarded by Janet Flatley.
"Money Managers
Say Pro Forma Results Are Useful," by Stephen Taub
Most money managers
claim corporate financial reporting needs to be improved. But when it comes to
the controversial issue of pro forma earnings, most professional investors say
those figures are useful or extremely useful.
Specifically, 9 out
of 10 portfolio managers believe that corporate financial reporting needs to
be upgraded, according to a survey of 223 fund managers taken in October by
New York-based capital markets firm Broadgate Consultants Inc. The survey of
portfolio managers was intended to gauge the reaction to recent proposals by
the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB). Officials at FASB are
contemplating drawing up new standards for financial reporting, and possibly
requiring more information about intangible assets to be carried on balance
sheets.
Despite recent
criticism of pro forma financial reporting, nearly 76 percent of portfolio
managers in the survey said they found pro forma accounting at least somewhat
useful, and many of these said that it is extremely useful.
In fact, 67 percent
of respondents opposed banning pro forma reporting from press releases.
However, 91 percent of that two-thirds majority felt that corporations should
provide more detail in their pro forma statements.
The Financial
Accounting Standards Board last week added a project on financial performance
reporting to its agenda. See recent story.
Portfolio managers
are somewhat divided about whether FASB should broaden the scope of its
project to require companies to include financial metrics such as ratios in
their statements. 47 percent said yes to that, while 44 percent voted no.
Even so, 95 percent
of the money managers said they would like more consistency in how a common
financial metric - earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and
amortization (EBITDA) - is calculated. Sixty percent of managers want more
information about intangible assets, and 60 percent want more detailed
disclosures about internally generated intangibles, such as the value of brand
names or customer lists, to name two.
So, what are the most
relevant measures of financial performance? In a tight financial market, cash
flow after capital expenditures and interest expense received the highest
marks from the portfolio managers. Balance sheet strength came in second.
EBITDA and earnings tied for third. Interestingly, book value ranked last.
As for FASB's
decision not to categorize the effects of the World Trade Center attacks as an
extraordinary item, nearly 55 percent of the managers agreed.
"The results of
the survey clearly reveal that professional investors want more detail,
precision and clarity in financial statements," said Thomas C. Franco,
chairman and chief executive officer of Broadgate, in a press release
accompanying the survey's results. "However, it is noteworthy that
investors also appear to recognize the obvious limitations with pro forma
results, but consider such reporting valuable in assessing the ongoing
performance factors driving the businesses they follow."
Read On! For More of Today
in Finance http://m.s.maildart.net/link_30322_6594702_1_120093342_73938558_0_7e
A message from charlesp@cwdom.dm
Greetings Professor Jensen
I have been reading your threads on Enron and came
across this:
Bush Slammed For Giving Big Tax Breaks To Oil
Buddies, by Tom Turnipseed, Counterpunch 07/11/2001 The House-passed stimulus
package gave the Enron Corporation a $254 million dollar tax relief gift.
Enron is a Houston-based energy giant headed by Kenneth Lay, who has been a
close friend of George W. Bush and a principal financier of Bush's political
endeavors. [ FULL STORY ] . http://www.counterpunch.org/turnipseed5.html
Updates on Canadian Accounting
Standards --- http://www.cica.ca/cica/cicawebsite.nsf/public/SGAccountingStandards
Income Tax Updates
The standard rate of mileage for
business use of a vehicle is set to increase again, effective January 1, 2002.
In addition, rates for deductions of mileage for moving and medical expenses
will increase. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/62817
For links to great sites on tax
news, go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#010304Taxation
Hi XXXXX,
Typically firms try to get access to
what is called a Bloomberg Terminal that, in turn, accesses a database of
forward contracting outcomes for interest rate contracting. These forward rates
are then translated into what is called a "yield curve," "swap
curve," or "interest rate curve." All these terms mean the same
thing. The problem lies in finding such a curve. Investment bankers with
Bloomberg Terminals can provide you with this number. Big Five accounting firms
have Bloomberg Terminals. Usually clients who enter into interest rate swaps
have access to Bloomberg terminals.
You can read more about this under the
definition of "yield curve" at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133glosf.htm
Most textbooks on financial instrument derivatives will explain and illustrate
what is going on inside the Bloomberg Terminal.
Your problem begins once you have the
yield curves at hand for each swap payment period. These yield curve values have
to be translated into the present value of the swap. For this I refer you to
some documents by Carl Hubbard and me that illustrate how to derive the interest
rate swap values for each period in Example 5 of Appendix B of FAS 133.
First you should read the 133ex05a.htm
file at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/
For your convenience, I have attached the file to this message.
Then you should carefully study the
second spreadsheet in the 133ex05a.xls workbook at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/
For your convenience I have attached that file. In the second spreadsheet, you
will find the derivation of interest rate swap values in columns M through W.
Then you should get down on your hands
and knees and pray for guidance. FAS 133 is a mess, albeit a necessary mess
given the really bad state accounting would be in without such a standard to
show enormous assets and liabilities at fair values even though their historical
costs were zero (as in the case of the initial starting values of interest rate
swaps).
Bob (Robert E.) Jensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212 Voice: (210) 999-7347 Fax: (210)
999-8134
Email: rjensen@trinity.edu
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
-----Original
Message-----
From: XXXXX
Sent: Monday, November 05, 2001 3:50 PM
To: 'rjensen@trinity.edu' Subject: FAS 133 Question
Hello Dr. Jensen,
My name is XXXXX, and
I work for an accounting firm in Providence, R.I. We've been having a heck of
a time figuring out how to calculate the fair value of and interest rate swap.
Our client pays a fixed 8.05% interest and has an interest rate swap contract
based on the 1 month LIBOR rate plus 2.25%. We were told by FASB (DIG unit),
that we needed to use and "interest rate curve". How do you get or
calculate this curve?? Also, is there any other site or examples of
calculating the fair value? Obviously our client has one of the more easy
derivatives, so it shouldn't be this hard. I've spent the better part of the
day search the net for information on this subject since FASB was less than
helpful, and stumbled across your site. It seems, after ready some of your
information, that there is still a lot of confusion about this subject.
Any assistance would
be appreciated.
Thanks in advance,
XXXXX
Dear Accounting
Educator:
You are invited to
participate in the 2002 AICPA Professor/Practitioner Case Development Program.
The program is designed to promote the collaboration of academics and
practitioners in the development of real-world-based cases for use in the
accounting curriculum.
The program
encourages accounting educators and practitioners to jointly develop case
materials based on actual incidents or situations. An AICPA task force of
educators and practitioners will review all case applications and select up to
ten cases for further development. Each selected case will be copyrighted and
published by the AICPA for distribution to administrators of accounting
programs across the United States. The student notes of the case material will
also be made available at AICPA Online. The authors of the selected cases will
receive a specially bound volume of all the cases selected for distribution.
Accepted cases will be further considered for invited presentation at one of
several education oriented conferences such as the American Accounting
Association Annual Meeting (AAA-edu.org), the Federation of Schools of
Accountancy Annual Meeting ( www.thefsa.org
), or the Colloquium on Change in Accounting Education (www.thecolloquium.com).
If selected, both the academic and practitioner authors are expected to
participate in the presentation of the case.
Applications must be
received by the AICPA by December 1, 2001. Please consider participating in
this program designed to foster enhancements in accounting education.
For more information
on the program or for an application form, please call (212) 596-6221, e-mail educat@aicpa.org
or visit AICPA Online at http://www.aicpa.org/members/div/career/edu/factsheet.htm
Thank you.
Leticia B.
Romeo
Coordinator Academic and Career Development
American Institute of CPAs Tel. (212) 596-6221 Fax (212) 596-6292 lromeo@aicpa.org
I wrote two cases several years ago for
this program. It was a great experience. Our "old" cases
are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5342/262wp/262case1.htm#top
From Syllabus Web on November 6,
2001
HP Inaugurates
Campus Notebook PC Program
Hewlett-Packard last
week launched a program to provide college students with notebook PCs and
service support. The HP Campus Advantage program includes consultation,
notebook PCs, call center support, and leasing and financing options. Kevin
Learned, president of Albertson College of Idaho, which teamed with HP to
offer a similar program this fall, said such technology investments are
increasingly an important factor in students choice of school. "The
ability for students to have instant access to the tools and information they
need ... is a very appealing prospect," he said. HP said it will also be
inviting schools to participate in the Annual Laptop Symposium on January 11th
at Villanova University in Pennsylvania. The symposium helps schools drive
creative uses for their technology.
For more
information, visit: http://www.hp.com/go/campusadvantage
Blackboard
Announces e-Education Suite
Blackboard Inc. last
week announced a series of product packaging enhancements that will unify its
three electronic education platforms under a single suite of products.
Customers can now choose between complete or independent licensing of the
three primary packages: the Blackboard 5 Learning System, the Blackboard 5
Community Portal System, and the Blackboard Transaction System. In explaining
the announcement, Eduventures research group director Adam Newman said,
"much as the administrative systems market moved from separate providers
of human resource, finance and student records systems into a common suite, we
see the e-Education segment of the higher educations technology market
converging into suites as well. By taking a suite approach, Blackboard is
helping to define the emerging paradigm for deploying Web services that touch
the daily student experience, such as Web course environments, community
portals, and online commerce."
For more
information, visit: http://www.blackboard.com
Katie Dean's Education Notebook.
A school laptop plan is put on hold
after parent opposition. Also: A university offers a certificate in game
development.... Berkeley and Columbia business schools offer a joint MBA program
--- http://www.wired.com/news/school/0,1383,48106,00.html
Bi-coastal biz
degree: Business schools at Berkeley and Columbia have paired up to offer a
joint executive MBA. The program will launch in June 2002.
The program hopes
to take advantage of two of the most important business and technology
centers, New York City and Silicon Valley.
The Berkeley-Columbia
EMBA, which offers 15 weeks of instruction over 19 months, will alternate
between New York and California.
The Trinity University Chaplain,
Stephen Nickel, informed me that the Parker Chapel Website is now up and running
at http://www.trinity.edu/departments/chapel/index.htm
I am not certain where all the credits
go for this, but some of the early design work credit goes to Tom Hicks.
EDUCAUSE Review
NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2001 Volume 36, Number 6
To Youth Camp, a Long Farewell by JAMES
J. O'DONNELL
The "youth camp" culture in colleges and universities has resulted in
an infantilization that today stands in the way of new ideas and new
technologies of strategic importance.
http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/erm0160.pdf
http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/erm0160t.pdf (non-graphic)
Five Dirty Little Secrets in Higher
Education by LAURA PALMER NOONE and CRAIG SWENSON
Recent societal and economic forces have called time-honored academic
conventions into question, revealing several "dirty little secrets" in
higher education.
http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/erm0161.pdf
http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/erm0161t.pdf (non-graphic)
The Answer Is Still
Technology--Strategic Technology by MILTON D. GLICK, with JAKE KUPIEC
How effective are colleges and universities in their use of technology,
particularly information technology, and are their investments in technology
meeting their strategic goals?
http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/erm0162.pdf
http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/erm0162t.pdf (non-graphic)
Copyright Assumptions and Challenges by
JAMES HILTON
Assumptions about copyright law are challenging the long-standing academic
principle of the free interchange of ideas, both within and outside of the
higher education institution.
http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/erm0163.pdf
http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/erm0163t.pdf (non-graphic)
Archiving in the Digital Age: There's a
Will, But Is There a Way? by KEVIN M. GUTHRIE
If the academic community's commitment to archiving is to make the transition to
the digital age, it needs not only a system for storing and preserving
electronic information but also the resources to support this system.
http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/erm0164.pdf
http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/erm0164t.pdf (non-graphic)
Recommended Readings on Information
Technology Issues
EDUCAUSE offers a list of readings on each of the top-ten information technology
issues identified by the 2001 Current Issues Survey.
http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/erm0165.pdf
http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/erm0165t.pdf (non-graphic)
Why Open Source Makes Sense by LINUS
TORVALDS and DAVID DIAMOND
From Just for Fun: The Story of an Accidental Revolutionary
http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/erm01613.pdf
http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/erm01613t.pdf (non-graphic)
If you downloaded iTunes 2.0 for Mac OS
X, you must go back for version
2.0.1 — thanks to a forgotten quotation mark in the code of the 2.0
installer, you may just find your hard drive wiped clean. A bug in
the just-released version of Apple's popular iTunes software has erased some
people's entire hard drives.
Also see http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,48149,00.html
From the University of Virginia (Music,
History)
Lift Every Voice --- http://www.lib.virginia.edu/speccol/exhibits/music/audio.html
I repeated this from a previous edition of New Bookmarks. You can download
the music.
I know of an instance where campus police gathered evidence of a threatening
note sent by one faculty member to another faculty member. The perpetrator
apparently changed the type ball of an IBM Selectric Typewriter in fear that
investigators might be able to match the typed note with the typewriter.
However, that same person did not change the ribbon, and campus police found the
entire note on the ribbon. Now similar evidence can be obtained from
computer keyboards.
From TechnoScout on November 12, 2001 --- http://www.technoscout.com/general/product/product.asp?product=1620&site=80472
The KeyKatcher lets you know what your children or
employees are typing on the web.
Worried about what your kids might come across on the
Internet? Whether your child is working on a school project, or just e-mailing
friends, there is a lot on the Internet that they might be subjected to. Now
you can know where your child has been on the net, without constantly looking
over their shoulder. The KeyKatcher is designed to monitor what is going on
during Web use on your computer simply by plugging it in to your keyboard port
of your PC. This attachment records keystrokes without any software involved
and can be moved without a trace. After setting up the KeyKatcher to record,
every tap made on your keyboard is stored in a Flash RAM. The 32-Kbit holds
over 32,000 keystrokes, or about 16 pages. The innovative design includes a
tamper-evident seal, so you will know if someone has tried to remove it. It
even monitors chat rooms and instant messaging, and lets you use your own
custom password, so only you have access. Its memory also remains intact if
unplugged, and through power outages. This monitor can be your eyes at home,
or even at your business if you want to make sure your employees are staying
on task. The KeyKatcher is subject to privacy laws in your state.
The KeyKatcher homepage is at http://www.keykatcher.com/
Donna Dubinsky reflects on her 15 years as a company executive and releases
15 "lessons" she's gained from them --- http://www.wirednews.com/news/holidays/0,1882,47844,00.html
Oh! Oh!
"Brain scans can reveal liars," by Emma Young, New
Scientist, November 12, 2001 --- http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99991543
Brain scans can reveal whether someone is lying or
telling the truth, US researchers have discovered. When people lied, fMRI
(functional magnetic resonance imaging) scans revealed significant increases
in activity in several brain regions.
Daniel Langleben and his colleagues at the University
of Pennsylvania hope fMRI could be used for more accurate forensic lie
detection. The widely used polygraph test is based on changes in heart rate,
blood pressure, breathing and the electrical resistance of the skin. But these
factors can vary widely among individuals, making it more difficult to
establish whether someone really is telling the truth.
Langleben's team gave 18 people an object to hide in
their pockets. They were then shown a series of pictures, including one of the
object itself. As each picture was presented, the participants were instructed
to deny that it matched their hidden object.
When there was a match, and the person was lying,
activity in several regions increased. This included the anterior cinglate,
which is associated with response inhibition and error monitoring, and the
adjacent right superior frontal gyrus, which plays a key role in attention.
The results suggest there is a "localised brain
correlate of deception", the team says.
Saint Augustine
"The fact that deception requires extra work in
a number of brain regions may indicate that the deception involves inhibition
of the 'default' response - truth," adds Langleben. "Interestingly,
this agrees with the traditional definition of deception dating back to Saint
Augustine: 'Deception is denial of truth'."
Previous attempts to use fMRI to identify brain
changes when someone is lying have failed. Langleben suspects that the
simplicity of the task used in his team's experiment may help explain their
success.
"The main strength of our study was adapting a
simple and very well known test that has been used forensically and in
research to detect deception with polygraphs and EEGs since the 1950s,"
he told New Scientist.
Cultural differences
However, more work is necessary before fMRI lie
detection could be used for legal purposes, he says.
"Our study shows only an average difference in
brain activity between lying and telling the truth in a group of young and
healthy English-speaking people. In order to determine whether fMRI can be
used to detect deception in any individual, much larger groups of different
ages, cultures and socio-economic status should be studied."
Using fMRI also involves using large, expensive
scanners, making it much less practical to use than a polygraph test.
Yahoo! Warehouse - buy and sell used,
overstock, and clearance goods --- http://warehouse.yahoo.com/
Bob Jensen's marketing links can be
found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm
Linux future still murky
Gartner Group analyst George Weiss says
Linux's achievements do not remove significant questions about its future. http://cgi.zdnet.com/slink?159783:2700840
The U.S. government takes its anti-Taliban
campaign online --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,48294,00.html
Muslim Life in America -- DOS http://usinfo.state.gov/products/pubs/muslimlife/homepage.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on terrorism
and the war are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/JusticeAppeal.htm
National Geographic for Kids (of any
age) --- http://www.nationalgeographic.com/ngforkids/
Internet, Ethernet, Firewall, File
Transfer Protocol, TCP/IP connections - say what? Here's an online reference
site that provides definitions for technology terms - everything from firewalls
to TCP/IP connections. The site turns tech jargon into accessible definitions
that even your grandmother would understand. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/61891
Bob Jensen's guides to acronyms and
technology terms --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm
For the first time, the legal arm of a
Big Five firm has made it into the top 10 in annual rankings of the Global 100
law firms. The survey, compiled jointly by The American Lawyer and London- based
Legal Business, analyzes growth, earnings, and productivity of firm members. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/62694
Broadband use is slowing down just as
entertainment subscription services are set to launch. Without high-speed
networks, the future of online entertainment is in trouble --- http://www.wired.com/news/mp3/0,1285,47968,00.html
Vision 101 (Health) --- http://www.1800contacts.com/vision101/frames.html
Explains how vision works and how to take care of your eyes.
I suggest that you click on the option to Skip the Introduction.
HIV/AIDS Bureau - provides low-income
funding for HIV/AIDS care --- http://hab.hrsa.gov/
Book Recommendations from AccountingWEB
Creating
Rainmakers: The Manager's Guide to Training Professionals to Attract New
Clients
Based on over 100
interviews with principals in professional firms, including many of today's
preeminent rainmakers, "Creating Rainmakers" shows readers how to
turn a professional staff into a powerful team of sales winners. The book
cover generating leads, building a strong network of contacts, mastering a
variety of sales techniques, and more. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1558508465/accountingweb
Million-Dollar Consulting: The Professional's
Guide to Growing a Practice
Smaller staffs, greater job complexity, and higher
performance goals are boosting the demand for consultants. This acclaimed
how-to resource gives consultants the tools and advice they need to grow a
firm that rakes in a $1 million a year. Step by step it shows how to raise
capital, reel in new clients, set fees, accelerate growth, and more. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0070696284/accountingweb
From AccountingWEB Resource Guide on November 16, 2001
Small Business Manager is the affordable,
interconnected financial and business management solution from Microsoft Great
Plains. Designed specifically for small, growing businesses, Small Business
Manager allows you to efficiently input, organize and access the information
you need to drive your business. When you've got greater functionality
requirements than an out-of-the- box accounting solution provides but you're
not yet ready for an elaborate software package, Small Business Manager is
your ideal choice. Visit http://www.greatplains.com/smallbusinessmanager
and register to attend a free online seminar!
Bob Jensen's bookmarks for small businesses are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#Smallbusiness
From a fraternity brother of mine long
ago in my past.
"Resolution, Not Compromise, Builds Coalition Appeasing the Muslim 'street'
is a recipe for defeat,"
BY ROBERT L. BARTLEY, November 12, 2001 --- http://www.opinionjournal.com/columnists/rbartley/?id=95001456
From Syllabus News on November 13, 2001
Financial Aid
Companies Offer Assistance Via New Web Site
American Education
Services (AES), a financial aid organization, and Allfirst Bank plan to
provide affordable student loans to African-American students through
HBCUmentor.org, a new website providing information, electronic tools and
applications for Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU). Through
a web interface, students can search for HBCUs that best meet their needs,
take multimedia campus tours, communicate directly with schools via free email
accounts and submit applications online. The system provides students 24-hour
access to a virtual "mentor" that interacts with the student,
counseling them according to their interests, academic abilities, high school
course studies, extracurricular activities and special needs. During the
website's first month online, it registered more than 7,700 visitors.
For more
information, visit: http://www.hbcumentor.org
Memphis Alumnus to
Head FedEx Technology Institute
James Phillips, chief
executive officer of media software company Interactive Pictures Corp., was
named executive director of the FedEx Technology Institute at the University
of Memphis. The Institute, a partnership between Federal Express Corp. and The
University of Memphis, will prepare students for technical, cross- functional
business environments. Its graduates are expected to be fluent in information
technology and will have access to the most up-to-date information technology
for learning and research. Ground was broken in May 2001 for the building that
will house the Institute. Completion is expected in 2003.
Online U. Offers
Continuing Ed Web Services
Online Capella
University has launched a web-based assessment tool for adults considering
continuing their education. The "2-Minute Advisor" is an interactive
tool designed to provide people individual course and program recommendations
based on their interests and specific needs. The Advisor online questionnaire
provides recommendations on courses or programs that best match a person's
interests and goals; an assessment of their learning style; reference and
research material to help with their decision; and information on financial
aid. "Everybody has questions about continuing their education, but few
people take the time to meet with an advisor, said Steve Shank, chancellor of
the school. The advisor gives people "quick access to the information
they need to make an informed decision."
For more information,
visit: http://www.capellauniversity.edu
Indiana Statesman
Launches New Web Site
The Indiana
Statesman, the campus newspaper of Indiana State University, launched a
redesigned website to provide more comprehensive news and campus information.
The site enables the staff to run breaking news, feedback on stories, and to
use stories from other campus newspapers around the country. The newspaper
developed the site with Digital Partners Inc., a Lincoln, Neb.-based company
which provides technology and marketing services to online college newspapers.
The company syndicates stories through a network that includes newspapers at
the universities of Wisconsin, Nebraska, Oregon, Mississippi, Pennsylvania and
North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The Indiana Statesman publishes three times a
week to 7,000 copies to students, staff and faculty.
For more
information, visit: http://www.indianastatesman.com
Kentucky Virtual
U. Adds Online Tutoring
Kentucky Virtual
University opened registration for Spring 2002 with new online services,
including free online tutoring, Sunday call center hours and an online writing
center. Acting chief executive officer Daniel Rabuzzi said the services
"are designed to create a high- touch environment for students plugged
into class over the Internet. Live tutors are now just a click away, and in
some subjects, are available 24 hours a day, seven days a week." Students
can schedule tutoring sessions in subjects ranging from basic math to Calculus
II, accounting, chemistry, economics, Spanish and statistics. The tutoring
will remain free through mid- May 2002 and is available through an arrangement
with the University of Kentucky.
For more
information, visit: http://www.kyvu.org
Bob Jensen's threads on distance
education are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
Especially note the document at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/crossborder.htm
Learn how to account for business combinations, goodwill, and other
intangible assets. Andersen's Executive Summary and NEW Controller's Supplement
identify the provisions and action steps needed to implement Statements 141 and
142. These documents also contain a topic-by-topic comparison of the new rules
and prior rules. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/62265
The FEI has put together some helpers on accounting for business combinations
at
http://cvccommunications.com/2/BusinessCombinations.html
Bill Gates addresses the opening of Comdex and admits personal computers
don't work very well. Microsoft will fix the problems in the next 10 years, he
says --- http://www.wirednews.com/news/exec/0,1370,48323,00.html
A newly discovered flaw in the way that
Internet Explorer handles Web site cookies could enable an attacker to view and
edit a user's personal data contained in the cookies. The vulnerability affects
all versions of IE, but is mitigated by several factors, according to a bulletin
released last week by Microsoft Corp. Under normal operation, Web sites are only
able to access the cookies for their site on a given user's machine. By crafting
a URL with specific contents, an attacker could gain access to cookies for other
sites and edit the contents of the files by injecting a script. Read the story
at http://www.eweek.com/article/0,3658,s%253D701%2526a%253D18121,00.asp
Many once-vaunted e-commerce sites are dead and gone, but often the
merchandise they didn't sell is still floating around on the Net. Joanna Glasner
takes a look at where it can be found --- http://www.wirednews.com/news/business/0,1367,48189,00.html
Forwarded by David Spiceland
The Business Editorial Review team of
MERLOT (Multimedia Educational Resource for Learning and Online Teaching) is
inviting academics from all disciplines to become External Reviewers. MERLOT is
a cost free means of viewing learning materials developed by other instructors.
Viewers can become Members with only a last name and address, although access is
available to non-members also. Members are able to contribute their own
materials as well as write User Comments for others.
MERLOT can be accessed at the following
site:
http://www.merlot.org
The criteria for being an External
Reviewer are that the individual be an instructor at an institute of higher
learning and that he/she has demonstrated expertise in the discipline, is
recognized for excellence in teaching, has experience using technology in
teaching, and has participated in the activities of the discipline association(s).
An External Reviewer is partnered with
a member of the Editorial Review Board to conduct Expert Peer Reviews on a
learning module in their discipline. In addition to contributing to the
discipline, serving as an External Reviewer enables the individual to become
more familiar with the types of learning material available. After completion of
the review, the External Reviewer is recognized for his/her contribution.
Accounting is one of the many
sub-disciplines found on MERLOT.
Individuals interested in serving as
External Reviewers should contact:
Cathy Owens Swift,
Business Co-Editor
Georgia Southern University PO Box 8140 Statesboro, GA 30460-8140
cswift@gasou.edu 912-681-5217
A Wired News Q&A with Fahad Al Sharekh, whose company, Ajeeb.com, just
rolled out what he claims is the Internet's first free Arabic-to-English
translation service --- http://www.wirednews.com/news/culture/0,1284,48260,00.html
In the face of the Taliban's hell-bent
quest to destroy all vestiges of arts and culture in the country, one man with a
website hopes to keep Afghanistan's history alive --- http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,47842,00.html
The website includes
images of contemporary and historical Afghan artists, stories about
Afghanistan, and Afghan music, fiction and poetry. Azad compiled his work
through networking and reporting. While he makes no money off of his website,
he has since left his job in the technology sector to devote all of his time
to building and maintaining the site.
Afghanmagazine.com
details the demise of cultural centers in Afghanistan.
"Herat is a city
in Western Afghanistan that had gone through a renaissance right before the
Soviet invasion," Azad said. "You can still sense the beauty of the
city, but most of the cultural heritage has been destroyed."
The Afghan National
Museum and the National Contemporary Art Gallery in Kabul have been looted,
while any remaining artwork has also been demolished. In fact, most Afghan art
is now unaccounted for due to archival destruction.
"In 1996, in
order to keep the rebels warm, the entire card catalog archiving the art at
the Afghan National Museum was burned," Azad said.
Geographic location
made Afghanistan the epicenter for the arts and gave it worldwide importance.
Within one valley in Afghanistan, rare Greek coins were found, Buddhist
statues were erected and pottery depicting deities from Islam, Judaism and
Christianity were unearthed, Azad said.
Afghanistan was
immensely rich in the arts from prehistory to the 17th century, according to
Thomas Leisten, an assistant professor of Islamic art and architectural
history at Princeton University. Gold was discovered from the first century,
while Greek temples were built when Afghanistan was ruled by the successors of
Alexander the Great.
"The art of
Afghanistan is not Afghan in the sense of a national art," Leisten wrote
in an e-mail. "For most of its history, the cities in western Afghanistan
belonged culturally and for times historically to eastern Iran."
That may explain why
international art historians have not been more vocal in preserving
Afghanistan's culture. They're not sure where the art belongs.
Furthermore, the
Afghan Service of Antiquities, an organization that sold Afghan art to other
countries, had a terrible reputation for selling art and antiques at wholesale
prices to dealers in Europe and the United States.
The Taliban's role in
the destruction of art in Afghanistan has been widely documented. Earlier this
year, Buddhist statues imbedded in the mountains were blown up because of the
Taliban's extreme religious beliefs prohibiting Muslims from viewing any
cultural artifacts depicting religions other than their own.
"As for Buddhist
and Hindu monuments, it may be connected to a saying of the Prophet Muhammad
who ordered (other religious) idols to be destroyed when he cleansed the Kaaba
in Mecca," Leisten wrote. "While Muslim rulers and regimes over
centuries had apparently no problem with the existence of the Buddhas, the
Taliban are taking a deliberately fundamentalist course concerning pre-Islamic
antiquities."
Other Afghan
Americans are taking an active role in responding to the destruction.
Amanullah Haiderzad,
an Afghan sculptor who established the fine arts department at Kabul
University, is trying to establish an Afghan-American art and cultural museum
in New York City. But he said raising funds for the project is difficult
because Afghans are generally not wealthy, and have only recently immigrated
to the United States.
"My goal is to
bring cultural and historical pride to the new generation of
Afghan-Americans," he said. "Right now, we have nothing. This center
would not only help to understand our heritage, but to get to know each other
now."
Although the media
still portrays Afghanistan as a barren, poverty-stricken country with no
infrastructure, Azad said there is still a slight cultural presence in the
country.
"A reporter
recently went to the refugee camps there, and some of the masters were still
painting," he said. "They were keeping the art alive."
See also:
Risking
All to Expose the Taliban
Afghanistan,
on 50 Websites a Day
Give
Peace a Website
After
Bullets Fly: War of Words
Discover more Net Culture
"Feminists Agonize Over War in
Afghanistan What Women Want." by Sharon Lerner, The Village Voice, November
6, 2001 --- http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0144/lerner.php
A year ago, when
women's rights and peace advocate Hibaaq Osman was giving a speech at the
United Nations, she cited only one cause for which the use of military force
might be justified: to oust the oppressive Taliban regime from Afghanistan.
Now that the bloody effort is under way, however, Osman, who heads the Center
for Strategic Initiatives in Washington, feels differently.
"I said it, but
I was just making a point," a distraught Osman recalls. "This
predicament is a test for feminists. We have seen our worst nightmare—women
being dehumanized and shot in public—and it makes us more radical. It makes
us angry enough to entertain the idea of war. But do I support war?"
Osman pauses to consider her own country, Somalia, with its brutal history,
before bursting out with an emotional "No. No. No. War is not OK under
any circumstances," and then concluding, "The whole thing simply
breaks my heart."
The four-week-old
military attack on Afghanistan is proving to be an excruciating dilemma for
feminists. In heart-wrenching conversations and e-mail exchanges across the
city and the globe, feminists find themselves split over how to handle
possibly the most misogynistic regime in history. Many are deeply
uncomfortable with the specter of a wealthy nation bombing a poor and already
ravaged one—a discomfort that is only deepened by the knowledge that more
women than men die as a result of most wars. And as national loyalties are
stoked by current events, feminists are further strained to reconcile their
patriotism with the desire to reach out to women throughout the globe.
Perhaps most
frustrating has been the world's failure to heed feminists' urgent warnings
about the Taliban, which they've been decrying since it took power in 1996.
Under the fundamentalist militia's rule, women have been publicly executed for
such "crimes" as traveling with men who are not their relatives and
being suspected of adultery. The government has banned women from work,
education, and examination by male doctors. Women have even been forbidden
from making noise when they walk (the sound draws men's attention, according
to Taliban rulers).
Back in 1997, the
Feminist Majority's Eleanor Smeal was among the first to sound alarms about
the ghastly treatment of Afghan women, urging the U.S. against diplomatic
recognition of the Taliban and to halt construction of a pipeline through
Afghanistan that would have supplied millions in profits to the regime. The
pipeline project was eventually stopped, but others of the group's
suggestions, including a U.S. designation of the Taliban as an international
terrorist organization, have yet to be carried out.
Perhaps it's no
surprise that some feminists, including Smeal, now feel the backward and
violent regime deserves whatever it gets. The rare overlap between feminist
and military interests made for particularly warm relations in the greenroom
at an NBC station in Los Angeles when Smeal met up with three generals who
were about to appear on Chris Matthews's Hardball. "They went off about
the role of women in this effort and how imperative it was that women were now
in every level of the air force and navy," says Smeal, who found herself
cheered by the idea of women flying F-16s. "It's a different kind of
war," she says, echoing the president's assessment of Operation Enduring
Freedom.
Indeed, the gender
gap in support for this U.S. military effort is unusually small. Historically,
female support for war has lagged between 10 and 15 percent behind men's,
according to Joshua Goldstein, author of War and Gender: How Gender Shapes the
War System and Vice Versa. But in a recent survey released by the Pew Research
Center for the People and the Press, 79 percent of women, compared to 86
percent of men, said they support the ongoing military intervention, a near
parity Goldstein believes may be explained by the fact that the Taliban is
anathema to women.
Continued at http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0144/lerner.php
Historic Weapons Collection --- http://www.kattnet.com/arms/
Warship (History) --- http://www.pbs.org/wnet/warship/
Apple CEO Steve Jobs calls Microsoft's
Office X "possibly the most important application for Mac OS X." --- http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,48160,00.html
Forwarded by Diane Graves
Copyright issues
and concerns:
"…Not every
use, even every educational use, is likely to be defined as fair use. Higher
education institutions need to develop up-to-date, reliable, consistent, and
clear copyright related standards for use. "Who uses what" and
"how they use it" have become pressing issues, in large part because
new media sources and the emergence of the Web allow for the widespread
dissemination of material. As such, they raise the stakes considerably from
the days when distribution was limited to students physically enrolled in
classes.
Institutions must
accompany these standards with a campaign to energize and educate the
community about copyright, an issue that is complex and often seems as though
it should be someone else's problem. Faculty, staff, and students should know
when they can use material under "fair use," when they must obtain
permission (and how to obtain it), and when and how they can obtain
alternative sources of the material (e.g., through commissioned works or from
the public domain.).
Institutions must
decide how much and what kinds of risks are worth taking with regard to use.
…. Institutions that take a liberal position regarding fair use risk
exposing themselves to litigation and the financial costs associated with it.
Regardless of the
specific position taken regarding fair use, institutions need to nurture a
culture of compliance with copyright law. This culture requires education and
resources. If a coherent use policy is created but faculty, staff, and
students lack access to the resources needed to comply (e.g., easy copyright
clearance, alternative sources for copyright material, help finding things in
the public domain), the policy will be ignored.
Excerpted from: James
Hilton, "Copyright Assumptions and Challenges," EDUCAUSE Review,
November/December 2001, pp.48-55.
Helpful web sites:
Friends of Active
Copyright Education: http://www.law.duke.edu/copyright/face/
Copyright Clearance
Center: http://www.copyright.com/
Copyright Management
Center at Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis (Includes link
to Fair Use Checklist) http://www.iupui.edu/~copyinfo/
CREDO: Copyright
Resources for Education Online (Columbia University) http://www.ilt.columbia.edu/text_version/projects/copyright/ILTcopy0.html
Bob Jensen's threads on plagiarism
are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/plagiarism.htm
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Collections Online http://mweb.lacma.org/
Exeter Cathedral Keystones and
Carvings: A Catalogue Raisonne of the Sculptures & Their Polychromy http://www.exetercathedral.co.uk
Welcome to Exeter
Cathedral Keystones & Carvings: A Catalogue Raisonné of the Sculptures
& Their Polychromy, an illustrated introduction to, and explanatory
catalogue of all the figurative sculpture that is part of the original
interior fabric of the medieval building.
This extensive
web-site is designed primarily for art historians and medievalists, but is
also intended to enable lay people to enjoy the wonderful medieval work which
can often be seen more clearly here than is possible within the building, even
through binoculars.
During its third global meeting held
last week in Sydney, Australia the XBRL.org Consortium announced that one of its
member organizations, the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB), is
providing a core taxonomy of XBRL for Financial Statements to members of
XBRL.org for approval after receiving public comment. Go to http://accountingeducation.com/news/news2242.html
Bob Jensen's XBRL links and threads
are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/xmlrdf.htm
"XBRL Software Tool Offers Relief From Data Transfer Woes," by:
National Network of Accountants --- http://www.smartpros.com/x31679.xml
A new way of communicating financial data promises to
make auditing more efficient, speed up the small business loan processing,
make it easier for financial planners to track client investments and cut down
on the work required to convert from one accounting software package to
another. Say hello to XBRL, a software tool coming soon to an accounting
program near you.
XBRL (Extensible Business Reporting Language) is an
offshoot of XML (Extensible Markup Language), the emerging favorite for
transaction processing over the Web. Its language is a cousin to HTML (HyperText
Markup Language), the common idiom for presenting text online and one that you
may have worked with.
Let's forget the alphabet soup for the moment and
zero in on why a CPA will find XBRL useful.
Consider first how many different accounting software
packages your various clients use. It's bad enough that you must learn enough
about each one to assess their control strengths and weaknesses, or that you
must figure what combination of reports gives you the answers you need. On top
of that, you often can't use that information without re-keying it
(re-entering it by hand) into your own write-up system, or using a data export
process that seldom works as advertised.
What's the upshot of this situation? Staff time spent
re-keying client data; calls to the system administrator when the export macro
bombs because of a wayward comma in a delimited file; supervisory headaches
when the junior accountant mixes up the entry for cash and fixed assets. Even
programs like F9 or FRx that read balances directly from accounting program
into a spreadsheet don't solve the problem entirely, since many programs
(QuickBooks to name one!) don't work with them. This confusion,
miscommunication and software glitches can consume many hours of staff and
professional time that can and should be used for other more important
matters.
In addition to write-up efficiencies, XBRL will soon
help CPAs and their clients to:
Speed up business loans by transmitting financial
statements, aging and cash flow reports from the applicant's computer directly
to the bank's. Download SEC filings into your financial analysis tool of
choice, without a significant amount of cut and paste. Make it easier for the
small business owner of multiple companies to see their macro financial
picture. Pull in data from a payroll service provider from their Web-based
site into the client's in-house omputer. Save big bucks converting data files
when upgrading computer programs, by doing all exports and imports via XBRL.
How will it work? XBRL proponents say it will solve the communication problem
by setting up a standard translation mechanism between incompatible programs.
It involves a two-part solution: taxonomy and a schema. These are "techie"
terms for a common vocabulary and a presentation hierarchy. The taxonomy tells
us the elements of a financial statement, and the schema tells us the order in
which it goes.
Also see
IASB
Provides XBRL Global Spec for Financial Statements
By SmartPros
The XBRL.org Consortium announced that the International Accounting
Standards Board -- one of its members -- is providing a core
taxonomy of XBRL for Financial Statements to members of XBRL.org for
approval after receiving public comment.
|
Bob Jensen's threads on XBRL are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/xmlrdf.htm
The National Network of Accountants homepage is at http://www.nnaplan.com/
Founded in 1992 as a practice-building resource for
accounting professionals, the National Network of Accountants, Specializing in
Financial Planning (NNA) has successfully trained between 200 and 300
accounting firms annually in the science of financial planning, and has
supported them in the integration of this AICPA - sanctioned specialty into
their practices.
In sanctioning financial planning as the first -- and
only -- practice specialty, the Institute recognized two important factors
affecting today's accounting practitioner: the market for accounting services
is shrinking and becoming more competitive; and a growing number of clients
are looking for one-stop financial planning services from their accountants.
The NNA program is quite unique. They utilize a
3-pronged approach that generates a number of welcome benefits to the
accounting practitioner in today's environment:
INCREASED REVENUE FROM THE CLIENT BASE STEADY FLOW OF
REFERRALS TO NEW CLIENTS WIDER RANGE OF PROFESSIONAL SERVICES AVAILABLE TO
CLIENTS SOLIDIFICATION OF EXISTING CLIENT RELATIONSHIPS EXPANSION OF PRACTICE
INTO UNTAPPED MARKETS ACCESS TO A MORE DIVERSE PROFESSIONAL NETWORK
The training program prepares the practitioner to
interface with his clients effectively in the financial planning arena by
teaching him how to gather the necessary information to construct a plan; how
to establish a client's goals, objectives and attitudes toward planning
issues; how to present a finished plan to a client; and how to market his
practice through the financial planning process. An overview of selected
creative planning techniques is also presented regularly to members , to give
the members a flavor for the opportunities this new practice specialty will
offer both his clients and himself.
The NNA generates written comprehensive plans for the
accountants, and provides a complete back-office support system, including
unlimited access to a cadre of professional resources with expertise in a
broad range of technical specialties (such as qualified plans, estate planning
and asset allocation).
Therefore, the accountant does not have to invest in
software, training of support personnel, or plan development time. The NNA
handles all software updates and compliance issues. Working with each
accountant, a designated NNA professional designs a financial plan that is
consistent not only with the client's goals and objectives, but also with the
style and approach of the accountant. This is a vital component. It permits
the accountant to generate a high quality written plan for his client - at
minimal cost. The NNA guarantees a 15-day turnaround after receipt of the
completed client confidential data.
A crucial element of the NNA program is their
marketing system. Many opportunities for a new client development and practice
growth are found in the financial planning process - but they are not readily
apparent. Through an insightful 8-Step Marketing Program, as well as
appropriate collateral material and support, the accountant is trained to
effectively market both their financial planning service and their tax and
accounting practice.
Interested practitioners should call 1-800-234 PLAN
Ext. 268,or E-Mail us at nna92@aol.com
for more information.
Bob Jensen's threads on XBRL are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/xmlrdf.htm
File-trading systems may face a dim
future in court and the Internet bubble may have burst, but peer-to-peer fans
say their technology remains promising. Now all they need to do is figure out
how to make it profitable --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,48231,00.html
Bob Jensen's P2P threads are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/napster.htm
Bob Jensen and
Jason Xiao have a new paper focusing on file sharing in accountancy:
Those of you that paid $20 for a password to American Accounting Association
journals may download the paper as instructed above by Craig Polhemus:
"Customized Financial Reporting,
Networked Databases, and Distributed File Sharing," by Robert E. Jensen
and Jason Zezhong Xiao, Accounting Horizons, September 2001, pp.
209-202 --- http://aaahq.org/ic/browse.htm
Apple has been hit with a $40 million
racial discrimination lawsuit filed by a former African-American employee. He's
hired a hotshot lawyer with a track record: the largest racial discrimination
case in U.S. legal history --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,48154,00.html
The Shortlist Prize for Artistic
Achievement --- http://www.shortlistofmusic.com/
You can download RAP from this site.
Student Project Team Evaluations
I have used the
Issues in Accounting Education case, "An Anticipatory Case for Managing
Teams and Team projects". (Vol 14, No 1, Feb 1999) This sets the team
"ground rules" for evaluation. Appendix B shows the same type of
grading scheme as mentioned by Hossein.
Barb Edwards,
M.Acc., CA
Simon Fraser University Burnaby, BC V5A 1S6 Email: bjedwards@sfu.ca
From Applications Development Trends,
November 2001, pp. 41-44.
ROI: Data
mining's bottom line --- http://www.adtmag.com/article.asp?id=5639
By Lana Gates
Easier-to-use and embeddable data
mining tools carrying shrinking price tags enable many more IT organizations
to sift through complex data for kernels of gold.
Data mining tools first came on the
scene about five years ago as a way to extract pertinent data from data
warehouses. Prior to the emergence of these types of tools, finding the data
you wanted required knowing the right questions to send to the data
warehouse. Data mining tools, however, look at data statistically and notice
certain things that would take a human too many hours to track.
In the past, the problem with data
mining tools was their cost. Although seemingly useful tools, companies
could not afford their up-front expense. And because data mining tools
employ mathematical algorithms to track data, they were difficult for
non-technical end users to operate, often requiring someone with a
mathematical and/or statistical background to handle them.
This has changed as more tools have
entered the market, become easier to use and dropped in price. Data mining
tools today are priced anywhere from $2,000 to $500,000, with good tools
available at both ends of the spectrum and everywhere in between. The
difference among the tools is in what they can do, the size of the database
they can work with and the complexity of the problems they can handle.
Regardless of price and complexity,
the tools are all cost-effective. "In data mining, the payoffs are very
clear," noted data management guru Herb Edelstein, president of Two
Crows Corp., Potomac, Md. "You can predict your payoff and measure
whether you got it."
Continued at --
http://www.adtmag.com/article.asp?id=5639
Data mining
& Knowledge Discovery: Databases In
business decisions
Note from Bob Jensen:
Before reading the message below, you may want to read about Data Mining at http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245glosf.htm#DataMining
The following message takes you much
deeper into this fascinating topic.
Bob Jensen
-----Original
Message-----
From: Dr.Vijay Pithadia Ph.D.M.Comm.C.P.S.T. [mailto:vijaypithadia@lycos.com]
Sent: Monday, September 10, 2001 1:22 AM
Data mining
& Knowledge Discovery: Databases In
business decisions
Dr. Vijay Pithadia
Doctor of Philosophy [1996 - 99]
Master & Bachelor of Commerce [1991-96]
Electronics Technocrat [1985 - 89]
Academic Staff,
Dept. of Social Work [MSW] Saurashtra
University
[Vijaypithadia@sify.com]
ABSTRACT:
Today computerization
of many business and government transactions related to activities and
decisions generates the floods of data by large and simple transaction i.e.
tax returns, telephone calls, business trips, performance tests and product
warranty registration are being handled through computer. For the processing
the data now are days many traditional and statistical methods of data
analyses i.e. ad-hoc queries and spreadsheets are used for to obtained
informative reports from data but they can’t give the knowledge from data.
In the present paper how the data mining and KDD technology can facilitates
analyses of the data in order to get the important knowledge hidden inside the
data. The second aim of this study is to awareness among the Indian
Universities Teachers, Industries- Organizations people and also among
software professionals to generate projects and to promote the technology in
business decisions.
Key Words: Data
Mining, Process, Techniques, Finance,Banking, SCM,IIT-K,Kanpur,
ISI-C,Kolkata,KDD
Data Availability:
Data used in this paper are available from public sources identified in the
study.
I thank Subir Hari
Singh, Ministry of Information Technology, Govt. of India, New Delhi, Roger
Barker, Morehead State University, Kentucky, S. Ganesan, Alagappa University,
karaikudi, Mangesh Koregaonkar, Indian Institute of Technology -B, Mumbai,
A.G. Balasubranian, Goa University, Goa, Gabriel Hawawini, INSEAD, Cedex,
Nitin Kumar Jain, Indian Institute of Technology -D, New Delhi, Deepak
Suchdey, President, Rajkot Management Association, Rajkot, P. L. Bali, Thapar
Institute of Engineering & Technology ,Patiala, C.S.G. Krishnamacharyalu,
S.V. University, Tirupati, and Umesh Makawana, government Engineering College,
Gandhinagar for making meaningful comments and suggestions. I also thank K I
Device, A D B Kompany, Jakarta, Sanjay Mehta, Student of MSW, and Bakul
Kakadia, Student of B.E. (IT) for research coad Juvancy.
[1] Introduction
Since last couple of
years a term Data Mining is being heard from computer professionals. Data
Mining [DM] is a new class of intelligent analytical method having ability to
intelligently and automatically assist humans in analyzing the mountains of
data for nuggets of useful knowledge. Data mining is an iterative process of
extracting interesting knowledge from data in large databases. Where knowledge
could be rules, patterns, regularities, relationships, constraints etc.
Secondly knowledge should be valid and potentially useful and third the hidden
information in the data that is useful. Where as KDD is the over all process
of finding and interpreting knowledge from data.
The subject goal is
extracting knowledge from data in context of large databases and to make
patterns/ Knowledge in understandable forms to human beings in order to
justify a better understanding of the underlying data. The emerging technology
KDD having a multi step process which uses Data Mining Methods [Algorithms] to
extract [Identify] what is hidden knowledge in the data according to
specifications of measures. Thus data mining underlying prediction on similar
groups of data and Description involves findings human interpretable patterns
describing the data in business and industry from Financial Management,
Marketing Management, and Economic Surveys of companies to Insurance, Banking
and maintenance areas of Business.
[2] Basic Steps of
KDD Process
Few of the basic
steps of KDD process are discussed here;
[1] Problem Analysis:
It is based on manual procedure. The main function is to understanding
application domain and requirements of user related to developing prior
knowledge for domain.
[2] Selection of
Target data: Creating target data set and Selecting a data set or its subset
on which discovery is to be performed by automatic way.
[3] Data Processing:
The third step of KDD process involves removing noise/ handling missing data
based on automatic program.
[4] Transformation of
Data: This procedure is made manually where data reduction and projection are
made and finding useful fields/features/attributes of data according to goal
of the problem.
[5] Data Mining:
Selection of data mining goal, choosing method according to task and
extracting knowledge and analyzing/verifying knowledge.
It is based on
automatic manner.
[6] Output Analysis
and Review: Interpretation and evaluation the knowledge/ pattern transforms
knowledge; rules reports, automatic usage and follow up for new predictions.
[3] Techniques for
Data Mining
For the purpose of
Data Mining htere are many techniques used. Some most popular and commonly
techniques i.e. Neural Networks, Nearest Neighbour Method And Decision Tree
are Discussed.
[1] Neural Networks :
It is based on non- linear predictive model and better for Financial Related
areas. Some of the sample systems are OWL (Hyper Logic, USA), Brain Maker (
CSS, USA ) Neuro Shell ( Word Systems Group, USA )
[2] Nearest Neighbor
Method: This techniques classifies each record in a data set based on a
combination of the classes of the K- record/s related to it in a historical
data set [ where K is greater than or equal to 1 ] and therefore it is some
times called as K- nearest neighbor techniques. Sample systems i.e.
TiMBL,PEBLS etc.
[3] Decision Tree: A
Decision Tree consist of nodes and branches; beginning node called root.
Depending upon the results of a test the data is classified into various
subsets. The end result is a set of rules with all possibilities.This method
is useful in certain algorithms represent decisions. These decision generates
rules for classification of a data set. Specific Decision Tree method include
Classification and Regression Trees [CART] and Chi - Square Automatic
Interaction Detection [CHAID] Sample systems i.e. Clementine ( Integral
Solutions, UK) IDIS ( Information Discover,USA) ID3, CS.0 ( Rule Quest,
Australia) etc.
[4] Data Mining
Solutions for Business
The application areas
of DM techniques are useful in business decisions. Some of the potential areas
are i.e. Banking, Finance, Survey’s related to Customer satisfaction,
Market, Buying behavior, Customer characteristics, Economic, Direct
Marketing.The details are described below
[a] Financial Market
: In the financial market,using various imperical models of market
behaviour,technical analysis for forecasting price dynamics and selecting the
optimal structure of investment portfolio can be justified.Such systems have
special interfaces for laoding financial data.i.e. Supercharts (Omega
Research,USA)wall street money (Market Arts,USA)etc Data mining methods are
also facilitates the analysis and slection of stocks and other financial
instruments.
[b] Banking : In the
banking functions such as mortgage approval,loan underwriting,money
lending/borrowing,loyal customer prediction,stock trading rules identification
etc are the important areas for Data Mining.This system also predict the
characteristics of ATM card users who sale the cards at point of sale.A system
can evolve prediction models for several levels of card usage,based on
parameters such as customer age,average checking account balance,return per
month,number of cheques etc.In the case of mortgage loans data mining system
facilitate an excellent set of discrimination rules by only 8% error rate.The
input parameters are account information i.e. loan source,rates and loan to
the value as well as borrower demographic information.
[c] Database
Marketing : In the business world database marketing is the most successful
application.The main functions of data base marketing are analyses customer
data base,find patterns of existing customer preferences,to target slection of
future customers.Many companies are using database marketing techniques,i.e.
American Express reported that due to database marketing their purchases of
credit card is increased by 15-20%.The possible apllications are Market
research including media selection product segmentation,broadcasting analysis
and product success prediction.A system allows television programming
executives to arrange show schedules for predicting audience share to maximize
market share and increase advertising revenues.
[d] Supply Chain
Management (SCM) : The fundamental operation of retail is the supply chain
management, product or services from the manufacturer to the customer via
retail eiter virtual or physical.Data mining can help viz maximising sales and
profits through an optimisation of marketing actions and providing necessary
insights for the retailer to properly manage customers, promoters,
products,stores and employees.Data mining provides the answers to the question
such as: what customer?what products?what time?and at what price?
[e] Marketing
Strategies : Target marketing actions such as direct mail campaigns are more
expensive to produce and inportant is to find mailing to those individuals
most likely to buy.Generating business models under the various condition is
very difficult and complex.The function of target marketing can be achieved by
data mining applications.Examples such as,Epsilon Data Management,USA handles
America’s biggest direct mailers also including American Express.Marks and
Spencer is also using this technique for direct mail campaign aimed at
attracting customers on a suit promotion.
[f] Sales Forecasting
: The important use of sales forecasting is for the optimisation of stocks and
purchases.Retails can predict with accuracy sales as per item and location in
order to optimise level of stocks,on the basis of past data.
This is also
important in attracting and keeping the clients.In germany karstadt retail
chain uses a neural networks based system developed by Neurotec for prediction
the sales of total 2,00,000 items carried in their sotres to optimise order.In
london,search space ltd.has developed a neural networks based application to
forecast sales for high street retail organisation.
[g] Fraud Detection
and Prevention : Data mining also palys an important role in this area.Fraud
can be detected in insurance of a person,tax returns,accounts,credit
cards,etc.A system can analyse the probability that the new account is
fraudulent.The probabilities are used to sort the accounts so that these with
highest probability can be further investigated by fraud analysis.
[5] Indian Players in
Data Mining
In India a very few
Organization like IIT-B, Mumbai, IIT-K, Kanpur, Tata Infotech, Mumbai,
IBM-India, Banglore and ISI-C, Kolkata are working toeards this area because
cost effective solutions is the major theme for development of promising
technology data mining. IIT-K, kanpur and IBM-India,Bangalore are working for
tools development where as Tata Infotech also working on the tools and
application development includes TULearn,a set of industrail quality tools to
define the nature of database and then to learn how to classify data into data
bases.It consist of Credit card Eligibility Analysis,Customer satifactory
survey,Market survey of Hindustan Lever Ltd.,BPL Mobile fraud detection
etc.ISI-C,Kolkata has been engaged on the problems:(a)Classification of
Archaeological Materials and (b)Market survey of quality control towards the
customer Satisfaction indices. [6] Research Issues
The techniques of
data mining is starts as new emerging concepts and all aspects of this
technology are at the research level shows the developments as well
improvement of its efficiency and scalability. The main issues are discussed
below:
[1] It handle
multiple source, different kinds of data i.e. transactional, active,
relational, multimedia, object oriented, legacy etc. [2] Data mining security:
Guard against the invasion of privacy. [3] Interactive Data mining of
knowledge at multiple concepts level, Efficiency and scalability of data
mining algorithms, Knowledge at multiple level in large data bases. [4]Smooth
integration with existing databases and ware housing systems, knowledge
updating, application and integration. [5] Data mining tasks: Summarization,
Characterization, Clustering, Trend and deviation analyses, Classification,
and pattern analysis etc.
[7] Conclusion
The application of
Data Mining is emerging and powerful technology for improving business
strategies,helping in design of new products & quality of products. It
complements and can often replace the other business tools i.e. computer
reporting and querying,statisfied analysis.Data Mining have modulation of
multiple disciplines such as Database systems,Data Warehousing and OLAP
(Online Analytical Processing), Machine learning,Information
science,statistics,visualisation and other disciplines such as Mathematical
Modelling,Pattern Recognisation,Neural Networks,Image/Signal Analysis,Web
Technology etc. In the busniess decision above all models can facilitates more
suitability to the decision.
Appendix - Tools For
Data Mining and KDD
The public domain,
commercial system [showed as com] and research prototype system is shown as
pub and some of them are usually freely available for research purpose.
# Decision Tree
Approach:
Pub: LMDT, OCI, PC
4.5, and SE - Learn
Com: AC2, Alice d'I
soft, CART, Cognos scenario, KATE - Tools, Preclass SPSS Answer Tree,
Xpertrule Profiler 4.0
# Nearest Neighbor
Approach:
Pub: MLC++, PEBLS,
and TiMBL 1.0 # Neural Network Approach:
pub: Neural Network
FAQ Free Software , Neuro Net Site
Com: Neural Network
FAQ List, 4 Thought, Brain Maker, DB Prophet,
INSPECT, Neural Works
Predicts, Neuro Solutions, & SPSS Neural Connections 2
# Rule Discovery
Approach:
Pub: Brute, CN2, DB
Miner, DB Predictor, FOIL, and MLC++
Com: Data Surveyor,
WINROSA, Data mite, wiz why and Super Query
# Clustering:
Pub:Autoclass
C,ECOBWEB,Fast Fuzzy Cluster,Snob
Com:Autoglass
III,COBWEB/3,Cviz Cluster Visualization,SOMine.
# Statistics:
Pub:XLISP-STAT
Com:BBN
Cornerstone,Data Desk,STATlab,SPSS.
# Visualization for
Discovery:
Pub:Graf-FX
IRIS,VisDB,Xmdv
Com:Cviz Cluster
Visualization,DataScope,UPDATE Sphinx Vision,WinViz.
References
[1] Betttini
et.al.(1998),”Discovering frequent event patterns with multiple granuality
in time sequences”.IEEE transaction on knowledge and data
engineering,Vol.10,No.2,March/April.
[2] Cabena
et.al.(1998),”Discovering Data Mining from concept to Implementation “,
Prentice Hall,USA.
[3] Chaudhary and
Dayal (1996),” Decision support,Data Warehousing and OLAP”,VLDB.
[4] Fayyad
et.al.(1997),”Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery”– J journal.
[5] Jiawei
Han(1996),” Data Mining techniques,a SIGMOD’96 Conference Tutorial.
[6] Michael
Gilmant(1998),” Nuggets and Data Mining”A white paper,February.
[7] Piatetsky Shapiro
(1998),”Data Mining 101”a white paper, June.
[8] Rakesh
Agrawal(1996),”Data Mining Technologies”,Proc.International Conference
VLDB
[9] V.Estivill Castro
and A.T. Murray(1998), “Mining Spatial Data Via Clustering “Proc.
International symposium on spatial data handling-SDH’98 canada,July 11-15
Reply from J. S. Gangolly [gangolly@CSC.ALBANY.EDU]
Bob,
This semester, along
with a colleague, I am teaching a computationally oriented course in
statistics, datamining, and data visualisation in our AIS program.
The course is geared
towards those who are looking for work in enterprise risk consulting, EDP
auditing, Network security, and similar practices.
The course syllabus
as well as powerpoint slides are available at
http://www.albany.edu/acc/courses/acc522/fall2001
I shall be grateful
for any comments/suggestions that the list members may have.
Regards,
Jagdish
Social Indicators --- http://www.parliament.uk/commons/lib/research/rp2001/rp01-083.pdf
This Research Paper
summarises some of the main social statistics available for the UK. The major
subjects covered are crime and justice, education, health, housing,
population, social security and transport.
A message from Scott Bonacker [scottbonacker@MOCCPA.COM]
At the suggestion of some helpful list members, I
have been using both www.filesanywhere.com
and www.freedrive.com
for file transfers for the last month. Both are inexpensive at less than $50
per year and I have been able to upload and download files as needed. The
practical limitation as always is the connection speed at a clients office.
But this is still a good alternative for client computers that don't have USB
ports for external drives or CD burners.
Filesanywhere holds out a promise of being able to
email a link to someone that will allow them to download a specific file from
the site, which would avoid having to change passwords every so often to give
different clients access when they need it. Also eliminates the risk of losing
control of the subscription. To really try out Filesanywhere requires a paid
subscription now - the free trial site is access limited by the company so I
frequently found that I couldn't access the "free" storage area due
to the number of people already online with their trial accounts.
I saw that Intuit is offering something in connection
with their QuickBooks software that has more capabilities but at a
significantly higher cost - $19.95 per month. They also offer the option of
establishing a mutual ftp site with a client for an additional $3 per month
per site.
Thanks for the suggestions,
Scott Bonacker [scottbonacker@MOCCPA.COM]
McCullough, Officer & Company,
LLC Springfield, Missouri moccpa.com
From Information Week on November 12,
2001
Hollywood Goes
Internet
Two movie-studio
ventures are working to put in place the technology and business models to
deliver films over the Net. http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eE2q0BcUEY04e0Zuc0Ak
What the Movie
Industry Can Learn From Napster As the movie industry contemplates digital
distribution issues, it has a lesson in how NOT to do it. http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eE2q0BcUEY04e0Zuf0An
Short And Sweet
Movies Of course, some people aren't waiting for Hollywood to get its act
together, and they're publishing short movies on the Web. Happily, reports
Chuck Ulie, amid all the sameness, some of these movies are worth watching.
http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eE2q0BcUEY04e0Zug0Ao
Supply and Demand for Accounting
Faculty
Is This a Dream? By
MICHAEL DALTON <mailto:firstperson@chronicle.com>
Personal experiences
on the job market Previous articles </jobs/archive/advicearch.htm>
"We would
like to talk to you about an accounting position at our university." That
was the substance of a plethora of messages I received in my placement-center
mailbox at this year's national meeting of the American Accounting Association
in Atlanta. I had contacted just four colleges prior to the convention about
meeting with me to discuss their faculty openings. When Monday morning came,
the first day of the convention, I had more than 20 requests for interviews.
This all started a
little over a month earlier when I sent in my one-page résumé to the
association's Web site. (http://accounting.rutgers.edu/raw/aaa/
) After an applicant registered for the convention, the association posted his
or her résumé. At about the same time, colleges and universities were
publishing their job listings on the site. So employers could look at the pool
of candidates and the candidates could check out the employers, and everybody
could assess the competition. When I checked the Web site before heading to
the conference, it showed 115 position announcements and 54 candidate résumés.
We all know from basic economics that when the demand is twice the amount of
supply it drives up salaries to compete for the small number of available
candidates. A colleague at the convention remarked to me, "The salaries
they are paying new hires in accounting are insane." Let me just say that
it is great to be on the right side of an "insane" job market.
Before the convention
started, I firmed up about four interviews. Then I started to receive e-mail
messages and phone calls from different colleges asking me to check out their
Web sites and to interview with them in Atlanta. By the time I reached
Atlanta, I thought the eight interviews I lined up for the three-day meeting
would be plenty. Nothing would have prepared me for what I was about to
experience.
In the placement
center at the hotel convention, candidates and employers communicated via more
than 200 portable mailboxes. A dozen tables were set up, each with a binder of
résumés and a binder of position vacancies. Employers could review the résumés
and request interviews, while candidates could look up position announcements
before responding to a request for an interview.
I had anticipated an
"air drop" of my résumé at the conference. And my eyes lit up when
I saw the more than 100 employer mailboxes set up as receptacles for my
dynamite résumé. But my zeal faded when I realized I already had more
interview requests than time would permit. It was, after all, only a three-day
convention, so I settled for interviewing with 15 institutions.
For the most part,
these interviews were preliminary or screening interviews to see if a
candidate's résumé would be placed in a smaller pile of applicants who would
be given serious consideration. For a few colleges, the interview time was
really just an informational session.
But what a great
feeling to be treated as a "hot commodity." Being in the trenches,
teaching for 19 years at the same college, you rarely get the sense that you
have made a valuable contribution. Yes there are the positive student
evaluations. But my experience in academe has been that it is rare for
administrators or colleagues to tell you that what you are doing is valuable
or is having a positive impact on students. Perhaps we all assume that. When
applying for a recent promotion in academic rank at my current job, I wrote to
thank my colleagues who had provided me a letter of recommendation, to tell
them that for me, the promotion would be secondary to all the kind and
generous comments they had made about me. We sometimes hear the global, yet
hollow, "Thanks for all you do." I think many of us could benefit
from a sincere, kind word on a regular basis. There were plenty of kind words
from the professors and department heads who acted as campus recruiters. Their
collective desire to have me teach at their institution was exhilarating. OK,
OK, it was a sterile supply-and-demand thing of having too few candidates for
too many position vacancies. Nevertheless, the event energized me. It wound up
that I had four interviews on Monday, 10 interviews on Tuesday, and one
interview on Wednesday morning.
So what was it like
to do that many interviews? Like teaching, during an interview you are on
stage.
With the right
attitude it can be a great deal of fun. My mission with each interviewer was
simple. I had three to five things I wanted them to know about me. I had three
questions prepared to ask them. The rest was just personality. It turned out
to be fun talking to colleagues about their colleges and universities and
about other things that were going on in the profession. With that many
interviews, I knew it would difficult to keep track of who said what. Since
there was little time between interview sessions, I developed a system of
writing short comments and key words about each college after the interview.
Typically, I wrote down information concerning the three questions I had asked
each interviewer: what my teaching load would be, what the expectations were
in terms of the quality and quantity of research publications for tenure, and
what their general philosophy of accounting education was. In the evening, I
would go back and fill in what else I could remember and prepare a separate
file for each employer. It took me a month after the convention to get my
formal application packets sent to the different colleges. Now the real search
begins.
Michael Dalton is the
pseudonym of a tenured associate professor of business and accounting at a
small, private college in the Midwest. He will be regularly chronicling his
search for a new job this academic year.
***********************************************
Maryann Gray, Ph.D.
Academic Information Officer
University of Southern California 203 Bovard ADM Los Angeles, CA 90089-4019
213 740-6374
Trivia Mystery
Solved: Using the Web to Distinguish Fact From Fiction
At St. Andrews Methodist Church in San
Antonio on November 4, 2001 the minister told a story about a barber named Elmer
Wells who gave out band instruments for free and taught children how to play
these instruments (even though he himself had no formal training in music).
One of those children purportedly was Glenn Miller, the famous band leader and
recording artist who died in a plane crash in World War II. Supposedly,
Elmer Wells was the inspiration for Elmer's Tune. It turns out that Elmer
Wells was a great inspiration for Glenn Miller, but he was not the inspiration
for Elmer's Tune.
While trying to find
out more about Elmer Wells, I discovered the following quotation from http://nfo.net/.WWW/j2.html#DJ
It is interesting to
note that one day Dick Jurgens heard a young mortician, named Elmer, fooling
around at the piano with a little tune he had composed. Dick liked it so much
that he arranged it as an instrumental for the big band, naming it simply,
"Elmer's Tune". Glenn Miller heard the song and liked it so much
that he asked Dick to allow him to play the tune with his own band. Jurgens
not only graciously agreed, but even had a local lyricist, Sammy Gallop, write
a lyric for the song before giving it to Glenn Miller. Miller's version became
a national hit.
Thus I discovered that
the song "Elmer's Tune" was composed by Elmer Albrecht and was first
introduced in a movie named Strictly in the Groove. The lyrics are
given at http://www.smickandsmodoo.com/aaa/lyrics/elmer.htm
Why are the stars
always winkin' and blinkin' above? What makes a fellow start thinkin' of
fallin' in love? It's not the season, the reason is plain as the moon It's
just Elmer's Tune
What makes a lady of
eighty go out on the loose? Why does a gander meander in search of a goose?
What puts the kick in a chicken, the magic in June? It's just Elmer's Tune
Listen, Listen
There's a lot you're liable to be missin' Sing it, Swing it Any old way and
any old time
The hurdy-gurdie, the
birdie, the cop on the beat The candy maker, the baker, the man on the street
The city charmer, the farmer, the man in the moon All sing Elmer's Tune
I feature this mystery mainly
because it illustrates how easy it sometimes is, in a matter of minutes on the
Web, to distinguish fact from fiction. In a matter of minutes, I hit upon the
Website at
http://www.ftmorganmus.org/miller.htm
Glenn Miller is Fort
Morgan High School's most famous graduate. His recording of “Chattanooga
Choo Choo” sold over 1,200,000 copies before RCA awarded him the first gold
record in history.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Glenn Miller joined
the high school football team as a left end in the fall of 1919. The maroons
won the Northern Colorado football conference in 1920, and Glenn was named
“Best Left End in Colorado” and given a football scholarship to the
University of Northern Colorado, in Greeley, Colorado.
Meanwhile, Elmer
Wells, his band and orchestra director, was having Glenn sit in with his own
dance band, “The Wells of Music,” which played around Morgan County on
weekends. This influenced Glenn to start his own dance band, the
“Mick-Miller Melody Five.” By now, the desire to play trombone and to
arrange music for his band was so great he decided to make music his lifetime
career. That spark of inspiration kindled by Elmer Wells eventually caused
Glenn to organize and lead the most popular of all the big band era - The
Glenn Miller Orchestra!
The above story also illustrates how
easy it is to make deductions that are logical but not true. It is
logical, since Elmer Wells had such a profound influence upon Glenn
Miller, that Miller's famous recording of "Elmer's Tune" would be a
tribute to Elmer Wells. Such appears not to be the case in this instance
since the song was named in honor of Elmer
Albrecht.
GULP!
That famous and vulgar phrase "pull my finger" takes on a
sinister meaning.
Drugs have been smuggled in body cavities for years. What's to stop a suicide
bomber from swallowing plastic explosives to get them on a plane? Very little,
experts say, and especially not the current airport security measures --- http://www.wirednews.com/news/business/0,1367,48349,00.html
From Leslie Owens, Readers Digest,
November 2001, Page 48.
My school friend was
on his way home from work when he noticed a woman standing in the parking lot
looking very worried. When he asked if all was well, she told him that
she'd locked her keys in the car by had called her husband some distance away
to bring her the spare keys.
On impulse, my friend
put out his hand an tried the door, which opened right up.
"Oh, my
God," the woman said. "Quick, can you lock it again?"
From Gregory Bokenkamp, Readers
Digest, November 2001, Page52.
While a friend and I
were visiting at Annapolis, we noticed there were several students on their
hands and knees assessing the courtyard with pencils and clipboards in hand.
"What are they doing?" I asked our tour guide.
"Each
year," he replied with a grin, "the upperclassmen ask the freshmen
how many bricks it took to finish this courtyard."
"So what's the
answer" my friend asked him when were out of earshot of the freshmen.
The guide replied
simply, "One."
Forwarded by Bob Overn
Actual Classified Ads
Stock up and save.
Limit: one.
We build bodies that
last a lifetime.
For Rent: 6-room
hated apartment.
Man, honest. Will
take anything.
Man wanted to work in
dynamite factory. Must be willing to travel.
Used Cars: Why go
elsewhere to be cheated? Come here first!
Christmas tag-sale.
Handmade gifts for the hard-to-find person.
Wanted: Hair-cutter.
Excellent growth potential.
Wanted. Man to take
care of cow that does not smoke or drink.
3-year-old teacher
needed for pre-school. Experience preferred.
Our experienced Mom
will care for your child. Fenced yard, meals, and smacks included.
Auto Repair Service.
Free pick-up and delivery. Try us once, you'll never go anywhere again.
Illiterate? Write
today for free help.
Girl wanted to assist
magician in cutting-off-head illusion. Blue Cross and salary.
Semi-Annual
after-Christmas Sale.
And now, the
Superstore -- unequaled in size, unmatched in variety, unrivaled
inconvenience.
We will oil your
sewing machine and adjust tension in your home for $1.
Also forwarded by Bob Overn
Normally,
employers want their employees to give 100%, but now someone has come
up with a way to give 103%. Read this and see if you agree.
Subject: How To
Achieve 103%
This is
something interesting....We have all been to those meetings where someone
wants more than 100%. Well
here's how you do that. Here's how you can achieve
103%. First of all, here's a little math
that might prove helpful in the future.
How does one achieve
100% in LIFE?
Begin by noting the
following.
IF:
A = 1
B = 2 C
= 3 D = 4
E = 5 F
= 6 G =
7
H = 8
I = 9 J
= 10 K = 11
L = 12 M = 13
N = 14
O = 15
P = 16 Q = 17
R = 18 S
= 19 T = 20
U = 21
V = 22
W = 23 X = 24
Y = 25 Z
= 26
Then:
H A R D W O R K
8+1+18+4+23+15+18+11 = Only 98%
Similarly,
K N O W L E D G E
11+14+15+23+12+5+4+7+5 = Only 96%
But interesting (and
as you'd expect),
A T T I T U D E
1+20+20+9+20+21+4+5 = 100% ...
This is how you
achieve 100% in LIFE.
But EVEN MORE
IMPORTANT TO NOTE (or REALIZE), is
B U L L S H I T
2+21+12+12+19+8+9+20 = 103%
So now you know what
all those high-priced consultants, upper management, and motivational speakers
really mean when they want to exceed 100%!
TEXAS A&M JOINS THE COALITION--GOD
BLESS THEM
An elite combat unit from the Corps in
Aggie Land stormed Bloomingdale's Department Store in New York yesterday after
its intelligence agency reported that Bed Linen was spotted on the fourth floor.
No one was hurt .
Forwarded by Dick Haar
Geezers" (slang for an old man)
are easy to spot:
At sporting events, during the playing
of the National Anthem, Old Geezers hold their caps over their hearts and
sing without embarrassment. They know the words and believe in them.
Old Geezers remember World War I, the
Depression, World War II, Pearl Harbor, Guadalcanal, Normandy and Hitler.
They remember the Atomic Age, the Korean War, The Cold War, the Jet Age and
the Moon Landing, not to mention Vietnam.
If you bump into an Old Geezer on the
sidewalk, he will apologize. If you pass an Old Geezer on the street,
he will nod or tip his cap to a lady.
Old Geezers trust strangers and are
courtly to women. Old Geezers hold the door for the next person and
always, when walking, make certain the lady is on the inside for protection.
Old Geezers get embarrassed if someone
curses in front of women and children and they don't like violence and filth
on TV or in movies. Old Geezers have moral courage.
They seldom brag unless it's about
their grandchildren. It's the Old Geezers who know our great country
is protected, not by politicians or police, but by the young men and women
in the military serving their country.
This country needs Old Geezers with
their decent values. We need them now more than ever. Thank God
for Old Geezers
And
that's the way it was on November 14, 2001 with a little help from my friends.
In
March 2000, Forbes named AccountantsWorld.com as the Best Website on the
Web --- http://accountantsworld.com/.
Some top accountancy links --- http://accountantsworld.com/category.asp?id=Accounting
For
accounting news, I prefer AccountingWeb at http://www.accountingweb.com/
Another
leading accounting site is AccountingEducation.com at http://www.accountingeducation.com/
Paul
Pacter maintains the best international accounting standards and news Website at
http://www.iasplus.com/
How
stuff works --- http://www.howstuffworks.com/
Bob
Jensen's video helpers for MS Excel, MS Access, and other helper videos are at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/
Accompanying documentation can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm
and http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
Professor
Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134 Email: rjensen@trinity.edu


November
7, 2001
Quotes of the Week
Men Face Extinction,
says a British Medical Journal Report
Professor Seigfried
Meryn says men already have higher rates for all major causes of death,
shorter life expectancy and women can now do their jobs just as well.
Professor Meryn, who
will speak at the First World Congress on Men's Health, says: "There is a
sustained increase in psychological disorders in men, including alcohol and
substance abuse, mid-life crisis, depression and domestic violence, while
men's increasing aggression also remains an unsolved health and societal
problem.|
"Over 30 (current)
wars and conflicts rage around the world are, mostly created, maintained and
aggravated by men."
ANANOVA, November 2, 2001 --- http://www.ananova.com/yournews/story/sm_439385.html
Eartheasy http://eartheasy.com/homepage.htm
The site aims
"to encourage, inspire and inform people of the inherent wealth of a
simpler, less material lifestyle." The site design mirrors its mission,
with a front page presenting six snapshots that connect to the main sections
-- live, grow, eat, play, wear, and give. Each of the sections offers
information on a number of topics ranging from energy efficient appliances to
natural lawn care to kite flying and much, much more.
The Scout Report on November 2, 2001
Here are a few quotes from the bottom
that I put at the top as an incentive to read through to the bottom.
WHAT DO MOST PEOPLE DO ON A
DATE?
Dates are for having fun,
and people should use
them to get to know each other. Even boys have
something to say if you listen long enough.
--Lynnette, age 8
(But you have to wait until the end of the
football and hunting seasons Lynnette. For best
success tune in the day before
Christmas.)
On the first date, they
just tell each other lies,
and that usually gets them interested enough to
go
for a second date.
--Martin, age 10
(Martin seems very wise for his age.
Accountants would call that pro forma
information that that has not been
audited.)
WHAT WOULD YOU DO ON A FIRST
DATE THAT WAS TURNING SOUR?
I'd run
home and play dead. The next day I would call all the newspapers
and make sure they wrote about me in all the dead columns.
--Craig, age 9
(Professors want to do the same thing after handing out teaching evaluation
forms Craig.)
WHAT DO YOU THINK YOUR MOM AND
DAD HAVE IN COMMON?
Both don't want any more
kids.
--Lori, age 8
(More quotes like this from kids near the bottom of this November 7 edition of
New Bookmarks.)
Question:
How can professors make one class unforgettable?
Answer:
The answer is near the bottom of this November 7 edition of New Bookmarks.
New:
Bob Jensen's Threads
on Fees and Choosing Accountants, Financial Advisors, and Consultants ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fees.htm
Note especially the documentation on
types of financial advisors and how to choose an advisor.
Your kids,
boyfriends and/or husbands will like this one!
Choose a destination and fly there
virtually (and its much safer than the real thing)! (Travel, Photography,
Entertainment)
TerraFly --- http://www.terrafly.com/
TerraFly changes the
way you view your world. Simply enter an address, and our system will put you
at the controls of a new and innovative way to explore your digital earth.
In Europe there is something somewhat
similar from a car on the ground.
SpeedyCam --- http://www.speedycam.be/
SpeedyCam broadcasts
time-lapse movies of local roads using webcams. No matter what's the weather
like, we travel around the country and Europe shooting our movies.
To view the movies,
you need the free QuickTime or Windows Media Player programs. To record the
movies, we just needed a "sports car", a webcam and some free time.
Currently we're
shooting more video footage of local roads but we plan to travel around
Europe, especially the German autobahn to get more high speed film material...
:-)
Bob Jensen's video helpers for MS
Excel, MS Access, and other helper videos are at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/
Accompanying documentation can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm
and http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
Most users will have to choose the rm
RealMedia versions unless they happen to have the Camtasia viewer installed.
Although there is no need to install the Camtasia player if your computer plays
rm videos, you can install the free Camtasia player from http://www.techsmith.com/
New
I added video tutorials on pivot tables and conversion of Excel files and charts
into interactive DHTML pages that can be read in a Web browser rather than
having to read the files in Excel. Go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
Danny Goodman's
JavaScript Tutorials
I added a very helpful link to Danny Goodman's JavaScript tutorials. I
highly recommend both his free Web tutorials and his great JavaScript book.
Web page designers should definitely learn how easy its become to use JavaScript
(not to be confused with Java). Go to http://www.dannyg.com/javascript/
Danny Goodman was featured on the PBS
Computer Chronicles television show on October 4, 2001. He pointed out how
there are many JavaScript plug-ins that do not require coding (actually
scripting in the case of JavaScript). With JavaScript you do not have to
be a computer programmer like you have to become for Java from Sun Corporation.
JavaScript was actually developed by NetScape for purposes of creating dynamic
Web pages.
Also see
JavaScript Bible --- http://developer.netscape.com/docs/books/idg/jsbible/jsbible.html
JavaScript Basics --- http://www.webword.com/interviews/goodman.html
JavaScript Arrays --- http://developer.netscape.com/viewsource/goodman_arrays.html
Yahoo's JavaScript Helpers --- http://dir.yahoo.com/Computers_and_Internet/Programming_Languages/JavaScript/
Bob Jensen's JavaScript Tutorials --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
Wow Common Sense for
the Week --- Just Say No to Pro Forma
SEC Commissioner Isaac Hunt said
federal regulators continue to see companies engaging in what he calls
smoke-and-mirror accounting practices that inflate earnings and stock prices.
Mr. Hunt described a process of manipulation of numbers on financial reports and
the growing use of unaudited financial statements, also known as pro
forma statements. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/61880
Bob Jensen's documents on eCommerce
are linked at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce.htm
Bob Jensen's accounting theory
documents are linked at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory.htm
Wow Accountant of
the Week --- BRAVO!
Robert K. Elliott, past Chairman of the
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) and executive partner
at KPMG, has announced his retirement from public accounting. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/62110
Bob Jensen's Comments About a Friend
Who Fights for Technology With Every Breath
Bob Elliott has always been a controversial center of power in the public
accounting profession. My hat is off to him for his forward-thinking,
determined action plans, and willingness to accept responsibilities for the
betterment of our profession and our education programs. I always admired
his ability to stand up to the heat and to remain cool under criticism and
pressure.
He is also one bright guy who does not
suffer fools, especially fools who never see the need for change in a
profession. His career was in public accounting, but I think that down
deep his heart was in academe. Good thing he didn't listen to his
heart. Otherwise he could not afford to retire so young.
See http://accounting.rutgers.edu/raw/aaa/audit/Pubs/Audrep/01winter/item07.htm
Also take a look at http://www.mecpa.org/elliott.htm
If I had been given a chance, I
probably would have nominated Bob for one of the Chrysler Design Awards
(honoring visionaries) --- http://www.chryslerdesignawards.org/
Wow Web Design Site
of Week --- From the Indiana CPA Society
CPA societies in the various states are
really getting good about helping to attract students to the CPA profession.
In an earlier edition of New Bookmarks, I noted the flashy site of the Illinois
State Society of CPAs at http://www.futurecpa.org/futurecpa/index.htm
The Student section of the Indiana CPA
Society's Web site has been awarded first place for
excellence in public relations programming by the Public Relations
Society of America's East Central District. Find out what makes this site a
winner! http://www.accountingweb.com/item/61995
The site is at http://www.incpas.org/Students/index.htm
Wow Site of the Week
--- Batter Up!
Years ago I made the Wow Site of the
Week the Oyez site at Northwestern University. Under funding from the U.S.
Government, the Oyez site enabled anyone in the world to download the audio of
actual oral arguments of lawyers standing before the U.S. Supreme Court --- http://oyez.nwu.edu/
Now there is a new Oyez Wow Site of
the Week --- Oyez Baseball --- http://baseball.oyez.org/
"The
Law-Baseball Quiz" debuted in the New York Times on April 4, 1979.
Created by law professor Robert M. Cover, it compared baseball players and
Supreme Court Justices. Unlike Eddie Gaedel, the midget in baseball's most
publicized stunt, the Quiz has delighted and stumped enthusiasts on many
occasions since it first appeared.
