Monday, April 30, 2007

Monthly Recap: April 2007

April was a busy month both on the work and blogging front. I had 17 blog posting, 18 including this one.

This was the first time I made it in Avinash�s top 10 web analytics blog list.. When Avinash released his rankings on April 16th, my blog was ranked 48,459 by tachnorati. In last 15 days the ranking has gone up to 38,710



Here is the list of articles that I posted

Behavioral Targeting

Web Analytics

Behavioral Targeting Moves by Yahoo and Google

A recent article by Brandweek, talks about how Yahoo is betting big on Behavioral Targeting.
Yahoo has been testing its BT like targeting since 2003 or so. I am from India but has been living in US for years, I signed up for my yahoo account in US. Sometime around 2003 when I logged out of my yahoo email, yahoo served me an ad related to an Indian company. I don�t remember explicitly telling yahoo that I was from India. I asked my co-worker (sitting next to me and who was not of Indian origin) to browse to the same location but she did not get the same ad. My thinking at that time was that that they were somehow reading the content of my emails (just like gmail), since I didn�t remember using yahoo search engine to find that content related to India, but I am not 100% sure though) and serving ads based on it.

According to this Brandweek article, critics say behavioral targeting is an invasion of privacy. Jeffrey Chester, CDD founder and executive director said he has no problem with behavioral targeting if advertisers disclose to consumers that they are tracking information. "They need to fully disclose and get permission, but they're afraid to do it," Chester said. I am not a critic of BT but I agree with Chester as I wrote in my posting on Google and Doubleclick privacy concerns.
Yahoo! rep Dina Freeman said the company protects its users' privacy. "It's anonymous. It's never tied to your name," she said. "Consumers in general are coming around to the fact that they like the relevancy."

I agree with the above statement but let�s disclose this to consumers so that everybody can feel comfortable.

Google on the other hand has been saying that it won't consider behavioral targeting. Even though Google is resisting Behavioral Targeting so far but a lot of people (including me) are predicting that Google will soon get into Behavioral Targeting. According to Brandweek article, however, now Google is saying they won�t consider behavioral targeting without getting consumers' approval. So they are thinking about it too if they get consumer approval. Richard Holden, director of product management at Google says "We're not opposed to it in principle, if it means showing fewer ads but ones that are more relevant." Yes, Behavioral Targeting is about showing relevant ads, so when can we expect first BT Targeted ads on Google network?

Monday, Monday

My weekly page update:
image04sm.jpg
Tanghe River Park in Qinhuangdao, China, by Turenscape.

The updated book feature is On the Plaza: The Politics of Public Space and Culture, by Setha M. Low.

Some unrelated links for your enjoyment:
Architecture-Urbanism
"Books, Publications, Issues of Interest to the International Planning, Architectural, and Design Community." (blog added to sidebar under blogs::architecture)

Marvelous Architectures
"Every day some picture and news of marvelous architectures around the World...." (added to sidebar under blogs::architecture)

Urban Planning Blog
"Thoughts on Urban Planning and Design." (blog added to sidebar under blogs::urban)

Sunday, April 29, 2007

Inflation Targeting is Flawed

Bloomberg is reporting Bank of England's Inflation-Targeting Loses Luster.
The Bank of England, confronting a record-breaking real-estate boom, is finding there's more to monetary policy than just keeping consumer prices in check.

surging U.K. property values are throwing into question the inflation-targeting approach of Governor Mervyn King and his colleagues, which focuses on consumer prices as the lodestar of policy and gives lower priority to asset values, money supply and credit growth.

The bank's approach isn't broad enough to tackle asset bubbles that can burst and lead to recessions, says Tim Drayson, an economist at ABN Amro Holding NV in London who formerly worked at the U.K. Treasury.

"In a few years' time, people will find that inflation- targeting is flawed,'' he says."

Inflation Goal

The bank's goal is inflation of 2 percent, and it has kept average gains in consumer prices at 1.5 percent since 1997, compared with 4.2 percent in the previous eight years.

While that allowed King, 59, to slash interest rates to the lowest levels since the 1950s, he now faces what Claudio Borio, head of policy analysis at the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, calls a ``paradox of credibility'': The more a central bank succeeds in keeping prices stable, the more likely that signs of an overheating economy will show up first in asset bubbles.

As in the U.S., a combination of stable inflation and low interest rates triggered a real-estate boom in the U.K., where house prices have tripled in the past decade. In the last year alone, London values jumped 16 percent, reports HBOS Plc, the U.K.'s biggest mortgage lender.

King argues that asset values are inflated by many factors outside the bank's control, and it's better off focusing on a single gauge of consumer prices.

World Capital Markets

"What determines asset prices in the U.K. is very much a function of what's going on in the world capital markets," he told a parliamentary committee on April 24. "The impact of higher asset prices can't just be linked solely and exclusively to U.K. monetary policy and credit growth." Immigration and a property shortage caused by planning restrictions are also driving U.K. real-estate prices higher, policy makers say.

