Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Sony NEX 5 digital camera firmware with 3D Sweep Panorama

Sony has appear the promised firmware amend for its NEX cameras abacus 3D Sweep Panorama mode. This approach separates the larboard and appropriate edges of the alone angel acclimated for creating across-the-board shots. It again uses these slices' differing perspectives to actualize a 3D still angel that can be played aback if you buy one of the company's Bravia TVs. Firmware adaptation 02 additionally includes bug fixes and promises to advance camera achievement including quicker start-up in low ablaze conditions. The updates are accessible for actual download anatomy the company's website.

Free firmware adds 3D Ambit Panorama shooting 
Sony NEX 5 digital camera firmware with 3D Sweep Panorama. 
London, 1st July 2010: A new firmware amend brings the action of 3D cutting to the NEX-5/NEX-3 changeable lens cameras.
Available now for chargeless download from the Sony Europe abutment site, the amend adds several achievement enhancements additional 3D Ambit Panorama. Unique to Sony, this agitative affection makes it accessible to abduction affecting across-the-board images in 3D with an extra-wide acreage of view.

Just columnist the bang button and ambit the camera from ancillary to side. The NEX-5 and NEX-3 shoot a accelerated access of frames that are automatically accumulated central the camera to actualize a seamless across-the-board still angel absolute abyss information. Ambit Panoramas can be enjoyed in 3D back the camera is affiliated to your 3D BRAVIA or any standards-compatible 3D TV.

The amend additionally offers added enhancements for the NEX-5/NEX-3. These include:
* Improvement of �normal� 2D Ambit Panorama shooting;
* Decreased ability cesspool back the camera is switched off;
* Quicker start-up in low-light conditions.
The amend is alone bare for NEX-5/NEX-3 cameras with Adaptation 01 firmware currently installed. Cameras alien with Adaptation 02 firmware or college are already adapted with the new features. Owners can acquisition out what firmware adaptation they�re currently active by selecting [MENU]/[SETUP]/[VERSION]. Registered NEX-5/NEX-3 owners will be brash of the amend via email.

Put on Your Party Hats - It's Time to Party for Another Decade!

I don't know about you but I am psyched. The prospects of an ongoing party for another decade are extremely good as the following chart shows.

Dow Jones Industrial Average - 1999 to Present



click on chart for sharper image

Market participants put on their party hats and started cheering in 1999 when the DOW crossed 10,000 for the first time. They have been cheering pretty much nonstop ever since.

Admittedly there was a bit of a party lag between early 2005 and late 2008 but the party hats have been working overtime since mid-2008 as shown below.

Dow Jones Industrial Average - October 2010 to Present



click on chart for sharper image

Lost Decades Comparison

Please bear in mind that some pessimists liken the above behavior to a period of stunning underperformance of the Japanese Nikkei Index over the last two decades.

Japan's Two Lost Decades



click on chart for sharper image

The Perpetually Optimistic Mish

Being the ever-optimist that I am, I want to quickly point out that while Japan essentially went straight down over two decades, the US by comparison has put in stunning outperformance by going nowhere.

Indeed, the Dow Jones Index is remarkably sitting exactly where it was in April of 1999, over 10 years ago while the Nikkei over the same timeframe fell by about 50%.

Optimists such as myself have only one thing to say: Hallelujah!

Meanwhile doom and gloomers like Robert Prechter think the Dow will fall to 1,000.

To that I say "Poppycock" (pretty harsh language indeed for those who know me well).

By my optimistic comparison, I think the Dow's downside is 5,000. That is a stunning 400% more optimistic appraisal of the current state of affairs than Prechter.

Furthermore, I freely admit that the DOW, instead of dropping, just may meander around 10,000 for another decade.

Wow. Except for public pension plan assumptions, imagine the parties we can have over that!

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

Month in review!

Well hello! You are all SWEETAYS for your sweet comments on my aqua and pink flag cake. I cut a piece off tonight for hubby and I must say, it�s pretty cute. Not Fourth of July cute, but CUTE.  :)

And as many of you mentioned, I�m just on the cutting edge with the hot colors of aqua and coral. I totally did it on purpose. NOT.

I have decided to start doing a review of posts at the end of each month � just in case you�re new around these parts.  :) Also, there�s usually a few things I forget to mention or that you lovelies share that I think will be helpful to others.

The beginning of the month was FUN because I took my first two trips to IKEA � both within a week! Whoohoo!!

My plan for a sofa table in our great room had fallen through and all of the sudden I had to have the Hemnes coffee table instead:

Isn�t it loverly? I LOVE YOU IKEA!! Kisses!

I posted week three of the kitchen redo, where I shared some more of my IKEA goodies and an update on the progress of our kitchen:

I swear I�ll do another update again this week � I haven�t gotten as much done lately as I had hoped, but I do have a few more projects to share! (No, it�s nowhere close to done.)  :)

The June Before and After linky party was kicked off with my first attempt at strawberry freezer jam:

And it was YUMMY!! Hmmm�now I�m hungry.

It only took three weeks, but I finished the beadboard backsplash in the kitchen:

044_thumb[1]

And I LOVE it! It is by far the biggest transformation in the room, and the cost for the beadboard was less than $50. I used the eight foot panels of primed beadboard from Home Depot, and they run about $15 a package.

Many have asked how it�s held up near the sink, and it�s GREAT! I used semi gloss paint on beadboard, and it�s sealed really well. I can wipe water right off. I was a little concerned before I installed it, but now have no worries about having the beadboard near the sink.

I shared my hatred of evil laundry, and since our dryer is on the fritz, I drooled over one of these:front loader

You all were SO helpful! The great majority of you love your front loaders, but those who don�t passed along some important info we�ll consider when buying a new washer and dryer set.

There were so many great suggestions on trying to get our current dryer to work � all we had tried, unfortunately. Bummer. One of those was to really clean out the lint trap, which is a good tip to pass along. It looks like it�s clean, but you need to use dish soap and a bristle brush to clean it out. You want water to run right through it.