OYEZ Baseball is an
enlarged version of Professor Cover's initial vision. We have simply burnished
the metaphor that Professor Cover summoned to describe baseball personalities
and justices. Much has changed from the simple newspaper version Cover penned,
as quiz enthusiasts will discover.
In producing OYEZ
Baseball, we have consulted a number of useful sources compiled by dedicated
scholars of the Court and the diamond. We are glad to acknowledge those
authors for others who may be inspired to dig deeper into some of the
fascinating, entertaining, and often inspiring personal histories that we
present here.
On the Supreme Court,
greatness or mediocrity derives from a justice's accomplishments or lack
thereof. The same is true for ballplayers. The Court vests its nine occupants
with awesome responsibility. Some justices, like some players, are blessed
with skills that not only generate tremendous personal achievements, but can
transform their institutions, and sometimes even American culture. Others are
quickly forgettable, while most toil somewhere in between. The qualities that
make some justices great and others mediocre are difficult to explain fully
and justify to those unversed in the Court's work. But most everyone
understands baseball-and baseball may be the best way to reveal greatness or
mediocrity. Hence, OYEZ Baseball.
OYEZ Baseball is part
of a larger effort to bring the work of the nation's highest court -- in text,
audio and images -- to the widest possible audience. The OYEZ Project has been
generously supported by grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities,
the National Science Foundation, the M.R. Bauer Foundation, and Northwestern
University, and Mayer Brown & Platt. OYEZ Baseball has been made possible
by support from FindLaw, the best source for legal information on the planet.
We are grateful to
work with talented colleagues at Mythryn, digital storytellers of the highest
caliber.Working from a great prototype created by Northwestern IT consultant
Alan Kendall, the masters at Mythryn (Jim Ferolo, Scott Edelstein, Jeff
Nemscher and Mike Boccieri) proved time and again that if we could imagine it,
they could build it -- on time and on budget. We are pleased to have harnessed
their creative talent in ways that make a great use of information technology.
We also thank Chris Stangl, whose baseball knowledge was called upon in a
pinch hitting role in the late innings of production; he came through with a
double off the wall.
This
collaboration-and many others it turns out-was originally hatched a decade ago
one afternoon in Constitutional Law at Northwestern University. After one
class period when Goldman revealed his passion for the Court and the game, and
the connections between the two, Manna approached his baseball-minded teacher
and suggested: "William Brennan is Ozzie Smith." Goldman scratched
his chin and looked up toward the ceiling, not wanting to let such a sweeping
claim casually pass by. "Why?" he queried. You'll have to take the
quiz to discover the connection, but on that day, at least, the answer that
the young student provided persuaded the good professor. Lucky for us both.
The rest, as they say, is history.
Batter up!
Twelve Tips for New Web Designers ---
http://www.newmedia.com/nm-ie.asp?articleID=3162
(Note that you can always remember the one recommended by Dolly!)
1.
Be Humble
Many
designers start their new ventures with little or no working capital. Does
that describe your situation? If things get too tough do not be afraid to
supplement your income by mowing lawns or cleaning bathrooms. Believe it or
not, this will help you buy food for the week and it makes for an interesting
story to tell people once your design business is established.
Are you
a good designer? Chances are there's someone out there better than you are.
When you go to visit a potential client, be confident -- but not cocky. Other
designers may be bidding on the same job. You want to be the most likable.
2.
Keep it Simple
Keep
what simple? Everything.
Keep
your designs simple. A simple design will sell more products. Keep your
business simple. A sole proprietorship may be more equitable to you than a
corporation (with partners) when you are first starting out. Keep your
overhead low. The more money you have to lay out for your business, the less
ends up in your pocket.
3.
Study the Work of Others
Be open
to new ideas and concepts. There is nothing wrong with getting inspiration
from someone else as long as you do not plagiarize their work. Studying
other's work will help you to grow creatively.
4.
Get 50 Percent Up Front
(That always worked for Dolly.)
When
starting a new job be sure to have a thorough, signed contract and a deposit.
If at all possible get a 50 percent deposit on the job. Requiring a deposit
lets the client know that you are a serious professional and it
locks them in the project. Now they have an investment at stake. They will be
more open to your suggestions and will place more value on your services.
5.
Keep a Notebook
Inspiration
comes at the strangest times. Keep a small notebook nearby to
jot thoughts down. Sometimes great things start there. Care
must also be given to keeping good records and an accurate calendar. The more
organized you appear, the better reputation you acquire.
6.
Develop a Portfolio
Don't
just tell people you're good, show them. Print out samples of your work and
have it available to show at a moment's notice. Put your portfolio online so
that people can browse it at their leisure.
7.
Blow Your Own Horn
When
you have finished a project, prepare a press release and announce it to the
appropriate media contacts. If the project is of local significance, send your
release, along with a photo of you and your client looking at your work to
local newspapers and television stations. If the project is larger in scope,
submit your press release to larger venues. You never know what will come of
it.
Be sure
to include a way for people to contact you in your press release. Be direct.
For example: "For more information visit http://www.explodedview.tv."
8.
Be a Schmoozer
Your
best jobs will probably come from word of mouth. Therefore, meet as many
people as you can. How do you do that? Attend seminars and trade shows. Join
the local chamber of commerce and take advantage of the events they sponsor.
Carry several of your business cards wherever you go and be ready to hand them
out.
When
you visit a potential client, it helps to bring a gift. It doesn't have to be
elaborate; something useful or tasty is usually best. If the client offers you
something to drink, always say "Yes." If you accept their
hospitality, the odds of getting the job significantly increase.
9.
Write Articles
Writing
editorials is an excellent way to get your name out to the public. Is your
method of design unique? Tell the world about it. Getting your articles
published establishes you as an authority in the field. If the reading
audience is large enough, you may even have the ability to influence the way
the industry evolves.
10.
Be a Speaker
Make
yourself available to give lectures on your field of expertise. This may be
done through speaker's bureaus or magazine publishers. Be alert to possible
venues and be ready to step in when the opportunity affords itself.
11.
Drink Decaf
A few
years ago I was drinking hot coffee during the workday. Then I would have a
venti Starbucks Frappaccino to reward myself for a job well done. At 3:00
a.m., I would find myself tapping away on my keyboard unable to sleep. This,
of course, rendered me useless in the morning. It became a vicious cycle,
which had to be broken. Now I start work early and get to bed at a reasonable
hour. The day is much more productive.
12.
Put Family First
Spouses
and children are more important than careers. Yes, you may be working hard to
support your family, but they also need to spend time with you. Be sure that
when you finish up work for the day, you leave your cares and stresses behind
and enjoy what you're working so hard for.
These
twelve tips are not a guarantee for success, but if you apply them you will be
a step ahead most independent Internet designers.
HBO On Demand (Any time, any place,
Movies, Entertainment, Television) --- http://www.hboondemand.com/
HBO On Demand is a
dream come true for HBO digital subscribers. (It's a great reason to get
digital service.) This revolutionary new service lets you watch your favorite
HBO shows exactly when you want to. You can even pause, rewind and fast
forward at any time. For a small additional monthly fee, you get unlimited
viewing of great HBO shows. Because there's no charge per show hassle, using
HBO on Demand is easy, fun and a great value.
For more details, try FAQ.
From the Free Wall Street Journal
Educators' Reviews for November 1, 2001
Subscribers to the electronic version of the WSJ may obtain these highly useful
reviews by contacting wsjeducatorsreviews@dowjones.com
TITLE: Special Report: E-Commerce:
Data, Data Everywhere...
REPORTER: Kevin J. Delaney
DATE: Oct 29, 2001 PAGE: R8,10
LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1004296279799214760.djm
TOPICS: Managerial Accounting, Accounting Information Systems
SUMMARY: In this article in the special
e-commerce section, Delaney interviews Bernard Liautaud who helps firms utilize
the data they accumulate with today's technology. He accomplishes this by
providing software that allows his clients to access, analyze and share the
information already captured in databases in their information systems. He
maintains this gives the manager an opportunity to focus on specific issues
"that can get lost in the aggregate data."
QUESTIONS:
1.) " ...but, says Bernard
Liautaud, companies still don't know how to use it," according to the
sub-headline of this article by Delaney. Find an example of ineffective
technology use in the related article about Alan Greenspan's remarks to Congress
last week.
2.) What does Liautaud mean by the term
the "Age of the Analytics?" How does he describe the evolution of
databases and their uses?
3.) If management accounting presents
relevant information to decision-makers, how would Business Objects help? What
happens to information that is presented "in the aggregate?"
4.) In management accounting, relevant
information can be provided to decision-makers for both routine and non-routine
purposes. Give four examples of information needed for routine purposes. Give
four examples of information needed for non-routine purposes. The sort of
service provided by Liautaud would be more useful for which of these two
purposes? Why?
5.) Find a specific example in the
article in which a company was not using some available information, producing
results that were not in the company's best interest.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University
of Rhode Island
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University
Bob Jensen's documents on eCommerce
are linked at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce.htm
Bob Jensen's accounting theory
documents are linked at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory.htm
My original threads on the Enron
scandal (FAS 133, FAS 57, Ethics) are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
To this I have added the following :
From the Free Wall Street Journal
Educators' Reviews for November 1, 2001
Subscribers to the electronic version of the WSJ may obtain these highly useful
reviews by contacting wsjeducatorsreviews@dowjones.com
TITLE: Enron Did Business With a Second
Entity Operated by Another Company Official; No Public Disclosure Was Made of
Deals
REPORTER: John R. Emshwiller and Rebecca Smith
DATE: Oct 26, 2001
PAGE: C1
LINK: Print Only in the WSJ on October 26, 2001
TOPICS: Disclosure Requirements,
Financial Accounting, Financial Statement Analysis
SUMMARY: Enron's financial statement
disclosures have been less than transparent. Information is arising as the SEC
makes an inquiry into the Company's accounting and reporting practices with
respect to its transactions with entities managed by high-level Enron managers.
Yet, as discussed in a related article, analysts remain confident in the stock.
QUESTIONS:
1.) Why must companies disclose related
party transactions? What is the significance of the difference between the
wording of SEC rule S-K and FASB Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No.
57, Related Party Transactions that is cited at the end of the article?
2.) Explain the logic of why a drop in
investor confidence in Enron's business transactions and reporting practices
could affect the company's credit rating.
3.) Explain how an analyst could argue,
as did one analyst cited in the related article, that he or she is confident in
Enron's ability to "deliver" earnings even if he or she cannot
estimate "where revenues are going to come from" nor where the company
will make profits.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University
of Rhode Island
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University
--- RELATED ARTICLES ---
TITLE: Heard on the Street: Most
Analysts Remain Plugged In to Enron
REPORTER: Susanne Craig and Jonathan Weil
PAGE: C1
ISSUE: Oct 26, 2001
LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1004043182760447600.djm
TITLE: Enron Officials Sell Shares Amid
Stock-Price Slump
REPORTER: Theo Francis and Cassell Bryan-Low
PAGE: C14
ISSUE: Oct 26, 2001
LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1004043341423453040.djm
Readers may also want to note the
following article:
"Where Was The Audit Committee?" by Mark W. Pearson, Financial
Executive, November 2001, pp. 44-47 --- <http://www.fei.org/magazine/articles/11-2001_audit.cfm>
Bob Jensen's threads on the Enron
scandal (FAS 133, FAS 57, Ethics) are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
We hear a lot about Windows XP.
What about the new MS Office XP?
Forwarded by Vidya Ananthanarayanan
You have heard about Office XP, read
about it, some of you have even seen it in action... we are now ready to
deploy it HERE! So join us on November 28 from 10-11:30am at the Integrated
Learning Center (Library Room 103) for a taste of what Office XP can do for
you:
- Incorporate animation in your
PowerPoint presentations
- Use a universal task pane to find
files, gather content, and integrate data into your Office documents.
- Use smart tags to stay in control
while formatting documents.
- Manage schedules with unified
reminders and color-coded calendars.
- And more...
Scholarly Electronic Publishing
Bibliography, Version 39 http://info.lib.uh.edu/sepb/sepb.html
This bibliography presents selected
English-language articles, books, and other printed and electronic sources
that are useful in understanding scholarly electronic publishing efforts on
the Internet. Most sources have been published between 1990 and the present;
however, a limited number of key sources published prior to 1990 are also
included. Where possible, links are provided to sources that are freely
available on the Internet.
Announcements for new versions of the
bibliography are distributed on PACS-P
and other mailing lists.
An archive
of prior versions of the bibliography is available.
Bob Jensen's helpers for finding
electronic books are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm
The message below
describes what are some major revisions to the electronic journals of the
American Accounting Association.
Dear Robert E Jensen,
Today, the American
Accounting Association launches a new, more comprehensive online publications
system with many enhanced capabilities.
As an AAA member, you
have access to many of these electronic publications at no charge.
The electronic
journals, newsletters, and other publications are available online at:
http://aaahq.org/ic/browse.htm
You may also reach
our electronic publications from the AAA website (http://aaa-edu.org) by
clicking on "Publications" in the left side bar.
Your new
case-sensitive Username and your Password are:
Username: XXXXX
Password: ZZZZZZ
You may change your
password online at any time. Please call or email as noted below if you have
problems accessing the system.
Using this Username
and password, you may access Accounting Education News and the newsletters of
the Sections you belong to, PLUS the full text of any electronic journals to
which you have subscribed.
JOURNALS:
All AAA members may
view abstracts and search through the full text of any or all of the nine AAA
journals.
If you have enrolled
in Electronic Option either for the three association-wide journals ($20 for
the three-journal package) or for any of the six Section journals ($5 each,
available only to Section members), you may also read or print full text. To
add Electronic Option to your membership, please email us at office@aaahq.org
or call (941) 921-7747, ext. 0.
NEWSLETTERS:
All AAA members have
access at no charge to Accounting Education News. Section members may also
access Section newsletters at no charge through this new system. Most Section
Newsletters will also remain accessible through the Section's Web page.
OTHER FEATURES:
The new electronic
publications system also accommodates library subscriptions; pay-per-view and
subscription options; limited free trials; and automatic search alerts by
email.
We have set your
automatic search alerts so that you will be notified by email when various
articles are added to the online system. YOU MAY CHANGE OR ELIMINATE THE
AUTOMATIC SEARCH TERMS ONLINE AT ANY TIME. Thank you for assisting us in
exploring this new feature, and please let us know if you have comments about
it or other aspects of the electronic publications system.
We hope you will
enjoy this new and improved service. If you have any problems or questions
regarding this new service, please contact me at craig@aaahq.org
or call me at (941) 921-7747 ext. 303.
Craig
[Craig Polhemus, American Accounting Association]
Craig Polhemus [craig@aaahq.org]
File Sharing by
Instant Messaging
Who needs file-sharing applications
when you have instant messaging? Yahoo, AOL and Microsoft are set to become
bigger than Napster ever was --- http://www.wired.com/news/mp3/0,1285,48071,00.html
Instant-messaging
services that allow users to trade music, movie and television files over the
Internet appear to be safe from the legal woes that have plagued other digital
music and movie companies.
Microsoft, America
Online and Yahoo now have added file-sharing enhancements to their
instant-messenger applications that allow users to swap any digital files over
centralized networks.
Other digital media
companies -- most notably Aimster, which provides file-trading capabilities
through instant messaging -- have faced long legal battles with the recording
and motion picture industries over this issue. But these corporations, by
virtue of their size and association with the recording industry, are unlikely
to be sued by the major labels.
"In almost every
case, you have an accumulation of well-financed companies -- media
conglomerates -- ganging up on startups," said Whitney Broussard, an
entertainment copyright lawyer with New York's Selverne, Mandlebaum &
Mintz, LLP. "Legal arguments aside, these companies have a lot of muscle
and they can often crush the little music startups. And maybe in the end, the
music industry will be right about file trading, but larger companies can
fight back. It's a lot riskier when you go down the legal road with those
companies."
This trio of
heavyweights' new services has been warmly received by the recording industry.
The three -- along with RealNetworks and Napster -- have signed on to be
distributors for two new subscription services set to launch later this year.
However, those deals
don't allow users to share files over instant-messenger systems.
While the
instant-messenger programs allow file trading, officials from both Microsoft
and Yahoo said the Terms of Service forbid any illegal activity.
"Yahoo has a
strong track record in protecting the rights of copyright holders," said
a Yahoo spokeswoman. "While we do provide core communications
capabilities to users, the sharing of copyrighted material is expressly
against our Terms of Service. Yahoo clearly notifies all users that any type
of infringement is prohibited before any sharing can be initiated."
The Recording
Industry Association of America -- a trade association representing the music
labels and the leading organization fighting copyright violations online --
had no comment about potential legal problems with the new services.
Continued at - http://www.wired.com/news/mp3/0,1285,48071,00.html
Use of instant messaging as a teaching
pedagogy is discussed by Amy Dunbar --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book01q3.htm#Dunbar
Bob Jensen's threads on file sharing
and P2P software are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/napster.htm
Bob Jensen and
Jason Xiao have a new paper focusing on file sharing in accountancy:
Those of you that paid $20 for a password to American Accounting Association
journals may download the paper as instructed above by Craig Polhemus:
"Customized Financial Reporting,
Networked Databases, and Distributed File Sharing," by Robert E. Jensen
and Jason Zezhong Xiao, Accounting Horizons, September 2001, pp.
209-202 --- http://aaahq.org/ic/browse.htm
A message from Larry Gordon
As you know from his
e-mail message, Steve Loeb has decided to step-down from being Co-Editor of
the Journal of Accounting and Public Policy (JAPP). I understand his
desire to pursue other interests and, like all of you, wish him well in his
new endeavors.
As founding Co-Editor
of JAPP, Steve has worked hard to help launch, maintain, and continuously
improve, the high quality of JAPP. Indeed, all of us who are concerned about
JAPP owe Steve a debt of gratitude for a job well done. In this regard, I am
pleased to report that Steve has agreed to serve on the Editorial Board of the
journal. Thus, I will still have the benefit of Steve's continuing council.
Nevertheless, Steve's departure as Co-Editor does leave an important void in
terms of JAPP's operations. In order to fill this void, I am pleased to
announce that Martin P. Loeb is assuming a new role with the journal.
Starting with Volume
20, Numbers 4/5, I will become JAPP's Editor-in-Chief and Martin will become
its Editor. In his new role as Editor, Martin will be an equal partner with me
in all editorial decisions regarding the journal. Those of you who already
know Martin surely realize how fortunate we are that he has decided to accept
this new role with JAPP. For those of you who do not know Martin, let me just
say a few words about him. Martin is a professor of accounting here at The
Robert H. Smith School of Business. He received his Ph.D. from Northwestern's
Kellogg Graduate School of Management and is a superb scholar. I am sure that
all of you join me in welcoming Martin in his new role with JAPP.
Sincerely,
Larry
LGordon@rhsmith.umd.edu
Note from Bob
Jensen
The accountancy profession, especially the profession's educators, owe Steve
Loeb an enormous bow of appreciation for his many years of service as Editor of Journal
of Accounting and Public Policy. Although I usually dreaded opening
those envelopes from the University of Maryland that contained research papers
to be refereed, I always realized that Steve quietly and diligently sacrificed
year in and year out for the good of our profession. How could any of us
not help you out Steve?
The FBI's Internet Fraud and
Complaint Center (IFCC FBI)
To thwart fraud on the Internet and terror in general, check in and/or report to
http://www1.ifccfbi.gov/index.asp
One of our local television stations in
San Antonio recommended the Private Citizen web site for
reducing the amount of junk phone calls and junk mail that you would like to
halt. The Wall Street Journal has also recommended this web site. http://www.privatecitizen.com/
The Financial Times is actually a very
good source for economic, financial, business, and business education news --- http://news.ft.com/home/us/
Distance Education Programs at Texas
A&M University --- http://www.tamu.edu/ode/disted/
Note how some universities are now
listing distance education courses and WebCT courses in separate categories.
For example see the categories at http://www.tamu.edu/ode/disted/
Latest News on MIT's Open Courseware
(OCW) --- http://web.mit.edu/ocw/
The following milestones have been
set for OCW through 2003:
September
2002: |
Course materials
from 100 subjects released on the OCW web site |
March
2003: |
Course materials
from 250 subjects released |
September
2003: |
Course materials
from 500 courses released |
Conclusion: Don't be in a big
hurry to use this free material.
Update on Fathom
"New Times, New Rules: An
Interview with Fathom's Ann Kirschner," by James L. Morrison and Ann
Kirschner, The Technology Source, November/December 2001 --- http://ts.mivu.org/default.asp?show=article&id=896
Ann Kirschner, a
media and marketing pioneer in broadcast television, cable and satellite
television, and interactive media, is president and CEO of Fathom. Co-founded
by Kirschner and Columbia University, Fathom offers a full range of learning
opportunities for professional development and personal enrichment, from free
seminars to accredited courses. These learning opportunities are facilitated
by Fathom's global network of leading learning institutions—universities,
libraries, museums, and a university press. Recently I spoke with Kirschner
about Fathom and its groundbreaking work in higher education.
James L. Morrison
[JM]: Tell us about Fathom's inception as well as its relationship to Columbia
University and its other partners.
Ann Kirschner [AK]:
In 1998, Columbia made a high-level strategic decision to understand how the
Internet would transform higher education. The university's intellectual
capital was becoming increasingly valuable, as revenues from patent licensing
continued to climb and as faculty were increasingly sought after by for-profit
ventures.
Fathom was built on
the notion of international partnerships. Worldwide interest in corporate
training and learning has spawned the concept that education is a global
business, which means that the greatest strength of universities—their
intellectual capital—is more valuable than ever. The best way to take
advantage of that strength is through international partnerships that balance
the goal of reaching a global audience with local educational objectives and
values. In other words, Fathom is a knowledge network, collaborating with
institutions and educational companies all over the world.
JM: What makes
Fathom a "knowledge network?"
AK: Fathom’s
consortium collaborates on the creation and distribution of high quality
knowledge. Fathom provides a focus and an infrastructure through which we can
share production resources, technology platforms, and market intelligence. We
also identify and share best practices from our consortium members on areas as
diverse as intellectual property policies and organizational structures for
digital media development. Working with the members of the network, as well as
course providers at other institutions and companies, we are able to aggregate
content and courses from literally dozens of sources—in much the same way
that a great bookstore combines the output of many publishing companies, or a
television network relies on quality production sources. Our goal is to select
the best content and courses and offer them to a global learning community.
JM: With whom does
Fathom share its international partnerships?
AK: We now have
partnerships with the London School of Economics, Cambridge University Press,
University of Chicago, University of Michigan, the British Library, the New
York Public Library, the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, the American
Film Institute, the Rand, the London Museum of Science and Natural History,
and the Victoria and Albert Museum. We also have relationships with dozens of
other course providers—educational institutions as well as for-profit
companies.
The idea of
partnering with other universities came to us early in the planning of Fathom
because we recognized the value of expanding beyond a single institution,
broadening our access to intellectual property, and thinking outside the
borders of any single culture or country. Additionally, partnerships broaden
our marketing reach. Universities have strong ties to their alumni and, beyond
that, to the university’s extended community of families, faculty, and
researchers.
Libraries and museums
have an even broader reach through their patrons and on-site visitors. At the
New York Public Library alone, for instance, millions of visitors use the
library facilities each year.
Fathom sought
participation from libraries and museums not only because their curators and
librarians are experts in their field—faculty of another kind—but because
they already serve their visitors and researchers as "clients" in a
more consumer-centric model than universities. A great museum exhibition, for
example, is focused on serving museum visitors with information and context
that will inform their understanding of the collection. Museums measure their
success at least in part by attendance at exhibitions and the sales of
collateral material such as exhibition catalogues. That doesn’t make them
less serious or scholarly, but it suggests some different metrics for success.
Overall, the Fathom
consortium has direct contact with over one million people through alumni
publications, newsletters, direct mail, websites, and e-mail. And through its
13 member institutions, Fathom also has the opportunity to work with about
10,000 faculty members, researchers, museum curators, and librarians—quite
likely one of the largest, and most important, groups of experts in the world.
In addition to our
consortium, we are building important partnerships that aid in distribution
and marketing. Fathom recently announced a unique relationship with the BBC,
for example, to create and promote history studies online, beginning with an
e-course we created with Columbia University’s renowned history professor,
Simon Schama. We hope that the BBC model will become the foundation for future
online seminars.
Continued at http://ts.mivu.org/default.asp?show=article&id=896
Business and Economics Courses from
Fathom --- http://www.fathom.com/
Under Accounting and Taxation, the
following links are found:
Under Accounting we find the
following:
Courses
and Seminars: View
all 36 results... |
|
Intermediate
Accounting Theory and Practice 120A (Fall 2001)
From: UCLA Extension
(through Onlinelearning.net)
This online course covers
the interpretation, use, processing, and presentation of
accounting information, as well as principal accounting
statements. Valuation, recording, presentation, and control of
cash, receivables, inventories, and current liabilities also are
examined. more...
|
Accounting
for Non-Accountants
From: UCLA Extension
(through Onlinelearning.net)
This online course is
designed for non-accounting managers and personnel in
organizations of all sizes who must work with and understand
internal accounting/financial data--without overemphasizing the
detailed mechanics and technical language of accounting. It also
is appropriate for entrepreneurs and business owners who desire
a greater understanding of what an organization's accounting and
financial information systems can and should be supplying.
Students gain the knowledge and skills necessary for
interpreting reported accounting data and evaluating its impact,
including an overview of the financial and managerial accounting
process. Topics include fundamental accounting, accounting for
sales, cost of sales and inventory, cash and internal control,
depreciation method, financial statement analysis, and cash
flow. more...
|
Intermediate
Accounting Theory and Practice 120C (Fall 2001)
From: UCLA Extension
(through Onlinelearning.net)
This online course covers
accounting for bonds, pension plans, long-term leases, and
income taxes, as well as long-term investments in corporate
securities. Other topics included accounting changes, developing
statements of changes in financial positions, and analyzing
financial statements. Price-level and fair-value accounting, as
well as present and future value of cash flows, also are
discussed. more...
|
Intermediate
Accounting Theory and Practice 120B (Fall 2001)
From: UCLA Extension
(through Onlinelearning.net)
This online course covers
the valuation, recording, and presentation of plant, equipment,
and intangible assets; accounting for corporations; contributed
capital; stock rights; options, and convertible securities;
retained earnings and dividends and treasury stockbook value and
earnings per share. more...
|
|
|
|
Under Taxation we find the
following:
Courses
and Seminars: View
all 4 results... |
|
Income
Taxation in Personal Financial Planning
From: UCLA Extension
(through Onlinelearning.net)
This online course
examines the issues and determination of tax liability for
numerous events and activities as they relate to the financial
plan. Students are provided with the information and tools of
income taxation necessary for making financial planning
decisions with the context of either personal or client
financial goals and objectives. Topics include tax issues and
concepts in relation to insurance, investments, benefit
planning, intra-family transactions, and business operations.
Students are taught and asked to demonstrate an understanding of
the following planning techniques: (1) excluding income, (2)
deferring income, (3) shifting income, and (4) managing or
timing income. more...
|
Federal
Income Taxation
From: UCLA Extension
(through Onlinelearning.net)
This online course
explores individual income taxation issues, including tax
determination; personal and dependents exemptions; concepts and
inclusions of gross income; general deductions and losses;
deduction of certain business expenses and losses; depreciation,
cost recovery amortization, and depletion; deduction of employee
expenses; itemized deductions and losses; passive activity
losses; property transaction gains and losses; nontaxable
exchanges; and capital gains and losses. more...
|
Estate
Planning
From: UCLA Extension
(through Onlinelearning.net)
This online course is
designed to aid accountants, trust officers, attorneys, life
insurance underwriters, and financial planners in solving estate
planning problems. Topics include tax objectives, wills and
living trusts, the unlimited marital deduction, saving the
"second tax," holding title to property, lifetime
gifts and trusts, life insurance and annuities, employee benefit
plans, business interests, and post-death problems. Recent tax
law changes also are covered. more...
|
Taxation
of Corporations and Shareholders (Fall 2001)
From: UCLA Extension
(through Onlinelearning.net)
This online course
examines classification of corporations and associations,
organization of corporations, transfers of property to and from
a corporation, small business stock, dividend distributions,
earnings/profits, property dividends, basic problems in
redemption of stock, attribution rules, and partial and complete
liquidations. Instruction also covers accumulated earnings,
subchapter S, and transactions between corporations and
shareholders. more...
|
|
|
Conclusion: Fathom is moving
fast in adding new courses, but a much more rapid pace is being set in arts and
humanities than in professional concentrations.
The first-ever Tech Museum of
Innovation awards are handed out and its organizers hope this is the start of
something big.
"For the Benefit of Humanity," by Sawitree Somburanakul, Wired News,
November 2, 2001 --- http://www.wired.com/news/school/0,1383,48099,00.html
A South African
foundation and a Brazilian engineer joined three Americans Thursday as
recipients of the first Tech Museum of Innovation Awards.
The awards,
established by San Jose's Tech Museum, in conjunction with Applied Materials
and Santa Clara University, are intended to reward technological innovation
that specifically benefits poor and underdeveloped pockets of humanity.
The five winners each
received a prize of $50,000.
Freeplay Foundation,
a 3-year-old South African organization, won in the Education category for its
work in using wind-up and solar-powered radios to help Africans gain access to
educational information.
The other winners
were Brazil's Fabio de Oliveira Rosa, the founder of IDEAAS (Economic
Development); Joseph DeRisi, a UC San Francisco biochemistry professor
(Health); Dr. Betsy Dresser, director of the Audubon Nature Institute in
Louisiana (Environment); and Chaz Holder, president of CZBioMed in North
Carolina (Equality).
"I was genuinely
surprised and absolutely delighted," said Kristine Pearson, director of
the Freeplay Foundation. "I think (the awards are) fantastic and very
well put together.
"Most of the
world lives in poverty. Technology has to benefit humanity at large," she
said.
That's the idea,
according to Peter Giles, president of the Tech Museum. To motivate the
innovators to innovate for reasons other than making a buck or two.
"Technology benefiting humanity" is the award program's slogan.
"Our goal was to
recognize ways in which technology was being used to help in these areas (of
the five categories) and other areas, so that we would encourage more people
to address the important problems facing humanity," Giles said.
The Tech awards were
inspired by The Millennium Project of the American Council for the United
Nations University, and its sponsors hope that they will come to be recognized
globally.
"We want to
build a strong foundation, so that years from now, these awards will start to
become like the Nobel Prize," said Giles. "We want to see it develop
to the point where it could stimulate people from all over the world to use
technology in a way that will address humanity’s greatest challenges.
"This awards
program focuses on the application of technology to important human problems.
The award finalists have to actually have demonstrated and done significant
benefits to humanity," Giles said. "Secondly, we are not aware of
the another award program that looks globally to the role of technology."
Fabio de Oliveira
Rosa's project would certainly fit Giles' criteria of applying technology to
solve a human problem. His low-cost electrification project, IDEAAS, has
helped people in rural Brazil turn barren landscape into arable land.
"These awards
and all the programs are very important," de Oliveira Rosa said.
"I'm very fond of technology and it's very exciting to see how technology
can be applied and integrated with science in helping humankind."
He said he plans to
use the money to help raise funds to fight poverty in other Third World
countries.
Likewise, DeRisi's
Health prize will be used to expand microarray technology research that makes
the under-funded malaria treatment throughout Africa more available.
"I didn't expect
to win," DeRisi said. "My main goal was to raise an awareness of
malaria and reach the public eye. Being the winner is just added bonus."
Despite being in its
first year, the Tech Museum competition drew 390 applications from 50
countries. From that group, 25 finalists were selected.
"I think it just
turned out to be terrific. It turned out to be more than what we
expected," said Jim Morgan, CEO of Applied Materials. "One of our
purposes is to help provide information to everyone. By publicizing these
ideas, they will spread quickly, and it will help more people around the world
faster."
The number of
competitors challenged the jury.
"The nominees
were very inspiring as a group, and there's tremendous diversity of the ideas
in innovations," said Jim Koch, director of the Santa Clara University's
Center of Science, Technology and Society. "So, the process was a very
arduous one and took a great deal of time."
Koch said that the
judging focused on the urgency of the problem addressed by the technology and
how replicable or inspiring it is to others.
Continued at http://www.wired.com/news/school/0,1383,48099,00.html
From Double Entries on October
31, 2001
E-COMMERCE AND AUDITING FAIR VALUES SUBJECTS OF NEW INTERNATIONAL GUIDANCE The
International Federation of Accountants (IFAC) invites comments on two new
exposure drafts (EDs): Auditing Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures and
Electronic Commerce: Using the Internet or Other Public Networks - Effect on the
Audit of Financial Statements. Comments on both EDs, developed by IFAC's
International Auditing Practices Committee (IAPC), are due by January 15, 2002.
See http://accountingeducation.com/news/news2213.html
The IFAC link is at http://www.ifac.org/Guidance/EXD-Download.tmpl?PubID=1003772692151
The purpose of this
International Standard on Auditing (ISA) is to establish standards and provide
guidance on auditing fair value measurements and disclosures contained in
financial statements. In particular, this ISA addresses audit considerations
relating to the valuation, measurement, presentation and disclosure for
material assets, liabilities and specific components of equity presented or
disclosed at fair value in financial statements. Fair value measurements of
assets, liabilities and components of equity may arise from both the initial
recording of transactions and later changes in value.
Bob Jensen's accounting theory
documents are linked at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory.htm
From Double Entries on October
31, 2001
SEC CHARGES FORMER SENOR EXECUTIVES AND EMPLOYEES IN MASSIVE FINANCIAL REPORTING
FRAUD SCHEME AT MCKESSON HBOC, INC.
On September 27, 2001, the Commission filed securities fraud charges against the
former General Counsel, Senior Vice President of Finance, Chief Financial
Officer, Senior Vice President in charge of Enterprise Sales, and two other
former gatekeepers of the financials of HBO & Company (HBOC), later a
subsidiary of McKesson HBOC, Inc. (now known as McKesson Corporation). The
Commission alleges that each of the senior managers played integral roles in a
scheme to "cook the books" of the company. The wrongdoing pervaded the
top levels of HBOC's legal, finance, accounting, sales and other departments.
This massive financial reporting fraud scheme began at Atlanta-based HBOC in
1997, and continued after its January 1999 merger with San Francisco-based
McKesson Corporation. When the fraud was first disclosed in April 1999, McKesson
HBOC shares tumbled from approximately $65 to $34, a decline that slashed the
company's market value by more than $9 billion.
http://accountingeducation.com/news/news2217
.
FASB Guidance on Derivatives and FAS
133 (Accounting for Derivatives Financial Instruments and Hedging Activities)
Derivatives Reference Manual ---
http://www.fasb.org/tech/intro.html
Chapter 1—Pricing Concepts and
the Term Structure of Interest Rates
[Download]
(35 pages)
(Adobe Acrobat Reader required)
Chapter 7—Derivatives
[Download]
(60 pages)
(Adobe Acrobat Reader required)
The October 2001 DIG Statements on
FAS 133 --- http://www.fasb.org/derivatives/issuindex.html
Issue B12—Embedded Derivatives in
Beneficial Interests Issued by Qualifying Special-Purpose Entities (Released
10/99; Revised 10/12/01)
Issue B34 Embedded Derivatives:
Period-Certain Plus Life-Contingent Variable-Payout Annuity Contracts with a
Guaranteed Minimum Level of Periodic Payments
Issue C15—Normal Purchases and
Normal Sales Exception for Option-Type Contracts and Forward Contracts in
Electricity (Cleared 06/27/01; Revised 10/10/01)
Issue C17—Application of the
Exception in Paragraph 14 to Beneficial Interests that Arise in a
Securitization (Released 10/01)
Issue C18 Scope Exceptions:
Shortest Period Criterion for Applying the Regular-Way Security Trades
Exception to When-Issued Securities
Issue C19 Scope Exceptions:
Contracts Subject to Statement 35, Statement 110, or Statement of Position
94-4
Issue J19 Transition Provisions:
Application of the Normal Purchases and Normal Sales Exception on Initial
Adoption to Certain Compound Derivatives
Issue D2—Applying Statement 133
to Beneficial Interests in Securitized Financial Assets (a Resolution of the
Issues Raised in Implementation Issue D1) (Released 10/01)
Issue E21—Continuing the Shortcut
Method After a Purchase Business Combination (Released 10/01)
Issue J19—Application of the
Normal Purchases and Normal Sales Exception on Initial Adoption to Certain
Compound Derivatives (Released 10/01)
Earlier DIG implementation guidance
can be found at http://www.fasb.org/derivatives/issuindex.html
Bob Jensen's FAS 133, FAS 138, and
IAS 39 helpers are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm
Bob Jensen's Glossary on these
matters (including DIG issues) can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133glosf.htm
Note especially the update to the term "Net Settlement."
Hi Bob,
I wanted you to be
aware of the fact that I've posted a newly published article on the Kawaller
& Company website -- "Complying with FAS 133: Hedging Currency
Transactions," published in AFP Exchange, September/October 2001. The
article was co-authored with Elie Zabal, President of INSSINC, which is a
world-wide provider of risk managment software.
Besides covering
alternative ways exposures may be hedged, the paper also was designed to in
connection with FAS 133 documentation requirements.
Go to http://www.kawaller.com
and click on "Articles." (It's the first listing under
"Currency articles.)
I'd be happy to hear
from you with comments or questions.
Ira Kawaller
Kawaller & Company, LLC kawaller@kawaller.com
International Accounting Standards
Board (IASB) updates --- http://www.iasc.org.uk/cmt/0001.asp
Especially note the broader coverage of
international accounting news at http://www.iasplus.com/
"Where Was The Audit
Committee?" by Mark W. Pearson, Financial Executive, November 2001,
pp. 44-47 --- http://www.fei.org/magazine/articles/11-2001_audit.cfm
Where was the
auditor?" It's a question often asked by investors and others in the wake
of allegations of fraudulent financial statements or a restatement of reported
financial results. Now, as the role of the audit committee expands, investors
are also wondering, "Where was the audit committee?" Is your audit
committee prepared to answer?
In the last few
years, the roles and responsibilities of the audit committee have been of
interest to investors, legislators, regulators and the general public -
largely due to concern over several factors: a number of highly publicized
cases of alleged fraudulent financial reporting that were costly to investors;
errors requiring restatements of financial statements; the use of acceptable,
but aggressive accounting principles; and "earnings management"
practices to achieve desired financial results.
In response to this
increased attention, a number of commissions and committees - consisting of
corporate executives, accounting and auditing practitioners, academics,
regulators and others - were formed to study the appropriate role of the audit
committee. From these studies, new requirements and recommendations have
emerged, resulting in audit committees taking a more proactive role in the
oversight of financial reporting.
It's widely believed
that the new practices would have gone a long way toward preventing the
financial reporting abuses of the past. Thus, the following explores the
practices and how they might improve the financial reporting process.
What
Has Changed?
Recent
significant activities of a number of groups assisting to enhance the
effectiveness of audit committees include:
-
The
issuance in 1999 of the "Report of The Blue Ribbon Committee on
Improving the Effectiveness of Corporate Audit Committees" (known as
the Blue Ribbon Committee), sponsored by the New York Stock Exchange and
the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD). The report
contains 10 recommendations for improving audit committees' performance.
The report stresses that audit committee members need to be independent,
possess financial literacy and recognize the significance of their
responsibilities by devoting the appropriate amount of time to their
tasks. The Blue Ribbon Committee also indicated the critical nature
of the audit committee's relationships and communications with the
independent auditors, the internal auditors and management.
-
Recent
pronouncements by the Auditing Standards Board have expanded the
communications between independent auditors and the audit committee
related to fraud, uncorrected audit adjustments and the quality of
accounting principles used by management.
-
Statement
on Auditing Standards (SAS) 82, Consideration of Fraud in a Financial
Statement Audit, requires that the independent auditor report directly
to the audit committee any fraud involving senior management and fraud
(whether caused by senior management or other employees) that causes a
material misstatement of the financial statements. The audit
committee should ask: Have there been any known instances of fraud, or
possible fraud? What was done about them? How can they be
prevented in the future?
-
SAS
89, Audit Adjustments, requires that a summary of uncorrected
misstatements be included in or attached to management's representation
letter, and that the independent auditor inform the audit committee about
uncorrected misstatements aggregated by the auditor during the
current engagement and pertaining to the latest period presented that were
determined by management to be immaterial -- both individually and in the
aggregate -- to the financial statements taken as a whole. Audit
committees should pay particular attention to the unrecorded adjustments
and get satisfactory explanations from management as to why those
adjustments were not recorded.
-
The
Blue Ribbon Committee recommended, and auditing standards now require,
that the independent auditors discuss with the audit committee their
judgments about the quality, not just the acceptability, of accounting
principles in the company's financial reporting. The auditors should
discuss the clarity of the company's financial disclosures, degree of
aggressiveness or conservatism of the company's accounting principles and
underlying estimates and other significant management decisions. The
audit committee should focus on the qualitative aspects of financial
reporting, such as evaluation of reserves and understanding the quality of
the accounting principles used.
-
In
August 2000, The Panel on Audit Effectiveness (the Panel) issued its
Report and Recommendations, which supported the audit committee's more
proactive over-sight role. The Panel recommended that audit
committees increase the amount of time and attention they devote to
discussions of internal control with management and the auditors, and that
he audit committee establish specific expectations with management and the
auditors about the qualitative information needs of the committee related
to internal controls, with particular emphasis on the control environment
and the controls (or lack thereof) over financial reporting.
How
Has This Changed What Audit Committees Do?
As a
result of the implementation of these recommendations and requirements, audit
committees have increased the depth of their understanding of the company's
business. Such an understanding not only enables audit committee members
to have a more thorough and candid dialogue with management about the
company's risks, but also puts them in a better position to ask the right
questions about reported financial results.
Audit
committees also are focusing more on the company's internal controls; they
expect periodic briefings regarding the company's controls from management,
the internal auditors and the independent auditors. Audit committee
members are not in a position to determine if the internal controls over the
financial reporting process are functioning properly, so they must turn to
others. Usually, that means asking questions of those directly
responsible for internal controls -- meaning management. Management can
provide background information on the internal controls, but audit committees
also need independent views from the internal and independent auditors.
The committee should review with the auditors and management their assessments
of the company's controls and make sure that appropriate actions are being
taken to correct any significant deficiencies. An environment in which
management pays little attention to internal control, or fails to respond to
control deficiencies noted by the auditors, may increase the risk of
fraudulent financial reporting.
Armed
with a better understanding of the business and financial reporting process,
audit committees can ask more insightful questions about the financial
statements and disclosures. Scrutiny of the financial statements might
detect unusual activity, such as premature recognition of revenue as alleged
in several recent enforcement actions by the Securities and Exchange
Commission. For example, when analyzing the financial statements, the
audit committee may question whether a spike in revenue at the end of a
reporting period is in response to a sales promotion or represents an improper
acceleration of revenue to meet revenue or earnings targets.
Continued at http://www.fei.org/magazine/Nov-2001.cfm
"Will Anthrax Help Usher in Age of
Paperless Society?," by Michael R. Zimmerman, eWeek News, October
31, 2001
I'll admit it. I
don't rush to open my mail any more when Dan the mailroom guy tosses it on my
desk. As reassuring a presence as Dan is (6'3" and an ex-Marine), there's
not much he can do to stop the threat of bioterrorism. And as far as I know we
don't have any radiation-zapping machines in the mailroom.
These days I'm making
sure the fax machine is stocked with paper and my desk cleared of hard copy
mail. Although the chance of anything like that happening at eWEEK is remote,
the inundation of Anthrax stories and photos of clean-up guys in bunny suits,
as well as the frequent warnings from Attorney General Ashcroft to be on the
lookout for peculiar behavior, is unnerving.
So I've started
asking people to fax me things that only two months ago I would've insisted be
sent by overnight delivery. This is from a person who over the course of the
last five years has berated people—mostly PR professionals (Sorry, folks)
for simply asking for my fax number—let alone actually faxing me something.
I've also started
relying more on e-mail and attachments and links. Let's face it, we all know
the paperless society that the personal computer age was supposed to usher in
never happened. People only started printing out e-mails and attachments. Then
they started printing out Web site info. And in color! The need for paper
didn't go away, it just changed.
Well, for me, the
need has changed again. These days I'm making sure the fax machine is stocked
with paper and my desk cleared of hard copy mail.
It should be noted
that I've also noticed a marked decrease in the amount of hard copy mail I'm
getting. I can't tell if that's a concerted effort by tech companies and PR
firms or not.
But I'm curious. Have
your mail habits changed? Has your company made any institutional changes with
regards to receiving hard copy mail vs. e-mail? Or, if you're company is
accustomed to mass mailings, have you scaled them back and turned to e-mail
and faxing instead?
If the answers are
yes to the above, we could very well be on the way to that paperless utopia
talked about so long ago—in the '80s.
From Tech Update Today on October 31,
2001
Army takes the
lead with smart cards
As the world grows
more obsessed with security, the U.S. Defense Department is tightening up
access to buildings, computer networks, e-mail and online transactions by
switching to "smart" identity cards. The Army will deploy 4.3
million of the Java-based cards over the next 18 months. Enterprises should
take note of the military's example. This post-September 11 world demands a
bold rethinking of your IT agenda. And tamper-proof, forgery-proof digital
credentials are a key component of that agenda.
Read full story http://cgi.zdnet.com/slink?158037:2700840
Also see http://www.wirednews.com/news/conflict/0,2100,47971,00.html
From InformationWeek Daily on
October 31, 2001
Major-Label
Uncertainty Holds Up Online Music Services
LOS ANGELES--Two
years after Napster started a revolution that's still changing the way
consumers access music, the industry is stuck in neutral when it comes to
developing the Internet as a distribution channel. With apologies to the
oft-delayed major label-backed services, MusicNet and pressplay, a panel of
independent online music execs told an audience at the Webnoize 2001
conference here that they've seen little progress in getting the labels to
recognize the value of third-party online services.
To the contrary, they
described music-industry efforts to further limit consumer choice by
introducing "protected" CDs--which prevent consumers from copying
music purchased through retail outlets--as a uniformly bad move. "It's
less functionality for the same amount of money," observed Jeremy Miller,
the panel moderator and a former exec of defunct music playlist service
Uplister. The panel expressed a degree of frustration that efforts to get
licenses to use major-label content haven't panned out. Emusic.com senior VP
Steve Grady said the subscription service provider assumed from day one that
it wouldn't be able to obtain major-label content and instead focused on
developing an inventory of music from independent labels. While that has
prevented Emusic from attracting a huge user base, Grady said it's let the
company offer consumers what the major labels seem reluctant to deliver: the
flexibility to use music downloads in a variety of ways, from burning CDs to
loading files into MP3 players.
James Glicker,
president of music services for FullAudio, which is developing a service that
will compete with MusicNet and pressplay, said the labels simply want more
revenue assurances than budding service providers can provide. Right now,
Glicker said, "There's no business there. Once there is a business, once
they can see revenue there, then they'll be more flexible." Sean Ryan,
CEO of Listen.com, agreed that the labels have to be convinced that
third-party online services can generate enough revenue to offset the labels'
concerns about losing control of their product. Said Ryan, "As we show
that we can do that, the rights will start to clear out."
Webnoize analyst Lee
Black cautions, however, that licensing giant swaths of music isn't a simple
matter for the major labels. Black says that the labels' contracts with
artists don't specify royalty payments for digital distribution, and thus the
contracts have to be revisited before music can be licensed to online outlets.
- Tony Kontzer
More from the
conference: Napster CEO Targets Q1 2002 Relaunch http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eEqi0BcUEY0V20ZRu0A6
The Canadian West (Photographs, Maps,
History) http://www.archives.ca/05/0529/052901_e.html
From InformationWeek Daily on
October 31, 2001
** WEB SERVICES:
Patent Could Trip Up IBM, Microsoft
Tech goliaths such as
IBM, Microsoft, and Sun Microsystems have big plans for Web services, but they
may face a potential David--a.k.a. Charlie Northrup, chief executive of Global
Technologies Ltd. Inc. in Princeton, N.J. His metaphorical slingshot is patent
5,850,518--also referred to as patent 518--which he filed in 1994.
It covers two claims,
which were intended to protect Global Technologies' initial entry into Web
services. Northrup summarizes the patent claims in this way: "When a
program is running, it needs to be able to register that it's available as a
service--and indicate the types of services it can give you. Similarly, the
program should be able to select any registered services that are out there
that it can take advantage of. It should also be able to determine which ones
it currently knows about, load the ones that it doesn't yet know about,
connect to those services, and use them."
Patent 518 appears to
intersect with Microsoft's .Net strategy and Sun's Liberty Alliance, says
Northrup, who adds that he doesn't plan to file a claim of patent
infringement. But those plans may change. Northrup has another set of
Web-service related patents slated for approval in about two months, and his
company just started seeking financial backing to cover the cost of filing
other patent claims.
Intellectual-property
attorney G. Gervaise Davis of Monterey, Calif., firm Davis & Schroeder
isn't sure whether Northrup has a case, since he hasn't reviewed the wording
of the patent claims. But Microsoft, Sun, and others should closely analyze
the patent for possible conflicts, he says. For starters, patent litigation is
second only to antitrust cases when it comes to fees, typically running
upwards of several million dollars, Davis says. That doesn't even include the
time and energy drain on execs and engineers. And about 70% of patent cases
that are litigated are upheld as valid, he says. "It's the sort of thing
you want to avoid at all costs." - Sandra Swanson
Patent disputes are
tricky.
Read the full
story at http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eEqi0BcUEY0V20ZRv0A7
Will XP support your hardware? Bill
O'Brien knows that you really don't want to roll out Windows 2000 only to find
yourself facing yet another upgrade decision in a few months. http://cgi.zdnet.com/slink?157915:2700840
Two Special Collections from the
General Accounting Office (GAO)
The Post-September 11 Environment:
Access to Government Information http://www.ombwatch.org/info/2001/access.html
Chilling Effects of Anti-Terrorism:
"National Security" Toll on Freedom of Expression http://www.eff.org/Privacy/Surveillance/Terrorism_militias/antiterrorism_chill.html
The advertisement below is for your
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Google: New Look and New File Types
Google keeps "tabs" on what's new by simplifying the user interface
& introducing a power command. http://www.newmedia.com/nm-ie.asp?articleID=3174
Bob Jensen's search helpers are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm
From The Scout Report on November 2,
2001
AltaVista Education Search http://www.altavista.com/sites/search/edu
This new page from AltaVista allows users to search for
terms from within the university and college sites in AltaVista. Searches from
this page will cover the more-than-20 million university and college sites
held here. Users can also browse the three categories, Education, Colleges
& Universities, and K-12 Education, though admittedly the links here,
while annotated, are not extensive.
Three Educational Math Sites:
Eartheasy http://eartheasy.com/homepage.htm
The site aims "to encourage, inspire and inform
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Each of the sections offers information on a number of topics ranging from
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more.
Incubator http://www.vrd.org/Incubator.shtml
The Virtual Reference Desk (VRD) provides the Incubator
software for free to nonprofits. The software "is designed for start-up
AskA services in need of software for taking in, routing, and answering
questions via the Web." Training and server space is provided by VRD at
no cost. This page supplies links to an Academic Library Demo, a K-12 Service
Demo, and a presentation on Incubator from the Digital Reference Conference.
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I noticed you have an area code
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The Taliban believes the Internet is
unholy, but there was an "official" website until right after the
September terrorist attacks. Its current status, however, is a mystery --- http://www.wired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,47956,00.html
KRTU from Trinity University is now
available worldwide at www.krtu.org
.
You and your friends in exotic lands
such as Australia, Siberia, and Boerne can listen 24 hours a day with Windows
Media Player.
See our new logo, our music schedule,
and anything else you ever wanted to know about Trinity's radio station at our
newly-redesigned website.
Oh yeah... We are still available on
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Thank you for listening.
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Operations Manager KRTU FM 91.7
Trinity University 715 Stadium Drive San Antonio, TX 78212 (210) 241-8345
ben.donnelly@trinity.edu
Listen to our live webcast at www.krtu.org
What happens if it looks like child
porn and pretends to be child porn, but really isn't child porn? That's one of
the issues the Supreme Court will be looking at when it decides whether or not
to uphold the Child Pornography Prevention Act --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,47987,00.html
From MIT
"A Smarter Web" by Mark Frauenfelder, Technology Review, November 2001
--- http://www.techreview.com/magazine/nov01/frauenfelder.asp
Tim Berners-Lee must
feel like he's in a time warp. In the early 1990s, he spent a frustrating year
trying to get people to grasp the power and beauty of his idea for a scheme
known as an Internet hypertext system, to which he gave the beguiling name the
World Wide Web. But since the Web didn't yet exist, most people couldn't
imagine the implications of what he was talking about. Berners-Lee persevered,
and with the help of the few people who shared his vision, his invention
became the fastest-growing media distribution system in history.
A decade later,
Berners-Lee is struggling with the same problem—only this time, he's trying
to articulate his dream of a Semantic Web. The idea is to weave a Web that not
only links documents to each other but also recognizes the meaning of the
information in those documents—a task that people can ordinarily do quite
well but is a tall order for computers, which can't tell if "head"
means the leader of an organization or the thing on top of a body. "The
Semantic Web is really data that is processable by machine," says Berners-Lee,
who is director of the MIT-based World Wide Web Consortium. "That's what
the fuss is about."
Today's World Wide
Web is fundamentally a publishing medium—a place to store and share images
and text. Adding semantics will radically change the nature of the Web—from
a place where information is merely displayed to one where it is interpreted,
exchanged and processed. Semantic-enabled search agents will be able to
collect machine-readable data from diverse sources, process it and infer new
facts. Programs that weren't made to be compatible with each other will share
previously unmixable data. In other words, the ultimate goal of the Semantic
Web is to give users near omniscience over the vast resources of the Internet,
turning the millions of existing database islands into a single gigantic
database Pangea.
To compare the
Semantic Web with today's Web, Berners-Lee—an intense person who speaks in
low-volume bursts—offers the following scenario: Imagine registering for a
conference online.
The conference Web
site lists the event time, date and location, along with information about the
nearest airport and a hotel that offers attendees a discount. With today's
Web, you have to first check to make sure your schedule is clear, and if it is
you have to cut and paste the time and date into your calendar program. Then
you need to make flight and hotel arrangements, either by calling reservations
desks, or by going to their Web sites.
"There's no way
you can just say, 'I want to go to that event,'" explains Berners-Lee,
"because the semantics of which bit is the date and which bit is the time
has been lost." But on the Semantic Web, he asserts, those bits will be
labeled; the software on your computer will recognize those labels and
automatically book your flight to the conference and reserve a hotel room with
the click of a button.
The Semantic Web will
also be a richer, more customizable Web. Imagine running your cursor over the
name of the hotel and being informed that 15 percent of the people who've
voted on its quality say it's excellent. If you happen to know that the hotel
is a dump, you can instruct your browser to assign those people a trust level
of zero. (The polling information would be saved on a third-party
"annotation server" that your Web browser accessed automatically.)
By assigning high levels of trust to people who match your tastes and
interests, and "bozo-filtering" the people who don't, the Web
will start looking more like your Web.
It's an enormous
undertaking. The first step is to establish standards that allow users to add
explicit descriptive tags, or metadata, to Web content—making it easy to
pinpoint exactly what you're looking for. Next comes developing methods that
enable different programs to relate and share metadata from different Web
sites. After that, people can begin crafting additional features, like
applications that infer additional facts from the ones they're given. As a
result, searches will be more accurate and thorough, data entry will be
streamlined and the truthfulness of information will be easier to verify. At
least that's the goal.
Many feel it can't be
done. Even though things are heating up in research labs, the Semantic Web as
envisioned by Berners-Lee is hampered by social and technical challenges that
some critics say may never be solved. But that's not stopping the World Wide
Web Consortium and other organizations from trying. The U.S. Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and commercial enterprises such as Network
Inference in Manchester, England, are already developing tools for building
the Semantic Web infrastructure—as well as applications for using it. And
according to Berners-Lee, with growing numbers of people beginning to grasp
how the Semantic Web will "allow more and more sophisticated agents to do
things on their behalf," we'll soon see some glimmers of what could be in
store.
Untangling the
Semantic Web
In his crowded office
on the third floor of MIT's Laboratory for Computer Science building, research
scientist Eric Miller doesn't seem bothered by the pounding and grinding
noises coming from heavy equipment on the construction site next door. As the
head of the Semantic Web project, the friendly and energetic Miller is too
enthralled with his new job to notice. "I'm the luckiest guy alive,"
he says. "I get paid for what I'd do for free."
Berners-Lee tapped
Miller to head up the consortium's Semantic Web Activity because of Miller's
involvement in Web-based knowledge management projects and his ability to
enthusiastically articulate the concepts behind the Semantic Web. Standing
next to a whiteboard covered in diagrams of metadata in action, Miller
explains that the fundamental idea behind the Semantic Web is to make the
Internet more useful to people by making the information floating all over the
Web more easily manipulated by computers.
Today, by contrast,
most content is formatted for human consumption. When you read a news article
online, for instance, you can easily pick out the headline, byline, dateline,
photo credit and so on. But unless these things are explicitly labeled, a
computer has no idea what they are. It simply sees a bunch of text. In the
Semantic Web, a news story will be marked with labels that describe its
various parts, making it easy, among other things, for a search engine to find
articles written by Jimmy Carter and not stories written about
him.
That's not possible
today, at least not on a global scale. The formatting tags used to create Web
pages are part of the hypertext markup language (HTML), and they describe only
what a Web page's information looks like (boldface, small, large, underlined,
etc.). The Semantic Web would go beyond cosmetics by including tags that also
describe what the information is: tags would label text as designating, for
instance, subject, author, street address, price or shipping charge. These
descriptive tags are the metadata—the data about the data. Metadata is not a
new concept, nor one restricted to the Internet. A library's card
catalogue—with its records describing a book's title, author, subject, year
and location on the shelves—is metadata.
The Web made it
trivially easy to exchange documents between previously incompatible computers
(a few of today's Web users may recall the headaches of the 1980s, when
computers from different makers were electronic islands). The Semantic Web
will take this a step further, making it possible for computers to exchange
particular pieces of information from within documents.
Beyond Metadata
You can't have a
Semantic Web without metadata, but metadata alone won't suffice. The metadata
in Web pages will have to be linked to special documents that define metadata
terms and the relationships between the terms. These sets of shared concepts
and their interconnections are called "ontologies."
Say, for example,
that you've made a Web page listing the members of a faculty. You would tag
the names of the different members with metadata terms such as
"chair," "associate professor," "professor" and
so on. Then you'd link the page to an ontology—one that you created yourself
or one that someone else has already made—that defines educational job
positions and how they relate to each other. An appropriate ontology would in
this case define a chair as a person, not a thing you sit on, and it would
indicate that a chair is the most senior position in a department.
By defining the
relationships between terms, ontologies can then be used by applications to
infer new facts. Suppose you have created a Web page that teaches
schoolchildren about condors, and have added metadata to the content. You
could link to an ontology (or more likely, several ontologies) that define the
various terms and their relationships: "California condor is a type of
condor from California." "Condor is a member of the raptor
family." "All raptors are carnivores." "California is a
state in the United States." "Carnivores are meat eaters." By
using both metadata and ontologies, a search engine or other software agent
could find your condor site based on a search request for "carnivores in
the U.S."—even if your site made no mention of carnivores or the United
States.
Because ontology
development is a big undertaking, it's likely that site creators will link to
third-party ontologies. Some will be free, others will be sold or licensed.
One issue that will have to be confronted: just as with dictionaries and
atlases, political and cultural bias will creep into ontologies. A
geography-based ontology maintained by the Chinese government, for instance,
would probably not define Taiwan as a "country."
But that hardly
impedes the vision. As the World Wide Web Consortium continues to develop
standards and technologies for the Semantic Web, hundreds of organizations,
companies and individuals are contributing to the effort by creating tools,
languages and ontologies.
One major contributor
is DARPA—the folks responsible for a great deal of the technology behind the
Internet (see "DARPA's
Disruptive Technologies," TR October 2001). These days,
DARPA is contributing tens of millions of dollars to the Web consortium's
Semantic Web project and has developed a semantic language for the U.S.
Department of Defense called DARPA Agent Markup Language that allows users to
add metadata to Web documents and relate it to ontologies. University of
Maryland computer science professor Jim Hendler—who was until August manager
of the DARPA program—has been working closely with Berners-Lee and Miller to
ensure consistency with the consortium's efforts. Last December, Hendler
announced the creation of a language that combines the DARPA Agent Markup
Language's capabilities with an ontology language, developed in Europe, called
OIL (which stands for both Ontology Inference Layer and Ontology Interchange
Language).
A developer of this
new language, University of Manchester lecturer Ian Horrocks, also advises the
World Wide Web Consortium on the Semantic Web. In January, he cofounded a
company called Network Inference to develop technology that uses ontologies
and automated inference to give Semantic Web capabilities to existing
relational databases and large Web sites. Recently, an Isle of Man-based data
services company called PDMS began using Network Inference's technology to add
Semantic Web capabilities to corporate databases. Dozens of other companies,
from Hewlett-Packard to Nokia, are contributing to Semantic Web development (see
"Spinning
the Semantic Web").
Continued at http://www.techreview.com/magazine/nov01/frauenfelder.asp
Also see
Berners-Lee
Slams MS Browser Tactics --- http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/22611.html
The code that can descramble DVDs can
be published on the Web, rules an appeals court in overturning an earlier edict
--- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,48075,00.html
"This is a great
decision -- the court recognized that the First Amendment prevails even when
people claim trade secret laws," said Robin Gross, an attorney for the
Electronic Frontier Foundation who represented defendants in the case.
"They were also clear that computer code is pure speech worthy of First
Amendment protection."
The California case
began in late 1999, when the DVD Copy Control Association (DVDCCA), and movie
industry trade group, sued Andrew Bunner, a Web developer, and numerous other
unnamed individuals for posting and linking to the DeCSS code on the Web.
The DVDCCA said the
defendants were using "confidential proprietary information" and
were therefore violating movie companies' trade secrets.
In January 2000, the
trial court issued a preliminary injunction against the defendants, barring
them from posting "or otherwise disclosing or distributing, on their
websites or elsewhere, the DeCSS program ... or any other information derived
from this proprietary information."
The appeals court
reversed that ruling Thursday. The court did not decide whether or not Bunner
disclosed a movie trade secret -- that will be decided in trial, which is
still pending. Instead, the court said that Bunner can only be barred from
posting the code if it has been proven, in a trial, that he has violated a
secret.
"DVDCCA's
statutory right to protect its economically valuable trade secret is not an
interest that is 'more fundamental' than the First Amendment right to freedom
of speech or even on equal footing with the national security interests and
other vital governmental interests that have previously been found
insufficient to justify a prior restraint," the ruling stated.
The DVDCCA could not
be reached for comment on Thursday.
"Joint Strike Fighter faces future
competition," by Duncan Graham-Rowe, New Scientist, October 29, 2001 --- http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99991488
Lockheed Martin may
have won the largest ever military contract to develop the Joint Strike
Fighter, but the losers, Boeing, could still have the last laugh.
The Pentagon's
announcement on Friday that Lockheed Martin had won the $200 billion,
winner-takes-all contract was met with jubilation in President's Bush's home
state of Texas, where the company is based.
But experts are
warning that the JSF is unlikely to be delivered on time and could be soon
made obsolete by Boeing's programme to build uncrewed combat aerial vehicles (UCAV),
the pilotless robotic planes of the future.
The JSF is a jet
fighter and is supposed to become the new striking force of the US and British
armed forces from 2009. Foreign sales could be worth as much as $400 billion
extra.
But Paul Nisbet,
defence analyst with JSA Research, in Rhode Island, warns that such contracts
are notoriously optimistic about development costs and how long it will take
to deliver. "I don't see why this contract should be any different,"
he says.
If they fall far
enough behind schedule they could face losing out to Boeing's pilotless
planes. "UCAVs will be far more capable than manned airplanes," says
Nisbet. Besides being safer, UCAVs should also outperform piloted craft, while
being smaller and cheaper to produce.
From Webmionkey on November 2, 2001
Will the privacy
directive proposed by the European Commission crumble the cookie
for good? If the European Parliament plenary assembly says "yay" on
November 13, and if then the EU Council of Ministers follows that up with yet
another "yay," euro-surfers may indeed find themselves re-entering
all their tasty personal data again and again. And again!
The European Commission, believing Web
cookies are the equivalent of spyware tools, wants the technology banned --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,48025,00.html
"Women impeded by tech
downturn," by Peter Deleveti, San Jose Mercury News, October 29, 2001
--- http://www.siliconvalley.com/docs/opinion/wiretap/pd103001.htm
Some tax data and a message from David
Fordham about levels of household income. I might add that the marriage
penalty also leads to a lot of separate filings from "significant
others" in households.
-----Original
Message-----
Take a look at Statistics of Income data 1998 SOI data on adjusted gross
income:
Total taxable returns
filed in 1998 -
93,047,898
Lower 83% of returns with AGI less than $75,000
77,475,127
Top 17% of returns: $75,000 under $100,000
7,221,303
$100,000 under $200,000
6,266,258
$200,000 under $500,000
1,606,186
$500,000 under $1,000,000
307,020
$1,000,000 or more
172,004
I was shocked ...
[lots and lots deleted]
Amy Dunbar
----------------------------------------------
Amy, isn't this
another example of how statistics can so easily paint a very skewed picture?
Note that the unit
being reported is "tax returns", not people.
If I and my wife
file a joint return, then our AGI is going to be greater. And if we include
our kids' investment income, AGI is greater still.
If I and my wife
file separately, then not only will both our AGI's be lower, but it will
count as TWO (2) returns in the above table. (If my kids decide to file
their bank account interest separately rather than being included in my
return, well, then you have additional lower AGI returns.)
Thus, as long as
joint filing is allowed, there will naturally be more "returns" as
the AGI gets lower, even with all other things being equal. You can't
necessarily infer the exact portion of the population in each income bracket
by counting "returns".
Note that I'm not
disputing your conclusions, just pointing out that as always, we must look
closely when using statistics.
David Fordham
James Madison University
Artists of Brucke: Themes in German
Expressionist Prints [Flash] http://www.moma.org/brucke/
Note that firewalls are not generally
intended to protect against viruses. The protect against invasion of the
computer by hackers intent on doing bad things such as creating entry trap doors
to your systems. In reply to a message about installing a firewall on a
home computer, Chula King wrote the following in reply to a firewall question
posed by Amy Dunbar:
I too use Zone Alarm,
and have been quite pleased with it. I've also tried Black Ice Defender and
don't think that it does nearly as good a job as Zone Alarm.
While not anti virus
software, Zone Alarm will quarantine "suspicious" e-mail
attachments. In addition, it blocks both incoming scans to one's computer and
outgoing messages produced by spyware.
Chula King
The University of West Florida
Reply from Amelia Baldwin
Amy,
as for hacking and
such, another vote for zonealarm on your cable internet enabled computer. it
is not difficult to use. yes, your cable company probes your IP a few times a
day but that's NOTHING compared to the number of times you will get pinged or
probed or God know what else by seemingly random attempts from total
strangers. :o( Zonealarm blocks and tracks these things and if you weren't
frightened before you put up a firewall, you will be when you seen how many
accesses were going on or at least attempted!
as for anti-virus,
keep an anti-virus program running and keep it's virus signatures up to date
(the number of folks who have the software but never update it just astounds
me) and never ever open an email attachment that you are not expecting even if
it IS from someone you know. some viruses send seemingly random attachments
via the email software of the infected computer to folks on the address list,
thus you might actually receive what looks like a legitimate attachment from a
known user and it will have a virus.
just my $0.02
Amelia
Reply from Bill Spinks
If you have a high
speed continuous connection, you need a fire wall! (ZoneAlarm is free and
pretty good). I monitor my log of blocked hits and probably get 10 or 15 a day
during the week and 20 to 30 on a weekend days. Interestingly enough when I
have checked the reverse address of those URLs that are trying to connect with
my computer, a large number of them are from China, Korea, and Taiwan -- some
have even come from middleschool computers (or so it is reported on http://samspade.org
.)
If like stamp
collectors you like to travel the world in symbolic form, you can report your
"intrusion" back to the tech supervisor of those sites. Sometimes
you hear, most times you don't, but it makes for some interesting
correspondence from interesting places.
billspinks
You can read some Zone Alarm reviews
at
http://www.epinions.com/cmsw-Utilities-All-Zone_Alarm/display_~reviews
Reply from Brian Zwicker
In the Untouchables,
Sean Connery said something like: "... never bring a knife to a
gunfight" (I have removed the ethnic/racial slur)
Faced with the same
incredibly high number of approaches to my home computer setup, I decided to
bypass emulating a firewall, and go for the real thing - a firewall.
It turns out not to
be very expensive, because I used an older pentium 2 computer I nad in the
basement, a couple of ethernet cards, and some software from gnatbox. The
computer, by the way boots and runs from a floppy disk! You do not even need a
dedicated monitor, except for setting up. The whole system now runs from my
desktop computer and you can reset various parameters from there.
Some caveats are that
to do e-mail, I had to obtain the real address of my cable provider's mail
server, because the gnatbox software could not be made to work without this.
It also took a couple of weekends to get everything wotking. I also don't know
how, or even if, this would work with many educational computer networks.
On the plus side,
since the firewall computer talks to the outside world, and I talk to the
firewall, it seems it would take a verrrry determined hacker to get past this
setup, and although I did have a number of virus problems prior to the
firewall going in, I have had nothing since.
One other thing is
the list that gnatbox will show on demand of attempted accesses to the
firewall. It dumps the older attempts after 12 hours, but the available list
is always many screens long. I would say that if even 99.99% of all attempts
are benign, at least 4 or 5 each week would be a real attempt to get through
in order to damage something. Pretty scary.
Cheers,
Brian Zwicker
International Resources from the
Library of Congress http://www.loc.gov/rr/international/
International Religious Freedom Report
(From the U.S. State Department)
http://www.state.gov/www/global/human_rights/irf/irf_rpt/
What a great idea!
It's probably not the most
cost-effective way to rake in customers, but a website posted by a taxi driver
in Barcelona lures four to 12 riders a month ... from Brazil! --- http://www.wirednews.com/news/culture/0,1284,47666,00.html
Bet you don't know
what a water fountain looks like in Barcelona. A recycling bin? A mailbox?
There's a cab driver
in this Catalonian capital who believes you might care enough about those
mundane objects to hail his website, especially if you're from Brazil.
Aspiring techie
Francisco Dugo has been flashing images of Barcelona on Taxitupi.com for the
last year and a half, seeking to parlay a simple digital camera and some HTML
knowledge into increased business
He doesn't exactly
take you for a ride of the city's monuments and tourist sites on his Web page,
designed in black and yellow, the official colors of Barcelona cabs. Instead,
Dugo unobtrusively takes pictures of whatever he finds interesting during his
shifts, selects the best ones and loads them into the site once or twice a
week.
"The webcam
captures the day-to-day," Dugo said, referring to the 94-picture camera
mounted with Velcro atop his dashboard. "It may show a dog, just as it
may show a traffic light. There's a photo section that does show the prettiest
parts (of the city). But there are any number of Web pages that can show you
the Sagrada Familia or the Ramblas. I have that too but that's not the point
behind the webcam."
Besides promoting his
native city, the point is mostly to attract customers, and the concept seems
to be working. Dugo said his site averages about 250 visits a day, the
majority coming from Spain, but with Brazil running a not-too-distant second.
Veterinarians have a new tool to help
them figure out the disease when confronted by confusing symptoms, but its
creators warn it's not a complete cure --- http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,47707,00.html
FAS 142 Update from the FEI Express on
November 1, 2001
POLL: MANY
WILL BOOK IMPAIRMENT CHARGES
Thirty percent of the financial executives participating in an informal
polling by FEI say their company expects to recognize an impairment charge for
goodwill upon implementation of FAS 142. Forty-five percent do not expect to
recognize the charge, and one-quarter of respondents don't know yet.
"Almost
one-third of the respondents currently expect to book an impairment charge for
goodwill. This is a significant number, and an indication of the kind of
impact adoption may have in this current economic environment," said Dean
Krogman, FEI Vice President of Technical Activities.
Earlier this year,
the Financial Accounting Standards Board approved the issuance of Statements
of Financial Accounting Standards No. 141, Business Combinations, and 142,
Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets. Under Statement 142, goodwill is no
longer amortized but must be reviewed annually for impairment, defined as an
excess of net book value over market value. Goodwill would also be required to
be tested for impairment if an event occurs that is likely to reduce the
market value of a reporting unit below its carrying value.
The financial
executives were asked if their company expects to have the same number of
reporting units as operating segments or whether there would be more reporting
units than operating segments. Responses were equally divided: 45 percent
expect the same number of reporting units as operating segments; 45 percent
expect to have more, and 10 percent don't know.
More than two-thirds
of the respondents (68 percent) expect to use a combination of discounted cash
flows and market multiples in determining the fair value of reporting units.
Almost one-quarter (24 percent) plan to use discounted cash flows only, and a
mere 8 percent plan to use market multiples only.
"We expect the
market multiples to be used as verifications of valuations done in other
ways," said Krogman. "It's very difficult to find publicly traded
competitors with exactly the same business mix as your company's reporting
unit, which would be required exclusively for market multiple
valuations."
The polling took
place during an FEI teleconference for members about the new business
combination standards. Approximately 75 financial executives responded
anonymously to each question.
Now is a good time to be a venture
capitalist, despite the economic slowdown. That's one of the optimistic
viewpoints at this year's Red Herring NDA conference --- http://www.wired.com/news/exec/0,1370,48048,00.html
Nobody talked about
their "cash burn," their plans for "grabbing mindshare" or
their "exit strategy" at this year's Red Herring NDA conference.
A chastened gathering
of venture capitalists, investors and entrepreneurs at the plush St. Regis
seaside resort focused on more old-fashioned concepts like making money,
holding on to customers and, in some cases, staying alive.
"It's been a
brutal year," said Peter Finkelstein, vice president of business
development for Orinda, California, startup Critical Point Software. "It
took until September to close our last $3 million. Our survival instincts were
definitely tested."
See also:
There's
Gold, But You Gotta Dig
A
Hands-On Look at Valley
Techno
Magic Courtesy of People
Need
a Job? Do Biotech
Give Yourself Some Business
News
Executive Summary: movers and
shakers
"How Islam Won, and Lost, the Lead
in Science," (History), by Dennis Overbye, The New York Times,
October 30, 2001 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2001/10/30/science/social/30ISLA.html
"Nothing in
Europe could hold a candle to what was going on in the Islamic world until
about 1600," said Dr. Jamil Ragep, a professor of the history of science
at the University of Oklahoma.
It was the infusion
of this knowledge into Western Europe, historians say, that fueled the
Renaissance and the scientific revolution.
"Civilizations
don't just clash," said Dr. Abdelhamid Sabra, a retired professor of the
history of Arabic science who taught at Harvard. "They can learn from
each other. Islam is a good example of that." The intellectual meeting of
Arabia and Greece was one of the greatest events in history, he said.
"Its scale and consequences are enormous, not just for Islam but for
Europe and the world."
But historians say
they still know very little about this golden age. Few of the major scientific
works from that era have been translated from Arabic, and thousands of
manuscripts have never even been read by modern scholars. Dr. Sabra
characterizes the history of Islamic science as a field that "hasn't even
begun yet."
Islam's rich
intellectual history, scholars are at pains and seem saddened and embarrassed
to point out, belies the image cast by recent world events. Traditionally,
Islam has encouraged science and learning. "There is no conflict between
Islam and science," said Dr. Osman Bakar of the Center for
Muslim-Christian Understanding at Georgetown.
"Knowledge is
part of the creed," added Dr. Farouk El-Baz, a geologist at Boston
University, who was science adviser to President Anwar el- Sadat of Egypt.
"When you know more, you see more evidence of God."
So the notion that
modern Islamic science is now considered "abysmal," as Abdus Salam,
the first Muslim to win a Nobel Prize in Physics, once put it, haunts Eastern
scholars. "Muslims have a kind of nostalgia for the past, when they could
contend that they were the dominant cultivators of science," Dr. Bakar
said. The relation between science and religion has generated much debate in
the Islamic world, he and other scholars said. Some scientists and historians
call for an "Islamic science" informed by spiritual values they say
Western science ignores, but others argue that a religious conservatism in the
East has dampened the skeptical spirit necessary for good science.
Continued at http://www.nytimes.com/2001/10/30/science/social/30ISLA.html
Lessons From Affiliate University:
Minipages 101 Affiliate marketing has become a game of survival. When last
week's session of Commission Junction University (CJU) challenged us to learn
what works on the Net, you listened. Particularly when those classic
first-movers -- porn, gambling, and spam --
are getting results. http://www.newmedia.com/nm-ie.asp?articleID=3169
The Brick Testament (Religion,
Children) --- http://www.thereverend.com/brick_testament/
Note that some Jews and Christians may
find the interpretations of these biblical stories offensive or just too hip.
The leggo pictures may also offend some readers, but other readers may really
like this picture storybook.
Barefoot Books (Children, Education) http://www.barefootbooks.com/
Give your child a
better start in life... At Barefoot, we celebrate art and story with books
that open the hearts and minds of children from all walks of life, inspiring
them to read deeper, search further, and explore their own creative gifts.
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs --- http://www.snow-white-disney.com/
Screen Capturing
Initial Message from Ross Stevenson [ross.stevenson@AUT.AC.NZ]
Hi aecmers I would
appreciate info on the software you (experts) use to screen dump from an
accounting program (such as Mind Your Own Business - MYOB) to a Word document.
I'm told there is stuff out there that is much better than 'PrntScrn' Thanks
in advance for any responses
Ross Stevenson
Auckland University of Technology NZ
Reply from James Borden [james.borden@VILLANOVA.EDU]
I have always thought
that Paint Shop Pro ( http://www.jasc.com/
) did an excellent job with screen captures (among other things). To me it is
one of the all-time great shareware programs!
Jim Borden
Villanova University
Reply from Bob Jensen [rjensen@trinity.edu]
I also use Paint Shop
Pro for a picture grab of the screen.
For conversion of
pictures of text into computer text that can be pasted into MS Word, I use
OmniPage Pro --- http://www.caere.com/products/omnipage/pro/
Many scanners now
come with text conversion software.
Bob Jensen
Trinity University
Reply from Del DeVries [ddevrie1@UTK.EDU]
When is a screen dump not really just a screen print? When you are trying
to capture a page which is either larger than a single viewable screen or
scrolls (such as web pages).
I have used Capture EZ Pro, http://www.screencapture.com/ezepro.htm
(shareware), primarily for web page captures (multiple output file format
capabilities) where I needed a snapshot of the entire web page - not just a
single screen full. The same could apply to accounting systems.
One additional slick feature is sequential file numbering for capturing
multiple web pages (or any screen capture) without taking time to
specificially name each file. You specify the leading characters of the file
name - the program adds sequential numbering to each successive capture.
Del DeVries
Reply from Bob Jensen [rjensen@trinity.edu]
Del's message is extremely helpful when you want to capture complete images
that are larger than the screen.
However, a better way to capture entire Webpages is to simply use Internet
Exlplorer's "File Save as" option for downloading entire Webpages.
Of course, you will get separate files for each picture since the only way a
Webpage can show a picture is to link to that picture's file (i.e., pictures
are not "pasted" into HTML files like they are pasted into MS Word
files.
If all you want is a picture from a Webpage, it is generally possible to
simply right click and save the single picture file. If you want all the
pictures and other items appearing on the page, then you go to File, Save as
and choose the entire Webpage option. It is possible that the
Webpage is in Java such that this is not possible, but most web pages are in
HTML where this is possible.
PDF files are more problematic. Generally the authors let you select
text and pictures for copying, but it is possible for the authors to turn off
selection permission. In that case you must resort to EZ Pro, Paint Shop
Pro, or one of the other software options for screen capturing.
Since I stopped using Netscape years ago, I don't know if you can do the
same type of Webpage and picture file download using Netscape.
Bob Jensen
Reply from Ronald R. Tidd [Ron@RRTIDD.COM]
To expand on Bob's comment about using the "File
Save As..." option in Internet Explorer to save entire web pages:
Under Save as File Type, select Web Archive Single
file (*.mht) and you will not get separate files for each picture.
Also take a look at
Hyperionics, http://www.hyperionics.com/index.html
Ron Tidd
Reply from Jim McKinney [jim@MCKINNEYCPA.COM]
For web site capture I usually use Adobe Acrobat. You
can download whole sections of a website automatically with the pages
date-stamped and source-links printed at the top of the page.
Jim McKinney
Howard University
Reply from Andrew Lymer [a.lymer@BHAM.AC.UK]
You could also check
out Fullshot from Inbit.com ( http://www.inbit.com
) - I switched to this from SnagIt a while back and prefer it for most things
involving quick screen grabs (although agree for post snag manipulation, PSP
is better)
Andy Lymer
University of Birmingham, UK
Reply from Roger Debreceny [rogerd@NETBOX.COM]
I like SnagIt from
TechSmith ( http://www.techsmith.com/
), a company that also produces CamTasia and DubIt each of which are also
useful producs.
Roger
Portal servers offer customizable Web
interfaces, personalized content presentation, security, application
integration, and tools for communication and collaboration. That's a tall order.
To find out how well the vendors support business requirements, Doculabs
compares portal servers from six vendors--BroadVision, Epicentric, iPlanet,
Oracle, Plumtree, and Tibco--and explains what to look for. http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eEqa0BcUEY04e0Zhe0AM
Bob Jensen's threads on portals are
at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/portals.htm
Aspects of the Victorian Book
(Literature, History) --- http://www.bl.uk/collections/epc/victorian/intro.html
Nowhere Girl (a cartoon-style diary of
a real woman) --- http://www.nowheregirl.com/
Sex: Unknown --- http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/gender/
From XML Report on October 31, 2001
XML Content
management All the news that's fit to XML by Rich Seeley
News content
published on the Web is immediately more useable and more searchable--if it is
XML tagged.
