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Latest Posts By pharoah88 - Supreme      About pharoah88
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27-Dec-2010 12:55 User Research/Opinions   /   $$$$ C O E $$$$ dOes nOt cOntrOl traffIc $$$$       Go to Message
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财经人语 “治堵”还须控制车数量

(2010-12-27)
早报导读
● 傅来兴

  拥车证(COE)价格继续往上冲,大型及豪华车组和公开组成功价格冲破7万元一张,预计接下来还会继续上涨,已有人预测甚至会上到10万元。

  这是交通部未来面对的大挑战:如何控制车子的数量和车子的流量,同时让想拥有车子的人能够以合理的价格买到COE买到车,满足了想拥车者的期望后,而又不会造成公路拥挤问题进一步恶化。

  因为COE价格上涨会带动新旧车子价格上升,继而推高通货膨胀,直接影响人民的生活费,依目前的情况看来,COE成价的上涨刚开始而已,升幅有逐渐增加的趋势。

  过去有人用福建话来嘲笑汽车配额制度,将COE说成是“死给它”,意即投标COE是无可奈何的事,只好死给它看。

 

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27-Dec-2010 12:50 User Research/Opinions   /   $$$$ C O E $$$$ dOes nOt cOntrOl traffIc $$$$       Go to Message
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财经人语 “治堵”还须控制车数量
拥车证(COE)价格继续往上冲,大型及豪华车组和公开组成功价格冲破7万元一张,预计接下来还会继续上涨,已有人预测甚至会上到10万元。
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27-Dec-2010 12:42 User Research/Opinions   /   #### HONESTY, THE BEST MEDICINE # # # #       Go to Message
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HONESTY , THE BEST MEDICINE

As a society, we need to be honest about treatment limitations.

Patients should be well informed about what the industry knows and doesn’t know.

There should be candour about the likelihood that care will make them worse instead of better. Patients should be empowered to be the treatment decision makers.

In recognition of the uncertainty patients face, we need to compassionately acknowledge their pain and fear. We need to counsel that aggressive intervention isn’t always the best course of action.

I share these conclusions not to suggest dissatisfaction; Linde and I are grateful for her care. Her clinicians included the country’s most respected doctors who did what they were trained to do — aggressively seek a cure.

Rather, these observations are offered to challenge the US healthcare industry to be more explicit about medical treatment being as much an art as a science, and to provide emotional and spiritual support to improve patient and caregiver experience.

There may be an economic benefit to this.

As patients learn more about the limits of medicine, some may choose less intensive and costly care. As a nation, our healthcare spending increases as patients near the end of life.

Since its onset, Linde’s cancer has come back twice. The first time, she continued a courageous and valiant fight.

The second time, she learned that further treatment would be painful, risky and probably leave her partially disabled and deformed. She was further told that the likelihood of having an extended, high quality life was remote.

With this knowledge, she opted for palliative care favouring quality of life over extending life.

My acceptance of her decision, while difficult, was the best way I could show my love and support.

Linde commends her clinicians for being great teachers. They were candid, patient, used non-clinical terms, and shared their uncertainty about the effectiveness of suggested treatment. Their support of her as the decision maker was wonderful.

Linde and I have opted to share our journey because we hope the understanding of medicine we have developed will be helpful to others.  Bloomberg

David H Klein is president and chief executive officer of Excellus BlueCross BlueShield in Rochester, New York.

The opinions expressed are his own.

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27-Dec-2010 12:35 User Research/Opinions   /   #### HONESTY, THE BEST MEDICINE # # # #       Go to Message
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My wife’s cancer yields lessons for healthcare

David H Klein

In July 2008, my wife Linde was diagnosed with advanced squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity. Her subsequent treatment has led me to view medical care from a different perspective.

What Linde and I have learned over the past two years has broadened my fundamental beliefs about medicine.

In sum, while amazing advances have been made and miracles are occurring, medicine remains very much an art.

I’ve spent almost 40 years on the business side of the healthcare industry, including the last seven as chief executive officer of a health plan.

I believed my network of contacts would serve us well. I presumed there were unambiguous answers to questions about the best treatment plan and the best providers.