Overall, nothing we tried worked, so the repair guy is coming tomorrow because the mounds of laundry are taking over!! Ahhhh!!

Every now and again I like to share what I�ve learned about blogging, and this month I talked about the importance of leaving comments:

blogger-comments-page

It really, really will bring more readers to your site! Try it out!

A couple of weekends ago, two girlfriends and I headed out to my favorite city in the world � the fabulous New York City!:

We went for the last of the NKOTB concerts (at least for a while?). I forgot to mention that the concert that weekend was the BEST one EVER. I�m not even kidding. Those Boston boys men know how to entertain!!

OH, and I forgot to tell you something wonderful!! I�ve mentioned before that there is a fabulous old Italian woman who used to sit outside our favorite restaurant in Little Italy:

Her name was Lucy, and for years, every time we�d go, she�d be there. Our last trip she was nowhere to be found and we had assumed her time had come (she�s got to be in her 90�s!). So when I was there, I just had to ask our waiter about her.

Well he looked at me weird when I mentioned her name, and I almost teared up, thinking the worst. But he was just surprised I knew who she was � and Lucy is alive and well! :) She had just walked out right before we came in that afternoon, and he was hoping she�d return in time so I could say hello, but I never got the chance.

I was SO happy to hear that the pasta and wine (Lucy swears that�s the key to a long, healthy life) are still working!! :)

The peeps at Silhouette sent me a craft cutter to try out, and one to give away to one of you Squeezies!! For my first project, I made a stinkin� adorable herb crate out of a thrift store find:herb crate

And later that week I fed my labeling obsession:

And it felt gooooood.  ;)

Last week I shared my cutie American flag door decor:

It was less $10 and took less than an hour to make, start to finish. I love seeing it as we drive up! :)

Many of you commented on my flower growing skills and I must say, I have little to do with the gorgeous petunias. :) I give props to Mother Nature for that one � the petunias just love the water!! (And it�s rained like the Pacific Northwest here lately!)

And finally�the beautiful pink/coral/aqua/turquoise cake, for your enjoyment:

It really is pretty darn good. :) If you want to try it out, check out the comments first. I used gel coloring, (not the icing stuff), but many of you bakers shared your favorites products that work much better � I�ll be sure to try them out next time!!

I had some fantastic giveaways this month from My Design Guide, The Pumpkin Patch, American Express and of course, Silhouette!

And I have to send out a big fat thank you to my advertisers for this month:

Bomobob�s beautiful photography:

Dimples and Dandelions boutique with adorable decor and clothing:

Photo Jewelry Making carries everything you could need:

My Design Guide can help you with design dilemmas big and small:

Well, that�s the month of June in review peeps! Thanks for coming along for the ride and welcome to the party if you�ve just joined us!  ;)

I�ll be back with the update on the kitchen�stay tuned.

Changing Attitudes on the Value of an Education

In response to Teenagers Scared Over Plight of their Parents; Attitudes - Bernanke's Biggest, Most Futile Fight which was based on a comment on my blog by someone using the name "Nancy Drew", please consider this response from "Projammer"
Hello Mish

Regarding your comment "Attitudes towards education and education costs have certainly started to change with some starting to question the value of an education and what they are willing to pay" ...

My daughter is 14. I looked at the cost of the private, church college I attended, in which she has expressed an interest. Four years is $100,000. We cannot cash-flow that. It will be more in 4 years.

My wife and I are programmers. She has mentioned an interest in learning to program. I'm considering teaching her this, teaching her how to run her own business, and skipping college altogether.

If not programming, then I can look for other "sole-proprietor" friendly businesses involving skills that she can learn. I can get her a lot of targeted education in any field she wants for a fraction of $100,000!

I'm putting money aside for college. But my doubts as to its value are growing just as quickly.
Thanks "Projammer" and thanks to "Nancy Drew" as well.

Real Life Attitudes vs. Fed Platitudes

Real life experiences are worth far more that platitudes from Fed-sponsored PHDs on who should be commenting about economics.

I commend both of the above because refusal to pay more than an education is worth. Changing attitudes are a necessary ingredient to bringing down the cost of an education, currently an absurd sum of money, for the sole benefit of overpaid administrators, college professors, and dare I say it, to a lesser yet still significant extent (primarily because of untenable benefit plans), ordinary teachers in many school districts across the country.

This is not a slam against teachers, but rather against public unions, bureaucrats, and politicians who have put many skilled teachers in an unwinnable situation.

Projected Education Costs

It is because of attitude changes by parents and teenagers regarding the value of an education, that I expect costs of education to drop significantly in the years ahead.

If you are a parent considering "locking in" the price of an education for your 8-year old child now, you may wish to reconsider.

My bet is that 10 years from now (if not a lot sooner) education costs will be falling like a rock.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

Leica X1 Digital Camera Review

Leica X1 Digital Camera Review

Leica X1 Digital Camera Review


Still remember the Leica X1 that we mentioned in September 2009? PhotographyBLOG has a short review of this 12.2-megapixel compact digital camera. As a reminder, the Leica X1 comes equipped with a 36mm fixed lens and a 2.7-inch LCD screen. The camera uses an APS-C sized (23.6mm x 15.8mm) CMOS sensor with a 3:2 aspect ratio. The image-stabilized Leica Elmarit 24mm f/2.8 lens provides a focal length of 36mm in 35mm terms. Additional features include a sensitivity range of ISO 100 - 3200, a maximum shutter speed of 1/2000th of a second, JPEG and DNG RAW file support, and a continuous shooting rate of up to 3 frames per second. Here is the conclusion:


The Leica X1 is a camera of extremes, offering a compelling blend of stunning design, fantastic handling and superlative image quality, but ultimately suffering from a pared-back feature set, sluggish responsiveness and a sky-high price-tag. The combination of a fantastic prime lens and large APS-C size sensor result in outstanding image quality that easily beats most other compacts and also most other entry-level DSLRs. Low-light images are excellent too, with the X1's faster ISO settings delivering low-noise results. Add the ability to shoot DNG RAW files as well as JPGS, and it�s clear that the X1 is a real class-leader.