But as he was
envisioning the advantages of XML'ing the news, Vincent Huang, co-founder of
XMLCities, Inc., Milpitas, Calif., saw that there was one giant roadblock.
While content managers back in a news organization's home office would love
having XML content to feed to Websites for television, radio and print media,
reporters were likely to resist adopting new word processing systems or
add-ons that would require them to learn a new way of writing.
"When an author
is creating content," Huang says, "you don't want any restraint. You
don't want your authors saying: 'Oops, I can't do this. Oops, I can't do
that.' It goes against human behavior."
Added to the
potential steep adoption curve, is the fact that in lean economic times,
publishers are likely to think twice about replacing existing word processing
software on every PC for every reporter in every bureau around the globe.
So Huang came up with
what he considers a simple but elegant solution. Let the reporter in Russia
bang out his stories in Word 6.0 or whatever old or new text processor he is
comfortable using. Then put automated XML tagging software in the hands of the
content managers or copy editors who prepare the news stories for electronic
publishing.
"What we're
saying is, if you're using Microsoft Word or Word Perfect or anything, it
doesn't matter," Huang explains. "Author your content and save it in
RTF. And after that we can load it into our XMLMaker and apply
auto-tagging."
Huang's XMLMaker
Suite, which will be available Dec. 1, uses pattern recognition technology to
automatically tag text and also includes a "Select-n-Click" feature
that editors can use to add XML tags while copy editing.
News content
providers would not be the only organizations to benefit from such a tool,
according to Ron Schmelzer, senior analyst at ZapThink, Inc., the Boston-based
XML analyst and consulting firm. He says it would be "particularly
effective for highly unstructured content" in other verticals including
education, financial and legal.
For more information:
http://www.xmlcities.com
http://www.zapthink.com
For more on XML
Content management go to: http://www.adtmag.com/section.asp?section=specialreport
.
Bob Jensen's threads on XML, XBRL,
and all that other good stuff can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/xmlrdf.htm
Why is AOL the top-rated destination
according to one measurement firm, and MSN the top site according to another? It's
because statistics can say just about anything --- http://www.wired.com/news/ebiz/0,1272,48041,1162b6a.html
The Financial Times has
performed a comprehensive study of Executive MBA programs worldwide, and has
ranked the schools based on such factors as resulting salary increases and
career progress of graduates, the corporate view of executive MBAs,
company-sponsored MBAs, the cost of such courses, and the role of e-learning.
The U.S. schools scored high in the rankings, with seven schools placing in the
top 10. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/61872
So where's
Harvard, Stanford, Yale, and MIT? The winners are as follows:
- University of Pennsylvania:
Wharton (US)
- Columbia University Graduate
Business School (US)
- London Business School (UK)
- New York University: Stern (US)
- University of Chicago Graduate
Business School (US)
- Northwestern University: Kellogg
(US)
- Instituto de Empresa (Spain)
- University of Navarra: IESE
(Spain)
- Emory University: Goizueta (US)
- City University Business School
(UK)
Below I repeat a module from my May 4,
2001 edition of New Bookmarks. Note that Wharton ranks at the top in the
above survey, but did not make the Top 10 in a Wall Street Journal survey.
From the May 4, 2001
Edition of New Bookmarks --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book01q2.htm
Stanford, Wharton, MIT, UC Berkeley, and Duke all get "Routed."
The WSJ rankings below are
highly controversial and confusing to say the least. I think the survey
was conducted using Palm Beach County's discarded punch-out voting machines
(remember the chads). Stanford, Wharton, MIT, UC Berkeley, and Duke
were in a sense "routed" by the Wall Street Journal's
in-charge Special Edition editor, Lawrence Rout
along with consulting editor Ronald Alsop.
A good researcher/editor should sit
back and question whether the outcomes are consistent with intuition and
previous research. The main conclusions should also be internally
consistent with the data. When there are inconsistencies, a good
researcher tends to ponder the reasons before publishing the results.
There are some inconsistencies in the WSJ top rankings that just do not
make sense to me. If the Special Edition had been sent out for academic
review like a paper submitted to a research journal, I seriously doubt whether
the referees would have voted to publish this Special Edition.
The Wall Street Journal Special
Report: "Top Business Schools," April 30, 2001 --- http://interactive.wsj.com/pages/topschools2001.htm
WSJ Top 10
01. Dartmouth
College
02. Carnegie
Mellon University
03. Yale
University
04. University
of Michigan
05. Northwestern
University
06. Purdue
University
07. University
of Chicago
08. Harvard
University
09. Southern
Methodist University
10. University
of Texas at Austin
To go directly to
this special report and participate in online discussions, visit http://CareerJournal.com
To purchase the
e-book "The Wall Street Journal Guide to Business Schools,"
containing larger survey results and in-depth profiles of more than 150
schools, go to http://WSJbooks.com
The WSJ's sample of recruiters
generated significantly different rankings than the university deans surveyed
for the US News rankings --- http://www.usnews.com/usnews/edu/beyond/apps/gradmba.htm
In my comments below, I do not want to
take sides on any school's ranking in either of the studies. However, I do
want to raise some questions about inconsistencies within the WSJ's
rankings that might account for some of the differences between the WSJ
versus the US News rankings. Keep in mind that there were two
different survey populations. The WSJ sample contained
"corporate recruiters" whereas the US News sample contained
"university deans."
Stanford (Rank
1 versus 45) and MIT (Rank 5 versus 38)
The WSJ's overall Top 10 does not include most of the US
News' overall Top 10 and vice versa. For example, the top US
News school is Stanford University at Rank 1. Stanford ranks 45th in the WSJ
outcome in spite of Stanford's significantly higher average Year 2000 GMAT
scores (730) compared with all other schools of business in the U.S. Top
GMAT averages are among the main reasons US News respondents
(deans) ranked Stanford as the top school of business. The WSJ
includes SMU in the overall Top 10 and then criticizes SMU on Page R7 of the
Special Edition for needing to "upgrade the lower tier of students."
In other words, the WSJ is saying that SMU is
better than Stanford but that SMU should become more like Stanford. Does
this make any sense?
Purdue at Rank 6 is a WSJ
favorite purportedly (Special Edition Page R7) because of analytical skills and
engineering backgrounds of many incoming graduate students. That's a WSJ
in-your-face slap at the famous MIT university (downgraded to Rank 38 by the WSJ
from Rank 5 by US News). MIT is the top ranking engineering school
according to the US News rankings and Purdue at Rank 13 at http://www.usnews.com/usnews/edu/beyond/gradrank/eng/gdengt1.htm.
My point here is not that recruiters in the WSJ sample did not favor
Purdue over MIT. My point is that those favoring Purdue must have done so
for reasons other than those supplied by the WSJ to support having Purdue
at Rank 8 and MIT at Rank 38. I doubt that MIT's students are that
seriously inferior to Purdue students in terms of "analytical skills"
and "engineering."
One of my reasons for doubting of the WSJ
analysis of survey outcomes is the "Pay Factor." Why do most of
the graduates from the WSJ's top-ranked schools have such low "Pay
Factor" rankings relative to the top "Pay factor" schools below?
When the top products do not have the top prices, it would seem that the WSJ's
Lawrence Rout and the rest of us would sit back and ponder why.
The
Pay Factor
Business schools in The Wall Street
Journal/Harris Interactive top 50 that reported the highest and lowest average
salaries for Class of 2000 graduates
Ten Highest
The Wall Street Journal
Special Report: "Top Business Schools," April 30, 2001
http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB988148379552037498.htm
School |
Salary |
Signing
Bonus |
Guaranteed
Year-End Bonus |
1. Harvard
University |
$99,247 |
$19,690 |
N.A. |
2. Stanford
University |
97,876 |
15,355 |
$38,582 |
3. London
Business School |
95,232 |
23,650 |
17,310 |
4. IMD |
93,000 |
21,000 |
N.A. |
5. Massachusetts
Institute of Technology |
92,343 |
23,495 |
33,517 |
6. University of
Pennsylvania (Wharton) |
92,081 |
22,722 |
N.A. |
7. Northwestern
University |
92,000 |
23,000 |
24,000 |
8. Dartmouth
College |
91,223 |
21,523 |
46,488 |
9. Insead |
91,000 |
N.A. |
N.A. |
10. University of
California, Berkeley |
90,000 |
19,800 |
35,000 |
My Diploma Wish
Factor
An even greater
inconsistency in the WSJ conclusions versus the data is
revealed in the "Recruiters' Favorites" at http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB988220429769371192.htm
(I don't know why there are only nine instead of ten favorites.)
The WSJ claims
Specifically,
we wanted to get the opinions of the people who know the schools the best --
corporate recruiters. We thought the business world's view of M.B.A. programs
would be of crucial importance to the schools, their students and the
companies that hire them.
However, the resulting WSJ's
overall Top 10 are not consistent with the Top 10 outcomes below.
When the WSJ's respondents ( recruiters) were asked which school they would
choose to get an M.B.A. degree, these were the ranked outcomes:
The Wall Street Journal
Special Report: "Top Business Schools," April 30, 2001 http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB988143448957418118.htm
Rank |
What
school would you choose for a MBA degree? |
No.
of Nominations |
1. |
Dartmouth
College |
75 |
2. |
Stanford
University |
48 |
3. |
Harvard
University |
44 |
4. |
Carnegie
Mellon University |
33 |
5. |
University
of Pennsylvania (Wharton) |
32 |
6. |
Northwestern
University |
30 |
7. |
Yale
University |
27 |
8. |
University
Of Chicago |
26 |
9. |
University
Of Michigan |
23 |
Another confusing outcome is that some
schools in the WSJ overall Top 10 do not rate high on any specialty.
I would suspect a Top 10 to be highest in at least one specialty area. The
specialty area outcomes were as follows:
Recognition for
Academic Excellence
When recruiters were asked to
nominate one or two schools they believe excel or have reputations in these
academic specialties, these schools were named most often at http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB988143448957418118.htm
Rank |
School |
No.
of Nominations |
Accounting |
1. |
University
of Pennsylvania (Wharton) |
86 |
2. |
University
of Chicago |
71 |
3. |
University
of Texas at Austin |
36 |
4. |
New
York University |
29 |
General
Management |
1. |
Harvard
University |
183 |
2. |
Dartmouth
College |
108 |
3. |
Northwestern
University |
81 |
4. |
University
of Michigan |
62 |
E-Commerce |
1. |
Stanford
University |
129 |
2. |
Carnegie
Mellon University |
95 |
3. |
Massachusetts
Institute of Technology |
91 |
4. |
University
of California at Berkeley |
46 |
Finance |
1. |
University
of Pennsylvania (Wharton) |
253 |
2. |
University
of Chicago |
191 |
3. |
Columbia
University |
52 |
4. |
Carnegie
Mellon University |
47 |
Information
Technology |
1. |
Massachusetts
Institute of Technology |
169 |
2. |
Carnegie
Mellon University |
109 |
3. |
Stanford
University |
67 |
4. |
University
of Texas at Austin |
38 |
International
Business |
1. |
Thunderbird |
107 |
2. |
Harvard
University |
86 |
3. |
University
of Pennsylvania |
56 |
4. |
Columbia
University |
38 |
Marketing |
1. |
Northwestern
University |
297 |
2. |
University
of Michigan |
54 |
3. |
Harvard
University |
47 |
4. |
Dartmouth
College |
41 |
Operations
Management |
1. |
Carnegie
Mellon University |
116 |
2. |
Massachusetts
Institute of Technology |
102 |
3. |
Purdue
University |
53 |
4. |
University
of Michigan |
48 |
Quantitative
Analysis |
1. |
University
of Chicago |
137 |
2. |
Massachusetts
Institute of Technology |
129 |
3. |
Carnegie
Mellon University |
96 |
4. |
University
of Pennsylvania (Wharton) |
79 |
Strategy |
1. |
Harvard
University |
207 |
2. |
Dartmouth
College |
73 |
3. |
Stanford
University |
66 |
4. |
Northwestern
University |
54 |
Bob Jensen's
Questions
These WSJ versus US News
outcomes vividly demonstrate that business school rankings, like beauty, lie in
the eyes of the beholding publisher. It is possible to get
"Routed" and "Re-Routed" when aggregating and
reporting the results of surveys.
Why are there so many internal and
external inconsistencies in this study? Why didn't the WSJ attempt
to explain the differences in US News rankings with the WSJ
overall rankings? What more should have been done before publishing the
rankings?
- Could it be that recruiters consider
obtaining graduates from elite schools as Stanford to be more competitive
and expensive such that many WSJ respondents tend to prefer schools
where there is a higher probability of hiring success at lower starting
salaries? Could it be that a higher proportion of Stanford GSB
graduates prefer small startup business firms Silicon Valley vis-a-vis large
corporations recruiting out of the Midwest and East? Could
these and other factors explain why WSJ respondents themselves
indicated that they would prefer to have degrees from Stanford but rated
Stanford low (45th) as a recruiting school for their companies?
In my opinion, corporate recruiting for MBA stars is a bit like
NFL recruiting of college players. Recruiting football stars
from leading teams such as Nebraska, Oklahoma, Florida State, USC, Michigan,
Penn State, and Notre Dame is highly competitive, and the top players are
hovered over by all teams. NFL recruiters have their small-school
favorites where they search for gems that NFL owners are not all pouncing on
at the same time. But having favorite small-time schools does not
imply that these schools can beat the elite teams.
- Could it be that a low proportion of
"Corporate Recruiters" were headquartered in the western United
States? Were a high proportion of the recruiters in the sample less
familiar with recruiting in the West where Stanford is the king?
Related biases could also arise in the responses comparing schools of
business outside the United States.
- Since recruiters are usually looking
for specialists (accounting, finance, marketing, etc.), why is it that some
of the WSJ's overall Top 10 did not score high on any specialty?
This inconsistency was not analyzed by the WSJ?
Was any effort made by Lawrence Rout to
discuss inconsistencies between his WSJ rankings by corporate recruiters
and the US News rankings by school of business deans? For example,
was the AACSB school of business accrediting agency consulted by WSJ
analysts? Was Stanford given a chance to question why they were downgraded
from Rank 1 to Rank 45 before the Special Edition went to press? Were MIT
and Purdue faculty consulted in an attempt to explain Purdue's Rank 6 versus
MIT's Rank 38? Perhaps Stanford, MIT, and Purdue faculty would have found
some serious flaws in either the WSJ or US News outcomes that
explain such differences. Why weren't major differences
between WSJ versus US News even mentioned in the WSJ's
Special Edition?
Personally, I doubt
whether either the WSJ or the US News school of business rankings
would ever have been accepted for publication by an academic research journal
having rigorous referees that we, as professors, must do battle with before
publishing our results. The reason is that we must explain inconsistencies
rather than ignore them! Questioning about inconsistencies and research
rigor is the number one responsibility of a journal editor and his/her team of
academic referees.
My bottom line conclusion is that there
are more inconsistencies in the WSJ survey than in the US News
survey.
- I find it internally inconsistent
that WSJ respondents had highly different rankings in terms of
choices where they wish they had their own MBA degrees versus their choices
for recruitment of students. Experts should have been consulted before
going to press.
- I find it externally inconsistent to
assign low overall rankings to programs whose graduates command the highest
salaries and signing bonuses. Possible reasons for this should have
been analyzed by the WSJ.
Trinity University colleagues might
want to note that Nancy Cooley is Phil Cooley's sister-in-law (I think).
Her article below is entitled "Toward More Effective Instructional Uses of
Technology: The Shift to Virtual Learning," by Michelle A. Johnston
and Nancy Cooley
Below is a description of the
November/December 2001 issue of The Technology Source, a free, refereed,
e-journal at http://ts.mivu.org/default.asp?show=issue&id=45
Note the change in our URL. UNC-Chapel
Hill has transferred ownership of The Technology Source to the Michigan Virtual
University. I have agreed to remain as editor-in-chief and MVU has agreed to
continue publishing TS as a free service to the educational community.
Michigan Virtual University is a
remarkable institution as you can see from my interview with the president,
David Spencer, in the September-October issue (see http://horizon.unc.edu/TS/default.asp?show=article&id=921
). David sees TS as an integral tool in assisting MVU implement its mission.
Also note that we are expanding our use
of information technology tools to enhance the e-journal features of TS. As John
Walber and Jonathan Finkelstein describe in their letter to the editor at http://ts.mivu.org:8000/default.asp?show=article&id=972
, the authors of all articles in this issue will use OfficeHoursLive (OHL)
during November to chat with you about the topic of their articles. OHL is a
powerful, easy-to-use, Web-based virtual classroom designed to enable
instructors to speak and interact with students live online via a microphone
connected to your computer (no long-distance charges). The office hour schedule
is posted at http://ts.mivu.org/default.asp?show=webchats&issue=45
Check the schedule, drop in, chat with the authors, and experience another tool
that facilitates communication at a distance. Can’t make it? We have added a
button to our interactive options titled “webchat”; click on that button and
you will be taken to the chat archive for that article.
Please forward this announcement to
colleagues who are interested in using information technology tools more
effectively in their work.
As always, we seek illuminating
articles that will assist educators as they face the challenge of integrating
information technology tools in teaching and in managing educational
organizations. Please review our call for manuscripts at http://ts.mivu.org/default.asp?show=call
and send me a note if you would like to contribute such an article.
Many thanks.
Jim --
James L. Morrison morrison@unc.edu
Professor of Educational Leadership CB 3500 Peabody Hall Editor,
The Technology Source UNC-Chapel Hill http://ts.mivu.org
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3500 Editor Emeritus,
On the Horizon Phone: 919 962-2517 http://www.camfordpublishing.com
Fax: 919 962-1693
IN THIS ISSUE:
In this issue's first case study,
Colette Mazzucelli and Roger Boston illustrate their use of Internet technology
in an international seminar on conflict prevention in the Balkans. Through a
combination of innovative Web development, chat tools, and streaming
audio-visuals, the organizers sought to engage seminar participants in an
ambitious, cross-cultural study of the factors leading to ethno-political
violence. As they discuss the goals of the course, the authors offer a timely
model of virtual learning in a global context; as they illustrate the various
components of their course design, they provide a range of resources that all
promote a highly interactive, dialogue-driven pedagogy. See http://ts.mivu.org/default.asp?show=article&id=949
Most educators agree that creating a
technology-rich, student-centered learning environment means more than just
making an existing syllabus available on the Internet--but questions remain
regarding what "more" entails. In our second case study, Marina
Milner-Bolotin and Marilla D. Svinicki offer a few suggestions: instructors can
adapt their syllabuses to target specific student anxieties, incorporate
discussion forums to encourage varied and extensive participation, and employ
technological tools that personalize homework assignments to each student. Such
advances not only resolve technological difficulties, but also address timeless
pedagogical concerns. See http://ts.mivu.org/default.asp?show=article&id=909
In this issue's third case study, Donna
Wood describes how a simple simulation enabled her students (a group of
preservice teachers) to develop their technological skills and to enhance their
pedagogical repertoire. Simulating participation in the Oklahoma Governor's Task
Force for Technology in Education, Wood's students used Web sources to develop a
plan, a curriculum, and instructional materials for helping public school
teachers to integrate technology into their work. The students also had a choice
to produce a multimedia Web site that would subsequently be accessible to any
public school teacher in the state of Oklahoma. See http://ts.mivu.org/default.asp?show=article&id=910
With several years of experience
teaching college-level German at UNC-Chapel Hill, Scott Windham knows that
students learn best when they engage with foreign languages in realistic
contexts. The availability of real-life materials in written and audio format on
the Internet, Windham reports in our fourth case study, represents a true
innovation in language instruction, and his own use of these resources gives a
compelling illustration of this point. Having seen an enthusiastic response from
his students, he also notes that student skills in at least two of the four
critical areas of foreign language study--listening and reading--have improved.
See http://ts.mivu.org/default.asp?show=article&id=892
In our final case study, Maggie McVay
Lynch reports on how she combated several persistent problems plaguing the
distance learning courses at her university. Familiar with the high drop out
rates (and low re-enrollment rates) for online courses, she set out to discover
what she could do about them. Lynch created a course to prepare students for the
distance-learning environment, requiring them to analyze differences between
distance and traditional learning, reflect on their academic responsibilities in
the new environment, and use technological tools. Students also identified their
learning styles and psychological types in order to build plans for adaptation
to the online environment. The results? The attrition rate of online students
was reduced to an average of 15% and re-enrollment increased to 90%. See http://ts.mivu.org/default.asp?show=article&id=901
Michelle A. Johnston and Nancy Cooley's
commentary offers some clarity on why the shift toward virtual learning is both
confusing and thrilling for many educators. As Johnston and Cooley point out,
instructors must develop their own technological expertise and find new ways of
teaching if technology is to become transparent and student learning is to
become central. In response to demands from contemporary students, their
parents, and their future employers, teachers must develop a pedagogy that
fosters a technologically astute citizenry. Johnston and Cooley describe the
sociological as well as technological shifts driving today's pedagogical
transformations. See http://ts.mivu.org/default.asp?show=article&id=869
In a commentary interview with James
Morrison, Fathom President and CEO Ann Kirschner outlines the collaboration
between Fathom and Columbia University. Through this collaboration, Fathom is
currently building an international learning network of universities, libraries,
museums, and other educational institutions. Such extensive partnerships,
Kirschner observes, will not only revolutionize education by expanding
accessibility to high-quality course content, but will also serve as a valuable
tool for institutions seeking a broader market for their programs. For a
provocative glimpse into the future of education, read on at http://ts.mivu.org/default.asp?show=article&id=896
How can technology training in higher
education be made more cost-efficient as well as more time-efficient? Addressing
this crucial question in our faculty and staff development feature, David P.
Diaz proposes some key concepts for faculty and administrators: pedogogy-based
training, an emphasis on context-specific applications, an ethic of
collaboration, and a flexible combination of both virtual and face-to-face
interaction. Such a fourfold strategy, Diaz notes, would save valuable resources
by streamlining the process, thereby making technology integration a much more
accessible goal for institutions. See http://ts.mivu.org/default.asp?show=article&id=924
Mary Harrsch recommends an excellent
new tool called Dragon Web Surveys. For a reasonable price, Dragon Web enables
non-programmers to design full-featured Web-based surveys. Users can define a
single response question with either a radio button or a drop-down list, a
multiple response question with check boxes, a value response question for a
numeric response, a text response question with space for a short or long text
response, or a Likert scale question where respondents rate items on a numeric
scale. The software also offers different security options and multiuser remote
capability, and it outshines its predecessors. Still not sold? Read Harrsch's
full report to find out how she took advantage of a free 30-day downloadable
demo. See http://ts.mivu.org/default.asp?show=article&id=919
In his review of our spotlight site,
Stephen Downes introduces Technology Source readers to Harvard University's
Research Matters. The site not only offers an impressive range of accessible
research from Harvard faculty, but provides such information in a highly
polished, easy-to-navigate format reminiscent of the finest commercial
e-journals. In its fine balance of content and design, Research Matters provides
a worthy standard for bridging the gap between the university and the general
public. After a first browse, researchers and web designers alike will find
themselves making further visits. See http://ts.mivu.org/default.asp?show=article&id=964
"Toward More Effective
Instructional Uses of Technology: The Shift to Virtual Learning," by
Michelle A. Johnston and Nancy Cooley, The Technology Source,
November/December 2001 --- http://ts.mivu.org/default.asp?show=article&id=869
The early portions of the article are
not quoted here.
New instructional
models
New technologies
within virtual learning environments are forcing pedagogical shifts—shifts
from the teachers controlling the teaching to the students controlling the
learning (Johnston, 2000). Not all students or faculty members are comfortable
with this shift in control, and some continue to prefer more traditional
models. Yet technology allows the exploration of multiple learning paths and
different learning preferences by both students and instructors. Examining and
preparing for a movement toward student control of learning is a daunting
challenge, requiring extensive preparation by both professors and students.
However, as Haddad (1999) suggests, change is worth it because
technology-based innovative teaching and learning strategies can both enhance
cognition and improve instructional management. Supported by powerful
technologies, students can become responsible managers of their instruction,
and instructors can become facilitators and co-learners. Ultimately,
assessment and learning tasks can become more performance-based (Tinzman,
Rasmussen, and Foertsch, 1999).
Two instructional
models that have promise in a virtual learning environment are project-based
learning and student-led inquiry. In the first model, project-based learning,
instructors select the project or problem, and in the second, the control
shifts to students who construct their own research questions:
1. Project-based or
problem-based learning, which originated in the sciences, has applications in
all disciplines. In this model, students and their instructors examine complex
problems and construct new knowledge to solve problems using real-life
resources and high-performance technology.
2. Student-led
inquiry or research asks students to construct significant questions and to
design strategies for answering those questions, presenting their findings,
and evaluating their products and processes. The processes tend to be
authentic, requiring higher levels of cognition, and relate both to real life
issues and themes across disciplines. For example, an ecology instructor who
wanted to design authentic and real-life learning opportunities for the
students formed a partnership with neighboring communities in a regional
groundwater quality and pond study. The students designed studies which
culminated in reports to the appropriate partnering community organizations.
Because they reflected specific communities' needs and students' findings, the
study designs, procedures, and reports were all different.
Both student-led
inquiry and project-based learning provide methodologies for virtual learning
environments in which students take charge of their learning while the
instructor facilitates. Within these learning environments, technology and
instructional models become intertwined and support constructivist principles.
Conclusion
Technology, whether
or not we are ready for it, is changing the way we work. Contemporary
students, who are more technologically savvy than those of the past, demand
pedagogical change. Furthermore, the societal imperative, expressed by the
expectations of their parents, communities, and their future employers,
promotes that change by asking for a technologically astute citizenry.
Educators at all levels, and particularly at the postsecondary level, have to
examine the instructional environment, shifts resulting from technology,
phases of technology integration, and models of instructional practices along
a continuum. The continuum moves from the automation level of technology
integration through a transition level to data-driven virtual learning, which
supports new and emerging models of instruction.
Technology has
already changed the educational environment in which we teach in ways that
instructors must recognize and address. Expectations regarding the role of
instructional technology will continue to grow as new technologies emerge.
Concomitantly, new instructors will create and implement new pedagogical
models that will better capture students' mastery of course objectives made
possible by high-powered technology.
References
Haddad, W. (1999).
TechKnowLogia: It is about knowledge and learning. Unpublished manuscript.
The Milken Exchange
on Educational Technology and Peter D. Hart Research Associates (1999).
Transforming learning through technology. Santa Monica, CA: Milken Family
Foundation.
Ravitz, J., Becker,
H., & Wong, Y. (2000). Constructivist compatible beliefs and practices
among U.S. teachers (Rep. No. 4). Irvine: Center for Research on Information
Technology and Services. Retrieved May 16, 2001, from http://www.crito.uci.edu/tlc/findings/report4/.
Shank, R. C. (January
2000). A vision of education in the 21st century. Technology Horizons in
Education (T.H.E.) Journal, 27(6), 42-45.
Tapscott, D. (1999).
Growing-up digital. New York: McGraw Hill Professional Publishing.
Tinzmann, M. B.,
Rasmussen, C., & Foertsch, M. (1999). Engaged and worthwhile learning. In
Fine, C. (Ed.), Learning with technology: Participants' manual (pp. 5-18). Oak
Brook, IL: North Central Regional Educational Laboratory.
Valdez, G.,
McNabb, M., Foertsch, M., Anderson, M., Hawkes, M., & Raack, L. (1999).
Computer-based technology and learning: Evolving uses and expectations. Oak
Brook, IL: North Central Regional Educational Laboratory.
Bob Jensen's Threads on Accounting
Fraud, Forensic Accounting, Securities Fraud, and White Collar Crime --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
New:
Bob Jensen's Threads
on Fees and Choosing Accountants, Financial Advisors, and Consultants --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fees.htm
What Students
Will Never Forget!
Forwarded by Don Ramsey
Here is a selection from Bailey
White's book, "Mama Makes Up Her Mind and Other Dangers of Southern
Living", about a substitute teacher at her school who had lost an ear in
an automobile accident.
Mr. Harris has a
pair of glasses with an artificial ear attached to the temple. It matches
his real ear perfectly; and as long as he keeps the glasses on,
everything is fine." "....
Mr. Harris is a
vigorous teacher. He doesn't just wander around the classroom with a
piece of chalk in his hand and mumble. He gets excited about physics.
He yells. He bangs on the desk. He scribbles wildly on the chalkboard.
And invariably, in his pedagogical heat, he will forget himself for an
instant and whip off his glasses. The ear comes off too. It is an
unforgettable moment.
Whatever Mr. Harris
is saying when that ear comes off is seared into memory forever. It's
the ultimate audiovisual aid.
Cheers,
Donald D. Ramsey,
University of the District of Columbia
Note from Bob Jensen:
Somehow I think that everything the instructor said before the ear fell off
would be instantly forgotten.
Forwarded by Dr. Bernards
WHO SHOULD YOU MARRY?
You got to find somebody who likes the same
stuff.
Like, if you like sports, she should like it
that
you like sports, and she should keep the chips
and dip
coming.
--Alan, age 10
No person really decides before they grow up
who
they're going to marry. God decides it all way
before, and you get to find out later who
you're stuck
with.
--Mindy, age 10
WHAT IS THE RIGHT AGE TO GET
MARRIED?
Twenty-three is the best age because you
know the
person FOREVER by then.
--Camille, age 10
No age is good to get married at. You got to be
a
fool to get married.
--Freddie, age 6
HOW CAN A STRANGER TELL IF TWO
PEOPLE ARE MARRIED?
You might have to guess, based on
whether they
seem to be yelling at the same kids..
--Derrick, age 8
WHAT DO YOU THINK YOUR MOM AND
DAD HAVE IN COMMON?
Both don't want any more kids.
--Lori, age 8
WHAT DO MOST PEOPLE DO ON A
DATE?
Dates are for having fun, and people should use
them to get to know each other. Even boys have
something to say if you listen long enough.
--Lynnette, age 8
On the first date, they just tell each other
lies,
and that usually gets them interested enough to
go
for a second date.
--Martin, age 10
WHAT WOULD YOU DO ON A FIRST
DATE THAT WAS TURNING SOUR?
I'd run home and play dead. The next day
I would
call all the newspapers and make sure they
wrote about
me in all the dead columns.
--Craig, age 9
WHEN IS IT OKAY TO KISS SOMEONE?
When they're rich.
--Pam, age 7
The law says you have to be eighteen, so I
wouldn't want to mess with that.
--Curt, age 7
The rule goes like this: If you kiss someone,
then
you should marry them and have kids with them.
It's the right thing to do.
--Howard, age 8
IS IT BETTER TO BE SINGLE OR
MARRIED?
I don't know which is better, but I'll tell you
one thing. I'm never going to have sex with my
wife.
I don't want to be all grossed out.
--Theodore, age 8
It's better for girls to be single but not for
boys. Boys need someone to clean up after them.
--Anita, age 9
HOW WOULD THE WORLD BE DIFFERENT
IF PEOPLE DIDN'T GET MARRIED?
There sure would be a lot of kids to explain,
wouldn't there?
--Kelvin, age 8
"And
the #1 Favorite is........"
HOW WOULD YOU MAKE A MARRIAGE WORK?
Tell your wife that she looks pretty even if
she
looks like a truck.
--Ricky, age 10
(I would read the story entitled The Ugly Duckling to
Ricky. Wives somehow turn
into swans when they think the time is right Ricky.)
Forwarded by Dick Haar
A group of geography
students studied the Seven Wonders of the World. At the end of that section,
the students were asked to list what they considered to be the Seven Wonders
of the World.
Though there was some
disagreement, the following got the most votes:
1. Egypt's Great
Pyramids
2. Taj Mahal
3. Grand Canyon
4. Panama Canal
5. Empire State Building
6. St. Peter's Basilica
7. China's Great Wall
While gathering the
votes, the teacher noted that one student, a quiet girl, hadn't turned in her
paper yet. So she asked the girl if she was having trouble with her list. The
quiet girl replied, "Yes, a little. I couldn't quite make up my mind
because there were so many."
The teacher said,
"Well, tell us what you have, and maybe we can help." The girl
hesitated, then read, "I think the Seven Wonders of the World are:"
1. to touch
2. to taste
3. to see
4. to hear
She hesitated a
little, and then,
5. to run
6. to laugh
7. and to love
May you be reminded
today of those things which are truly wondrous.
--- Author Unknown
---
And
that's the way it was on November 7, 2001 with a little help from my friends.
In
March 2000, Forbes named AccountantsWorld.com as the Best Website on the
Web --- http://accountantsworld.com/.
Some top accountancy links --- http://accountantsworld.com/category.asp?id=Accounting
For
accounting news, I prefer AccountingWeb at http://www.accountingweb.com/
Another
leading accounting site is AccountingEducation.com at http://www.accountingeducation.com/
Paul
Pacter maintains the best international accounting standards and news Website at
http://www.iasplus.com/
How
stuff works --- http://www.howstuffworks.com/
Bob
Jensen's video helpers for MS Excel, MS Access, and other helper videos are at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/
Accompanying documentation can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm
and http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
Professor
Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134 Email: rjensen@trinity.edu


November
1, 2001
Quotes of the Week
Forwarded by Bev Koebrich [auntiebev@mediaone.net]
Subject: You
may cry, but U have to double click and go here, it's well worth the trip
(give it 45 seconds to load the song, be patient)
http://bayridge.com/tribute.swf
No words to quote: The
perspective from above (a photograph for cockpits of U.S. war planes) --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/temp/FromAbove.htm
Forwarded by Kenneth Johnson
"The
federal income tax system is a disgrace to the human race."
Jimmy Carter
"The
hardest thing in the world to understand is the income tax."
Albert Einstein
"We have
long had death and taxes as the two standards of inevitability. But there are
those who believe that death is the preferable of the two. As one man said,
'At least there's one advantage about death; it doesn't get worse every time
Congress meets."
Erwin N. Griswold
"I can't
make a damn thing out of this tax problem. I listen to one side and they seem
right, and then I talk to the other side and they seem just as right, and here
I am, where I started. God, what a job!"
Warren G. Harding
"Any one
may so arrange his affairs that his taxes shall be as low as possible; he is
not bound to choose that pattern which will best pay the treasury; there is
not even a patriotic duty to increase one's taxes."
Judge Learned Hand
Laurie McAulay from the U.K. added the
following quotations:
"Accounting
was born without notice and reared in neglect."
(Sterling, 1979)
"Accounting
performs the same function in a modern society which witchcraft performed in a
more primitive one."
(Gambling, 1987, Accounting, Organizations and Society)
On a more serious note:
The quality of
human life is much too rich and the nature of our relationships with each
other much too complex for any system of thought to dictate from a position of
privilege."
(Arrington and Francis, 1989, Critical Perspectives on Accounting).
Possibly my favourite, however, is:
"My third
disappointment in this study is that I have been unable to say anything
definitive, or even mildly useful, on the subject of transfer prices ... the
issue remains a perennial puzzle for academics, while practitioners continue
to cope. I wish the best of good fortune to the next researcher to tackle this
problem."
(Vancil, 1979).
"If someone
walks rather than drives his car to the corner store to get a loaf of bread, we
consider that person a good user of technology precisely because s/he didn't use
it. Being a balanced technology user requires knowing when to use it and when
not to."
From THEN WHAT? A FUNQUIRY INTO THE NATURE OF TECHNOLOGY, HUMAN TRANSFORMATION,
AND MARSHALL MCLUHAN (As quoted in Infobits on October 26, 2001)
The FBI's Internet Fraud and
Complaint Center (IFCC FBI)
To thwart fraud on the Internet and terror in general, check in and/or report to
http://www1.ifccfbi.gov/index.asp
One of our local television stations in
San Antonio recommended the Private Citizen web site for
reducing the amount of junk phone calls and junk mail that you would like to
halt. The Wall Street Journal has also recommended this web site. http://www.privatecitizen.com/
Excel Tips and
Videos (Pivot Tables and Charts)
Did you know that Microsoft Corporation presents some of its financial history
in Excel pivot tables? You can download the Excel Workbooks containing
pivot tables from http://www.microsoft.com/msft/tools.htm
I prepared a video
on how to download and use the Microsoft pivot tables. The video can be
downloaded from PivotMicrosoft.rm
I also have a video
illustrating how to make a pivot table --- PivotTable01.rm
In addition, I provide a video
illustrating how to make a pivot chart --- PivotChart01.rm
Some other videos
are located at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/
Excel Tips and
Videos (Goal Seek)
This is a nice feature used by Dr. Hubbard and me when we derived the
yield curves consistent with interest rate swap values in Example 5 in Appendix
B of FAS 133. Both a narrative in 133ex05.htm
and an Excel workbook 133ex05a.xls
illustrating the derivation of yield curves can be found at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/
I prepared a video illustrating the use
of the Goal Seek utility in Excel at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/acct5342/
The goal seek video is named ExcelGoalSeek.rm
Excel Tips and
Videos (Conditional Formatting)
This is a nice article discussing a feature of Excel that I never tried
before reading this article.
"Vigilant Spreadsheets, by Charles
Kelliher and Lois S. Mahoney (both authors are faculty members at the University
of Central Florida), Journal of Accountancy, November 2001, pp. 41-45 ---
http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/nov2001/kelliher.htm
Would you like to be
able to scan your company’s financial operations spreadsheet and instantly
see which departments are over budget or behind schedule or which accounts
receivable are past due? There’s an easy way to do that in Excel, which can
automatically flag cells that meet most any condition you establish. You can
set the cells to display different formatting flags—colors, font styles,
shading, patterns, underlining—with each custom format identifying a
specific financial condition. For example, you can program Excel to flag costs
that are over budget by displaying them as red; under-budget costs may appear
blue.
The Excel function
that does this job is conditional formatting. What makes the function
especially handy is that it’s not static—that is, when the data in the
worksheet change, the cells instantly reflect that by taking on the
appropriate formatting.
To set up the
function, first highlight the cells you want to include. Then click on Format,
Conditional Formatting, which brings up the dialog box shown in exhibit 1 (of
the article).
I prepared a video illustrating the use
of the Conditional Format utility in Excel at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/acct5342/
The conditional formatting video is named ExcelConditionalFormat.rm
Bob Jensen's Excel Tips and other
tutorials are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/busn2311/helpers1.htm
Innovative Pedagogy
of the Week (This may have potential in various courses on campus.)
I hope a video can be obtained for subsequent viewing.
A winner of the Pulitzer Prize will
write his novel online while surfers watch --- http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,47961,00.html
Live, from Florida
State University, it's Writing a Novel in Real Time.
At least, that's what
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Robert Olen Butler is trying to do with his
Inside Creative Writing program that launches Tuesday.
Butler, who teaches
at the university, will begin with a simple concept for a story when he starts
writing at 9 p.m. (EST).
"My project ...
involves the sharing of a fully elaborated, moment-to-moment act of personal
intimacy formerly found only behind the veil of private life, the act of
creating a piece of literary fiction," Butler said.
The writing will be
viewable online and on a Florida educational channel for approximately three
weeks.
The story idea
will come from "one of the postcards from his collection of hundreds and
(he will) build a first-person story that picks up the voice of the
written message he finds on the back."
Butler said the idea
is allow the reader to learn from the creative decisions as they happen.
Each episode will
conclude with the author answering questions e-mailed to him during the
broadcast. "I won't have the chance, even unconsciously, to re-plan the
story," he said. "I want the whole process to be visible in real
time on the Internet."
From Syllabus e-News on October 30,
2001
Wisconsin Picks
Instant Messaging Platform
The University of
Wisconsin has licensed the Jabber Communications Platform to provide instant
messaging (IM) applications for its 80,000-plus students, faculty and staff.
Jabber, an IM applications developer, will provide the real-time
communications platform, which can also be extended to provide messaging
between students and users of other messaging services like Yahoo or MSN. The
IM services will be delivered via the Jabber Instant Messenger client for
Windows, developed to ensure the performance of widespread deployment of IM.
Roger Hanson, a technologist with the University of Wisconsin, said the
platform would provide "everything we think our students and faculty will
need for spontaneous IM communications."
For more
information, visit: http://www.wisc.edu
To read about Amy Dunbar's first
experience using AOL's Instant Messaging while teaching an online tax course, go
to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book01q3.htm#dunbar
From Syllabus e-News on October 30,
2001
Michigan Provides Dow
Jones Service to B-School
Dow Jones Newswires
said it would provide its flagship equities information service, Dow Jones
News Service, to the trading room at the University of Michigan Business
School. The school's Trading Room is designed to give students a realistic
view of operations on an actual trading floor. Students are required to manage
a real investment fund, combining skills acquired in traditional courses with
the latest financial technology to develop strategies for portfolio
management. Dow Jones news service offers quick, in-depth reports on
everything that affects the stock markets. Richard Sloan, a Michigan professor
of accounting and finance, said "students now have the opportunity to
analyze how security prices react to the release of new information using the
same information source as the Wall Street professionals responsible for
setting prices."
For more information,
visit: http://www.bus.umich.edu
Campus Pipeline
Unveils Content Management for Higher Ed
Campus Pipeline, Inc.
introduced what it called the first enterprise content management solution
designed for higher education. The Campus Pipeline Luminis Content Management
Suite 2.0 is the product of a collaboration between the company, Drexel
University, Pepperdine University, and Documentum, a provider of enterprise
content management. The software is intended to automate and administer the
management of tens of thousands of Web pages, documents, and other digital
resources, from multiple contributors, both inside the campus and in the
public domain. Drexel chief information officer John A. Bielec said the
collaboration allowed the school to "customize the first content
management suite for higher education and help many universities address
similar needs."
Bob Jensen's threads on course
authoring systems can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/290wp/290wp.htm
"But Enron
analysts must have the energy and persistence of Talmudic scholars to penetrate
the company's cryptic financials. In effect, Enron's troubles were hiding in
plain sight." See ARTICLE ONE quoted below.
A Message to My
Students on How This Relates to Accountancy:
Below you will find two of the most
important short articles that I will assign next semester in ACCT 5341
Accounting Theory. These are articles about the importance of the
"tone at the top" in terms of ethics and information credibility.
We will watch a video from the FASB entitled "Financially
Correct" that, in interviews with top CEOs and investors like Warren
Buffett, stresses how the most important thing top management can do for
investors is to set the tone at the top in terms of information credibility and
quality of earnings reporting.
After viewing that video, we will turn
to one of the largest flagships of multinational corporations --- Enron
Corporation. Reality will set in when we witness the low-quality earnings
reporting and low-quality tone at the top with a double dealing "senior
officer" (CFO, Andrew Fastow) of Enron. Reality will set in when we
study FAS 133 on how to account for financial instrument derivatives and then
witness how these derivatives were accounted for in a murky way by Enron.
Reality will set in when we consider the dependence auditing firms on the
retention of enormous clients like Enron and the clout that such clients have on
critical audit decisions.
One article below asks "Where has
Enron's board of directors been through all of this?"
I would instead ask, where was Enron's Audit Committee in all of this?
Derivative financial instruments in Enron were intended to be hedges and not
speculations. FAS 133 only allows special accounting treatment for those
that qualify as hedges. Why did losses mount if these derivatives were
designated as hedges? I don't have answers for this, but it will be
interesting to see if we can dig up some answers.
I suggest that you listen to the
following audio clip that I recorded in a FAS 133 training workshop that I
organized a couple of years ago in NYC. Mike Koegler is an executive with
Chase Bank:
Audio
of Mike Koegler of Chase Bank KOEGLER3.mp3
Clearly, Enron could not get FAS 133
hedge accounting treatment using derivatives that it sold to itself.
Doesn't it follow that Enron also should not be dealing in derivatives in a $1.4
billion derivatives trading company organized and heavily owned by Enron's
CFO? LJM is not mentioned in Enron's annual reports to date, including the
Year 2000 annual report (at least I could not find any mention of LJM in a word
search of annual reports to date). Links to the annual reports are
provided to date. Nowhere in those annual reports are Mr. Fastow's
related party transactions mentioned. Enron's press releases on this
matter appear after the media somehow picked up on Mr. Fastow's related party
transactions. He belatedly resigned (in July of 2001) from his
partnerships that were exposed over a year ago in the media. Enron now has
a new CFO
If you want to listen to other FAS 133
audio clips that I recorded from presentations by Mike Koegler and other FAS 133
experts, go to the following documents:
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/000overview/mp3/133intro.htm
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/000overview/mp3/133summ.htm
The SEC has launched an investigation
into related party transactions at Enron. In particular, Enron's October
22, 2001 response reads as follows at http://www.enron.com/corp/pressroom/releases/2001/ene/70-LJMfinalltr.html
ENRON ANNOUNCES
SEC REQUEST, PLEDGES COOPERATION
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Monday, October 22, 2001
HOUSTON
– Enron Corp. (NYSE: ENE) announced today that the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) has requested that Enron voluntarily provide information
regarding certain related party transactions.
“We welcome this
request,” said Kenneth L. Lay, Enron chairman and CEO. “We will cooperate
fully with the SEC and look forward to the opportunity to put any concern
about these transactions to rest. In the meantime, we will continue to focus
on our core businesses and on serving our customers around the world.”
Enron noted that its
internal and external auditors and attorneys reviewed the related party
arrangements, the Board was fully informed of and approved these arrangements,
and they were disclosed in the company’s SEC filings. “We believe
everything that needed to be considered and done in connection with these
transactions was considered and done,” Lay said.
Enron is one of the
world’s leading energy, commodities and services companies. The company
markets electricity and natural gas, delivers energy and other physical
commodities, and provides financial and risk management services to customers
around the world. Enron’s Internet address is www.enron.com.
The stock is traded under the ticker symbol “ENE.”
Click here
to download this press release in Adobe Acrobat 4.0 format.
The main articles that caused me to
pounce on this are quoted below.
ARTICLE ONE
"How Enron Ran Out of Gas," by Paul Kedrosky (Professor of Business at
the University of British Colombia), The Wall Street Journal, October 29,
2001, Page A22 --- Click
Here
http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1004306265411230320.djm&template=pasted-2001-10-29.tmpl
Is troubled Enron
Corp. the Long
Term Capital Management of the energy markets, or merely yet another
mismanaged company whose executives read too many of their own press releases?
Or is poor Enron just misunderstood? Those are the questions after another
week of Chinese water torture financial releases from the beleaguered
Houston-based energy concern.
A year ago Enron was
the hottest of the hot. While tech stocks were tanking, Enron's shares gained
89% during 2000. Even die-hard Enron skeptics -- of which there are many --
had to concede that last year was a barnburner for the company. Earnings were
up 25%, and revenues more than doubled.
Not bad, considering
where the company came from. A decade ago 80% of Enron's revenues came from
the staid (and regulated) gas-pipeline business. No longer. Enron has been
selling those assets steadily, partly fueling revenues, but also expanding
into new areas. By 2000, around 95% of its revenues and more than 80% of its
profits came from trading energy, and buying and selling stakes in energy
producers.
The stock market
applauded the move: At its peak, Enron was trading at around 55 times
earnings. That's more like Cisco's once tropospheric valuation than the meager
2.5 times earnings the market affords Enron competitor Duke Energy.
But Enron management
wanted more. It was, after all, a "new economy" Web-based energy
trader where aggressive performers were lucratively rewarded. According to
Enron Chairman and CEO Ken Lay, the company deserved to be valued accordingly.
At a conference early this year he told investors the company's stock should
be trading much higher -- say $126, more than double its price then.
Then the new economy
motor stalled. The company's president left under strange circumstances. And
rumors swirled about Enron's machinations in California's energy markets.
Investors pored over Enron's weakening financial statements. But Enron
analysts must have the energy and persistence of Talmudic scholars to
penetrate the company's cryptic financials. In effect, Enron's troubles were
hiding in plain sight.
It should have been a
warning. Because of the poor financial disclosure there was no way to assess
the damage the economy was doing to the company, or how it was trying to make
its numbers. Most analysts blithely concede that they really didn't know how
Enron made money -- in good markets or bad.
Not that Enron didn't
make money, it did -- albeit with a worrisomely low return on equity given the
capital required -- but sometimes revenues came from asset sales and complex
off-balance sheet transactions, sometimes from energy-trading revenues. And it
was very difficult to understand why or how -- or how likely it was Enron
could do it again next quarter.
Enron's
financial inscrutability hid stranger stuff. Deep inside the company filings
was mention of LJM Cayman, L.P., a private investment partnership. According
to Enron's March 2000 10-K, a "senior officer of Enron is the managing
member" of LJM. Well, that was a puzzler. LJM was helping Enron
"manage price and value risk with regard to certain merchant and similar
assets by entering into derivatives, including
swaps, puts, and collars." It was, in a phrase, Enron's house hedge fund.
There is nothing
wrong with hedging positions in the volatile energy market -- it is crucial
for a market-maker. But having an Enron executive managing and benefiting from
the hedging is something else altogether, especially when the Enron executive
was the company's CFO, Andrew Fastow. While he severed his connection with LJM
(and related partnerships) in July of this year -- and left Enron in a whirl
of confusion last week -- the damage had been done.
As stories in this
paper have since made clear, Mr. Fastow's LJM partnership allegedly made
millions from the conflict-ridden, board-approved LJM-Enron relationship. And
recently Enron ended the merry affair, taking a billion-dollar writedown
against equity two weeks ago over some of LJM's wrong-footed hedging.
Analysts, investors, and the Securities & Exchange Commission were left
with many questions, and very few answers.
To be fair, I
suppose, Enron did disclose the LJM arrangement more than a year ago, saying
it had erected a Chinese wall between Fastow/LJM and the company. And in a
bull market, no one paid much attention to what a bad idea that horribly
conflicted relationship was -- or questioned the strength of the wall. Now it
matters, as do other Enron-hedged financings, a number of which look to have
insufficient assets to cover debt repayments due in 2003.
We didn't do
anything wrong is Mr. Lay's refrain in the company's current round of
entertainingly antagonistic conference calls. That remains to be seen, but at
the very least the company has shown terrible judgment, and heroic arrogance
in its dismissal of shareholders interests and financial transparency.
Where has
Enron's board of directors been through all of this? What
kind of oversight has this motley collection of academics, government sorts,
and retired executives exercised for Enron shareholders? Very little, it
seems. It is time Enron's board did a proper investigation, and then cleaned
house -- perhaps neatly finishing with themselves.
Then I discovered
the "tip of the iceberg" article below:
ARTICLE TWO
"Enron Troubles Only the Tip of the Iceberg?," by Peter Eavis,
TheStreet.com --- http://www.thestreet.com/markets/detox/10003083.html
Dealings with a
related party have tarnished Enron's (ENE:NYSE - news - commentary - research
- analysis) reputation and crushed its stock, but it looks like that case is
far from unique.
The battered energy
trader has done business with at least 15 other related entities, according to
documents supplied by lawyers for people suing Enron. Moreover, Enron's new
CFO, who has been portrayed by bulls as opposing the related-party dealings of
his predecessor, serves on 12 of these entities. And Enron board members are
listed as having directorships and other roles at a Houston-based related
entity called ES Power 3.
The extent of Enron's
dealings with these companies, or the value of its holdings in them, couldn't
be immediately determined. But the existence of these partnerships could feed
investors' fears that Enron has billions of dollars of liabilities that don't
show up on its balance sheet. If that's so, the company's financial strength
and growth prospects could be much less than has generally been assumed on
Wall Street, where the company was long treated with kid gloves.
Enron didn't
immediately respond to questions seeking details about ES Power or about the
role of the chief financial officer, Jeff McMahon, in the various entities.
Enron's board members couldn't immediately be reached for comment.
Ten Long Days
Enron's previous CFO,
Andrew Fastow, was replaced by McMahon Wednesday after investors criticized
Fastow's role in a partnership called LJM, which had done complex hedging
transactions with Enron. As details of this deal and
two others emerged, Enron stock cratered.
The turmoil that
resulted in Fastow's departure began two weeks ago, when Enron reported
third-quarter earnings that met estimates. However, the company failed to
disclose in its earnings press release a $1.2 billion charge to equity related
to unwinding the LJM transactions. Since then, investors and analysts have
been calling with increasing vehemence for the company to divulge full details
of its business dealings with other related entities. Enron stock sank 6%
Friday, meaning it has lost 56% of its value in just two weeks.
Enron's
End Run?
New financial chief's involvement in Enron
business partners |
Enron-Related
Entity |
Creation
Date |
McMahon
Involved? |
ECT
Strategic Value Corp. |
4/18/1985 |
Yes |
JILP-LP
Inc. |
9/27/1995 |
Yes |
ECT
Investments Inc. |
3/1/1996 |
Yes |
Kenobe
Inc. |
11/8/1996 |
Yes |
Enserco
LLC |
1/7/1997 |
Yes |
Obi-1
Holdings LLC |
1/7/1997 |
Yes |
Oilfield
Business Investments - 1 LLC |
1/7/1997 |
Yes |
HGK
Enterprises LP Inc. |
7/29/1997 |
Yes |
ECT
Eocene Enterprises III Inc. |
2/20/1998 |
Yes |
Jedi
Capital II LLC |
9/4/1998 |
Yes |
E.C.T.
Coal Company No. 2 LLC |
12/31/1998 |
Yes |
ES
Power 3 LLC |
1/7/1999 |
Yes |
Enserco
Inc. |
3/25/1999 |
No |
LJM
Management LLC |
7/2/1999 |
No |
Blue
Heron I LLC |
9/17/1999 |
No |
Whitewing
Management LLC |
2/28/2000 |
No |
Jedi
Capital II LLC |
4/16/2001 |
No |
Source:
Detox |
However, Enron has
yet to break out a full list of related entities. The company has said nothing
publicly about McMahon's participation in related entities, nor has it
mentioned that its board members were directors or senior officers in ES Power
3. (Nor has it explained the extensive use of Star Wars-related names
by the related-party companies.) It's not immediately clear what ES Power 3 is
or does. So far, subpoenas issued by lawyers suing Enron have determined the
names of senior officers of ES Power 3 and its formation date, January 1999.
Among ES Power 3's
senior executives are Enron CEO Ken Lay, listed as a director, and McMahon and
Fastow, listed as executive vice presidents. A raft of external directors are
named as ES Power 3 directors, including Comdisco CEO Norman Blake and
Ronnie Chan, chairman of the Hong Kong-based Hang Lung Group. A
Comdisco spokeswoman says Blake isn't commenting on matters concerning Enron
and a call to the Hang Lung group wasn't immediately returned.
Demands, Demands
Rating agencies
Moody's, Fitch and S&P recently put Enron's credit rating on review for a
possible downgrade after an LJM deal that led to the $1.2 billion hit to
equity. Enron still has a rating three notches above investment grade. But its
bonds trade with a yield generally seen on subinvestment grade, or junk,
bonds, suggesting the market believes downgrades are likely.
If Enron's rating
drops below investment grade, it must find cash or issue stock to pay off at
least $3.4 billion in off-balance sheet obligations. In addition, many of its
swap agreements contain provisions that demand immediate cash settlement if
its rating goes below investment grade.
Friday, the company
drew down $3 billion from credit lines to pay off commercial paper
obligations. Raising cash in the CP market could be tough when investors are
jittery about Enron's condition.
This week, a number
of energy market players reduced exposure to Enron. However, in a Friday press
release, CEO Lay said that Enron was the "market-maker of choice in
wholesale gas and power markets." He added: "It is evident that our
customers view Enron as the major liquidity source of the global energy
markets."
McMahon reportedly
objected to Fastow's role in LJM, allegedly believing it posed Fastow with a
conflict of interests. But he will need to convince investors that the 12
entities he's connected to don't do the same. Enron has said that its board
fully approved of the LJM deals that Fastow was involved in. Now, board
members will have to comment on their own roles in a related entity.
Related Links
Enron's belated FAQ statement on
"related party transactions" --- http://www.enron.com/corp/pressroom/faq.html
Exclusive Reports --- http://houston.bcentral.com/houston/stories/2001/07/02/story1.html
Enron Keeps Bleeding --- http://www.businessweek.com/reuters_market/M/REUT-MCO.HTM.htm
Enron Corporation homepage --- http://www.enron.com/
Enron Corporation's Financial Statements
Annual Information
Reply from Roger Debreceny [rogerd@NETBOX.COM]
Here are a couple of
recent URLs on Enron:
http://www.nytimes.com/2001/10/28/business/28ENRO.html?pagewanted=print
http://www.corpwatch.org/issues/wto/featured/2001/tclarke.html
Roger
Reply from Bill Mister
I have heard that the
Enron investigation has now been pulled out of the SEC's Fort Worth Office and
is now being run out of Washington. This is an unusual move.
I wonder if the move
from Ft. Worth to Washington had anything to do with the editorials in the NY
Times and the Washington Post. In the Times the new leadership at the SEC was
referred to as a "puppy dog" rather than a "watch dog."
And, I believe it was the Times that said they would look to see how the SEC
handled the Enron case after the "kinder and gentler" speech Mr.
Pitts made to the AICPA.
Another factor is
that the CEO of Enron is a strong Bush supporter.
I wonder which if
either of these influenced the SEC to change the venue of the investigation?
Also, Enron's Audit
Committee is chaired by Bob Jaedicke (yes, the former Stanford accounting
professor and dean) and a member is Senator Phil Gram's wife, Wendy L. Gramm.
This will be
interesting, albeit possibly disgusting, to watch.
William G.
(Bill) Mister
william.mister@colostate.edu
Changing Priorities in the SEC
The new Securities and Exchange Commission chairman, Harvey Pitt, is intent on
shifting the focus of the SEC from prosecuting corporate financial fraud to
improving financial disclosure. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/61403
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting
fraud are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
A book recommendation from the
AccountingWeb on November 2, 2001
In this
groundbreaking book, the author uses professional service firms in industries
such as consulting, investment banking, law, and advertising as a model for
all knowledge organizations to develop intimate and profitable knowledge-based
relationships with their clients. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0750671858/accountingweb
From Syllabus e-News on October 30,
2001
Schools Go 'Cashless' for Off-Campus
Purchasing
Mercer University in Macon, Ga., and
Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Va., have instituted
"cashless" buying programs to enable students, faculty and staff to
use their ID cards to purchase goods at select off-campus businesses.
Currently students use the stored value cards to buy some products on campus,
including vending machine snacks, cafeteria lunches, and books. The new
program, being managed Student Advantage Inc., would create off- campus
networks of businesses at which card holders could make cashless card
purchases. The company said the program would "dramatically"
decrease the use of cash on and off campus, thereby contributing to campus
safety. It also helps cement the universities' relationship with their
surrounding communities, officials argued.
For more information, visit: http://www.studentadvantage.com
Wow Site of the Week
Songs of the Century for Teachers
(although I think anybody with a school address can download the great music)
--- http://www.songs-of-the-century.com/
You can download and listen to the music and download curriculum plans,
exercises, and other teaching ideas using this music.
The recordings are
by original artists such as the Kingston Trio.
Note that it takes about 10 seconds to
register free for this site. You may have to download a plug-in for
RealPlayer, but the Songs of the Century site makes this automatic and will only
take a matter of minutes.
Categories Include the Following:
- Dawn of the Century (1890-1999)
- The Jazz Age (1920-1929)
- The Swing Era/The War Years
(1940-1949)
- American Bandstand (1950-1959)
- The Sixties (1960-1969)
- The Rock Era (1970-1979)
- The Eighties (1980-1989)
- End of the Millenium (1990-2001)
On October 28, the PBS TV show called
Computer Chronicles featured radio stations on the Web. However, if you
want to find show summaries, I find the Computer Chronicles Web site to be
poorly maintained and hopelessly out of date at http://www.cmptv.com/computerchronicles/
Some of the sites (not mentioned on the
show) for finding free online radio that you can listen to while working at the
computer, include the following:
Yahoo's radio links --- http://dir.yahoo.com/News_and_Media/Radio/
National Public Radio (NPR) --- http://www.npr.org/
http://www.webradios.com/
http://www.web-radio.fm/
http://www.internetradiolist.com/
http://www.radiofreeworld.com/page14.html
There are many others that you can
find with a search engine.
USC may be playing games, but it is not
in fun. The U.S. Army and USC are joining forces to design commercial PC
games that will be used to train the next generation of soldiers.
"New Army Soldiers: Game
Gamers," by Noah Shachtman, Wired News, October 29, 2001 --- http://www.wired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,47931,00.html
The U.S. Army,
working with a University of Southern California research lab and a team of
game-making firms, is developing two games, set on urban battlefields, that
will be used both to train grunts and entertain geeks.
Players will command
a nine-person team in C-Force, which
is being developed for one of the "next-generation" gaming systems,
like the X-Box, Game Cube or Playstation 2. CS
XII, the other game, is a PC title in which players lead a company of
about 100.
Both games, available
commercially within two years, will have Rob Sears -- the man responsible for
the legendary combat titles Mech Commander and Mech Warrior 3 -- as the
executive producer.
The armed services
have a long history of adapting commercial products for training purposes. But
this is the first time the military's ever commissioned a commercial game.
Military gamers are,
to put it mildly, psyched about the prospect of an officially sanctioned war
game.
See also:
A'Hacking
the Military Will Go
War
is Virtual Hell
Armor:
The Things They'll Carry
New
Weapons for a New War
Conflict 2001:
Fresh Perspectives
Take your chances in Gamesville
Falls Earth Station, Inc. --- http://www.fallsearth.com/
Today’s campus and
institutional communication infrastructure must provide reliable and
cost-effective support for a variety of tasks. Whether your organization has a
large and complex mission requiring separately managed spheres of operation,
or whether some or all of the tasks are combined into a single responsibility
center; aspects of each communication and control function will increasingly
share common physical plant.
At Falls Earth
Station, we understand that change is a constant. We design, build, integrate,
and operate cost-effective communication and control systems primarily for the
university, institutional, and campus environment.
From Syllabus e-News on October 30,
2001
Student Consumers
Targeted by Digital TV Companies
Students at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cornell University, and the University
of the Arts are being offered high-end digital cable television service that
offers them up to 118 digital channels, access to premium channels,
pay-per-view events, and the ability to customize channel line-ups over the
Internet. The service, provided by Madison, N.Y.-based Falls Earth Station,
Inc., would be delivered directly to a cable headend on the campus and fed
through the campus's existing cable system, thereby eliminating the need for a
satellite antenna on each dormitory building. Jerry Barnes, president of Falls
Earth Station, said, "we recognize today's college student is a
sophisticated and value-conscious consumer, and (the service) is designed to
offer the variety, value and flexibility demanded by the higher education
community."
For more
information, visit: http://www.fallsearth.com
For Me It Was
Disappointing
For a greatly overpriced $25, I purchased the "book" entitled Quality
Issues in Distance Learning (AACSB International, 1999). It is really
just a pamphlet of about 30 small pages and is very disappointing. I find
it lacking in Web links, references, data, and examples. It is no wonder
that this item did not make much of a splash in the online education and
research sea. Perhaps it is appropriate that this arrived in my mailbox
just before Halloween. The skeleton outline is helpful, but the flesh is
almost nonexistent --- http://www.aacsb.edu/Publications/Publications/quality_issues.html
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
Forward |
2 |
About AACSB |
3 |
Recommendations |
4 |
Quality
Issues in Distance Learning |
|
1.
Introduction and Background |
7 |
2.
Definition |
9 |
3.
Organization of the Guidelines |
10 |
4.
Mission
4.1. Inclusion in Mission
4.2. Commitment to Distance
Learning
4.3. Stakeholder Involvement |
10
11
13 |
5.
Students
5.1. Student Support Infrastructure
5.2. Student-Faculty and
Student-Student Interaction
5.3. Consumer Information for
Students |
14
14
15 |
6.
Faculty
6.1. Faculty Composition and
Qualifications
6.2. Faculty Commitment to Distance
Learning |
16
19 |
7.
Curriculum and Learning Issues
7.1. Design of Learning Experiences
7.2. Individual and Group Learning
7.3. Technology Strategy
7.4. Assessment |
20
20
21
22 |
8.
Instructional Resources
8.1. Resource Sufficiency |
23 |
9.
Intellectual Contributions
9.1. Intellectual Contribution
Policies
9.2. Ownership and Compensation |
25
26 |
10. Business
and Institutional Relationships
10.1. Off-site Support
10.2. Customized Distance Learning
Programs
10.3. Partnership Arrangements |
26
27
28 |
11. Summary
and Conclusions
Issues of Quality Distance Learning
Delivery |
29 |
Student
Questions for Distance Learning Providers |
31 |
Order Form |
33 |
Mission
Statement and Strategic Objectives |
35 |
|
Bob Jensen's education
technology documents are linked at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
Hi XXXXX,
I don't think there is any way of
making a downloaded PDF file stop working after a time limit. A PDF file is not
an executable file and would have not way of terminating itself. The best you
can to is to put a warning at the top of the document that says the material is
dated and students will have to go to such and such site for updated materials.
In other words, put a link at the top
of a document and encourage users to always download a fresh document. Also put
a date at the top so that they know when you last revised the document.
Unfortunately, revising a document does not always entail revising all of the
material in the document. Perhaps you should have two dates: One that indicates
when you last added to the document and one that indicates when you last
thoroughly revised the document.
Always encourage people to send you
suggestions for revisions and corrections. Then have some process for making
revisions and corrections as quickly as possible.
You can
prevent printing and text selection for automatic quotations in a PDF document.
In Adobe Exchange software, go to File, Document Info, Security and then choose
to block printing, text selection, editing, password controls, etc. But there is
no way of preventing downloading to my knowledge.
You can read more about adding security
to PDF files at the following sites:
http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/products.html
http://www.adobe.com/epaper/tips/acr5secure/pdfs/acr5secure.pdf
http://www.adobe.com/epaper/tips/acr5secure/page3.html
Hope this helps.
Bob
-----Original
Message-----
From: XXXXX
Sent: Saturday, October 27, 2001 11:51 PM
To: rjensen@trinity.edu Subject: A question for you
Bob:
Over the years, I
have been distributing extensive handouts in PDF format to students. I prepare
these handouts to elaborate upon class discussion or to discuss current
topics. These handouts, however, end up having a life of their own. Is there
any way to prevent people for printing/accessing a PDF file after a certain
date, i.e., to make it expire?
I am not interested
in preventing access after a time period for commercial reasons. My main
concern is that my hastily prepared handouts (which admittedly always have
some errors because they are carefully proofed or checked by another person)
end up being distributed on the web beyond my class for an indefinite period
of time. I get emails pointing errors in my 3-year old handouts that I have
since fixed.
Thanks.
XXXXX
Update from Bob Jensen:
The author of the above message discovered that PDF files may be timed out if
they are served in a special way on Adobe's server. I could not find any
information about this at Adobe's website. If there is such a service, it
is probably not a free service from Adobe.
Interesting Site of
the Week (History, eCommerce, eBusiness, dot.com)
The Museum of E-Failure http://www.disobey.com/ghostsites/
The Museum
of E-Failure is an attempt to actively
preserve the home pages of sites that will probably disappear in the next few
months. Our goal is not to laugh at these failed enterprises, but to preserve
documentary images - as many as possible - before all traces of their
existence are deleted from history's view. It is my hope that these
screenshots may serve as a reminder of the glory, folly, and historically
unique design sensibilities of the Web's Great Gilded Age (1995-2001). May no
historical revisionists ever claim that this wacky period didn't happen -
these screenshots prove that it did!
Thanks to all who sent in defunct or endangered site URLs during the last
month . Be proud - you've done your part to preserve our vanishing
Cyber-Heritage!
If you'd like to
support this peculiar exercise in ALT-PRINT-SCREEN documentation? Send a tip
using the Ghost-O-Meter and I'll try to get a screen grab of the site before
it disappears.
Steve
Baldwin
Web Search Engines FAQS: http://www.infotoday.com/searcher/oct01/price.htm
Bob Jensen's search helpers are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm
The 2000 National Doctoral Program
Survey http://survey.nagps.org/
Improving graduate
education has been the subject of much discussion in recent years. We wanted
to know how implementation of recommended changes was coming along, so we
asked the people to whom the improvements matter most: graduate students.
Between March and August of 2000, over 32,000 students and recent Ph.D.'s
responded to our survey on educational practices in doctoral programs.
You can rank programs
based on student assessments of their educational practices and on student
satisfaction, view program reports on the 1300 programs from which we received
at least 10 responses, and view overall results for each discipline.
View
the Results |
|
Rank
programs
by perceived implementation of recommended educational practices and by
student satisfaction |
|
View
program reports
for any of the 1300+ programs from which we received at least 10
responses |
|
View
aggregate results
broken down by discipline and by respondent characteristics |
|
Help
the Cause |
|
Tell
others.
Send an email to
students in your program, to friends at other programs, and to members
of your graduate student association. |
|
Link to
us. Add
a link to the survey home page, http://survey.nagps.org,
to your own web site. |
|
Talk to
your campus newspaper.
Our press
kit contains materials your campus paper can use in a story. |
|
Talk to
your chair and your dean.
These background
materials provide a good starting point for a discussion of
educational practices in your program. |
|
Brainstorm.
Share
your ideas for making graduate education better. |
|
Sign
up. Sign
up to be notified about future surveys. |
|
Give us
feedback.
If this survey is helpful to you, tell
us! If you have ideas for improvements, let
us know about them. |
Many disciplines are documented. One
such discipline is as follows:
Aggregate Results, Business and
Management Programs
The following report is not very
current, but it is informative about trends.
Demand For Business Ph.D.s Continues
Slow Rise, While Doctoral Production Falls Steadily, AACSB International --- http://www.aacsb.edu/Publications/Newsline/view.asp?year=1999&file=spdemand_1.html
Demand for Ph.D.s
in business schools rose slightly this year according to results of the
latest AACSB surveys of business doctoral production and faculty demand.
The overall vacancy rate rose to 6.8 percent, compared to 6.6 percent a year
ago. Planned growth in business faculty positions is up by
one-half of a percentage point, from 3.1 percent last year to 3.6 percent
this year.
The number of
business doctoral degrees awarded in 1997-98 is 1,006, down from last year's
1,072, marking this as the third year of doctoral production decline.
The number of women receiving Ph.D.s fell to 304, down from 319.
New
African-American Ph.D.s in business rose to 34, three more than the year
before. Hispanic-American Ph.D.s rose from 11 to 23. Eight
Native-Americans earned business doctoral degrees, compared to two last
year. Among non-U.S. or Canadian citizens, the percentage of total
degrees conferred rose to 34.5 percent from last year's 28.1 percent
Distance Learning
Documents from the AACSB International
Distance Learning Programs Increase;
Schools Focus On Use Of Technology To Extend Business Education from
the AACSB International --- http://www.aacsb.edu/Publications/Newsline/view.asp?year=1999&file=wncomputer_1.html
Distance learning is
a new information technology application that is in a rapid growth phase.
Business schools now seem to have their basic technological infrastructure in
place and the focus has shifted to how to use the technology to support and
extend business education. Microcomputers now are ubiquitous in business
schools and mini/mainframes are becoming rare.
These are some of the
findings of the most recent UCLA Survey of Business School Computer Usage,
conducted in cooperation with AACSB. Survey results provide comprehensive
overviews of business school computing, communication and technological
environments - information that is designed to assist deans and strategic
planners with developing business program plans and technology allocation
decisions.
The Fifteenth Survey
compiles data from 232 business schools in 11 countries and was conducted by a
team from California State University, Dominguez Hills, led by Julia A. Britt,
associate professor of management. Britt, who has co-authored the survey with
Jason Frand, assistant dean and director, computing and information services
at the UCLA Anderson School, took over primary responsibility for the survey
this year.
This year, schools
reported owning a total of 49,245 microcomputers, an average of 221 per
school, a slight increase from the 215 microcomputers per school as reported
last year. "The small increase seems to confirm the conclusion that the
average number of microcomputers per school has reached saturation," said
Britt. The computer operating budget as a percent of the school operating
budget of 3.5 percent is just slightly above that of last year, 3.3 percent,
indicating that the decline from the high of almost 5 percent in 1993 may have
leveled off.
According to Britt,
product and market developments have moved microcomputer equipment in the
direction of a commodity product. "All Intel-based microcomputers offer
essentially the same features, run the same operating system and application
software, and individual purchases are frequently based on just price or
convenience rather than unique capability or a proprietary operating
system," she said. Overall, Windows now has a combined 92 percent share
of the desktop operating system usage, up from the 87 percent reported last
year. It appears that almost all of the DOS only systems now have been
replaced.
Further, both the
faculty-per-micro density and the student-per-micro density show very little
change from last year. Eighty-four percent of the undergraduate schools and 91
percent of the MBA schools indicate that there usually is very little waiting
for microcomputer access at a density level of 17. However, the data shows
that when 24 or more students are required to share access to a single
microcomputer, there always will be a wait. And finally, commercial systems
now have allowed Email to become ubiquitous. The schools report that 92
percent of the faculty, 94 percent of the staff, 77 percent of the
undergraduate, and 87 percent of the MBAs now use Email regularly. As can be
seen in the table, local area networks (LANs) provide extensive access and
communication opportunities.
Local Area Network
Access (percent of schools) N=228 LOCATION PCS LAPTOPS Faculty Office 97% 64%
Admin Office 96 50 Computer Labs 96 42 Classrooms 84 51 Library 72 27
Dormitories 54 28 Group Room 43 32
"The excitement
is in access to and utilization of this basic infrastructure," Britt
said. "This is where the dynamic developments are occurring. Together
with distance learning, the Internet and the Web are becoming one of business
schools' most frequently used application resources. An increasing number of
faculty members are using the Internet and the Web resources for classroom
support, and more and more students are using these resources for business
research," she said.
Continued at http://www.aacsb.edu/Publications/Newsline/view.asp?year=1999&file=wncomputer_1.html
Detailed appendices in the survey
identify key benchmarking metrics by business school, including budget ratios,
computer ownership requirements, and microcomputer and staff density ratios,
as well as examples of innovations in the areas of curriculum, Web development
and the technological environment.
The executive summary of the survey
report can be found on the Internet at http://www.anderson.ucla.edu/faculty/jason.frand/researcher/survey/15exsum.htm
.
Schools participating in the survey received a free copy of the report.
Additional copies can be ordered by sending a check for $50 per copy to: Jason
L. Frand, Assistant Dean, Computing and Information Services, The Anderson
School at UCLA, 110 Westwood Plaza, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1481.
Quality Issues in Distance Learning
from the AACSB International (for $25 or $30) --- http://www.aacsb.edu/Publications/Publications/quality_issues.html
This report results
from the work of a task force established by the Board of Directors of AACSB -
The International Association for Management Education. The board recognized
the growing importance of distance learning in management education, and they
charged the task force to provide guidance to assist 1) schools developing
distance learning programs, and 2) peer reviewers evaluating distance learning
programs.
In addition to its
response to the two specific requests of the board's charge, the task force
report provides a list of questions for prospective students to use when
considering enrolling in a distance learning program.
While this report has
as one of its aims to assist peer reviewers evaluating distance learning
programs, it does NOT create new accreditation standards for distance
learning. Accreditation standards for management education appear in other
documents and have sufficient flexibility to be used to evaluate quality in
distance learning. This report should assist reviewers to interpret the
standards as they apply in distance learning programs.
Bob Jensen's documents on distance
learning are linked at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
AACSB/EBI Survey Findings Reveal Little
Relationship of Gender, Status and Rank to Business Faculty Satisfaction --- http://www.aacsb.edu/Publications/Newsline/view.asp?year=1999&file=wnfindings_1.html
Other Reports from AACSB International
Special Reports
Surveys/Survey
Results
Statistical
Information
The American Accounting Association's
former benchmarking program is described at http://accounting.rutgers.edu/raw/aaa/about/brochures/bench.htm
Tom Oxner pointed out to me that program was dropped when the AACSB
International adopted a similar program.
Craig Polhemus later wrote the following message:
Bob,
Thank you for
alerting me to the outdated information on the AAA Rutgers site. (It was the
2000-01 brochure you accessed there.) We will correct that right away.
I am sorry that you
did not hear that the AAA Benchmarking program has been cancelled. All
participating schools were notified immediately, and this change has been
included on the AAA front page each week since it happened.
The AACSB’s plans
for accounting and business program reporting changed substantially between
August and October. Based on consequent recommendations from Tracey and me,
the AAA’s Executive Committee decided to end the program immediately.
The day that decision
was made, we updated the active Benchmarking-brochure URL ( http://accounting.rutgers.edu/raw/aaa/partners/bench.htm
). This is the Benchmarking URL reached from the AAA front page ( http://AAA-edu.org
) either through the drop-down menu or through the Faculty Development
sections.
Looking closely, I
note that the URL you cited led to a blue brochure. The blue brochure was for
2000-01; the 2001-02 brochure (both before and after the change reflecting the
end of AAA Benchmarking) is in green. It does require a close look to notice
which year each is for – poor brochure design on our part.
Because I couldn’t
find an active path from the AAA front page to the 2000-01 blue brochure at
the URL you cite, I tried our Search function – and sure enough its first
two hits were to the 2000-01 blue brochure, with the 2001-02 discontinuation
notice the fourth hit.
A Benchmarking
discontinuation notice is also in the forthcoming Fall issue of Accounting
Education News.
As always, I greatly
appreciate your calling this Web problem to my attention as well as your
strong support for AAA programs.
I’m away from the
email account that subscribes to AECM, so could you please summarize or post
this there for me? Thank you.
Craig
[Craig Polhemus, American Accounting Association]
The AACSB International's benchmarking
program is described at http://www.aacsb.edu/knowledgeservices/benchmarking.asp
I might note that when it comes to
critical problems identified by the AACSB International, curricular issues take
a back seat relative to issues noted at http://www.aacsb.edu/tfintro.html
.
eCommerce and eBusiness curricula
comparisons are dealt with at http://www.aacsb.edu/E-Business/Index.html
Although there are no databases listed,
you can find some good curriculum publications at http://www.aacsb.edu/Pubs.html
From my bookmarks at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm
International Education Data,
Statistics, and Trends
Education Indicators Education at a Glance 2001: Education at a Glance
OECD Indicators - 2001 Edition --- http://www.oecd.org/els/education/ei/eag/
National Center for Education
Statistics
Projections of Education
Statistics to 2011 --- http://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfor.asp?pubid=2001083
Total
public and private elementary and secondary enrollment is projected to
increase from 52.9 million in 1999 to 53.4 million in 2005. Then total
enrollment is projected to decrease to 53.0 million by 2011, an
overall increase of less than 1 percent from 1999 (table
1).
Between 1999
and 2011, public elementary and secondary enrollment is projected to
increase 8 percent in the West, while in the South it will increase 1
percent. In the Northeast and Midwest, enrollment is projected to
decrease 4 and 3 percent, respectively, over the same period (table
5).
Enrollment in
degree-granting institutions is projected to increase from 14.8
million in 1999 to 17.7 million by 2011, an increase of 20 percent. A
16 percent increase is projected under the low alternative and a 23
percent increase is projected under the high alternative (table
10).
High school graduates from public and private high schools are
projected to increase from 2.8 million in 1998-99 to 3.1 million by
2010-11, an increase of 11 percent. This increase reflects the
projected rise in the 18 year-old population (table
23).
Between
1998-99 and 2010-11, the number of public high school graduates is
projected to increase 20 percent in the West, while the South will
increase 12 percent. The Northeast and the Midwest are projected to
increase 11 and 2 percent, respectively, over the same period (table
24).
The number of
bachelor's degrees is expected to increase from 1,184,000 in 1997-98
to 1,392,000 by 2010-11, an increase of 18 percent (table
27).
Under the
middle alternative, a 34 percent increase in current expenditures for
public elementary and secondary schools is projected for the period
from 1998-99 to 2010-11. Under the low alternative, current
expenditures are projected to increase by 29 percent; under the high
alternative, current expenditures are projected to increase by 40
percent (table
33).
Under the
middle alternative, current expenditures per pupil in fall enrollment
are forecast to increase 33 percent in constant dollars from 1998-99
to 2010-11 (table
33).
Download,
view and print the entire report as a pdf
file (937kb).
|
The Integrated
Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS --- http://nces.ed.gov/ipeds/
Features
IPEDS
Web-Based Data Collection allows institutions to provide NCES with
the required statistical data, replacing the paper survey forms that
have been used in past years.
IPEDS
Peer Analysis System and Self-guided
Tutorials enables a user to easily compare a LinchPin institution
of the user’s choosing to a group of peer institutions, by
generating reports using selected IPEDS variables of interest.
IPEDS
College Opportunities On-line (COOL) presents data on institution
prices, financial aid, enrollment, and type of programs that are
offered by the institution. IPEDS COOL is designed to help college
students, future students, and their parents understand the
differences between colleges and how much it costs to attend college.
|
College Opportunities
Online --- http://nces.ed.gov/ipeds/cool/
IPEDS
College Opportunities On-Line is your direct link to
over 9,000 colleges and universities in the United States. If
you are thinking about a large university, a small liberal
arts college, a specialized college, a community college, a
career or technical college or a trade school, you can find
them all here.
College Opportunities
On-Line is brought to you by the National Center for Education
Statistics in the U.S. Department of Education. NCES was
authorized by Congress in 1998 to help college students,
future students, and their parents understand the differences
between colleges and how much it costs to attend college.
College Opportunities
On-Line helps you find out about a specific college or set of
colleges, if you have some in mind. You can name the colleges
and obtain information about them.
If you are not sure
what colleges might be of interest, IPEDS
COOL has the tools to help you search for a college.
You can search for a college based on its location, program,
or degree offerings either alone or in combination. The more
criteria you specify, the smaller the number of colleges that
will fit your criteria. Once you've found some colleges of
interest, you can obtain important and understandable
information on all of them.
Once you have
determined the colleges that meet your interests, we urge you
to obtain more information about them by visiting their web
sites, writing for more information, or visiting the schools
of your choice.
Warning: An
institution's inclusion in IPEDS COOL does NOT imply approval
of the institution or its programs by the U.S. Department of
Education. Title IV eligible schools (those that participate
in awarding Pell Grants and other federal financial aid) have
recognized accreditation. This is important for acceptance of
transfer credit or degree recognition.
Other
College Related Links
Contact
the IPEDS Staff
|
|
Education Statistics Quarterly_ http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2001/quarterly/winter/
Advanced Telecommunications in U.S.