What I learned was that for uncommon diseases like Linde’s, if not all diseases generally, clear answers often don’t exist.

I will never forget one doctor telling me that the information I sought wasn’t available and that I would have to trust my gut.

This is pretty incredible when you think about how much as a society we spend on healthcare.

The new United States federal healthcare reform law promotes the adoption of health information technology and supports comparative effectiveness research to understand the marginal contributions of new drugs, devices and procedures.

But what we learned with Linde’s treatment is that data on innovations, especially for less common diseases, isn’t sufficient to broadly create evidence-based medicine.

Often medical research, even when coordinated and summed across the industry, doesn’t have enough patients suffering with a particular disease to test alternative treatments using scientific — trial and error — methods.

I can’t tell you how many times I heard from physicians that every patient is different.

The same deficiency exists for assessing a practitioner’s expertise with a particular treatment for a disease. To evaluate a doctor or treatment, it’s necessary to risk adjust for differences in patients.

Generally, it’s more challenging to care for an older patient than a younger one.

Similarly, treating patients with diabetes is more difficult than those without. There are myriad risk factors and standardising for them is difficult if not impossible.

This has implications for what we consider the best places to receive care and how doctor performance should be reported. We really don’t want clinicians to avoid riskier cases to achieve better grades.

In the face of these limitations, clinicians often rely on their understanding of underlying disease processes to decide the best course of action.

Leading medical organisations convene panels of experts to provide opinions about the most effective approach for diagnosis and treatment. The work of these panels is important, but sometimes their opinions are later found to be wrong.

The recently developed human genome provides promise for gaining disease process insight, but it’s a work in progress.

Bottom line, there isn’t as much hard science as one would like.

So, what do we do?

I wish there was an answer that offered real value. After all, I’m a business executive who runs a health plan providing benefits to thousands of employers. I’m also a taxpayer who supports government programmes.

Unfortunately, there are no such assurances, but there are steps we can take.

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27-Dec-2010 12:25 User Research/Opinions   /   #### HONESTY, THE BEST MEDICINE # # # #       Go to Message
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H O N E S T Y
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27-Dec-2010 12:20 User Research/Opinions   /   $$$$ C O E $$$$ dOes nOt cOntrOl traffIc $$$$       Go to Message
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Why not raise usage taxes?

Letter from Kelvin Seah Kah Cheng

I REFER to “Rises in COE premiums: Were speculative elements the cause?” (Dec 24).

I am glad to learn of the Ministry of Transport’s decision to limit the number of certificates of entitlement (COEs) available to the market.

Although the immediate impact of this move is to increase the costs involved in buying a vehicle which may hurt aspiring car owners, it will, nevertheless, pave the way for a more sustainable pattern of vehicle growth in the long run.

However, I am wondering whether the higher COE prices might actually have an unintended effect of increasing vehicle usage instead.

With COE prices reaching a high of $76,000, the fixed costs associated with a car purchase are now much steeper than before.

To make the most of their expensive purchases, new car owners might just decide to increase their usage levels.

After all, usage charges will now be low, relative to the cost of the vehicle itself.

As such, even a visit to the neighbourhood mall or market may be worth a car ride, from the perspective of the new car owner.

Perhaps a better way to control traffic congestion and vehicle usage is to increase usage taxes such as electronic road prices and parking charges rather than imposing a tighter restriction on the number of COEs available.

It might be useful for the Ministry to review behavioural research from other jurisdictions which study how vehicle usage intensities are affected by variables such as the fixed cost of a vehicle and usage taxes; contemplate the successes, failures and lessons of the transport policies of these countries, and examine if certain best practices can be assimilated to fit the local context, in order to arrive at the optimal road use policy.

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27-Dec-2010 12:16 User Research/Opinions   /   $$$$ C O E $$$$ dOes nOt cOntrOl traffIc $$$$       Go to Message
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$$$$  C O E  is  jUst  fOr  TAXES  ? ? ? ?
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27-Dec-2010 12:03 User Research/Opinions   /   ~TALENT mIs~develOpment=*WEALTH mIs*dIstrIbUtIOn       Go to Message
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MDIS students affected by lost scripts to retake exam next month

SINGAPORE

But that fear — as 31 students from the Management Development Institute of Singapore (MDIS) have discovered — was unfounded. They have been given a date extension to retake the multiple-choicequestion (MCQ) paper next month.