You can purchase the Leica X1 digital camera for around $1,995 each. [PhotographyBLOG]




Toshiba H30 Compact HD Camcorder Review

Toshiba H30 Compact HD Camcorder Review

Toshiba H30 Compact HD Camcorder


CrunchGear has reviewed the new Toshiba H30 compact HD camcorder that provides a 10 megapixels sensor, a 5x optical zoom, a 10x digital zoom, an SD card storage and a touchscreen LCD display. The Toshiba H30 comes in a very compact form factor and produces a much better image quality than pocket cameras. Recorded videos are stored on flash memory, but the H30 includes just 128MB on board, of which only about 96MB is usable, so SDHC media is a necessity. The H30 takes SD/SDHC memory cards up to 32GB (not included). Each 32GB card will record up to 5-hour of 1080p video. Here is the verdict:


At $180, the H30 is easy to recommend � if you think a traditional camcorder is worth your money at all. It�s a bit larger and more complicated than your average Flip or Kodak, but it also brings marginally better image quality, optical zoom, and a few extra features many consumers will find handy. On the other hand, a PlaySport can be had for $120, and my personal favorite P&S, the EX-FC100, for $200. The most compelling feature of the H30 is really that it�s the same device we�ve been using for ages, just packed into an incredibly tiny package. We�ll all be recording video with our iPhone 4s and Droid Xs soon enough, but in the meantime it might be reassuring for a lot of people to have something like this sitting in a drawer, familiar and reliable.


You can also watch the video review of the Toshiba H30 compact HD camcorder after the jump.


[CrunchGear]




Leica X1 Digital Camera Review

Leica X1 Digital Camera Review

Leica X1 Digital Camera Review


Still remember the Leica X1 that we mentioned in September 2009? PhotographyBLOG has a short review of this 12.2-megapixel compact digital camera. As a reminder, the Leica X1 comes equipped with a 36mm fixed lens and a 2.7-inch LCD screen. The camera uses an APS-C sized (23.6mm x 15.8mm) CMOS sensor with a 3:2 aspect ratio. The image-stabilized Leica Elmarit 24mm f/2.8 lens provides a focal length of 36mm in 35mm terms. Additional features include a sensitivity range of ISO 100 - 3200, a maximum shutter speed of 1/2000th of a second, JPEG and DNG RAW file support, and a continuous shooting rate of up to 3 frames per second. Here is the conclusion:


The Leica X1 is a camera of extremes, offering a compelling blend of stunning design, fantastic handling and superlative image quality, but ultimately suffering from a pared-back feature set, sluggish responsiveness and a sky-high price-tag. The combination of a fantastic prime lens and large APS-C size sensor result in outstanding image quality that easily beats most other compacts and also most other entry-level DSLRs. Low-light images are excellent too, with the X1's faster ISO settings delivering low-noise results. Add the ability to shoot DNG RAW files as well as JPGS, and it�s clear that the X1 is a real class-leader.


You can purchase the Leica X1 digital camera for around $1,995 each. [PhotographyBLOG]




Toshiba H30 Compact HD Camcorder Review

Toshiba H30 Compact HD Camcorder Review

Toshiba H30 Compact HD Camcorder


CrunchGear has reviewed the new Toshiba H30 compact HD camcorder that provides a 10 megapixels sensor, a 5x optical zoom, a 10x digital zoom, an SD card storage and a touchscreen LCD display. The Toshiba H30 comes in a very compact form factor and produces a much better image quality than pocket cameras. Recorded videos are stored on flash memory, but the H30 includes just 128MB on board, of which only about 96MB is usable, so SDHC media is a necessity. The H30 takes SD/SDHC memory cards up to 32GB (not included). Each 32GB card will record up to 5-hour of 1080p video. Here is the verdict:


At $180, the H30 is easy to recommend � if you think a traditional camcorder is worth your money at all. It�s a bit larger and more complicated than your average Flip or Kodak, but it also brings marginally better image quality, optical zoom, and a few extra features many consumers will find handy. On the other hand, a PlaySport can be had for $120, and my personal favorite P&S, the EX-FC100, for $200. The most compelling feature of the H30 is really that it�s the same device we�ve been using for ages, just packed into an incredibly tiny package. We�ll all be recording video with our iPhone 4s and Droid Xs soon enough, but in the meantime it might be reassuring for a lot of people to have something like this sitting in a drawer, familiar and reliable.


You can also watch the video review of the Toshiba H30 compact HD camcorder after the jump.


[CrunchGear]




Sanyo VPC-E1403 Affordable 14-megapixel Compact Digicam

Sanyo VPC-E1403 Affordable 14-megapixel Compact Digicam


Measuring 99mm x 56.8mm x 18.8mm, the new Sanyo VPC-E1403 is a 14-megapixel compact digital camera that can record videos at a frame rate of 30fps and a resolution of 1280 x 720 pixels. The digicam also boasts a 3-inch TFT LCD screen, an ISO sensitivity of up to 6400, an SD or SDHC card slot, a digital image stabilizer and a 3x optical zoom. The smile and blink recognition feature are included for perfect portraits. The camera recognizes smiling faces itself and takes the snap automatically, without you having to press the release. If someone blinks when the shutter closes, the photographer is alerted by the blink recognition and can take another shot. The Sanyo VPC-E1403 is priced at �129 ($157) with a three-year warranty. [PhotographyBLOG]


Sanyo VPC-E1403 Affordable 14-megapixel Compact Digicam

Sanyo VPC-E1403 Affordable 14-megapixel Compact Digicam


Measuring 99mm x 56.8mm x 18.8mm, the new Sanyo VPC-E1403 is a 14-megapixel compact digital camera that can record videos at a frame rate of 30fps and a resolution of 1280 x 720 pixels. The digicam also boasts a 3-inch TFT LCD screen, an ISO sensitivity of up to 6400, an SD or SDHC card slot, a digital image stabilizer and a 3x optical zoom. The smile and blink recognition feature are included for perfect portraits. The camera recognizes smiling faces itself and takes the snap automatically, without you having to press the release. If someone blinks when the shutter closes, the photographer is alerted by the blink recognition and can take another shot. The Sanyo VPC-E1403 is priced at �129 ($157) with a three-year warranty. [PhotographyBLOG]


Most Significant

Today Vanity Fair posted the results of their World Architecture Survey. The magazine
"asked the world�s leading architects, critics, and deans of architecture schools two questions: what are the five most important buildings, bridges, or monuments constructed since 1980, and what is the greatest work of architecture thus far in the 21st century."
The results of the first question -- compiled in a slideshow -- are not surprising, with Frank Gehry's Guggenheim in Bilbao easily topping the list. The rest are recognizable buildings by household names like Renzo Piano, Peter Zumthor, Norman Foster, Rem Koolhaas, Tadao Ando, and so on.