Private Schools: 1998-99--- http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2001/2001037.pdf
Digest of Education Statistics, 2000
--- http://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo.asp?pubid=2001034
A Primer for Making Cost Adjustments in
Education--- http://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo.asp?pubid=2001323
Condition
of Education (Annual Report to the U.S. Congress) http://nces.ed.gov/pubs/ce/index.html
Education Statistics Slide Show http://www.lib.umich.edu/libhome/Documents.center/edstats/slide1.htm
Digest of Education Statistics http://nces.ed.gov/pubs/D96/
U.S. Department of Education http://www.ed.gov/
DAS Web http://www.pedar-das.org/
UNESCO Statistical Yearbook http://www.education.unesco.org/educprog/stat/index.html
Fedstats http://www.fedstats.gov/
Facts and
statistics (Fast Facts) --- http://gwu.edu/~gprice/handbook.htm
US
News Online Comparisons of Programs in Higher Education
I've been making CDs
for years, but only recently did I discover software that makes it as easy as
easy as (Edit, Copy) and (Edit, Paste) in Windows Explorer (which is free with
the Windows operating systems). But you do need one added piece of
software.
For those of you who have never
recorded a CD-R or CD-RW, there is a pretty good buy out from Roxio that
includes both the Easy CD Creator 5.0 package and the Go Back 3 Deluxe for a
combination price of $119 --- http://www.roxio.com/en/promotions/t12/index2.jhtml
Recording a Data CD has really become
easy. All I do is click the DirectCD Project button and the Format button.
That turns a blank CD-R or CD-RW disk into a file receiver such that you simply
drag or paste files into the CD using Windows Explorer (exactly like you would
when moving or pasting into other hard drives). You can even remove the CD
and re-open it later to add or delete files (i.e., you can build and modify the
CD at different points in time). Then when you have just the files you
want in your CD, you click the finalization options and Easy CD Creator finishes
the CD into a disk that can be read on virtually any CD-ROM drive. The CD-RW
files can be erased and modified later on, whereas the CD-R disks cannot be
erased.
Easy CD Creator can also copy CD audio
disks. You can also make photo or video CDs.
What I really like is the MP3 CD button
that allows you to record analog input (such as the audio part of a videotape)
into MP3 files on your hard drive. Learn more at http://www.roxio.com/en/products/ecdc/;jsessionid=1PCBIFOX54SGZT33IAVBVQQ
I've not used the Go Back 3 software
package, but it probably is something I will install soon. GoBack 3 Deluxe
delivers quick and easy system recovery, providing users with the power to undo
PC problems and greatly reduce downtime and service calls --- http://www.roxio.com/en/products/goback/;jsessionid=1PCBIFOX54SGZT33IAVBVQQ
Impressions via 'Sessions' The New
York Times just introduced "sessions. "If you don't know
what they are, you'd better find out. http://www.newmedia.com/nm-ie.asp?articleID=3147
From the U.S. Library of Congress
(History, Music, Folk Songs, but no audio here) ---
Woody Guthrie and American Folk Song Archive - he was a grass-roots Renaissance
man --- http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/wwghtml/wwghome.html
You can find some good free MP3 folk
singer downloads, including some Woody Guthrie songs, at http://www.crypticgallery.com/mp3/main.html
The are a number of other sites that
provide audio samples (usually not complete songs). For example, try the
samplers below:
http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/default.asp?oid=4165
From Webmonkey Frontdoor on
October 30, 2001
Last week, we all reeled
with enthusiasm over Apple's hip new iPod
MP3 player. But where's the hot new audio device for the PC? Introducing Imation's
RipGO!, a mini CD-R burner and digital audio player. The unit, which is
already the subject of a fair amount of hype,
plays MP3 and WMA files, and it records any digital file, music or otherwise,
onto teeny tiny 80mm CD-Rs. Cute!
Question:
What is the new wage base (after which no social security deductions will be
made from your paycheck for the rest of the year)?
Answer:
The Social Security Administration has announced the new wage base for
application of Social Security tax withholding, effective January 1, 2002. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/61172
The IRS has issued Notice 2001-70 on
Disaster Relief From Application Of Mid-Quarter Convention in Tax Code
Depreciation Rules. In this notice, the IRS relieves taxpayers from using the
mid-quarter convention for computing depreciation expenses. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/61029
Amazon Expects a Merry Christma$;
bellwether e-tailer its predicts pro-forma profitability for Q4. http://www.newmedia.com/nm-ie.asp?articleID=3160
I know that I talked
about this crapola called "pro forma" in the October 24 edition of New
Bookmarks, but once again it rears its ugly head.
I have a free video
on the pro forma deceptions at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/acct5341/jensen/realmedia/
I have threads on these deceptions at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/roi.htm
Dennis Beresford addresses the pro
forma issue at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/beresford01.htm
The way in which tech firms are
reporting results of a very difficult quarter is quite a turnaround from a
couple of years ago.
"Earnings Downplay Stock Losses," by Joanna Glasner, Wired News,
October 29, 2001 --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,47886,00.html
Even when presented
in the best light, the financial results that technology firms are reporting
this month look pretty awful compared to a year or so ago.
After accounting for
the techniques that firms employ to downplay poorly performing segments,
however, the actual results may be quite a bit worse than even the most
uninspiring first impressions would indicate.
Nearing the tail end
of a brutal investing year, many firms with substantial holdings in the
telecom and technology industries are reporting financial results that divert
attention away from hefty investment losses they've sustained.
Instead, firms such
as Microsoft and Amazon.com are encouraging investors to focus on
"operating income" -- the money derived from their core business --
and to view losses in other areas as one-time events.
In some instances,
the emphasis on operating income is a stark turnaround from a couple of years
ago. Back then, when tech stocks were riding high, it was common practice for
companies to include investment performance when discussing profits.
But when the market
tanks, customs change.
"It typically
has been the case that investment gains have been included in general
earnings. But in bad times, they're separated out," said David Tice,
manager of the Prudent Bear Fund, which makes money betting against stocks
perceived as overvalued.
While he doesn't
object to firms' treating investment income as a separate category, Tice
believes the treatment should be consistent in good economic times and bad
ones.
However, not every
firm adheres to that principle.
A case in point, this
earnings season, was Microsoft -- a company that for most of 1999 and 2000
earned hundreds of millions of dollars each quarter from gains in its
investment portfolio.
When its investments
were doing well, Microsoft (MSFT) headlined its earnings announcements with
its net profit, a figure that included both the sizable sums it made from its
main business of selling software and the gains it made from outside
investments.
The results were
impressive. Reporting its earnings for the three-month period ending Sep. 30,
2000, Microsoft boasted of a net profit of $2.2 billion. Much of that
bountiful profit came from a $1.13 billion gain from outside investments that
quarter.
But that was last
year. This past quarter, when its investments performed poorly, Microsoft gave
first mention in its Oct. 18 earnings announcement to operating income. By
that measure, the software company reported a profit of $2.9 billion for the
three months ending Sep. 30, up from the same period last year.
However, the number
didn't include outside investments. Microsoft gave secondary mention to net
earnings, which were noticeably worse. After taking into account investment
losses of $980 million, an income tax payment and some incidentals, the
company's net profit actually totaled $1.28 billion.
That's still not bad,
of course, but in context, it's more than 40 percent less that what it
reported in the same quarter a year ago.
Microsoft said it
gave operating income first mention in its earnings announcement because this
was a crucial metric for investors to watch. In queasy economic times, Wall
Street could take solace in the fact that the company's main operating system
business was chugging along very nicely.
Continued at http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,47886,00.html
See also:
Amazon
Not Out of the Jungle
Profits,
Losses and Damn Lies
Where's the Money?,
Huh?
There's no biz like E-Biz
Almanac of American Politics --- http://nationaljournal.com/members/almanac/
From Smart Stops on the Web, Journal of
Accountancy, November 2001, Page 21 --- http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/nov2001/news_web.htm
The New Banking Hours—24/7
www.usaccessbank.com
This e-bank offers its customers the
same services they would find at any traditional institution—certificates of
deposit, interest checking, overdraft protection and savings accounts—as
well as bill payment and brokerage services. Customers also have access to
other online resources such as the Free ATM Finder for locating nationwide,
surcharge-free ATMs.
Online Financial Strategies
www.onlinebankingreport.com
In addition to offering a
subscription to its e-zine and archived issues (click on Subscriptions for
pricing information), this site also provides customers with a free sample of
five articles from the Online Banking Report archives, and boasts more than
1,000 pages of useful ideas and Net banking products, plus links to the home
pages of the 100 largest U.S. banks.
Money, Mortgages and MSN
www.moneycentral.msn.com/banking/home.asp
This page of Microsoft’s MSN.com
has information, resources and a search tool for online banking. The banking
commentary section explores the topic “Why isn’t cash obsolete?” as of
this writing. The mortgages and loans section lets you apply online once and
receive multiple home or car loan offers, as well as find the best current
credit card rates. The Step-by-Step Guides section “Bank Online” gives
users advice on what to look for in an e-bank and what tools they will need to
begin e-transactions.
The Business of Banks
www.bankrate.com
This site offers the latest auto
loan, mortgage and credit card rates here. In addition, users have access to
tools to rate banks, find local branches and see national averages on
mortgages and credit cards. Financial calculators and a free subscription to
Bankrate’s electronic newsletter are also available.
A Quick Course in Online
Banking
www.onlinebrokerage.about.com/blbank.htm
About.com’s Online Banking Center
gives users an introduction to and basic information about conducting
electronic banking transactions. Topics include Web banking basics, paying
bills and mortgages online, and banking software. Articles on topics in
banking and links to related information also are available.
Electronic Transaction
Resources
www.bank-accounts-online.com
The Banking and Investing Online
Resource Group publishes articles with titles such as “How to Manage and
Strengthen Your Dream Sales Team,” and offers a Q&A section devoted to
customer service and online banking. By clicking on the Fraud Reporting tab,
users can get links to fraud prevention and reporting organization Web sites
including the Federal Trade Commission and the Fraud Bureau.
The Best Online Banks --- http://onlinebrokerage.about.com/cs/bestwebbanks/index.htm
One-stop
Online Banking Center
Find the answers to all of your questions about online banking here.
Internet
Bank Scorecard, from Gomez.com Best of
the Net
Internet consultancy, Gomez.com's Winter 2000 ranking of online banks.
SmartMoney's
2000 Online Banking Rankings Best of
the Net
WSJ's personal finance magazine, SmartMoney's ranking of online banking sites.
BankRate's
Best US Online Checking Accounts for 2001
Check out the best in US checking accounts for the year 2001.
Canadian
2000 Online Bank Rankings, from Quicken.ca
Financial software maker Quicken ranks Canadian web banks.
"0-Effort"
Online Banking's rankings
This Web site has recently announced its ranking of online banks. And you can
sort them by Best Interest Rates, Best Bill Paying, or Best Customer Service.
This one is a little hard to believe.
Holiday e-commerce will reach record levels in 2001, despite economic
uncertainty, according to Nielsen//NetRatings and Harris Interactive. But
outside North America, holiday e-commerce is really starting to take off. http://www.newmedia.com/nm-ie.asp?articleID=3154
Demand Increasing for Online,
Electronic Payment Methods The use of the Internet to pay bills is growing, but
so is the use of several electronic payment methods. A survey by the Yankee
Group found it's the convenience of eliminating checks that is helping convert
consumers. http://www.newmedia.com/nm-ie.asp?articleID=3149
Congress isn't considering legislation
on national ID cards, but the subject continues to bother civil libertarians who
fear that it's only a matter of time --- http://www.wired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,47788,00.html
Actually, what Larry Ellison is
proposing is not so unreasonable.
A three-century-old theory that the
Northern and Southern lights match has finally been confirmed by a NASA
spacecraft
"Parallel Polar Light Shows," Wired News, October 26, 2001 --- http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,47920,00.html
"The search for intelligent life
at NASA," The Economist, October 25, 2001 --- http://www.economist.com/science/displayStory.cfm?Story_ID=832711
From Infobits on October 26, 2001
SCHOLARLY PUBLISHING: COSTS AND
CONCERNS
Recently, here at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and elsewhere, there has been more
than the usual talk about the exceptionally-high and constantly-rising costs
of scholarly journals and what scholar, editors, and libraries can do about
the situation. Here is a summary of some of the discussion and reading:
At the UNC-Chapel
Hill School of Information & Library Science 2001 Lucile Kelling Henderson
Lecture, John Vaughn, Executive Vice President of Association of American
Universities (AAU), presented some possible solutions to the problem. He
suggested that scholarly publishing be non-revenue generating, funded on a
cost-plus basis, as are research activities. He said that scholars need to
retain their copyright, or at least sufficient rights to keep their
publications accessible to the scholarly community. Vaughn proposed the
following actions:
-- a high quality
study of the economics of scholarly publishing in the print environment that
can then be extrapolated to the digital environment,
-- a series of
discussions with key actors and stakeholders in the academic community, and
-- the
establishment of a group of experts with an oversight board to develop a
business plan to transform the current system.
For more info on AAU's position on
scholarly publishing, see "Principles for Emerging Systems of Scholarly
Publishing" at http://www.aau.edu/issues/Principles5.10.00.html
"Declaring
Independence: Returning Scientific Publishing to Scientists," (THE
JOURNAL OF ELECTRONIC PUBLISHING, vol. 7, issue 1, August, 2001) at http://www.press.umich.edu/jep/07-01/buckholtz.html
LEARNED PUBLISHING
Journal of the
Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers http://www.alpsp.org/journal.htm
"Publishing
Electronic Journals Online" by Tom Abate (BIOSCIENCE, vol. 47, no. 3,
March 1997) http://scilib.ucsd.edu/sio/guide/prices/prices8.html
The Open Archives
Initiative Develops and promotes interoperability standards that aim to
facilitate the efficient dissemination of content http://www.openarchives.org/
International
Consortium for the Advancement of Academic Publication A Canadian e-journal
publishing initiative http://www.icaap.org/
The Resilience
Alliance An attempt to develop manuscript processing software for e-journals http://www.resalliance.org/consortium/
Project Euclid: A New
Model in Scholarly Communication http://projecteuclid.org/
Berkeley Electronic
Press Partnership Provides a suite of electronic publishing tools http://escholarship.cdlib.org/bepress.html
Commercial services
for e-journal editors:
ScholarOne http://www.scholarone.com/applications.html
Rapid Review http://cjs.cadmus.com/rapidreview/index.html
THEN WHAT? is a novel
dealing with the future of learning and technology by Infobits subscriber,
Jason Ohler <jason.ohler@uas.alaska.edu>
. Since 1986, Ohler has been Director of the Educational Technology Program at
the University of Alaska Southeast.
For more
information and excerpts from the book, link to http://www.jasonohler.com/thenwhat/
INFOBITS is also available online on
the World Wide Web at http://www.unc.edu/cit/infobits/
(HTML format) and at http://www.unc.edu/cit/infobits/text/index.html
(plain text format).
Allegations that Big Five firm KPMG
helped the nation's largest for-profit hospital chain cheat Medicare and
Medicaid will be resolved by a $9 million settlement by the firm http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=61513
Allegations that Big
Five firm KPMG helped the nation's largest for-profit hospital chain cheat
Medicare and Medicaid will be resolved by a $9 million settlement by the firm.
KPMG this week agreed to settle out of court in a case that last year slapped
their client the Columbia Hospital Corporation with over $840 million in
criminal fines for defrauding government health care programs.
The case alleged that
KPMG filed false claims on behalf of Basic American Medical Inc. and later
Columbia Hospital Corp. that allowed them to collect on costs they knew were
not allowed. The case revolved around false claims made from 1990 to 1992, and
involved four hospitals in Florida and two in Kentucky.
"We vigorously
deny that we engaged in any wrongdoing," KPMG spokesman George Ledwith
said. He added that the accounting firm agreed to settle only to avoid costly
litigation and put a 10-year-old dispute behind it.
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting
fraud are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
"Programmer Exposes Microsoft
Flaws," by Amy Harmon, The New York Times, October 23, 2001
--- http://www.nytimes.com/2001/10/23/technology/23PIRA.html
"U.S. forces pack pocket
computers: Handhelds track troop movements, help pinpoint targets, MSNBC,
October 23, 2001 --- http://www.msnbc.com/news/646394.asp?0si=-
From MIT
"Information Warfare," by David H. Freedman, Technology Review,
November 2001 --- http://www.techreview.com/magazine/nov01/freedman.asp
The rising stakes
have touched off an escalating stream of network skirmishes between those
determined to break into organizations' computers and those charged with
protecting them. Right now, the bad guys are winning. "Internet security
is a big mess," says Bill Cheswick, a chief scientist at Lumeta, a
Somerset, NJ, computer-security software firm spun off from Lucent
Technologies. "It gets discouraging sometimes." That sobering
reality has sent Cheswick and other top computer scientists into their labs to
come up with new weapons for the intensifying battle
A proposal to create an
"electronic Congress" in times of emergency is causing some wonder up
on Capitol Hill --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,47841,00.html
This is something I proposed on
September 12 at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/justiceappeal.htm#Jensen
Apple has finally unveiled its secret
"breakthrough" device: The iPod is a pricey portable music player that
stores up to 1,000 songs and can copy a CD in 10 seconds. But Apple fans aren't
all that thrilled --- http://www.wired.com/news/gizmos/0,1452,47805,00.html
Cleopatra from Egypt: From
History to Myth --- http://www.fmnh.org/cleopatra/cleopatra.html
The Senate is preparing to approve the
biggest expansion of eavesdropping laws in a generation. Opponents of the
anti-terrorism bill try to put a brave face on bitter defeat --- http://www.wired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,47858,00.html
Take a look at these
Top 100 Most Influential Accountants and their favorite books.
Accounting Today announced its annual
list of the 100 Most Influential People in Accounting for the year 2001. Many
people named on the list shared their most recent reading experiences. Here are
the books that are shaping these top minds. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/61222
The actual listing of the Top 100 Most
Influential People in Accounting is at http://www.electronicaccountant.com/html/top100peop/top100list.htm
I detected the following professors or
former professors of great influence.
Congratulations to our former AAA
President Steve Albrecht, Professor of Accounting from BYU (although on
leave at Stanford)
Congratulations to our ethics watchdog Abraham
J. Briloff ,Professor Emeritus, Baruch College
Congratulations to diligent GASB
part-time member William Wallace Holder, Ernst & Young Professor of
Accounting, University of Southern California
Congratulations to our ever- intangible
Baruch Lev Professor, New York University
Baruch is probably the only professor on this Top 100 list with a highly useful
Web site. See http://www.stern.nyu.edu/~blev/
Congratulations to Belverd E.
Needles Jr., President, International Association for Accounting Education
and Research (but we all know Bel from Depaul University and from his successful
textbooks in accountancy).
Congratulations to Harvey L. Pitt,
Chairman, SEC (many of you may not know he was formerly an Adjunct Professor of
Law at Georgetown University).
Three Cheers
for Our Terrific Mary Stone!
Congratulations to Mary S. Stone, Professor, The University of Alabama and most
recent President of the American Accounting Association until August 22, 2001.
Congratulations to Ray Whittington,
Director School of Accountancy, DePaul University (a suitable honor for a very
good professor of accountancy).
The most popular books among the Top
100 Most Influential Accountants are as follows according to the list at http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=61222
Security
Transformation: Digital Defense Strategies to Protect your Company's
Reputation and Market Share, by Mary Pat McCarthy and Stuart Campbell
with Rob Brownstein |
The
Man in the Mirror, by Patrick Morley |
The
Prayer of Jabez: Breaking Through to the Blessed Life, by Bruce
Wilkinson |
The
ValueReporting Revolution: Moving Beyond the Earnings Game, by Robert
Eccles, et. al. |
Tuesdays
with Morrie: An Old Man, a Young Man, and Life's Greatest Lesson, by
Mitch Albom |
Under
the Tuscan Sun : At Home in Italy, by Frances Mayes |
John
Adams, by David McCullough |
EToys has pried the nails from its
coffin, saved by a former rival. The site is one of several dot-com burnouts
resurrected by a one-time competitor --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,47745,00.html
Like most systems designed to protect
children from sexual or violent content on the Web, a voluntary one touted by
Microsoft, AOL Time Warner and Yahoo has severe limitations --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,47808,00.html
Haunted by the specter of regulation,
three of the biggest companies on the Net are throwing their weight behind a new
smut filtering scheme --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,47798,00.html
From the FBI
Crime in the United States, 2000 --- http://www.fbi.gov/ucr/00cius.htm
PixelPress (Art, Photography, Aritists)
--- http://www.pixelpress.org
At PixelPress we
attempt to simultaneously explore new ways of understanding the world and new
ways of using media to deepen the exploration. We invite a wide variety of
artists and documentarians to present their work, and frequently collaborate
with them to better utilize the new potentialities of digital media, such as
non-linear narratives, layered points of view, shifting relationships of image
and text, and other evolving forms. We also select books, exhibitions or
events of interest in our PixelPicks, an occasional column that highlights
work from a variety of cultures, many of them under-represented in mainstream
media. And we publish essays and articles on subjects surrounding the
contemporary evolution/revolution in media.
All of this has been
done without any commercial sponsorship. And other than one grant from the
Hasselblad Foundation in Sweden – for which we are eternally grateful –
this site has been funded only by the spirit of adventure. So if we don’t
change it fast enough, please don’t be discouraged. We are working on it.
Learn how to organize your message,
pick a theme, and utilize fonts to maximize your usage of PowerPoint. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/61530
From Transparency International
Global Corruption Report --- http://www.globalcorruptionreport.org/
From the National Academies Press
Terrorism and Security Collection http://www.nap.edu/terror/
DoubleTake Magazine (Literary News,
Fiction, Poetry, Literature) --- http://www.doubletakemagazine.org/
Macromedia claims it owns the patent to
Adobe Photoshop and files a suit against Adobe Systems --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,47773,00.html
Women Make Movies (a feminist site that
films cultural differences in the lives of women) http://www.wmm.com/
Instant messaging gets a digital media
overhaul, as Yahoo integrates streaming music, cartoon backgrounds and games
into its new application. But America Online and Microsoft still rule --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,47782,00.html
Yahoo
on Monday released the latest version of its popular instant messenger
application, offering users the ability to stream popular music, play games
and create cartoon backgrounds on the system.
The company's new
service enhancements are an attempt to counter the tremendous reach that
competitors America Online and Microsoft
have built up by embedding their applications on pre-packaged products.
Yahoo's goal is to
build a real-time entertainment portal that allows users to watch movie clips
and interviews, listen to new music, play games or simply personalize the chat
window with comics like Dilbert or generic backgrounds.
"We've put an
entertainment tool through the IM window where people can connect with bands,
or watch the newest video or purchase the CD," said Mary Osaka, a Yahoo
spokeswoman. "It provides users a way to experience IM in ways they never
have before."
While AOL and
Microsoft have primarily been competing for the dialup users, Yahoo has made a
serious play to attract broadband users looking for more than just a simple
text experience.
"It's a good
strategy for Yahoo to go after the rich media, high-end users because AOL and
MSN are going to be targeting the ease-of-use newbie consumers," said
Billy Pidgeon, an analyst with Jupiter
Media Metrix. "That doesn't mean that these companies won't get into
that later, but for now, this is Yahoo's best bet."
Along with the
company's streaming Internet news program FinanceVision, Pidgeon said it was
clear Yahoo was developing a strategy for high-speed users.
Yahoo faces an uphill
battle in its fight to gain a strong foothold with instant message services --
among the fastest-growing applications on the Internet.
AOL and Microsoft
have a decided advantage. AOL users have free access through the Internet
service provider, while Microsoft users have a default service built into the
operating system.
That strategy has
worked well for both companies, which have battled for the top spot in the IM
wars. Currently, Microsoft has 42 million users, a number that is expected to
grow now that the company's Windows Messenger client is built into the new XP
operating system, according to Jupiter Media Metrix.
See also:
Aimster
Up, Napster Down for Now
Can't
We All Just Chat Along?
This
Hack's Sights Set on AIM
Trapped
and Chatting in NYC
This is yet another reason why I
recommend subscribing to the electronic version of The Wall Street Journal so
that you can also subscribe to the free educator service. This is one of
the example cases from the free October 25 edition of the Accounting Educators
Review:
SEGMENT REPORTING and FX HEDGING
TITLE: Pfizer Posts
Jump In Third-Period Net On Lipitor Sales
REPORTER: Beth M. Mantz
DATE: Oct 18, 2001
PAGE: B9 LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1003323212215713160.djm
TOPICS: Advanced Financial Accounting
SUMMARY:
The article describes information in both the quarterly report and in
supplemental information supporting the earnings release that is linked to the
electronic form of the WSJ article. Topics discussed in the article include
the effects of foreign currency translation on revenues and details from
segment reporting.
QUESTIONS:
1.) Examine Pfizer's 3rd quarter report, linked through the article on WSJ
interactive as "listen to Pfizer's conference call discussing
third-quarter earnings." How are the company's segment results presented?
Do segment reporting standards under SFAS 131 require this much detail? Why
might a company want to present such detail?
2.) Along what lines
do you think the company organizes its management reporting system?
3.) The article
describes a "$242 million foreign currency hit because of the strong
dollar." This amount is given in the supplemental information to the
quarterly financial statements. How does
foreign currency affect this company's revenues? How can the company hedge
against the impact of foreign currency translations? (To this I
would add questions about FAS 133/IAS39 accounting rules for FX hedging.)
4.) The article
states, "revenue for human pharmaceuticals climbed 13% to $6.24 billion,
or 16% excluding the impact of foreign exchange..." Where is this
information presented in the quarterly results linked to the article? What
concerns do you have about the way that this information is presented?
Reviewed By: Judy
Beckman, University of Rhode Island
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University
I teach in an electronic classroom that
allows for switching between 37 computers, a document camera, and a SmartBoard.
Any designated computer (on a touch screen) displays simultaneously on two
screen. The same thing happens if I plug my laptop into a VGA port on the
lecturn.
In my office, I have a LinkSys splitter
that allows me to input four devices (e.g., computers) and switch each device to
a single monitor, keyboard, and mouse. I use this so I only need one keyboard
and mouse at my desktop. However, the monitor signal degrades too much such that
each of my two main computers has its own monitor. See http://www.linksys.com/
You can try a Y-Cable VGA signal
splitter that costs about $5.00. However, you may lose some image quality.
The best solution is to have a splitter
with a SVGA or VGA distribution amplifier See http://www.monitorworld.com/faq_pages/q24_page.html
I think my LinkSys splitter degrades because it only splits the SVGA signal
without distribution amplification.
Bob Jensen
-----Original
Message-----
From: Ramsey, Donald [mailto:dramsey@UDC.EDU]
Sent: Monday, October 29, 2001 6:56 PM
To: AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU Subject: Laptop Ports
Is it possible to
simultaneously control two digital projectors, and read a live image from a
document camera, from one laptop? Would you run out of ports? Is any external
hardware necessary? Many thanks for any advice!
Best,
Donald D.
Ramsey,
University of the District of Columbia
[dramsey@UDC.EDU]
Reply from John Roberts [roberts_j@POPMAIL.FIRN.EDU]
My school recently
purchased some InFocus projectors that were meant to be used with notebook
computers. Consequently, when we tried to use these in the classroom witha
normal desktop computer we discovered that there was no video out from the
projector to a monitor as there had been on previous models of projectors we
had used.
InFocus wanted $325
for their Cable Wizard that would allow us to have both the projector and
monitor hooked up. Our IT department located another splitter - the VS-102
manufactured by ATEN International based in Taiwan. It has a MSRP of $69 (BUY.COM
has it for 47.95) and has worked great - no discernable degradation of signal.
You might check out
the following site for this and other video splitters:
ATEN's site: http://www.aten-usa.com/products/productselect.php?CATEGORY=VIDEO
Buy.Com's site:
http://www.us.buy.com/retail/searchresults.asp?search_store=1&qu=video+split
A growing number of small and midsize
companies are deploying enterprise resource planning applications. In the past,
many of these companies lacked the budget or time to consider implementing
large, complex, and expensive ERP packages. But now, top-tier vendors are
offering less-expensive, modular, and hosted versions of their software. http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eEqY0BcUEY04e0ZM40Aw
Bob Jensen's ERP threads are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245glosap.htm
So much data, so few ways to print out
a good copy. Not anymore. Introducing PrintMe, a worldwide network of servers
connected to a worldwide network of printers --- http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,47785,00.html
I found your name on
the website as someone who teaches existing server-side Java courses. My
company has developed a new, practical server-side Java course, and we would
like you to consider offering it to your students in the future.
You can view the
syllabus of this new class that we developed at www.basebeans.com
. The web site has the complete details of the Train the Trainer workshop. As
technology advances from servlets to JSPs, the next step is towards JSP
frameworks. As an instructor, I'm sure you are aware of the constant need to
stay ahead of the curve.
If you would contact
me at (415) 781-1463, I can tell you more.
Thanks,
Rene
I received the message below from
Accountingtemps on October 25, 2001
WHAT DOES THE FUTURE HOLD FOR THE
NEXT GENERATION OF ACCOUNTANTS?
To find out, Accountemps and Robert
Half recently surveyed 1,400 chief financial officers (CFOs) and interviewed a
wide range of leading experts in accounting and academia for their opinions on
how today's trends will shape the future of the accounting profession.
The Next Generation Accountant
project addressed such questions as:
· What new educational standards
and competencies will be required of tomorrow's accountants?
· What impact will technology have
on the field?
· How will the growth of
consulting and specialization change available career options?
· Where will the hottest
accounting jobs be in the future?
To learn more, visit the Next
Generation Accountant web site at http://www.nextgenaccountant.com
. The site contains complete survey results, a summary of research findings,
an accounting skills quiz, audio and video clips of expert interviews, and
more.
Download or request a free copy of
our 20-page Next Generation Accountant research guide at: http://www.nextgenaccountant.com/research_hili/research_guide.html
You may also view the interactive web
cast at: http://www.nextgenaccountant.com/webcast/webcast.html
If you have any questions, or if you
are interested in having a local Accountemps or Robert Half representative
make a presentation of the Next Generation Accountant findings, call
Accountemps at 800-803-8367 or Robert Half at 800-474-4253 for the office
nearest you.
Paul Harvey Writes:
We tried so hard to
make things better for our kids that we made them worse. For my grandchildren,
I'd like better.
I'd really like for
them to know about hand me down clothes and homemade ice cream and leftover
meat loaf sandwiches, I really would.
I hope you learn
humility by being humiliated, and that you learn honesty by being cheated.
I hope you learn to
make your own bed and mow the lawn and wash the car.
And I really hope
nobody gives you a brand new car when you are sixteen.
It will be good if at
least one time you can see puppies born and your old dog put to sleep.
I hope you get a
black eye fighting for something you believe in, I hope you have to share a
bedroom with your younger brother. And it's all right if you have to draw a
line down the middle of the room, but when he wants to crawl under the covers
with you because he's scared, I hope you let him.
When you want to see
a movie and your little brother wants to tag along, I hope you'll let him.
I hope you have to
walk uphill to school with your friends and that you live in a town where you
can do it safely. On rainy days when you have to catch a ride, I hope you
don't ask your driver to drop you two blocks away so you won't be seen riding
with someone as uncool as your Mom.
If you want a
slingshot, I hope your Dad teaches you how to make one instead of buying one.
I hope you learn to dig in the dirt and read books.
When you learn to use
computers, I hope you also learn to add and subtract in your head.
I hope you get teased
by your friends when you have your first crush on a girl, and when you talk
back to your mother that you learn what ivory soap tastes like.
May you skin your
knee climbing a mountain, burn your hand on a stove and stick your tongue on a
frozen flagpole.
I don't care if you
try a beer once, but I hope you don't like it. And if a friend offers you dope
or a joint, I hope you realize he is not your friend.
I sure hope you make
time to sit on a porch with your Grandpa and go fishing with your Uncle.
May you feel sorrow
at a funeral and joy during the holidays.
I hope your mother
punishes you when you throw a baseball through your neighbor's window and that
she hugs you and kisses you at Christmas time when you give her a plaster mold
of your hand.
These things I wish
for you - tough times and disappointment, hard work and happiness. To me, it's
the only way to appreciate life.
Paul Harvey (for the "Rest of His
Story") http://www.paulharvey.com/
You can hear his voice, listen to his news, and read his news.
Halloween joke forwarded by Dick Haar
Three vampires went
into a bar and sat down. The barmaid came over to take their orders. "And
what would you, er, gentlemen like tonight?"
The first vampire
said, "I'll have a Bloody Mary."
The second vampire
said, "I'll have a mug of blood."
The third vampire
shook his head at his companions and said, "I'll just have a glass of
plasma."
The barmaid wrote
down each order, went to the bar and called to the bartender,
"One Bloody
Mary, one blood regular, and a blood light."
If you have children,
you may find this site from Little Golden Books a nice Halloween treat. Even
if you don't have children, it is a neat Web site. You will need Flash
installed on your computer.
Halloween Pop-up Book
http://www.goldenbooks.com/fun/emagic/flash/h2k.html
Bob Blystone
Farmer Joe --- http://newfunpages.com/farmerjoe.php3
Forwarded by a Happy Lady (I listed
some, but not all, of these in a previous edition of New Bookmarks).
THE "TWO COW" GLOSSARY
A CHRISTIAN DEMOCRAT:
You have two cows. You keep one and give one to your neighbor.
A SOCIALIST:
You have two cows. The government takes one and gives it to your neighbor.
AN AMERICAN REPUBLICAN:
You have two cows. Your neighbor has none. So what?
AN AMERICAN DEMOCRAT:
You have two cows. Your neighbor has none. You feel guilty for being
successful. You vote people into office who tax your cows, forcing you to sell
one to raise money to pay the tax. The people you voted for then take the tax
money and buy a cow and give it to your neighbor. You feel righteous.
A COMMUNIST:
You have two cows. The government seizes both and provides you with milk.
A FASCIST:
You have two cows. The government seizes both and sells you the milk.
DEMOCRACY, AMERICAN STYLE:
You have two cows. The government taxes you to the point you have to sell both
to support a man in a foreign country who has only one cow, which was a gift
from your government.
CAPITALISM, AMERICAN STYLE:
You have two cows. You sell one, buy a bull, and build a herd of cows.
BUREAUCRACY, AMERICAN STYLE:
You have two cows. The government takes them both, shoots one, milks the
other, pays you for the milk, then pours the milk down the drain.
AN AMERICAN CORPORATION:
You have two cows. You sell one, and force the other to produce the milk of
four cows. You are surprised when the cow drops dead.
A FRENCH CORPORATION:
You have two cows. You go on strike because you want three cows.
A JAPANESE CORPORATION:
You have two cows. You redesign them so they are one-tenth the size of an
ordinary cow and produce twenty times the milk. Yo u then create clever cow
cartoon images called Cowkimon (that's plural) and market them World-Wide.
A GERMAN CORPORATION:
You have two cows. You re-engineer them so they live for 100 years, eat once a
month, and milk themselves.
A BRITISH CORPORATION: You have two
cows. They are mad. They die. Pass the shepherd's pie, please.
AN ITALIAN CORPORATION:
You have two cows, but you don't know where they are. You break for lunch.
A RUSSIAN CORPORATION:
You have two cows. You count them and learn you have five cows. You count them
again and learn you have 42 cows. You count them again and learn you have 12
cows. You stop counting cows and open another bottle of vodka.
A SWISS CORPORATION:
You have 5000 cows, none of which belong to you. You charge others for storing
them.
A BRAZILIAN CORPORATION:
You have two cows. You enter into a partnership with an American corporation.
Soon you have 1000 cows and the American corporation declares bankruptcy.
AN INDIAN CORPORATION:
You have two cows. You worship both of them.
A CHINESE CORPORATION:
You have two cows. You have 300 people milking them. You claim full
employment, high bovine productivity, and arrest the newsman who reported on
them.
AN ISRAELI CORPORATION:
There are these two Jewish cows, right? They open a milk factory, an ice cream
store, and then sell the movie rights. They send their calves to Harvard to
become doctors. So, who needs people?
AN IOWA CORPORATION:
You have two cows. That one on the left is kinda cute...
Forwarded by Dick Haar
A group of Aggie
blondes in a class at Texas A&M were given the assignment to measure the
height of a flagpole. So they go out to the flagpole with ladders and tape
measures, and they're falling off the ladders, dropping the tape measures -
the whole thing is just a mess.
An engineer comes
along and sees what they're trying to do, walks over, pulls the flagpole out
of the ground, lays it flat, measures it from end to end, gives the
measurement to one of the blondes, puts the pole back in the ground, and walks
away.
After the engineer
has gone, one blonde turns to another and laughs. "Isn't that just like
an engineer? We're looking for the height and he gives us the length."
For Us Charlie Browns in life!
Forwarded by Auntie Bev.
Charles Shulz
Philosophy
1. Name the five
wealthiest people in the world.
2. Name the last five
Heisman trophy winners.
3. Name the last five
winners of the Miss America contest.
4. Name ten people
who have won the Nobel or Pulitzer prize.
5. Name the last half
dozen Academy Award winners for best actor and actress.
6. Name the last
decade's worth of World Series winners.
How did you do?
The point is, none of
us remember the headliners of yesterday.
These are no
second-rate achievers. They are the best in their fields.
But the applause
dies. Awards tarnish.
Achievements are
forgotten.
Accolades and
certificates are buried with their owners.
Here's another quiz.
See how you do on this one:
1. List a few
teachers who aided your journey through school.
2. Name three friends
who have helped you through a difficult time.
3. Name five people
who have taught you something worthwhile.
4. Think of a few
people who have made you feel appreciated and special.
5. Think of five
people you enjoy spending time with.
6. Name half a dozen
heroes whose stories have inspired you.
Easier?
The lesson:
The people who make a
difference in your life are not the ones with the most credentials, the
most money, or the most awards.
They are the ones that care.
And
that's the way it was on November 1, 2001 with a little help from my friends.
In
March 2000, Forbes named AccountantsWorld.com as the Best Website on the
Web --- http://accountantsworld.com/.
Some top accountancy links --- http://accountantsworld.com/category.asp?id=Accounting
For
accounting news, I prefer AccountingWeb at http://www.accountingweb.com/
Another
leading accounting site is AccountingEducation.com at http://www.accountingeducation.com/
Paul
Pacter maintains the best international accounting standards and news Website
at http://www.iasplus.com/
How
stuff works --- http://www.howstuffworks.com/
Professor
Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134 Email: rjensen@trinity.edu


October
24, 2001
I
will be out of the country for a week. This
will delay in the next edition of New Bookmarks.
Quotes of the Week
How many people
does it take to change a light bulb? Only one, but the light bulb has to really,
really want to change.
Forwarded by Janet Flatley
Forwarded by Dick Haar (The author is
Peter Ferrara):
"There was a
report that someone in Pakistan had published in a newspaper there an offer of
a reward to anyone who killed an American, any American. "So I just
thought I would write to let them know what an American is, so they would know
when they found one."
"An American is
English...or French, or Italian, Irish, German, Spanish, or of an Indian tribe
, Polish, Russian or Greek. An American may also be African, Indian, Chinese,
Japanese, Australian, Iranian, Asian, or Arab, or Pakistani, or Afghan.
"An American is
Christian, or he could be Jewish, or Buddhist, or Muslim. In fact, there are
more Muslims in America than in Afghanistan. The only difference is that in
America they are free to worship as each of them choose. "An American is
also free to believe in no religion. For that he will answer only to God, not
to the government, or to armed thugs claiming to speak for the government and
for God.
"An American is
from the most prosperous land in the history of the world. The root of that
prosperity can be found in the Declaration of Independence, which recognizes
the God-given right of each man and woman to the pursuit of happiness.
"An American is
generous. Americans have helped out just about every other nation in the world
in their time of need. "When Afghanistan was overrun by the Soviet army
20 years ago, Americans came with arms and supplies to enable the people to
win back their country. As of the morning of September 11, Americans had given
more than any other nation to the poor in Afghanistan.
"An American
does not have to obey the mad ravings of ignorant, ungodly cruel, old men.
American men will not be fooled into giving up their lives to kill innocent
people, so that these foolish old men may hold on to power. American women are
free to show their beautiful faces to the world, as each of them choose.
"An American is
free to criticize his government's officials when they are wrong, in his or
her own opinion. Then he is free to replace them, by majority vote.
"Americans
welcome people from all lands, all cultures, all religions, because they are
not afraid. They are not afraid that their history, their religion, their
beliefs, will be overrun, or forgotten. That is because they know they are
free to hold to their religion, their beliefs, their history, as each of them
choose. "And just as Americans welcome all, they enjoy the best that
everyone has to bring, from all over the world. The best science, the best
technology, the best products, the best books, the best music, the best food,
the best athletes.
"Americans
welcome the best, but they also welcome the least. The nation symbol of
America welcomes your tired and your poor, the wretched refuse of your teeming
shores, the homeless, tempest tossed. "These in fact are the people who
built America. Many of them were working in the twin towers on the morning of
September 11, earning a better life for their families.
"So you can try
to kill an American if you must. Hitler did. So did General Tojo and Stalin
and Mao Tse-Tung, and every bloodthirsty tyrant in the history of the world.
"But in doing so you would just be killing yourself. Because Americans
are not a particular people from a particular place. They are the embodiment
of the human spirit of freedom. Everyone who holds to that spirit, everywhere,
is an American.
"So look around
you. You may find more Americans in your land than you thought were there. One
day they will rise up and overthrow the old, ignorant, tired tyrants that
trouble too many lands. Then those lands too will join the community of free
and prosperous nations.
"And America
will welcome them."
Peter Ferrara
Associate p\Professor of Law
George Mason University School of Law.
To Subscribers of the AECM
I want to thank Denny Beresford for his
announcement that I will be one of the two recipients of the American Accounting
Association's Outstanding Accounting Educator awards to be granted in San
Antonio next August. I prize both his friendship and his valuable contributions
to the AECM.
Since my wife and I am hurriedly
preparing to depart for Brazil (I'm conducting an eCommerce workshop at the
Asian Pacific Accounting Conference in Rio), I do not have time today to respond
to the many messages of "congratulation" from close friends and other
friends whom I have never met face-to-face. Your very kind words reveal that we
all are indeed good friends. I define friends as people who happily share their
talents, time, questions, answers, joys, and frustrations with one another. The
most important thing is that friends can even be critical of one another without
taking it personally. Subscribers on the AECM are indeed good friends.
Joel Demski, who is both my friend and
the current President of the American Accounting Association, made some points
that I agree with in his inaugural address in Atlanta on http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/001aaa/atlanta01.htm
He also complained that scholarship in
accounting is "no longer any fun." On that point I must disagree!
Since the rise of technology in education and Internet communications
(especially AECM communications), I am finding more fun in scholarship than ever
before. We have a new kind of collaboration and bonding that in most ways makes
traditional communications obsolete. It has been a real joy to visit so many
campuses, meet so many new faces, and learn so much from each of you around the
world. It has been especially fun to have some of you focus my thoughts and
ideas with your questions and answers on the AECM. The AECM is especially great
since I don't have to camp out in airports just to get inside your heads.
I will be doing a workshop with Amy
Dunbar at Mercer University on November 9. At that time, I will propose to Amy
that I interfere with her efforts to organize an honors reception in San Antonio
in August. However, I do not want to bill that reception as focusing on Bob
Jensen's award. Rather, I would like this to be billed simply as an AECM
subscriber get together where those of us that have bonded on the AECM have a
chance to meet face-to-face and acknowledge the wonderful contributions of the
many activists on the AECM. If you don't make this a Bob Jensen affair, then I
will in good conscience feel free to donate substantially to that reception and
possibly help find a place where we can hold the reception. Erika would like to
hold it in our home, but I'm afraid there are too many of you to fit inside the
house. (Nobody wants to party outdoors in August in San Antonio unless it's in a
swimming pool.) There are, however, a number of places downtown where we can
meet close to the Marriott AAA Convention Headquarters.
And in all of this, let's all take a
bow in the direction of Baltimore where Barry Rice had the vision to turn the
AECM into a reality.
My love to all of you!
Bob Jensen
September 11 Web Archive (History,
Media, Terror) ) --- http://september11.archive.org/
Why Project (Art about the attack on
the World Trade Center & Pentagon") --- http://www.whyproject.org/
Afghan Women's Crafts (get something
good for doing something good) --- http://www.feminist.org/store/ProductAfghan.asp
Groups viewed as terrorist
organizations by the U.S. have no trouble voicing their side on the Internet,
and many of the sites are even hosted on American soil --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,47616,00.html
Bob Jensen's threads on terrorism are
at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/justiceappeal.htm
Coates Library has
provided links to a few Websites concerning terrorism and the September 11th
attack: a law and policy site from the University of Pittsburgh Law School, an
extensive site from Vanderbilt University, and a list of related government
documents from the University of Maryland. These links will be updated
regularly. From the library homepage http://lib.trinity.edu/
mouse over "Research Support" and click on "Recommended
Internet Sites." You'll see the link near the top of the page.
We also have PATTERNS
OF GLOBAL TERRORISM, from the state department, and a few other related
documents on the "new government documents" display shelf just to
the right of the coffee bar.
Michael J.
Kaminski
Assistant Librarian/Public Services
Elizabeth Huth Coates Library
Trinity University 715 Stadium Drive San Antonio, TX 78209 Ph: (210) 999-7087
fax: (210) 999-8182 michael.kaminski@trinity.edu
http://www.trinity.edu/mkaminsk
Hi David,
Your message will appear in the October
24 edition of New Bookmarks to be released later on this morning --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
I also added it to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm
Thanks,
Bob Jensen
Dear Prof Jensen:
I was browsing your
site with interest, and wondered if you might be interested in adding our
Web-site, at http://www.bublos.com
to your list of resources. Bublos is primarily a book price comparison site,
though also offers many other useful resources as well, including a growing
book-review archive, and lots of other literary bits and pieces. We also have
useful information regarding used and rare books at http://www.bublos.com/library/rare.books.html
I hope you'll have a
few moments to pay us a visit, and would be very grateful for your
consideration in adding our Web-site to your list of other resources.
Many thanks,
David Benham
http://www.bublos.com
Sharing Professor of
the Week --- Jim Patten at California State University at Bakersfield --- http://www.csubak.edu/~jpatten/
Especially note Jim's accounting ledger
system in Excel.
I have a complete
Excel based general ledger accounting package on my Web site. You will also
find some managerial data, tax templates, and Compound Interest Value
Factors/tables Please feel free to visit the site. I do appreciate feed back.
You will see that I
have used some "Quick Books" techniques and some concepts from the
old AICAP ATB package that was taken over by Creative Solutions. For those who
are olde enough to remember, I use the olde BPI general ledger accounting
system chart of accounts. The BPI package was used on every PC platform at one
time---Dec, TRS 80, IBM, Apple II, etc, etc.
The problems with
using dedicated accounting packages include: Software availability/cost
Learning curve Lack of flexibility at the report generation stage.
So, unlike some, I
feel that using an Excel based accounting package is a real plus. If fact, my
financial statement report generator using Excel is as real world as it gets!
That's why every package out there has "export" to Excel
capabilities, since they cannot compete with the capability of Excel in terms
of report formatting!
I have actually
installed my Excel package for a number of organizations, so I know it works!
Here is my site:
http://www.csubak.edu/~jpatten
Jim Patten,
Associate Professor of Accounting
Cal State University, Bakersfield
Electric Voltage Levels in Many
Nations
This is an
interesting web site with the voltage and plug types for many countries.
Unfortunately, it is ambiguous about Brazil. This site is a company that wants
to sell converters --- http://www.dvdoverseas.com/world_broadcasting.htm
Larry Gindler
Hedge Funds
I don't have much time to spend on this
since I am hurriedly preparing to leave for Brazil.
The SEC has a page on hedge funds at http://www.sec.gov/answers/hedge.htm
You can check on hedge fund performance
at http://www.hedgefund.net/
There is a lot of free information, including discussions of strategies.
The Hedge Fund Association is at http://www.thehfa.org/
I am afraid I cannot provide more at
this time.
Bob Jensen
-----Original Message-----
From: Michael
Sent: Sunday, October 21, 2001 1:43 PM
To: rjensen@trinity.edu Subject: Information
Help! I have read your
numerous articles on hedging, speculating etc and would like to know or learn
more. I am very interested in yield curve arbitrage and also speculative
trading. I am very interested in any information you may provide like the
title of a good book or also, a hedge fund that deals with such things
(checked www.hedgeworld.com
and could not find one that is open).
I am looking for real life
examples not just the theory. Kinda of like what you provided in your
articles. Thank you very much, and I hope you respond soon.
Micheal
The Illinois CPA Society announced the
launch of a new Web site that is devoted to providing students of all ages with
valuable resources and the latest accounting career information. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/60145
The flashy link is at http://www.futurecpa.org/futurecpa/index.htm
Other career links can be found at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#careers
Hi XXXXX,
Opportunities in the corporate sector
have declined in this economy for graduates with either a PhD or a MBA. The
demand is still very high in academe for graduates with an accounting doctoral
degree. There are some opportunities for educators in corporate training
programs, but these usually entail teaching and/or management of online courses.
When the economy was in better shape,
accounting and finance PhD opportunities existed in the financial industry,
particularly for graduates of top schools who wanted to do research for
brokerage houses and investment banks. Graduates with IT specialties such as SAP
were and still are often lured away from academe by large accounting firms
and/or large corporations. I think there are still good business sector
opportunities for PhD graduates with IT skills.
As an example of recent UT graduate
placement, go to http://www.bus.utexas.edu/news/your_business/july01.asp
In 1999, there were only 144 doctorates
granted in accounting and tax. Nearly all of them were placed in academe. There
were good jobs for more than 10 times as many graduates. In the Year 2000, there
were only 74 graduates according to the Accounting Faculty Directory
2002-2003 by James R. Hasselback, Page -3 (actually there is no page number,
but the page is three pages in front of Page 1)
If you can get at back issues of The
Accounting Review, you will see accounting PhD job openings advertised in
every issue. These might provide you with some help concerning jobs
available to accountants with doctoral degrees.
I am sorry I cannot provide you with
better links.
Bob Jensen
-----Original
Message-----
From: XXXXX
Sent: Friday, October 19, 2001 9:04 AM To: rjensen@trinity.edu Subject: Advice
needed!
Hi Dr. Jensen!
I hope the accounting
program is still going strong!!!
Since the last time I
emailed you in the summer I've been doing a lot research regarding grad
school. I've been trying really hard to decide whether going to get a PhD or
MBA would better suit my long-term career goals. After a considerable amount
of research and attending a few MBA informational sessions, I've decided that
maybe an MBA would not be the best for me. I learned about what job options
were available to me after receiving an MBA and my current job options. I
realized that there are not too many additional benefits to outweigh the high
costs. I was interested in moving into consulting if I decided to pursue an
MBA, but I learned from some readings that maybe I do not need an MBA to move
from audit to consulting.
I quickly realized
that public accounting and consulting all involved lots of hours and for now
that is fine, but I'm not sure if that is what I want to spend my career
doing. I realized after entering the workforce now for over a year how much I
miss school and being in the academic community. Of course I've learned a lot
this past year from work. The experience of working in public accounting has
allowed me to really think about where I want to take my career. I know
eventually I would enjoy teaching, but think I would also enjoy working a few
years longer before teaching. In your last email you mentioned that there are
also corporate positions available for PhD graduates. Can you tell me more
specifically what those positions might be?
I guess preparing to
attend a PhD program and a MBA program are different. I know what they are
looking for in a candidate for entrance into a MBA program, but what kind of
work experience are admissions looking for a PhD candidate?
If there are any
websites that I can visit to learn about career options for PhD graduates in
accounting, please let me know. Any opinion you can give me would greatly be
appreciated. Thank you.
XXXXX
Wow Innovation of
the Week
"The Electronic Paper Chase,"
by Steve Dilea, Scientific American --- http://www.scientificamerican.com/2001/1101issue/1101ditlea.html
It offers excellent
resolution and high contrast under a wide range of viewing angles, requires no
external power to retain its image, weighs little, costs less and is
remarkably flexible (literally and figuratively)--unlike today's computer
displays. No wonder traditional ink on paper continues to flourish in a
digital world that was expected to all but do away with it.
Yet ink on paper is
lacking in one of the essential traits of computer displays: instantaneous
erasure and reuse, millions of times without wearing out. Electronic ink on
paper with this ability could usher in an era of store signs and billboards
that could be updated without pulping acres of trees; of e-books that embody
the familiar tactile interface of traditional books; of magazines and
newspapers delivered wirelessly to thin, flexible page displays, convenient
for reading, whether on crowded subways or desert islands.
There have been
intermittent efforts to produce such electronic paper over the past three
decades, but only recently has research gone into full swing. The day when
Scientific American and other periodicals are routinely published in this
medium may come before 2010, thanks to competition between two start-up firms.
Both companies are offshoots of major research institutions: the Xerox Palo
Alto Research Center (PARC) and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Media Laboratory. Both firms base their core technologies on tiny,
electrically charged beads, with the imaging capability controlled
electronically. And they are not only racing each other to commercialize their
efforts but are also anticipating competition from the organic light-emitting
diodes that are beginning to emerge from laboratories.
Spinning Off Electric
Paper The earliest attempt at "electric paper," as it was originally
called, came as a response to the poor visual quality of the computer displays
available in the early 1970s. "The CRTs [cathode-ray tubes] were too
dim," recalls Nicholas K. Sheridon. "I wanted to find a display
material with as many of the properties of paper as possible. Finding a paper
substitute was not my main motivation."
. . .
By 2002 Sheridon
expects the commercial sale of similarly sized signs that can be easily
updated via a wireless network. To a retail client like Federated Department
Stores, Macy's parent company, which is currently spending more than $250,000
a week on changing its in-store signs, such renewable signage could prove
highly desirable. Also due out next year are smaller SmartPaper signs meant to
keep prices up-to-date on supermarket shelves, where inaccurate numbers can
turn into expensive fines under item-pricing laws.
The pliable, reusable
e-newspaper or e-magazine of the future "could happen in a few
years," Sheridon has predicted on several occasions. He happens to have a
concept model: a slit aluminum cylinder from which he pulls out a sheet of
SmartPaper, papyrus scroll-like. In a working model, an array of electrodes
along the edge of the cylinder would imprint up-to-the-minute news or feature
stories on the paper's flexible, rubbery surface; plastic sheets would protect
the paper from being damaged. Smaller-size beads necessary for higher
resolution are on the way. As for a full range of colors, Sheridon has been
issued a patent for subtractive color using transparent Gyricon beads with
thin disks of color filter material in cyan, magenta and yellow, each
addressable by different voltage levels.
Nevertheless, as
paperlike as it may become, this electronic paper may never feel exactly like
the original. Sheridon admits, "It will never be as light as paper. Paper
is about four mils thick; this will always be 12 or 15 mils thick. But it
doesn't have to exactly replicate paper to be useful."
New—FASB
40-Minute Video, Financially Correct (Quality of Earnings)
The price is $15.
A message from Dennis Beresford
Bob,
The SEC has posted at
its web site a speech by new Chairman Harvey Pitt to the AICPA Council meeting
last week. It can be accessed at: http://www.sec.gov/news/speech/spch516.htm
Mr. Pitt seems to be
trying to mend fences with the accounting profession after the great acrimony
relating to auditor independence and other matters in recent years. I'm
pleased that he says that the SEC will try to work on the problem of ever
expanding disclosure requirements and the near impossible complexity of
accounting rules. It will be interesting to see what happens.
Denny Beresford
Note that the quote below is not
talking about GAAP profitability. Instead it is that vapor concept of pro
forma profitability --- whatever that is as inconsistently defined by many firms
trying to boost their image with investors.
From Information Week Daily on October
24, 2001
Amazon
Inching Toward Profitability
Amazon.com Inc. CEO
Jeff Bezos, addressing the company's third-quarter loss of $170 million,
insisted Tuesday that the online superstore was ready to meet its pledge for
profitability in the final three months of the year.
Of course, he's
talking pro forma operating profitability. Measured in that sense, Amazon's
results look almost rosy: The pro forma loss from operations for the quarter
ended Sept. 30 shrunk 60% to $27 million, compared with $68 million a year
earlier. The U.S. retail and services segments combined were profitable on a
pro forma basis for the second straight quarter--to the tune of $1 million,
compared with a loss of $29 million last year.
But back to the
non-pro forma loss of $170 million, as computed according to generally
accepted accounting principles: It was a 29% improvement from the $241 million
loss a year ago, but $2 million worse than the $168 million it lost during the
previous quarter. Net sales were basically flat--$639 million, compared with
$638 million a year ago. One bright spot for the quarter: Sales of used
merchandise, launched just 11 months ago, totaled 17% of all U.S. orders.
"To reach pro
forma profitability requires not heroics, just execution," CFO Warren
Jenson said during a conference call. Jensen said net sales for the fourth
quarter are expected to be between $970 million and $1.07 billion, compared
with $972 million for fourth quarter of 2000. He expects revenue from
services--fueled by partnerships with Target, Circuit City, and Expedia formed
in the past three months--to exceed $200 million this year. - Christopher T.
Heun
Bob Jensen's threads on
eCommerce are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on
ROI and pro forma definitions (or lack thereof) are at
Book Review
The Value Reporting Revolution clearly
explains why corporations must move toward greater transparency and, more
importantly, it provides a comprehensive framework for achieving that goal.
Readers learn how to identify the gaps between how corporate managers perceive
their disclosure practices versus how the markets see them. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0471398799/accountingweb
New Offering from PwC Division touts
consistent CRM PwC ConsultingTM, a division of financial services organization
PricewaterhouseCoopers, has released CRM ACCEL — a complete multi-channel CRM
program designed to help companies reduce the cost of serving customers while
increasing revenue. http://www.newmedia.com/nm-ie.asp?articleID=3144
CRM is defined at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm
A CRM portals page is at http://www.downesmarketing.co.uk/crmlinks.html
Bob Jensen's eCommerce links are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce.htm
From the Scout Report on October 19,
2001
Institutional
Policies and Practices: Results From the 1999 National Study of Postsecondary
Faculty, Institution Survey_ http://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo.asp?pubid=2001201
Released this week
from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), this 138-page
publication reports results from a survey of 960 institutions and is part of
the 1999 National Study of Postsecondary Faculty. The report gives data on
types of instructors (full-time, part-time, teaching assistant, etc.), gender,
ethnicity, and salaries and how these numbers have changed over time. NCES
found that 71 percent of undergraduate courses are taught by full time
faculty, 27 percent by part-time faculty, and 1 percent by teaching assistants
(14 percent in public research institutions). The survey also found that 45
percent of faculty were part-time, and only 53 percent of institutions
contribute to benefits for part-time faculty (who worked, according to the
survey, an average of 36.9 hours a week). This report should be of great
interest to anyone tracking changes in university employment.
H-Utopia http://www2.h-net.msu.edu/~utopia/
The latest addition
to H-Net's discussion networks explores issues of utopia and is "devoted
to discussion of utopianism in all its forms, from literary expression to
policy analysis to architectural criticism to activism." With a focus on
the forms, contents, and influences of utopian/ dystopian thinking, the site
allows users to participate in discussions and view logs of past discussions
and announcements. The welcome message link gives users information about
subscribing as well as some basic information about the list and the editors.
Lift Every Voice
[QuickTime, MP3] http://www.lib.virginia.edu/speccol/exhibits/music/index.html
The University of
Virginia Library is hosting a special exhibition called Lift Every Voice,
named after a hymn composed by two African-American brothers in the days of
the Jim Crow South and aiming to inspire the struggle for equal rights. The
Lift Every Voice exhibition commemorates and celebrates a variety of songs
that were a part of everyday American life through the centuries. No time to
visit Virginia? Then visit the exhibition's Website and enjoy reading about
the history behind our country's ballads, hymns, patriotic anthems, minstrels,
musicals, and protest songs while listening to audio clips of selected songs
(QuickTime, MP3). The text is enriched by digital images of historical papers,
compiled by Virginia's Albert H. Small Special Collections Library, including
musical scores, photos of musicians, and printed lyrics. The site also
contains a section on Thomas Jefferson's relationship to music in the Old
South, with digital images of texts from Jefferson's library and, of course, a
sample of "Carry Me Back to Old Virginny."
They Rule (Fortune 100 Boards of
Directors) http://theyrule.orgo.org/
(It is difficult to navigate in this site. This site could also be
improved in terms of font size, contrast, and ease of reading.)
BACKGROUND
C. Wright Mills wrote
"The Power Elite" in 1956 documenting the inter-connections of the
most powerful people in the United States. Since then some of the faces
have changed but the general situation has only become more extreme. Now
fewer companies control more of the economy and oligopolies exert control in
nearly every sector of the economy. The people who head up these
companies swap on and off the boards from one company to another, and in and
out of government committees and positions. These people run the most
powerful institutions on the planet, and we have almost no say in who they
are. This is not a conspiracy. They are proud to rule. And
yet these connections of power are not always visible to the public eye.
OVERVIEW
They Rule aims to
make some of the relationships of the elite of the US ruling class visible.
It allows users to browse through the interlocking directories of some of the
most powerful American companies and easily run searches on them. If a
user finds an interesting website about a company or director they can add it
to a list of URLs relevant to that company or director. A user can save
a map of connections complete with their annotations for others to view.
Future users can then show approval for URLs and maps by submitting a vote.
They Rule is a starting point for research about these powerful individuals
and corporations.
DISCLAIMER
They Rule is NOT a
Live database of board members and companies. That information changes
constantly. I hope to update the database annually, and try to ensure
that the links are accurate at the time of launch. Please inform me if
you find a connection that was never true. Otherwise, please just see
They Rule as a launch pad for investigations and not the definitive
representation of reality. I take no responsibility for the writing of
others on this site, nevertheless, if something is really offensive,
scandalously untrue, or might get me killed then I may delete it. Please
inform me of anything that might meet these criteria.
CONTACT
You can chat
with others about the site on the They Rule mailing list on Yahoo groups, click
here to go to the subscription page.
Or you can mail me at josh@futurefarmers.com
Click on a company from the ADD COMPANY
menu, move it to the cent of the screen.
Click on the plus symbol beside the boardroom table.
Click on expand to see all the directors of the company.
Click, hold and drag them, to position them.
Click on their briefcases to see a menu of options for them.
Click expand to see other companies that they are on the boards of. Build
a map, clear it, build another, add some notes and save it.
Load up other people's maps with the LOAD MAP button.
Click on a director's briefcase and choose search to run a search on them in
Google.
Click on the plus signs and briefcases, then use shortcut keys x=expand,
delete=delete, d=donations, s=search, c=contract, u=urls.
This was sent to me by my good friend
Dan Gode at NYU: (Science, Biology, Medicine, Genetics)
Bob
The article below is
by an Economist editor. It points out how complex it is to go from
understanding genes to understanding disease. Read the full article for its
complete impact.
http://www.feedmag.com/dna/anxiety.html
Dan
Question:
What is the name of the commercial online university owned by Cornell
University?
Answer:
eCornell.com at http://www.ecornell.com/
To date, this appears to be more of a training and certificate operation than a
degree program source.
Our mission is to
create unique web-based distance learning programs for individuals and
organizations around the world by understanding their needs, engaging
outstanding faculty and staff, and operating at the forefront of content,
pedagogy, and technology.
eCornell creates rich
and interactive educational programs that use technology to support both
individual and collaborative learning. We believe that distance should pose no
barrier to interaction or the true exchange of knowledge between faculty,
students or peers.
Our goal is to design
learning systems that allow learners to collectively explore and develop
knowledge and individually apply that knowledge in real-world situations.
Learner
Centered Approach
We
accommodate learner's needs, styles and schedules by giving them opportunities
to access resources from any computer connected to the Internet.
Instructional
Tools
We use a variety of tools including discussions, e-mail, interactive
exercises, case studies, presentations, and team projects. In our courses we
have our learners use the tools and techniques they need for successful
communication, collaboration and research in the modern, worldwide, electronic
workplace.
Instructional
Design Process
eCornell employs a full complement of instructional designers, media experts,
programmers, production artists, and quality assurance specialists, who work
with faculty to translate their subject expertise into lively and effective
distance courses.
1. We begin with a
thorough discovery process, in which we work with our clients to understand
the subject, context and audience for the course.
2. We use this
information to develop detailed courses and curriculums and to select the
optimum mix of presentations, activities and assessments for our potential
users.
3. With the
author(s), we review existing materials and specify new ones to be created
for the course.
4. Even in the
design phase, our projects are carefully scheduled and managed, with clear
milestones and many opportunities for all parties to review the emerging
product.
5. Once a delivery
model has been chosen, the course goes into production.
6. Text is edited
and formatted, interactive programs written and debugged, on-line quizzes
developed, video scripted and produced. The eCornell staff handles the
technical aspects; the author, who is ultimately responsible for course
content, remains involved through proofing, testing, and setting up training
for course facilitators.
7. With the
official release of a course, the author's work is done, but ours is just
beginning: eCornell manages the delivery of our courses to the students. We
handle course scheduling, registration and tracking; provide, train, and
schedule facilitators; host course content; and provide ongoing technical
support.
Question:
What are the specialties to date at eCornell?
Answer:
They seem to be in Medicine and Human Resource Management. The HRM courses
include the following:
Human Resources
Studies Certificate
Human
Resources and the Law
Fundamentals of Employee Benefits
Building and Managing Employee Relations
Fundamentals of Compensation
Selection and Staffing
Performance Appraisal and Management
Interestingly, Cornell University is
where Blackboard began. Now eCornell seems to be in direct competition
with Blackboard.com at http://www.blackboard.com/
From Syllabus News, October 16, 2001
Cornell Debuts
On-Line Human Resources Management Program
eCornell, the
distance learning subsidiary of Cornell University, last week launched an
online curriculum for human resources professionals. The program, which will
offer online workshops and certificate programs, will draw on the faculty and
resources of Cornell's School of Industrial and Labor Relations (ILR). Francis
Pandolfi, eCornell's president and CEO, said there were about 1 million human
resources executives who cannot tap the ILR school because of distance.
eCornell, founded in Sept. 2000, created ILR courseware that uses case
studies, interactive exercises, simulations, role- playing scenarious and
multi-media presentations.
For more
information, visit: http://www.ecornell.com
Northwestern
Upgrades Network Search Technology
Northwestern
University has incorporated new search software to enable its online users to
perform relevant, comprehensive searches across 250,000 documents and 700
sites that comprise its network. Staci Roberts, director of Web Communications
for the school, said the decentralization of university information made it
"increasingly difficult to find documents within our network" as its
user community grew. Northwestern chose Inktomi Enterprise Search, a scalable
search software platform from Inktomi Inc.
For more information,
visit: http://www.inktomi.com
LSU Center Builds
Versatile Video Network
Louisiana State
University's Health Science Center has finished a 72-node IP video network
that links 12 offices across the state. The network, built by Wire One
Technologies Inc., will be used to support research among state institutions
and to collaborate with outside organizations. Kenneth Tanner, information
technology analyst at the Health Science Center, said the Center often
conferences across "separate, independently managed and addressed IP
networks." The Wire One solution allocates network resources across
multiple networks, "establishing video communications between ISDN users,
IP users on our own networks and Internet2 users."
For more
information , visit http://www.sh.lsuhsc.edu
Question:
What is the online learning center for the University of Utah and what software
is used?
Answer:
The Web site is at http://www.aoce.utah.edu/
and the course management software used is called Prometheus,
which is the same software used by the knowledge portal called Fathom.
Bob Jensen's links to other course
management software packages are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/290wp/290wp.htm
From Fathom --- http://www.fathom.com/
DIGITAL LEARNING COMMUNITIES:
PROMOTING DEMOCRACY THROUGH EDUCATION, a short online course from Columbia
University, provides a roadmap to the future of education, in which the
educational program will contain the school as well as the home and the
community. Enroll anytime: http://www.fathom.com/fks/catalog/course.jhtml?id=32702503&cid=000437
PLANNING FOR EFFECTIVE INSTRUCTION, a
semester-length course from the University of San Diego, is a practical course
that covers the basics of teacher decision-making. Class starts October 23: http://www.fathom.com/fks/catalog/course.jhtml?id=3212&cid=000438
SWEAT SPEAKING, a free seminar from
Columbia University, provides public-speaking pointers on everything from
calming yourself before you speak, to making eye contact, to how to work with
your audience. The seminar is free; simply follow the checkout process to
enroll: http://www.fathom.com/fks/catalog/course.jhtml?id=10701031&cid=000431
* Short e-Course * BONDS COURSE 1:
INTRODUCTION TO BONDS, a short online course from Wide Learning, explains how
bonds are quoted in the markets and provides an overview of the basic types of
bonds and bond markets. Enroll anytime: http://www.fathom.com/fks/catalog/course.jhtml?id=3020&cid=000432
* Semester-Length Course *
INTRODUCTION TO BUSINESS MANAGEMENT from New School University teaches
concepts of business organization, communication, decision-making, planning,
motivating, controlling, group dynamics, leadership, and change. Class starts
October 22: http://www.fathom.com/fks/catalog/course.jhtml?id=14701533&cid=000433
W.E.B. DUBOIS AND THE BLACK
EXPERIENCE, a short online course from Columbia University Professor Manning
Marable, looks at the life and work of this leading African-American writer
and political activist of the twentieth century. Enroll anytime: http://www.fathom.com/fks/catalog/course.jhtml?id=2398&cid=000452
Only a quarter of the world's 1,000
million Muslims actually live in the Middle East. Historian Sarah Ansari
traces some of the trends and influences of Islam in the twentieth century in
this excerpt from "The Cambridge Illustrated History of the Islamic
World," Cambridge University Press: "From a western perspective, the
Middle East was where Europe first encountered Islam..." http://www.fathom.com/story/story.jhtml?story_id=122263&cid=000454
Trends and Prospects International
security expert Bruce Hoffman discusses the history of terrorism and its
continued challenge to international security in an article from
"Countering the New Terrorism," published by RAND. Hoffman examines
the perpetrators and their organizations, resources and methodologies,
concluding with some assessments of their future threats: http://www.fathom.com/story/story.jhtml?story_id=60989&cid=000455
Search for more online courses in
Fathom's Course Directory: http://www.fathom.com/products/course_directory.jhtml
Monkey See, Monkey
Do is not always a bad pedagogy
Hi Ross,
I learned a similar lesson about 10
years ago and have since minimized presentations in class. Fortunately, I now
teach in an electronic classroom where each student has a computer. I can
push buttons on a touch screen to see what each student is doing at any time
during a class.
A new pedagogy that is really working
for me and the students is Camtasia. When I teach something that is really
technical (such as how to create Microsoft Access OLE tables, queries, forms,
and bound OLE charts or accounting for interest rate swaps with forward rate
yield curves), I prepare a Camtasia video ahead of time (using a microphone to
record my voice as I run through each step on the video of action on the
computer screen). Then in class I play a segment of the video, pause
the computer video, and make the students do what I did in that
segment. Then I proceed to show them the next segment, pause
the computer video, and then they practice getting that topic, etc.
I am amazed at how students like this
approach. Those that had trouble with any segment in class can simply play the
Camtasia video after class and practice until they get it right. Another
advantage of playing Camtasia is that I don't screw up like I am prone to doing
in live computer demonstrations of very technical topics. If I screw up
while making the video before class, I simply practice and then re-make the
video. The videos are also great for refreshing my memory before going to
class --- at my age I need all the memory aids I can find.
I am not saying that every class should
be this monkey-see, monkey-do pedagogy. Classes should also be devoted to
discussions, verbal case analyses, role playing, lectures, etc. But when
you are explaining something very technical such as in MS Access technicalities
or pivot tables in Excel, this monkey-see, monkey do approach works better than
anything else I have ever tried on very technical tasks.
You can download sample video demos
(some of the files may be too large for downloading) of my Camtasia approach
from http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/acct5342/
Camtasia is a product of TechSmith at http://www.techsmith.com/
Bob Jensen
-----Original
Message-----
From: Ross Stevenson [mailto:ross.stevenson@AUT.AC.NZ]
Sent: Tuesday, October 16, 2001 5:12 PM
To: AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: Using technology
Hi (from the South
Pacific)
My experience with
using IT technology to teach accounting......
This year I put *all*
my lecture stuff (notes, past exams, ppoint slides, accounting software etc.)
in a hyperlinked digital format that could be projected in the class room, was
available to students in computer labs, and could be taken home by students.
I thought it was
great -but- it essentially failed with one class.
This class (a first
year class of Marketing students who found accounting boring/hard) thought I
relied on the whizz bang delivery too much.
I know many of you
could say "I told you so" but I had to learn the lesson myself.
Ross Stevenson
Auckland University of Technology NZ
If you want to listen to some great
jazz, go to John Coltrane's site at
http://www.johncoltrane.com/
A message to the AECM from Tracey
Sutherland [tracey@AAAHQ.ORG]
Hello All.
I should begin by
thanking Bob Jensen for his unflagging support for AAA faculty development
initiatives. The listserv's conversation about the AAA's Accounting Coursepage
Exchange -- the ACE database -- is timely. The project is facing challenges
that I'm not sure it can overcome. In conversation here you have noted the
difficulties for faculty on campuses using course management tools like WebCT
and Blackboard that block colleagues from easily sharing -- that's one
dilemma. The other is the difficulty of maintaining continued visibility for
this kind of project. Maybe it just hasn't found the right champion/audience
yet -- but without participation and continued use this kind of resource can't
provide good value. We'll be taking a hard look at ACE this year, and I
believe we will take one of two approaches - enlist a cadre of enthusiastic
members to take responsibility for promoting and monitoring this program, or
consolidate it into a multi-disciplinary system such MERLOT (Multimedia
Education Resource for Learning and Online Teaching). These MERLOT folks have
significant resources to put behind the development of their resource -- which
you can check out at http://www.merlot.org/Home.po
.
If ACE survives then
the AAA web staff will revamp the whole thing -- to improve the functionality
(ACE is a couple of years old and was outsourced for development -- we're
using ColdFusion now in-house and could put together something that's easier
for everyone to use).
We'd welcome your
thoughts on the subject -- if you prefer to send them directly to me I can
pull them together and post a summary on AECM.
Best regards,
Tracey
American Accounting Association
Paul Harvey (for the "Rest of His
Story") http://www.paulharvey.com/
You can hear his voice, listen to his news, and read his news.
A helpful message from Richard Campbell
regarding multimedia chat rooms:
Bob Jensen asked me
privately about audio and video chat rooms. Two that I have looked at in the
past are www.livve.com
and www.seesaw.com . The
second option has the opportunity to display up to six videos simultaneously.
Both have inconsistent performance, but work better at fast connections. Both
cost about $10 per month.
I caution everyone
about going into unknown rooms. Let me express my concern in accounting terms
- you may encounter an intentional display of assets that you may not want to
perform an attest function on. I don't want to contribute to the delinquency
of any majors here.
Richard J. Campbell [campbell@RIO.EDU]
Forwarded by Janet Flatley
The following report
appeared in the Short Form e-newsletter of Washington (State) Society of CPAs www.wscpa.org/wscpa/ShortForm/101601/1016sf2.htm
The list referred to in the article can be accessed at: www.cpacomputerreport.com/never_again.htm
October 16, 2001
Terrorist Attacks Claim Lives of Many Accounting Professionals So far, nearly
100 accounting professionals have perished in the September 11 attack on the
World Trade Center and Pentagon. That doesn't include the 164 members of AON
Insurance that supplied professional coverage via the AICPA insurance plans.
Also, 24 members of the New York State Dept. of Taxation and Finance perished.
CPAs concerned about
colleagues impacted by the World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks are advised
to visit regularly the Web site of the newsletter CPA Computer Report <http://www.CPAComputerReport.com>
. The newsletter's Web master has collected individual names and firm names of
accounting and CPA firms that had offices in the World Trade Center as well as
names of individual accountants killed or spared by the attack. There is a
convenient email link so visitors can, on their own, submit additional data as
it becomes available.
The newsletter's
editor, Franklynn Peterson, ordered the work "So the profession doesn't
have to get its updates piecemeal. We keep a constant search of names known to
be involved so we can spot firms and individuals as soon as possible after
news of their condition is reported at the diverse publications, data banks,
news sites and Web sites. Additions to the lists are added nearly daily. The
lists are usually updated daily by approximately 10 AM CDT."
Hey Alaska (lot of Flash) --- http://www.heyalaska.com/
"Ready or Not, Cyber-Conferencing's
Time Has Come," by Jeffrey Burt, eNews and Views, October 17, 2001
Among
those caught in the ripple effects of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in New
York City and Washington D.C. are the industry conferences, those tech fests
of keynote speeches and breakout sessions, of early-morning meetings and
late-night parties, of T-shirts, pens and rubber balls that light up when you
bounce them.
Already
knee-deep in the quagmire of the struggling economy, these conferences were
seeing declining numbers of attendees even before Sept. 11.
Since
the attacks, many conference sponsors have seen attendance drop even further,
as many attendees and exhibitors chose not to fly. Jason Chudnofsky, president
and CEO of Key3media Events, which hosts uberconference Comdex, recently told
eWEEK's John Dodge that he is forecasting a 30 percent drop in attendance.
As
some organizers canceled or postponed conferences, others chose a different
approach. Next week, both Mercury Interactive Corp. and Bentley Systems Inc.
are moving their annual user conferences into cyberspace.
Mercury
will use presentation technologies from PlaceWare Inc. and WebEx
Communications Inc. and streaming tools from Digex Inc. and Digital Island
Inc. to conduct its conference over the Web.
Bentley,
which had to cancel its user conference shortly after Sept. 11, will now
conduct a 20-city international simulcast that it hopes will involve thousands
of participants globally.
It
will be interesting to see how these go off. A key part of any conference is
the interaction among the participants: the one-on-one conversations that
spontaneously pop up, the product training sessions, the feeling among
attendees that they are a part of a bigger industry. And what about the bags
of goodies handed out by exhibitors like so much candy on Halloween? How are
participants going to get their stuff?
Granted,
neither of these conferences is of CeBIT proportions, but there still is the
human connections made at events that can't be replicated online. But as
Mercury COO Ken Klein told eWEEK's Evan Koblentz, "Obviously, things
changed on Sept. 11."
The
high-tech industry is about adapting to rapidly and constantly changing
environments, of meeting the needs of particular situations and dealing with
new demands as they arise. That's the way Mercury Interactive is approaching
these new demands.
"I
think we'll learn a lot from this exercise," Klein said.
All Species on Earth (Biology,
Genetics, Science) --- http://www.all-species.org/
From the WSJ Interactive Accounting
Educators Edition on October 18, 2001
All of the articles cited below raise accounting questions.
TITLE: Waiving or
Drowning: Banks Face Loan Bind
REPORTER: Mitchell Pacelle
DATE: Oct 15, 2001 PAGE: C1 LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1003094883752843520.djm
TOPICS: Accounting, Banking, Bankruptcy, Restructuring
SUMMARY: The article
discusses issues that banks face as a result of their borrowers violating debt
covenants. Questions focus on lending agreements and debt restructuring.
TITLE: Enron Jolt:
Investments, Assets Generate Big Loss; Part of Charge Tied to 2 Partnerships
Interests Wall Street
REPORTER: John Emshwiller and Rebecca Smith
DATE: Oct 17, 2001 PAGE: C1 LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1003237924744857040.djm
TOPICS: Financial Accounting
SUMMARY: Enron Corp.
recorded a $1.01 billion charge mostly connected with write-downs of impaired
assets, producing the company's worst-ever third quarter loss of $618 million.
TITLE: It's a
Natural: P&G Sells Jif to J.M. Smucker
REPORTER: Emily Nelson and Devon Spurgeon
DATE: Oct 11, 2001 PAGE: B1 LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1002719217933137520.djm
TOPICS: Advanced Financial Accounting, Taxation
SUMMARY: "Any
kindergartner could have recommend this deal: the nation's largest maker of
jelly is acquiring the largest brand of peanut butter." The deal also
includes Crisco and is structured as a tax-free reorganization following
Procter & Gamble's spinoff of Jif and Crisco to its shareholders.
"P&G shareholders will own about 53% of the new Smucker after
receiving one Smucker share for every 50 P&G shares they own."
Reminder to Program Professors: Go to http://wsj.com/offers/prof
to register for The Wall Street Journal Online if you haven't done so
already. There are Educators's Reviews in areas other than
accounting as well as accounting.
Someone inquired about Activities Based
Costing/Management (ABC and ABM) software and links. Some helpers are
provided below:
Accounting Software Links in General
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#010303Software%20and%20Instructional%20Aids
Activities Based Costing --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#ABC
Especially note ICMS at http://www.icms.net/
ICMS ABC Software Demo --- http://www.icms.net/software_demo_form.htm
Books:
Forrest,
Edward, Activity-Based Management: A Comprehensive Implementation Guide
(New York: McGraw-Hill, 1996).
Cokins,
Gary, An ABC Manager's Primer: Straight Talk on Activity-Based Costing
(Burr Ridge, Ill: Irwin Professional Pub., 1993).
Turney,
Peter B. B., Common Cents: The ABC Performance Breakthrough (Hillsboro,
OR: Cost Technology, 1992).
Brimson,
James A., Activity-Based Management: for service industries, government
entities, and nonprofit organizations (New York: Wiley, 1994).
Links at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbus.htm
Activities Based Management and ABC
Costing http://www.rpm-abm.com/cami_idx.htm
http://akao.larc.nasa.gov/dfc/abc/abcbib.html
(annotated bibliography)
http://users.aol.com/caspari/l118.htm
(Is ABC Fundamentally Flawed?)
http://www.chief.co.il/toc/
http://members.aol.com/caspari0/toc/BIBLIOG.HTM
(bibliography)
http://www.focusedmanagement.com/FMI%20Articles/softabc%281%29.htm
(ABC Software)
http://www.deloitte.com.au/index.asp?MenuId=0&Page=/content/abc.asp
http://www.mmsonline.com/articles/119803.html
http://mba.vanderbilt.edu/germain.boer/Creating%20Value/Discussions/InvLevelandProfit.htm
(from my good friend Germain)
http://www.intentia.se/liston/1762_2.lxml
http://www.neiu.edu/~hchen/202/98/
http://web.mit.edu/lfm/www/working_papers/1996_abstracts/strimling_abstract_1996.html
http://www.sba.pdx.edu/faculty/darrellb/dbaccess/finalstu.htm
http://www.acq-ref.navy.mil/wcp/abc2.html
http://www.tocc.com/Geyser_G.html
(you have to do a little hunting)
http://hamilton99.execmba.com/activity.htm
(Case Study)
http://www.acca.org.za/publications/studenews/9811p34.html
(Value Added)
http://www.sbm.temple.edu/~jmereba/research.html
(See the Working Papers section)
I would examine the listing of the
Managerial Accounting texts at http://www.bn.com/.