The school will conduct the re-test on Jan 19 next year instead of Dec 18 which was two weeks ago.

On Nov 30, the students were told their scripts had been lost and no explanation was given as to how it had happened.

It is believed that those affected by the missing scripts — which MDIS had previously attributed to an “administrative lapse” — are full-time final-year students, the majority of whom are foreigners.

When contacted, an MDIS spokesperson said that officials have met up with the students and they have agreed on the new date.

The spokesperson added: “The students are happy and satisfied with the Institute’s efforts in addressing their concerns.”

Previously, MDIS told the students that Oklahoma City University (OCU) — its partner university in the Mass Communications Programme — had advised the private school that candidates should re-take the paper or it would be difficult for the university to assess and award marks for the MCQ component.

One relieved student said he and his classmates had spent nine days in September preparing for the paper under the guidance of OCU lecturers.

Students were also worried that they would have too little time to prepare for the re-exam, since they also had to go through other courses at that time.

But MediaCorp understands that they will only sit for the MCQ paper after they have completed their current module.

“This is definitely good news as we will be able to concentrate on our current subjects before re-sitting for the MCQ test,” said another student, 20. — First, their exam scripts were lost. Then came the possibility they would have only a short time to prepare to re-sit it.Zul Othman

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27-Dec-2010 11:21 Others   /   TRADE FREELY & LiVE LONGER       Go to Message
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By AFP, Updated: 24/12/2010

IBM offers glimpse into the future

Air-powered batteries, 3-D cellphones that project holographs and personalized commutes are among the predictions of IBM scientists gazing into their crystal balls.



IBM offers glimpse into the future

IBM offers glimpse into the future



The US computer giant this week released its annual "Next Five in Five" list of five innovations expected over the next five years.

Among the predictions are advances in transistors and battery technology that "will allow your devices to last about 10 times longer than they do today," IBM said.

Today's lithium-ion batteries could be replaced by batteries "that use the air we breathe to react with energy-dense metal, eliminating a key inhibitor to longer lasting batteries," IBM said.

"If successful, the result will be a lightweight, powerful and rechargeable battery capable of powering everything from electric cars to consumer devices.

"Better yet, in some cases, batteries may disappear altogether in smaller devices," IBM said, by reducing the amount of energy per transistor to less than 0.5 volts and relying on a technique known as "energy scavenging."

"Some wrist watches use this today -- they require no winding and charge based on the movement of your arm," IBM said. "The same concept could be used to charge mobile phones for example -- just shake and dial."

Also on the cards: 3-D and holographic cameras that fit into cellphones allowing video chat with "3-D holograms of your friends in real time."

Personalized commutes are another development seen by IBM scientists, who are already at work on using new mathematical models and predictive analytics technologies to deliver the best routes for daily travel.

"Adaptive traffic systems will intuitively learn traveler patterns and behavior to provide more dynamic travel safety and route information to travelers than is available today," IBM said.

Human beings will also increasingly become "walking sensors," IBM said, providing valuable data to "fight global warming, save endangered species or track invasive plants or animals that threaten ecosystems around the world."

"In five years, sensors in your phone, your car, your wallet and even your tweets will collect data that will give scientists a real-time picture of your environment," IBM said.

"A whole class of 'citizen scientists' will emerge, using simple sensors that already exist to create massive data sets for research," it said.

Finally, IBM said, scientists will find ways to better recycle heat and energy from data centers to "do things like heat buildings in the winter and power air conditioning in the summer."

"Up to 50 percent of the energy consumed by a modern data center goes toward air cooling," IBM said. "Most of the heat is then wasted because it is just dumped into the atmosphere.

"New technologies, such as novel on-chip water-cooling systems developed by IBM, the thermal energy from a cluster of computer processors can be efficiently recycled to provide hot water for an office or houses," it said.