But I'm more intrigued by the second question, if certain buildings stand out from the rest in a decade that really didn't have its own "Bilbao." Well, there was a clear-cut winner and a surprising runner-up:

vanity.jpg
[L: Most Significant: Beijing National Stadium by Herzog & de Meuron | R: Second Most Significant: Saint-Pierre, Firminy by Le Corbusier]

First place is probably the most media-saturated building of the last ten years, thanks to the opening ceremonies of the 2008 Olympics in Beijing: the Beijing National Stadium (Bird's Nest) by Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron. Second place is a church designed by Le Corbusier and completed in 2006, 41 years after his death; construction began in 1971 (six years after he died) but was inactive from 1973-2003. So first place is a building in the spotlight and second place is one only architects know about. Here is the list of buildings that received more than one vote (# votes):
Bird's Nest by Herzog & de Meuron (7)
Saint-Pierre Firminy by Le Corbusier (4)
Seattle Public Library by OMA (3)
CCTV Building by OMA (2)
Disney Concert Hall by Frank Gehry (2)
Large Hadron Collider - CERN (2)
MAXXI Museum by Zaha Hadid (2)
Scottish Parliament by EMBT (2)
And the EGO Awards go to these architects who chose their own buildings as the "most significant work of architecture created so far in the 21st century":
Wolf Prix of Coop Himmelb(l)au for the BMW Welt
Hans Hollein for the Architecture Pill
James Stewart Polshek for the Rose Center for Earth and Space
Bernard Tschumi for the Acropolis Museum
Any other takes on the list? There's plenty to nitpick in the buildings picked by the "52 experts."

Teenagers Scared Over Plight of their Parents; Attitudes - Bernanke's Biggest, Most Futile Fight

Here is a comment I want to share from someone who posts under the name "Nancy Drew" on this blog. Nancy Drew writes ...
Our daughters are 15 and 17. Most of their friends are very concerned about their parents' financial situations and tell me their parents have too much debt. Whether their parents know it or not, these kids know exactly what is going on and they are scared.

My oldest daughter told me this week that her friend "K"'s mother is jealous of me. I asked her why, and she said her friend's mother thinks I never worry about money and seem carefree. I told my daughter that is only because we don't have debt.

I reminded her of the years when her friend K's family went on cruises while we were tent camping in a state park. I told her that her dad and I made a decision when we first got married that we weren't going to buy anything, not even a car, until we had the cash to buy it.

We previously had a mortgage, but we paid it off in 13 years. I told her we just didn't want the stress. She gave me a hug and walked away without saying anything.
Congratulations Nancy, not only did you make wise decisions you taught your kids well.

Political Will vs. Consumer Psychology

The biggest and most futile fight Bernanke faces is changing attitudes towards debt.

Flashback February 19, 2009: Fiat World Mathematical Model
What happens next depends somewhat on the political will of the central banks and politicians. However, it depends more on the psychology of the borrowers. If consumers and businesses refuse to spend and instead pay back debts (or default on them along with rising unemployment), the picture simply is not inflationary, at least to any significant decree.

The credit bubble that just popped exceeded that preceding the great depression, not just in the US but worldwide. Thus, it is unrealistic to expect the deflationary bust to be anything other than the biggest bust in history. Those looking for hyperinflation or even strong inflation in light of the above, are simply looking at the wrong model.
Flashback June 25, 2008: Peak Credit
Lessons Of The Great Depression Forgotten

The lessons of their great grandfathers who lived in the great depression era were forgotten. Over time, everyone learned to ignore the dangers of debt, risk, and leverage. Belief in the Fed and the government to bail out any problem are ingrained. Bank failures are distant memories.

Peak Credit

Peak credit has been reached. That final wave of consumer recklessness created the exact conditions required for its own destruction. The housing bubble orgy was the last hurrah. It is not coming back and there will be no bigger bubble to replace it. Consumers and banks have both been burnt, and attitudes have changed.

Children whose parents are being destroyed by debt now, will keep those memories for a long time.
For more on attitudes please see:


Moreover, students fresh out of college, six-figures deep in debt, face decades of debt slavery.

Both parents and students are wondering what went wrong as noted in Subprime Goes to College; Students Buried in Debt; Who is to Blame

Note the bad policy decision (Pell Grants), that helped fuel the problem of rapidly rising costs of education.

Please see College Grads about to Flood Labor Market; Class of 2009 Still Without Jobs in Deep Trouble for still more details on the plight of students.

Attitudes towards education and education costs have certainly started to change with some starting to question the value of an education and what they are willing to pay, even as the Obama administration tries to keep the education bubble alive by throwing more money at it.

Every place you look, be it housing, education, or public unions, attitudes towards debt, lending, and the role of government are changing. It is precisely those changing social attitudes why Bernanke is losing and will lose the battle against deflation.

The sad irony is Japan has proven it is a stupid battle to be fighting in the first place.

Those fretting over base money supply and foolishly screaming hyperinflation (or even inflation), simply do not understand the dynamics of debt deflation, nor do they understand how small the increase in base money is compared to debt that will be written off, nor do they understand the role of changing social attitudes towards spending.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

How Policy Errors Cause Depressions (and how "in isolation" some things Krugman says make sense)

It is easy to pick on Paul Krugman. So easy in fact, that it is not even fair sport.