Enter the search terms "Managerial Accounting" and "Management
Accounting."
I also recommend that you look at the
Managerial and Cost Accounting Courses in ACE at http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/ace/index.htm
Hello Yogamalar,
The best two sources are quite old and
will not be on the Web.
I suggest that you begin with one of
the most famous deductive monographs in accounting history (it may no longer be
in print, but nearly all colleges will have copies in the library). It is An
Introduction to Corporate Accounting Standards by W.A. Paton and A.C.
Littleton (American Accounting Association, Monograph No. 3, 1940)
The other works are AICPA ARS Studies 1
and 3 by by Moonitz and Sprouse and Moonitz --- http://www.wku.edu/~halljo/attempts.html
You might also take a look at Baxter's
lecture at http://newman.baruch.cuny.edu/digital/saxe/saxe_1978/baxter_79.htm
I discuss these topics at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/theory/00overview/theory01.htm
Bob Jensen
Sir,
I'm a student of a
university and I used go through your web pages which help me giving
information about my studies. I'm so happy to have a web page which students
can access it and clear their doubts..
I just want a help
from you sir I studying accounting and finance final year. I'm looking
for deductive approach theory in accounting practice and how it's contributed
to the development of existing accounting practice in UK. It should focus on
strength, weakness and limitations of the theory in current frame work
practice.
I hope you will be
giving me a explanation and some references...
thanky ou..
from sbesh.
Apple's new digital entertainment
device will get the music you have on your computer into your car and onto your
stereo --- http://www.wired.com/news/mp3/0,1285,47740,00.html
Stories of youths who helped shape the
nation --- http://www.weweretheretoo.com/
If you want to brush up on business
terms for your job, or if you just want to make sure you've got the ins and outs
of the business world down pat, this Glossary of Business Terms will do the
trick. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/59892
Bob Jensen's links to accounting,
business, and finance glossaries are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbus.htm
The most frequently used document in
Bob Jensen's website is the Technology Glossary ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm
The Journey is the Destination
(History, Travel, Africa, Photography, Dan Eldon) --- http://www.daneldon.org/
Early next year, Handspring will
introduce a compact handheld that includes a built-in cell phone. The Palm-OS
device is smaller than other smart phones and even includes a built-in keyboard
--- http://www.wired.com/news/gizmos/0,1452,47541,00.html
Accounting history lecture worth noting
--- http://newman.baruch.cuny.edu/digital/saxe/saxe_1978/baxter_79.htm
Research from IBM
"Bringing Computers to Life," BBC News, October 19, 2001 --- http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_1606000/1606862.stm
IBM has unveiled an
ambitious initiative to develop technologies that share the basic biological
abilities of living organisms. Senior researchers at the company said the
growing complexity of computers and networks demands that the technology does
a better job of maintaining and healing itself.
The researchers warn
that without these efforts there is a danger that networks will soon become
unmanageable.
The company is
backing its initiative with its own research program, a series of grants to
universities and efforts to make other computer companies sign up.
Grand challenge
This week IBM is
sending 75,000 copies of a manifesto written by Paul Horn, senior vice
president of IBM Research, that details the aims of its Autonomic Computing
initiative.
Mr Horn warns that
humans are losing the battle to manage the increasing complexity of computer
systems and networks.
This complexity is
only going to increase as computer technology shrinks and finds its way into
ever more devices.
If the current rates
of the expansion of digital technology are maintained, soon there would not be
enough people to keep the world's computer systems running, he said.
He called finding
ways of handling this complexity the next "grand challenge" facing
the technology industry.
In the manifesto he
said: "The growing complexity of the [technology] infrastructure
threatens to undermine the very benefits information technology aims to
provide."
Ideally future
networks should resemble the autonomic nervous system which maintains and
monitors many basic bodily functions without conscious help.
Global power
The autonomic nervous
system maintains blood sugar and oxygen levels and monitors temperature. It
adjusts the body's heating and cooling systems to keep body temperature
hovering around 37C.
What is needed,
argued Mr Horn, are computer systems that do a much better job of configuring
themselves, can work around disruptions, heal any damage they suffer or fight
off potential problems.
IBM is planning its
own research programs to create technologies that can turn relatively dumb
networks into smarter alternatives.
It is also planning
to spend millions over the next five years funding 50 research projects at
universities to take on the complex challenge.
The likely outcome of
the project is a series of software standards that define how to build
software or hardware that has these more biological properties.
IBM is working
closely with the Global Grid Forum. This industry body is driving efforts to
turn the disparate computing and research capabilities of the world's science
labs into a shared pool of resources that anyone can plug into.
This effort is
already driving the creation of software that hides the individual quirks of
individual machines and instruments behind common interfaces.
International Tax Issues in FAS 133
and IAS 39
From a Message forwarded by richard.newmark@phduh.com
This week we feature
Thuronyi's special report on the international treatment of NFIs, based on his
address to the U.N. tax conference. Thuronyi concludes that no country has
fully resolved the tax issues posed by NFIs, although a few nations with
developed economies and complex tax systems have adopted new rules to deal
with the problems. Most countries, he notes, have not yet developed tax
regimes to adequately address those concerns. Thuronyi suggests that
developing or transitional countries can take steps to deal with NFIs in the
short term. (See 2001 WTD 199-16 )
4) Check out Tax
Analysts' home page at http://www.tax.org
. Once at the home page, click on the "Discussion Groups" icon or go
to http://www.tax.org/Discuss/discussion.htm
. From there you can browse the archives (at http://www.tax.org/taxa/tadiscus.nsf
) to view previously released discussion group postings for all of Tax
Analysts' discussion groups, including the International Taxation Group.You
can also check out Tax Analysts' international section at http://www.tax.org/International/international.htm
for the latest news features.
5) Now You Can Order
Tax Analysts' Products From Our Internet Web Site. If you'd like to find out
more about Tax Analysts' products, or wish to order (or re-order) a print,
electronic, or CD-ROM publication, you now can do so from our Web site. Simply
go to Tax Analysts' Home Page ( http://www.tax.org
), click on "Customer Service" on the Navigator menu, and click on
"Order Form." Note: URLs found in the interior pages of the archives
may be obsolete. Please use instructions above to obtain documents.
Alternatively, you can contact the customer service department by e-mail at cservice@tax.org
Almanac of American Politics 2002 ---
http://nationaljournal.com/members/almanac/
Female Athletes (History, Photography)
--- http://www.gamefaceonline.org/
The new Microsoft looks even more
aggressive than the old Microsoft.
"Extending its tentacles," Economist, October 19, 2001 --- http://www.economist.com/business/displayStory.cfm?Story_ID=822234
As it launches an
array of new products, the software giant is changing, and yet its basic
instincts are staying much the same
Extensible Stylesheet Language (XSL)
Version 1.0 http://www.w3.org/TR/xsl/
Hemophilia (Medicine, Science) --- http://vector.cshl.org/ygyh/mason/ygyh.html?syndrome=hemo
America's Underinsured: A Closer Look
(The disgrace is that over 40 million Americans have no health insurance) ---
http://www4.nationalacademies.org/onpi/webextra.nsf/web/uninsured?OpenDocument
Samuel F.B. Morse Papers (Samuel was
more than the inventor of the Morse Code (Art, History, Communication)) ---
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/sfbmhtml/
History
of Halloween ---
http://www.historychannel.com/cgi-bin/frameit.cgi?p=http%3A//www.historychannel.com/exhibits/halloween/main.html
For Systems Programmers
System Toolbox http://www.systemtoolbox.com/
New Zealanders are frustrated by slow
Internet service. It seems that their electric fences, and the grass beneath
them, are interfering with connection and download speeds.
Kiwi Grass Slows Farmers' Baud --- http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,47446,00.html
GT News Best Practices: Best
Practice - Who's Doing It? 8 recent articles from the GTNews Best Practice
section --- http://www.gtnews.com/best_practice/home.html
Michael Knorr of Citibank reports the
latest on 'Outsourcing Payments Technology'
Chris Jenkins of French &
Associates offers the case study 'Outsourcing Order-To-Cash at Cisco'
Susan Skerritt of Treasury Strategies
looks at 'The Trend toward Globalization and the Benefits of a Centralized
Global Treasury'
Eva Andersson of ABB explains 'ABB's
Customer-Oriented e-Treasury'
Marco Casalino of Fiat GEVA, S.p.A.
shares Fiat's experience in 'Europe: Siting a Treasury Center'
David Boulanger of AMR Research, Inc
warns that '2001 Brings New Perils and Priorities' for corporate treasuries in a
recessionary environment
Andreas Thorling of Nordström &
Granath Ab writes on 'Working Capital Management - The Treasurer's Challenge'
bfinance contribute the case study
'Transparency in the Treasury: British Land Offers a Fresh Approach'.
All this and more in our Best Practice
Section http://www.gtnews.com/best_practice/home.html
FACTS OF LIFE
=============
1) Raising teenagers is like nailing JELL-O to a tree.
2) There is always a lot to be thankful for, if you take the time to look. For
example, I'm
sitting here thinking how nice it is that wrinkles don't hurt.
3) The best way to keep kids at home is to make a pleasant atmosphere and let
the air
out of their tires.
4) Families are like fudge . . . mostly sweet, with a few nuts.
5) Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
6) Laughing helps. It's like jogging on the inside.
7) Middle age is when you choose your cereal for the fiber, not for the toy.
8) My mind not only wanders; sometimes it leaves completely.
9) If you can remain calm, you just don't have all the facts.
10) You know you're getting old when you stoop to tie your shoes and wonder what
else
you can do while you're down there.
A message of hope from Brent and Betty
Carper in Egypt
To those of you who
have not yet seen this article, please click on the attachment. This article
is well worth reading and keeping for times when you may need a boost! This
article relates everything that America is and what it stands for!
Much love to all!
Brent and Betty
Editorial
from a Romanian newspaper
Why are
Americans so united? They don't resemble one another even if you
paint them! They speak all the languages of the world and form an
astonishing mixture of civilizations. Some of them are nearly
extinct, others are incompatible with one another, and in matters
of religious beliefs, not even God can count how many they are.
Still, the American tragedy turned three hundred million people
into a hand put on the heart. Nobody rushed to accuse the White
House, the army, the secret services that they are only a bunch of
losers. Nobody rushed to empty their bank accounts. Nobody rushed
on the streets nearby to gape about. The Americans volunteered to
donate blood and to give a helping hand. After the first moments
of panic, they raised the flag on the smoking ruins, putting on
T-shirts, caps and ties in the colours of the national flag. They
placed flags on buildings and cars as if in every place and on
every car a minister or the president was passing. On every
occasion they started singing their traditional song: "God
Bless America!".
Silent as
a rock, I watched the charity concert broadcast on Saturday once,
twice, three times, on different tv channels. There were Clint
Eastwood, Willie Nelson, Robert de Niro, Julia Roberts, Cassius
Clay, Jack Nicholson, Bruce Springsteen, Silvester Stalone, James
Wood, and many others whom no film or producers could ever bring
together. The American's solidarity spirit turned them into a
choir. Actually, choir is not the word. What you could hear was
the heavy artillery of the American soul. What neither George W.
Bush, nor Bill Clinton, nor Colin Powell could say without facing
the risk of stumbling over words and sounds, was being heard in a
great and unmistakable way in this charity concert. I don't know
how it happened that all this obsessive singing of America didn't
sound croaky, nationalist, or ostentatious! It made you green with
envy because you weren't able to sing for your country without
running the risk of being considered chauvinist, ridiculous, or
suspected of who-knows-what mean interests. I watched the live
broadcast and the rerun of its rerun for hours listening to the
story of the guy who went down one hundred floors with a woman in
a wheelchair without knowing who she was, or of the Californian
hockey player, who fought with the terrorists and prevented the
plane from hitting a target that would have killed other hundreds
of thousands of people. How on earth were they able to bow before
a fellow human? Imperceptibly, with every word and musical note,
the memory of some turned into a modern myth of tragic heroes. And
with every phone call, millions and millions of dollars were put
in a collection aimed at rewarding not a man or a family, but a
spirit which nothing can buy.
What on
earth can unite the Americans in such a way? Their land? Their
galloping history? Their economic power? Money? I tried for hours
to find an answer, humming songs and murmuring phrases which risk
of sounding like commonplaces. I thought things over, but I
reached only one conclusion.
Only
freedom can work such miracles!
|
Origins:
Americans are pleased and fascinated when newspapers in other countries run
strongly pro-American articles, as indicated by the resurgence of interest in
Canadian Gordon
Sinclair's 28-year-old radio broadcast and enormous attention paid to the
purported Romanian editorial quoted above.
Since the piece as presented here is
undated, untitled, and unsigned; contains no publication information
whatsoever; and is a translation of an article not originally printed in
English, tracking it to its source was not easy. Fortunately, some helpful
readers pointed us to its origins.
This article was written by Mr.
Cornel Nistorescu and published under the title "Cîntarea
Americii" on September 24 in the Romanian newspaper Evenimentul
zilei ("The Daily Event" or "News of the Day").
As Associated Press reported
about Mr. Nistorescu:
Nistorescu, managing director of the daily newspaper Evenimentul
Zilei -- News of the Day -- published
his editorial Sept 24, two days after watching a celebrity
telethon in New York for victims of the attacks . . .
Like his
other columns, "Ode to America" was meant for domestic
consumption. No one knows when -- or how --
the article first reached the other side of the Atlantic. But
Nistorescu figures it began when someone pulled it off the
English-language version of his daily's Web page and sent it to a
friend.
Since
then, thousands of Americans at home and expats around the world
have e-mailed it to friends, saying it captured their nation's
spirit. It has been read out to U.S. soldiers and on radio talk
shows and posted on U.S. Web sites.
Nistorescu
says he had no idea his "Ode to America" would resonate
so far away . . .
Nistorescu
remains surprised and touched by the success of the piece, one of
thousands he has penned in a more than 20-year career.
"It
is all about the American spirit and how freedom cannot be
crushed," he says.
|
Forwarded by Dr. Wolff
From a friend:
I arrived in Moscow,
Idaho (Home of Idaho University-one block from Best Western) and went to
dinner at Best Western. About 85-100 people were in the Restaurant. I'm at a
table for about 5 minutes when his "Group" comes in (20 people).
They have Antiwar Picket Signs with them.
It appears that two
of these demonstrators are professors. They all sit at a large round table
behind me and begin to talk very loudly about US atrocities in Afghanistan.
One of the "professors" stands up and gives a brief talk about how
the "US is famous for atrocities" and Afghanistan will be no
different. One of the students asked a question about Viet Nam POW's. The
"Professor" makes a comment about how that was only US propaganda
about poor treatment of POW's.
OK - I'm really mad
now and I jump up and go over to their table. (In retrospect - Over the
entrance to the Restaurant is a huge American Flag. On each table is an
American Flag and a small hand painted sign "United We Stand"). I
excuse myself and ask the Professor if I can ask him a question. He says yes.
I said that he appears to be of age to have served in Viet Nam, and asked him
if he had served.
His answer was NO!
I defended this Campus and told the truth to the students. I then asked if he
remembered what he was doing on February 16, 1969. When he answered , "Of
course not -- that was too long ago,"
I responded,
"Really, I remember what I was doing. That was the second day of my
capture and I had been standing in a bamboo cage for 24 hours with water up to
my chest." I then said, "Sir, your comments about how POW's in Nam
were treated are a lie and I personally say to you, you are a ******* liar, as
you never were there. I was a POW and they did not treat our POWs humanly. The
only other person I have ever heard make the statements like you have is Jane
Fonda. Is she telling the truth and not me?"
He stood up and after
about 10 seconds said, "Jane is a great patriot and I cannot visualize
her lying." With that, I reached over and grabbed the small American Flag
and United We Stand sign and said, "I'm taking this back to my table
where it can be appreciated."
No one said a word to
me as I started to walk back. However after a few seconds, people started
standing up and applauding all around the restaurant. Two men got up from a
table across the room and walked over to me. The first identified himself as
former US Marine Lieutenant Flynn and the other man was former Gunnery
Sergeant Graboski. In a loud voice after introducing themselves, Lt. Flynn
said they were former Marine Guards at a US Embassy.
He then said "We
are over at this table to defend the US Flag from all foes, both foreign and
domestic." They then sat down and asked their waitress to bring their
meals over to my table. A few more minutes went by with loud comments from the
"Antiwar" table. All of a sudden, "Gunny" Sergeant
Graboski stood up and in a loud voice said "All of you heard what the
President said the other night.
You are either with
the United States or you are with the terrorists." He then said
"Please stand and join me in God Bless America." As he started
singing, people all around the restaurant stood up and joined in. Several of
the students at the "Antiwar" table also stood up half way through
the song and joined in. Both Professors and the majority of the students
remained seated and refused to sing. At the end there was a great ovation. The
Manager came up to my table (he and his staff came out from the kitchen and
sang). He thanked me for what I started and then went over to the antiwar
table and asked them to leave. "I will pay for what you have had so far
but I cannot in good conscience serve you -- get out now!!"
One of the professors
then made a remark, "Well, we are not going to pay one dime for how
shabbily we have been treated."
As they were leaving,
one customer stood up and said, "Manager, here is $5 towards their bill,
anyone else willing to chip in to get this scum out of here?" All over
the restaurant, people stood up reaching for their wallet and saying
"I'll chip in."
The Manager, in tears
said, "My family is from Poland, I am now a citizen and am so proud of
what I see tonight." He started crying and a couple of the waitresses
helped him into the kitchen. The two Marines and I were there for about
another 20 minutes and finished our meal. The Hostess came up and showed us
more than $100 dollars that all the other tables had told their waitresses to
give towards our bill. I thanked her but said I could not take the money. Lt
Flynn suggested donating it in the Restaurant's name to the New York Relief
Fund, so I guess that's what will happen. I just can't believe how Americans
are coming together now. Just thought you would like to hear how the rest of
the country is reacting to what happened!!!
Take care -- Idaho is
OK, John
And
that's the way it was on October 24, 2001 with a little help from my friends.
In
March 2000, Forbes named AccountantsWorld.com as the Best Website on the
Web --- http://accountantsworld.com/.
Some top accountancy links --- http://accountantsworld.com/category.asp?id=Accounting
Another
leading accounting site is AccountingEducation.com at http://www.accountingeducation.com/
Paul
Pacter runs the best international accounting site on the Web at http://www.iasplus.com/index.htm
How
stuff works --- http://www.howstuffworks.com/
Professor
Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134 Email: rjensen@trinity.edu


October
18, 2001
Bob
Jensen's New Bookmarks on October 18, 2001
Bob
Jensen at Trinity
University
I
will be in Austin the next few days in order to make a presentation on FAS 133
at the Seminar on Accounting Education sponsored by the Texas
Society of Certified Public Accountants. The program is at http://www.tscpa.org/welcome/SemAcctEd.html
This
may result in a delay in sending out the next edition of New Bookmarks.
Question:
What ideal terrorist surveillance source, based upon its perfect crime fighting
record in proven history, has President Bush and other officials completely overlooked?
Answer:
The answer appears near the bottom of this edition of New Bookmarks. Click
here to jump to that answer.
Quotes of the Week
"Even
Pacifists Must Support This War: Those Who Refuse are Reminiscent of the
Oxford Union in 1933."
Scott Simon, a Quaker pacifist, whose voice we hear
daily on National Public Radio.
See http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/justiceappeal.htm
On Sept. 14,
Culbertson wrote: "I hope the example of cooperation and trust that this
spacecraft and all the people in the program demonstrate daily will someday
inspire the rest of the world to work the same way. They must!"
"240 Miles Up, Seeing Tragedy," by William Harwood, September 11, 2001
--- http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A40539-2001Oct10.html
Good thing the picture was that of Bert instead of Miss Piggy! I
suspect Osama and his cohorts were just trying to learn English
like most any kid in America --- ABCD EFG HI
JK LMNOP
Taliban supporters in Bangladesh may not be as Web-savvy as they'd like to
think: Among the photos they lifted off the Internet to paste on posters is an
image of bin Laden next to Bert, the Sesame Street character --- http://www.wired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,47450,00.html
Moslems in Bosnia and Kosovo praise the
American flag while radical left professors living in the freedoms and comforts
of the United States loathe that flag. The thing about that flag is that
it is the reason anyone is free to criticize America, spit upon America's
flag, and curse America's leaders. And the world media, especially
CNN, exuberates wildly amidst the anti-American riots to broadcast these
hatreds and flag burnings to the world. Light your torches professors,
only call CNN first or the flag bonfires are no fun! Note the following
article:
"Towers of Intellect It doesn't take terror to show the imbecility of
professors, but it helps," by James Bowman, The Wall Street Journal,
October 11, 2001 --- http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB100223834682375520.htm
"The
American flag is "a symbol of terrorism and death and fear and destruction
and oppression." (says you)
Jennie Traschen, Professor of Physics at the University of Massachusetts
http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB100223834682375520.htm
"Anyone who
can blow up the Pentagon gets my vote."
A Professor at the University of New Mexico (who in good conscience later
apologized)
http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB100223834682375520.htm
. . . Prof. George Lakoff of Berkeley, whose
response to an attack on his country was to analyze the phallic imagery of the
falling towers or of "the planes as penetrating the towers with a plume of
heat. The Pentagon, a vaginal image from the air, penetrated by the plane as
missile."
James Bowman, http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB100223834682375520.htm
(That was really intellectual and creative inspiration George. I
definitely think it is an Ig
Nobel Prize certainty for next year.)
"PCs Talk Personal:
Listeners like computers that voice their personality," by Erica Klarreich,
Nature, October 1, 2001 --- http://www.nature.com/nsu/011004/011004-3.html
The results have
implications for anyone trying to market products on the Web. Subliminal voice
cues could be used to alter customers' behaviour and attitudes.
The ethics of such
marketing practice causes some experts concern: people might not realize they
were being manipulated, points out Ben Shneiderman, a specialist in
human-computer interaction at the University of Maryland, College Park.
"It's a really striking and provocative result," he says.
Web marketing sites
that used synthesized voices with personality could quickly become the
computer equivalent of slick car salesmen and lose their credibility, adds
Shneiderman. But marketers have been tailoring advertisements to their target
audience for years, argues Nass, and using computers does not raise any new
ethical issues.
Visually impaired
people who need synthetic speech when they use the Web might benefit from the
research, which could help designers produce more satisfying voices, Lai adds.
Synthetic speech can make "your teeth grate," she says. "By
simply tweaking a few parameters in creating voices, we can get more
favourable responses."
The rest of the article is at http://www.nature.com/nsu/011004/011004-3.html
Jim Borden passed along the following
link:
"Cyber U. Aid for online courses clears House despite little study," by Leena Pendharkar, CBS.MarketWatch.com. October 12, 2001 --- Click
here. (The URL is too long to type here.)
Congress is set to
allow college students to use federal aid for online education, despite
limited research into its effectiveness and concerns about creating a new
breed of diploma mills.
The House approved
the Internet Equity and Education Act Thursday by a 354-70 vote. Intended to
help part-time students and distance learners, the bill allows use of existing
federal financial aid to pay tuition for online courses at colleges and
technical training schools.
"Students who
are disabled and can't make it to campus, students who might have to hold jobs
while in school, and others who are currently cut off from federal aid -- this
bill changes that," said its sponsor, Rep. Johnny Isakson, R-Georgia.
In advancing
cyber-learning, however, the measure eliminates safeguards enacted in 1992 to
crack down on bogus correspondence schools that were fleecing the U.S.
Education Department, which provides $40 billion in financial aid each year.
And two of the
nation's largest teachers' groups - the National Education Association and the
American Association of University Professors - argue that more research into
the value of Internet learning still needs to be done.
"We were
disappointed that this bill passed because it seems premature," said Mark
Smith, government relations director for the AAUP, whose members stand to lose
jobs if online courses replace classroom-based ones.
Presently, students
must be enrolled in an accredited institution that offers at least half of its
courses on campus to receive federal aid. They also must take at least 12
hours of weekly course work.
Under the proposed
law, students need only enroll in a course one day a week. Accredited
institutions no longer have to meet the 50 percent in-class rule as long as
their loan default rate is less than 10 percent. That's considered a measure
of how well the school is keeping tabs on its students and returning the
government's investment.
"The 12-hour
rule and 50 percent rule were important safeguards to problems with
correspondence-learning programs," NEA lobbyist Kim Anderson said.
"We're concerned about the content on the Net -- we have to make sure
it's high quality."
Studies suggest adult
students who take classes online do just as well as those in traditional
programs, said Terri Hedegaard, founder of University of Phoenix Online (UOPX:
news, chart, profile). The publicly traded company boasts the nation's largest
distance-learning program, with 29,000 students. The school is part of the
100,000-student University of Phoenix, a subsidiary of the Apollo Group (APOL:
news, chart, profile) that operates more than 100 campuses and learning
centers around the U.S.
Hedegaard
acknowledges that Web-based courses aren't the best option for all students.
"We don't advocate this style of learning for 18- to 20-year-olds because
they need to learn socialization, they need face time with students and
teachers."
Indeed, students with
varying needs may respond differently to online learning, said Stephen H.
Balch, an education policy expert with the National Association of Scholars.
"Of course,
class time with teachers is most enriching," Balch said. "But the
heavy emphasis on writing with Net courses, and for students with families or
fewer financial resources, Net learning is a good option."
Isakson notes the act
will come up for reauthorization in 2003, at which time problems can be
addressed. A companion bill has been referred to the Senate Health, Education,
Labor and Pensions Committee.
Education Resources
Apple Learning Exchange (includes Quicktime video) http://ali.apple.com/ali/
Classified by subject areas and aimed mainly at K-12 teachers.
TeacherNet (from the U.K.) --- http://www.dfes.gov.uk/teachers/
Bob Jensen's education technology aids are linked at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
Note especially the advice to new faculty at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/newfaculty.htm
A message from Dennis Beresford [dberesfo@TERRY.UGA.EDU]
The latest issue of
"Business Officer," the monthly publication of the National
Association of College and University Business Officers (NACUBO) contains an
interesting article titled, "Calculating the Cost of Online
Courses." It is written by a Professor of Integrated Science and
Technology at Marshall University. I suspect that some might quibble with the
approach in the article but it's an interesting side to the technology debate
that may not have been discussed much.
NACUBO makes the
contents of its magazine available free on its web site (nacubo.org). However,
the article is in the October issue and the latest one presently available is
September so it probably will be a week or two until the article is available
electronically.
Denny Beresford
University of Georgia
The Calculating the Cost Project
site is at http://www.nacubo.org/public_policy/cost_of_college/content.html
Bob Jensen's Bob
Jensen's Threads of Online Program Costs and Faculty Compensation are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/distcost.htm
Bob Jensen's Education Technology
Documents --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
Accounting Fraud --- they do it because it
usually pays very well even
if they get caught!
I started a new page of Threads on Accounting Fraud, Forensic Accounting,
Securities Fraud, and White Collar Crime --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
At the above site, especially note the
Stanford University database on accounting and securities fraud.
Intellectual History and Art Site of the Week
The Legacy Project --- http://www.legacy-project.org/
Our site is a gathering place for people interested in
the enduring legacies of the many violent traumas of the 20th century. We are
dedicated to exploring issues of remembrance in different cultures, in order to
better understand the contemporary significance of historical tragedy.
The Legacy Project will build a global exchange on
the enduring consequences of the many historical tragedies of the 20th
century. As the survivors of historical traumas pass on, the lasting resonance
of their experiences will depend on whether younger generations can understand
and recognize them. Such recognition will challenge subsequent generations to
discover new connections across historical events and to maintain distinctions
among them. To be grounded in individual experience, and to recognize common
ground in the historical experience of others.
The Legacy Project offers a channel for mutual
recognition across generations and geography. Through scholarly research and
innovative presentation, The Legacy Project will create new — and shared —
frameworks for cultural expressions of loss, drawn from Africa, the Americas,
Asia and Europe. Our work will help define the language of human loss - its
forms, its symbols, its grammar.
Framing a dialogue in the global language of loss —
among works of creative art and scholarship — is an unprecedented cultural
event. Through it, The Legacy Project seeks a collective, retrospective
reflection on the losses that constitute the legacy of the last century.
Cal Berkeley's Labor Research Portal
--- http://iir.berkeley.edu/~iir/library/webguides.html
Note especially the Labor Education guide at http://iir.berkeley.edu/~iir/library/laboredgd.html
Web
Guides |
Alternative
Forms of Ownership
Resources for workers and firms interested in models for employee
participation and ownership |
Labor
Education
A guide to labor studies programs at colleges and universities |
Globalization
Resources covering Global trade, employment and environmental issues |
Labor
Libraries
A list of special libraries that focus on labor, along with selected
Full-text print resources on the Internet |
Government
A list of United States government, regulatory and legal web resources
that pertain to labor |
Labor
Unions - U.S.
The IIR Library's exhaustive list of U.S. unions |
International
Labor Unions
Labor unions world-wide, along with international organizations that
address labor concerns. |
Work
and career
The Library's guide to employment information and career guides on the
web |
Labor
Culture
A selected guides to the art, culture and music of the Labor Movement |
Bob Jensen's management bookmarks are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#smallbusiness.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on portals and vortals are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/portals.htm
A sampled item from the Wall Street Journal Accounting
Educator's Review
This is a great free service to educators who subscribe to the electronic
version of the WSJ.
TITLE: Xerox Fires Auditor KPMG as Tension Continues
REPORTER: William M. Bulkeley and Mark Maremont
DATE: Oct 08, 2001 PAGE: A3
LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1002292663458919440.djm
TOPICS: Accounting, Accounting Irregularities, Auditing, Auditing Services,
Auditor Independence, Auditor/Client Disagreements
SUMMARY: KPMG served as the auditor for Xerox for more than 30 years. A
spokeswoman for Xerox indicates that they dismissed KPMG so that the company
could "approach the 2001 audit with a clean slate." Questions concern
auditor and client disagreements, auditor legal liabilities, independence,
communications with successor auditor, and communication with the board of
directors and/or audit committee.
QUESTIONS:
1.) What problems with Xerox's financial reporting did KPMG express ?
2.) What concerns with KPMG did Xerox express? What role does an audit
committee serve? What obligations does the independent auditor have for
communications with the audit committee and/or board of directors?
3.) KPMG and Xerox are both defendants in a lawsuit. What is the nature of
the lawsuit? What legal liabilities do auditors face?
4.) Who is the new independent auditor for Xerox? What communications
should/should not occur between the successor auditor and KPMG?
5.) What additional audit services has Xerox obtained? Who is providing the
additional audit services for Xerox? Could the independent auditor also provide
the additional audit services? Why or why not? How are these additional services
likely to enhance Xerox's financial reporting?
SMALL GROUP ASSIGNMENT: Your audit firm has been asked to serve as the
independent auditor for Xerox. Prepare a list of issues that you would like to
resolve before accepting the audit engagement. Discuss the importance of each of
these issues.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
Reviewed By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University
Reviewed By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University
Reminder to Program Professors: Go to http://wsj.com/offers/prof
to register for The Wall Street Journal Online if you haven't done so already.
Afterwards, contact the following person for the free WSJ Educators Service
(includes various discipline choices):
Tawanda Rowe
Program Coordinator
The Wall Street Journal
wsjeducatorsreviews@dowjones.com
Bibliography of the History of American Education http://www.zzbw.uni-hannover.de/HerbstStart.htm
Entrepreneur Books: Small Business And
Investing Book Reviews --- http://www.entrepreneurbooks.com/
Capital
Gains, Minimal Taxes: The Essential Guide for Investors and Traders clearly
explains the taxation of stocks and mutual funds.
The
Armchair Millionaire tells us to invest regularly and early to benefit from
dollar cost averaging and the power of compounding.
The
Motley Fool's Investing Without A Silver Spoon teaches us the basics of
dividend reinvestment plans and buying stocks without a broker.
Talking Money
by Jean Chatzky, a columnist for Money Magazine, gives basic financial advice.
The
Millionaire Mind by Thomas J. Stanley, Ph.D. gets our vote for the best
wealth-building book reviewed on Entrepreneur Books! Highly recommended!
We found The
Entrepreneurial Mindset: Strategies for Continuously Creating Opportunity in an
Age of Uncertainty to be a great book for entrepreneurs.
First,
Break All The Rules: What The World's Greatest Managers Do Differently
teaches us how great managers get the most from their employees.
Mortgages
For DummiesTM helps us understand mortgages and when to refinance
your home.
Entrepreneur Books readers have asked us to review The
E-Myth Revisited: Why Most Small Businesses Don't Work and What to Do About It.
Business
Know-How: An Operational Guide for Home-Based and Micro-Sized Businesses with
Limited Budgets offers practical, hands-on information for dealing with
specific, small business situations and saving money within your home business.
Rich
Dad's Guide To Investing: What The Rich Invest In, That the Poor and Middle
Class Do Not tells us that to be great investors, we should first understand
business.
Inc.
Yourself: How To Profit By Setting Up Your Own Corporation is a classic book
about forming your own corporation. But, are the tax-savings of incorporation as
significant as the author claims?
The
McGraw-Hill 36-Hour Accounting Course is a solid introduction to
double-entry accounting for small business owners.
The
Insider's Guide To Small Business Loans has information about securing your
small business loan.
Why Flip A Coin?
The Art and Science of Good Decisions teaches us about the dating game,
hedging, and more.
Rental
Houses for the Successful Small Investor is a great book for investors
contemplating investing in real estate rental properties.
Keys
To Reading An Annual Report is an excellent, short introduction to financial
statement analysis.
Angel
Investing: Matching Start-Up Funds With Start-Up Companies is a great new
book to help us understand the world of angel investors and venture capitalists.
We review From
.com to .profit: Inventing Business Models That Deliver Value And Profit.
Beyond
The Basics: How to Invest Your Money, Now That You Know a Thing or Two is a
good introduction to wealth building and the stock market for new and
intermediate level investors.
Financial
Shenanigans: How To Detect Accounting Gimmicks & Fraud In Financial Reports
teaches investors how to spot accounting fraud and gimmickry.
It's hot on the bestseller lists, but should you follow the advice in Rich
Dad, Poor Dad? We try to separate the good advice from the bad.
The stories of 101 entrepreneurs are profiled in What
No One Ever Tells You About Starting Your Own Business by Jan Norman
Low
Risk, High Reward: Starting and Growing Your Small Business With Minimal Risk
is an excellent introduction to starting a small business. It covers many small
business start-up issues and gives some useful advice on lowering your risk of
losing money.
Read about Thinking
Like An Entrepreneur: How To Make Intelligent Business Decisions That Will
Lead To Success In Building And Growing Your Own Company.
Buffett:
The Making Of An American Capitalist tells us about the life and times of
one of the world's greatest investors, and the astute reader will learn many
investing lessons.
The
Millionaire Next Door: The Surprising Secrets of America's Wealthy is still
a bestseller.
Wondering how to help your daughter sell more Girl Scout cookies? Read our
review of the outstanding study of human nature: Influence:
How And Why People Agree To Things
Emotional
Intelligence by Daniel P. Goleman is highly recommended.
Bob Jensen's bookmarks on investing
and small business can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm
Especially note this one:
Wondering how to help your daughter sell more Girl Scout cookies? Read our
review of the outstanding study of human nature: Influence:
How And Why People Agree To Things
Influence: How and Why People
Agree To Things by Robert
Cialdini teaches us the basics of how people are influenced. It breaks
influence into six key factors:
- Reciprocation
- Consistency and Commitment
- Social Proof
- Authority
- Liking (the person who is trying
to influence us)
- Scarcity
Pat McConnell of Bear Stearns explains how analysts deal with the debate
between standard setters and management teams over quality of earnings in
financial reporting --- http://flywheel.memeticsystems.com/backend/ct_click.cgi?ct_id=1056&type=1
Comparisons of HTML authoring and
editing
software
"WYSIWYG Editor Shootout 2001," by Michael Calore, Webmonkey,
September 28, 2001 --- http://hotwired.lycos.com/webmonkey/01/39/index4a.html
Some of you may recall the previous
WYSIWYG Shootout, where GoLive, Dreamweaver, FrontPage, Fusion, and even a
few text editors were passed in front of the all-seeing Webmonkey Eye of
Scrutiny. Once the carrion was cleared and the battle fires were extinguished,
Macromedia's Dreamweaver went home with the top prize for the second year in a
row. Will Dreamweaver take home the gold star this time around? We shall see.
We shall see.
This year, though, the game is a little different —
for one thing, the players have changed. Macromedia, the company that makes
Dreamweaver, has swallowed up Allaire, and it now markets a whole slew of
development apps under the company umbrella. And some of our favorite Web
editors of yesteryear (Visual Page anyone?) have packed up their belongings
and retired to a cottage in the mountains. Sadly, the makers of NetObjects
Fusion, one of the beefiest WYSIWYG apps on the market, have gone out of
business. NetObjects Inc. will no longer produce the software, and the company
has decided to sell off its assets and close its doors for good.
One of the reasons for the dramatic shifts in the
roster is that the WYSIWYG editor market has undergone tremendous change
recently, and the competitive spark between the software companies that make
these beasts has erupted into a full-scale high Sierra wildfire. As a result,
the WYSIWYG editors of today are sleeker, faster, and more powerful than their
predecessors.
The WYSIWYG editors have also had to keep up with the
increasingly advanced needs of the Web development community — we need a
graphics application to handle our images, a presentation platform like
QuickTime or Flash for our multimedia, and a content management system to keep
track of several thousand files. We also need extensive backend capabilities.
So the big players now market their WYSIWYG editors along side their other
professional Web development applications, putting the spotlight on
full-featured, interoperable development suites. They've also expanded
their rosters of technologies with large-scale implementation to include JSP,
JHTML, XHTML,
and C#, among others.
But where does that leave the text editors? Well, it
wouldn't be fair to weigh text editors like BBEdit and HomeSite against the
full-fledged WYSIWYG applications that have every bell and whistle imaginable
— from animated GIFs to SVG-based navigation. Sure, text editors are great
for dHTML, file management, and, well, editing text, but the feature-rich,
GUI-based Web editors have upped themselves into a whole new category. So this
year, we'll let the text editors fight it out amongst themselves in their own
league: Look for a companion Webmonkey text editor shootout soon.
What we're left with are three mighty powerful
contenders that have merged or improved themselves into an all-new league of
their own. Almost all of the bloat-happy, intrusive WYSIWYG editor traits have
been phased out, leaving us with a fairly level playing field. This means that
choosing the right editor has never been harder. So, how do we pick one editor
program over another?
After an lengthy analysis of the major alternatives, the Michael Calore's
conclusions are as follows:
And the Golden Monkey Statuette goes to:
Dreamweaver 4 from Macromedia!
Unbelievable! This is the third straight victory for
Dreamweaver! Though the win is surely no shock to all you developers who use
the program every day. If you've ever had the pleasure of using Dreamweaver,
you know that it just makes building a website remarkably painless. Whether
you're slapping together some quick brochure-ware, or donning your coder cap
to create a thousand-page, dynamic site with all of the ubiquitous
accoutrements, Dreamweaver 4 has the refined tools, the easy interface, and
the well-developed standards support that you desperately need.
While all three editors scored poorly on the CSS
test, Dreamweaver came closer than GoLive and FrontPage to producing
consistent formatting across the most popular browsers. The code that
Dreamweaver generated was a little bulkier and obtuse than the code offered by
the competitors, but its purpose is obvious now: Dreamweaver's raw code
actually works in Netscape 4.7.
One of the factors weighed heavily in the outcome of
the Shootout was the integration between Dreamweaver, Fireworks, and Flash.
The suite's ability to update code in Dreamweaver after being altered in
Fireworks (something they call "roundtrip editing") certainly made
our eyebrows arch skyward. For a few extra bucks, Macromedia offers a package
deal of Dreamweaver 4 and Fireworks 4, so you can start creating HTML and
graphics right out of the box. The CD-ROM version of the program also ships
with trial versions of BBEdit 6.0 (for the Mac) and HomeSite 4.5 (for PC), so
you can use these excellent text editors to bolster your Dreamweaver
experience. The extra features like the O'Reilly code reference and the
JavaScript debugger are big plusses as well.
Coming in at a close second is Adobe GoLive. We can't
say enough about its super-cool QuickTime editor. The code-editing
functionality in the program is first-rate, and the context-sensitive palettes
make for a pleasant desktop feel. However, GoLive dishes out some bulky and
strange code, especially when you're trying to position elements on a layout
grid. Puzzling and awkward tags like xpos, showgridx, and cntrlrow give off a
funny vibe. We certainly wouldn't want them on any of our pages!
And the bronze goes to FrontPage. While it has come a
long way, baby, we felt like both Dreamweaver and GoLive were better tools for
most Web developer needs. FrontPage does receive honorable mention, however,
as the best tool for beginners. Dreamweaver may be the all-around WYSIWYG
champ, but that doesn't necessarily make it the right editor for you.
Generally speaking, the crop of WYSIWYG editors we
reviewed here are all pretty good. Dirty-little-secret proprietary tags are
almost extinct. If you drop in hand-generated code, and for the most part,
it's left alone. And Stylesheets, dHTML, JavaScript, and multimedia
capabilities are now the norm rather than the exception (though success with
these features varies).
So really you could pick any one of these editors.
Once you got used to the program's quirks and peculiarities, it would probably
do you proud as it tackled most of your daily page-building tasks. Aside from
a general competency, almost every one of the editors reviewed have at least
one feature that they are particularly good at. We suggest that you let the
nature of your projects and your own good or bad habits guide you to the
editor that most accurately matches your needs.
As you can see, when it comes to WYSIWYG editors,
there's something for everyone. So just go ahead and pick one! After all, it
takes a human (or at least a really smart monkey) to create a good website.
These tools are simply here to help you get it done faster and with minimal
effort.
I am proud to call Paul Pacter both a
good friend and a former student while I was on the faculty at Michigan State
University. He was one of the many great doctoral students recruited by
James Don Edwards. See http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/pacter2001.htm
Paul was a research project director
for both the FASB and the IASB prior to taking on an assignment in the office of
Deloitte and Touche in Hong Kong. His apartment beside the Hyatt Hotel is
fabulous, and he is a wonderful host.
Paul maintains what is probably the
best international accounting site in the world --- http://www.iasplus.com/index.htm
For the latest tribute to him, go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/pacter2001.htm
World Biodiversity Database --- http://www.eti.uva.nl/Database/WBD.html
ETI's World
Biodiversity Database is a continuously growing taxonomic database and
information system that aims at documenting all presently known species (about
1.7 million) and to make this important biological information worldwide
accessible. Access to this online information system is free of charge for
noncommercial use: scientific and educational purposes. All data in the WBD
are copyright protected by the authors, artists and other contributors and may
not copied or reproduced without approval of ETI and the lawful owners.
The WBD is intended
to increase understanding and to support a responsible use and to facilitate
the management of the earths biodiversity resources. It is built as a joint
effort of specialists worldwide who contribute basic taxonomic, ecological and
biodiversity data to ETI to make this available in electronic form, both
online in the WBD and in subsections on CD-ROMs.
The WBD contains
taxonomic information (hierarchies), species names, synonyms, descriptions,
illustrations and literature references when available. A direct link to CMBI
provides genetic information on protein sequence (from the SWISS-PROT and
TrEMBL databases), nucleic sequence (EMBL) and 3D structures (PDB) for each
taxon. In the future the WBD will be extended with online identification keys
and an interactive geographic information system. A section of the WBD is
available on CD-ROM.
Those parts of ETI's
WBD that represent so called Global Species Databases (full worldwide coverage
on specific taxa) will be linked to the Species 2000 Index of Species, a
virtual basic taxonomic reference system, that is continuously updated by
quality taxonomic databases. The Species 2000 Index acts as a basic species
name references system that can help you to locate detailed information on
species in the member databases.
The database,
constructed in cooperation with the Stichting Academisch Rekencentrum
Amsterdam (SARA), currently contains over 200.000 accessible taxa. If you have
any comments or suggestions or a data set that would fit into the WBD, please
forward these to our webmaster [webmaster@eti.uva.nl].
XYZ=IISBP
The proposed global business credential
that we once knew as "Cognitor" and more recently referred to as
"XYZ" has been given a shiny new name and an international
organization to support and promote it. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/60274
Shucks. Now I can't cognate in public.
Bob Jensen, Intensely Interesting
Senile Behaving
Person
Work Together, Stay in Place (Janet
Flatley passed this link along to me.)
Learn how some smart organizations and quick learners are working virtually,
efficiently, and seamlessly around the globe today. by Fast Company http://www.fastcompany.com
The most important
part of work is teamwork. Product-development teams scattered around the world
collaborating on an exciting innovation. Marketing teams coordinating the
release of an ad campaign across North America, Europe, and Asia. Logistics
teams moving parts and products from suppliers to the assembly line to
customers.
For years, one of the
biggest challenges facing such far-flung teams was how to work together across
boundaries of time and place. Until September 11, the most direct response to
that challenge was to hop on an airplane. A customer has a problem? I'll be in
Amsterdam by 10 AM. A software engineer is stumped by a glitch? Let's all meet
in Palo Alto at noon. Suddenly, teams that spend most of their time in the air
don't seem quite so appealing.
What follows is a
collection of smart ideas and useful tools designed to help teams collaborate
more while traveling less. You can still work together, even if you stay in
place.
Continued at
http://www.fastcompany.com/invent/invent_feature/virtualteams.html
It certainly does seem likely that some travel will
be replaced by other forms of meetings. Maybe even videoconferencing will come
into its own, after years of requiring huge investments and elaborate
procedures. And, if we're lucky, videoconferencing will make meetings so
unendurable that we'll shorten them by 90 percent. After all, the problem with
videoconferencing is that it's such bad TV. If the networks ran a weekly
program that showed an hour of a business guy sitting at a desk listening and
shuffling his notes, we'd turn it off in a second. Let's at least get some
background music and a laugh track. Then maybe video conferencing will take
off...
http://www.darwinmag.com/read/swiftkick/
Big Five firm PricewaterhouseCoopers
has retained its top 10 spot on Working Mother magazine's annual list of the
"100 Best Companies for Working Mothers." The other Big Five firms are
represented on the Top 100 list as well. Find out what it takes to make the
grade. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/60271
But it is Deloitte and Touche that
disclosed to the world a goal of doubling the number of female partners (in the
next five years as I dimly recall).
Question: What
does CNN claim is the best health and medicine site on the web?
Answer: emedicine.com at http://www.emedicine.com/
When I went there several times, I
got the following message:
eMedicine.com is
experiencing extremely high traffic due to our recent media exposure. We are
providing this page with a summary of our most requested content in an effort to
serve as many of our readers as possible. Thank you for your patience and
support.
Hispanics may find the following site
helpful: healthfinder Espanol --- http://www.healthfinder.gov/espanol
But this study fails to explain why they "get prettier at closing
time."
"How pretty faces light up the brain,"
BBC News, October 10, 2001
--- http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_1590000/1590847.stm
The romantic saying "their eyes met across a
crowded room" could have some scientific basis.
It is very important to know rapidly with whom it
might be rewarding to bond
Dr Knut Kampe It turns out that eye contact with a
pretty face is enough to start the brain buzzing within seconds.
British researchers have found that when someone sees
an attractive face, their brain's "reward centre" lights up.
The scientists believe bonding with attractive people
has an evolutionary advantage and is hard-wired into the brain.
Health and strength
As well as the more obvious rewards of finding a
suitable mate, associating with attractive people perhaps enhances someone's
social status.
Knut Kampe, of the Institute of Cognitive
Neuroscience at University College, London, led the research.
He told BBC News Online: "From an evolutionary
point of view, it is important to rate someone as attractive because this
indicates health, strength, etc.
Attractiveness and Aging --- http://www.ship.edu/~sfmade/agingsummer/attractiveness/chap5.html
From Syllabus e-News on October 9, 2001
eCollege Tops Colorado List for Fastest Growth
The fastest growing company in Colorado in the past
year was edcuational courseware developer eCollege, according to the
consulting firm Deloitte & Touche, which ranked state companies in its
annual Colorado Technology Fast 50 listing. Denver-based eCollege, an
application service provider that develops online campuses and courseware, had
revenue growth of 10,996 percent in the last year. Qwest Communications was
number two on the list. Five year-old eCollege has worked on online
educational programs for Seton Hall University, the University of Colorado,
the DeVry Institutes, the Kentucky Virtual High School, and Microsoft
Faculty Center.
For more information, visit: http://www.ecollege.com
University of Maryland Business School Puts Up Portal
The University of Maryland's Robert Smith School of
Business said it would launch an Internet portal to help manage online
information across its academic constituencies. The school will use software
from Autonomy Corp. to organize, personalize and deliver documents, financial,
transportation and logistics databases, federal agency information, and
selected Web- based sources. The portal will also have natural language
retrieval features to allow full-sentence search queries. Sandor Boyson,
Smith's chief of information strategy, said the new portal represents the
replacement of "a Website that posted static information with a
sophisticated portal that delivers automated services to those who access
it."
For more information, visit: http://www.rhsmith.umd.edu
U. Texas Med Center Institutes Speech Recognition
The University of Texas's Southwestern Medical Center
is offering a speech recognition service enabling callers to say the name of
the employee, physician, department, clinic, or study they are trying to reach
and connect to an appropriate number. The service uses SpeechSite speech
recognition technology from SpeechWorks International, Inc., and helps
university operators, who field calls for about 75,000 patients annually, work
with callers with more complex needs. The Center said more than 60 percent of
all calls are now automated using the system, which resides on server in the
data center and uses employee information from its human resources management
system. In the near future, the system will be expanded to recognize
Spanish-speaking callers.
For more information, visit: http://www.speechworks.com
New Rutgers Site to Help Spur Applications
Rutgers University, the state university of New
Jersey, unveiled a new web site designed to help boost undergraduate
applications. The site, designed by Edgewater, N.J.-based Multimedia Solutions
Inc., uses several interactive features, including Macromedia Flash, to create
an "animated experience" for students, parents, and counselors
browsing the site. Rutgers invested in the site redesign because it wanted
"to quickly and effectively convey the entire Rutgers experience, from
academics to student life ... we also wanted to increase the number of
qualified applications we receive," said Diane Harris, the director of
marketing for undergraduate admissions at the school.
For more information, visit: http://admissions.rutgers.edu
Gene Fan pointed out this link.
Texas Administrative Code
TITLE 22 EXAMINING BOARDS
PART 22 TEXAS STATE BOARD OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTANCY
http://info.sos.state.tx.us/pub/plsql/readtac$ext.ViewTAC?tac_view=3&ti=22&pt=22
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the
North American Securities Administrators Association (NASAA) have announced the
launch of a new Web site designed to provide information about money managers,
financial planners, and other investment advisors. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/59363
One Model of a Masters in
Accountancy and Professional Consultancy Curriculum
The following program is quite innovative in terms of its curriculum, here is
the web address. The program follows a 4-1-1-4 structure, with the 1-1 courses
offered in a DL format while the students are working full-time; the 4-4 courses
are offered as a full-time set of courses during the first and second summers
after graduation. http://www.mac.villanova.edu
I have a great deal of respect for the accounting faculty at Villanova,
especially their current leader, Jim Borden.
I might note that Dean Monahan is a
veteran accounting educator. His message reads as follows:
The College of
Commerce and Finance (C&F), the business school at Villanova, has
undergone some dramatic changes recently that should be of interest to you as
you explore our new Master of Accounting and Professional Consultancy degree
program.
Over the last four
years we have witnessed a dramatic revitalization of our curriculum, as
evidenced by the following changes:
instituted a laptop
initiative (all undergraduate C&F students have a laptop computer, to
facilitate the learning process, for the duration of their studies)
construction of a
state-of-the-art addition and complete renovation to Bartley Hall, the home of
the business school
marshaled the
resources necessary to launch a radically different and innovative Executive
MBA program, to be delivered in the newly acquired Villanova Conference Center
recruited talented
new faculty through national searches—faculty who are actively involved in
research, consulting, and curriculum change efforts
Our strategic plan
embraces an overall goal of achieving educational distinctiveness and calls
for similar bold steps going forward. Clearly, the business school at
Villanova is a school on the move!
The College is also
actively engaged in partnering in the design of its programs with the business
community. Prominent corporate executives serve as members of the Dean’s
Advisory Council and the CIO (Chief Information Officer) Council. Both groups
are heavily involved with shaping the direction of the College, from course
offerings to program development, to actually teaching courses and guest
lecturing. Such active involvement of business professionals will help ensure
the currency, vibrancy, and relevance of our course and curriculum offerings—something
we are deeply committed to.
The Master of
Accounting and Professional Consultancy is the result of extensive dialogue
with members of these councils as well as with public accounting and
consulting firms. The investment made by these corporate partners is paying
dividends to the College in advice on strategic direction and curriculum; to
the firms in helping to shape the course of graduate business education at a
nationally prominent institution; and to students in the relevance and scope
of Villanova’s graduate business programs.
We are indeed most
pleased to invite you to participate in our innovative graduate accounting
program—a program that is designed to add value to your career for many
years to come. For additional information about the program, please contact
the Graduate Business Office by phone 610-519-4336 or email
( mac@villanova.edu ). Alternatively,
you can visit our website at www.mac.villanova.edu
.
We look forward to
hearing from you.
Best regards,
Thomas (Tim) Monahan,
Ph.D., CPA
Dean of the College of Commerce & Finance
Villanova University
Another model with a stronger accounting information systems focus is
that of Bentley College --- http://www.cpanet.com/goto/0110bentleycollege.asp
The Bentley College AIS curriculum is summarized at http://www.cpanet.com/goto/0110bentleycollege.asp
Also see http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245glosap.htm
A great news site for updates on
Windows XP --- http://special.northernlight.com/windowsxp/
Year 2001 Nobel Prize winners --- http://www.nobel.se/
"No More Economic Stimulus Needed," by Milton Friedman.
Dr. Friedman, a Nobel laureate in economics, is a senior research fellow at the
Hoover Institution. He is co-author, with his wife Rose, of "Two Lucky
People: Memoirs" (University of Chicago Press, 1998).
The Wall Street Journal, October 10, 2001 --- http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB1002671888556045120.htm
Crude Keynesianism has risen from the dead. On all
sides, there are calls for fiscal stimulus to "provide the quick shot of
adrenaline the slumping U.S. economy needs" (to quote from this
newspaper's Outlook column on Oct. 1). President Bush has now proposed a
"stimulus package," calling for spending increases and tax
reductions amounting to a total of $60 billion to $75 billion, in addition to
the emergency assistance of $40 billion already authorized.
I believe this is a great mistake. Let me count the
reasons why:
1) The economic slowdown to date has been relatively
mild. Unemployment is still at levels that more often accompany prosperity
than recession, let alone depression. Sept. 11 was a major shock
psychologically, but its direct economic effect -- perhaps $25 billion to $100
billion -- is a pin prick in a $10 trillion economy. The loss of physical
capital, plus secondary effects (e.g. extra resources required for screening
airline passengers) will reduce our potential national income. However, they
need not reduce the long-term rate of growth of that lower potential, though
the short-term effects will lengthen the current downturn in the economy and
increase its severity.
2) The Fed is already providing a "quick shot of
adrenaline," having cut the federal funds rate from 6.5% to 2.5% in the
past nine months, the final one percentage point drop after Sept. 11. Monetary
growth (M2) for the past year has been close to 10%, a rate of growth that if
long continued would assure a sharp rise in inflation. By historical
standards, the Fed's behavior was pre-emptive and aggressive.
Given the lag between monetary change and economic
change, the monetary stimulus is only now beginning to take effect. But note
that the stimulus is permanent: Once the money supply is increased, it is
there to pass from hand to hand as it is spent again and again. Under this
stimulus, the economy is likely to turn around in the next quarter or two.
When that happens, this episode will prove to be a
milder, if somewhat longer, recession than usual. Indeed, even the monetary
stimulus may have been somewhat overdone, and may leave an inflationary
heritage. As Martin Feldstein argued cogently on these pages recently, should
we not wait to see how the patient responds to the monetary stimulus before
rushing into a fiscal stimulus?
3) Fiscal stimulus also takes time to have any
effect. Anything passed now is not likely to affect actual spending or tax
receipts until after the economy has already started to recover, and to come
full flood only when the economy is expanding. Talk about locking the stable
door after the horse is stolen.
4) More fundamentally, does fiscal stimulus
stimulate? Japan's experience in the '90s is dramatic evidence to the
contrary. Japan resorted repeatedly to large doses of fiscal stimulus in the
form of extra government spending, while maintaining a restrictive monetary
policy. The result: stagnation at best, depression at worst, for most of the
past decade. That has also been the experience in the U.S. and other countries
that have tried to use government spending to jump-start the economy.
The reason is not far to seek. Extra government
spending means less repayment of government debt, or the incurring of more
debt. In either case, private individuals have less to spend. Government
projects replace private projects. Which are likely to be more productive?
5) Cutting taxes now would promote private spending
rather than government spending and provide a supply-side incentive. That is
highly relevant for the long run, but not for cyclical stimulus. Here, too,
time delay is crucial. The effect of the tax reductions is likely to come into
effect when the economy is already on the mend.
The one sure result of fiscal stimulus will be to
ratchet up the fraction of national income spent by the federal government. Is
a permanently larger government the right answer to the terrorist threat?
A message from Andrew Priest [a.priest@ECU.EDU.AU]
CERT have issued "CERT Advisory CA-2001-28
Automatic Execution of Macros" which relates to macro vulnerabilities in
Microsoft Excel 2000 + and Microsoft PowerPoint 2000 +.
Full information on the vulnerability can be found
online at:
http://www.cert.org/advisories/CA-1999-04.html
or
http://securityresponse.symantec.com/avcenter/security/Content/2001.10.04.html
In respect of macros, your attention is also drawn to
the following CERT advisory:
http://www.cert.org/advisories/CA-1999-02.html
Regards Andrew Priest
Note from Bob Jensen:
Once again I remind readers that they can reduce macro risks by installing
QuickView Plus and choose the option to open Word and Excel documents in
QuickView rather than Microsoft. However, they can only read the documents
in QuickView. See http://www.jasc.com/product.asp?pf%5Fid=006
A culture that emphasizes grievances
will live in fear.
"Anthrax Is Spread by Resentment," by Theodore Dalrymple, The
Wall Street Journal, October 15, 2001 --- http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB1003094213419075600.htm
It was H.G. Wells
who, only a few years after the development of the germ theory of disease,
first realized the value of bacteria for terrorist purposes. In 1895, he
published a story called "The Stolen Bacillus," in which an
anarchist revolutionary worms his way into the confidence of a bacteriologist
in order to obtain cholera germs to put in London's water supply.
The bacteriologist,
little suspecting his visitor, expatiates on the dangers of the cholera that
he shows him in a test-tube: "Yes, here is the pestilence imprisoned.
Only break such a little tube as this into a supply of drinking-water . . .
and death -- mysterious, untraceable death, death swift and terrible, death
full of pain and indignity -- would be released upon this city, and go hither
and thither seeking his victims."
Wells also tells us
what is going on in the mind of the anarchist revolutionary as he exultantly
escapes with the deadly culture of germs that he has stolen: "How
brilliantly [he told himself] he had planned it, forged his letter of
introduction and got into the laboratory, and how brilliantly he had seized
the opportunity! The world should hear of him at last. All those people who
had sneered at him, neglected him, preferred other people to him, found his
company undesirable, should consider him at last. Death, death, death! They
had always treated him as a man of no importance. All the world had been a
conspiracy to keep him under."
Here we have the
resentment and grandiosity that, often allied to one gimcrack utopian theory
or another (of which, of course, fundamentalist Islam is but one), usually
motivates the terrorist. The problem is that resentment and grandiosity is
almost the normal condition of modern man. Feeling himself deprived of that to
which he is by right entitled, and also feeling that, according to the
doctrine of equality, there is nothing and nobody in the world more important
than his own glorious self, he sets about rectifying the injustices that have
been done to him by indiscriminate deeds of vengeance.
I have no special
knowledge of the people who are spreading anthrax in Florida and New York and
Nevada, but I know that there are many people, quite apart from Osama bin
Laden, who would be willing to do so, and who would be only too happy to take
advantage of the prevailing situation to sow the kind of generalized panic and
despair that would be balm to their wounded souls.
Often in my practice
I meet people through whom resentment bubbles like sulfurous gas through
molten lava. Not long ago, for example, I met a man, ominously attired in
combat dress, who was so infuriated by the suffering of animals consequent
upon the consumption of meat that he felt he wanted to go into the nearest
supermarket and shoot everyone dead with a Kalashnikov. He had joined a gun
club to learn how to shoot with maximum effect, and I had little doubt that he
was thoroughly in earnest and that he could see no moral objection to his
proposed slaughter of the shoppers.
Another man became
infuriated with a chocolate company whose products he had consumed in
immoderate quantities. When he was diagnosed as a diabetic, he became
convinced that the chocolate company was to blame, for it had
"addicted" him and was therefore responsible for his illness (and,
of course, the illness of countless others). His demands for compensation fell
on deaf ears, and to prevent the company from harming anyone again, he
proposed to poison the chocolate.
The righting of a
grievance, real or imagined, is the nearest many people can come nowadays to a
transcendent purpose in life; and the number of people with grievances
escalates as sectional historiographies -- Islamist, in this case -- grow ever
more dominant and numerous. Soon everyone will be able to nurse a historic
grievance of his own. Indeed, how many people will admit in decent company to
having had a happy childhood?
Moreover, for many
years the intellectual and moral worth of a member of the intelligentsia has
been measured by the vehemence of his criticism and rejection of the
accomplishments of the past. Only anger over wrongs and injustices is
considered a generous or constructive emotion; admiration for past achievement
has been relegated to the status of swinish complacency, which is itself the
passive handmaiden of oppression. And in an age dominated by mass media, it is
hardly surprising that such an attitude should have communicated itself to the
whole of society. The identity of anger with virtue and generosity has become
complete.
Continued at http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB1003094213419075600.htm
Whether you're looking for a short e-course or seminar, a semester-length
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world's leading educational and cultural institutions, Fathom is your source for
quality online learning.
You can browse online courses in Fathom's Course Directory ( http://www.fathom.com/products/course_directory.jhtml
) or follow the links below to some of our most popular courses.
A new database developed by the INS is rolling out at schools around the
country. It will keep track of all foreign students studying in the United
States on student visas --- http://www.wired.com/news/school/0,1383,47353,00.html
Dear Professor Jensen,
I'd like to introduce the latest addition to The Wall
Street Journal's family of focused, highly useful Web sites: http://CollegeJournal.com
.
CollegeJournal.com is an exceptional site for lots of
different audiences: parents of college students, recent graduates, our
thousands of student subscribers, or anyone else who's making career changes
or simply trying to navigate his or her way through today's increasingly tough
employment environment.
The site provides articles and features designed to
help students, graduates and those in the early stages of a career find
challenging jobs. It's also loaded with practical, time-saving tools for
career professionals of all levels, such as an online resume builder that
creates documents in a variety of flexible formats.
Updated daily with content from The Wall Street
Journal, the site's own editorial team and other key resources, some of
CollegeJournal.com's additional key features include:
-- Find a Job: Use our searchable database of 30,000+
positions, including many entry-level posts and internships.
-- Who's Hiring: See which companies have available
jobs and review postings.
-- Salary Info: Research salary information by
function and industry.
-- MBA Center: Use the searchable graduate-school
database and gather information on how to choose and apply to schools.
-- Global Careers: Read the one-stop guide to
business and social customers around the world.
-- Much more: Including financial-aid information,
career advice, industry research and more.
Also take a moment to sign up for the site's E-Mail
Alerts to receive reminders about job-search, graduate school and other
related issues.
I hope you'll visit
CollegeJournal.com, a free site
at http://collegejournal.com
. There simply isn't any other online resource that brings together such a
robust combination of quality resources and career-related tools. And
remember, we also offer additional focused sites such as RealEstateJournal.com
and more as part of the WSJ.com Network -- all just a click away from
CollegeJournal.com's home page.
Sincerely,
Tony Lee
Editor in Chief/General Manager CollegeJournal.com http://collegejournal.com
New and redesigned weapons since the
Gulf War are being counted on by the U.S. military to fight terrorism in
Operation Enduring Freedom. Here's a run-down on some new warfare technology ---
http://www.wired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,47395,00.html
The Nobel Prize for Literature
"Strange News From Sweden The Nobel Prize goes to a writer of actual
merit. What happened?" by Tunku Varadarajan, The Wall Street Journal,
October 12, 2001 --- http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB1002849853950752760.htm
"Our Conrad," The Wall Street Journal, October 12, 2001 --- http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB1002844102262801000.htm
We agree with those who see the awarding yesterday of
the Nobel Prize for Literature to V.S. Naipaul as long overdue. As a writer
Mr. Naipaul towers above some recent recipients of the prize: Toni Morrison,
Gunther Grass, Nadine Gordimer. But that is a matter of judgment.
What is indisputable is that his award is timely. Mr.
Naipaul's persistent theme has been that men and women from both the First
World and the Third must be judged by equal standards.
"The world is what it is," he writes at the
start of "A Bend In the River." "Those who are nothing, who
allow themselves to become nothing, have no place in it." No fiercer
answer can be made to the nihilism and the moral and cultural relativism so
pervasive in the West today.
Mr. Naipaul is a native of Trinidad and an Oxford
scholarship boy. He arrived on the London literary scene in the 1950s, the
heyday of post-colonial intellectual fashion. His first novel caught the eye
of the literary establishment as the product of a "native" whose
maturity portended hopeful things for the Third World. The Swedish Academy
praises Mr. Naipaul for "his memory of what others have forgotten, the
history of the vanquished."
This gets Mr. Naipaul mostly wrong. In "The Loss
of El Dorado," Mr. Naipaul is unsparing about the abusiveness of colonial
rule. But he's also no sentimentalizer of what followed: corrupt and brutal
despotisms in Africa and South America, stupid home-grown ideologies, as well
as the self-indulgent Western fantasies that sustain them. Writing about the
lyrics of Joan Baez, Mr. Naipaul observes: "You couldn't listen to the
sweet songs about injustice unless you expected justice and received it much
of the time. You couldn't sing about the end of the world unless you felt that
the world was going on and on and you were safe in it."
Because Mr. Naipaul has no patience with left-wing
illusions about the "developing world," he refuses to traffic in
stereotypes about the locals. His characters are self-conscious figures, with
ambitions and desires and judgments about the world. They are not political
caricatures. Leonard Side in "A Way in the World" keeps his bases
covered by placing an image of Christ over his bed despite being Muslim.
Bringing it all together is what Mr. Naipaul called,
in a 1990 lecture at the Manhattan Institute, "Our Universal
Civilization." His conclusions are worth quoting at length:
"The universal civilization has been a long time
in the making. It wasn't always universal; it wasn't always as attractive as
it is today. The expansion of Europe gave it for at least three centuries a
racial taint, which still causes pain . . . .
"Because my movement within this civilization
has been from Trinidad to England, from the periphery to the center, I may
have felt certain of its guiding principles more freshly than people to whom
these things were everyday. One such realization . . . has been the beauty of
the idea of the pursuit of happiness. "[This] is at the heart of the
attractiveness of the civilization to so many outside it or on the periphery.
. . .
"It is an elastic idea; it fits all men. It
implies a certain kind of society, a certain kind of awakened spirit. I don't
imagine my father's Hindu parents would have been able to understand the idea.
So much is contained in it: the idea of the individual, responsibility,
choice, the life of the intellect, the idea of vocation and perfectibility and
achievement. It is an immense human idea. It cannot be reduced to a fixed
system. It cannot generate fanaticism. But it is known to exist, and because
of that, other more rigid systems in the end blow away.''
In the face of last month's barbarism, this is
exactly the message the world needs to hear.
"What the Nobel Economists Missed," by David R. Henderson, The Wall
Street Journal, October 12, 2001 --- http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB1002844871126597040.htm
On Wednesday, the Nobel Prize committee announced
this year's winners for economics: Berkeley's George Akerlof, Stanford's
Michael Spence, and Columbia's Joseph Stiglitz. Americans all, they won the
award for their path-breaking contributions to the economics of
"asymmetric" information.
The awards may well be justified, especially for
Messrs. Stiglitz and Akerlof. But unfortunately the Nobel committee, and
economists in general, are missing the big picture on information economics.
Let me explain, first by highlighting the three economists' contributions.
Mr. Akerlof, in a famous 1970 article, gave a new
explanation for a well-known phenomenon: the fact that cars barely a few
months old sell for well below their price when new. He pointed out that
although a certain proportion of new cars are lemons, once they are sold
people are more likely to keep the good ones and less likely to keep the
lemons. Potential buyers of used cars, knowing this fact, will pay
substantially less for a used car because of the higher probability that it's
a lemon.
Why is this a problem? Because the potential sellers
of good used cars can't get a price that reflects their quality and,
therefore, hold onto them even though potential buyers would gladly pay a
higher price if they knew the car was high-quality.
Similarly, economists had long understood that if
insurance buyers have better information about their health than do the
companies that sell them insurance, then "adverse selection" can
result. To the extent the insurance company cannot distinguish the sick from
the healthy, it will set the same price for both. The sick will find the
insurance a good deal, and the healthy will find it a bad deal, and so a
disproportionately high number of sick people will buy insurance. The
insurance company, knowing this fact, prices accordingly, thus driving out
even more of the healthy, and raising prices even more, and so on. Mr.
Stiglitz, in a 1976 article co-authored with Princeton University economist
Michael Rothschild, showed that in theory the insurance market could break
down completely.
Finally, Michael Spence made his reputation with an
article in 1973 on job-market signaling. He argued that when employers hire
workers, information about those workers' productivity is very costly and that
they therefore need some indicator of the workers' productivity. One such
indicator, he argued, is whether they finished college. Potential employees,
knowing this, invest time and money in completing their degree in order to
"signal" to employers that they are productive. By Mr. Spence's
reasoning, people might learn close to nothing in college, but their
investment pays off in a better and higher-paying job.
Mr. Akerlof, who, in 1973 was one of my senior
colleagues on President Nixon's Council of Economic Advisers, was especially
careful not to conclude that government intervention is necessarily a solution
to the problem of asymmetric information. He pointed out, in fact, that two
free-market solutions to the "lemons problem" are warranties and
reputations. Mr. Stiglitz, on the other hand, who was chairman of the Council
of Economic Advisers under President Clinton, seems to have more confidence in
government.
Unfortunately, in discussing government solutions,
Mr. Stiglitz has been vague about the kinds of solutions he has in mind and
has never, to my knowledge, specified the incentives that would motivate
government officials to do the right thing. Mr. Stiglitz, in fact, is often
guilty of what UCLA economist Harold Demsetz calls the "nirvana
fallacy": calling a problem with the market an imperfection while not
having a clear government solution that would make things better.
Which brings me to the big thing missing in the work
of all three: the central insight that Friedrich Hayek, co-winner of the 1974
Nobel Prize in economics, had in the 1930s and 1940s. Hayek pointed out that
almost all information that matters is decentralized, that it exists in the
minds of the millions of participants in an economy. Hayek first made this
point in a 1935 article explaining why socialism couldn't work.
In focusing on the information asymmetry between
buyers and sellers and between employers and employees, Messrs. Stiglitz,
Akerlof and Spence ignore a much more crucial asymmetry: the one between
decentralized, private information and centralized government information. The
former tends to be very useful; the latter tends to be almost useless.
With free markets, each person can use the particular
information he or she has, what Hayek called "knowledge of the particular
circumstances of time and place." Modern Hayekian economists often call
this "local knowledge." But in the Soviet Union, buyers couldn't
communicate what they wanted through the market because there were no markets,
and sellers produced to satisfy the central planners, not the ultimate users.
Result: chaos and widespread poverty.
And if centralizing a whole economy makes information
problems even worse, the same is generally true for centralizing parts of it.
Consider the rush to federalize aviation security. Mr. Stiglitz relied on his
economic theories to endorse precisely this after winning the prize, saying,
"There are certain activities like airport security that should not be in
the private sphere. That market is not self-adjusting." Yet America's
state-controlled system failed miserably on Sept. 11. By contrast, private
contractors at Israeli and European airports seem to do a pretty good job with
less government oversight.
The Federal Aviation Administration is a centralizing
organization that moves slowly. If it fails, its employees are rarely fired
and virtually never have their pay cut. But a private airport owner, with
profits on the line, might use his "local knowledge" and flexibility
to come up with more imaginative ways to weed out hijackers or to protect
against them if they do get on board. Chemical plants and oil refineries,
either of which, if exploded, could cause many deaths, seem to be well
protected by their private owners.
Could private airports do as well? They do in
Britain. Here's an important case where markets, with admittedly imperfect
information, may do a better job than governments, which have even less to go
on.
"Web site stands up to
extortion: Data stolen from WebCertificates didn’t include credit
cards," by Bob Sullivan, MSNBC, October 11, 2001 --- http://www.msnbc.com/news/641534.asp?0si=-&cp1=1
An Internet firm that
is currently being extorted by a computer criminal said again Thursday it won’t
accede to his demands, despite an e-mail campaign by the criminal to embarrass
the company. In August, WebCertificates.com, owned by Ecount.com, had to admit
to its 1 million customers that an intruder had cracked their systems and stolen
some personal data. On Thursday, the criminal began e-mailing customers about
the break-in, following through on a threat because Ecount refused to pay
$45,000 in extortion payments.
America Rides Out as Global Sheriff European Observer: The message to other
countries may be the modern equivalent of "Saddle up, boys," by
Frederick Kempe From The Wall Street Journal Europe Oct 10, 2001
--- http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB1002659764936654200.htm
"Responsibility for the Terrorist Atrocities in the United States, 11
September 2001," 10 Downing Street Newsroom, http://www.number-10.gov.uk/news.asp?NewsId=2686
"The Pride Factor Examining Asia: Only respect for Pakistanis and
Afghans can win the wider war," by Hugo Restall From The Asian Wall
Street Journal Oct 10, 2001 --- http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB1002658941693954120.htm
Courage and Cowardice http://www.salon.com/books/int/2001/10/11/miller/print.html
Salon publishes an interesting conversation with William Ian Miller, author of
"The Mystery of Courage," on the silly but weirdly fascinating
question of whether the Sept. 11 terrorists were cowards.
"War Profiteers," Oct 10 2001
The Wall Street Journal, October 10, 2001 --- http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB1002670846324082880.htm
The trial lawyers say this is a tragedy they won't exploit.
Don't believe it.
Things must be getting back to normal: There's
litigation in the air. Yesterday the Supreme Court denied an appeal from
Microsoft, which means that the case will continue to work its way through the
lower courts. At the same time, the High Court shut down an effort to reverse
a state ban on cities suing gun manufacturers over crime costs. Meanwhile, the
trial lawyers are crossing their hearts and hoping everyone believes they have
no intention of litigating liability for the World Trade Center attack.
The day after the worst atrocity on American home
soil, trial lawyers association president Leo V. Boyle posted a letter on the
group's Web site titled "A National Tragedy." For "the first
time in our history," Mr. Boyle announced, "the Association of Trial
Lawyers of America, in this time of national crisis, urges a moratorium on
civil lawsuits that might arise out of these awful events."
Oh, bravo. Now, we don't question their horror at the
attack. But if our tort warriors really wanted to demonstrate solidarity with
the nation -- and especially with those families whose loved ones were buried
in the rubble of lower Manhattan -- a pledge to accept a reform limiting
outrageous fees would be more persuasive than a moratorium with no real
meaning. Especially when they can count on friends in Congress to protect
their core interests. Does anyone believe that Tom Daschle and Richard
Gephardt didn't know exactly what they were doing when they made sure that the
airline bailout bill that ended up going before both their houses wasn't the
one that would have limited attorneys fees?
The lost passage we refer to appears in the version
of the bill introduced by Rep. Don Young (R., Ark.). It reads as follows:
"ATTORNEY FEES. -- Reasonable attorneys fees for work performed in any
action commenced pursuant in this section shall be subject to the discretion
of the court, but in no event shall any attorney charge, demand, receive, or
collect for services rendered, fees in excess of 25% of the damages ordered by
the court to be paid pursuant to this section." Contingency fees, of
course, normally scale up from 33%.
With airlines desperate for cash and warning of
imminent bankruptcies, it wasn't likely in any event that the bill was going
to get held up over lawyers fees. Now any future claimants have two choices:
Either sue in federal court in New York, or submit a claim to a federal
compensation fund to be administered by a special master appointed by the
Attorney General -- and give up the right to sue.
The devil . . . er, the plaintiffs bar . . . is in
the details.
ATLA says it is encouraging people to take the
administrative route and has set up a program to provide pro bono
representation for those in need. But because no one knows what the criteria
or award levels will be, victims and their families not in immediate need of
money will likely hang back until they see what's what -- one reason a
moratorium has little significance now. After all, claimants have two years to
file. And whatever pious advisories ATLA might send its members, they're still
free to do what comes naturally.
This is all the more reason to try to rescue some
good from the wreckage by applying a reform endorsed by George W. Bush in the
campaign: Redefine the fee relationship between a tort lawyer and his client
as a fiduciary one. A version of this principle already operates in so-called
securities cases. Here, lawyers fees are determined by the lodestar method:
They submit bills detailing the hours they worked, which a court then
multiplies by a reasonable rate that factors in a measure of the risk
involved. Not only would such a reform ensure that money from this tragedy go
to widows and orphans rather than their attorneys; it would set a badly needed
example for all future mass tort claims. Courts are still dealing with cases
from the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.
Everybody talks about Afghanistan, but nobody ever learns anything about it.
Despite a Taliban edict outlawing the Internet, there are plenty of sites to
find out all you ever wanted to know about the country --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,47243,00.html
Pervasive Computing (PC)
Bob Jensen' Bob Jensen's Threads on
Invisible Computing, Ubiquitous Computing, and Microsoft.Net are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ubiquit.htm
Alleging unfair restraint of trade, BDO
Seidman has filed a lawsuit against the AICPA, CPA2Biz, and Shared Services LLC.
The Chicago-based accounting and consulting firm and has asked that, among other
things, the AICPA be enjoined from continuing the operation of CPA2Biz. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/60155
The American Institute of CPAs issued a statement in response to a lawsuit
filed against the association and its portal, Cpa2biz, by accounting and
consulting firm BDO Seidman. The lawsuit claims the defendants conspired to
"wrongfully fix prices for products and services without competition in a
free, open and unrestricted market." ---
http://flywheel.memeticsystems.com/backend/ct_click.cgi?ct_id=1050&type=1
From the Internet Scout Report on
October 12, 2001
Google News
"Google's New Look & New
File Types" --- http://searchenginewatch.com/sereport/01/10-google.html
"The Effects of September 11 on
the Leading Search Engine" -- _First Monday --- http://firstmonday.org/issues/issue6_10/wiggins/index.html
Google Searches Related to 9/11
Terrorists Attacks --- http://www.google.com/press/zeitgeist/9-11-search.html
Google Zeitgeist --- http://www.google.com/press/zeitgeist.html
Bob Jensen's search helpers are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm
New online subscription services will
be able to offer practically every major song ever published, according to a
"breakthrough agreement" reached among once-warring sides --- http://www.wired.com/news/mp3/0,1285,47413,00.html
"The
coming subscription services may now begin licensing thousands of musical works
immediately. For consumers, this will essentially mean they will have access to
more and better on-line music options, sooner."
The RIAA said that
under the agreement, it and all its member labels and their licencees,
including the new online subscription services, will immediately have access
to every musical work authorized to be licensed by the Harry Fox Agency, the
largest agency in the industry for licensing reproductions and distributions
of musical works. HFA will issue licences for subscription services offering
on-demand streaming and limited downloads.
Once rates are
determined, royalties will be payable on a retroactive basis from the start of
services. Pending that determination, the RIAA will pay HFA an advance of $1
million towards the royalties to be determined. If the two groups do not
settle on a rate during the next two years, the recording industry will pay
monthly advances totaling $750,000 per year until a rate is set.
Publishers
represented by HFA will have the opportunity to opt out of the licensing
agreement if they choose to. Also, if they prefer, subscription services or
record companies may deal directly with HFA or individual music publishers.
The RIAA represents
the interests of the over 600 record companies, including Universal, Warner,
Sony, BMG and EMI.
See also:
Music
Labels Not Yet in Tune
File
Trading Sites in Crosshairs
Napster
Settles, Eyes Relaunch
Napster's
New Tune: Pay Labels
Hear how MP3 Rocks the Web
Groove With Lycos Music
Downloads
Guggenheim.com has gone multicultural (art) --- http://www.guggenheim.com/
This is also one of the few sites to provide an initial choice as to
"Broadband" versus "Narrowband."
Children are hungry, sick, and dying in many parts of this very imperfect
world.
State of the World's Children 2002 (UNICEF) --- http://www.unicef.org/sowc02/
United Nations Wire --- http://www.unwire.org/
It used to be the lowliest job in the joint. But help-desk support is moving
away from troubleshooting simple questions. Now the staff is supporting business
strategy. http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eEnU0BcUEY04e0TKF0Az
"User Password Control," by Paul Adams,
Webmonkey, October 4, 2001
--- http://hotwired.lycos.com/webmonkey/01/40/index3a.html
An easy way to get your users into the practice of
using secure passwords on your site is through simple form validation. A bit
of JavaScript on the form page where the user enters a new password can nip a
few bad habits in the bud. If you're not up on your JavaScript, you know what
to do: Read and memorize Thau's fantastic tutorial.
