Friday, January 9, 2009

Money | Read This Before You Remodel | WSJ

The HGTV/Contractor/Designer/HomeDepot/Mortgagebroker juggernaut drives on. But does it make sense? Viewing your home as a fashion statement will line several folks' pockets but certainly not yours. Check this for a current perspective on what is common sense in the remodeling world.

Life | Action Sport | Vimeo

Bored? here's a new action sport for you ...

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Tech | China Internet Users > US Pop in 2009 | Kedrosky

According to some new research from JPMorgan, 2009 will be the year that China Internet users surpass the entire population of the U.S.

hina-inernet

Life | What have you changed your mind about | Kedrosky

From Paul Kedrosky's blog

What Have You Changed Your Mind About?

What have you changed your mind about? This year's Edge question is the preceding one, and John Brockman gets answers (many of them interesting and/or unpredictable) from a long list of people, including scientists, economics, psychiatrists, writers, etc.

So, what have I changed my mind about? it is a question that has been gnawing at me a great deal lately, with a general sense that changing my mind on things is more important than ever, and that I'm not doing it often enough. Not, of course, in some whimsical sense -- today I like blue,tomorrow I like red -- but in the sense that the world is saying on many levels that so much of what I thought I knew is wrong. I can hardly keep up with the long list of things that I've changed my mind about recently, so many that I feel a little like Billy Pilgrim, that I've come unstuck in time.

Some examples of things I've changed my mind about in the last year:

  • Whether there are institutions that are too big to fail (No)
  • Whether phones need keyboards (No)
  • Why TV exists (I don't know anymore)
  • Whether bond yields can go negative (Yes, obviously)
  • The important of ignorance (Vastly underrated)
  • Whether economics matters (Maybe)
  • Mountain-biking (Not just for wahoos who don't ski)
  • The role of contrarianism (Important, but entirely misunderstood too)
  • Whether blogs matter (More than I thought they did)
  • Whether Twitter is any use (Yes)
  • Whether AM radio is a wasteland (Yes, but still matters)
  • Large data sets (Way more dangerous than I thought they were)
  • Reading books on screen (Totally doable)
  • Venture capital (Much closer to unnecessary)
  • Hedge funds (I've gone from it being mostly about chance to it being almost entirely about chance)
  • Sincerity (Under-rated)
  • Market valuation (Historical numbers matter only minimally)
  • Technical analysis (It works until it doesn't, but it can work)
  • Agnosticism (It's a cop-out. I'm an atheist.)
  • Warren Buffett (Smart, but also the ultimate market limit order that will one day be disastrously taken out)
  • Babies (I now smile inanely at other people's)
  • China recession (Better than 50% chance it happens, up from near zero)
  • Vanity Fair (Worth reading for more than the pictures)
  • Eschatological leanings (Rational response to universal entropy)
  • Current account deficits (Hugely important, but can last far longer under unique circumstances)
  • Wholesale funding model (Works until it doesn't)
  • Debt (Even more necessary more dangerous than I thought it was)
  • 50-year Treasury (Has to happen)
  • Lessons from Japan bubble/decline (It is a cop-out to say they didn't try hard enough)
  • Marx (Funnier than I thought he was)
  • Bonds and bond market (Baffled why I was under-allocated for so long)
  • Professional sports (Gone from being a waste of time to a _complete_ waste of time with looming bankruptcies)
  • This time it's different (Sometimes it really is different)
  • Whether oil can get to $200/$20 again in 12 months (Yes and yes)

I'm sure I'll come with more, but I'd cheerfully have others add theirs.