However, if you can separate the wheat from the chaff, sometimes there are nuggets of truth in what Krugman writes.

For example, please consider The Third Depression.
We are now, I fear, in the early stages of a third depression. It will probably look more like the Long Depression than the much more severe Great Depression. But the cost � to the world economy and, above all, to the millions of lives blighted by the absence of jobs � will nonetheless be immense.

And this third depression will be primarily a failure of policy.
I completely agree with those statements.

Moreover, if I take partial sentences I can find more things to agree with, such as

  • "governments are obsessing about inflation when the real threat is deflation"
  • "And who will pay the price ..."
  • "The answer is, tens of millions of unemployed workers, many of whom will go jobless for years, and some of whom will never work again."

That last bullet point was a compete sentence, the last sentence in his article. The problem is the rest of the article is loaded with Keynesian claptrap regarding policy errors.

Nonetheless, Krugman is right on the key point - policy errors cause depressions. We simply disagree as to what those policy errors are.

Krugman Also Correct About Inflation

Interestingly, most of the Austrian types mock Krugman about inflation, but on this point Krugman is essentially correct.

There is no credible inflation threat at this juncture. Hyperinflation is a complete joke. Those who get this wrong simply do not understand the role of credit in a credit-based fiat economy.

The destruction of credit and especially credit marked-to-market on the balance sheet of banks and lending institutions is immense.

By my definition we are back in deflation now. "Deflation is a net contraction of money supply and credit, with credit marked-to-market".

Price watchers are not only missing the boat, they also fail to take housing prices in their calculations.

The Price We Pay For Budgetary Murder

The reason I say Krugman is essentially correct regarding the inflation/deflation debate is that deflation is not a threat, it is a necessity as explained in The Price We Pay For Budgetary Murder.
"There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit (debt) expansion. The alternative is only whether the crisis should come sooner as the result of a voluntary abandonment of further credit (debt) expansion, or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved." - Ludwig von Mises

Greenspan and Bernanke combined to stave off paying what was due in 2001-2002. The result was a massive housing bubble that ultimately collapsed.

Congress and the Fed added to the misery by wasting trillions of taxpayer dollars bailing out banks and Wall Street while leaving the private sector in shambles, and millions of homeowners debt slaves to their houses.

Each time the day of reckoning is put off, the bigger the price down the road. Thus, we should all be fearing more Keynesian and Monetarist attempts to forestall the inevitable collapse.

Attempting to stave off further debt writedowns and another recession is like attempting to stave off a hangover by drinking more whiskey.
How Policy Errors Cause Depressions

Let's start at the beginning, something Krugman fails to do.

The Greenspan Fed made countless policy errors in creating an environment of too big to fail, bailing out banks literally every time they got in trouble. The critical mistake was short-circuiting the 2001 dotcom recession.

Greenspan managed to do that by slashing interest rates, holding them too low, too long, and fueling the biggest housing and debt problems the world had ever seen.

At that point, a depression was inevitable. The only question was "how severe?"

Was Krugman a Housing Bubble Proponent?

In a 2002 New York Times editorial Krugman said "To fight this recession the Fed needs�soaring household spending to offset moribund business investment. [So] Alan Greenspan needs to create a housing bubble to replace the Nasdaq bubble."

Krugman claims "that wasn't a piece of policy advocacy, it was just economic analysis."

For links and further discussion please see Krugman's Intellectual Waterloo

Policy Error #2

No policy decision is so bad that it cannot be made worse. Bernanke failed to see Greenspan's error and could not even see a housing bubble that was obvious to anyone with an ounce of common sense.

When the bubble finally did burst the Fed in cooperation with Congress and the treasury department bailed out the banks, the bondholders, and Wall Street at the expense of taxpayers. That was a second critical mistake, guaranteeing the relapse we see now.

Banks still are capital impaired, banks still are not lending, consumers are still deep in debt and the Fed and Congress did not cure any structural problems (including Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac) with their bailouts.

The waste of bailout capital will without a doubt affect "tens of millions of unemployed workers, many of whom will go jobless for years, and some of whom will never work again" just as Krugman says.

Unfortunately, Krugman has the wrong reason. The policy error is not as Krugman thinks (failure to throw more money at the problem), but rather throwing any money at the problem.

Bondholders should have taken their punishment, not taxpayers. Instead, taxpayers were forced to pay for the bailout via higher taxes from the Obama administration.

European Policy Errors

In Europe, the ECB made similar policy errors in attempting to bail out French and German banks in deep slop over poor loans to PIIGS, primarily Greece, Portugal, and Spain.

The correct policy decision in Europe (assuming the foolish loans were already made) was to restructure the bad debts at a pace that could actually be paid back. Instead the ECB insists that Greece, Spain, and Portugal pay back those loans in full, something that I guarantee you will not happen.

Here is a simple point-by-point analysis that shows how that policy error will effect on the entire global economy.

How Policy Errors Cascade

  • As long as the ECB's "extend and pretend" policy is in play, Greece, Spain, and Portugal will remain wrecked while burdened by loans they will eventually default on anyway.
  • In that timeframe, European growth will be anemic at best. Indeed, it is far more likely that Europe will slide back into a deep recession than simply sputter along.
  • As long as European growth is weak, China will be weak because Europe is China's largest trading partner.
  • If China's exports decline, China will need fewer imports from Australia and Canada.
  • If China and Europe are weak, there will not be tremendous demand for US exports.
  • Global job growth will remain weak.
  • Fiscal stimulus measures will fail.
  • Earnings estimates will surprise to the downside and the global equity markets will be extremely vulnerable to further losses.
  • Further equity losses in conjunction with absurd pension benefit assumptions will bankrupt many city, state, and municipal pension funds.

This is the insanity of "extend and pretend" measures not only in Europe but in the US as well.