First, we send the password form input to a
JavaScript variable — call it "pw". This can be done when the form
is submitted, with the onSubmit event handler, or just when the user is done
filling out the password field, by using onBlur. Next, a function tests the
variable to see if it meets our criteria. If it doesn't, the function returns
the error status in another variable, to be displayed to the hapless user.
So, with the value of the user's password entry in a
variable, let's say we want our users' passwords to be between 8 and 16
characters long.
if ((pw.length < 8) || (pw.length > 16))
{error = "Your password needs to be between 8
and 16 characters long.\n";}
Easy enough. Now let's make sure that it contains
only the characters we want — namely alphanumeric characters, dots, dashes,
and underscores. This can be done with regular expressions or without. Let's
try it without, so we remain compatible with old browsers.
Note: These scripts contain lengthy strings which
might cause some strange wrapping on this page. If you're looking for
something to cut and paste, I suggest you use this well-preserved version.
var validchars =
"ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 0123456789 ._-";
var temp;
for (var i=0; i<pw.length;
i++)
{temp = "" +
pw.substring(i, i+1);
if (validchars.indexOf(temp) == "-1")
{error = "Your password contains illegal
characters.\n";}}
This little routine uses the indexOf method. If
indexOf finds the character you're looking for, it returns a number indicating
where that character is located in the string; if it doesn't find it, it
returns a value of -1. Here we take each character from the password string,
in order, and see if it's in the list of valid characters. If any of the
characters return a value of -1, the error message is displayed.
Similar measures can be applied to ensure that
passwords comply with any cruel and unusual policies you may want to impose.
Bear in mind, however, that client-side authentication techniques like this
aren't impossible to bypass — you should have a second line of defense on
the server side, checking again that no illegal passwords have gotten by your
JavaScript. You should be checking anyway, escaping slashes and quotes, and
blocking malicious scripting. A secondary server-side check can be a good
place to make sure that passwords aren't dictionary words too, just because
it's so cumbersome to check passwords against a dictionary in JavaScript.
For courses, it is a whole lot easier it is a whole lot easier just to use
Blackboard, WebCT, or some other system discussed at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/290wp/290wp.htm
Dear Friends and Colleagues,
Here are a couple of websites that you might find
useful.
First, Diotima (materials on women and gender in the
ancient world) at http://www.stoa.org/diotima/
, with wonderful up-to-date bibliographical lists (for such topics as
athletics, death, magic, rape, ancient medicine, law, prostitution, and so
forth) available at http://www.stoa.org/diotima/biblio.shtml
. If the topic you want isn't listed, go below the lists to the keyword
function. Also, there is a link to abbreviations if the initials of a journal
are unfamiliar to you.
Second, the Perseus Classics Collection at http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/
(put out at Tufts University). Below I have included the introduction for this
fabulous collection of art, texts, maps, historical sketches, etc.
Best to all,
Joan Burton Chair,
Classical Studies 999-8144 jburton@trinity.edu
Trinity University
Forwarded by Andy Lymer
In the spring of 2000,
a new journal, the Journal of Machine Learning Research (JMLR), was created,
based on a new vision of the journal publication process in which the
editorial board and authors retain significant control over the journal's
content and distribution. Articles published in JMLR are available freely,
without limits and without conditions, at the journal's website, http://www.jmlr.org
. The content and format of the website are entirely controlled by
the editorial board, which also serves its traditional function of
ensuring rigorous peer review of journal articles. Finally, the journal is
also published in a hardcopy version by MIT Press.
Authors
retain the copyright for the articles that they publish in JMLR. The
following paragraph is taken from the agreement that every author signs
with JMLR (see www.jmlr.org/forms/agreement.pdf
):
The Supreme Court awards another
victory for freelancers, saying National Geographic must pay for republishing a
photographer's works electronically. Is this a sign of things to come in
digital-age copyright disputes?
"Freelance Victory Blurs
Picture," by Kendra Mayfield, Wired News, October 10, 2001
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,47430,00.html
Finding the
intersection between decades-old copyright law and where it applies in the
digital world remains far off the map in the wake of a critical Supreme Court
decision on Tuesday.
In the year's
second significant victory for freelancers versus digital publishers, the
court refused to take up a lower court ruling that said National Geographic
should have paid freelance photographer Jerry Greenberg for republishing his
works in a 30-disc CD-ROM set without his permission.
The court held,
without comment, an 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling last March
against the National Geographic Society for violating
Greenberg's copyrights.
That court ruled the
CD-ROM set was not a mere revision of a prior collective work, but instead was
an entirely new product.
The Greenberg case
follows a landmark
ruling in Tasini et. Al
v. the New York Times et. Al that publishers who republish
freelance articles without the creator's permission or further compensation
are violating their copyrights.
"The facts are
different but the guiding copyright principle is the same," said Norm
Davis, Greenberg's attorney. "Both are parallel cases with implications
for republication of copyrighted materials in electronic formats. Both lay
guidelines for publishers to use in planning products of that sort."
Both cases hinge upon
section 201C in the 1976
Copyright Act, which gives publishers the privilege to reproduce and
distribute copyrighted materials without consent within the framework of
specific circumstances.
But critics say the
11th Circuit ruling in the Greenberg suit is inconsistent with the Tasini
case, in which the Supreme Court said that if works are reproduced
electronically in the same context as the original, they constitute a
permissible revision of a collective work.
The Supreme Court's
refusal to hear the Greenberg case has vexed those siding with the National
Geographic.
The remainder of the article is at http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,47430,00.html
See also:
A
Cold Look at Chilled Speech
Mr.
Tasini, Meet Mr. Greenberg
Freelancers
Fear Blacklisting
Post-Tasini:
Pity the Librarians
Recording industry lobbyists had
quietly tried to insert an amendment into an anti-terrorism bill to let
copyright holders break into your PC and delete suspected pirated files. Privacy
experts are horrified --- http://www.wired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,47552,00.html
It's no joke.
Lobbyists for the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) tried to
glue this hacking-authorization amendment onto a mammoth anti-terrorism bill
that Congress approved last week.
An RIAA-drafted
amendment according to a draft obtained by Wired News would immunize all
copyright holders -- including the movie and e-book industry -- for any data
losses caused by their hacking efforts or other computer intrusions "that
are reasonably intended to impede or prevent" electronic piracy.
In an interview
Friday, RIAA lobbyist Mitch Glazier said that his association has abandoned
plans to insert that amendment into anti-terrorism bills -- and instead is
supporting a revised amendment that takes a more modest approach.
"It will not be
some special exception for copyright owners," Glazier said. "It will
be a general fix to bring back current law." Glazier is the RIAA's senior
vice president of government relations and a former House aide.
The RIAA's interest
in the USA Act, an anti-terrorism bill that the Senate and the House approved
last week, grew out of an obscure part of it called section 815. Called the
"Deterrence and Prevention of Cyberterrorism" section, it says that
anyone who breaks into computers and causes damage "aggregating at least
$5,000 in value" in a one-year period would be committing a crime.
If the current
version of the USA Act becomes law, the RIAA believes, it could outlaw
attempts by copyright holders to break into and disable pirate FTP or websites
or peer-to-peer networks. Because the bill covers aggregate damage, it could
bar anti-piracy efforts that cause little harm to individual users, but meet
the $5,000 threshold when combined.
"We might try
and block somebody," Glazier said. "If we know someone is operating
a server, a pirated music facility, we could try to take measures to try and
prevent them from uploading or transmitting pirated documents."
The RIAA believes
that this kind of technological "self-help" against online pirates,
if done carefully, is legal under current federal law. But the RIAA is worried
about the USA Act banning that practice -- and neither the Senate nor the
House versions of that bill include the RIAA's suggested changes.
See also:
File
Trading Sites in Crosshairs
Good
Beat, But Can't Dance to All
Web
Music Fight Plays Out in D.C.
Look and listen: Lycos Music
Nokia has introduced a new all-in-one cell phone that does everything: Web,
e-mail, FM radio, digital music and games. But guess what? It's not coming to
the United States any time soon --- http://www.wired.com/news/wireless/0,1382,47491,00.html
Powers of 10 (mathematics, astronomy) http://www.powersof10.com/
This is an interactive site that allows you to make inquiries. You can
navigate from very small (e.g., on a strand of DNA) to very large (e.g., outer
space).
"Critters on a Chip," W. Wayt
Gibbs, Scientific American --- http://www.sciam.com/explorations/072897biosens/gibbs.html
One sensor, dubbed
"critters on a chip" by its inventors at Oak Ridge National Laboratory
in Oak Ridge, Tenn., consists of a tiny light-sensitive computer chip coated
with bioluminescent bacteria. When the bacteria encounter certain chemicals,
they light up, creating an electrical signal that the chip can process or
amplify. So far the researchers have used a genetically engineered bacterium
called Pseudomonas fluorescens HK44 to create a biochip that is exquisitely
sensitive to naphthalene, a common petroleum pollutant.
Dismuke's Virtual Talking Machine (Music, Speech, Recording, History) http://www.dismuke.org/
See also "Text Reading" at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm
Name That Tune "The Cognitive Itch"
"The Science Behind the Song Stuck
in Your Head," Los Angeles Times, October 7, 2001 --- http://www.latimes.com/features/lifestyle/la-000080020oct07.story
For years, humans
have been tortured by Stuck Tune Syndrome, in which a seemingly innocuous
piece of music lodges in the brain and won't leave. So far, no reliable cure
exists, but a University of Cincinnati professor hopes to change that. James
Kellaris has embarked on a study to figure out why songs sometimes commandeer
people's thoughts.
Kellaris, a marketing
teacher who moonlights as a bouzouki player in a Greek band, theorizes that
certain types of music operate like mental mosquito bites. They create a
"cognitive itch" that can only be scratched by replaying the tune in
the mind. The more the brain scratches, the worse the itch gets. The syndrome
is triggered when "the brain detects an incongruity or something
'exceptional' in the musical stimulus," he explained in a report made
earlier this year to the Society for Consumer Psychology. To help determine
which factors cause songs to stick, Kellaris surveyed 1,000 students at four
universities.
Almost without
exception, the respondents had regularly endured stuck songs or jingles, with
the typical episode lasting anywhere from a few hours (55%) to a full day
(23%). Another 17% said the malevolent melodies persisted several days, and 5%
said tunes haunted them longer than a week. One person claimed--perhaps
facetiously--that music from an Atari 260 videogame had been playing in his
head "since 1986."
The survey also asked
people to identify the stickiest songs. From this list, Kellaris hopes to
pinpoint the characteristics that make a tune more likely to bore into the
brain.
One possibility is
excessive repetitiveness. Although all songs contain repetitious elements,
some rely on the technique so heavily that they might cause the brain to echo
the pattern automatically, Kellaris suggests. Examples: "Follow the
Yellow Brick Road," Queen's "We Will Rock You" and the theme
from "Mission: Impossible."
A related factor is
musical simplicity. "Children's songs seem more prone to get stuck than
complicated material, such as a Bach fugue," Kellaris says. "Perhaps
the ease with which a tune can be reconstructed" increases its
adhesiveness.
Greg Scelsa of
Lancaster, who composes and performs children's music for the duo Greg &
Steve, acknowledges that simplicity and repetition are key ingredients for
making children's songs memorable.
A classic example is
"If You're Happy and You Know It," he says. The melody in each verse
builds sequentially from the previous verse. He demonstrates by singing,
"If you're happy and you know it, clap your hands. If you're happy and
you know it, clap your hands. If you're happy and you know it, then your face
will surely show it. If you're happy and you know it, clap your hands."
With each "happy
and you know it" line, the melody changes slightly, "but in a
predictable way," he says. "It's the same pattern, which makes it
more memorable."
Does that also make
it more likely to implant itself in someone's cranium? Probably, he says.
Probably? Three hours after Scelsa hangs up, "If You're Happy and You
Know It" has staged a coup d'etat in our brain.
Another possible
component of sticky songs is incongruity. If the beat or lyric defies listener
expectations, it might incite a cognitive itch, Kellaris says. As an example,
he mentions the song "America" from "West Side Story,"
which has a jarring 12/8 meter.
Then again, maybe
melody has nothing to do with Stuck Tune Syndrome, says Diana Deutsch, a UC
San Diego psychology professor who also served as founding editor of the
journal Music Perception.
Perhaps persistent
songs are like recurring dreams, she says: "Something in the back of your
mind is trying to tell you something." As proof, Deutsch cites her own
experience. Whenever she can't get a song out of her head, she contemplates
the meaning of the lyrics--and the song instantly goes away. "Even songs
without words can have a larger meaning," she notes, mentioning anthems
and religious music as examples.
OK, but what if the
tune circulating in your skull is the theme from "The Flintstones"?
What's the deeper message behind that? Deutsch isn't sure, but insists that if
the human brain has a tendency to play songs over and over, there must be an
evolutionary reason.
If so, evolution
should be outlawed. That's because it inevitably favors the most irritating
songs. Let's say the brain wants to send itself an anti-anxiety message. It
could play something like the Beatles' "Let It Be" or the Beach
Boys' "Don't Worry Baby." But nooooo. Instead, the inner jukebox
naturally selects Bobby McFerrin's "Don't Worry, Be Happy."
Kellaris isn't
surprised. Other research has shown that disturbing thoughts are usually more
memorable and compelling than pleasant ones, he says.
The first case of
Stuck Tune Syndrome is lost to history. If ancient Romans had "Parvus
Orbis Est" (Latin for "It's a Small World") chirping
incessantly in their heads, they were kind enough not to mention it.
"Maybe this is a
modern phenomenon," says H.A. Kelly, director of UCLA's Center for
Medieval and Renaissance Studies. "I can't think of any literary
references to a haunting or persistent melody."
In recent times, the
most bizarre cases of Stuck Tune Syndrome involve elderly men and women. In
rare instances, they begin to hallucinate music, according to reports in
medical journals. The songs are "so vivid that people will look for a
nearby radio," says neurologist Oliver Sacks, author of "The Man Who
Mistook His Wife for a Hat."
Curiously, many of
the auditory hallucinations are hymns or patriotic tunes, sung by a chorus.
Some fade after time; others are permanent. "It goes 'round and 'round in
their heads and they can't get it to go away," says UCSD's Deutsch, who
has interviewed three sufferers and hopes to conduct a formal study of the
disorder. "One woman went to her doctor and complained about hearing a
hymn because she's not religious."
Sacks says the songs
tend to be "music that was popular or important in the first 15 years of
the person's life." In other words, future generations can expect to
hallucinate Eminem, Britney Spears and the theme from Barney the dinosaur.
Scientists don't know
what causes the hallucinations. Some people begin hearing music after surgery,
others after taking too much aspirin. But most of the patients are partially
deaf, so the hallucinations might be akin to phantom-limb syndrome, Sacks
says.
In any case, no cure
is known.
The rest of the article is at http://www.latimes.com/features/lifestyle/la-000080020oct07.story
Do you suppose the following jingle
might go 'round in students' brains so "they can't get it to go away?"
Molly Mouse was a hat check girl ---
W'woo W'woo!
Molly Mouse was a hat check girl --- W'woo W'woo!
Molly Mouse was a hat check girl
An accountant thought he'd give this chick a whirl ---
W'woo
W'woo, W'woo!
He sauntered up to Molly Mouse's side
--- Uh Ugh!
He sauntered up to Molly Mouse's side --- Uh Ugh!
He sauntered up, his voice quavered, but he was tacit
And whispered Molly will you be a debit on the left, my asset
Uh Ugh, Uh Ugh, Ugh?
Not without my Uncle Rats' consent
--- Ugh Uh!
Not without my Uncle Rats' consent --- Ugh Uh!
Because for me, Clyde, it's plain to see
You'd be my credit on the right, my liability
Ugh Uh, Uh Ugh, Uh Ugh!
That's it Clyde, better hit the road
--- Goodbye!
That's it Clyde, better hit the road --- So long!
That's it Clyde, better hit the road
You ain't no hedge under 133, SFAS 133
No OCI you'd be, for me, for me, you see!
On second thought, maybe my revised jingle
should go away! See http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/muppets.htm
Check out the latest news and information on the Proposed Global Business
Credential at the AccountingWEB Resource Center. New items are added regularly,
so be sure to bookmark this page. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/56555
Seems like the Mafia invented this kind
of extortion (pay us to stay away) years and years ago.
The money bin Laden has
funneled to the Taliban comes from three primary sources: legal and illegal
businesses or front companies bin Laden operates directly or indirectly; tribute
payments he receives from several Persian Gulf states, companies or individuals
that give him funds so he and his al Qaeda supporters will stay out of or
minimize activities in their countries; and entities that are masked as
charities.
Bin Laden's Puppets-- http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A40211-2001Oct10.html
This extortion seems to be working in Saudi
Arabia
The New York Times reports that "Saudi Arabia has so far
refused to freeze the assets of Osama bin Laden and his associates."http://www.nytimes.com/2001/10/11/international/11DIPL.html
Bob
Jensen's commentaries and treads on terrorism are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/JusticeAppeal.htm
And to think that he can afford one of the $250,000 wrist watches
advertised in the latest Neiman
Marcus Catalog.
The New York Post reports that in his video press release, Osama bin
Laden was wearing a Timex Ironman Triathalon watch. A Timex press release http://www.timex.com/html/our_company_news_smithsonian.html
claims the model is "the best-selling watch in the world," and it
notes that it has also been worn by Bill Clinton, George H.W. Bush, and Dan
Quayle.
If the caves and tunnels beneath Afghanistan's mountains are truly
impregnable, the U.S. military may resort to dropping small "tactical"
nukes. The B6-11 is a "bunker buster" nuclear bomb capable of
destroying fortresses buried deep underground --- http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,47319,00.html
PBS Frontline Looks for Terrorism Answers --- http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/terrorism/
The Peacemakers Speak --- http://www.thecommunity.com/crisis/
Wireless Local Networks
Palm has laid off workers, slashed prices for its handheld devices and faces
fierce competition from Microsoft. Analysts say it's more than a bad economy
that plagues the PDA leader --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,47474,00.html
ROTC
Officers And Gentlemen Review & Outlook: Will the Ivies now welcome ROTC
back on campus? The Wall Street Journal, October 11, 2001 --- http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB1002239045399432280.htm
For
most Princetonians, the blackened bronze stars that dot the Gothic stone
windowsills of their dormitories are relics of the university's past, each
bearing the name of a Princeton man who gave his life in one of the two world
wars. But for Geoff Gasperini, the stars are more than memorials. They are a
tangible link to a commitment that remains alive today.
That's because
Geoffrey Francis Gasperini, '01, is also Lieutenant Gasperini. At Princeton
that makes him part of a distinct minority; in the class that graduated in
May, he accounted for half the Army Reserve Officer Training Corps. But give
Princeton its due. As small as ROTC's presence may be there, the nearby chart
underscores just how unique Princeton is: Of the eight Ivy League schools,
only Cornell has all ROTC branches represented on campus (Army, Navy, Air
Force). Princeton has Army, and Penn has Navy.
Of the remaining five
Ivies, few have an outright ban. But while most accept ROTC scholarship money,
accepting ROTC itself is another story. As yesterday's
page-one story noted, a Yale student has to drive an hour and a half to
the University of Connecticut to fulfill his or her ROTC requirements.
(Princeton's Air Force cadets take their ROTC classes at Rutgers.) Given that
many of these same Ivies accept millions of dollars in Defense Department
subsidies for research, the message is clear: We'll take the money but not the
uniform.
At most of these
schools, of course, ROTC was forced off campus amid the turbulence of Vietnam.
Many in academe have held their noses ever since, here complaining about the
unscholarly quality of military instructors, there decrying an officer corps
out of touch with the values of American society. But when you officially
define your ideal relationship with the military's largest program for officer
training as one that keeps it at "arm's length" -- as the University
of Pennsylvania did -- such criticism rings a little hollow.
The
Ivies and ROTC
|
ARMY |
NAVY |
AIR
FORCE |
Brown |
* |
No |
No |
Columbia |
* |
No |
* |
Penn |
* |
Yes |
* |
Harvard |
* |
* |
* |
Princeton |
Yes |
No |
* |
Yale |
* |
No |
* |
Cornell |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Dartmouth |
No |
No |
No |
*These
schools do not offer ROTC themselves. But their students can fulfill
their ROTC requirements at a nearby affiliated college or university.
Source:
Army, Navy and Air Force ROTC web sites
|
And that's just what
makes Princeton so interesting. Over coffee and bagels, Lt. Gasperini and a
handful of Princeton cadets make clear they view the relationship as a two-way
street. Clearly the Army is happy to tap into a talented cadre of students. But
Princeton too benefits from an ROTC presence that puts real faces on the
military for the other students, faculty, administration.
"There's been a
great renewal of respect for the fire department and police department since
Sept. 11," says Lt. Gasperini. "The military's response and the public
reaction has yet to come." But on campus there are encouraging signs of the
re-emergence of an understanding of the military's role -- an understanding
severed by Vietnam but reflected in the honor roll of Princeton war dead
inscribed on the lobby walls of Nassau Hall, where the university's president
has his office. One cadet tells of getting a long thank you e-mail from a
classmate and fellow ski-team member. Lt. Col. Matthew McCarville, Princeton's
ROTC director, says the university's vice president called just to tell him that
"your cadets and alumni" were in the administration's thoughts and
prayers. Even the color guard at the football game reports more cheers, waves
and "Attaboys."
Guerrilla
soldier against fundamentalism (Geriljasoldat mot fundamentalistar)
Article
with illustration: Asma Jahangir is a dangerous woman, so
dangerous that a fatwa has been issued on her, allowing any Muslim to
murder her. Jahangir, who works as a barrister and UN human rights
representative in Pakistan, has spent years of her life working to
improve women's legal protection in Pakistan, and for that she has
been condemned by the Islamic fundamentalists. Yesterday, she gave the
annual Chr. Michelsen speech. She is convinced that no country should
have an official religion, and her work has earned her an
international reputation and considerable praise. In spite of her
upbringing in the Pakistani upper class, Jahangir has chosen not to
sit back and enjoy the privileges of her class: "I had a
politically active father who spent in all seven years in prison for
his opposition to the military regime. From early childhood, I
witnessed his fights and worries," she tells. Her fight to free
her father at the age of 18 resulted in a verdict against the military
regime which was used as precedence in trials against other military
regimes in the 70s. Her struggle against the corrupt power structures
created by decades of military regimes, has taught her to be cunning
and strategic. Pakistan is marred by hundreds of honour assassinations
on women every year, and while Jahangir does not believe she will live
to see the society of her dreams, she is confident that Pakistan is on
the right track. "Women think differently than they did 20 -30
years ago, women in all layers of society have become aware of their
rights," says Jahangir, who does not want to leave her country to
pursue an international career. "There is increasing resistance
against the military regimes," she says, emphasising how proud
she is of her people and the rich and diverse culture of the whole
region. "Out of this cultural abundance a powerful creative force
would grow if only we could get rid of the fundamentalists," she
says.
Journalist: Asbjørn Kristoffersen
|
Bergens Tidende 15.03.2001
1110016
A suggestion from Jackie Signor, educational program administrator, Dept. of
Gynecology & Obstetrics, Stanford University.
I think I've got it. Killing him will only create a
martyr. Holding him prisoner will inspire his comrades to take hostages to
demand his release.
Therefore, I suggest we do neither. Let the SAS,
Seals or whatever covertly capture him, fly him to an undisclosed hospital and
have surgeons quickly perform a complete sex-change operation.
Then we return "her" to Afghanistan to live
as a woman under the Taliban."
Halloween is Approaching
Giant Pumpkin Carvings --- http://www.olywa.net/s&mcramer/carving/
An archaeologist is the best wife a man
can have.
The older he gets, the more interested in him she becomes.
Author unknown.
"Very
funny, Scotty. Now beam down my clothes."
Near the closing of an email message from Andrew Priest.
Pull My
Finger, Fill My Filter
2001 Ig
Nobel Prize Winners http://www.improbable.com/ig/ig-pastwinners.html#ig2001
Note especially the winner in
Biology! Close family living will become more enjoyable. But the
Public
Health issue remains problematic.
The 2001 Ig Nobel Prize Winners
MEDICINE
Peter Barss of McGill University, for his impactful medical report "Injuries
Due to Falling Coconuts." [PUBLISHED IN: The
Journal of Trauma, vol. 21, no. 11, 1984, pp. 990-1.]
PHYSICS
David
Schmidt of the University of Massachusetts for his partial
solution to the
question of why shower curtains billow inwards.
BIOLOGY
Buck Weimer of Pueblo,
Colorado for inventing Under-Ease,
airtight underwear with a replaceable charcoal filter that removes
bad-smelling gases before they escape.
Note from Bob Jensen:
Since terrorists have commenced sending anthrax spores via the mail, Mr.
Weimer's invention has an unanticipated benefit. Prior to opening any
letters or packages, wearers of his charcoal-filtered underwear can transfer
their knickers to their heads, tightly bound, until the coast is deemed clear
in terms of possible anthrax powder in their mail. Perhaps humiliating
this inventor with an Ig Nobel prize is unjust in light more serious and
unsuspecting benefits of his invention.
Now I will pass along more serious advice
from Bob Blystone:
If you have general questions about Anthrax, please
refer to the website listed below.
http://www.bt.cdc.gov/Agent/Anthrax/Anthrax.asp
It is to the Center for Disease Control.
Go down the page and get past the PR part of the
site and you can get to real information: research papers and the like. You
will need Acrobat to view the papers.
Bob Blystone
Robert V. Blystone, Ph.D.
Professor of Biology Trinity University San Antonio, Texas 78212 rblyston@trinity.edu
210-999-7243 FAX 210-999-7229
ECONOMICS
Joel Slemrod,
of the University of Michigan Business School, and Wojciech
Kopczuk, of University of British Columbia, for their conclusion that
people find a way to postpone their deaths if that that would qualify them for
a lower rate on the inheritance tax. [REFERENCE:"Dying
to Save Taxes: Evidence from Estate Tax Returns on the Death Elasticity,"
National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper No. W8158, March 2001.]
LITERATURE
John Richards of
Boston, England, founder of The
Apostrophe Protection Society, for his
efforts to protect, promote, and defend the differences between plural and
possessive.
PSYCHOLOGY
Lawrence W. Sherman of
Miami University, Ohio, for his influential research report "An
Ecological Study of Glee in Small Groups of Preschool Children."
[PUBLISHED IN: Child Development,
vol. 46, no. 1, March 1975, pp. 53-61.]
ASTROPHYSICS
Dr. Jack and Rexella Van Impe
of Jack Van Impe Ministries, Rochester
Hills, Michigan, for their discovery that black holes fulfill all the
technical requirements to be the location of Hell. [REFERENCE: The March 31,
2001 television and Internet broadcast of the "Jack
Van Impe Presents" program. (at about the 12 minute mark).]
PEACE
Viliumas Malinauskus of
Grutas,
Lithuania, for creating the amusement park known as "Stalin
World."
TECHNOLOGY
Awarded jointly to John Keogh of Hawthorn, Victoria, Australia, for patenting
the wheel in the year 2001, and to the Australian
Patent Office for granting
him Innovation Patent #2001100012.
PUBLIC HEALTH
Chittaranjan
Andrade and B.S. Srihari of the National Institute of Mental Health and
Neurosciences, Bangalore, India, for their probing medical discovery that nose
picking is a common activity among adolescents. [REFERENCE: "A
Preliminary Survey of Rhinotillexomania in an Adolescent Sample," Journal
of Clinical Psychiatry, vol. 62, no. 6, June 2001, pp. 426-31.]
Forwarded
by Dick Haar
I swear an oath on my honor as a hypocrite that...
I will cuss cows but eat beef, blast miners but wear
jewelry and drive a car but condemn oil companies.
I don't want trees cut for any purpose other than to
provide the lumber for my next house.
As a Hollywood celebrity I assert my God given right to
sire at least four children by three different wives and then protest about
overpopulation in the world.
I will put fish first by saving the sucker and salmon, but
not the farmers and ranchers who feed me.
I demand that politicians and federal judges in Washington
save all endangered species, except the small business man.
I feel government is imminently qualified to micro- manage
nature, after all, look what a smashing job they've done with the IRS, EPA,
USDA, FBI, BLM and assorted other alphabet agencies.
As a self-righteous hypocrite it is my duty to celebrate
Earth Day with barbecues and parades and by leaving tons of trash behind.
I demand that feedlots and farms stop polluting our ground
water. That privilege should be preserved for me every time I flush the
contents of my toilet into a septic tank or the ocean.
I want to relocate grizzly bears and wolves to the West but
not in my big-city backyard. After all, people live here!
I give my permission for mountains lions to eat lambs but
if a lion eats my dog or cat I demand the abominable beast be shot on sight.
I will cuss oil companies on talk radio and stand in the
way of their drilling more wells while sitting in my gas guzzling SUV with the
engine running.
I will write letters to the editor on my computer
castigating utility companies for not providing enough electricity. At
the same time I will send money to green groups who want to tear down
hydroelectric dams and stand in the way of any new power producing projects.
I avow at the next cocktail party I attend while smoking a
cigarette and sipping a martini that I will sue the tobacco companies for
causing my lung cancer.
Although I have never personally milked a cow or grown
vegetables in a garden I demand to have a say on how farmers and ranchers do
it.
As a pompous hypocrite I demand that water, herbicides, and
pesticides be taken away from farmers immediately, but I don't want it to
affect the price, quantity or quality of the food I buy in the store.
It is my strongly held conviction that we should ban all
pesticides, except the can of bug spray I use to kill ants and other unwanted
bugs in my home.
As a mealy-mouthed hypocrite I vow to help stop global
warming by watching the Discovery Channel on my giant sized television in my
air-conditioned house.
I assert that cattle pooping on our nation's grasslands is
a national disgrace while fertilizing my urban lawn with steer manure and urea
is simply good ecology.
I will complain about fertilizer runoff from farms but not
from golf courses because I happen to be a golfer.
I will hound hunters in the woods because they use guns
despite the fact that hunting groups have increased habitat and wildlife
numbers.
I demand that the government end all timber cutting or
recovery in our national forests but I'll cry like a singed coyote if the feds
allow wildfires to burn near my house.
As a card-carrying hypocrite I disavow the use of fur,
leather, wool and all animal by-products, except the ones used in medicine
that might save my life.
I demand labels be placed on all food products but not on a
rock album that endorses killing cops.
Finally, as an arrogant and self-serving hypocrite I firmly
believe that rural folks have done a terrible job of taking care of the
countryside and they must do a better job because that's where I want to live
or visit someday when I can escape the pollution, crime, and insanity of the
barren big city in which I currently reside.
Question:
What ideal terrorist surveillance source, based upon its perfect crime fighting
record in proven history, has President Bush and other officials completely overlooked?
Answer:
The "chicken" answer follows this brief introduction.
It Appears They Could Not Wait for
Their 79 Promised Virgins.
The word "Jihad" strangely resembles the yell of horney Texans,
especially those Aggies, visiting the infamous Chicken
Ranch --- the historical bordello that was later featured in the Broadway
theatrical and movie called "The
Best Little Whorehouse in Texas."
According to OpinionJournal.com on
October 10, this is how some of Bin Laden's money for the Jihad (Holy War) was
being spent by those deeply religious martyrs.
Terrorist Stag Parties http://www2.bostonherald.com/attack/investigation/ausprob10102001.htm
The Boston Herald reports that one of the Sept. 11
hijackers had a visit from a prostitute in a Chestnut Hill, Mass., hotel room
on Sept. 9. The paper quotes an unnamed driver for a pair of local
"escort" services--including one service that advertises escorts
"for the most discriminating of gentlemen and their most important
occasion"---as saying that the escort, a blond woman in her early 20s,
had a 20-minute tryst in the hotel room with one of the hijackers and was paid
$180 in cash. "The FBI has interviewed the driver and the call girl and
has seized records from the two escort services, the driver said. The woman,
shaken by her sudden involvement in the international probe, has hired a
lawyer, he added."
The newspaper notes that this "is just the
latest link between the Koran-toting killers and America's seedy sex
scene":
In Florida, several of the hijackers--including
reputed ringleader Mohamed Atta--spent $200 to $300 each on lap dances in the
Pink Pony strip club. . . .
And in Las Vegas, at least six of the hijackers spent
time living it up on the Strip on various occasions between May and August.
Marwan Al-Shehhi, who was aboard the second plane that slammed into the World
Trade Center, frequently got lap dances at the Olympic Garden Topless Cabaret
where he had a reputation as a lousy tipper, the San Francisco Chronicle
reported.
FBI agents have also reportedly questioned the owners
of Nardone's Go-Go Bar in Elizabeth, N.J. Several of the terrorists spent time
in nearby Paterson and Newark and reportedly patronized the club.
The following item is a bit of
history reading for Bin Laden's terrorists intent on visiting brothels United
States. Too bad the Chicken Ranch is only history these
days.
President
Bush should read the last paragraph of the item below. If the
Chicken Ranch was allowed start up once again, it might become the best FBI
source of information on terrorism plots --- just like information leaks
in the Chicken Ranch helped Sheriff Flournoy attain a record of having solved every crime in Fayette
County, Texas. What I mean is that a revived Chicken Ranch could become an enormous source
of international
surveillance success in modern times. And the revived Chicken Ranch would only be a
few miles from the Bush Ranch in Texas. President Bush could almost listen in without
a wire tap.
The Chicken
Ranch --- http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/view/CC/ysc1.html
The "Chicken Ranch" in La Grange, Fayette
County, made famous by the Broadway musical The Best Little Whorehouse in
Texas, was perhaps the oldest continuously running brothel in the nation.
Institutionalized prostitution in La Grange can be traced back to 1844, when a
widow, "Mrs. Swine," brought three young women from New Orleans and
settled in a small hotel near the saloon. Mrs. Swine became the first madam
and began a tradition of interaction with the community and local lawmen that
lasted almost 130 years. She and the girls and women who worked for her
carried on a lucrative business, using the hotel lobby for entertaining and a
room upstairs for services, until the Civil War, when she and a faithful
prostitute named Tillie were run out of town as Yankees and traitors. After
the war prostitution continued to operate in conjunction with the saloons in
La Grange, but no official records were kept. By the end of the nineteenth
century, prostitution had moved out of the hotels and into a red-light
district on the banks of the Colorado River. There Miss Jessie Williams (born
Faye Stewart) bought a small house soon after her arrival from Waco in 1905.
She continued the custom set by her predecessor of good relations with the law
and ran the only respectable house on the banks of the Colorado River; she
admitted politicians and lawmen but excluded drunkards. Through her
connections she learned of an impending crusade against the red-light
district, sold the house she owned in Waco, and bought two dwellings and
eleven acres outside of the city limits of La Grange and two blocks from the
Houston-Galveston highway. This became the location of the Chicken Ranch.
In 1917 two sisters arrived at the house and were
taken in and promoted to "middle-management" positions by Miss
Jessie. They were in charge of public relations and sent packages and letters
to local boys fighting in World War I. One of the sisters eventually married
an older, wealthy customer and moved to San Antonio, where she became, as one
author says, "a beloved benefactor and patron of the arts." The
other sister stayed in her middle-management position until her death. As the
war ended and America entered the twenties, automobiles made the establishment
accessible to many more customers. New prostitutes came and necessitated more
rooms and new furniture. The rooms were simply built onto the main house in a
haphazard fashion as needed, a style that continued until the closing of the
place. Miss Jessie stayed on good terms with the sheriff, Will Lossein, who
visited every evening to pick up gossip and get information on criminals who
had visited the whorehouse and bragged of their exploits. Many crimes in La
Grange were solved in this way. While the sheriff kept a tight grip on
criminals, Miss Jessie ruled the house with a firm hand. Nothing exotic was
allowed, and none of the bedroom doors had locks on them. Miss Jessie would
walk the halls, and if she heard a customer giving one of her girls a hard
time she would chase him out of the room and house with an iron rod and
perhaps never admit him again.
As the Great
Depression hit and the economy fell,
Miss Jessie was forced to lower her prices. Though initially she still had
plenty of clients, as times grew harder, customers were not so plentiful and
the girls grew hungry. Miss Jessie therefore began the "poultry
standard" of charging "one chicken for one screw." Soon
chickens were everywhere, and the establishment became known as the Chicken
Ranch. The girls were never hungry. Miss Jessie supplemented the income by
selling surplus chickens and eggs. The economy began to turn around as the
Civilian Conservation Corps began construction of Camp Swift near La Grange,
and the shortage of men and money declined. The establishment used the same
public-relations tactics in World War II as in the First World War, and the
ranch began an economic recovery from the depression. As the war ended, Miss
Jessie was confined to a wheelchair by arthritis but still ruled the house
with her iron rod. She did so into the 1950s, when she was confined to her bed
and cared for by her longtime nurse. She spent her last few years with her
wealthy sister in San Antonio and died in 1961 at the age of eighty.
Edna Milton had arrived at the Chicken Ranch from
Oklahoma in 1952 at the age of twenty-three. She soon took over for Miss
Jessie and proved just as capable and entrepreneurial. When she bought the
ranch from Miss Jessie's heirs for $30,000-much more than the property
value-she already had established herself as a competent madam. She had a good
relationship with the new sheriff, T. J. Flournoy, who had been elected in
1946 and had immediately put in a direct line to the Chicken Ranch, so he
could replace the nightly visits of his predecessor with nightly calls. Edna
also interacted with the community in the same ways Jessie had: social contact
between the girls and the residents of La Grange was forbidden; girls saw the
doctor weekly and shopped with local merchants; and commodities and supplies
were bought from local stores on a rotating basis. Edna also continued
Jessie's custom of giving money to local civic causes and became one of the
town's largest philanthropists. The generosity of her donations points to the
success of the ranch. During the 1950s the ranch reached its sixteen-girl
maximum. On some weekends there was a line at the door, made of students and
soldiers from the nearby military bases. One base even supplied transportation
via helicopter to the ranch. A visit to the Chicken Ranch also became part of
freshman initiation at Texas A&M.
A door attendant admitted only white, presentable,
and sober men into the parlor, where chairs stood on both sides of the room.
No cursing or drinking was allowed of the men, or the women for that matter.
Edna charged a quarter for the jukebox, seventy-five cents for cigarettes, and
a dollar for a Coke, steep prices for the sixties. The women asked for music
and Cokes to promote business. The going rate for their services was fifteen
dollars for fifteen minutes, though more expensive options were added in the
sixties. A girl would have from five to twenty customers a day. After giving
an estimated 75 percent to Edna, the prostitutes still made $300 a week and
had no expenses. Edna took care of taxes, insurance, utilities, food (two
meals a day), weekly doctor visits, two attendants, maids, a cook, and laundry
bills. Even before profits from the Cokes, cigarettes, and jukebox, it has
been estimated that the ranch had an income of more than $500,000 a year. All
new employees were fingerprinted and photographed by Sheriff Flournoy before
they could start work, and a criminal record of any kind prevented their
employment. Flournoy caught a few women wanted on warrants this way. Once at
the ranch, the women had to subscribe to strict rules written by Miss Edna.
The Chicken Ranch continued operating successfully
until mid-1973. That year, consumer-affairs reporter Marvin Zindler from KTRK-TV
in Houston ran a week-long exposé on the ranch. He claimed that his motive
was inaction on the part of the Texas Department of Public Safety and local
law officers to combat the organized crime and corruption allegedly evident at
the ranch. All of the attention drawn to the ranch forced the governor, Dolph
Briscoe, to meet with the head of the DPS, the state attorney general, and
Zindler. At the meeting it was disclosed that the DPS had run a two-month
surveillance on the Chicken Ranch and had failed to find evidence of
connection with organized crime. However, the pressure on the governor was
such that he could not ignore the problem. He scheduled a meeting with Sheriff
Jim Flournoy and ordered the house closed. The sheriff, along with some of the
citizens of La Grange, saw little reason to close the ranch, but thought he
had to do it anyway. He informed Edna of the situation, and by Wednesday
morning of the week following Zindler's exposé, August 1, 1973, the ranch was
closed and the women had left. Flournoy left for his meeting with the governor
with a petition signed by nearly 3,000 people, but upon arriving was informed
that the governor had canceled the meeting when he heard the house was closed.
Most of the ranch's employees had headed for Austin or Houston; only Edna and
a few maids were left. Edna attempted to buy a house in La Grange, but her
downpayment was returned. She subsequently got married and moved to an East
Texas town where her husband owned several restaurants.
Although the Chicken Ranch was officially closed, the
story was not over. Customers showed up for more than two years looking for
the place. Zindler also came back for a follow-up story and in the midst of an
argument with Sheriff Flournoy was pushed down. This resulted in a $3 million
lawsuit against the sheriff. Many local people began contributing to
Flournoy's cause by selling T-shirts and bumper stickers. Flournoy settled out
of court for much less than $3 million. The musical about the ranch was very
successful. Edna had a silent role in the Broadway production, which was later
turned into a movie. Two lawyers from Houston bought the building and land and
in 1977 moved part of the building, in its original condition, to Dallas to
open a restaurant named the Chicken Ranch. It opened in September 1977 with
Miss Edna as the hostess, the building and furniture in their original
condition, and a menu of mainly chicken dishes. The restaurant closed in
January 1978. The building and furniture were auctioned off at the site of the
restaurant in late June of that year in a foreclosure sale ordered by the
Small Business Administration. Sheriff Flournoy resigned in 1980, saying that
he and his wife were sick of hearing about the Chicken Ranch and did not want
to hear that name again. When he died in October of 1982, his funeral was
attended by Lieutenant Governor Bill Hobby and nearly 100 lawmen. He was
credited with solving every murder and bank robbery in Fayette County during
his thirty-four-year term. The Chicken Ranch had helped his criminal
investigations.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Austin American-Statesman, August 2,
1973, January 22, June 25, 1978. Jan Hutson, The Chicken Ranch: The True Story
of the Best Little Whorehouse in Texas (New York: Barnes, 1980). Vertical
Files, Barker Texas History Center, University of Texas at Austin (Jim
Flournoy, La Grange, Texas).
The above bit of Texas history was
written by Walter F. Pilcher
And that's the way it was on
October 18, 2001 with a little help from my friends.
In
March 2000, Forbes named AccountantsWorld.com as the Best Website on the
Web --- http://accountantsworld.com/.
Some top accountancy links --- http://accountantsworld.com/category.asp?id=Accounting
Another leading accounting site is
AccountingEducation.com at http://www.accountingeducation.com/
How
stuff works --- http://www.howstuffworks.com/
Professor
Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134 Email: rjensen@trinity.edu
October
10, 2001
Bob
Jensen's New Bookmarks on October 10, 2001
Bob
Jensen at Trinity
University
Question:
What is the most important single
ingredient to the success of any economy?
Answer:
See the ending of this October 10 edition of New Bookmarks.
Quotes of the Week
War is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things.
The decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feeling which thinks that
nothing is worth war is much worse. The person who has nothing for which he is
willing to fight, nothing which is more important than his own personal safety,
is a miserable creature and has no chance of being free unless made and kept so
by the exertions of better men than himself.
John Stuart Mill,
1886
--- http://www.ag.wastholm.net/aphorism/A-1886
(This was quoted in a Trinitonian Student Newspaper Letter to the Editor
on October 5, a letter that was signed by 15 faculty members at Trinity
University.)
Verse is the voice from the heart,
Verse creates uncountable wings of birds,
That take us flying to find our dreams...
From a story that I accidentally stumbled upon in a
place where I least expected to find such a story.
Talk About Town, by Le Huang, Viet Nam News, October 1, 2001 (See the
Good Morning Viet Nam section below)
“If you’re a messy office person,” says Professor
Luscombe, “you think that cleaning your office comes at the expense of other
things. To be both neat and productive is rare.”
Syllabus Magazine, (See below)
Question:
What makes Bob Jensen great?
Answer:
He's a lot like James Luscombe.
"Disordered
Array: The Art of Controlling Chaos," Syllabus Magazine,
October 2001, pp. 29-30 --- http://www.syllabus.com/syllabusmagazine/article.asp?id=5090
Like many academics,
Professor James Luscombe lives a life overrun by exams to grade, dissertations
to read, committee recommendations to write, research to conduct, students to
see, lectures to deliver. It all creates mounds of paper, floppy disks, extra
furniture, boxes of unknown origin, and a collection of books to rival
Amazon.com. But beneath the chaos, the professor is a productivity machine,
and with so much to produce, who has time to get organized?
“If you’re a
messy office person,” says Professor Luscombe, “you think that cleaning
your office comes at the expense of other things. To be both neat and
productive is rare.”
As he surveys his
lair of lawless confusion he adds, “I’d like to think there is a
neatness/productivity uncertainty principle at work in nature.”
I used to envy my colleagues who
have tidy offices with everything in its assigned place out of sight.
After reading the above article, I take solace in my piles of rubble
(campus office and home office) --- they're part of my creative
process. My wife is the neat and tidy half of our partnership, but when
she is in a creative mode her work areas become just as messy as mine. The
only difference is that Erika tidies up her messes when the job is done.
My jobs are never done!
Warning:
A messy office may be a necessary condition for creativity, but it is most
certainly not a sufficient condition.
Question:
What major corporation just signed contracts with a major state university to
receive online MBA degrees in finance?
Answer:
(Jim Borden clued me into this answer.)
"Deere & Company Turns to Indiana University's Kelley School of
Business For Online MBA Degrees in Finance," Yahoo Press Release, October
8, 2001 --- http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/011008/cgm034_1.html
MOLINE, Ill., Oct. 8 /PRNewswire/ -- Deere &
Company, the world's leading manufacturer of agricultural equipment, has
entered into a Web-based academic partnership with Indiana University's Kelley
School of Business to provide a Master of Business Administration degree
program for Deere's finance professionals, beginning in August 2002.
The customized online program is designed as a
three-year course of study to be completed in parallel with the participants'
full-time job responsibilities. Course content is centered around the business
knowledge, technical skills, and behavioral competencies for Deere's future
leaders to use in responding to challenges facing the company. Kelley's senior
faculty designed the program specifically for John Deere, with input from the
Deere finance division's senior management team.
``This is a rigorous program drawing from the
strengths of both the Kelley School and the Deere management team. It is
designed to create value for our enterprise and allow us to attract and retain
high-quality employees,'' said Nate Jones, chief financial officer at Deere
& Company. ``Graduates of this program will learn skills that help them
better meet the challenges of improving business performance and delivering
value to shareholders.''
``The Kelley School of Business takes pride in its
ability to build curricula,'' said Dan Dalton, dean of the Kelley School.
``Our faculty's talent in educational innovation enables us to create close
relationships with the corporate community and construct programs according to
their specific criteria. We are delighted to extend this ability to include a
corporation with the integrity and strong international reputation of John
Deere.''
The MBA program curriculum will consist of twenty
courses structured to meld individual student goals with the organizational
needs of Deere & Company. Each academic year will consist of three
twelve-week sessions. The program will be launched each year with a one- to
two- week residential module on Indiana University's Bloomington campus.
Teaching tools will include discussion and debate
forums, on-line testing, audio streaming and video streaming, simulations, and
time-revealed scenarios for case-based learning. Course materials may be
accessed directly from the Worldwide Web. The program will use only full-time
tenure-track faculty recognized for their quality of teaching in other Kelley
School programs.
The John Deere MBA program is a customized adaptation
of the Kelley Direct Online MBA program, which is the first fully online MBA
offered among nationally ranked top-20 business schools. It has been available
since 1999 to qualified working professionals who continue their employment
while earning their degrees. It was created in collaboration with the Kelley
School's corporate executive education clients, who voiced a need for MBA
skills throughout their work forces. About 150 students are enrolled in the
Kelley Direct Online MBA program today.
Bob
Jensen's threads on universities that have similar contracts with other
universities are given in the following sites:
Question:
What e-learning programs in a single and renowned university serve over
1,500,000 paying online students?
Answer:
The e-Learning programs at the Harvard Graduate School of Business
From
Syllabus News on October 2, 2001
Harvard B-School Expands Business Courses Via the
Web
Harvard Business School Publishing said last week it
would use the Internet to make available its electronic learning programs in
best management and business practices to corporate groups and enterprises.
HBSP said more than 1.5 million people already use its 15 e-learning modules
in three topic areas of leadership, strategy and general management. HBSP will
now offer support for companies that wanted to make the modules available to
company groups via the Internet.
For more information, contact Nancy O'Leary at
Harvard Business School Publishing http://noleary@hbsp.harvard.edu
.
Duke B-School and Teradata Team on CRM Course
Duke University's Fuqua School of Business and
Teradata, a division of NCR Corp. that markets database analytic tools, are
collaborating to hold an executive education program in customer relationship
management (CRM). The program, to be held Nov. 19-20, will be taught by Martha
Rogers, an adjunct professor and co-founder of Peppers and Rogers, a CRM
consultancy, and Julie Edell, associate professor of marketing at Fuqua. Peter
Heffring, president of the Teradata CRM division, will be a guest lecturer on
the program.
For more information, visit http://www.ee.fuqua.duke.edu
Online Library Adds Princeton Press to List
Questia Media, Inc., which bills itself as the
world's largest online library, said last week that Princeton University
Press, an independent publisher connected with Princeton University, has
joined its list of publishing partners. The company expects to digitize and
add to its collection more than 2,500 scholarly books in humanities and social
sciences from the Princeton collection over the next five years. Questia
Media, Inc., founded in 1998, launched an online library with search and
writing tools to help students write better papers faster. The company
provides access to the full- text of a large collection of books, and tools
including highlighter, markup, automatic footnotes and a bibliography builder.
For more information, visit http://www.questia.com/Index.jsp
.
Universities
who are interested in partnering with colleges in developing countries will most
certainly want to take a look at the following cover story:
"Reaching
Across Boundaries: The Bryant College-Belarus Connection," by G.A.
Langlois, J.B. Litoff, and J.A. Ilacqua, Syllabus, October 2001, pp.
12-14 --- http://www.syllabus.com/syllabusmagazine/article.asp?id=5088
Using the Internet’s
sphere of influence, one small college is making an impact on the education of
students in Belarus, a country that has achieved only limited structural
reform since its independence from the former Soviet Union. Despite the
country’s economic isolation from the West, Belarusian institutions are
reaching across traditional boundaries to forge new collaborative
relationships.
Emerging national
consciousness in the Newly Independent States (NIS) of Europe has produced
dramatic alterations in business, politics, economics, technology, and
culture, requiring innovative educational methodologies that better match the
needs of these countries in transition. In 1996, in response to these
challenges, Bryant College spearheaded the Collaborative Learning at a
Distance (CLD) program between Bryant and Belarus. This comprehensive joint
venture is an excellent model for using Internet technologies to advance
collaborative learning, communication competencies, and policy making.
In implementing the
CLD Program, we encountered many philosophical, logistical, and technical
challenges. Two distinctly different Belarusian institutions, the Information
Technologies Center (ITC) of the National Academy of Sciences of Belarus and
the European Humanities University (EHU), bridged political boundaries to
create a close working relationship between a state (government-owned) and
non-state (private) institution. The shared enthusiasm of the ITC and EHU for
the CLD Program enabled them to overcome their political differences.
A Non-Hierarchical
Approach
The program uses a
non-hierarchical model, emphasizing reciprocal, interactive learning across
national and academic boundaries (see figure). It is based on our belief that
learning is a collaborative process and that we learn better when we teach
each other and learn in multiple ways. Our Internet-based CLD Program focuses
on a small-scale, personalized interactive learning experience, which directly
involves the teacher/mentor, student/learner, and all other stakeholders in
the process.
This non-heirarchical
pedagogical approach is relatively unfamiliar to university educators in the
NIS. A history of centralized education and strong governmental control over
curricula has resulted in a teaching environment that does not encourage the
interactive exchange of ideas between faculty and students. At a time when
funding for educational innovation in the NIS has been curtailed,
cost-effective, collaborative distance learning projects can help address the
problem of dwindling educational resources and compensate for the legacy of 70
years of communism.
Fostering
Collaboration
Collaborative
projects—including seminars for scientists and engineers who worked for the
Soviet defense industry, distance learning courses, and the development of
environmental policy initiatives with the National Academy of Sciences of
Belarus—have been led by scholars representing diverse academic disciplines.
These projects have utilized a wide array of information technologies,
including International Virtual Roundtable Discussions via e-mail, seminars on
Web site construction, Microsoft NetMeeting conferencing between the U.S. and
Belarus, software training and development, and the use of the Internet to
promote collaborative learning across diverse cultural and political
boundaries. (The entire CLD Program is available at http://web.bryant.edu/~history/new/course.htm).
Using these
technologies, faculty, students, and entrepreneurs in the U.S. and Belarus
have formed strong ties. Faculty exchanges have permitted collaborators to
teach at participating universities, conduct research, present training
programs, lead trade missions, and deliver papers at international
conferences. On-site visits, ranging in length from six days to six months,
have played a critical role in our ability to develop trusting relationships
and set the CLD Program in motion. We have learned that even sophisticated
distance learning technologies cannot replace the power and intensity of human
interactions.
Student-centered,
collaborative group projects, standard on American campuses, are virtually
unheard of in Belarus. The introduction of divergent points of view on
controversial topics into classroom discussions is also largely absent. In
fact, the educational system of Belarus, including all curricula issues,
continues to be tightly controlled by the state. Still, the CLD Program’s
use of Internet technologies has had a powerfully democratizing influence on
Belarusian learners who have participated in this project.
Technology-enabled
interactions between students from different cultures and with different
expertise and skill sets have presented challenges. For instance, American
students display an almost casual approach to e-mail correspondence, often
failing to use proper punctuation or sentence structure. By contrast,
Belarusians take particular care in constructing well-written messages,
exacerbating the time constraints caused by limited computer laboratory
access. Mentors in both countries encouraged collaborative techniques for
negotiating these barriers to communication.
History professor
David Lux noted that crucial pedagogical issues arose during the initial
offering of his course, “The History of American Technology.” Viewing the
course as an experiment to field-test technological and pedagogical issues
associated with distance learning, Lux observed that cultural differences
significantly affected how students approached the course. Belarusian students
“proved voracious in their willingness to digest readings and engage in very
sophisticated dialogue about the meaning and content of what they were
reading.” Yet, Lux concluded that “the collaborative learning,
student-project features of the course,” so popular with Bryant students,
did not initially “translate meaningfully” into the educational culture of
Belarus. With guidance and examples from Bryant faculty and students, however,
Belarusian students gradually came to appreciate the value of collaborative
projects.
In the course, “Cultures
and Economies in Transition in the Post Soviet Era,” Professors Judy Barrett
Litoff and Joseph Ilacqua described a high level of energy by students
representing diverse countries. Heated debates often ensued as students
tackled the difficult challenge of understanding societies in transition.
However, their shared experiences as students helped them to negotiate their
diverse perspectives. For example, during the Kosovo crisis in the spring of
1999, spirited e-mail exchanges of conflicting student perspectives took
place. These discussions demonstrated the value of exploring cross-cultural
and comparative political differences in order to better understand complex
global problems.
Belarusian students
enrolled in “Environmental Policy: Technology, Business & Government,”
a course offered by Professor Gaytha Langlois, lacked a basic understanding of
the governmental infrastructure necessary to implement well-designed
environmental policy initiatives. Even Bryant students were poorly informed
about how policies are actualized in the U.S., but in Belarus, the differences
in governmental structure and practices further complicated this problem. The
process of acquainting Belarusian students with the roles that government and
non-governmental organizations play in crafting environmental and business
policy has proved to be more cumbersome than expected. Through the use of
structured International Virtual Roundtable Discussions, the ability of
government and non-governmental organizations to formulate environmental
policies became clearer.
Technical
Considerations
Time differences,
Internet delays, and the technological realities of Belarus presented
challenges that limited the use of complex distance learning technologies.
Consequently, we designed a relatively inexpensive and modest program. Since
access to the Web in Belarus is often slow and unpredictable, we have provided
CD-ROM versions of the CLD Web site to Belarusian students. CD-ROMs that are
run on computers connected to the Web provide students with full entry to the
CLD courses, including the ability to access hyperlinks. In addition, through
the cooperation of information technology specialists at Bryant and EHU, a
mirror Web site has been established to enhance connectivity.
Because of the
seven-hour time difference between the east coast of the United States and
Belarus, and because Belarusian students have limited access to e-mail and
depend primarily on under-equipped (by U.S. standards) university computer
laboratories for electronic communication, synchronous and asynchronous e-mail
communication between the United States and Belarus has proved to be more
difficult than we had originally anticipated. U.S. students are routinely
assigned personal university e-mail addresses, but as a rule Belarusian
students are rarely provided one. Even when students are assigned e-mail
addresses, however, they often discover that access to university computer
laboratories is limited to 2-3 hours a week. To encourage synchronous e-mail
communication with students, Bryant faculty have adopted e-mail office hours
between 11:00 a.m. until 1:00 p.m. (6:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. in Belarus). By
choosing these e-mail office hours, we are able to avoid the busy use of the
Internet in Belarus during the mid- and late afternoon.
The most useful and
successful distance learning technique that we have introduced is the
International Virtual Roundtable Discussion (IVRD) via e-mail. This tool,
utilizing the Internet to promote cross-cultural and comparative perspectives,
has been incorporated into all CLD courses and has been enthusiastically
embraced by learners. The IVRD features structured discussions that avoid the
pitfalls of unmoderated chat rooms, yet it encourages learners to share
informed opinions about specified topics that often result in lively exchanges
of viewpoints.
On occasion, we
utilize Microsoft’s NetMeeting program to provide live, two-way, global “see
and talk” communication over the Internet. The Microsoft NetMeeting program,
standard on new computers, uses simple computer accessories, including
microphone, speakers, headset, and small video camera, that cost about $100.
This inexpensive technology, although dependent upon a relatively new computer
(about $1,000), replaces the high costs of long-distance telephone charges and
video conferencing. Although two-way video and audio communications are
exciting and hold great promise, they frequently require users to have great
patience and perseverance in order to make them work properly.
The
rest of the article is at http://www.syllabus.com/syllabusmagazine/article.asp?id=5088
A
Stanford University Martini
Stanford University Goes Live On Blue Martini
Software Powered Community Portals
Stanford University Expands Use of the Blue Martini
eCRM Application Suite to Provide Personalized Information and Services to
Students, Faculty, Staff and Alumni
SAN MATEO, Calif. , (09/27/2001)-- Blue Martini
Software, Inc. (NASDAQ: BLUE), today announced that Stanford University has
expanded the use of the Blue Martini 4 external customer relationship
management (eCRM) application suite to power its community portals. The
Stanford community portals will provide personalized content, information and
services to students, faculty, staff and alumni, including University news,
research, e-mail, search, online calendars, weather and public information.
Previously, the Stanford Graduate School of Business
had adopted the Blue Martini eCRM suite to power its own branded knowledge
portal. With this expanded agreement, the entire University system will
benefit from Blue Martini Software's capabilities.
The portals will provide centralized access to
multiple Stanford services and applications university-wide, and will leverage
Stanford's directory and authentication system to provide single sign-on.
Based on the user's status (incoming student, returning student, graduate
student, faculty, staff or alumni), Stanford will be able to configure and
display targeted information. Users will also be able to personalize the
content, as well as the look-and-feel of their individual sites.
"We evaluated a number of companies and selected
Blue Martini Software because of its depth and breadth of its application
suite," said Chris Handley, executive director of Information Technology
Systems and Services. "Blue Martini Software enabled us to get our
student portal up and running very quickly to meet our immediate needs and see
near-term return on investment, while offering the flexibility and depth to
evolve our applications to meet our long-term initiatives. We believe this
approach will decrease our total cost of ownership and increase our time to
benefit."
"Stanford has always been at the forefront of
providing the best technology resources to its students, faculty, staff and
alumni," said Monte Zweben, president and CEO of Blue Martini Software.
"With these new portals, Stanford will deliver a dynamic Web experience
tailored to the many needs of its diverse end-users."
Collaboration and Chat Stanford may also deploy
collaboration functionality to enable collaborative browsing between two or
more individuals in physically different locations, as well as text-based
chat. With Blue Martini Software's collaboration, two or more students could
review class options online and mutually decide on a set of courses.
Campaign Management Stanford also has the option to
leverage Blue Martini Marketing, which includes campaign management, analytics
and visualization, to enable Stanford to proactively reach their students,
faculty, staff and alumni with personalized emails and direct mail. With this
application, Stanford could invite all of their alumni to sign up for seminars
or events via email and drive them back to their personalized portal.
"The Blue Martini Application Suite will become
the basis for "myStanford" for all of our constituencies - students,
staff, alumni and faculty. Instead of having to buy and integrate multiple
point solutions across Stanford, we made a single investment that will span
the entire Campus. The Blue Martini Application Suite will enable Stanford to
foster community communication, consolidate and share information with our
constituencies, and further differentiate the prestigious Stanford
brand," Handley added.
Stanford has initially rolled the portal out to
approximately 15,000 students and expects to expand the portal community to
include faculty, staff and alumni.
About Blue Martini Software Blue Martini Software
delivers on the promise of CRM. With the Blue Martini 4 eCRM application
suite, Blue Martini Software helps companies understand, target and interact
with their customers across multiple touch points. The suite includes four
applications: Blue Martini Marketing, Blue Martini Commerce, Blue Martini
Channels and Blue Martini Service. Each application can be used individually
to meet a specific business need, or as a complete suite for managing
catalogs, content, transactions, campaigns, analysis and personalization. Blue
Martini Software can be reached at 650-356-4000 or www.bluemartini.com
.
The
Blue Martini homepage is at http://www.bluemartini.com/index.jsp
Wow Website Design Page of the Week --- http://www.whitney.org/artport/idealine/
This is a fabulous design that could be applied in virtually every academic
discipline.
A Net Art Idea Line mapping lines of thought through
time. From the beginning, net art has travelled multiple paths. More than a
medium, the net is a environment uniquely hospitable to many diverse media:
programming and animation, video and audio, gameplay and community. Each
individual artist picks up these threads and weaves them in novel combinations.
The Idea Line is designed to let you follow these threads of thought yourself,
and discover how each work is part of a larger tapestry.
Instructions
The Idea Line displays a timeline of net artworks,
arranged in a fan of luminous threads. Each thread corresponds to a particular
kind of artwork or type of technology. The brightness of each thread varies
with the number of artworks that it contains in each year, so you can watch
the ebb and flow of different lines of thought over time. As you move your
mouse over the lines, they will open up to reveal titles of artworks. Place
the mouse on top of a title to learn more about the work. Click to launch the
work itself. Right-click (shift-click on a Mac) to highlight other pieces by
the same artist.
If you are looking for a particular title or artist,
type into the text box at the upper left. You'll be able to see your search
results in the context of the overall idealine.
Questions about the Idea Line collection
How was the list of artworks made? We sent out a
public request for help to several net art forums. Almost one hundred artists
responded. In addition, we entered data on many popular or influential
artworks that were not covered in this response. A text-only list of the
artworks (146K) is available. Can I get on the Idea Line? Yes. Our net art
database is publicly accessible. Read these instructions to learn how to enter
information about your work. You can also add important works by other artists
that we may have overlooked. (Note that we currently limit each artist to five
works total.) We will periodically update the idealine to use new information
from the database.
How do I update my information?
If you want to update information about your artwork,
let us know at idealine@whitney.org. For practical security reasons, we
currently do not let the general public change information once it is in the
database.
Norton Poets Online --- http://www.nortonpoets.com/
Especially note the "Multimedia" section
where you can listen to leading poets read their works.
Interesting Knowledge Portals of the Week --- Very
Efficient Designs
Science, Industry, Agriculture, Business, and Culture & Recreation
Portals http://www.scienceandindustry.gov.au/
Although these are most certainly oriented to Australia, there is a wealth
of information in these portals. Note especially the Directories and
Databases.
Delivering science,
industry
and innovation
information and services to industry, investors, and the business and research
communities
Related Portals: Agriculture
| Business | Culture
and Recreation |
Bob Jensen's threads on knowledge
portals and vortals are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/portals.htm
I recently wrote a module on technology services at Trinity University for
the first draft of a forthcoming AACSB accreditation report.
One paragraph of my module reads as follows:
******************************************************************************************
Probably the most noteworthy change in ITS support in the past several years is
the improvement of the ITS Help Desk services. The Help Desk quickly responds to
questions from students and faculty. Generally the answers given to questions
about MS Office products, Blackboard, and Windows operating system questions are
very accurate and helpful. We give ITS an A for improved quality of Help Desk
services.
******************************************************************************************
I just wanted to say thanks to the men and women who have grown pretty darn
good at their crafts over in ITS. Sometimes we fail to appreciate how tough a
job it is to be an expert on something that keeps changing almost daily and, at
the same time, fend off the hacker-crazies bent on destroying our systems.
I also want to say thanks to the Computer Science Department faculty who seem
to be quite generous with their expertise in times of need of their particular
skills.
This spirit of cooperation is what makes Trinity University a great place to
study and work.
College news online, especially news and helpers for
business students
College Journal (from The Wall Street Journal) --- http://www.collegejournal.com/
For example, a news item on October 8 read as follows:
Why B-School
Students Are Fearing the Worst
Dark
skies: With layoffs mounting and a recession
looming, the coming on-campus recruitment season could be a washout for
second-year M.B.A. students. Here's how one candidate feels about his job
prospects.
They should have majored in accounting! (see
below)
The
AICPA's Supply of Accounting Graduates and the Demand for Public Accounting
Recruits --- http://www.aicpa.org/members/div/career/edu/sagdpar.htm
For
nearly 25 years, the AICPA has conducted an annual survey of colleges and
universities to determine the supply of new accounting graduates, and an annual
survey of CPA firms and practices to gauge the demand for new graduates employed
by public accounting firms. The results of both surveys are compiled in a report
and distributed to accounting department heads and firm recruiting partners,
among others. Since 1994 the report was expanded to include information on
accounting majors and detailed gender and ethnic/racial breakdowns of graduates
as well as new graduates employed by CPA firms. The findings enable the AICPA to
identify trends, and educators and practitioners to compare their data with
nationwide statistics.
Introduction and Highlights This 2000 edition of The
Supply of Accounting Graduates and the Demand for Public Accounting
Recruits is prepared for anyone interested in the demographics of the
accounting profession. This report will be useful for individuals
involved in planning for university accounting programs, and human
resources for accounting firms.
The data reported here is based on a survey conducted earlier this
year of U.S. colleges and universities that offer accounting degrees at
the Baccalaureate, Master’s or Ph.D. level and survey of public
accounting firms and sole practitioners affiliated with the American
Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). The report is
presented in two sections: “Accounting Graduates” presents detailed
information regarding the number of accounting degrees awarded by
universities during the 1998–99 academic year and “Hiring by CPA
Firms” reports the hiring of recent college graduates by public
accounting firms during the academic year.
Both sections present data weighted to provide a normative
profile of the recipients of account-ing degrees and individuals newly
hired by CPA firms. The Graduates section reports by level of
accreditation held by the college or university. The Hiring Section
reports by size of firm. Both reports present detailed gender and ethnic
data. A complete description of the methodology used for gathering and
weighting data is presented in Appendix A.
Following are some of the more significant findings from the
report:
• A total of 47,895 accounting bachelor’s and master’s
degrees were awarded in l998–99, which represents a 20% decrease
from the total number reported for l995–96. The percentage decrease
of bachelor’s degrees awarded is almost twice that of master’s
degrees.
• Females are increasingly outnumbering males at the bachelor’s
level (57% to 43%). For the first time in this series of studies,
females outnumbered males also at the master’s level (54% to
46%).
• Minorities accounted for 19% of the total number of accounting
bachelor’s and master’s graduates, down from 23% in l995–96.
However, the percentage of minority PhDs has increased from 12% to 16%
for the same period.
• The percentage of bachelor’s graduates finding jobs in
business/industry has dropped relative to those entering public
accounting (26% and 34%, respectively). The percentage of master’s
graduates entering public accounting (61%) is triple the percentage
going into industry (20%).
• Accounting enrollments in bachelor’s and master’s programs
have dropped dramatically (22%) from l995–96. Enrollments had
already begun to drop from l994–95 to l995–96. A majority of
responding schools expect enrollments in accounting bachelor’s
programs two years from now to be the same, and they expect
enrollments in accounting master’s programs to increase.
• The number of candidates sitting for the CPA exam continued the
downward trend from l993, except for an upward surge in l999. This is
likely attributable to the fact that the 150-hour law became effective
in more than a dozen states in the year 2000. Candidates for the May
and November exams in l999 totaled 126,769.
• The total number of accounting graduates with bachelor’s
degrees hired by CPA firms decreased slightly in l999, while master’s
degrees hires increased.
• The percentage of new accounting graduates hired by the firms
was about one-third the percentage of non-accounting graduate hires in
l999.
• Fifty-four percent of the new graduate hires were female; 46%
were male.
• Twenty percent of the new graduate hires were minorities, up
from 16% in l996.
• The percentage of female CPAs employed by the firms is 34%;
minorities accounted for 5% of CPAs employed by the firms.
• Eighty-five percent of the largest firms reported hiring more
experienced recruits in l999 than in l998; 53% of the next largest
firm-size group said they hired more experienced recruits than in
l998.
|
The
above report has been updated to the end of 1999. While this does
not capture the crash and burning of either the dot.com industry or the World
Trade Center, anecdotal evidence suggest that demand remains strong for
accounting graduates in accountancy, although there has been some shrinkage in
organizations other than public accounting. Increased demand in public
accounting has been reinforced by a marked shrinking of supply of those
graduates due to a myriad of factors, especially the addition of the fifth year
(150-credit) college- requirement in over 40 states.
What
riles me about golden parachutes is that they take the risk out of abnormal
income and
often reward failure. There is a new article about the golden
parachute mess.
"Minimize
Parachute Penalties," by Randy Myers, Journal of Accountancy,
October 2001, pp. 33-42 --- http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/oct2001/myers.htm
When
executives at United Airlines began calculating what they would have to pay to
acquire rival US Airways if the merger had been completed, due diligence took
them on an eye-opening ride beyond the balance sheet. Detailed in the
employment contracts between US Airways and its senior executives were
severance provisions for the top five managers that would add approximately
$165 million to the cost of United’s takeover deal. Even in a merger valued
at more than $11 billion, that was no small sum.
EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY |
COMPANIES SHOULD NOT ENTER into golden parachute plans
without careful consideration. CPAs called in to help draft these
agreements can, through prudent planning, save their employers and
clients significant sums.
GOLDEN PARACHUTES CAN ENCOMPASS A VARIETY of benefits,
including not just extended salaries and cash payouts but also early
vesting of stock options, bonuses, pensions and other benefits.
Because of the complexity of rules governing parachutes and their
tax treatment, most parachutes generate attest work for CPAs when
they are triggered.
THE DEFICIT REDUCTION ACT OF 1984 led to the proliferation
of so-called “299%” deals in which an executive losing his or
her job due to a change in corporate control got a payout that fell
just under the excise tax trigger.
A GROSS-UP PROVISION LAYERS an additional payment on top of
the golden parachute to reimburse the recipient for the excise tax
he or she will owe.
ONE OF THE MOST POPULAR TECHNIQUES to mitigate the cost of
a parachute payment is to take advantage of an IRS provision that
says payments made to executives for services they provide after a
change in control are not part of the golden parachute.
|
RANDY MYERS is a
freelance financial writer who lives in Dover, Pennsylvania. His
e-mail address is randy@randymyers.net. |
"Important Tax-Act Dates for Taxpayers to Know," by the Financial
Planning Association ---
http://flywheel.memeticsystems.com/backend/ct_click.cgi?ct_id=973&type=1
The
above site has much more than dates --- it is a great summary of key things to
consider in financial planning and investing. Take a look and see how
useful this site really may be in your life.
A
great resource site for finance, investing, world news, and accounting
CBS Market Watch (includes a glossary) --- http://cbs.marketwatch.com/news/default.asp?siteid=mktw
PBS: Electric Money (better termed the history of money before and after
computers) --- http://www.pbs.org/opb/electricmoney/
(Includes teaching guides and resources for
instructors)
This is a great article that features the new FASB Concepts Statement No.
7
"Future Cash Flow Measurements," by D.T. Meeting, R.W. Luecke, and L.
Garceau, Journal of Accountancy, October 2001, pp. 57-67 --- http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/oct2001/meeting.htm
EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY |
FASB ISSUED CONCEPTS STATEMENT NO. 7 TO HELP CPAs who use
present value and cash flow information as the basis for accounting
measurements. Using Cash Flow Information and Present Value in
Accounting Measurements includes general principles governing
accountants’ use of present value, particularly when the amount of
future cash flows, their timing or both, are uncertain.
THE STATEMENT INTRODUCES AN EXPECTED CASH flow approach
that focuses on the explicit assumptions about the range of possible
cash flows and their respective probabilities. It also describes
techniques CPAs can use to estimate the fair value of liabilities,
taking into account the entity’s credit standing.
CONCEPTS STATEMENT NO. 7 APPLIES ONLY TO measurements at
initial recognition, to fresh start measurements and to amortization
techniques based on future cash flows. It does not apply to
measurements based on the amount of cash or other assets an entity
pays or receives or on fair value observations in the marketplace.
FASB SAYS THE EXPECTED CASH FLOW APPROACH is a better
measurement tool than the traditional approach in many
circumstances. CPAs should use it to develop asset and liability
values when there is no contractual cash flow—taking into account
all expectations about possible cash flows rather than just the most
likely one.
THE GUIDANCE IN THE FASB CONCEPTS STATEMENT applies to both
liabilities and assets. Measuring liabilities involves problems that
are different from measuring assets. When using present value to
estimate the fair value of a liability, the objective is to estimate
the value of the assets required to settle the liability with the
holder or to transfer it to another entity.
|
DAVID T. MEETING,
CPA, DBA, is professor of accounting at Cleveland State University,
Cleveland, Ohio. His e-mail address is d.meeting@csuohio.edu.
RANDALL W. LUECKE, CPA, CMA, CFM, is vice-president, finance, at CSA
Group in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. His e-mail address is randall.luecke@csagroup.org.
LINDA GARCEAU, CPA, DBA, is dean, College of Business, East
Tennessee State University, Johnson City. Her e-mail address is garceaul@access.etsu.edu. |
Nolo: A Great Resource Site for Law --- http://www.nolo.com/
Information
Technology Worker Shortage Continues
Open number of IT positions in US companies has more than tripled since 1999. http://www.newmedia.com/nm-ie.asp?articleID=3112
If
you know any accounting educators with helpful materials on the web, please ask
them to link their materials in the American Accounting Association's
Accounting Coursepage Exchange (ACE) web site at
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/ace/index.htm
Please send these professors email messages today and urge them to share as much
as they can with the academy by easily registering their course pages with ACE.
I am a strong advocate of
ACE and was encouraged when nearly 200 accounting educators from around the
world began to share syllabi and course materials. Now I am discouraged by
the lack of maintenance that many of these same professors have with respect to
the shared materials. By this, I am referring to such problems as those
noted below:
-
Failure to keep ACE
links active.
Many of the links are broken, including links to the main coursepages.
(Does Linda Holmes ring a bell? Coursepage Location: http://facstaff.uww.edu/holmesl/215.htm
)
-
Failure to keep the
ACE links up to date.
Many of the courses date back to 1998 or 1999 without any updating of
materials.
(Does Roger Debreceny ring a bell? Coursepage Location: http://www.ntu.edu.sg/nbs/fma/courses/ab212/
)
-
Password Barriers
to ACE-linked documents
It does no good to share materials that require passwords no shared with ACE
users. Many of the courses that were not password protected now have
become password protected. One of the problems is in courses that
used to be password-free on Webservers but are now delivered from Blackboard or WebCT servers
having password entry barriers..
(Does Peter Oyelere ring a bell? Coursepage Location: http://learn.lincoln.ac.nz/fiac202
)
The main limitation to
date is the oversight or unwillingness of accounting educators in interesting
courses that go beyond a textbook, especially doctoral courses, to share syllabi
and materials. I think failure to list with ACE
listing is more oversight than unwillingness since many of the syllabi and other
course materials can be accessed with a little search effort at a particular
university's Website. For example, many of the accounting
faculty at the University of Texas ( http://www.bus.utexas.edu/dept/accounting/faculty.html
) share syllabi and other materials on the Web but none have included their
coursepages in ACE. The same can be said for the University of Washington
where Terry Shevlin shares syllabi for five courses, including a doctoral-level
course --- http://faculty.washington.edu/shevlin/
The above
college-by-college-type of search is very inefficient relative to what could be
gained if accounting educators and researchers simply provided their links in
ACE. In ACE, the shared helpers from virtually all universities are
categorized so that we don't have to go to each university to conduct a
time-consuming search.
Even if some faculty do
not keep their ACE listings up to date, simply having them in the system
provides signals regarding where to go look for more current listings of
particular courses.
Come on folks! Let's
get into that MIT spirit even though it seems counterintuitive (see below).
**********************************************************************
Reply from Bob Jensen
to Messages from Roger Debreceny and Zane Swanson:
Hi Roger, (and Zane)
The easy way around this is for ACE
to recommend that the course link be changed to a "person link" or a
"department link" that is "never" broken. Then the
individuals or departments involved are responsible for maintaining current
links on their own at any point in time.
Short of that, what educators can do
if the link is to an " old course page" is simply change to
"old course page" to a page that automatically or manually links to
an updated course, another course, or a page of current links.
Bob Jensen
-----Original
Message-----
From: Roger Debreceny [mailto:rogerd@NETBOX.COM]
Sent: Saturday, October 06, 2001 8:44 PM
To: AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: Re: What happened to our ACEs?
Bob
Fair cop. But ACE
makes it pretty difficult to update our records. When I go back to the site to
update the course, I find that all I can do is to make amendments to that
given course number. I have not taught the course since 1999 -- the only
option is to email the AAA office to ask them to remove the record.
I think another
problem we're finding is the rapid rise of BlackBoard/WebCT etc, which means
that faculty will be having their outlines hidden behind passwords.
Roger D
-----Original
Message-----
From: Zane Swanson [mailto:Swansonz@ESUMAIL.EMPORIA.EDU]
Sent: Saturday, October 06, 2001 10:32 AM To: AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU
Subject: Re: What happened to our ACEs?
Hi Bob Jensen,
Your recent complaint
about ACE failed links points to a larger problem of frustration on the Web
about links that do not work. It would seem that a program could be developed
to "sweep" web sites periodically to identify links that do not
work. At the limit, those individuals/groups creating links should have an
Email tag a la XML that could be notified when links fail (on say a monthly
basis). If the original poster of a failed link does not respond in a
reasonable time, then the program could simply delete the failed link. The
fact is that some portion of failed links are due to no fault at all of those
who originally make the link, but to later modifications about which the
original poster had no control. Perhaps, Bob's own site could benefit from
such a program to sweep for failed links which would otherwise be very time
consuming proposition to identify and maintain.
I tried to post this
message to AECM's listserv, but could not because of some technical problem.
If you want to include this message with further discussion on this matter,
please feel free to do so.
Respectfully,
Zane Swanson
**********************************************************************
Reply from Bob Jensen
to a message from David Albrecht
Hi David,
What I do is to have two sets of
documents. One set, a set that includes each course syllabus, is on a Web
server and is available to the world. The other set, a set that includes
copyrighted material or other material that I either should not or do not want
to make public, is on a Blackboard server. The latter set includes material
that I am allowed to show my students (such as solutions to textbook problems)
but am not allowed to make available to the public at large.
I find that serving up HTML documents
on the Blackboard server is a pain in the tail since HTML documents must be
"zipped" up with accompanying image and multimedia files and then
"unzipped." Whenever possible, I prefer serving up HTML documents
from a plain vanilla Web server rather than a Blackboard server.
Bob Jensen
-----Original
Message-----
From: David Albrecht [mailto:albrecht@PROFALBRECHT.COM]
Sent: Sunday, October 07, 2001 2:07 AM
To: AECM@LISTSERV.LOYOLA.EDU Subject:
Re: What happened to our ACEs?
I confirm what Roger
says. My recollection is that when I tried to have changed a URL for a course
page on ACE, the change didn't take place easily.
To get a password for
some courses (when the prof is hesitant to supply access) on the BGSU
BlackBoard and WebCT servers takes a request to the university counsel. I have
given up trying to gain access to colleagues' sites.
Dave Albrecht
From
MIT: ""OpenCourseWare looks counterintuitive in a market-driven
world."
"Insight: Brave New World for Higher Education," by Michael
Schrage, Technology Review, October 2001 --- http://www.techreview.com/magazine/oct01/insight.asp
In April 2001, MIT
president Charles M. Vest announced that the Institute would bring the
"open-source" software sensibility to higher education and offer—for
free!—its curricula and courseware to the world via the Web. This "OpenCourseWare"
initiative represents a radically different approach to digitizing, marketing
and globalizing education.
"OpenCourseWare
looks counterintuitive in a market-driven world. It goes against the grain of
current material values," said Vest at the time. "But it really is
consistent with what I believe is the best about MIT." He concluded,
"Simply put, OpenCourseWare is a natural marriage of American higher
education and the capabilities of the World Wide Web."
Maybe it is, maybe it
isn't—don't forget that marriage is hard. Still, no serious observer doubts
that digital technologies are already transforming the cultures, content and
economics of higher education. What's so striking, and what Vest (to his
credit) so readily acknowledges, is that the technology of higher education is
becoming as much a function of market mechanisms as digital media. After all,
the largest single private university in America is the University of Phoenix—a
decidedly for-profit institution with an enrollment north of 100,000 students
whose average age is 35 and whose average annual income is $56,000. Not
incidentally, nearly two-thirds of its students are women. How's that for
diversity?
Once dismissed and
derided as "diploma mills," schools like Phoenix, DeVry Institutes,
Strayer University and their counterparts have already had an enormous impact
on American postsecondary and postbaccalaureate education. Yes, MIT, Harvard
and Berkeley are fabulous brands. But there's every reason to believe that
market-oriented entities like Phoenix have every economic incentive to be even
more innovative than an MIT in crafting compelling online curricula and
content. A decade hence, whose "courseware" sensibilities will be
educating more people faster, better and cheaper around the globe? MIT's? Or
Phoenix's?