Still, King acknowledges that ignoring money supply and credit growth may lead policy makers into "tricky territory."

In 2005, he became the first Bank of England governor to be outvoted by his committee when it decided to ignore the fastest money-supply expansion in eight years and cut rates to shore up economic growth.

"In retrospect, it was a mistake," says Thomas Mayer, chief European economist at Deutsche Bank AG in London. The move reignited the housing market, sending the price of an average London home surging by a quarter. House-price inflation stood at 9.1 percent at the end of 2006, the London-based National Institute of Economic and Social Research said in a report today.
There is no question that inflation targeting is a mistake. For starters the Fed can not possibly know what neutral is if it were to bite them in the ass. After all, it is virtually impossible to define a representative basket of goods and services to measure prices.

For example: Gasoline is far more important to cab drivers than to someone living in a nursing home. Education is far more important to those with school aged children than those who are retired with no kids. Are home prices or rent more important and for who?

The measurement problem is made all the more difficult because new products and services come out all the time. Also compounding the problem (perhaps intentionally so) are hedonics and substitutions. No this does not all average out regardless of what anyone says (or if it does it is only by fleeting happenstance). Finally it should be noted that government has every reason to lie about prices to keep cost of living (COLAs) down for social security recipients.

But even if by some miracle the government was not distorting the data, measurements were accurate, etc etc, inflation targeting misses the boat because it excludes asset prices. Nonetheless, Bernanke is on the inflation targeting bandwagon.

Bernanke & Inflation Targeting

Back on October 17, 2003 Bernanke spoke about Inflation Targeting: Prospects and Problems.
Should the Federal Reserve announce a quantitative inflation objective? Those opposed to the idea have noted, correctly, that the Fed has built strong credibility as an inflation-fighter without taking that step, and that that credibility has allowed the Fed to be relatively flexible in responding to short-run disturbances to output and employment without destabilizing inflation expectations. So, the opponents argue, why reduce that flexibility unnecessarily by announcing an explicit target for inflation?

It would be foolish to deny that the Fed has been quite successful on the whole over the past two decades. Whether the U.S. central bank would have been even more successful, had it announced an explicit objective for inflation at some point, is impossible to say. We just don�t know. We can�t re-run history; and although empirical cross-country comparisons can be useful, they are far from being controlled experiments.

On the premise that effective communication is even more crucial near price stability, I will focus today on how an incremental move toward inflation targeting, in the form of the announcement of a long-run inflation objective, might help the Fed communicate better and perhaps improve policy decisions as well, without the costs feared by those concerned about potential loss of flexibility.
Given the bubbles in the stock market and housing, the implosion of subprime lending, consumer debt bubbles and an economy totally dependent on rising asset prices, Bernanke is showing more than a bit of misguided hubris when he states "It would be foolish to deny that the Fed has been quite successful on the whole over the past two decades". Then again perhaps we need to understand where Bernanke is coming from.

Consider Roger Garrison's article What Does Inflation Targeting Mean?
Although Ben Bernanke has pledged to ensure a continuity between the Greenspan policies and his own, he differs in several important respects, including his endorsement of "inflation targeting." Greenspan has always been against it.

But Bernanke's idea of "inflation targeting" is in need of some deconstruction.

First and foremost, it means that he actually wants some positive rate of inflation, a rate that is expected to persist and therefore gets factored into nominal interest rates. He wants nominal rates kept high enough to give the Fed some elbow room. That is, if the nominal fed-funds rate is, say, 5%, then the Fed has some scope for lowering that rate � in the event that it believes the economy is due for a monetary infusion.

Bernanke was most vocal about this view a year or so ago, when the fed-funds rate was 1% and Fed watchers began to worry about Greenspan "having no more arrows in his quiver."

But can Bernanke actually pursue a policy of inflation targeting in the literal sense? In other words, can he increase the money supply whenever, say, the CPI begins to indicate an inflation rate below the target rate and decrease the money supply whenever the CPI begins to indicate an inflation rate above the target rate? I don't think so.

The lag between changes in the money supply and corresponding changes in the CPI is somewhere between 18 and 30 months. This is the "long and variable lag" identified long ago by the monetarists. One of the lessons in Monetary Economics 101 is that a viable target must be one that yields timely feedback to the targeter.

Bernanke is an advocate of inflation targeting. We should understand this to mean that Bernanke is a deflation-scared inflationist.
For all his studies of the great depression, Bernanke still does not get it it. The fundamental cause of the great depression was the credit boom that preceded it. Inflation targeting that ignores asset prices is not targeting inflation at all. Inflation targeting must start with a proper definition of inflation: expansion of money and credit.

The current boom is a direct result of the greatest liquidity experiment the world has ever seen. Asset prices have been rising nearly everywhere as all central bankers have been in on it. It is now simply too late to do anything about it. All we can do sit sit back and wonder just how more insane things can get before they implode.