US Public Sector Policy Errors

Obama and the Democrats are doing their best to keep public sector jobs alive. This is a poor policy decision because Firing Public Union Workers Creates Jobs.

Moreover, wasting hundreds of billions of dollars on military spending is another piss poor policy decision. We should declare victory in the war in Afghanistan and pull our troops out, not just in Afghanistan but globally.

Instead of wasting $1 trillion attempting to be the world's policeman, how about cutting military spending by two-thirds, lowering income taxes, and cutting corporate income taxes to zero on profits held in the US?

Instead Obama is raising taxes, placating public unions, and wasting money warmongering.

Policy Errors in Europe

Europe is far ahead of the US in wanting to do something about public sector unions as noted in UK Prime Minister Warns "Years of pain ahead, No Trampoline Recovery"; Time for U.S. Public Unions to Share the Pain Too.

Also see Whistleblower's Account of UK Public Sector Work.

However, the UK is looking to raise the VAT. Increasing taxes is the last thing a recovery needs.

Every one of those bad policy decisions affects the global economy.

The implications of this set of global policy errors is extremely negative, so much so that I have to agree with Krugman "We are now, I fear, in the early stages of a third depression".

The reason however, is absurd measures of Keyensian and Monetarist stimulus, war-mongering, and other Congressional nonsense, not the failure to do more. Thus, Krugman is off by 180 degrees as to why and what to do about it, even if some of his statements in isolation appear to make sense.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Cake FAIL

Many of you know I share the good and the bad on this little �ol blog. I have shared my house at it�s worst, as well as many projects I deem �science fairs� (translation = they don�t go well).

Well this one is in the science fair category for sure.

One of the many things I love about blogging is that I will now try things that I may have never attempted, because if it turns out I�ll want to share it with you all. And if it doesn�t turn out, I�ll want to share it with you all.  ;)

Let�s preface the rest of this post by saying I have baked a cake before. Many. You may not believe me after I show you this, but I cross-my-heart-swear I have.

Swear.

OK, a few weeks ago, someone on twitter sent along a picture of one of the cutest cakes I�ve ever seen � I can�t remember for the life of me where I saw it, but it was an ADORABLE Fourth of July flag cake. Not the regular sheet cake, but one that looks all boring with white icing and then PADOW!, you cut into it and there�s this gorgeous American flag cake.

Adorable.

So I�ve planned for weeks to try this out. And today I did.

And it:

a.) took FOREVER

b.) did not look like the picture

c.) like really, really did not look like the picture

d.) still tasted really good. :)

I figured I was going to have issues when I added the food coloring to the batter:

I needed some of the batter to be red for the red stripes, some white, and some blue for the blue corner of the �flag.�

Ummm�that batter up there? It�s not red. It�s pink. Maybe coral? Not red.

I added a little gel food coloring, then more, then a lot. Still coraly pink. Ohhhhkay.

I trudged on�and it was just one thing after the other. I learned some things this first time around so next year (oh yes, I will try it again!) I�ll remember them.

First tip is to just make all of the cake batter at ONE time, then segment it into five equal parts batter for all of the stripes. You can then color each batch whatever color you need, instead of making separate batches and coloring them as you go.

I did the red pink batter first and baked those cakes. Then I was going to make the white stripes, and put some of the batter aside to make the blue cake I needed. But I lost my mind for a few seconds and put the blue coloring in before I separate them � and then tried to get it out before I mixed it.

It didn�t work.

Hot mess. HOT.

I ran out of cake mix (oh yes, I used box mix!) and found a white Christmas cake mix in the pantry that didn�t expire till next February � SCORE!! I used that for the white layers I needed.

But it was still just a mess. I got whipped icing cause I LOVE WHIPPED ICING and it did not cover the cake well at all � I mean, seriously. Are you kidding me?

I just said forget it, garnished it with some stinkin� fruit, and from the outside it looked OK:

OK, it was a hot mess. Just humor me.

But when you cut it open, the fruit on top accentuates the clash of the blue/aqua and red/coral/pink:

american flag cake

Awesome.

In the original cake I saw, there were two bottom layers of red and white, then two smaller white and red layers on top next to the blue. I didn�t have room for the top white layer. So my flag is red, white, red. Gah.

To make the flag, the bottom layers are just round cakes. The blue corner is a layer of cake, cut into a ring and placed on top of the other two. The middle two layers (what should be two layers) are the inside circle of two additional cakes. You ice between layers and then piece them together.

It�s just that easy.  :)

When hubby saw it today he was so excited I had made cake!

Then I asked, did you see it, the inside? Do you like it?

�Yeah it�s cute!� (He says just seeing the fruit and white icing. From far away.)

�See the flag inside?�

He steps closer.

�The what?�

�The FLAG.  See the three layers of pink, white, pink and the aqua? It�s an American flag!�

Crickets.

 �Ohhh, yeah. I see it! It�s cute!� (LYING. Because he loves me. And he still wants a slice of cake.)

I must say, the leaning tower of pink and aqua cake is absolutely scrumptious:

It�s not so pretty but ummm umm it�s GOOD!! :)

I have a ton of cake scraps left:

022

(Uh, is it me, or does it look NEON?)

So tonight I made some itty bitty trifles:

mini trifle

The cutey itty bitty trifle bowls courtesy of WalMart -- $2 each!

Again, I continue to accentuate the pastel tone of the cake with the fruit, but you know what? It�s GOOD! :)

So there you have it � my science fair cake fail. But what do you consider a cake fail � if it looks like a hot mess, or if it tastes like a hot mess?

Maybe it�s not a complete fail? Just a half-way one? I�m going with that.  :)

I�ll be back soon with an update on the kitchen! Kitchen projects I�m pretty good at. Fourth of July cakes � notsomuch.

 

P.S. The cake was from a blog with the title that was something like 18 and baking, or something like that? If you know of it, let me know! :)

**Thanks! I found it! Click here � this girl is ahhhmazing!!

P.P.S. Many are suggesting gel food coloring and that�s what I used � maybe the whole tube just isn�t enough?  ;) I have no clue � any other ideas?