Reframe that question
in an open-source context: would you rather bet on Linux (MIT) or on Windows
(Phoenix) as tomorrow's dominant operating system? Or is the software world
better off with both—each synergistically/antagonistically keeping the other
in check?
Anyone who cares
about the future of software needs to understand market trends as much as
digital design. Similarly, anyone who genuinely cares about the future of
higher education must accept that market forces are now as critical as
technological innovation.
Rebel with a Cause by
John Sperling and Higher Ed, Inc. by Richard S. Ruch are two stylistically
different books that offer useful perspectives on these issues. The former is
an intensely personal memoir of a combative entrepreneur with a University of
Cambridge PhD who battled the not-for-profit academic establishment and won.
The latter is a smoothly written survey by the former dean of a for-profit
revealing why these schools will matter even more tomorrow than they do today.
Anybody with an "elite" university education will be intrigued and
provoked by these tales. Anybody who thinks that "elite"
universities will be immune from the influences of these upstarts will
probably have to think twice.
In Rebel with a
Cause, Sperling does not come across as the most likable entrepreneur or
educator to ever pen his memoirs. Compared to Harvard president James Bryant
Conant's My Several Lives, or his MIT counterpart James R. Killian Jr.'s The
Education of a College President or former MIT president Howard Wesley
Johnson's recent Holding the Center, Sperling's book portrays him as less an
academic statesman than a ruthless buccaneer, determined to topple the cozy
incestuousness of America's higher-education establishment. He's spoiling for
a fight and almost never fails to find one.
"No innovation
will survive unless its protagonists are willing to respond to the inevitable
attacks by the academic traditionalists with a passion of equal
intensity," writes Sperling. "Furthermore, successful defense of an
innovation requires will, political skill, and financial resources. [We had]
all three. Plus [we were] principals who were happy warriors and who thrilled
to the battle."
Don't mess with me!
shrieks every other page of this business autobiography. Sperling details his
battles with wives and lovers as passionately as he describes his lawsuits and
lobbying of educational accreditors in states that dared interfere with his
vision of adult education for the masses. Why does Sperling's vision matter?
Because his business success and the rising role of Phoenix-like educational
institutions gives the lie to the oft-quoted Henry Kissinger aphorism that the
reason university politics are so vicious is that the stakes are so small.
Because the stakes
are huge. Postbaccalaureate education, training and certification are already
multibillion-dollar concerns in America. Sperling is the very model of an
entrepreneur who has firsthand experience with the "inefficiencies"
in the educational marketplace and knows how to exploit them. Sperling knows
that quality education is often a secondary—or even a tertiary—concern of
universities. After all, a university is not just a marketplace of ideas; it's
a marketplace.
Will that marketplace
be driven more by for-profit or not-for-profit sensibilities? (Or as Nobel
Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman likes to put it,
"tax-paying" versus "tax-exempt" sensibilities.) It's one
thing for an MIT or a Stanford to benchmark itself against a Chicago or a
Berkeley; but what does it mean to benchmark itself against a Phoenix or a
DeVry? Or is that too ridiculous to even contemplate? Sperling has no
(apparent) illusions about direct competition with the elite schools, because
the fundamental missions are so different. But when it comes to opportunities
in continuing education, distance learning and the Internet, he has no doubts
about which kind of school is in the best position to profitably innovate.
The
remainder of the article is at http://www.techreview.com/magazine/oct01/insight.asp
From
Canada, A Very Multicultural Nation
Cultural Profiles Project (a government project) --- http://cwr.utoronto.ca/cultural/
Meeting God: Elements of Hindu Devotion (Religion, Art, History) --- http://www.amnh.org/exhibitions/meeting_god/
The Floating World of Ukiyo-E --- http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/ukiyo-e/
This
Article From Nature Makes a Strong Case for "Art" in a Scientific or
Professional Curriculum
"Doctors examine art appreciation class improves student doctors'
diagnosis" by Helen Pearson, Nature, September 12, 2001 --- http://www.nature.com/nsu/010913/010913-11.html
"Physicians should be more like Sherlock
Holmes," says Irwin Braverman. His new research suggests that
art-appreciation classes could teach medical students the sleuthing skills
they need: trainee doctors' diagnoses improve after they have learnt how to
look at the whole picture.
Medical students often miss the details that clinch a
diagnosis, says Braverman, of Yale University School of Medicine in New Haven,
Connecticut. In an effort to overcome this observational blindness, he teamed
up with the Yale Center for British Art to give first-year students a fine-art
class.
After only two hours spent studying a classical
painting and being questioned on what they saw, students' diagnostic skills
improved1. They were better able to pick out key clues in patient photos than
were a group who sat through an additional anatomy lecture. Art-appreciation
classes are now part of the curriculum for all Yale medical students.
Challenging students' assumptions "is exactly
the kind of reasoning you try and provoke in clinical diagnosis", agrees
John Spencer, who studies medical education at the University of Newcastle in
England.
Medical teaching has traditionally focused on
cramming and rote learning, with the result that novices "don't think out
of the box", says Spencer. Braverman illustrates this with the tale of a
man referred with a leg problem. The student doctor, focusing on the patient's
legs, couldn't work out what was wrong, although the answer was staring him in
the face. The student missed the patient's bulging eyes, tell-tale signs of a
thyroid problem.
The ability to see details without preconceived ideas
is a key part of diagnosis, yet finely honed observational skills are often
only learnt after years of clinical practice. Programmes such as Yale's art
class could accelerate the process, hopes Braverman.
The course is an example of how teaching methods are
changing, says Spencer, with examinations focusing on reasoning rather than
simple recall.
When
searching for academic and business links, it is unfortunate if you forget to go
to the Baker Library at the Harvard Business School http://www.library.hbs.edu/
Harvard
Business School Publishing --- http://www.hbsp.harvard.edu/
For
electronic commerce publications go to the above link and search for
"E-Commerce and the Internet"
From
Internet Week news on October 1, 2001
ROI: Little More Than Lip Service
Ever since the dotcom bust and economic slowdown, IT
organizations have latched on to all manner of "ROI" metrics to
justify their technology investments.
But whether they're really calculating return on
investment is suspect. New research and anecdotal evidence suggest that
managers may be fudging the numbers--or at least evaluating their projects
less than rigorously.
A new InternetWeek survey indicates a striking
disconnect between what businesses say about their ROI studies and their
actual e-business results. Some 82 percent of 1,000 managers surveyed by
InternetWeek said they expect their company's overall "e-business
operations" to be profitable in 2001. Yet only 34 percent said their
company had developed an ROI model to measure the success of those operations.
--David Lewis and Mike Koller
Read on: http://update.internetweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eEbG0Bdl6n0V30SpZ0Aj
Bob Jensen's ROI threads are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/roi.htm
Bob Jensen's electronic commerce threads are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce.htm
An
Educated Guess as to the Real Prize in Terrorist Leader Bin Lauden's Eyes
"Line
in the Sand: Exile Seeks to Destabilize His Oil-Rich Homeland;
Royals Caught in Middle," The Wall Street Journal, October 4, 2001,
Page A1.
"Osama
has no hope of overthrowing the U.S. --- but he does seek that in his own
country," says Chas W. Freeman Jr., a former U.S ambassador to Saudi
Arabia. "What he hopes we will do is attack a broad target in the
Middle East, and thus delugitimize both what we do and the Saudi regime."
Bob
Jensen's threads on terrorism are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/JusticeAppeal.htm
Young
Muslims who wanted to learn about "bone breaking" and how to make
explosives won't be able to visit a London-based website anymore, because
authorities closed it.
"England Closes Extremist Site," Wired News, October 4, 2001
--- http://www.wired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,47307,00.html
A website offering young Muslims the chance to learn
all about explosives and the "art of bone breaking" was shut down
this week under a new British crackdown on Islamic extremists.
Police sources told Reuters on Thursday that the
closure of the London-based Sakina Securities website followed the arrest on
Monday of one of its instructors on terrorism charges.
The 43-year-old alleged Sakina instructor -- police
refuse to name him -- is one of two men being held on terrorism charges in
Britain as it tightens the net on militants.
Bob
Jensen's threads on banned literature are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book01q4.htm#BannedLiterature
See
also:
Another
Thing to Fear: ID Theft
Smallpox's
7 Percent Solution
Making
the Case for Pakistan
A
TV Plea to Patriot Hackers
Eavesdrop
Now, Reassess Later?
Conflict 2001:
Fresh Perspectives
Why
individuals on the radical left really hate patriotism.
"CAMBRIDGE DISPATCH Left Back by Jonathan Cohn, The New Republic,
September 20, 2001 --- http://www.tnr.com/100101/cohn100101.html
If all this sounds
familiar, that's because it is. Since its coming-out party two years ago in
Seattle, the anti-globalization movement has been frequently described as a
new force in American politics, the product of a new generation with new
arguments and concerns. And it is true that the movement's focus on
corporations and global finance, as opposed to governments and armies,
represented a change from the leftist campaigns of the 1970s and '80s. But
last week, when the terrorist attacks put governments and armies back at the
center of American politics, the fresh-faced radicals sounded just like
their generational predecessors. And so on Friday, when United Students
Against Sweatshops pulled out of its planned demonstrations against the IMF
and World Bank, it also urged members to participate in "peace-oriented
events" over the coming weeks: "We stand firmly against sentiments
of military retaliation," the organization said, sounding exactly like
the student activists of 1968 or 1991. Last spring a group of Harvard
students seemed to break new ground in campus activism when they staged a
sit-in to protest low wages for the school's custodial workers. Now some
members of that group are starting the Harvard Initiative for Peace and
Justice; vigils and letter-writing campaigns against military action are
already in the works.
But not all of the
anti-globalization left is on board. Mindful of its membership's
sentiments--not to mention the police officers, firefighters, and other
union workers killed in the attacks--the AFL-CIO not only canceled its
planned IMF/World Bank demonstrations, but it also endorsed, in no uncertain
terms, military reprisal. "We deplore the assault," said AFL-CIO
President John Sweeney, "and we stand fully behind the President and
the leadership of our nation in this time of national crisis." The
AFL-CIO has asked its door-to-door canvassers, initially dispatched to drum
up support for the anti-globalization cause, to collect donations on behalf
of the terrorism victims instead. On Capitol Hill, some of globalization's
fiercest critics, like Marcy Kaptur, the congresswoman from the Rust Belt
city of Toledo, are morphing into some of the Democratic Party's biggest
hawks.
All of which
represents a very serious problem for the left. One of the
anti-globalization movement's primary goals--and primary successes--in its
short life has been repairing the generation-old gulf between intellectuals
and labor. Students have flocked to union-run organizing camps; a group of
labor-friendly intellectuals established Scholars, Artists, and Writers for
Social Justice. Now, with one awful attack, that alliance is splitting at
the seams. The hard hats and the hippies are on opposite sides of the
barricades once again. At the teach-in at MIT, activists seemed to be
gearing up for their generation's Vietnam--a chance to take on U.S.
militarism and imperialism in their own time. They seemed to have forgotten
that until last week, that was precisely the debate the American left was
trying to avoid.
I think what the authors of the article imply is that there is a
difference between "left" and "radical left." The radical
left is trying to organize a revolution against capitalism, religion,
globalization of trade, and the white race.
The point of the article is that patriotism unites races, religions, and
workers with the government and business leaders. Patriotism is a bomb on
radical organizers (that is what they are saying themselves in the article,
especially in Toledo)
The article does not imply that only conservatives are patriotic.
Bob
Jensen's threads on terrorism are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/JusticeAppeal.htm
"The Best and the
Brightest: The kids are all right, but too many professors hate
America"
The Wall Street Journal, Page A18, October 2, 2001 --- http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB1001979331574643920.htm
Maybe there is something to the old injunction not to
trust anyone over 30 -- at least on campus. Within the confines of the faculty
lounges where graying radicals are now ensconced, September 11 may be seen as
another example of America paying for its sins. Yet students seem to have
recognized it for what it is: their Pearl Harbor.
You might not know that from the professors making it
into the headlines. At a recent University of North Carolina
"teach-in," one lecturer told students that if he were President, he
would first apologize to "the widows and orphans, the tortured and the
impoverished and all the millions of other victims of American
imperialism." Over at Yale, Professor Paul Kennedy asked the audience to
understand the reasons people had for their hatred of America -- notably our
military and economic power, our culture, and more. University of Texas
Professor Robert Jensen (that's
Robert W. Jensen from the University of Texas and not Robert E. Jensen from
Trinity University)
wrote that the attack "was no more despicable
than the massive acts of terrorism . . . that the U.S. government has
committed during my lifetime."
Imagine, then, what it must be like for such
professors to look out at their campuses to see hordes of students with
American flags flying from their bicycles, sticking out of their backpacks,
stuck in their pockets, or emblazoned on T-shirts with messages that promise,
"We Won't Forget."
The jolt must have been even greater at Harvard,
where the Crimson, the student paper, ran an editorial pegged to a poll
showing 69% of Harvard students in favor of military action against the
perpetrators of the attacks. More telling still was the Crimson's forthright
response to what it called "bad news": namely, that only 38% of that
large percentage who want military action said they were willing to take part
themselves. As the editors tartly observed, one worries for the character of a
student body that favors a military response "only as long as they can
continue to sit comfortably in Cambridge." If students "are willing
to enjoy the benefits of the national defense," the paper concluded,
"they must not refuse when called to serve."
At the Yale Daily News, the editors put it this way:
"After September 11, 2001, we came of age as a generation. We agreed on
an agenda. We faced the same enemy. And now the government is asking us: Will
we serve?" They concluded by answering their own question: "We must
answer the calling of our time -- for if we don't, who will?"
Plainly what these and other bursts of campus clarity
suggest is that notwithstanding the decades of effort put in by the thought
reformers -- the creators of the language police, the campus harassment codes
and the rest -- these people never did capture many hearts and minds. In its
more overt forms on campus this ideology tends to manifest itself in Vietnam
nostalgia, as it did at the University of Wisconsin at Madison where students
chanted "One-Two-Three-Four, we won't support your racist war."
More subtly it appears too in those op-eds indicting
an American society whose people have now got their comeuppance. Its adherents
seem particularly bothered by an America that continues to celebrate memories
and films focusing on World War II.
They have good reason to be bothered by such
recollections. On June 12, 1942, his 18th birthday, a young Andover graduate
put off his Yale education to enlist in the U.S. Navy. It was six months after
Pearl Harbor. The young man's name was George Bush.
Maybe they're not beating down the doors of the Army,
Navy and Marine recruiters up at Cambridge or New Haven. But if the reactions
of their college papers to September 11 is any indication, America's young
have learned something about their obligation to a free if imperfect society
-- even if it wasn't in the lesson plan.
The U.S. Flag is not being
burned at Lehigh University, but then again it was temporarily banned until
students forced a change in a campus ruling to ban displaying of the U.S.
Flag.
See http://www.opinionjournal.com/best/?id=95001149
(Free registration required)
Banner Banners
We read about this one on the Web site of radio talk-show host Neal Boortz. On
Tuesday Lehigh University of Bethlehem, Pa., briefly banned the American flag.
The Allentown Morning Call reports that Bill Guglielmo, an engineering junior
from Davidson, Md., was riding on a campus bus when, in his words, "I
hear a call over the radio for them to remove all American flags."
It turns out that one John Smeaton, vice provost for
student affairs, "ordered flags removed so non-American students would
not feel uncomfortable," according to the Morning Call, which quotes an
executive of the school as saying: "We have such a diverse student body
and emotions are so high right now. The idea was to keep from offending some
of our students, and maybe the result was much to the contrary. The student
and the bus driver were understandably angry. A mistake was made." Within
an hour, the school rescinded Smeaton's order.
What does it tell us about the state of American
higher education that an administrator's first reflex when America is under
attack is to protect foreign students from displays of American patriotism,
which he only imagines would offend them?
"Lehigh University wavers
on flag order," Lehigh Valley News, September 14, 2001 --- http://www.mcall.com/html/frontpage/b_pg001_e14noflags.htm
While acts of patriotism were breaking out across the
Lehigh Valley, they were being squashed on the campus of Lehigh University.
But not for long.
It may have been meant as an act of sensitivity, but
a Lehigh University official's decision to remove the American flag from a
campus bus was met with anger from at least one student and the bus driver.
The backlash struck so quickly that the University
immediately rescinded its order.
The weeks following the terrorist attacks yielded the largest spike in
Internet traffic yet. Now, a group of scholars are attempting to capture
snapshots of how websites responded to the attacks --- http://www.wired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,47184,00.html
Public
Agenda Special Report: Terrorism --- http://www.publicagenda.org/specials/terrorism/terror.htm
Bob
Jensen's threads on terrorism are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/JusticeAppeal.htm
UPS Logistics has delivered goods despite blizzards, floods, and fires. But
its IS systems were put to the test on Sept. 11. Find out how the company fared.
http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eEkN0BcUEY04e0S4x0AH
"E.P.A. Years Behind Timetable on
Guarding Water From Attack, by Greg Winter, The New York Times, October 4,
2001 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2001/10/04/national/04WATE.html
The Environmental
Protection Agency has fallen years behind its timetable for safeguarding the
nation's water supply against a possible terrorist attack, according to the
agency's internal documents.
Under orders from
President Bill Clinton, the agency detailed its plans for protecting the
nation's drinking water in 1998, offering a road map for the administration's
campaign to foil terrorist plots by fortifying the United States'
infrastructure.
Yet many of the steps
that the agency said would be completed as long as two years ago, like
identifying vulnerabilities, have just begun or are still on the drawing
board. That is prompting some lawmakers to call for stricter oversight of the
E.P.A.'s antiterrorism efforts.
"Our nation no
longer has the luxury of time to build adequate defenses against threats to
our drinking water," Senator Christopher S. Bond of Missouri, the senior
Republican on the Appropriations Committee, wrote in a letter this week to
Christie Whitman, the agency administrator. "We must build them
now."
See Also
Energy Citations Database (ECD) http://www.osti.gov/energycitations/
"Energy Independence Now We Need A
New Energy Revolution," SF Gate, October 4, 2001 --- http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/gate/archive/2001/10/04/newenergy.DTL
Amid this week's
latest batch of unbearably sad stories about the victims of the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks, one of the most important stories is the one we haven't
read.
It's the story about
how, after the last major crisis in the Middle East 25 years ago, America
embarked on a crash program to develop new solar, wind, geothermal and
fuel-cell technologies to successfully become energy independent.
You didn't read it,
because it didn't happen.
The news we're
reading this week might look very different if we had followed that course,
which was recommended at the time by scores of environmentalists, ranging from
author/activist Barry Commoner to our then-governor, Jerry Brown.
Had we listened to
them, the US government might not have earned our well-deserved reputation as
a hypocrite nation that prizes oil above everything else, including the very
values we purport to uphold.
Of even more
immediate concern, our continuing dependence on foreign oil leaves the
American economy dangerously vulnerable, particularly if the already unstable
situation in the Middle East continues to deteriorate.
That's why a campaign
for energy independence remains one of our best weapons against terrorism. In
the long run, one of the most effective steps we can take to preserve freedom
here at home and to extend its benefits to others around the world is to
loosen oil's slimy grip on our domestic and foreign policies.
There is an
undeniable relationship between America's alliances with oppressive Middle
East regimes and the organized, religiously fueled terror campaign that seeks
to punish the US for being the chief enabler of those dictatorships. Put
simply, we rely on oil-rich despots at our own peril.
"Student may face charges in hoax," by Lisa Chiu, The Arizona
Republic Oct. 02, 2001 --- http://www.arizonarepublic.com/arizona/articles/1002student02.html
Arizona State University junior Ahmad Saad Nasim told
a gruesome tale: He was attacked from behind, beaten and pelted with eggs
while his assailants uttered racial epithets.
But that story was a lie and now has ASU officers
considering whether to cite Nasim for false reporting.
The department has not yet determined whether to take
action against Nasim, said police Chief John Pickens, but it is in contact
with the Maricopa County Attorney's Office, which would prosecute such crimes.
Nasim could also face internal disciplinary action from the university.
The political science major confessed Thursday to the
hoax after he was found lying inside a locked bathroom stall in the
university's library, apparently attempting to fake another hate crime. Police
said he gave no reason for either hoax.
Seems nuts to me!
Are peanut subsidies vital to the war effort, or is someone pulling our
legume?
http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=95001258
World
Health Report 2001, Mental Health: New Understanding New Hope --- http://www.who.int/whr/
Family Values Tour --- http://www.familyvaluestour.com/
The
State of the World's Children 2002 --- http://www.unicef.org/sowc02/
Starting points
- Begin
reading 'In brief'.
- A special online synopsis of
messages on leadership from UNICEF's The State of the World's Children
2002. The full report – containing text with multiple examples of
leadership, feature stories, statistical panels, "Voices of Young
People" and declarations of commitments for children from every
region of the world – can be viewed online and obtained as a print
publication.
- Go
to Contents.
- An annotated list of the messages
and short features found in the online version of The State of the
World's Children 2002.
- View
or print the full report (PDF or text-only).
- The State of the World's
Children 2002, available in PDF and text-only versions, reports on the
progress that has been made in improving the lives of children and
families since the 1990 World Summit for Children. It includes the
inspiring successes of the 'Say Yes for Children' campaign that has been
launched in over 100 countries. And it presents the worldwide preparations
leading to the UN Special Session on Children. Includes a Foreword and
reports from the UN Secretary-General, six pages of maps, 25 charts and
figures, 40 photos and illustrations, 64 references, a full index and more
than 50 quotes from children and young people.
- Journalists:
Go to the press kit.
- Includes a PDF of the report,
press release, press summary and six sheets of graphics on the major goals
of the 1990 World Summit for Children. The press kit is linked to the
Special Session web pages for journalists.
Most
popular Websites in the world --- http://www.webbieworld.com/ww/
Chris
Nolan clued me in on the following site about what is happening on the
Web. Note the Top 50 list.
Web Characterization --- http://wcp.oclc.org/
Statistics
Size
and Growth
Country/Language
Economic
Activity
Top
50 List
Miscellaneous
Documentation
Publications
Related Links
Project Staff
Home
Bob
Jensen's threads on Internet statistics and links to other providers of such
statistics can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob4.htm
The
fact that the FBI is struggling to conclusively identify the hijacker terrorists
points out how serious the threat of ID theft may be --- http://www.wired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,47201,00.html
Savvy decision makers don't trust the "black box" business models
used by consultants who have little understanding for a client's unique
situation. The trick--as RollingStone.com learned--is to use predictive and
highly customized models. http://update.informationweek.com/cgi-bin4/flo?y=eEkN0BcUEY04e0S4y0AI
Combustible Celluloid (Movie Reviews) http://www.combustiblecelluloid.com/
A great American History Site
States and Capitols --- http://www.50states.com/
American Picture Palaces (Movie Theatres, Architecture, Art History) --- http://xroads.virginia.edu/~CAP/PALACE/
Each week from the 1910s through the 1940s, Americans
"went to the show" in record numbers. "The show" drew peak
crowds three to four times daily with an extra screening on weekends and it
began, as architect S. Charles Lee noted, "on the sidewalk" with the
extravagant architecture of America's motion picture palaces. (1) Palaces
seated between 2500 and 6000 patrons at a time; "de luxe" palaces
boasted stage shows, permanent orchestras, organs, first run films, and an
array of customer services unknown to today's cinemagoers. Studio head Marcus
Loew recognized, "We sell tickets to theaters, not movies." (2)
Movie historian Ben Hall described the movie palace as "an acre of seats
in a garden of dreams."(3)
Most studies of America's movie palaces have been
nostalgic, preservation-oriented efforts which have tended to isolate movie
palaces in time and space from other public architecture and from the larger
current of consumerism in the U.S. In his study of San Francisco's Fox
Theater, Preston Kaufmann asserts that "the world portrayed by the motion
picture theater was in truth a carbon copy of the era which gave it birth.
This could only be achieved in such an unforgettable decade as the
Twenties."(4) Although the Twenties spawned some of the most fanciful and
elaborate theater architecture, the movie palaces are understood more fully
when they are read as part of a larger story--the rise of a pervasive culture
of consumerism which dramatically altered the way Americans worked, played,
and thought about their relationships to other citizens. When theater
architect John Eberson called movie palaces "the most palatial homes of
princes and crowned kings for and on behalf of His Excellency--the American
Citizen," Eberson was speaking a language perfected by advertisers,
retailers, religious leaders, government officials, and heads of industry
during the fifty years prior.(5) Movie palaces perfectly demonstrate the
anxieties, exhilirations, and pitfalls of the culture of consumerism which has
become synonymous with the 'American Way.'
Online
Brokers Finding It Hard to Hold Customers
The online trading industry is losing established investors faster than it can
replace them. http://www.newmedia.com/nm-ie.asp?articleID=3101
Pro-Forma Earnings (Electronic Commerce, e-Commerce,
eCommerce)
From the Wall Street Journal's Accounting Educators' Reviews, October
4, 2001
Educators interested in receiving these excellent reviews (on a variety of
topics in addition to accounting) must first subscribe to the electronic version
of the WSJ and then go to http://209.25.240.94/educators_reviews/index.cfm
Sample from the October 4 Edition:
TITLE: Sales Slump Could Derail Amazon's Profit Pledge
REPORTER: Nick Wingfield
DATE: Oct 01, 2001
PAGE: B1
LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1001881764244171560.djm
TOPICS: Accounting, Creative Accounting, Earnings Management, Financial
Analysis, Net Income, Net Profit
SUMMARY: Earlier this year Amazon promised analysts that it will report
first-ever operating pro forma operating profit. However, Amazon is not
commenting on whether it still expects to report a fourth-quarter profit this
year. Questions focus on profit measures and accounting decisions that may
enable Amazon to show a profit.
QUESTIONS:
1.) What expenses are excluded from pro forma operating profits? Why are
these expenses excluded? Are these expenses excluded from financial statements
prepared in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles?
2.) List three likely consequences of Amazon not reporting a pro forma
operating profit in the fourth quarter. Do you think that Amazon feels pressure
to report a pro forma operating profit? Why do analysts believe that reporting a
fourth quarter profit is important for Amazon?
3.) List three accounting choices that Amazon could make to increase the
likelihood of reporting a pro forma operating profit. Discuss the advantages and
disadvantages of making accounting choices that will allow Amazon to report a
pro forma operating profit.
SMALL GROUP ASSIGNMENT: Assume that you are the accounting department for
Amazon and preliminary analysis suggest that Amazon will not report a pro forma
operating profit for the fourth quarter. The CEO has asked you to make sure that
the company meets its financial reporting objectives. Discuss the advantages and
disadvantages of making adjustments to the financial statements. What
adjustments, if any, would you make? Why?
Reviewed
By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island Reviewed
By: Benson Wier, Virginia Commonwealth University Reviewed
By: Kimberly Dunn, Florida Atlantic University
Bob
Jensen's threads on electronic commerce are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce.htm
Financial
Instruments Derivatives Software
"A Shot in the Arm for Derivatives Software," by Barclay Leib, FINANCIAL
EXECUTIVE, October 2001, pp. 59-53.
This magazine from the Financial Executives International (FEI) is not online.
When
retired Microsoft executive Gregory Whitten recently coughed up $32 million in
late-round financing for derivatives quantitative and modeling firm NumeriX, a
flurry of attention rippled through the derivatives software world.
Whitten had been Microsoft's chief software architect and the single most
important person in developing Microsoft's Windows application. Where
his dollars now flow could well be an indication of yet another software
success story.
NumeriX
has long been known for its state-of-the art derivatives risk modeling
capabilities. The company's first claim to fame came in 1996, when it
released an extremely fast Monte Carlo pricing and stress-test simulation
source code within its "Time-Library Toolkit." Merrill Lynch
& Co. quickly bought this latter product and became NumeriX's initial
customer.
Today,
the company has 50 of the world's top physicists, mathematicians and software
engineers working to solve further mathematical inefficiencies in the
derivatives market. This is the area where someone has to grapple with
the manner to appropriately price every new structured product Wall Street
wants to invent. Is it better to use certain models, or is a combination
of different models best in specific circumstances?
Paying
attention to the robustness of one's derivatives pricing software can be
important. According to Alexander Sokol, chief technology office of
NumeriX, "Use the wrong model with overly simplistic assumptions, and you
risk ending up with a derivatives valuation that is 10 bid-offered spreads
away from their true fair value." NumeriX's mission is to help its
customers avoid such mistakes, and perhaps most importantly, to allow clients
to properly house and account for new derivatives without having to rely on
any stop-gap spreadsheet solutions.
NumeriX's
primary customer list features sophisticated banks and other software vendors.
Like the "Intel Inside" concept, NumeriX's source code has already
been integrated as a premium service within the systems of derivatives risk
management providers Fenics Ltd. (now part of GFI Group) and Murex, among
others. The firm has also partnered with major accounting firms such as
Arthur Andersen and KPMG, and more recently arranged an alliance with global
broker Garban Intercapital.
. .
.
Bouchard
specifically envisions that, among other delivery channels, NumeriX will soon
be reaching the buy-side world via the Internet as an application services
provider (ASP). Clients will be able to upload or maintain their
positions on a NumeriX ASP platform, and be charged a palatable access fee
either by the time they spend on the system or by the size of the portfolio
being examined. He
promises full FAS 133 accounting compliance as well.
Free
service for book search and price comparison from among over 40 bookstore, www.AAABookSearch.com
.
Bob
Jensen's threads on other book searching sites --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm#Books
Hi
Jim,
I
did a piece on Professor Farber over a year ago in New Bookmarks and recommended
him to be a plenary speaker for the Philadelphia meetings. I must admit,
however, I have not been following his work as of late. Your message
reminds me to take a look.
Bob
Jensen
Bob,
I was just wondering if you ever subscribed to Dave
Farber's IP email list. If not, I think you would find it fascinating. You can
find info about it by going to http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~farber/
and scrolling down to the "Who am I" section.
Also, I checked out your Camtasia recording that was
saved as a Real Player file. Very nice! I also think Camtasia is a great
product. I have used it extensively for my distance learning classes,
recording all of my lectures using Camtasia and Real Presenter. I think the
two of them are a perfect combo. I then burn all the files on to a CD and
distribute them to my class. I also make the files available to my regular
classes via the web.
Hope all is well with you.
Regards,
Jim Borden
Villanova University
Psubs.Org: The Personal Submersibles Organization (History, Submarines, Navy,
Diving, Oceans) --- http://www.psubs.org/
Includes a link to "Disasters."
To
promote and encourage the discussion, design, construction, certification,
ownership and use of Personal Submersibles.
The
author of a new book on copyright legislation warns, "It's very clear that
reckless copyright enforcement can chill speech. The message of my book is that
we've gone too far." --- http://www.wired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,47195,00.html
As more and more
"speech" goes digital and as those digits get locked down with
increasingly stronger clickwrap -- copyright and copy protection measures --
speech faces the very impediments the Constitution's framers took pains to
avoid, Vaidhyanathan says.
"It's very clear
that reckless copyright enforcement can chill speech," he said. "The
message of my book is that we've gone too far. There are ways in which the
copyright system becomes an engine for democratic culture. But once you
increase the protection to an absurd level, you end up having a negative
effect on this process."
One day before the
attacks, all systems were go on the souped-up revision to the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act -- a bill that proposed to outlaw any digital
electronic device or PC that did not have copy protection hardwired into it.
After the attacks, a
shift in priorities came that leaves the "Security Systems Standard &
Certification Act" (SSSCA) in limbo. Communications Daily now rates the
chances that the SSSCA will even show its face on Capitol Hill anytime this
session as "unlikely."
That suits
Vaidhyanathan just fine.
"The bill as
written is so sweeping that it would outlaw Linux -- or any sort of
open-source activity," he said. "It would require us to
fundamentally change the nature of the personal computer.
"It seems like a
really short-sighted policy proposal, and I can't imagine that the personal
computer industry is going to stand by and let this happen."
Another development
that appeared too late to make the book was the U.S. Supreme Court's decision
on New York Times v. Tasini, a copyright case that recognized print
journalists' right to compensation when their work is republished on the Web.
Vaidhyanathan was
"agnostic" about the ruling, especially concerning Justice Ruth
Bader Ginsburg's majority opinion.
"I really didn't
like the fundamentalist tone of Justice Ginsburg's opinion," he said.
"She dismissed any appeal to a greater public good in matters of
copyright and she made it seem that copyright is only a matter of private --
not public -- interest."
On the other hand,
Vaidhyanathan hopes the tone set in Justice John Paul Stevens' dissent can
carry forward into future rulings -- and laws.
"Justice Stevens
actually wrote one of the most historically informed, nuanced and reasonable
opinions I have ever read about copyright," Vaidhyanathan said. "He
basically said that copyright is for the public, and we have to take the
effects of our decisions into account. It can't just be about the interests of
the copyright owners."
See
also:
Hollywood
Loves Hollings' Bill
New
Copyright Bill Heading to DC
New
World Order, Copyright Style
Point,
Click, Legislate and Play
Everybody's got issues in Politics
Keep an eye on Privacy
Matters
Concerned
that too many civil liberties would be lost in pursuit of terrorists, lawmakers
rewrite anti-terrorism, surveillance legislation to automatically expire in two
years --- http://www.wired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,47230,00.html
Online
Curriculum and Certification
"Online Courses Offered to Smaller Colleges," T.H.E. Journal,
September 2001, Page 16 --- http://www.thejournal.com/magazine/vault/A3621.cfm
Carnegie Technology Education (CTE) is providing
up-to-date curriculum and certification to community and smaller, four-year
colleges. The courses are designed by experts in online curriculum development
in conjunction with faculty at Carnegie Mellon University's School of Computer
Science. CTE combines live classroom instruction with online courses delivered
over an advanced Web-based system that not only provides access at any time or
place, but supports homework, testing, feedback, grading and student-teacher
communication.
CTE serves as a mentor to faculty at partner colleges
through a unique online process, guiding them throughout the teaching
experience and providing help-desk assistance, Internet-based testing,
materials and tools. CTE also promotes faculty development at partner
institutions by helping faculty keep pace with technology changes and
real-world industry demands. The program's online delivery method makes it
possible to constantly update course content, as well as continually improve
the effectiveness of teaching and testing materials.
By allowing colleges to outsource IT curriculum and
faculty training, CTE helps institutions avoid the large investments necessary
to build similar capabilities within their department. CTE's curriculum and
teacher training can also be a competitive advantage to help colleges attract
and retain qualified faculty. Carnegie Technology Education, Pittsburgh, PA,
(412) 268-3535, www.carnegietech.org
.
Bob Jensen's threads on assessment are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/assess.htm
I
live with so much email that I have avoided buying a full-featured cell phone to
interrupt my life at other times.. However, my wife and I do carry what
are called "SOS Wireless Phones" that have a button for
911 (free anywhere in the US), a button for emergency auto service (I don't
recall whether this is free), and a button to bring up "Ernestine" who
will direct your call to anywhere in the world for a hefty $1.45 per
minute. Obviously, these are not wireless telephones that we use for
anything other than emergencies. The phones only telephone out and do not
receive phone calls. They run on AA batteries such that we really do not
have to sweat keeping the phones charged with an adapter.
What
is really nice about a SOS Wireless Phone is the price. After buying the
phone, the cost is about $10 per month per phone.
If
you only want to carry a wireless phone that will make contact with the world in
an emergency situation, this is probably the least expensive wireless
alternative. See http://www.sosphone.com/
We've
been using these for years and are happy with the service. To be honest,
we have only used the phone to call for emergency road service one time.
But we do test the phones by calling "Ernestine" every now an then.
PEOPLE
IN THE NEWS
Two CPAs Honored for
Lifetime Achievements
The
Accounting Hall of Fame inducted Nicholas Dopuch and James Don
Edwards into its ranks during the American Accounting
Association’s annual meeting in August.
Dopuch, the Moog professor of accounting at Washington
University’s Olin School of Business in St. Louis, received
this honor in recognition of his writing, vision and energy,
which helped shape the development of accounting research over
the past four decades.
Edwards earned admission to the Hall of Fame on the basis
of his extensive contributions to the profession in both
academic and professional settings. He is the Tull Professor
of Accounting Emeritus at the University of Georgia’s J.M.
Tull School of Accounting.
Ohio State University’s Fisher College of Business
established the Accounting Hall of Fame in 1950. Since that
time, the Hall’s international board of electors has
admitted 69 influential and respected accountants from
academia, accounting practice, government and business.
|
|
Journal of Accountancy, October 2001, Page 18 --- http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/oct2001/news1.htm#PEOPLE IN THE NEWS |
As is indicated in auditing and accounting textbooks,
AU Section 411, "The Meaning of Present Fairly in Conformity With
Generally Accepted Accounting Principles," specifies the "hierarchy
of generally accepted accounting principles. That auditing standard states
that auditors must be prepared to justify an accounting treatment other than
one that is specified by literature that is applicable to the transaction.
Thus, in the presence of applicable literature that is clearly on point,
auditors would have virtually no choice but to insist that a client follow
that literature.
AU Section 411 is clear in specifying that EITF
consensus positions are included in the hierarchy of GAAP, although they are
considered "level C" GAAP, and do not have the same status as, say,
an FASB Statement on the same subject. However, for all practical purposes,
EITF consensus positions represent authoritative GAAP that must be followed by
all affected companies. I have copied below certain parts of AU 411 that
explain this a little more.
Denny Beresford
University of Georgia
Compensation
and Financial Planning Sites
From the Journal of Accountancy, October 2001, Page 23 --- http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/oct2001/news_web.htm
Plan for
Tomorrow Today
www.adp401k.com
This retirement
services site offers detailed explanations of various plans—defined
contributions, 401(k) safe harbors, SIMPLE IRAs and executive deferred
compensation. It also provides users with overviews and information about the
requirements for and contributions to such plans.
A Web-Based
Watchdog
www.aflcio.org/paywatch/index.htm
Although a
company’s stockholders might not see much of a profit for a given fiscal
year, top executives still could receive millions of dollars in salary,
bonuses, and stock options. This section of the AFL-CIO site tracks
compensation packages for CEOs of corporations in the Standard & Poor’s
1,500 stock index.
A Beneficial
Introduction
www.rsgroup.com/html/r_retpln.htm
This section of the
Retirement System Group’s site briefly reviews the benefits of various
retirement plans, such as IRAs and defined benefit, contribution and
nonqualified plans.
Pension Plan
Tools
www.psca.org
Magazines,
newsletters, research, statistics and survey information, as well as a
glossary of terms, are available at the Profit Sharing and 401(k) Advocate
site. Frequently asked questions about benefit plans, as well as historical
data on the growth of 401(k) eligibility and defined contribution plan
participation and assets from the late 1970s to 1999, are also included.
Archived
Articles and Alerts
www.rbvdnr.com/eb/articles.htm
The law firm
Reinhart, Boerner, Van Deuren, Norris and Rieselbach offers users information
on various topics at this site. It features articles such as “FDIC
Regulation Alert—Restrictions on Golden Parachutes and Indemnification
Agreements” and “How ‘GATT’ Affects Your Retirement Plans.” The
Employee Benefits section features an alert comparing the Treasury’s 2001
and 2000 limits for various types of benefit plans.
Stock
options are great as long as the underlying securities rise in price. But if
prices slip, the tax burden can be painful. Here’s advice on how to avoid
problems.
"Sunk
by Options," by Russ Banham, Journal of Accountancy, October 2001,
pp. 43-48 --- http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/oct2001/banham.htm
A
Free Magazine of Literature, Poetry, Biography: The Spook --- http://www.thespook.com/
Entrepreneur Magazine's Best Cities for Entrepreneurs
Entrepreneur Magazine has teamed with business information specialists Dun
& Bradstreet to provide a ranking of the nation's best cities for
entrepreneurs. In addition, you can find links to all the nation's states with
useful information such as the number of businesses in the state, the number of
women-owned and minority-owned businesses, the amount of business turnover, the
number of businesses with fewer than 500 employees, a measure of small-business
income, and information ranking banks and the percentage of small commercial
loans issued in the state. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/58685
The two cities tied for the top berth are Dallas,
noted for a well-trained labor force, strong city leadership, and an extensive
transportation network, and Orlando, seen as a high-tech hub with a reasonable
cost of living and an attractive climate.
Other cities filling out the top five include West
Palm Beach/Boca Raton, Florida, Washington, D.C., and Austin/San Marcos,
Texas.
Other information in the survey includes:
- Cities that ranked high for small-business
growth: Houston, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Boston, Dallas, and Kansas
City, MO
- Cities with strong entrepreneurial activity:
Las Vegas, Orlando, Austin/San Marcos, Atlanta, Phoenix/Mesa, AZ, and West
Palm Beach/Boca Raton
- Cities noted for economic growth: Las
Vegas, Austin/San Marcos, Riverside/San Bernardino, CA,
Charlotte/Gastonia/Rock Hill, NC/SC, Sacramento, CA, and San Diego, CA
- Cities ranked for risk factors: Hartford,
CT, Greensboro/Winston-Salem/High Point, NC, Norfolk/Virginia
Beach/Newport News, VA, Raleigh/Durham/Chapel Hill, NC, Nassau/Suffolk,
NY, and Providence/Fall River/Warwick RI/MA
In addition, the descriptive material on the site
provides links to all the nation's states with useful information such as the
number of businesses in the state, the number of women-owned and
minority-owned businesses, the amount of business turnover, the number of
businesses with fewer than 500 employees, a measure of small-business income,
and information ranking banks and the percentage of small commercial loans
issued in the state.
For the city rankings, go to http://www.entrepreneur.com/bestcities
Texas Cities:
- Dallas is tied for Rank 1
- Austin and Fort Worth are tied at Rank 5
- Houston is at Rank 17
- San Antonio is at Rank 31
All
you Einsteins pulling your hair out because you don't know why a shower curtain
billows inward will be happy to know that David Schmidt has solved the mystery.
No wonder he won the Ig Nobel prize in physics --- http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,47334,00.html
Is
anything in life more frustrating than a pop-up ad that, when you click to close
it, causes another one to pop up? The Federal Trade Commission is suing one man
responsible for such mischief --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,47217,00.html
"Training
System Delivers Accredited Courses." T.H.E. Journal, September 2001,
Page 26 --- http://www.thejournal.com/magazine/vault/A3620.cfm
The
Dynamic Online Training System (DOTS) developed by Australian-based WebRaven
has made its way into the U.S. market. The system delivers online, self-paced
accredited courses to students, providing them with a cost-effective method
and the opportunity to complete their high school certificates via the
Internet. DOTS is a fully manageable enrollment, student management, course
administration and tuition delivery system for educational institutions. It is
an innovative software solution that manages all members of an institution,
from content managers, content creators, instructors and students. The system
also effectively manages the delivery of training to all members of your
institution, and even has the facilities to be e-commerce enabled. In
addition, DOTS offers complete flexibility to build your own online courseware
using multimedia components such as videos, sound clips, images, PDF files and
animated GIFs. Advantages of incorporating DOTS into any institution include
the cost savings, easy delivery method via the Internet and less reliability
on physical resources. WebRaven, Brisbane, Australia, www.webraven.com
.
There
is a great review of tax software in the following cover story:
"Ranking
the Products," by Stanley Zarowin, Journal of Accountancy, October
2001, pp. 28-32 --- http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/oct2001/zarowin.htm
Vendor |
Tax
program |
Address |
Telephone |
E-mail
address |
ATX
Forms |
Saber, Max
and Taxsolver |
PO Box
1040,
Caribou, ME 04736 |
800-944-8883 |
sales@atxforms.com |
CCH |
ProSystem
fx |
21250
Hawthorne Blvd.,
Torrance, CA 90503 |
800-457-7639 |
cust_serv@cch.com |
Creative
Solutions |
UltraTax |
7322 Newman
Blvd.,
Dexter, MI 48130 |
800-968-8900 |
sales@CreativeSolutions.com |
Drake
Software |
Drake Tax
Solution |
235 E.
Palmer St.,
Franklin, NC 28734 |
800-890-9500 |
drakeinfo@drake-software.com |
Dunphy
Systems |
1040
Professional
Tax Preparation |
6740
Huntley Rd., Suite 103,
Columbus, OH 43229 |
614-431-0846 |
dunphy@dunphy.com |
Intuit |
ProSeries |
2535 Garcia
Ave.,
Mountain View, CA 94043 |
800-934-1040 |
www.proseries.com |
Lacerte/Intuit |
Lacerte
1040
Tax Software |
13155 Noel
Rd., 22nd Floor,
Dallas, TX 75244 |
800-765-7777 |
www.lscsoft.com |
Micro
Vision
Software |
Tax Relief
1040 |
140 Fell
Court,
Hauppauge, NY 11788 |
800-829-7354 |
www.microvisioninc.com |
Orrtax
Software |
IntelliTax |
13208 NE
20th St.,
Bellevue, WA 98005 |
800-377-3337 |
webmaster@orrtax.com |
TaxACT |
2nd Story
Software |
5925 Dry
Creek Lane, NE,
Cedar Rapids, IA 52402 |
800-573-4287 |
www.taxact.com |
Taxworks By
Laser Systems |
TaxWorks By
Laser Systems |
350 North
400 West,
Kaysville, UT 84037 |
800-230-2322 |
www.taxworks.com |
Universal
Tax Systems |
TaxWise |
6 Mathis
Dr. NW, PO Box 2729,
Rome, GA 30164 |
800-755-9473 |
sales@universalsystems.com |
Xpress
Software |
Xpress
Individual
Package |
P.O. Box
280760,
Columbia, SC 29228 |
800-285-1065 |
www.xpresssoftware.com |
From
the University of Pittsburgh: Terrorism Law and Policy --- http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/terrorism.htm
German
Boer's useful
information for entrepreneurs
For more recent updates, see
http://mba.vanderbilt.edu/germain.boer/Creating%20New%20Ventures/mgt754-2001.htm
http://www.sbaonline.sba.gov/
--Small Business Administration home page
http://fisher.lib.virginia.edu/active_data/domestic.html
--Regional economic information
http://www.yellow.com/ --World Wide Yellow Pages.
This is a good place to search for a business.
You can search by company name, type of business or location.
Some
additional links that have useful information.
The
MIT Entrepreneurs club has a significant amount of material available for
entrepreneurs. The information
ranges from legal to technical. This
link should be on every budding entrepreneur's list of essential
information:
http://www.mit.edu:8001/activities/e-club/e-club-home.html
A
web site that keeps track of online auctions is http://www.itrack.com/links.html
The
Los Angeles Times at http://www.latimes.com/HOME/BUSINESS/SMBIZ/
has lots of stories about new ventures and is worth looking at to get
business ideas and to see what kinds of ideas are working.
If
you read the sections on Articles and Speeches at this site you will find some
great information for first time entrepreneurs.
http://www.accel.com/entrepreneurs/
The
question and answer format of this site helps you get an idea of what venture
capitalists look for in a new venture. http://www.garage.com/forums/ventureCapital/qandaArchive.shtml
For
help with legal issues, try this site. It
is written for the entrepreneur with no knowledge of the law.
http://sv.findlaw.com/
Bob
Jensen Small Business and Entrepreneurial Helpers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#SmallBusiness
Publishing
Your Own Newsletter Learn how to publish your own newsletter for fun and profit.
http://www.newmedia.com/nm-ie.asp?articleID=3099
Zero-Knowledge
Systems is ending its pioneering anonymity service on Oct. 22. It's due to lack
of sales, not pressure from governments, the company says --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,47337,00.html
Is
it the The End of Ma Bell As We Know It?
AT&T is reportedly in talks with BellSouth about a "merger of
equals," and may be close to resuming talks with Comcast over the future of
AT&T Broadband. http://www.internetnews.com/isp-news/article/0,,8_893021,00.html
Fatal
Injuries to Civilian Workers in the United States, 1980-1995 ---
http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/NTOF2000/2001129menu.html
"Cell
Phones on Campus Advocated Education: Security concerns prompt a drive to
reverse a 1988 law that bars students from using the devices at
school," Los Angeles Times, September 30, 2001 --- http://www.latimes.com/technology/la-000078272sep30.story?coll=la%2Dheadlines%2Dtechnology
World Almanac for Kids (of all ages) --- http://www.worldalmanacforkids.com/
Other places to look are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#08051Glossaries
Pornography
San Francisco's board of supervisors bans filters at city libraries, lobbing
another salvo at those who want public libraries and schools to keep porn away
from children --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,47283,00.html
The website is called "GET (some) REAL," and the strategy of its
organizers is to wean men away from Net porn and into the real world where,
presumably, real women are waiting for real attention --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,47326,00.html
The anti-porn folks spew
a lot of hot air denouncing smut on the Internet, from academic discourse
on the sexual exploitation of women, to sermon
suggestions about the evils of filth to support
groups for recovering porn addicts.
But they haven't been
able to offer anything but passive resistance to the multi-billion dollar
industry that drives Internet traffic. Until now.
Enter a few Swedes
who grew tired of sitting on their hands, watching the online smut factory
grow in size and power. They created a tool that allows people with similar
sentiments to create fake X-rated pages that use cloaking
technology to redirect would-be pornophiles to their website,
GET (some) REAL.
"We were
thinking a long time about what to do about pornography on the Internet, but
couldn't come up with anything good," said Marie Birde, who edits the
website as well as Darling, a Swedish pop magazine with a feminist bent.
"Then we asked, 'what if we do the same thing the porn pages do?'"
The pages take
seconds to make -- you simply drag pasties emblazoned with the "GETsomeREAL"
logo over the "strategic" areas of female models. When an
unsuspecting surfer stumbles across your newly created site, he'll be greeted
with the adulterated picture and the manifesto: "Porn's fake, girls are
real."
By using the same
raunchy terms and meta tags used by the hardcore sites and stringing together
thousands of fake pages into a single database, the site should start popping
up on search engines very soon.
Birde hopes her
unwary visitors learn a lesson, or at least experience a twinge of guilt.
Since the campaign
was launched last Friday, nearly 13,000 ersatz pages have been generated.
Birde has gotten her share of fan mail and hate mail.
"A lot of people
love it, but a lot of people are like 'stay away from our porn, you crazy
bitches,'" she said.
The campaign is a
collaboration between Darling and Moonwalk, an web-based ad agency based in
Stockholm.
Co-founder and
creative director Calle Sjönell, is donating his time and talents to the
effort.
"We want the
guys to get off the screen and meet real girls instead," he said.
"The campaign isn't aimed at the ugly guys in their fifties, but at the
young guys who are still able to hang out with the real thing."
Moonwalk registered
15 domains with suggestive names, such as Texasboobfest.com, which also
redirects users to GetSomeReal.com.
Although they could
have simply generated the fake pages themselves, Sjönell said the goal is to
raise public awareness by making people throw their own wrenches into the
online porn machine, no matter how small.
"I'm against
pornography because there's too much drugs and exploitation in it,"
Sjönell said. "But if people use sex toys together at home and really
get off on it, I think that's great."
See
also:
Library:
We Don't Want No Filters
Separating
Students From Smut
Girl
Model Sites Crossing Line?
Yahoo
in Porn Foe's Sights
The Wealthy: Forbes Top 400 http://www.forbes.com/2001/09/27/400.html
"Retinal photographs pinpoint people at high stroke risk," by
Eugenie Samuel, NewScientist.com, October 5, 2001 --- http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99991388
When I Am King (Comics, Art, Art History) --- http://www.demian5.com/
I think the market leader is GroupSystems (previously
Ventana). In fact, I believe that GroupSystems may be the only significant
player left in this marketplace. I have used this tool on several occasions
and like it a lot. Unfortunately www.ventana.com
is not responding to requests at the moment.
Roger Debreceny [rogerd@NETBOX.COM]
Up until a year ago, Israeli and
Palestinian startups were showing signs that cooperation was possible in the
Middle East. But increased aggressions since last year have rolled back the
progress that was being made --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,47214,00.html
The Hidden Drawback of Consolidation
Internet trust and payment company moves newly aquired clients to own services. http://www.newmedia.com/nm-ie.asp?articleID=3105
Recommended Book: Terms of Engagement: Changing the Way We Change
Organizations
The author presents a model for creating more effective change in an
organization by involving everyone in the change process from the beginning. He
suggests setting up large conferences with cross-functional, multidisciplinary
planning and implementation groups. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1576750841/accountingweb
The End of History is Not in Sight
There is a very interesting editorial
in the October 5, 2001 edition of The Wall Street Journal. Several
years ago, I used his "End of History" book in a First Year
Seminar that I taught at Trinity University.
"History Is Still Going Our Way,"
an Editorial by Francis Fukuyama.
Professor Fukuyama, a professor of international political economy at the Johns
Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, is author of "The End of
History and the Last Man."
What makes this article interesting is
how Professor Fukuyama now reasons that he was wrong about liberal democracy's
taking over the world, and he gives credit to Samuel Huntington and others for
being more accurate about forecasting the political economy of the future.
A stream of
commentators has been asserting that the tragedy of Sept. 11 proves that I was
utterly wrong to have said more than a decade ago that we had reached the end
of history. The chorus began almost immediately, with George Will asserting
that history had returned from vacation, and Fareed Zakaria declaring the end
of the end of history.
It is on the face of
it nonsensical and insulting to the memory of those who died on Sept. 11 to
declare that this unprecedented attack did not rise to the level of a
historical event. But the way in which I used the word history, or rather,
History, was different: It referred to the progress of mankind over the
centuries toward modernity, characterized by institutions like liberal
democracy and capitalism.
March of History
My observation, made
back in 1989 on the eve of the collapse of communism, was that this
evolutionary process did seem to be bringing ever larger parts of the world
toward modernity. And if we looked beyond liberal democracy and markets, there
was nothing else towards which we could expect to evolve; hence the end of
history. While there were retrograde areas that resisted that process, it was
hard to find a viable alternative type of civilization that people actually
wanted to live in after the discrediting of socialism, monarchy, fascism, and
other types of authoritarian rule.
This view has been
challenged by many people, and perhaps most articulately by Samuel Huntington.
He argued that rather than progressing toward a single global system, the
world remained mired in a "clash of civilizations" where six or
seven major cultural groups would coexist without converging and constitute
the new fracture lines of global conflict. Since the successful attack on the
center of global capitalism was evidently perpetrated by Islamic extremists
unhappy with the very existence of Western civilization, observers have been
handicapping the Huntington "clash" view over my own "end of
history" hypothesis rather heavily.
I believe that in the
end I remain right: Modernity is a very powerful freight train that will not
be derailed by recent events, however painful and unprecedented. Democracy and
free markets will continue to expand over time as the dominant organizing
principles for much of the world. But it is worthwhile thinking about what the
true scope of the present challenge is.
It has always been my
belief that modernity has a cultural basis. Liberal democracy and free markets
do not work at all times and everywhere. They work best in societies with
certain values whose origins may not be entirely rational. It is not an
accident that modern liberal democracy emerged first in the Christian West,
since the universalism of democratic rights can be seen in many ways as a
secular form of Christian universalism.
The central question
raised by Samuel Huntington is whether institutions of modernity such as
liberal democracy and free markets will work only in the West, or whether
there is something broader in their appeal that will allow them to make
headway in non-Western societies. I believe there is. The proof lies in the
progress that democracy and free markets have made in regions like East Asia,
Latin America, Orthodox Europe, South Asia, and even Africa. Proof lies also
in the millions of Third World immigrants who vote with their feet every year
to live in Western societies and eventually assimilate to Western values. The
flow of people moving in the opposite direction, and the number who want to
blow up what they can of the West, is by contrast negligible.
But there does seem
to be something about Islam, or at least the fundamentalist versions of Islam
that have been dominant in recent years, that makes Muslim societies
particularly resistant to modernity. Of all contemporary cultural systems, the
Islamic world has the fewest democracies (Turkey alone qualifies), and
contains no countries that have made the transition from Third to First World
status in the manner of South Korea or Singapore.
There are plenty of non-Western people who prefer the
economic and technological part of modernity and hope to have it without
having to accept democratic politics or Western cultural values as well (e.g.,
China or Singapore). There are others who like both the economic and political
versions of modernity, but just can't figure out how to make it happen (Russia
is an example). For them, transition to Western-style modernity may be long
and painful. But there are no insuperable cultural barriers likely to prevent
then from eventually getting there, and they constitute about fourth-fifth's
of the world's people.
Islam, by contrast, is the only cultural system that
seems to regularly produce people, like Osama bin Laden or the Taliban, who
reject modernity lock, stock and barrel. This raises the question of how
representative such people are of the larger Muslim community, and whether
this rejection is somehow inherent in Islam. For if the rejectionists are more
than a lunatic fringe, then Mr. Huntington is right that we are in for a
protracted conflict made dangerous by virtue of their technological
empowerment.
The answer that politicians East and West have been
putting out since Sept. 11 is that those sympathetic with the terrorists are a
"tiny minority" of Muslims, and that the vast majority are appalled
by what happened. It is important for them to say this to prevent Muslims as a
group from becoming targets of hatred. The problem is that dislike and hatred
of America and what it stands for are clearly much more widespread than that.
Certainly the group of people willing to go on
suicide missions and actively conspire against the U.S. is tiny. But sympathy
may be manifest in nothing more than initial feelings of Schadenfreude at the
sight of the collapsing towers, an immediate sense of satisfaction that the
U.S. was getting what it deserved, to be followed only later by pro forma
expressions of disapproval. By this standard, sympathy for the terrorists is
characteristic of much more than a "tiny minority" of Muslims,
extending from the middle classes in countries like Egypt to immigrants in the
West.
This broader dislike and hatred would seem to
represent something much deeper than mere opposition to American policies like
support for Israel or the Iraq embargo, encompassing a hatred of the
underlying society. After all, many people around the world, including many
Americans, disagree with U.S. policies, but this does not send them into
paroxysms of anger and violence. Nor is it necessarily a matter of ignorance
about the quality of life in the West. The suicide hijacker Mohamed Atta was a
well-educated man from a well-to-do Egyptian family who lived and studied in
Germany and the U.S. for several years. Perhaps, as many commentators have
speculated, the hatred is born out of a resentment of Western success and
Muslim failure.
But rather than psychologize the Muslim world, it
makes more sense to ask whether radical Islam constitutes a serious
alternative to Western liberal democracy for Muslims themselves. (It goes
without saying that, unlike communism, radical Islam has virtually no appeal
in the contemporary world apart from those who are culturally Islamic to begin
with.)
For Muslims themselves, political Islam has proven
much more appealing in the abstract than in reality. After 23 years of rule by
fundamentalist clerics, most Iranians, and in particular nearly everyone under
30, would like to live in a far more liberal society. Afghans who have
experienced Taliban rule have much the same feelings. All of the anti-American
hatred that has been drummed up does not translate into a viable political
program for Muslim societies to follow in the years ahead.
The West Dominates
We remain at the end of history because there is only
one system that will continue to dominate world politics, that of the
liberal-democratic West. This does not imply a world free from conflict, nor
the disappearance of culture as a distinguishing characteristic of societies.
(In my original article, I noted that the posthistorical world would continue
to see terrorism and wars of national liberation.)
The rest of the editorial (for a
couple of weeks at least) is at
http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1002238464542684520.djm&template=pasted-2001-10-05.tmpl
Good
Morning Viet Nam
The
Islamic fundamentalists should look for guidance from post-war Viet Nam on how
to improve the living conditions of their suffering followers.
In 1972 the war between the United States and Viet Nam ended, and the two
countries have been trying to pick up the pieces for decades. In a war
that lasted though two Democratic presidents and parts of the terms of office of
two Republican presidents, the main goal was to discourage red tide of a
communist take over of Asia. The U.S. pulled out in military defeat,
leaving all of Viet Nam in the hands of the Hanoi-based communist regime.
It is interesting two note what happened to the red tide of communism since
1972.
On a randomly-picked day of October 4, 2001, I examined a small slice of
current Viet Nam by reading the Viet Nam News news service on that
day. In this October 9 edition of New Bookmarks, I will feature two
articles that surprised me somewhat. One is an economics article and the
other is an article on poetry and love. Both articles reflect the changing
times in economics, politics, fear, love, and hate. I hope that when the
current U.S. war can eventually be declared over, the pieces can be picked up
following the post-war lessons learned in Viet Nam. I hope that when the
current U.S. war can eventually be declared over, the pieces can be picked up
following the post-war lessons learned in Viet Nam. The long-term disaster in
Afghanistan began long before the September 11 terror attacks and will carry on
long-after terrorist networks crumble into history. The lasting problems concern
economics and the overcoming of hate and fear.
I might note that the Viet Nam News
encourages capitalism by carrying daily stock quotations --- http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/Home.htm
Look
what happened in the aftermath of the Viet Nam War in a nation now dedicated to
peace instead of war.
"Foreign Investors to Receive New Incentives: Level
Playing Field"
Viet Nam News, October 4, 2001 ---
http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/Update/New.htm#Foreign investors to receive new incentives, level playing field
HANOI, October 4, 2001 — The Government is planning a fresh slew of
incentives to attract foreign investment, including key proposals that would
create a level playing field between domestic and foreign-invested projects.
The plans were unveiled by Deputy Prime Minister
Nguyen Manh Cam at a workshop entitled Heading for Success, held by the
Ministry of Planning and Investment (MPI) and the Industry Ministry in Ha Noi
on Wednesday.
Deputy PM Cam told the conference – which included
leaders of central and local administrative bodies and representatives from
150 foreign-invested industrial firms – that foreign-invested enterprises
were an integral and dynamic component of the country’s economy.
He said foreign investors’ success in production
and business was also the success of the entire nation.
Cam lauded the foreign direct investment (FDI) sector
for its rapid growth since the promulgation of the Foreign Investment Law in
1988, and its crucial contributions to raising the national economy’s
efficiency and competitiveness.
FDI accounts for a quarter of the country’s total
investment and 34 per cent of its industrial output.
Foreign firms earn 23 per cent of the country’s
annual export revenue (excluding oil and gas) and some 13 per cent of gross
domestic product.
The Government has issued several policies to lure
foreign investment. These have included the revised Foreign Investment Law
enacted in July 2000; the export-governing mechanism for the 2001-05 period;
and resolutions on attracting further FDI from now until 2005.
The Deputy PM also called for prompt measures to
address outstanding problems hindering the inflow of FDI capital-particularly
any obstacles to the efficiency and efficacy of foreign investors’
operations.
He singled out the inadequate and inconsistent legal
system, the absence of close co-ordination between relevant State bodies, and
the proliferation of cumbersome and overlapping administrative procedures.
Cam also dwelt upon the absence of several key
foundations of a fully-fledged market economy, and the immaturity of the
country’s labour force, securities industry, property sector, and science
and technology.
"The quality of consultancy, insurance and
auditing services needs to be improved, alongside greater investment in
socio-economic infrastructure," he said.
The deputy PM asked provincial authorities to
research and solve problems faced by FDI enterprises, and report them to the
prime minister when higher-level intervention was required.
Industrial sector looks forward
Speaking at the workshop, Industry Minister Dang Vu
Chu presented a report on the industrial sector’s development orientations
for the 2001-10 period.
To achieve an annual growth rate of 12-13 per cent in
the next 10 years, Chu said, the industrial sector needed US$50-60 billion
worth of investment capital.
Of this, 60 per cent would come from domestic sources
and the rest would be supplied by offshore investors.
Chu laid out key annual production targets for 2010
across a range of major industries.
The output targets included 69-71 billion kWh of
electricity (up 170 per cent on 2000); 34-35 million tonnes of oil (up 90 per
cent); 17-19 million tonnes of clean coal (80 per cent); 30-32 million tonnes
of cement (170 per cent); 4-4.5 million tonnes of steel; and 0.9-1 billion
metres of fabric (140 per cent).
The plans say that locally-made machine parts are to
account for 60-70 per cent of machinery and equipment assembled in the country
by 2010.
Chu highlighted some key projects calling for foreign
investment in the oil and gas industry.
These included the Nam Con Son gas pipeline catering
for the Phu My gas-power-urea industrial complex; oil refineries No. 1 and 2;
petro-chemical plants; and the south-west gas pipeline servicing the Ca Mau
gas-power-fertiliser complex.
By 2010, the country’s total electricity capacity
will reach 11,800 MW, generated by hydro-power, coal, gas and renewable
energies (including solar, wind and geo-thermal energy).
The high-voltage grid will be extended to different
regions, and active preparations will be made for the construction of the
3,600 MW Son La hydro-power plant.
The coal industry will spend more money on high-tech
exploration and extraction, while in-depth investment is also needed for
existing and newly built steel mills specialising in the production of embryo
steel, rolled steel sheets and other products.
Further investment and resources will also be
required in the mining industry, with untapped potential to explore ores like
bauxite, aluminium, copper, lead, zinc and tin.
The engineering, electronics, telecommunications and
vehicle industries require more investment to develop and upgrade production
and assembly facilities that will ensure higher quality products with more
competitive prices.
The Government will also inject capital to invigorate
other industries such as textiles, paper, food processing, high-quality
building materials and glassware.
Deputy Minister of Planning and Investment Vu Huy
Hoang told the meeting that more than 3,600 FDI projects have been licensed in
Viet Nam to date, with a total registered capital of $41 billion.
Of these, 2,900 projects are still valid and have
aggregate capital of $37.7 billion.
So far, $20 billion (or 44 per cent of total
registered capital) has been disbursed.
By September 2001, 1,841 FDI projects in the
industrial sector had been licensed, accounting for 63.6 per cent of the
country’s project total, with a combined registered capital of $20.19
billion.
Representatives of LG-MECA (Republic of Korea), Vedan
(Taiwan), Nghi Son Cement (a joint venture with Japan), Honda (Japan), VMEP
(Taiwan), Sony (Japan), and Ford (the US) contributed their ideas on making
improvements to the legal and regulatory framework.
They gave input on Resolution 9 on foreign
investment, Decision 46 on export-import activities, and the timetable of
import tax reductions for the country’s admission into the ASEAN Free Trade
Area (AFTA) and the Common Effective Preferential Tariff (CEPT) programme.
The foreign investors also offered solutions to the
problems facing their production and business operations in the country.
A
Story Poetry and Love From Viet Nam
Talk About Town, by Le Huang, Viet Nam News, October 1, 2001 ---
http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/2001-09/29/Columns/Talk%20Around%20Town.htm
A short-sighted boy wanders along a quiet street
after the rain. He opens and closes his hand lazily, catching the cool drops
of water that fall from the leaves above.
Suddenly, he erupts into verse: a sweet composition
inspired by the memory of a beautiful girl.
It’s a romantic scene straight out of the genre of
love poetry, something often considered a luxury in the daily grind of life.
What would you think if you came across this boy on
the street? Is it only the insane who mutter on the street and compose love
poems?
I had asked myself this question more than once
before I came across my mother’s treasure – stashed carefully away in a
corner of her wardrobe.
No, it’s not precious jewelry or even money but a
pile of faded paper.
It’s the unique collection of love poems composed
by my father during their courtship more than 20 years ago.
"Even now I cannot understand how I could
compose so many poems," my father admitted.
He had never before been struck by the creative power
of romance. My mother was his first love.
But he composed these verses naturally, as if he were
well-practised in the art of poetry. And his inspiration, he told me, was the
mood for love.
Some of my friends, touched by tender romance, shared
the same interesting psychological phenomenon.
"It’s not just happiness, sorrow can also fire
up a romantic soul," said one friend who has once or twice dabbled in
poetry.
A colleague of mine realised his son’s soul was
captured by the charms of a female when he found some draft love poems
scribbled in a notebook.
The man, in his mid-40s, understands his son very
well. Poetry is a natural way for an artistic soul to give vent to its
emotions, he said.
The young boy is lucky to escape from the hustle and
bustle of daily life by creating a poetic, mythical land.
But most of today’s young have no time for such
contemplative thoughts.
An acquaintance of mine admitted she had never
composed nor received love poetry, although she has fallen in love with more
than one man.
"Young people live fast and practical lives
nowadays," she said, "How can we find the time or place for romantic
words?"
But some people have adapted a very modern medium to
convey their old-fashioned sentiments.
A recent survey found that nearly 50 per cent of
young urban residents expressed their love through emails.
"It gets straight to the point," an
Internet user told me, "and it’s simple, so it avoids
misunderstanding."
And there are other – more traditional – ways to
express one’s love, you can say it with flowers or other gifts.
"Give beautiful flowers or practical gifts, that
is a better strategy than a poem which beats around the bush and takes time to
decipher," another friend said.
But we cannot simply blame the fast pace of life for
snuffing out the flame of romance in our souls.
One friend of mine, recently returned from a western
country, told me that absence had made his heart grow fonder and he was, once
again, composing love poems to his girlfriend.
He managed this romantic venture despite a packed
study schedule. "Verses popped into my mind again, just as they did when
our love was new," he revealed. "Our love is far more romantic, even
though we are physically far apart."
He believes that every person has an artistic,
romantic streak inside. All it takes to become a poet is to love and dream.
Do you believe? I am not so sure that everyone has
the ability to compose beautiful love poems.
But why not try. Summon up a memory of a loveable
smile, alluring eyes or the fragrance of long hair wafting in the wind.
Maybe we can all nurture a little piece of beauty in
the depths of our soul.
As a poet once said: "Verse is the voice from
the soul,
Verse is the voice from the heart,
Verse creates uncountable wings of birds,
That take us flying to find our dreams..."
Question:
What is the most important single
ingredient to the success of any economy?
Answer:
Contract enforcement that minimizes fraud, extortion, and
confiscation of investment and income. This is why Viet
Nam is becoming a better place to invest than in many (most?) other parts of the
world. Any nation such as Singapore that abides by contract enforcement has much brighter
economic prospects than nations (Russia and China come to mind) that allow
criminals to ruin the prospects of contract enforcement. This includes contracting for human justice as well as
economic justice. Set the terms in advance and abide by your
promises.
I suspect this is why Viet Nam is making a concerted effort to "level
the playing field." (See above)
The Viet Nam News homepage is at http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/Home.htm
And that's the way it was on
October 10, 2001 with a little help from my friends.
In
March 2000, Forbes named AccountantsWorld.com as the Best Website on the
Web --- http://accountantsworld.com/.
Some top accountancy links --- http://accountantsworld.com/category.asp?id=Accounting
Another leading accounting site is
AccountingEducation.com at http://www.accountingeducation.com/
How
stuff works --- http://www.howstuffworks.com/
If
you know any accounting educators with helpful materials on the web, please ask
them to link their materials in the American Accounting Association's
Accounting Coursepage Exchange (ACE) web site at
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/ace/index.htm
Please send these professors email messages today and urge them to share as much
as they can with the academy by easily registering their course pages with ACE.
Professor
Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134 Email: rjensen@trinity.edu
October
2, 2001
Bob
Jensen's New Bookmarks on October 2, 2001
Bob
Jensen at Trinity
University
You
can change the viewing size of fonts by clicking on the View menu item in your
browser.
Scroll down this page
to view this week's new bookmarks.
For earlier editions of New
Bookmarks, go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Click
here to search Bob Jensen's web site if you have key words to enter --- Search
Site.
This search engine may get you some hits from other professors at Trinity
University included with Bob Jensen's documents, but this may be to your
benefit.
Robert W. Jensen contends that the
United States deserves every terrorist act that can be inflicted upon it and is
using the September 11 attacks as an excuse to further ignite the U.S. into a
revolution against corporate America and capitalism.
I am not Robert W. Jensen from the
University of Texas --- See http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/justiceappeal.htm
Janet Flatley noted the following from The Wall Street Journal on
September 16, 2001 --- http://www.opinionjournal.com/best/?id=95001149
Another J-prof, Robert
Jensen (that's Robert W. Jensen) of the University of Texas, somehow
persuades the Houston
Chronicle to publish a scurrilous article arguing that America is
"just as guilty" as the perpetrators of Tuesday's atrocity:
This act
(attack
on the U.S. on September 11)
was no more despicable than the massive acts of terrorism--the deliberate
killing of civilians for political purposes--that the U.S. government has
committed during my lifetime. For more than five decades throughout the
Third World, the United States has deliberately targeted civilians or
engaged in violence so indiscriminate that there is no other way to
understand it except as terrorism. And it has supported similar acts of
terrorism by client states.
Janet wrote the following:
Thank you so much for
your clarification about the "other" Prof. Jensen. I sent
your email to the editor of www.opinionjournal.com
Best of the Web because of the item it carried 2 weeks ago (see link above).
I don't know if they will publish it, but they have been very forthright
about correcting/clarifying previous items.
All these matters
are, in normal times, the subject of legitimate dispute. But we are at war.
This is not the time to fight old foreign-policy battles.
Janet Flatley
Special Song of the Week from Anne
Murray --- http://www.angelfire.com/mo2/goodnews/main.html
Anne
Murray's song goes like this:
I rolled out this morning
The kids had the morning news show on
Bryant Gumbel was talking about the fighting in Lebanon
Some senator was squawking about the bad economy
It's gonna get worse you see
We need a change in policy.
There's a local paper rolled up in the rubber band
One more sad story's one more I can stand
Just once how I'd like to see the headline say
Not much to print today, can't find nothing bad to say.
Because ... nobody robbed a liquor store on
the lower part of town
Nobody OD'ed, nobody burned a single building down
Nobody fired a shot in anger, nobody had to die in vain
We sure could use a little good news today.
I'll come home this evening
I bet that the news will be the same
Somebody takes a hostage, somebody steals a plane
How I wanna hear the anchor man, talk about a county fair
And how we cleaned up the air, how everybody learned to care.
Oh tell me ... nobody was assassinated in
the whole Third World today
And in the streets of Ireland, all the children had to do was play
And everybody loves everybody in the good ol' USA
We sure could use a little good news today.
Links to hear the above song (the audio will only work with some computers):
http://www.friendsinneed.com/littlenews.htm
http://www.fortunecity.com/tinpan/bush/1092/lyrics/goodnews.html
Quotes of the Week
All of the following quotations were forwarded by Jagdish Gangolly
Most teachers waste their time by asking questions
which are intended to discover what a pupil does not know, whereas the true
art of questioning has for its purpose to discover what the pupil knows or is
capable of knowing.
A. Einstein
It is not so very important for a person to learn
facts. For that he does not really need a college. He can learn them from
books. The value of an education in a liberal arts college is not the learning
of many facts but the training of the mind to think something that cannot be
learned from textbooks.
A. Einstein
In childhood we learn our lessons with the aid of
both body and mind, with all the senses active and eager. When we are sent to
school, the doors of natural information are closed to us; our eyes see the
letters, our ears hear the abstract lessons, but our mind misses the perpetual
stream of ideas from nature, because the teachers, in their wisdom, think
these bring distraction, and have no purpose behind them.
R. Tagore
On his experience at school: "We had to sit like
dead specimens of some museum, while lessons were pelted at us from on high,
like hailstorms on flowers".
R. Tagore
Where the mind is without fear and the head is held
high,
Where knowledge is free;
Where the world has not been broken up into fragments by narrow domestic
walls;
Where words come out from the depth of truth;
Where tireless striving stretches its arms towards perfection;
Where the clear stream of reason has not lost its way into the dreary desert
sand of dead habit;
Where the mind is led forward by thee into ever-widening thought and action
into that heaven of freedom,
My Father, let my country awake.
From:Rabindrananth Tagore, A Tagore Reader, ed. Amiya Chakravarty, 1961 The
Macmillan Company
The
goals that Usama bin Laden lays out in his own words are at
http://www.fas.org/irp/world/para/docs/980223-fatwa.htm
Also see http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A17451-2001Sep24.html
Government reports and
intelligence experts have been warning for years that Osama bin Laden has been
trying to build one, but nobody is saying publicly whether he's been successful
--- http://www.wired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,47158,00.html
Some think he may have the "suitcase nuke"
ready or close to ready for deployment.
CIA World Factbook 2001 --- http://www.odci.gov/cia/publications/factbook/index.html
The facts speak for themselves.
Bob
Jensen’s Commentaries, Quotations, and Links Regarding the Latest U.S. War
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/JusticeAppeal.htm
MIT analyzes the media coverage of
the terrorism attack and its aftermath
re-constructions --- http://web.mit.edu/cms/reconstructions/introduction.html
re:constructions is
an on-line resource and study guide, designed to spark discussions and
reflections about the media's role in covering the events of 11 September 2001
and their aftermath. As millions of people around the world sit glued to their
television sets, even as we write, we feel it is important to encourage
critical analysis of the words, images, and stories which fill the media - as
well as the ones we are not hearing or seeing. We hope this site will be used
to help inform discussions in schools, places of worship, union halls, civic
gatherings, and homes as people struggle to make sense of what is happening
and to sort through their competing emotions about these events.
We are not offering
answers here so much as encouraging people to ask hard questions before they
rush to judgement and action. We do not present these essays as the work of
experts - although in some cases we have included pieces from important
commentators, past and present. Most of us are still learning how to think
critically and theoretically about the media ourselves. All of us are too torn
apart by these events to have any certainty about the adequacy of our words
and our knowledge to respond to such a situation. But, we want to share what
we know and what we think and what we feel. We want to see if these ideas
might be useful in helping someone else begin a similar process of exploration
and examination.
Teachers in Michigan are starting the school year with their own computers,
thanks to a new technology initiative paid for by the state --- http://www.wired.com/news/school/0,1383,46987,00.html
Scott Bonacker forwarded the following
link to a Yale University site --- http://buster.cs.yale.edu/implicit/index.html
Implicit Association Test (IAT):
Unconscious roots of thinking and feeling.
The IAT was
originally developed as a device for exploring the unconscious roots of
thinking and feeling. This web site has been constructed for a different
purpose -- to offer the IAT to interested individuals as a tool to gain
greater awareness about their own unconscious preferences and beliefs.
Many years ago,
Fyodor Dostoyevsky wrote: "Every man has reminiscences which he would
not tell to everyone but only his friends. He has other matters in his mind
which he would not reveal even to his friends, but only to himself, and that
in secret. But there are other things which a man is afraid to tell even
to himself, and every decent man has a number of such things stored away in
his mind." This quote from Dostoyevsky captures two
themes to which that IAT relates: First, that our private attitudes may
not always be ones that we are willing to express publicly. Second, that
our attitudes may not even be accessible to our own conscious thought and
feeling
It is well known that
people don't always 'speak their minds', and it is suspected that people don't
always 'know their minds'. Understanding such divergences is important to
scientific psychology. This web site presents a new method that demonstrates
public-private and conscious-unconscious divergences much more convincingly
than has been possible with previous methods. It also displays the method in a
do-it-yourself demonstration form. This new method is called the Implicit
Association Test, or IAT for short.
In addition to
several do-it-yourself demonstrations of the IAT, this site contains various
related information. The value of the demonstrations may be greatest if you
try at least one by clicking below before browsing the rest of the site.
Click here for
preliminary information about the available IAT demonstrations, to help you
decide whether or not to try them, and which to try.
Note: Your browser
must support Java Applets to try one of the IATs (WebTV is not yet able to
support Applet technology). For best viewing, turn your brightness setting to
maximum and be sure that text and background color overrides on your browser
are turned off.
Problems
completing an IAT
General comments
about the IAT
Bibliography
of relevant articles
"Would You Mind If We Fingerprint
Your Brain?," y Dave McGowan February 24, 2001 --- http://davesweb.cnchost.com/brainfingerprinting.htm
Nothing is
ever done for the good of the people, even when appearances may indicate
otherwise. That is one of the inviolate rules of politics that must be
applied when attempting to interpret any significant action, event or trend. A
corollary to that rule is: any new technology will be used to the detriment -
and never the benefit - of the people.
There is a consensus opinion
developing though that the routine acceptance of DNA evidence in U.S. courts of
law would be an exception to these rules. DNA evidence, we are told, is a way to
right egregious miscarriages of justice. Indeed, crusading attorneys like Barry
Scheck have built high-profile careers out of freeing the wrongly convicted. It
is not likely though that exonerating the innocent is the ultimate goal of the
DNA crowd. Emptying out the country's prisons doesn't seem to be real high on
the state's priority list.
To the contrary, finding new ways -
as well as new reasons - to incarcerate America seems to be the order of the
day. The freeing of the falsely convicted makes for a nice way to sell DNA
technology to the general public, however. It also makes for a nice way to sell
another new technology -- 'Brain Fingerprinting.' In case you haven't heard,
Brain Fingerprinting is a way to actually read a suspect's mind and determine
whether or not he has committed a crime...
That is the claim made by the creator
and chief proponent of the new technology, anyway. As 60 Minutes reported
on December 12th, 2000, allegedly 'civilian' scientist Larry Farwell "says
that by analyzing the brain waves of a criminal suspect, he can tell whether or
not that individual has committed a crime."
"Highlights of CBS 60 Minutes
Featuring Brain Fingerprinting," Mike Wallace, December 10, 2000 --- http://www.brainwavescience.com/Highlight60Minutes.htm
MIKE WALLACE:
Tonight, an improbable story about a revolutionary new technology called Brain
Fingerprinting that has caught the interest of both the CIA and the FBI. It is
the creation of Dr. Larry Farwell, a scientist from Iowa, who says that by
analyzing the brain waves of a criminal suspect, he can tell whether or not
that individual has committed a crime. Dr. Farwell believes Brain
Fingerprinting could one day be as effective as DNA in helping police
investigate crimes, and in helping free those who have been wrongly convicted.
The Federal Reserve has a new site to aid in teaching economics and finance
--- http://www.kc.frb.org/fed101html/
"Higher Education in the Digital Age: Planning for an Uncertain
Future," by Diane Harley, Syllabus Magazine, September 2001 --- http://www.syllabus.com/syllabusmagazine/article.asp?ID=4769
No "One-Size-Fits-All" Model for the
Future
How should universities balance their role of serving
an evolving on-site student demographic and exploring new, potentially
for-profit models of online education? They must first assume that future
campus populations will represent a mix of residential and off-site students
who will expect an innovative blend of ICTs in their courses. And they should
continue to experiment, because university experimentation and evaluation will
be an essential contributor to our knowledge about what does and does not work
in online distributed education. To paraphrase President Emeritus of Stanford
University Gerhard Casper, university experiments should:
Be developed within the context of the residential
university Facilitate the production of high-quality software and
infrastructure that enhance teaching (expensive, and to date there has been
too little investment) Monitor the quality of learning more closely Test
whether online education can substitute for classroom experience (a complex
task) Test what sources of revenue can cover the costs of both experimentation
and scaling. Second, university leadership should be very clear about
institutional goals and possible market niches when planning to serve off-site
students. Our ongoing work at CSHE suggests that there are a number of key
issues to consider when thinking about the costs and benefits of entering into
the expensive and fast-changing world of online residential and off-site
distance education. We are all aware of the emergence in the past few years of
a diverse array of online education models—for-profit ventures (Fathom.com,
NYU Online), equity stakes in external companies (University of Chicago,
Columbia University, UNext.com), university consortia (Universitas 21, WGU,
University Alliance for On-line Learning), licensing agreements (Pearson,
McGraw-Hill), and most recently, the MIT OpenCourseWare initiative. To
disentangle this world, types of institutions and their missions, as well as
the technologies themselves, must be disaggregated. Choices that make sense
for an extension arm of a research university or a well-focused proprietary
institution such as the University of Phoenix, may be entirely different from
choices that are realistic for a community college or a small residential
institution.