Mike Shedlock / Mish
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/

Nokia 6111 disassembly video tutorial

This is about 8 minutes long and has clear instructions. I actually watched the whole clip eventhough I don't plan on opening a 6110 up. It was interesting for me. I would love to see a clip like this starring the Nokia N95.

2 hands on clips of Sony Ericsson's W44S

This is the W44S by Sony Ericsson for the AU KDDI network in Japan. It is a clamshell that opens two ways, one like a regular clamshell phone and the other like a communicator. It has a 3 inch 240x432 resolution 260k color screen (which looks fantastic) and a 3.17 mega pixel CMOS camera. The media player interface looks great. Why can't we have kickass GSM SE phones like the Japanese. Anyways, I won't bore you with details. Enjoy the clip! Oh, and if you like this phone then I recommend checking out the Sony Ericsson W43S unboxing pics I posted yesterday.



More Sony Ericsson P700i live pics













Seems like everyone are getting their hands on the P700 since PeterKay from Esato posted his awesome review. Just earlier I posted about a guy from Chile selling a P700 for a premium price. Now another member (Marc_SE) over at Esato managed to get his hands on a P700 and posted the above pics. Lucky people...

6x optical zoom for Nokia N95


This is from the makers that also brought us the 6x zoom for the MOTORAZR as well as other brands. This gizmo is being sold over at Ebay for only 17.99$ US not including shipping. Here is the product description:

Function:
Overcome the short coming of camera cellphone that can only near-sighted, it also makes distant view for you at the moment.

Advantage:
The new design to run of rays can effectively avoid the contortion of image, and makes the super wide angle, the larger luminous flux, the higher visual acuteness, good for color reduction, which makes the high quality of photography.

Usage:
You need to fit the telescope clip well yourself by "instant glue".
Before you fit it by "instant glue", you need to test it first.
Change the cellphone back shell first enclosed with the telescope.
Adjust the clear focus with the naked eye.
It can take a picture while fixing the telescope on back shell. (If the screen of your cellphone is analyzed degree enough, you can adjust the focus with the screen of the cellphone).

Packing Including
Mobile Phone Telescope.
Crystal Case
Telescope Mount.
Neckstrap.

This contraption is for people who are dying for 6x optical zoom for their N95. I find it too troublesome and huge to use. I wouldn't be bothered to carry it around.

Live pics of CECT I-70 : the Vertu clone










The maker of this phone says this is the luxury phone for the common people. Vertu is known for it's extremely high price and this clone cost way less. It is called Veptu instead of Vertu and has the name of CECT I-70. The battery cover is extra shiny and can be used as a mirror. It tries to mimic the real Vertu with a gold housing which unfortunately feels like plastic. The phone makes use of fake leather. The phone features a 2 mega pixel camera. The phone in all is a good copy of the real deal and will fool people as long as you keep a safe distance away and cover the "p" in Veptu when talking on the phone. Oh and it comes in a nice box. Pics from gophone.

Philips 9@9r live pics















This is the latest Philips phone and was announced this month. It is a triband phone with a 2.2 inch 176x 220 resolution screen, external OLED screen, microSD support, stereo bluetooth and 1.3 mega pixel camera. It measures 97 x 52 x 16 mm and weighs 82 grams. The highlight of the phone is it's thin clamshell form factor and an impressive 1000 mAh battery (that claims to last up to 740 hours stand-by and 8.5 hours talk time). The phone is very basic but it looks nice with it's glossy finish. Pics from pconline.com.cn.

Sony Ericsson P700 for sale in Chile



A guy is selling a SE P700 at some Chile site. I couldn't understand a word from the page (so i don't have further details...). He posted some pics and a video that we have seen before. What he did do was post some of his pics as shown above. I wonder why he didn't take a pic of the phone on. Hmmm...

Click for sale

"RAREST Mobile Phone on eBay-4GB- RARER Than iPhone! MP3" iPhone clone




Wow...what a title. This is being sold over at ebay. Engadget found this iPhone clone 2 days ago. This dualband phone features a 3.5 inch 320x480 (160ppi) touchscreen, Windows XP OS (professional version) and 4 GB (there is a choice of 8 GB) of internal memory and a 1.3 mega pixel camera. There is also a 2 row number keypad at the bottom along with a row of soft keys. I wonder what the phone looks like in the back.

Today's archidose #89


, originally uploaded by dianavieira.

Funerary Chapel in Oliveira do Douro, Portugal by Jos� Fernando Gon�alves.

To contribute your Flickr images for consideration, just:

:: Join and add photos to the archidose pool, and/or
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More live pics of Sony Ericsson's Spiderman 3 goodies



















More live pics of Spidey goodies from sogi.com. The crystal case for the K750 is like the K800's crystal case. The strap and the pouch we already saw. The special wallpapers are ok. I like the first one. If you didn't already know, then SE launched 4 K series phones special Spiderman 3 editions. Here are some more live pics with the K800.
 
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