This post brought to you by:

rustedcapture125

ECB Shuts off Liquidity, Spanish Banks Scream Murder; Spain and Greece Will Both Default

For just under a year, the ECB has offered �442 billion to encourage lending. Instead, and easily predictable, the program did not increase lending and did nothing more than allow weak banks to roll over debts.

The program is now ending and Spanish banks are screaming about the ECB's "obligation to supply liquidity".

The Wall Street Journal has part of the story in ECB Walks a Fine Line Siphoning Off Its Liquidity.
The European Central Bank is scrambling to reassure markets that Thursday's expiration of a �442 billion ($547.46 billion) bank-lending program won't destabilize the financial system, even as banks across the region remain wary of lending to one another.

The ECB introduced the 12-month lending facility last summer to encourage private-sector lending and ensure adequate liquidity within the 16-member currency bloc. Since then, the program, which represents more than half the ECB's liquidity operations, has become a lifeline to banks in Greece, Spain and other countries hit by the region's debt crisis.

The cost of borrowing euros in the interbank market rose to an eight-month high Monday, as banks prepared for the one-year loan's expiration. The euro slid on worries that repayment will expose Europe's financial system to new threats. Yields on German bunds, seen as a haven, fell.

Some investors worry that vulnerable euro-area banks, unable to borrow in the interbank market, could have difficulty replacing that funding, despite repeated assurances from the ECB that it will provide funds on similar terms, albeit for only three months, beginning Wednesday.

"We are confident that this very large financial transaction can take place without disruptions," ECB governing council member Ewald Nowotny said Friday.
Spanish Banks Whine About the "Obligation" to Supply Liquidity

The Financial Time reports Spanish banks rage at end of ECB offer.
Spanish banks have been lobbying the European Central Bank to act to ease the systemic fallout from the expiry of a �442bn ($542bn) funding programme this week, accusing the central bank of �absurd� behaviour in not renewing the scheme.

One senior bank executive said: �Any central bank has to have the obligation to supply liquidity. But this is not the policy of the ECB. We are fighting them every day on this. It�s absurd.�

Another top director said: �The ECB�s policy is that they don�t want to provide maturity of more than three months. But they have to adapt.�

A special offer of six-day liquidity will tide banks over until the following week�s regular offer of seven-day funds. On Wednesday, the ECB will also be offering unlimited three month liquidity, and further offers of three-month liquidity will keep banks going until at least the end of the year.

�The system is just not working,� agrees Simon Samuels, banks analyst at Barclays Capital in London. �We�re approaching the third year of liquidity support and still the market cannot survive unaided.�
Spain and Greece Will Both Default

It should be perfectly obvious that at some point Spain and Greece are going to default. The factors at play are ...

  • How much longer the ECB is willing to throw good money after bad
  • How much longer Germany will put up with ECB policy
  • How much longer the market will put up with this extend and pretend nonsense
  • How much longer Greece and Spain are willing to put up with austerity measures

Extend and pretend can go on for years or this can all blow sky high in a month. Regardless, the implications of this setup are extremely negative.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

Firing Public Union Workers Creates Jobs

Public unions in New Haven, Connecticut have not yet gotten the message that business-as-usual no longer flies. I am quite happy with that because the city responded by dumping public workers and privatizing services, and that is exactly what needs to happen.

Firing public union workers actually creates jobs.

How so? Let's start with a look at the union position as described in War Is On In Custodian Negotiations
Three hours after school custodians blasted the city for threatening to privatize their jobs, the city released a counterattack: It revealed results of a surprise inspection that found custodians watching TV while they were supposed to be at work.

Negotiations were already �on the verge of disaster� before Thursday, said Local 287 President Robert Montuori. He accused the city of trying to intimidate workers and punish the union for opposing privatization.

As negotiations stall, the city is moving forward toward privatization: It sent out a request for proposals in December, seeking bids on a custodial services contract for the schools. Eight bids came in; the district has identified GCA Services Group, Inc. out of Pennsburg, Penn. as its preferred bidder.

Custodians argue privatization would lead to lower wages, lost jobs, and wasted taxpayer money on costly management contracts. They�ve been showing up regularly at school board meetings to deliver that message.

Clark said the district has found that in the buildings where the city has already privatized custodial work, the district saves at least two-thirds of the cost of using union-only labor, �and the work gets done.�

�I get zero complaints about the cleanliness in those buildings,� Clark said, while he gets complaints every day about the other buildings, where the union workers clean.

Clark said given the efficiency and good results, it makes sense to continue to privatize the custodial work. He said language in the custodian�s current contract allows the district to further privatize after June 30, 2009. His said the district doesn�t need union consent in order to privatize, but it is still negotiating in good faith.
Nothing to Negotiate

At this point there is nothing to negotiate. The union refused to bargain and is being thrown out on its ass, and rightfully so.

Rebuttal to Union Complaints

Public union custodians argue that privatization would lead to lower wages, lost jobs, and wasted taxpayer money on costly management contracts.

Lower Wages: Let's hope so. The union workers are overpaid even if they cleaned the schools like they are supposed to do.

Wasted Taxpayer Money: No, that is a blatant self-serving union lie given the district saves at least two-thirds of the cost of using union-only labor, �and the work gets done.�

Lost Jobs: Not a chance. There will actually be more jobs as a result of getting rid of the unions.

How so? For starters, there will be an equivalent number of private jobs to replace the union jobs. Moreover, given the district saves 67% on cleaning costs, some of the saved money will be used on other school district needs, creating more jobs. Finally, some of the savings can be used to cut back on tax increases putting more money in the pockets of taxpayers who will spend it. That too creates jobs.

Every fired public union worker creates more jobs elsewhere, faster than most can imagine possible, quite possibly immediately.

Thus, a good way to deal with rising unemployment is to fire public union workers.

Addendum

Some people simply cannot look at both sides of the coin. "Jeff in Cleveland" is one of them. Jeff writes "For every fired $20 hour job with benefits - The city/state gets to pay for food stamps."