We can safely predict an ongoing market for
residential higher education and the unique socialization and networking roles
it serves. Such institutions will primarily invest in technologies that
enhance their regular course offerings; perhaps secondarily (if at all)
getting into the online distance learning business. Others may see the online
market as an important new source of students and funds, and will thus
capitalize heavily in new ventures to be at the forefront of the predicted
boom in global online education. Successful models will provide a flexible
mixed or hybrid mode (varying proportions of online and face-to-face methods)
for teaching and learning. Whatever model emerges for a particular institution
should be the result of careful planning and reflect a synthetic approach that
includes wise use of the existing and cutting-edge technologies and is
customized to the subject matter, to student needs and schedules, and to the
institution’s mission, goals, and budgets.
From Infobits on September 28, 2001
ONLINE LEARNING VERSUS CLASSROOM LEARNING
Much research into the efficacy of online learning
over classroom learning has been anecdotal and of questionable quality,
leading to inconclusive results and the need for further study. Two recent
articles in the JOURNAL OF INTERACTIVE INSTRUCTION DEVELOPMENT address this
question of efficacy.
Terrence R. Redding and Jack Rotzein
("Comparative Analysis of Online Learning Versus Classroom
Learning," Journal of Interactive Instruction Development, vol. 13, no.
4, Spring 2001, pp. 3-12) compare the learning outcomes associated with three
classroom groups and an online community college group in pre-licensing
insurance training. They conclude that "online instruction could be
highly effective" and that a "higher level of cognitive learning was
associated with the online group." They also note that higher
achievements of the online group can be attributed to the self-selected nature
of the students, the instructional design of the online course, and the
motivation associated with adult learners. Redding and Rotzein recommend that
further studies be conducted in other fields of study to see if their results
can be replicated in other professions or disciplines.
In the same issue Kimberly S. Dozier (Assistant
Professor of English, Dakota State University) urges restraint in rushing to
replace traditional classroom courses with online classes ("Affecting
Education in the On-Line 'Classroom': The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly,"
," Journal of Interactive Instruction Development, vol. 13, no. 4, Spring
2001, pp. 17-20). She cautions educators "not to forget what makes us
teachers and what makes us learners. We must not forget the limitations of
technology and we must not assume that an on-line course duplicates a
traditional course." One of the aspects of learning that she fears may be
missing in some online learning experiences is self-reflection as students are
"simply responding to a specified task and moving on to the next
one."
Note: neither article is available on the Web. Check
with your college or university library to obtain copies.
Journal of Interactive Instruction Development [ISSN
1040-0370] is published quarterly by the Learning Technology Institute, 50
Culpeper Street, Warrenton, VA 20186 USA; tel: 540-347-0055; fax:
540-439-3169; email: info@lti.org; Web: http://www.lti.org/
IS THE CLASSROOM A DIRTY WORD?
With seminars, trade shows, and magazines emphasizing
online learning, Elliott Masie, President of The MASIE Center, worries,
"Is the classroom a dirty word? Does classroom training suffer from a
public relations or self-concept problem?" In "Does the Classroom
Have a Self-Concept Problem? A TechLearn 2001 Think Piece," he presents
several situations in which the classroom can be a more appropriate learning
setting:
-- the learning activity involves discussion or live
role modeling;
-- the learning target is a motor skill that requires
the use of equipment;
-- the audience is small and it is easier and cheaper
to put a subject matter expert with a learner, than to produce a digital
learning module that will be used by just a few people;
-- the bulk of the content is gained from a Socratic
dialogue with fellow learners.
The article, from the TechLearn Trends on-line
newsletter, is available online at http://www.masie.com/masie/default.cfm?trends=253&page=trendsdisplay
TechLearn Trends is published by The MASIE Center
Learning and Technology e-Lab & ThinkTank, 95 Washington St., Saratoga
Springs, NY 12866 USA; tel: 518-350-2200; fax: 518-587-3276; email:
emasie@masie.com; Web: http://www.masie.com/
To subscribe to the free email version of TechLearn
Trends, link to http://www.masie.com/masie/default.cfm?page=techlearntrends
"What makes the new technologies worth
embracing? Why should institutions of higher education undertake the major
investments that are involved? What makes the Internet more than just the
latest in a long chain of technological innovations -- including radio and
television -- that have fallen short of inflated expectations in the realm of
advanced learning?" Tripathi's essay is a preview from a forthcoming
anthology on digital education. The article is available on the Web at http://www.acm.org/ubiquity/views/a_tripathi_1.html
Bob Jensen's threads on assessment are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/assess.htm
"Wired colleges block in-class Net
browsing," USA Today, September 26, 2001 --- http://www.usatoday.com/life/cyber/tech/2001/09/25/classroom-browsing.htm
Two colleges on the
cutting edge of Internet technology are now pioneering solutions to a rapidly
growing problem: students who pay more attention to their computers than to
their professors.
Bentley and Babson
colleges were among the first in the nation to wire their classrooms for the
Internet. And now they're spending tens of thousands of dollars on software
and hardware that lets professors block some Internet access in classrooms
with network connections.
"Faculty members
were finding students surfing the Net, sending instant messages, even looking
at porn in some of the freshman intro classes," said Phillip Knutel,
Bentley's director of academic technology.
As another deterrent,
some classrooms at Bentley have technology that allows teachers to capture a
student's e-mails or instant messages and display them on a large screen for
the whole class to see.
The software doesn't
censor which sites a student can visit on the Internet. Instead, a professor
can choose whether classes have access to the entire Internet or just the
school's internal network. Professors can also block out e-mail and instant
messaging.
Babson math professor
Joe Aieta said his students have told him the temptation to use the Internet
during class is too great when it is at their fingertips. That's why Aieta
occasionally limits their access.
"They think they
can keep up with the classwork while sending and receiving messages,"
Aieta said. "But they acknowledged that it didn't always work so
well."
Babson freshman
Patrick Lehner, 19, said the network-blocking software doesn't bother him that
much.
"Are students
here happy or proud about it? Probably not," he said. "But there's a
good lesson to be learned from it. It might help rebuild people's habits so
that they focus more (on class)."
Bentley, which in
1985 became one of the first U.S. colleges to require undergraduates to have
computers, first implemented the blocking technology in classrooms in the last
academic year. Babson had a primitive version of the software installed three
years ago.
Cabletron, a
Rochester, N.H.-based company founded by Babson alumnus Craig Benson,
developed the original Babson blocking program. Enterasys, a subsidiary of
Cabletron, developed Bentley's program and recently upgraded the one at
Babson. Both schools were involved in the development.
Lois Brooks, director
of the Academic Technology Specialist program at Stanford University, said she
doesn't know of any other school that is doing what Babson and Bentley have
done.
"I've heard
people talk about this, but I haven't heard it go beyond the speculation
stage," she said.
Some schools have
been trying less sophisticated solutions to the problem.
The University of
Virginia has installed switches in its business school classrooms that kill
access to computer networks. But the switches aren't well-hidden, and students
who know where they are can flip them back on.
Other schools, such
as UCLA, last year banned Internet connections in its required, core classes.
And Columbia last year expanded its "integrity code" to include a
student promise to "use technology in the classroom only as it is
directly relevant to the material being discussed."
So far, no tech-savvy
student has been able to crack Bentley's or Babson's software, according to
Knutel and Aieta.
Aieta plans to ask
his students to try to crack the program in order to test its security,
figuring that's what they'd be trying to do anyway.
"If you have
denied access, and if the student thinks they can somehow get it back, they
will try everything," Aieta said. "They've never seen a button they
didn't want to push."
2001/9/17 -- List of 28 new ERIC Digests --- http://www.ed.gov/databases/ERIC_Digests/index/2001-9-17.html
Studies of particular interest in higher education include the following:
ED451860 |
Adult Women in Community Colleges. ERIC Digest |
ED451859 |
Minority Student Retention and Academic Achievement in Community
Colleges. ERIC Digests |
ED451760 |
The Changing Nature of the Academic Deanship. ERIC Digest. |
ED451841 |
Facilitating Responsibility for Learning in Adult Community
College Students. ERIC Digest. |
ED451855 |
International Students at Community Colleges. ERIC Digest. |
ED451733 |
Reflective Teaching Practice in Adult ESL Settings. ERIC Digest. |
ED451277 |
Practitioner Assessment of Conflict Resolution Programs. ERIC
Digest Number 163. |
ED449637 |
Assessment of Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Students
for Special Education Eligibility. ERIC Digest #E604. |
ED449633 |
The Warning Signs of Learning Disabilities. ERIC Digest
#E603. |
I Love Camtasia
I have generated some video aids for my students using Camtasia.
Camtasia is fantastic for showing and explaining something technical such as the
application of software or the explanation of homework problems and
illustrations in accounting. Camtasia will capture successions of screen
changes and cursor movements on your computer screen. Camtasia will also
capture your voice explanations as you go along. It will also make audio
sounds when you click on the mouse or type on the keyboard. You may
highlight cursor movements for the video. You can also dub audio,
pictures, and video clips into a video that you captured at an earlier point in
time.
Since the Camtasia reader and the compression codec files for playing
Camtasia avi files were not installed on any of the Trinity University lab
computers, I was worried that my students could not see and hear the video
helpers that I created. Then I discovered that the Camtasia Producer that
accompanies the Camtasia recorder will convert the captured avi files into
RealMedia (rm) files. The benefits of converting the avi files to rm files
include the following:
- The rm files can be played on any computer that can play RealMedia files,
which includes all lab and classroom computers at Trinity University.
- The rm files are smaller than the avi files (about
25% to 60% smaller depending upon file size).
I have placed a Camtasia avi file and a RealMedia file at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/camtasiaSample/
Unless you have installed the Camtasia reader, you probably will prefer to
download the RealMedia version of this sample video capture of Exercise 03-07 of
the Perry and Schneider book on Accounting Information Systems.
Be patient when downloading the above files. The avi version is 29 Mb
and the RealMedia version is 14.7 Mb.
Camtasia from TechSmith is described at http://www.techsmith.com/
Also see the following article praising the pedagogy of Camtasia:
"A
Hassle-free and Inexpensive Way to 'Videotape' Class Lectures," by Rene Leo
E. Ordonez,
EDUCAUSE Review, September/October 2001,
pp. 14-15 --- http://www.educause.edu/pub/er/erm.html
Forwarded by Ed Scribner
"How I (Finally) Got My Calculus I Students to Read the Text," by
Tommy Ratliff --- http://www.maa.org/t_and_l/exchange/ite3/reading_ratliff.html
Last fall, I gave
short two-minute (or so I hoped) quizzes at the beginning of class, asking one
of the reading questions. As the semester went on, I became increasingly
dissatisfied with the results. Quiz time stretched to five or ten minutes, and
I saw very little difference in the students' preparation. My hope had been
that the quizzes would provide motivation for completing the reading, but
instead the quizzes themselves became the focus.
This spring I had
students email me their answers to reading questions prior to each class. I
was able to quickly review their answers and gain some idea of areas that
needed extra attention. To keep my in-box manageable, students gave their
messages a specific subject line which I used to filter their assignments into
a separate mail box.
I was very pleased
with the results. The class average was 23 out of 28 assignments, which means
that 19 out of 23 students in the class answered questions for each
assignment. As a result, the class as a whole was better prepared for each
class meeting than any other calculus class I have taught.
One of the most
surprising results was that the students seemed more willing to write complete
sentences and express complete thoughts when using email than with handwritten
work. The lack of symbols on the keyboard was a decided advantage. For
example, in a handwritten assignment, many students would explain Newton's
Method by giving the formula xn+1 = xn - f(xn)/f'(xn)
and hope that would be enough. However, the difficulty of entering
mathematical notation via the keyboard, combined with the ease of editing
their answers, made most students prefer using complete sentences to writing a
few cryptic comments. In this case, technology, in particular, the limitations
of technology, encourages the students' mathematical development.
For example, one
student's response to the questions from February 17 was:
1. The term
"locally linear" means that at a certain point in a function, if
you zoom in enough, the function will appear to be a straight line, even if
the function is a curve. This allows us to estimate the slope of a curve to
give us the derivative.
2. The derivative
of f(x)=|x| does not exist at 0 because that equation is not locally linear.
No matter how much you zoom in on the graph, the kink will always be at the
origin. You can't find the slope at this point, therefore there is no
derivative of f(0) for this function.
While the last
sentence is not technically correct, it is clear this student had put in much
thought.
From April 7, one
student responded with:
1. The purpose of
Newton's Method is to simply and efficiently find a root of some function.
It is also used because oftentimes it is impossible to find roots
algebraically.
2. The idea behind
Newton's Method is that you start with 'one approximation to a root' and
then find another better approximation. In Newton's Method you find
successive approximations to eventually find the root, r.
Another responded
with:
1.The purpose of
Newton's Method is to approximate the root of a function that can not be
easily solved algibraically (sic).
2. I really don't
understand exactly how Newton's method works or the idea behind it.
The last response,
and others like it, gave me worthwhile information on what to expect in class.
I spent less time than in previous semesters defining basic terms and
discussing basic examples. In their course evaluations, students indicated
that these assignments were a lot of work, and even tedious at times, but most
felt the readings were very useful for understanding the course material.
To keep the
evaluation manageable, I graded the assignments on a binary scale (1 or 0).
This took me about 15 minutes per assignment. (All three responses above
scored a 1.) These assignments counted 5% of their final grade, which was just
enough so most students did them, while not being overly worried about the
grading.
Pseudocsience Versus the Real Thing --- New from the
National Academy Press
"Quantum Leaps in the Wrong Direction: Where Real Science Ends...and
Pseudoscience Begins (2001)," National Academy Press --- http://search.nap.edu/books/030907309X/html/
Banned Books and Other Literature
Interesting projects for some courses
might include such assignments as the following:
- What are the moral or academic
reasons for banning selected books?
- Does the banning of books backfire
in the sense that young people will try ever so hard to get their hands on a
banned book, some of which are available free on the Internet? For
example, its not so hard to download Huckleberry Finn --- http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/twain/huckfinn.html
- What are some of the educational and
social ramifications of banning books?
- What kinds of literature really should be
banned in the eyes of virtually all academics (e.g., the ten top ways of
inflicting intense pain, the ten easiest ways to commit suicide, how to kill
with combinations of ingredients found in most kitchens, how to make bombs from
ingredients found on many farms, how to make poisons to kill people you
dislike in school, etc.)?
Banned Books Week (From the American
Library Association) --- http://www.ala.org/bbooks/
Celebrate Your Freedom to Read September 22–29, 2001
Develop Yourself: Expose Your Mind to a Banned Book
The 100 Most Frequently Challenged
Books --- http://www.ala.org/bbooks/top100bannedbooks.html
The top 20 listed are as follows:
- Scary
Stories (Series) by Alvin
Schwartz
- Daddy’s
Roommate by Michael Willhoite
- I
Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou
- The
Chocolate War by Robert Cormier
- The
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain
- Of
Mice and Men by John Steinbeck
- Harry
Potter (Series) by J.K. Rowling
- Forever
by Judy Blume
- Bridge
to Terabithia by Katherine Paterson
- Alice
(Series) by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor
- Heather
Has Two Mommies by Leslea Newman
- My
Brother Sam is Dead by James Lincoln Collier and
Christopher Collier
- The
Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger
- The
Giver by Lois Lowry
- It’s
Perfectly Normal by Robie Harris
- Goosebumps
(Series) by R.L. Stine
- A
Day No Pigs Would Die by Robert Newton Peck
- The
Color Purple by Alice Walker
- Sex
by Madonna
- Earth’s
Children (Series) by Jean M. Auel
|
Banned Books Links --- http://www.ala.org/bbooks/bannedbookslinks.html
Young
Muslims who wanted to learn about "bone breaking" and how to make
explosives won't be able to visit a London-based website anymore, because
authorities closed it.
"England Closes Extremist Site," Wired News, October 4, 2001
--- http://www.wired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,47307,00.html
A website offering young Muslims the chance to
learn all about explosives and the "art of bone breaking" was shut
down this week under a new British crackdown on Islamic extremists.
Police sources told Reuters on Thursday that the
closure of the London-based Sakina Securities website followed the arrest on
Monday of one of its instructors on terrorism charges.
The 43-year-old alleged Sakina instructor -- police
refuse to name him -- is one of two men being held on terrorism charges in
Britain as it tightens the net on militants.
Should I be banned from calling your
attention to CD-DA Extractor?
How to copy all or parts of most any CD
CD-DA Extractor --- http://www.poikosoft.com/cdda/index.html
Easy
CD-DA Extractor
includes three programs:
- Easy
CD-DA Extractor,
rips Audio CDs.
- Easy
Audio File Converter,
converts audio files between different formats
- Easy
Audio CD Creator,
creates Audio CDs from MP3 and WAV files
Features include:
- File format
conversions between many formats
- Audio CD
-recording
- Download and
upload disc information from the freedb, the Internet Compact Disc
Database.
- Normalize the
music
- Delete silence
from the start and end of a track
- Copy samples of
tracks with user-definable start and lengths
- Read and write
ID3/ID3V2/ID3W tags.
- Includes a
CD-Database editor that can be used to browse and edit the contents of the
CDPLAYER.INI database
- Digital Audio CD
playing
Bob Jensen's threads for creating
CDs and recording MP3 files are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/newfaculty.htm#Resources
Tips for Improving the GMAT Score
Here's a resource for business school applicants who wish to improve their
performance on the Graduate Management Admissions Test (GMAT). You'll find tips
for maximizing your performance on the four-hour exam as well as sample
questions. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/58154
Efficient Systems are More Fragile
"Flight Ban Slows 'Just in Time' Factories," by Scott Thurm, Rick
Brooks, and Jeffrey Ball, The Wall Street Journal, September 13, 2001,
page B3 LINK: http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1000336853689369570.djm
TOPICS: Just-In-Time Inventory Management, Managerial Accounting, Inventory
Systems
Wow Helper
Site of the Week
Vidya Ananthanarayanan called my attention to this site from Illinois Online
Network --- http://illinois.online.uillinois.edu/IONresources/instructionaldesign/index.html
Related Resources
Using
Instructional Design Principles to Amplify Learning on the World Wide Web
By Donn C. Ritchies and Bob Hoffman
Instructional
Elements of an Online Course
NC State University
Models
of Distance Education
A paper from the University of Maryland that gives strategies for
incorporating Labs into online science courses.
Instructional
Design Online Workshop
By Robin Eanes, St. Edwards University
Instructional
Design for the New Media
From Learn Onterio
Resources
for Instructors Creating Online Courses
Compiled by ION
What
Works and What Doesn't
Faculty and Student Experiences
AACSB Documents on Electronic Business --- http://www.aacsb.edu/e-business/
Make plans to
attend AACSB's Management
Education E-Commerce Conference, May 16 - 19, 2001, in Atlanta, Ga.,
at the Sheraton Buckhead Hotel.
E-Business Education (1999 Documents)
http://www.aacsb.edu/e-business/news.html
"B-Schools:
New Rules" |
- Graduate business schools are reshaping curricula
to train the next generation of New Economy leaders. Here are ten
of the best.
Edited by Susan Moran
Business 2.0 (October, 1999) |
"Biz
School Gets an Upgrade" |
- From small colleges to top 10 business
schools, academia is abuzz with plans for new degree programs to
help students cash in on e-commerce mania.
by Joe Nickell
Wired News (April 3, 1999) |
"Degrees
of Success" |
- Companies are funding
B-schools' e-commerce programs to lure students. Is this
education, or just another sign of Internet mania?
by Michelle V. Rafter
The Industry Standard (September
06, 1999) |
"E-Commerce
for MBAs" |
- Electronic commerce has the potential to
revolutionize business as we know it. Big changes are already
taking place in the way companies sell, advertise and market their
products and services. E-commerce is evolving so fast that many in
the business world feel clueless at times. Increasingly, corporate
recruiters expect the business school graduates they hire to
possess Web-related skills. To meet the demand, more business
schools are offering courses in e-commerce, covering both the
technology involved and the strategic elements.
NPR's Elaine Korry reports for Morning Edition
National Public Radio (June 3, 1999, Real audio file)
|
New Rankings: Top 100 Accounting
Firms
PricewaterhouseCoopers handily held on to the first position in this year's
ranking of the Top 100 Accounting Firms. Read the complete listing and see how
your favorite firms fared. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/58263
More electronic business and
commerce bad news.
From the FEI Express on September 21,
2001
SURVEY: COMPANIES ARE
SCALING BACK E-COMMERCE COMMITMENTS FEI's fourth annual technology survey, a
joint project between the Committee on Finance and Information Technology and
Computer Sciences Corp., has identified several trends in corporate IT
spending. Raw data for the survey comes from questionnaires sent to FEI
members.
The first trend is
that members' companies are scaling back the priority and the financial
commitments for e-commerce. The economic slowdown has compelled member to
place "renewed emphasis on identifying the appropriate level of
technology investments, prioritizing those investments, increasing the
availability of decision support information and leveraging IT to reduce
costs." With that, the survey found, members plan to engage in more
outsourcing and use of shared services.
The survey also
found that fewer dollars are being spent on discretionary technology projects.
Returns on investment are not clear, and many companies appear to lack formal
strategic plans for IT. Moreover, the survey authors concluded, there are
differing views of IT's role as a source of competitive advantage. Enterprise
resource planning (ERP) systems continue to create cost overruns, and relative
satisfaction levels with them are falling. Copies of the survey are available
here: http://www.fei.org/download/2001-FEI-CSC-Survey.pdf
.
Managing in economic hard times
requires good communications, refocusing on short-term ROI and the ability to
change direction quickly. http://cgi.zdnet.com/slink?141834:2700840
Enterprise information portals from
Epicentric, iPlanet, Plumtree and Viador deliver more than just data--they also
provide a good ROI for companies that can afford them. http://cgi.zdnet.com/slink?141406:2700840
Bob Jensen's threads on ROI are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/roi.htm
InternetWeek is running a poll on how
to measure electronic business success.
Reader Poll What is the
main way you currently measure the success of your e-business initiatives?
- Return on
investment of individual e-business projects
- Separate
profit/loss of combined e-business initiatives
- Contribution of
e-business initiatives to company as a whole, both revenues and soft
benefits (ie, multi-channel reach)
- Against specific
operational goals, such as cutting inventory turns or improving
call/Internet center response times
- Other ways
To participate in the poll, go to http://www.internetweek.com/question01/quest091401.htm
"Sudan Bank Hacked, Bin Laden Info Found - Hacker E-Mail," by Ned
Stafford, Newsbytes, September 27, 2001
A group of U.K.-based hackers has cracked computers
at the AlShamal Islamic Bank in Sudan and collected data on the accounts of
the Al Qaeda terrorist organization and its leader Osama bin Laden, Kim
Schmitz, a flamboyant German hacker/businessman, has claimed. Schmitz, who has
offered a $10 million reward for the capture of bin Laden, told Newsbytes that
the information has been turned over to the FBI. Bin Laden, a millionaire
Saudi exile whose base is now Afghanistan, is suspected of being the driving
force behind the deadly Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the
Pentagon with hijacked planes.
Newsbytes could not confirm Schmitz's claim. An FBI
spokesman in Washington declined to confirm or deny the story, saying that the
agency's policy is not to comment on information and leads it is receiving.
"We have received a lot of information on this
case," he told Newsbytes. "Of course we appreciate the leads we are
receiving from the public, but we cannot confirm what specific information has
been provided to us or by whom."
Schmitz, 27, a former teen hacking prodigy who spent
time behind bars before starting a successful data security business, has been
accused of being press hungry. He says his recent strong anti-terrorism
pronouncements are not a PR prank, but stem from his strong desire to wipe out
terrorism. He says he has received death threats from the Middle East.
The bank Schmitz claimed was hacked was mentioned
Wednesday by Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich. during a Senate Banking Committee
hearing. According to CNN, Levin referred to a 1996 State Department report
that said bin Laden had provided the AlShamal Islamic Bank with $50 million in
start-up capital.
Walden University introduced an online doctoral program in public policy --- http://www.waldenu.edu/
Walden also has other online graduate programs, including an online MBA program.
Walden University is designed for working
professionals who desire an advanced degree while maintaining career and
personal commitments. Walden's flexible, student-centered education allows you
to earn a master's or doctorate from the convenience of your home or
workplace.
Bob Jensen's links to other online programs are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/crossborder.htm
Professor Jensen - thought you'd be interested in
these stories from Computer World. They track with your comments last week
about greater use of technology in the wake of 9/11.
Janet Flatley AVP-Controller 1st Fed S&L Assn Pt
Angeles WA (360) 417-3104
Public safety agencies urge quick rollout of wireless
location services
National public safety organizations are pushing the
FCC to enforce an Oct. 1 deadline by which cell phone network operators must
offer wireless location services to customers.
http://computerworld.com/nlt/1%2C3590%2CNAV47_STO64274_NLTPM%2C00.html
____________________________________________________________
Yahoo rolls out virtual conference services
The business communications division of Yahoo Inc.
today unveiled two new services designed to support virtual meetings and
Internet broadcasts as alternatives to physical meetings.
http://computerworld.com/nlt/1%2C3590%2CNAV47_STO64278_NLTPM%2C00.html
Grrrrr
This month use special care when examining your credit card statements. Because
of shutting down air transport this month, there are a lot of payments on credit
cards that were received and posted late. It looks like most card companies are
going ahead and adding penalties for late payments and leaving it to the
cardholders to complain. Not only does it cost credit users money (and provide
an unfair windfall to the card issuers) but it can also damage credit ratings
due to the automatic systems that influence our lives. (I thank Scott
Bonacker for pointing this out to me.)
From the FEI Express on September 21,
2001
PWC, 3I RELEASE
REPORT ON PRIVATE EQUITY From a historical perspective, 2001 is projected to
be a solid year of private equity investing globally, but not the
record-breakers that 1999 and 2000 were. So says the second annual survey
issued by worldwide consulting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers and global
investment firm 3i.
Their report,
"Global Private Equity 2001," looks at worldwide venture capital and
private equity investments during 2000 and early 2001, and makes projections
for the remainder of 2001. PwC is the world's largest professional services
organization, with more than 150,000 people in 150 countries. 3i invests in
businesses across three continents through local teams in Europe, Asia Pacific
and the U.S.A.
The publication is
rich in detail and analysis. Investments this year, the report says, will
exceed those made in 2000 in many of the top 20 countries, but U.S.
investments may fall to half of 2000's level, and Western Europe is likely to
experience similar, if lesser declines. Other findings include:
During 2000, private
equity investments surged 30 percent, to a new high of U.S.$177 billion. Of
that amount, $113 billion went to technology-related companies. * Total
investments have increased globally by an annual average growth rate of 35
percent over the last six years. * The U.S. accounted for $122 billion, or 69
percent of worldwide investments, about four times the amount recorded in
Western Europe. * While no record breaker, 2001 is likely to be the third
biggest year in private equity history.
The report is
posted at www.pwcmoneytree.com
under the heading "Special Reports," or www.3i.com/essential
reading/themarket/. Hard copies may be obtained by contacting Keith Arundale
of PwC in London at keith.arundale@uk.pwcglobal.com
.
From Syllabus e-News on September 25, 2001
McGraw-Hill Picks Firm for Higher Ed Simulation
Courseware
McGraw-Hill last week picked Baltimore-based SM
Consulting to develop higher-ed focused computer simulation software for the
publisher. The companies said the Internet-based simulations to be developed
will compliment collegiate-level course textbooks and foster new levels of
"interaction, collaboration and competition." SM Consulting Inc., is
a privately held, information technology services company with practices in
managed services, Web application development, and network operations support.
For more information, visit http://www.mcgraw-hill.com
.
Mcgraw-Hill also distributes the excellent SmartSims strategy interactive
simulations rooted in the venture startup of Pete Mazany at the University of
Auckland in New Zealand --- http://www.netmike.com/
Doctors in New York have successfully
removed the gall bladder from a woman in France, using a remote-controlled robot
--- http://www.wired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,46946,00.html
Top Five Marketing Concerns for the
Next Five Years What marketers will need to know in the future. http://www.newmedia.com/nm-ie.asp?articleID=3064
From FEI Express on September 28, 2001
STOCK OPTION ACCOUNTING UPDATE
The International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) recently issued a press
release announcing some of its recent decisions regarding accounting treatment
of stock options (see http://www.iasb.org.uk). Chief among the decisions made,
and one omitted from the press release, was the "tentative decision"
to adopt an international accounting standard that requires companies to assign
a "fair value" to employee stock options. Financial Executives
International has consistently warned that such a move, which would require
companies to treat the issuance of employee stock options as an operating cost,
could ultimately undermine the IASB's goal of creating a single set of
high-quality, understandable and meaningful global accounting standards. To read
the entire press release issued by FEI in response, click here: http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=105&STORY=/www/story/09-21-2001/0001576563
.
Forwarded by Robert B Walker [walkerrb@ACTRIX.CO.NZ]
FASB Understanding the Issues: Vol 4 Series 1
---
I refer to the monograph on credit standing &
liability measurement written by Crooch & Upton. --- http://accounting.rutgers.edu/raw/fasb/statusreport_articles/vol4_series1.html
The article seems to suggest you wish to have
feedback on this and other matters. Accordingly, I send my thoughts on this
matter.
I would begin by observing that I think Concepts
Statement 7 is inconsistent with the earlier 1996 study from which it was
derived. I found that study utterly persuasive so I do not now find CS-7
persuasive. In moments of cynicism, I think that Mr Upton’s apparent
epiphany is related more to the politics of accountancy than to its conceptual
purity.
By this I mean that the measurement of liabilities at
risk free interest rate rather than at a rate reflecting credit standing would
be so anathema to the generality of accountants that it is futile to suggest
it. Indeed the Crooch & Upton begin by stating a basic premise of
axiomatic significance to their case – no gain or loss should arise when
engaging in simple borrowing. The idea that no sooner one entered a loan
agreement than a loss would arise (because it would invariably be a loss)
would have most accountants in a state of high dudgeon.
The issue then is one of gain or loss. But then that
is only if you perceive the world from an income orientation perspective. I
don’t, primarily because of the influence of the conceptual framework. This
is reinforced by my work as a liquidator of companies. I see the world purely
from a balance sheet perspective and one subject to realisable value at that.
In other words, I see the utility of accounting only in terms of solvency
determination with all that entails in regard to the going concern assumption.
Unlike the United States, in the jurisdiction in
which I live accounting has been rendered central to creditor protection in
our corporate law. Central to this law, in turn, is the conceptual framework
(at least in my view and to test the hypothesis I have a case before the
courts now). I am then caused considerable misgiving as the final consequence
of FASB’s view is the effective emasculation of our law built, essentially,
on American conceptual development.
The ultimate consequence of what FASB propose is that
as a company slides toward insolvency its liability value declines, the value
of its net worth increases. Presumably as it has no credit standing at all
because it is insolvent, it has no liabilities. This may be practically true
when the creditors miss out but in my jurisdiction at least it is not legally
true because those responsible for the creditors loss are held accountable,
the impediments of the legal system notwithstanding.
I note that Crooch & Upton make reference in a
footnote to the theory of Robert Merton in which it is implied that the
residual assets are able to be ‘put’ to satisfy the claims of creditors.
That may be true in an economist’s fantasy but it is not true in law, a
rather more important arena.
I say perceiving a decline in the value of a
liability is considerably more counter-intuitive than the problem of
accelerating the recognition of cost of debt. This is a mere triviality by
comparison. After all the same amount of charge is recognised over time. The
advantage of accelerating loss is that it causes an entity to be more
inhibited in its distribution policy as it has less equity to draw upon. That
is to the advantage of creditors.
It seems to me that there needs to be an objective
value at which to determine the value of a liability, this being central to
the ability to liquidate. Mr Upton in his 1996 study demonstrates that such a
value will represent the price the debtor has to pay to have the liability
taken away. That price will be determined by the seller providing sufficient
resources to the buyer to ensure that the buyer will avoid any risk. The
resources would need to be enough to acquire a risk free asset with the same
maturity profile as the liability.
The effect of perceiving the ‘price’ of a
liability in this way is to necessitate that it is discounted at a risk free
rate.
I note that the only way to make CS-7 coherent is to
assume that such transfers of assets are always made between parties of the
same credit standing. This pertains to one of the major practical difficulties
of reflecting credit standing in accounting measurement – that is knowing
what it is. It may be easily determined in the publicly listed world in which
Crooch & Upton inhabit. It is not in the small, closely held corporate
world in which I operate. For accounting to have long term validity it must be
applicable in all circumstances.
I think it fair to note that there is another
dimension to this that tends to undermine what I believe. I have a theoretical
notion that the world upon consolidation nets to nil. That is to say, my
financial asset and your financial liability must have the same value in our
respective records. Call this a principle of reciprocity.
Theoretically, so far as I understand it a lender
will discount the face value of a zero discount bond at the risk free rate
after having adjusted for the probability of receiving nothing at all. The
effect of doing that is, at the inception of an advance, to carry the value of
the asset at the cash value paid at that time. If the application of the
principle of reciprocity was applied when the liability was revalued in the
books of the debtor, the creditor would take up a gain that denied any risk
existed.
I find this inconvenient as it causes me to abandon a
notion in which I fundamentally believe. I will just have to suffer cognitive
dissonance, won’t I? But then one should not underestimate the psychology
that underlies accounting, particularly in the face of the paradoxes it is
capable of generating.
Also see other articles on related topics at http://accounting.rutgers.edu/raw/fasb/statusreport_articles/
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory.htm
From Jeff Romine [jromine@TRUMAN.EDU]
I want to bring something to your attention. As we
discuss the changes that are necessary in accounting education, eventually the
discussion will address high school accounting education. I am not sure how
may states are like Missouri but in Missouri the State Department of
Elementary and Secondary Education publishes educational competency standards
for accounting. You may view them at:
http://www.dese.state.mo.us/divvoced/business/accounting.htm
A quick review of these standards demonstrates a
"bookkeeping" orientation. This orientation probably leaves college
bound students with the wrong impression of accounting. However, I suspect
that these standards reflect the national standards. You may check out the web
site for the National Business Education Association at http://www.nbea.org/
This means that your state may have a similar list of competencies. Please
check it out in your state.
Now for the main point. If the AAA and or the AICPA
want to change how students perceive accounting and what they learn in
beginning high school accounting the NBEA and/or the State Departments of
Education might be a good place to start. I am hopeful that this is already
happening.
Please do not think that high school business
education is the only place that change is required.
The Real Terrorist Plot Thickens
The suspicion is that whoever was
responsible for the attacks - most likely Saudi terrorist Osama bin Laden -
tried to profit from them by short selling stocks. This basically means selling
loads of shares before the attacks and then buying them back once the share
price had slumped. The most obvious shares for this would be airlines stocks,
those companies based in the World Trade Center and insurance companies - and
these are where investigations are likely to begin --- http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/57/21725.html
Of course this could also be done with
a variety financial instruments derivative contracts. Investigators are going to
have to sort through a lot of contracts.
And is it just coincident that:
"Attack Destroyed SEC Enforcement Office; CFTC's New York Offices Were Also
Leveled," by Michael Schroeder and Mitchell Pacelle, The Wall Street
Journal, September 13, 2001, PageA1,A2 --- http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB1000348229290230479.djm
TOPICS: Auditing, Financial Accounting, Financial Statement Analysis
WHAT TO DO IF YOUR PURSE OR WALLET IS MISSING
Hi Bob,
We've all heard horror stories about fraud
that's committed on us by people who use your name, address, SS#,
credit, etc. Unfortunately I (the author of this piece who happens to be
an attorney) have firsthand knowledge, because my wallet was stolen last
month and within a week the thieve(s) ordered an expensive monthly cell
phone package, applied for a VISA credit card, had a credit line
approved to buy a Gateway computer, received a PIN number from DMV to
change my driving record information online, and more.
But here's some critical information to limit
the damage in case this happens to you or someone you know. As everyone
always advises, cancel your credit cards immediately, but the key is
having the toll free numbers and your card numbers handy so you know
whom to call. Keep those where you can find them easily. File a police
report immediately in the jurisdiction where it was stolen, this proves
to credit providers you were diligent, and is a first step toward an
investigation (if there ever is one).
But here's what is perhaps most important: (I
never ever thought to do this) - Call the three nationa credit reporting
organizations immediately to place a fraud alert on your name and SS#. I
had never heard of doing that until advised by a bank that called to
tell me an application for credit was made over the Internet in my name.
The alert means any company that checks your credit knows your
information was stolen and they have to contact you by phone to
authorize newcredit. By the time I was advised to do this, almost 2
weeks after the theft, all the damage had been done.
There are records of all the credit checks
initiated by the thieves' purchases, none of which I knew about before
placing the alert. Since then, no additional damage has been done, and
the thieves threw my wallet away this weekend (someone turned it in). It
seems to have stopped them in their tracks.
The numbers are:
- Equifax: 1-800-525-6285
- Experian (formerly TRW): 1-888-397-3742
- Trans Union: 1-800-680-7289
- Social Security Administration (fraud line):
1-800-269-0271
We pass along just about everything. Do think
about passing this information along. It could really help someone?
Bev Koebrich [auntiebev@mediaone.net]
|
Appeals for the American Institute of
Certified Public Accountants ---
http://www.cpa2biz.com/CS2000/TaskCenters/Learning/Disaster+Recovery/Melancon,+Eddy+Call+on+CPAs+to+Volunteer.htm
Dear
Financial Planning Practitioner:
With
the recent tragic events in New York City, Washington, DC and Pennsylvania
still reverberating across this country, the AICPA’s Board of Directors, its
staff and its members have been deeply affected.
Included in the thousands of people affected by this tragedy, we are
currently aware of many CPAs who worked in the World Trade Center and the
immediate area. Thus, the AICPA
wants to help all of the survivors and families of victims get through this
crisis with our contributions and our expertise.
As
professionals with expertise that can help people in need, we want to mobilize
our members to help the survivors and families of victims.
To that end, we are looking for members with a demonstrated knowledge
of financial planning matters to volunteer their services to help survivors
and families of victims with the financial planning issues that they will face
in the aftermath of the events of September 11th.
Volunteers
will provide those in need with free consultation services to establish
direction that will start them on their road to recovery – something we
envision will require a commitment of several hours per consultation.
These people will need assistance with issues, such as:
·
Whether they have enough money to
make it through the next few weeks or months.
·
How to apply for life insurance
policies and benefits.
·
Dealing with continuation of
benefits.
·
How to apply for federal and state
benefits, including social security.
·
Settling estates.
·
Transferring retirement plans to
beneficiaries.
·
Investing lump sum payments.
·
Planning for college.
·
Tax planning.
To
volunteer, please call the AICPA at 877-CPA-4ALL (877-272-4255) between the
hours of 8:00 AM and 8:00 PM Eastern time as soon as you can.
Tell the operator that you want to reach out to help those in need.
Alternatively, you may contact the AICPA via email at cpa4all@aicpa.org.
If contacting us via email, be sure to include the following contact
information: name, company name, complete address, phone, fax, email, areas of
expertise, and the region of the country that you are able to assist in.
Your name will be added to a list of practitioners donating their
expertise. As people or families
in need call for assistance, they will be matched with a volunteering
financial planning professional.
CPA2Biz
is assisting the AICPA in this effort. A
dedicated resource center is being created at www.cpa2biz.com/recovery,
which will provide practitioners with information, articles, and resources
related to the issues that arise from this tragedy and that can also be used
to assist you in your volunteer efforts.
Please visit the site for important information for you, your clients,
and your employer.
To
the extent you cannot volunteer your services, it would greatly help our
effort if you would provide relevant articles or information that we can
disseminate to other practitioners as they help their clients through this
tragedy. This information should
be sent to the Financial Planning Team at pfp@aicpa.org.
We
are also accepting donations to help the survivors and families of victims.
The AICPA has the AICPA
Benevolent Fund that is used to help members and their families when they
face financial difficulty caused by serious illness, accident, death or other
major misfortunes. However, to
expand the scope of our assistance, the AICPA has established a new fund, CPAs
in Support of America Fund, Inc., to provide assistance to CPAs, CPA firms
and others affected by these events.
To
contribute to either fund, please send a check in the name of the fund to:
AICPA, Harborside Financial Center, 201 Plaza Three, Jersey City, NJ
07311-3881. For information
regarding contributions please consult our website, http://www.aicpa.org/,
or the CPA2Biz website, http://www.cpa2biz.com/.
Kathy G. Eddy,
CPA and Barry C. Melancon, CPA
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The good news is researchers don't
believe terrorists have the capability yet to attack with biological weapons.
The bad news is they believe such an attack could be devastating --- http://www.wired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,46924,00.html
Even if Lewis is
correct, that doesn't mean a biological attack can't happen. The chances a
terrorist organization does have bio-weapons increases dramatically if it is
sponsored by, say, Iraq or Pakistan, or another of the many countries that
have the scientific infrastructure in place to produce bio-weapons.
By 1991, Iraqis had
created weapons of anthrax, botulinum toxin and aflatoxin,
according to the Centers for Disease Control.
They didn't use them
in the Gulf War, although they did release chemical
weapons on the Kurds in 1988. The former Soviet
Union also had bio-warfare capabilities before its collapse.
Although the United
Nations destroyed what appeared to be the final remains of the Iraqi offensive
program in 1996, the United Nations Special Commission is not
confident that Iraq has abandoned biological weapons research.
According to Jay
Davis, a national security fellow at Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory, and former director of the defense threat
reduction agency at the Department of Defense, it's also possible that
terrorists have been working on developing a biological weapon for many years,
if one were to judge by the intricate and persistent planning that went into
the attack last week.
If anything is clear,
it's that the United States is incapable of dealing with a biological attack
-- a situation that has been hammered home perhaps too loudly to terrorists,
said Mark Wheelis, a professor of microbiology and a bioweapons historian at
the University of California at Davis.
"If terrorists
are interested in biological weapons, it's probably our fault since we had the
Secretary of Defense going on TV saying this is America's greatest
vulnerability," Wheelis said.
If terrorists did
succeed, and anthrax, smallpox,
bubonic plague,
tularemia or
any of many other potentially deadly microbes were released upon American
civilians, it's likely they would go undetected until people started getting
sick. That might be too late.
A World
Health Organization study estimated that if a tularemia biological weapon
were used against a modern city of 5 million people, it would cause 250,000
illnesses and 19,000 deaths.
The attack would
trigger cases of pneumonia, pleuritis and lymph node disease within three to
five days after exposure. Unless treated with effective antibiotics, the
disease could lead to serious illness including respiratory failure, shock or
death.
Researchers are
looking for ways to detect bio-attacks before they cause sickness, but no 100
percent reliable technologies exist to date.
The rest of the article is at http://www.wired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,46924,00.html
History Through Deaf Eyes --- http://depts.gallaudet.edu/deafeyes/
Gallaudet University
is developing a traveling social history exhibition about deaf Americans.
Using objects and images collected by individuals, organizations, and schools
for deaf students, this exhibition will illustrate shared experiences of
family life, education, and work—as well as the divergent ways deaf people
see themselves, communicate, employ and adapt available technology, and
determine their own futures.
The Web pages at this
site show the plan for the exhibition along with selected photos that will be
on display.
Evolution (from PBS Television) --- http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/
Book Review: Design for Community
What works on the Web when creating and running thriving virtual communities. http://www.newmedia.com/nm-ie.asp?articleID=3065
Science, Technology and the CIA
(History) http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB54/index.html
International Security http://usinfo.state.gov/topical/pol/
Last week I wrote:
Now here is an interesting idea, I wonder if it
works? Its worth a try. Even if it only works halfway at least you'll find out
before those helpful emails show up from friends and strangers.
This morning I got a helpful email pointing out that
the message I forwarded was a hoax. You can read about it at:
http://antivirus.about.com/library/weekly/aa082801b.htm
Moral of the story: Don't forward anything unless you
can somehow verify the source, and don't think that you can't be fooled
anyway.
Scott Bonacker,
CPA McCullough, Officer & Company, LLC Springfield, Missouri moccpa.com
depressedteens.com - (reaching out,
mental health, psychology) http://www.depressedteens.com/indexfl.html
Fifty to one hundred of the spoken
languages today are expected to disappear during the 21st Century (Linguistics).
The Rosetta Project --- http://www.rosettaproject.org:8080/live
The Rosetta Project is
a global collaboration of language specialists and native speakers working to
develop a contemporary version of the historic Rosetta Stone. In this updated
iteration, our goal is a meaningful survey and near permanent archive of 1,000
languages. Our intention is to create a unique platform for comparative
linguistic research and education as well as a functional linguistic tool that
might help in the recovery of lost languages in unknown futures.
Online Directory of English as a Second Language Resources http://www.cal.org/ericcll/ncbe/esldirector
Advances in Language Translation
"The World Wide Translator," Technology Review from MIT, by
Alan Leo September 21, 2001 --- http://www.techreview.com/web/leo/leo092101.asp
"This whole area of language is extremely
complex," says IDC analyst Steve McClure. "It's probably the most
complicated problem in computer science that I'm aware of."
Computer-assisted translation typically involves two
steps. First, a rules engine parses the original sentence, attempting to
identify the relationships between the words. The engine then translates each
word within the context that it believes to be correct—often with mixed
results.
That's how most machine translation works, including
Altavista's Babelfish Web site (source of the example above, translated from
English to Italian and back) and freetranslation.com.
"Unfortunately," says Mark Lancaster, CEO
of SDL International, a London-based globalization firm, "the way that we
speak is very ambiguously. And so it's very difficult to interpret random
input, which is essentially how we speak." As a result, no matter how
good a rules engine is, a human translator still must correct its mistakes
("Hour is the moment…").
This second step remains the most time-consuming and
expensive aspect of translation, often requiring expertise in a specific
technical field as well as in the source and target languages. Moreover, two
human experts may translate the same passage differently in texts where
consistency is desired.
To correct this problem, translation memory stores
the human-corrected translation along with the original, non-translated text.
For each document, the software compares each sentence of the original to its
growing translation memory.
When it finds a sentence it has seen before, it uses
the remembered translation instead of the rules engine—knowing, instead of
guessing. It then flags the new sections, cutting down the time spent by human
reviewers. And as it adds each successive document to its translation memory,
it knows more and guesses less.
For closely related sentences, fuzzy matching allows
the software to produce a partial translation while flagging the differences
for a human reviewer.
While not all computer-aided translation incorporates
translation memory, many globalization software providers, including Trados,
Mendez, Star AG, Atril, SDL, and Alchemy Software offer products that do.
Who Wants to Play?
Lancaster is excited about the potential to share
translation memories. "We've been building translation memories for ten
years, so we have pretty big database repositories," he says.
For now, Lancaster says, SDL uses those databases
only for its own translation work but plans to develop a shareable one:
customers using SDL's translation software, SDLX, will gain access to a
massive database of past translations. The price of admission? Customers will
have to share their resultsWho or pay a premium to keep them private.
But the idea remains controversial. Would a company
willingly share its intellectual property, potentially with competitors? They
might in exchange for a discount, claims Lancaster.
Such a tradeoff may appeal to small or medium-sized
companies, says McClure, but large companies consider their translation
memories valuable intellectual property and would be unlikely to share them.
"If Cisco has to go to the trouble of
translating the gigabit router instructions to Mandarin Chinese, that's not
going to be easy," agrees analyst Eric Schmitt of Forrester Research.
"It's going to be expensive. Cisco doesn't want to go to the trouble and
then have Alcatel and Juniper come along and get the same benefit."
Still, while these challenges remain great, they may
not be computer translation's largest stumbling block, says David Parmenter of
Basis Technology in Cambridge, MA, a firm that assists companies in moving
their business worldwide.
"The bulk of the translation business is built
on foreign translators who do the work piecemeal," Parmenter says.
"It's hard to beat the economics of that."
Capitol Spotlight - keeping track of
key votes in Washington, Politics) --- http://www.c-span.org/capitolspotlight/
Michael Moore was featured speaker on the Trinity University campus on
September 24. It is great to have controversial personalities from all
sides of life speak on campus. Michael Moore is a popular, funny, and
clever speaker who jousts with the windmills of corporations (Roger and Me),
television (TV Nation) and just about everything else connected with the
wealthy and powerful (Downsize This!). However, sometimes Moore
takes things too far. For example, he argues that O.J. Simpson was too
stupid, rich, and unimaginative to be guilty. Is that really funny?
The implication is that he would more likely to have cut off the head of his
wife in a jealous rage if he were brilliant, poor, and creative.
Those interested in the history and controversy surrounding Michael Moore may
want to take a look at "Michael Moore: Radical Chic or Radical Schlub?"
by Nick Mamatas - December 28, 2000 --- http://www.disinfo.com/pages/dossier/id556/pg1/
Four-Letter Expletives from the Far
Left (I left out those parts.)
"CAMBRIDGE DISPATCH Left Back by Jonathan Cohn, The New Republic, September
20, 2001 --- http://www.tnr.com/100101/cohn100101.html
If all this sounds
familiar, that's because it is. Since its coming-out party two years ago in
Seattle, the anti-globalization movement has been frequently described as a
new force in American politics, the product of a new generation with new
arguments and concerns. And it is true that the movement's focus on
corporations and global finance, as opposed to governments and armies,
represented a change from the leftist campaigns of the 1970s and '80s. But
last week, when the terrorist attacks put governments and armies back at the
center of American politics, the fresh-faced radicals sounded just like their
generational predecessors. And so on Friday, when United Students Against
Sweatshops pulled out of its planned demonstrations against the IMF and World
Bank, it also urged members to participate in "peace-oriented
events" over the coming weeks: "We stand firmly against sentiments
of military retaliation," the organization said, sounding exactly like
the student activists of 1968 or 1991. Last spring a group of Harvard students
seemed to break new ground in campus activism when they staged a sit-in to
protest low wages for the school's custodial workers. Now some members of that
group are starting the Harvard Initiative for Peace and Justice; vigils and
letter-writing campaigns against military action are already in the works.
But not all of the
anti-globalization left is on board. Mindful of its membership's
sentiments--not to mention the police officers, firefighters, and other union
workers killed in the attacks--the AFL-CIO not only canceled its planned IMF/World
Bank demonstrations, but it also endorsed, in no uncertain terms, military
reprisal. "We deplore the assault," said AFL-CIO President John
Sweeney, "and we stand fully behind the President and the leadership of
our nation in this time of national crisis." The AFL-CIO has asked its
door-to-door canvassers, initially dispatched to drum up support for the
anti-globalization cause, to collect donations on behalf of the terrorism
victims instead. On Capitol Hill, some of globalization's fiercest critics,
like Marcy Kaptur, the congresswoman from the Rust Belt city of Toledo, are
morphing into some of the Democratic Party's biggest hawks.
All of which
represents a very serious problem for the left. One of the anti-globalization
movement's primary goals--and primary successes--in its short life has been
repairing the generation-old gulf between intellectuals and labor. Students
have flocked to union-run organizing camps; a group of labor-friendly
intellectuals established Scholars, Artists, and Writers for Social Justice.
Now, with one awful attack, that alliance is splitting at the seams. The hard
hats and the hippies are on opposite sides of the barricades once again. At
the teach-in at MIT, activists seemed to be gearing up for their generation's
Vietnam--a chance to take on U.S. militarism and imperialism in their own
time. They seemed to have forgotten that until last week, that was precisely
the debate the American left was trying to avoid.
After the 1993 bombing of the World
Trade Center, most businesses there started backing up electronic data on a
regular basis --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,47004,00.html
The Emerging Issues Task Force , a group that operates under the auspices of
the Financial Accounting Standards Board , has announced a plan whereby U.S.
firms that have suffered a financial loss due to the recent terrorist attacks
will be able to treat the loss as extraordinary on company financial statements,
thus not impacting the company's current income or loss. http://www.accountingweb.com/item/36674
"Surge of New Technologies Erodes
U.S. Edge in Spying," by William J. Broad, The New York Times,
September 20, 2001 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2001/09/20/national/20SPY.html
For decades, the
United States used its technical expertise to gather electronic signals and
eavesdrop on the intimate conversations of its adversaries, including Kremlin
leaders in their limousines. Fleets of satellites blanketed the globe,
overhearing all manner of signals, messages and conversations, day and night.
But the experts say
the rapid growth of commercially available technologies is fast eroding the
government's edge. New computer power gives wide access to unbreakable or
virtually unbreakable codes. Fiber-optic lines give off no electronic
emanations that can be gathered. Even radio waves, the spy's best friend, are
evading capture as radios hop frequencies almost randomly to outwit
eavesdroppers
The nation's
declining ability to listen surreptitiously to global communications may turn
out to have been a major reason there was little or no warning of hijackers
intent on turning commercial jets into flying bombs, security experts say.
To be sure, they add,
the communications revolution also offers new opportunities for spying, like
snooping on cellphones. And Washington has embarked on an aggressive if quiet
campaign to research, design and acquire equipment to sharpen its espionage
edge.
But on balance,
experts say, the intelligence losses outweigh the gains and will for some
time.
"The government
is trying to close the barn door," said Angelo M. Codevilla, a professor
of international relations at Boston University who was on the staff of the
Senate intelligence committee for eight years. "The horse left a long
time ago. And it's not coming back."
A longtime federal
official whose work relies on the fruits of technical espionage agreed.
"It's getting
harder each year to pick up what we need," the official said. "Our
potential adversaries are on the verge of denying access."
Moreover,
intelligence experts say, the government is short of seasoned analysts and new
ones lack such essential skills as knowledge of foreign languages. Also, they
say, while infiltration is theoretically the best approach to terrorist cells,
in practice it is often impossible to achieve, especially among zealots intent
on martyrdom.
Surveillance cameras roll at,
fittingly, George Orwell Plaza in Barcelona. Unlike in the United States, where
such intrusions are often viewed as invasions of privacy, few here seem to mind
--- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,46932,00.html
Over 23,000 white papers (categorized) in information technology --- http://itpapers.com/
You can also submit a paper to this site.
One of the great MIS sites is at ISWORLD
at http://www.isworld.org/isworld/isworldtext.html
Great AIS links are
also provided by Alan Sangster at http://www.qub.ac.uk/mgt/alans/alans.htm
United Nations officials say the
Taliban have threatened to execute any of its workers who use computers or
electronics communications equipment. The question is why the U. N. allows
its employees to take such huge risks by staying in that country --- http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,47074,00.html
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan
-- The Taliban have threatened to execute any U.N. worker who uses computers
and communications equipment in Afghanistan, forcing a near halt to the
remaining relief work in the country, U.N. officials said Monday.
The militia raided
U.N. offices in Kabul, the capital, and Kandahar, where the Taliban leadership
is based, during the weekend and sealed their satellite telephones,
walkie-talkies, computers and vehicles to bar them from use, according to U.N.
spokeswoman Stephanie Bunker.
"They warned our
staff that if they use these things they will face execution," said
Gordon Weiss, the spokesman for UNICEF in Islamabad.
Congress isn't going to rush to rewrite
wiretapping and immigration laws, insist Democratic and GOP legislators. They
say they'll move quickly on President Bush's anti-terrorism plan, while being
careful to balance security with freedom --- http://www.wired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,47086,00.html
"Real-Life Cyborg Challenges Reality With Technology," by Bruce
Schechter, The New York Times, September 25, 2001 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2001/09/25/science/physical/25CYBO.html
Over the past few years, Dr. Mann has critiqued what
he calls the totalitarian possibilities of technology through inventions like
SeatSale and documentary films like "Shooting Back," which is part
Marshall McLuhan and part Michael Moore. While some people call these
activities performance art, Dr. Mann prefers to call them experiments and
publishes essays about them in technological journals alongside his more
conventional, equation-laden work.
To make "Shooting Back," Dr. Mann, equipped
with his hidden "wearcam," went into chain stores and innocently
asked why there were domes on the ceiling. He secretly filmed the employees'
evasiveness and their defensive responses — "They're here for your own
good" — and then reached into his bag and pulled out a video camera of
his own. At that point, he was usually kicked out of the store.
"Of all places I go, it's the casinos and
department stores and police stations that object most strongly to my
apparatus," he said. "And yet those are the places where I feel it's
most needed to prevent what would be a one-sided totalitarian regime."
Lately, Dr. Mann has been working to design chips to
run some of the algorithms he has developed for his wearcam so they will be
cheaply and readily available.
His most important innovation is a mathematical
technique that he calls video orbits. The images that flow through Dr. Mann's
eyetap camera are used to record his moving gaze. The video orbit algorithm
takes these images and automatically pastes them together to make a seamless
whole. By pasting together many overlapping images, the low- resolution camera
behind the glasses effectively becomes a camera of far higher resolution.
More important, the video orbit algorithm tracks head
movement well enough to allow the computer to superimpose a fixed display on
the world. So, equipped with face recognition software, the display could
attach name tags to faces. Or when the software recognizes an advertisement
that had been earlier placed in a "kill file," it can superimpose
something more suitable.
This technology also makes it possible for Dr. Mann's
wife to "accompany" him (via the Internet) when he is shopping.
"My wife can pop inside my head," he said. "And if I reach for
whole milk, she can draw an X through it to give me a hint or suggestion. If
she thinks a used car salesman is lying to me, she could draw a Pinocchio nose
on him."
The algorithm now runs on a rather bulky computer
that barely fits the description of portable. But Dr. Mann predicts that
within a year it will run on a custom chip that can be implanted in the eyetap
glasses.
He expects wearable computers to become common in 10
years. "I just see it as the thing that replaces all the things you
normally carry around: cellphones, pagers, wristwatches, all those things
become subsumed into one item," he said.
Dr. Mann is less fascinated by the equipment than
with the changes it represents. "People are amazed that I can read my
e-mail while I'm walking down the street," he said. "Big deal —
it's just a side effect of having a computer blasting right into your eye. The
real powerful thing is that you're experiencing the world through it, and
that's something none of the other things that we carry do. It's allowing a
new form of communication, namely communication by modifying the visual
perception of reality."
"Oracle boss urges national ID
cards, offers free software Idea driven by security concerns," by Paul
Rogers and Elise Ackerman, Mercury News, September 25, 2001 --- http://www.siliconvalley.com/docs/news/svfront/ellsn092301.htm
Broaching a
controversial subject that has gained visibility since the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks, Oracle Chairman and CEO Larry Ellison is calling for the United
States to create a national identification card system -- and offering to
donate the software to make it possible.
Under Ellison's
proposal, millions of Americans would be fingerprinted and the information
would be placed on a database used by airport security officials to verify
identities of travelers at airplane gates.
``We need a national
ID card with our photograph and thumbprint digitized and embedded in the ID
card,'' Ellison said in an interview Friday night on the evening news of KPIX-TV
in San Francisco.
``We need a database
behind that, so when you're walking into an airport and you say that you are
Larry Ellison, you take that card and put it in a reader and you put your
thumb down and that system confirms that this is Larry Ellison,'' he said.
`Absolutely free'
Ellison's company,
Oracle, based in Redwood Shores, is the world's leading maker of database
software. Ellison, worth $15 billion, is among the world's richest people.
``We're quite willing
to provide the software for this absolutely free,'' he said.
Calls for national ID
cards traditionally have been met with fierce resistance from civil liberties
groups, who say the cards would intrude on the privacy of Americans and allow
the government to track people's movements.
But Ellison said in
the electronic age, little privacy is left anyway.
``Well, this privacy
you're concerned about is largely an illusion,'' he said. ``All you have to
give up is your illusions, not any of your privacy. Right now, you can go onto
the Internet and get a credit report about your neighbor and find out where
your neighbor works, how much they earn and if they had a late mortgage
payment and tons of other information.''
Attempts by the
Mercury News to reach Ellison for further comment Saturday were unsuccessful.
Many questions about the proposal remain unanswered, such as whether foreign
nationals would be required to have a card to enter the country. The hijackers
in the Sept. 11 attacks are not believed to have been U.S. citizens.
In the TV interview
with anchorman Hank Plante, Ellison said shoppers have to disclose more
information at malls to buy a watch than they do to get on an airplane.
``Let me ask you.
There are two different airlines. Airline A says before you board that
airplane you prove you are who you say you are. Airline B, no problem. Anyone
who wants the price of a ticket, they can go on that airline. Which airplane
do you get on?''
Oracle has a
longstanding relationship with the federal government. Indeed, the CIA was
Ellison's first customer, and the company's name stems from a CIA-funded
project launched in the mid-1970s that sought better ways of storing and
retrieving digital data.
Civil libertarians
said caution is needed.
``It strikes me as a
form of overreaction to the events that we have experienced,'' said Robert
Post, a constitutional law professor at the University of California-Berkeley.
``If we allow a terrorist attack to destroy forms of freedom that we have
enjoyed, we will have given the victory to them. This kind of recommendation
does just that.''
Post said while such
a system may catch some criminals, it could be hacked or faked or evaded by
capable terrorists. Nor is it clear that such a system would have foiled the
Sept. 11 attacks, he said.
Strong support
But polls last week
show many Americans support a national ID card.
In a survey released
Wednesday by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press, seven of
10 Americans favored a requirement that citizens carry a national identity
card at all times to show to a police officer upon request. The proposal had
particularly strong support from women. There was less support for government
monitoring of telephone calls, e-mails and credit card purchases.
The FBI already has
an electronic fingerprint system for criminals.
In July 1999, the
FBI's Integrated Automated Fingerprint Identification System became
operational. That system keeps an electronic database of 41 million
fingerprints, with prints from all 10 fingers of people who have been
convicted of crimes.
For the remainder of the article, go to
- http://www.siliconvalley.com/docs/news/svfront/ellsn092301.htm
Book Review: Fresh Styles for Web
Designers A new group of cutting-edge Web designers are changing the face of the
Web, embracing its quirks. http://www.newmedia.com/nm-ie.asp?articleID=3087
It's not so easy to become one these
days!
America's 40 Richest Under 40 (from Fortune) --- http://www.fortune.com/sitelets/40under40/intro.html
Another factor that will help keep traditional mail
alive in some form is "message overload." Because of e-mail, voice
mail, cellular phones and faxes, people today receive a far greater volume of
messages than many can handle. A study conducted by the Menlo Park,
California-based Institute for the Future found that working Americans today are
sending and receiving an average of 190 messages a day, up from 178 in 1997 and
substantially more than several years ago.
Institute for the Future --- http://www.nationalcenter.org/NPA227.html
The New York publisher appeals an
Australian judge's ruling that allows an Australian man to sue for defamation.
The case has major implications for publishers on the Internet --- http://whttp://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,46986,00.htmlww.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,46986,00.html
"Home Schooling in the United
States: Trends and Characteristics" ( US Census Bureau) http://www.census.gov/population/www/documentation/twps0053.html
Meeting God (Hindu Religion) http://www.amnh.org/exhibitions/meeting_god/index.html
What is the name of the first accounting firm in United States? http://www.accountingweb.com/item/58643
The Oklahoma not-so-Good-SAM hacker
portrayed in his community as being unjustly prosecuted admits he invaded a news
site with malicious intent. http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,47146,00.html
CHILDE: Children's Historical
Literature Disseminated throughout Europe (History, Art, Photography) --- http://www.bookchilde.org/
CHILDE is a project,
funded under the European Commission's Culture 2000 programme, that uses web
technology to allow wider and more open access to images from collections of
early children's books in Europe.
It is hoped that by
sharing these images and other resources with an international audience, the
CHILDE project will lay the foundations for a wider network of early
children's book collections.
VoiceXML Developer Series Everything
you ever wanted to know about VXML, but were afraid to ask. http://www.newmedia.com/nm-ie.asp?articleID=3094
"VoiceXML Developer
Series," by NewMedia Staff, NewMedia.com, September 26, 2001
VoiceXML is an XML
format that utilizes existing telephony technology to interact with users over
the telephone through speech recognition, speech synthesis, and standard Web
technologies. The first edition of the VoiceXML Developer series will provide
you with a synopsis of VoiceXML and a glimpse into the technology used to
develop VoiceXML applications. Subsequent editions will go into the specific
details of creating VoiceXML applications.
Background
The VoiceXML 1.0
specification was released on March 2000 by the VoiceXML Forum which was
founded by technologists from Lucent, AT&T, IBM, and Motorola. The group
was formed out of the need to create a unified standard for voice dialogs
rather than requiring customers to learn several XML specifications that had
been developed internally within each of the member's respective research labs
(starting as early as 1995). Other non-founders had also experimented with
voice dialog XML formats including HP's TalkML and Sun's Java Speech Markup
Language (JSML).
All of this led up to
October 2000, when the VoiceXML Forum released VoiceXML 1.0 to the Voice
Browser Group (founded in 1998) of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), the
recognized standards body for the Web. This independent body has been working
on the second version of the specification and have announced that it will
release a revised specification sometime towards the end of 2001.
The nascent industry
has grown rapidly since its millennium debut into a market that is expected to
reach $200 million dollars in 2001 and reach $24 billion by 2005. The industry
has been driven in part by an existing marketplace that has utilized
Interactive Voice Response (IVR) systems for call center automation; think
"Press 1 for your account balance. Press 2 to transfer funds".
You've probably used such a system to check your bank or credit card balances.
So VoiceXML fills an
existing need for automation by improving upon the current technology and
making it simpler to implement and integrate into the rest of the enterprise.
VoiceXML also provides a new opportunity for companies that have not been able
to afford the cost or complexity of an IVR system by using standard telephony
components and leverage its existing Web infrastructure, applications, and
developer skills.
Technologies
A VoiceXML system is
made up of of a VoiceXML gateway that accesses static or dynamic VoiceXML
content on the Web. The gateway contains a VoiceXML browser (interpreter),
Text-To-Speech (TTS), Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR), and the telephony
hardware that connects to the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) via a
T1, POTS, or ISDN telephone connection. A Plain Old Telephone Server (POTS)
line is the type that's installed in your home and can only handle a single
connection whereas a T1 contains 24 individual phone lines.
Bob Jensen's threads on XML and
VoiceXML are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/xmlrdf.htm
Subject: Terrorism of U and S by Dr.
Suess
Every U down in Uville liked U.S. a
lot,
But the Binch, who lived Far East of Uville, did not.
The Binch hated U.S! the whole U.S. way!
Now don't ask me why, for nobody can say,
It could be his turban was screwed on
too tight.
Or the sun from the desert had beaten too bright
But I think that the most likely reason of all
May have been that his heart was two sizes too small.
But, Whatever the reason, his heart or
his turban,
He stood facing Uville, the part that was urban.
"They're doing their business," he snarled from his perch.
"They're raising their families! They're going to church!
They're leading the world, and their
empire is thriving,
I MUST keep the S's and U's from surviving!"
Tomorrow, he knew, all the U's and the S's,
Would put on their pants and their shirts and their dresses,
They'd go to their offices, playgrounds
and schools,
And abide by their U and S values and rules,
And then they'd do something he liked least of all,
Every U down in U-ville, the tall and the small,
Would stand all united, each U and each
S,
And they'd sing Uville's anthem, "God bless us! God bless!"
All around their Twin Towers of Uville, they'd stand,
and their voices would drown every sound in the land.
"I must stop that singing,"
Binch said with a smirk,
And he had an idea--an idea that might work!
The Binch stole some U airplanes in U morning hours,
And crashed them right into the Uville Twin Towers.
"They'll wake to disaster!"
he snickered, so sour,
"And how can they sing when they can't find a tower?"
The Binch cocked his ear as they woke from their sleeping,
All set to enjoy their U-wailing and weeping,
Instead he heard something that started
quite low,
And it built up quite slow, but it started to grow--
And the Binch heard the most unpredictable thing...
And he couldn't believe it--they started to sing!
He stared down at U-ville, not
trusting his eyes,
What he saw was a shocking, disgusting surprise!
Every U down in U-ville, the tall and the small,
Was singing! Without any towers at all!
He HADN'T stopped U-Ville from singing!
It sung!
For down deep in the hearts of the old and the young,
Those Twin Towers were standing, called Hope and called Pride,
And you can't smash the towers we hold deep inside.
So we circle the sites where our
heroes did fall,
With a hand in each hand of the tall and the small,
And we mourn for our losses while knowing we'll cope,
For we still have inside that U-Pride and U-Hope.
For America means a bit more than
tall towers,
It means more than wealth or political powers,
It's more than our enemies ever could guess,
So may God bless America! Bless us! God bless!
Swinging With a Blanket is a Great Idea
Forwarded by Auntie Bev (a true story about a flight leaving the Denver
Airport)
The pilot/captain came on the loudspeaker after the
doors were closed. His speech went like this:
First I want to thank you for being brave enough to
fly today. The doors are now closed and we have no help from the outside for
any problems that might occur inside this plane. As you could tell when you
checked in, the government has made some changes to increase security in the
airports.
They have not, however, made any rules about what
happens after those doors close. Until they do that, we have made our own
rules and I want to share them with you. Once those doors close, we only have
each other.
The security has taken care of a threat like guns
with all of the increased scanning, etc. Then we have the supposed bomb. If
you have a bomb, there is no need to tell me about it, or anyone else on this
plane; you are already in control. So, for this flight, there are no bombs
that exist on this plane.
Now, the threats that are left are things like
plastics, wood, knives, and other weapons that can be made or things like that
which can be used as weapons.
Here is our plan and our rules. If someone or several
people stand up and say they are hijacking this plane, I want you all to stand
up together. Then take whatever you have available to you and throw it at
them. Throw it at their faces and heads so they will have to raise their hands
to protect themselves.
The very best protection you have against knives are
the pillows and blankets. Whoever is close to these people should then try to
get a blanket over their head--then they won't be able to see. Once that is
done, get them down and keep them there. Do not let them up. I will then land
the plane at the closest place and we WILL take care of them.
After all, there are usually only a few of them and
we are 200+ strong! We will not allow them to take over this plane.
I find it interesting that the US Constitution begins
with the words "We, the people"--that's who we are, THE people and
we will not be defeated.
With that, the passengers on the plane all began to
applaud, people had tears in their eyes, and we began the trip toward the
runway.
The flight attendant then began the safety speech.
One of the things she said is that we are all so busy and live our lives at
such a fast pace. She asked that everyone turn to their neighbors on either
side and introduce themselves, tell each other something about your families
and children, show pictures, whatever. She said "for today, we consider
you family. We will treat you as such and ask that you do the same with
us."
Throughout the flight we learned that for the crew,
this was their first flight since Tuesday's tragedies. It was a day that
everyone leaned on each other and together everyone was stronger than any one
person alone. It was quite an experience.
You can imagine the feeling when that plane touched
down at Dulles and we heard "welcome to Washington Dulles Airport, where
the local time is 5:40". Again, the cabin was filled with applause.
Last night I saw a program with college students
where one of them said that at their campus there are no more hyphenated
titles, i.e., African-American,etc., everyone is just an American. No one will
ever be able to take that pride away from us. "
Worst Country Song Titles (for real
recorded songs) --- http://www.downstream.sk.ca/country.htm
- All I Want From You (Is Away).
- All My Exes Live In Texas
- Am I Double Parked by the
Curbstone of Your Heart? (courtesy of Michael)
- At the Gas Station of Love, I Got
the Self Service Pump (courtesy of Barry)
- Bubba Shot The Jukebox
- Cow Cow Boogie
- Did I Shave my Legs for This? by
Deana Carter (courtesy of Scott)
- Don't Believe My Heart Can Stand
Another You.
- Don't Squeeze My Sharmon.
- Don't Strike A Match (To The Book
Of Love)
- Drop Kick Me Jesus Through The
Goal Posts Of Life.
- Get Your Biscuits In The Oven, And
Your Buns In The Bed.
- Go Back To Texas and Cheesey
French Fry Lake (thanks, Laura!)
- Guess My Eyes Were Bigger Than My
Heart.
- Her Only Bad Habit Is Me
- Hold On To Your Men..Cause she's
Single Again (courtesy of Susan)
- How Can I Miss You if You Won't Go
Away? (courtesy of Charles)
- How Can You Believe Me When I Say
I Love You, When You Know I've Been A Liar All My Life?
- How Come Your Dog Don't Bite
Nobody But Me?
- I Changed Her Oil, She Changed My
Life (courtesy of Charles)
- I Don't Do Floors
- I Don't Know Whether To Kill
Myself Or Go Bowling.
- I Fell In A Pile Of You And Got
Love All Over Me (courtesy of Charles)
- I Flushed You From The Toilets Of
My Heart (courtesy of Charles)
- I Gave Her My Heart And A Diamond
And She Clubbed Me With A Spade (courtesy of Bruce)
- I Gave Her the Ring, and She Gave
Me the Finger (courtesy of Maureen)
- I Got Tears In My Ears From Lying
On My Bed Crying On My Pillow Over You.
- I Got Through Everything But The
Door
- I Guess I Had Your Leavin' Coming
- I Keep Forgettin' I Forgot About
You (courtesy of Charles)
- I May Be Used, But Baby I Ain't
Used Up.
- I Sat Down On A Beartrap (Just
This Morning)
- I Still Miss You Baby... But
My Aim is Getting Better (courtesy of Eric)
- I Wanted You To Leave Until You
Left Me.
- I Wanna Whip Your Cow
(courtesy of Charles)
- I Wish I Were A Woman (So I Could
Go Out With A Guy Like Me) (courtesy of Mick)
- I Would Have Wrote You A Letter,
But I Couldn't Spell Yuck! (courtesy of Charles)
- I Wouldn't Take Her To A Dawg
Fight, Cause I'm Afraid She'd Win (courtesy of Charles)
- If Fingerprints Showed Up On Skin,
Wonder Whose I'd Find On You.
- If I Ain't Got It, You Don't Need
It.
- If I Can't Be Number One In Your
Life, Then Number Two On You (courtesy of Charles)
- If I Were In Your Shoes, I'd Walk
Right Back To Me (courtesy of Mick)
- If Love Were Oil, I'd Be A Quart
Low (courtesy of Charles)
- If My Nose Were Full of Nickels,
I'd Blow It All On You (courtesy of Charles)
- If She Hadn't Been So Good Lookin'
I Might Have Seen the Train (courtesy of Phil)
- If The Jukebox Took Teardrops
- If You Can't Bite, Don't Growl.
- If You Don't Leave Me, I'll Find
Someone Who Will (courtesy of Barry)
- If You Leave Me, Can I Come Too?
(courtesy of Charles)
- If You Really Loved Me, You'd
Leave (courtesy of Phil)
- If Whiskey Were A Woman, I'd Be
Married For Sure.
- I'll Marry You Tomorrow, But Let's
Honeymoon Tonight.
- I'll Tennessee You In My Dreams
- I'm Gonna Hire A Wino To Decorate
Our Home.
- I'm Here To Get My Baby Out Of
Jail
- I'm Quittin' Wild Turkey Cold
Turkey (courtesy of Mandy)
- I'm The Only Hell Mama Ever
Raised.
- It Only Takes One Bar (To Make A
Prison)
- I've Been Flushed From The
Bathroom Of Your Heart.
- I've Been Roped And Throwed By
Jesus In The Holy Ghost Corral.
- I've Got $5 And It's Saturday
Night
- Jim, I Wore A Tie Today
- Lay Something On My Bed Besides A
Blanket
- Make Me Late For Work Today.
- Mama Get The Hammer (There's A Fly
On Papa's Head) (courtesy of Charles)
- Mommy, Can I Still Call Him Daddy?
- My Head Hurts, My Feet Stink, And
I Don't Love Jesus.
- My John Deere Was Breaking Your
Field, While Your Dear John Was Breaking My Heart (courtesy of
Charles)
- My Wife Ran Off With My Best
Friend, And I Sure Do Miss Him (courtesy of Charles)
- Nashville Rash
- Occasional Wife
- Oh, I've Got Hair Oil On My Ears
And My Glasses Are Slipping Down, But Baby I Can See Through You (courtesy
of Charles)
- Overlonely and Underkissed
- Pardon Me, I've Got Someone To
Kill (courtesy of Charles)
- Phantom Of The Opry
- Pick Me Up On Your Way Down
- Poultry Promenade
- Queen Of My Double-Wide Trailer
- Redneck Martians Stole My Baby
- Refried Dreams
- She Feels Like A New Man Tonight.
- She Got The Gold Mine And I Got
The Shaft (courtesy of Charles)
- She Got The Ring And I Got The
Finger (courtesy of Charles)
- She Made Toothpicks Out Of The
Timber Of My Heart (courtesy of Charles)
- She Thinks My Tractor's Sexy
- She Walked Across My Heart Like It
Was Texas (courtesy of James)
- She's Actin' Single..... I'm
Drinkin' Doubles.
- She's Got Freckles On Her, But
She's Pretty (courtesy of Charles)
- She's Got the Rhythm (And I Got
the Blues)
- Thank God And Greyhound She's Gone
- Thanks To The Cathouse, I'm In The
Doghouse With You.
- The Man That Came Between Us (Was
Me)
- The Pint Of No Return.
- There Ain't Enough Room in my
Fruit Of The Looms to Hold All My Lovin' For You (courtesy of Atley)
- There's A Tear In My Beer
- They May Put Me In Prison, But
They Can't Stop My Face From Breakin' Out (courtesy of Charles)
- Tight Fittin' Jeans
- Trainwreck Of Emotion
- Velcro Arms, Teflon Heart
(courtesy of Charles)
- Waitin' In Your Welfare Line
- Walk Out Backwards Slowly So I'll
Think You're Walking In.
- Who's Gonna Mow Your Grass?
- Who's Gonna Take The Garbage Out
When I'm Dead And Gone?
- Whose Bed Have Your Boots Been
Under?
- Why Did You Leave the One You Left
Me For? (courtesy of the Johnson family)
- Why Don't We Get Drunk and Screw
(courtesy of Karen and James)
- Would Jesus Wear A Rolex On His
Television Show?
- Yard Sale
- You Can't Have Your Kate And Edith
Too.
- You Can't Roller Skate In A
Buffalo Herd
- You Done Tore Out My Heart And
Stomped That Sucker Flat (courtesy of Charles)
- You Were Only A Splinter As I Slid
Down The Banister Of Life (courtesy of Charles)
- Your Negligee Has Turned To
Flannel Nightgowns.
- Your Tattoo
- You're a Hard Dog To Keep Under
The Porch (courtesy of Susan)
- You're Going To Ruin My Bad
Reputation.
- You're Out Of Step (With The Beat
Of My Heart)
- You're The Reason Our Kids Are So
Ugly (courtesy of Charles)
- 80 Proof Bottle of Tear Stopper
Forwarded by Mr. Clean
I just received this from
my broker. I normally don't pass stock tips on, but I thought this
exception would be OK. If you hold any of the following stocks, you may want
to review.
American Can Co.
Interstate Water Co.
National Gas Co.
Northern Tissue Co.
Due to the uncertain market conditions, at this present time, we advise
you to sit tight on your American Can, hold your Water, and let go of your
Gas. You may be interested to know that Northern Tissue touched a new
bottom today, and millions were wiped clean.
Mr. Clean
Forwarded by Jay A. Vandenberg
If you bought $1000 worth of Nortel
stock one year ago, it would now be worth $49.
If you bought $1000 worth of
Budweiser (the beer, not the stock) one year ago, drank all the beer, and
traded in the cans for the nickeldeposit, you would have $79.
My advice to you is to stop investing
and start drinking heavily!!!
Blind American Bunnies
Once upon a time, in a nice little forest, there lived an blind little bunny
and a a big blind snake.
One day, the bunny was groping his way through the
forest in search of a peace rally. The snake laid across the path,
and the blind bunny stumbled to the ground.
"Oh, my," said the bunny, "I'm terribly sorry. I didn't mean
to trip over you. I've been blind since birth, so, I can't see where I'm going. In
fact, I don't even know who I am or what I'm about since the horrid attacks on
September 11."
"It's quite okay," replied the snake. "Actually, my story is
much the same as yours. I, too, have been blind since birth. Tell you what,
maybe I could kinda crawl over the top of you, and figure out what you are, so at least
you'll have that going for you."
"Oh, that would be wonderful," replied the bunny.
So the snake slithered all over the bunny, and said, "Well, you're
covered with soft fur; you have really long ears; your nose twitches; and you
have a soft cottony tail. I'd say that you must be one of those highly
vulnerable and unsuspecting American bunnies."
"Oh, thank you! Thank you," cried the bunny in obvious
patriotic excitement.
The bunny suggested to the snake, "Maybe I could feel you with my paw,
and help you the same way you've helped me."
So the bunny felt the snake all over, and remarked, "Well, you're scaly
and smooth, and you have a forked tongue, no backbone and no balls. I'd say you
must be one of the slimy opium and heroin suppliers that organized, in a blasphemy
of Islam, the recent terrorism attacks that killed
thousands of innocent, unsuspecting, and unarmed people. If you have your
way, bunnies like me will be put on the endangered species list."
"Yeah," replied the gleeful
vermin while ever-tightening his hug on the soft and vulnerable ball of fluff.
And that's the way it was on
October 2, 2001 with a little help from my friends.
In
March 2000, Forbes named AccountantsWorld.com as the Best Website on the
Web --- http://accountantsworld.com/.
Some top accountancy links --- http://accountantsworld.com/category.asp?id=Accounting
Another leading accounting site is
AccountingEducation.com at http://www.accountingeducation.com/
How
stuff works --- http://www.howstuffworks.com/
Professor
Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134 Email: rjensen@trinity.edu