IBM posted a YouTube video of the five predictions at www.youtube.com/watch?v=anKiEoxkpxM
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21-Dec-2010 12:51 Genting Sing   /   Traders Lounge - Daily opportunities for everyone       Go to Message
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Card
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21-Dec-2010 12:49 User Research/Opinions   /   ~TALENT mIs~develOpment=*WEALTH mIs*dIstrIbUtIOn       Go to Message
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wongcas Primo Mobile Partners Up with ITE East
By Wong Casandra on 17 Dec 2010
I haven't been to a school for an actual product launch before, so naturally, I was intrigued by Primo Mobile's choice of location (ITE College East) for the launch of its Tonino Lamborghini Evoluzione Android 2.1 smartphone. Turns out it was more than just that.
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21-Dec-2010 12:47 Others   /   TRADE FREELY & LiVE LONGER       Go to Message
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teinhee Do We Need the HD in Mobile?
By Seow Tein Hee on 20 Dec 2010
3D displays are coming to mobile devices, but even before that, we've already seen smartphones capable of high definition video playbacks. The question is - do we, or should we, put our mobile phones through the rigorous task of playing 720p or even 1080 videos?
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21-Dec-2010 12:43 User Research/Opinions   /   00000000 Information Management 11111111       Go to Message
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Do We Need the HD in Mobile? By Seow Tein Hee on 20 Dec 2010 3D displays are coming to mobile devices, but even before that, we've already seen smartphones capable of high definition video playbacks. The question is - do we, or should we, put our mobile phones through the rigorous task of playing 720p or even 1080 videos?
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21-Dec-2010 12:41 Others   /   TRADE FREELY & LiVE LONGER       Go to Message
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Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year!
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21-Dec-2010 12:38 Others   /   TRADE FREELY & LiVE LONGER       Go to Message
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BALANCING 

LIFESTYLE
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21-Dec-2010 12:36 Others   /   TRADE FREELY & LiVE LONGER       Go to Message
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21-Dec-2010 12:34 User Research/Opinions   /   ~TALENT mIs~develOpment=*WEALTH mIs*dIstrIbUtIOn       Go to Message
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fOr  thOse  whO  get  an  A  Is

educAtion  In  Class




fOr  thOse  whO  get  a  D  is

Deduction  In  CASH
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21-Dec-2010 12:32 User Research/Opinions   /   ~TALENT mIs~develOpment=*WEALTH mIs*dIstrIbUtIOn       Go to Message
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fOr  thOse  whO  get  an  A  Is

educAtion  In  Class




fOr  thOse  whO  get  a  D  is

Donation  In  CASH
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21-Dec-2010 12:31 User Research/Opinions   /   ~TALENT mIs~develOpment=*WEALTH mIs*dIstrIbUtIOn       Go to Message
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By Channel NewsAsia, Updated: 20/12/2010

Former MOE scholar expelled from University of York

Former MOE scholar expelled from University of York



Former MOE scholar expelled from University of York

Jonathan Wong (Photo: Screen grab of York Press website)



SINGAPORE : A former scholar with Singapore’s Ministry of Education (MOE) has been expelled from the University of York.

23—year—old Jonathan Wong, who was a history major at the university, had been found guilty of owning child pornography videos.

In a statement on Monday, the university said Jonathan has been "permanently excluded" on the grounds of gross misconduct.

The university added that it is strongly committed to child safety and deplores all types of child pornography and abuse.

Jonathan had also been sentenced to six months’ imprisonment by the UK court on Monday.

However, his sentence has been suspended for two years. This means it will not be a custodial sentence. Sources at the court had earlier indicated he would not receive a custodial sentence because he had pleaded guilty to the charges and had no previous convictions.

But he will be subject to an eight—month supervision order from the probation service and will be placed under the sex offender’s register for seven years.

He has also been disqualified from working with children.

With the expulsion, Jonathan’s eight—month supervision order has to be re—looked at as he will no longer be staying legally in the UK.

The MOE has also revoked his teaching scholarship.

— CNA/al
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21-Dec-2010 12:28 User Research/Opinions   /   && && && && PAINT THE TOWN RED PARTYING       Go to Message
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