OK Jeff, fair enough. Yet, as I said above, more private workers will be hired than public workers lost. Thus, food stamps outlays will shrink as a result of firing public workers.

Thanks Jeff, for adding to the reasons for firing public union workers.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

Happy Birthday Keziah!

It is my daughters birthday today and she has reached the grand old age of 15.

How those years have flown by. It doesn't seem long since she looked like this...




Now she is all grown up...



It was her choice to have her photo taken in a similar pose to her earlier one, including stick!


She had a few friends around at the weekend to celebrate her birthday which included a sleepover and compulsory play on the trampoline.

They may say they are grown up but they still like to play on the trampoline! I admit in this photo they weren't doing much bouncing, more chatting, but they had been.


She chose her own cake, with decoration based on the poem by Edward Lear;



 So Happy 15th Birthday Keziah.

I hope you have had a great day!


Silhouette and Crate & Barrel winners!

It�s time to announce the lucky winners of the fantastic Amex/Crate and Barrel and Silhouette craft cutter giveaways!!

First of all, the winner of the Crate and Barrel $100 gift card is:

Susie of Shafer Living!

Secondly, the winner of the Silhouette is�drum roll puuhleeze�

April of Natural Nester!

 

Congrats ladies!!

Remember (I believe) you can still use the code �TDC123� at check out to get the fab discounts on a Silhouette if you didn�t win!

Go here again to see the deals and more info!

I�ll be back later with what is a bit of a pink, white and aqua Fourth of July disaster. :)

Book of the Moment

L.A. Under the Influence by Roger Sherman is
A series of case studies in Los Angeles [in which] Sherman applies game theory to scrutinize the behavior of ... intersecting private and public interests, revealing an alternative logic of architectural composition. Making extensive use of diagrams, photographs, and a range of negotiation models employed within game theory, including pecking order, negotiated access, multilateral exchange, and tit for tat, he identifies the characteristic features and behaviors of this new spatial logic. Sherman contends that it is ... negotiations [between ... stakeholders over the use of property], rather than more commonly accepted factors like history, symbolism, and planning, that not only shape a city but also influence the development of its smallest common increment: the individual parcel. [University of Minnesota Press]
Here are some of the case studies presented in Sherman's book.


View Larger Map
An oil rig and single-family house buffeted by a pocket park (easement).


View Larger Map
Multi-family housing, a palm reader, and a billboard living in harmony with each other.


View Larger Map
A high-wire tower straddling two properties.


View Larger Map
Billboards "as shading device and privacy protector for second-floor apartment roof deck."


View Larger Map
A "no-man's land protruding into the street."


View Larger Map
Oil rigs, a bank, and Curly's Cafe coexisting harmoniously.


View Larger Map
An oil derrick in Beverly Hills camouflaged in a floral pattern.


View Larger Map
Why yes, that is a regulation wiffle ball court.

Consumer Confidence Dives; Treasury Yields Plunge to April 2009 Levels; An Economic Depression is Here - Congress, the Fed to Blame

Is that a 3-handle I see on the long bond and a 2-handle of the 10-year treasury? Why yes it is.

Treasury Yields - Weekly Close



click on chart for sharper image

The week is not over yet but this looks rather ominous. Treasury yields are back where they were in April of 2009 at the start of the so-called "recovery".

I am not quite sure why the 3-month treasury displays as a flatline at .5. The flatline is closer to 0.

Consumer Sentiment Plunges

Inquiring minds note that the Consumer Conference Board Confidence Index Drops Sharply.
The Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index� which had been on the rise for three consecutive months, declined sharply in June. The Index now stands at 52.9 (1985=100), down from 62.7 in May. The Present Situation Index decreased to 25.5 from 29.8. The Expectations Index declined to 71.2 from 84.6 last month.

Those saying conditions are �good� decreased to 8.0 percent from 9.7 percent, while those saying business conditions are �bad� increased to 42.4 percent from 39.5 percent. Consumers� assessment of the labor market was also less favorable. Those claiming jobs are �hard to get� increased to 44.8 percent from 43.9 percent, while those saying jobs are �plentiful� decreased to 4.3 percent from 4.6 percent.

Consumers� short-term outlook, which had improved significantly last month, turned more pessimistic in June. Those anticipating an improvement in business conditions over the next six months decreased to 17.2 percent from 22.8 percent, while those expecting conditions will worsen rose to 14.9 percent from 11.9 percent.
An Economic Depression is Here

Either the present conditions are about to move back up or the expectations index is about to plunge as well. I expect the latter. Expectations for improvement are way too optimistic, not that a reading of 71 is optimistic at all. It isn't.

Structural problems are immense and the sad fact of the matter is those problems cannot be cured by more deficit spending. Krugman is correct about a depression, just wrong about the cure. Logically the disease and the cure cannot be the same.

By the way, a depression is not coming, we are clearly in one, a deflationary one at that. Once again, those chanting hyperinflation all missed the boat by light-years.

Various safety nets like food stamps, unemployment insurance, and of course people no longer paying their mortgage and living in their houses for free all mask over the depression.

Depression is The Price We Pay For Budgetary Murder and contrary to Krugman's belief, further budgetary murder cannot possibly cure anything.

Understanding The Problem

Before you can fix anything, you have to understand what the problem is and what caused it.

What causes depressions is an unsustainable runup in credit and debt that precedes it, NOT a failure to go deeper in debt.

Anyone who understands 5th grade math should be able to figure that out. Unfortunately, Nobel prize winning economists can't.

Congress, the Fed to Blame

In this case, a spendthrift Congress coupled with loose monetary policy at the Fed, effectively encouraged housing and other speculation. The depression we are in now is a result of massively failed policy. The same policy cannot possibly be the cure.

Give Congress the boot and vote in those against bank bailouts, Fannie Mae bailouts, excessive military spending the US simply cannot afford, and other free-lunch policies.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List
 
Copyright 2010 Camera Dashboard. All rights reserved.
Themes by Ex Templates Blogger Templates l Home Recordings l Studio Rekaman