Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Would you like dung with that? Elephant-style coffee $50 a cup


The Sydney Morning Herald

December 10, 2012

Lindsay Murdoch

A new brand of gourmet coffee comes from coffee beans hand-picked from Thai elephant dung and its price might leave a nasty taste in your mouth.

BANGKOK: Coffee connoisseurs are rushing to pay $50 a cup as the wives of mahouts in northern Thailand eagerly wait to pick through piles of fresh elephant dung.

In a world first, coffee made from pure arabica beans are being slow cooked in the stomachs of a herd of 30 elephants, plucked 30 hours later from their dung, then washed and roasted.

No, the result is not a crap-puccino, promoted as ''good to the last dropping''.

A Thai mahout's wife jokingly poses with a plastic basket containing coffee beans freshly cleaned from elephant dung
Nice work ... a mahout's wife jokingly holds a basket of beans below an elephant's tail. Photo: AP

Those who have tried Black Ivory Coffee say it tastes of ''milk chocolate, nutty, earthy with hints of spice and red berries''.
Anantara Hotels, Resorts and Spas, a luxury hotel group, is selling the coffee at its hotels in northern Thailand, the Maldives and Abu Dhabi. Business is brisk despite the price tag of $US1100 ($1049) a kilogram.

Correspondents from Bangkok have made the journey to the Golden Triangle, where Thailand, Laos and Burma, meet to witness the jumbo baristas at work and to sip the product.

''When an elephant eats coffee, its stomach acid breaks down the protein found in coffee, which is a key factor in bitterness,'' Blake Dinkin, a Canadian who has spent $US300,000 developing the brand told Associated Press. ''You end up with a cup that's very smooth without the bitterness of regular coffee.''

The coffee beans, hand-picked by villagers on hillsides, stew together with bananas, sugar cane and other ingredients in the elephants' vegetarian diet.

The first batch of 70 kilograms has already sold out and Mr Dinkin hopes to produce six times that amount next year.

Black Ivory is not the first novelty coffee to hit the market in recent years. Coffee passed through civets sells for a similar price. In 2010 the Indonesian President, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, raised eyebrows when he presented then prime minister Kevin Rudd with Kopi Luwak, or civet coffee, during a visit to Australia.

Sunday, November 4, 2012

The golden rules for happiness, wealth and stress-free living


The golden rules for happiness, wealth and stress-free living

Date
STOCK MARKET REPORT WITH 50 DOLLAR NOTES BURSTING THROUGH.  CASH MONEY INVESTMENT SUPER SHARE SELL BUY OPTIONS FUTURES TRADE COMMISSION INTEREST RATES AUD AUSTRAL IAN CURRENCY RBA RESERVE BANK WAGES PAY RISE SALARY PROFITS SAVINGS BULL BEAR MARKET ASX SPECIALX 27193
Shares
...............................AFR FIRST USE ONLY...................................  PIC JAMES DAVIES
Half the stockmarket game is about making profits, the other half about avoiding losses. Photo: James Davies
HERE are 10 sharemarket lessons you should already know:

■Let's start with an oldie but a goodie. If you find yourself standing up at your dealing desk punching the air in delight, it means ''Sell!''

■And another one. If anyone ever says ''we have entered a new paradigm in equity investment'', sell.

■There is only one thing a falling share price tells you and it's not ''BUY ME''. I do not know what it is about Australian culture, but if something falls in price, everyone wants to buy it. I cannot tell you the number of times my wife has told me ''It's OK, it was 25 per cent off''. She could have saved 100 per cent. A falling share price means ''SELL'' not ''BUY''. It's technical analysis 101.

■The market falls three times as fast as it rises. An academic study into behavioural finance once concluded that losses have three times the emotional impact of a gain. It explains a lot. Fear is a faster driver than confidence. It takes a lot longer to become confident than fearful.

■Humans are not natural investors. We need mechanisms outside the ramblings of the brain to protect equity investments. Unemotional triggers because our natural triggers of fear and greed are useless.

■No one ever tells you to sell. Step on to a car lot and expect to be sold a car. Appear in the offices of the finance industry and expect to be told to invest. We are there to get you in, not let you out. So when you want to sell, it will have to be your decision. Expect to meet resistance.

■There are no crystal balls. When it comes to tomorrow, financial theory tells you to look at history and project it forward. It's rubbish. Tomorrow is not a reflection of the past but is in fact a blank canvas. Historic returns are not future expectations, they are statistics.

■If half the game is about making profits, then the other half is almost certainly avoiding losses. It's about not stuffing it up. It's almost more important than getting it right. To control losses you need to watch what happens to your investments after you have bought them and act when proved wrong. It is this latter bit that the buy-and-hold philosophy turns a blind eye to and that's why it doesn't work except in hindsight on select examples. Buy and hold was never alive, its weaknesses were just hidden by a bull market.The guy that came up with the line ''if you never sell, you never take a loss'' is an idiot. Sometimes you wonder if long-term diversified investment isn't really just a concept the finance industry came up with as an excuse for not having to pay attention. I'm sure Babcock & Brown, ABC Learning and Pasminco were all long-term investments once.

■Timing the market. If you want to save yourself 10 years of going nowhere, it is clear that occasionally you are going to have to time the market. But let that not dismay you, timing is half the fun. Making a judgment and taking a risk is why we're here and the finance industry would do well to embrace it rather than hide in the cliche that you can't. If the finance industry is going to survive, if we are ever going to differentiate ourselves from the execution-only alternatives, we have to have a stab at it. At telling people ''when'' as well as ''what''.

■Be good to your kids. Those kids you're going to pack off to primary school on Monday are the first generation of investors who will have no experience of the 2008 crash and are therefore the first generation capable of irrational exuberance once again. We will be selling them all our assets at the top one day. So smile and be nice. It's us and them.

Marcus Padley is a stockbroker with Patersons Securities and the author of sharemarket newsletter Marcus Today. For a free trial go to marcustoday.com.au. His views do not necessarily reflect those of Patersons.

No such thing as ownership when it's an e-book

No such thing as ownership when it's an e-book

Date
Linda Morris

Linda Morris

Features write




BUYERS of e-books may have no more legal rights than ''tenant farmers'', it has emerged, following the case of a Kindle user whose digital library was wiped by Amazon.


The fine print in online agreements inserted at the behest of publishers to protect authors' copyright licenses readers to the digital files but does not grant ''tangible'' ownership, as with any hard copy book.

These conditional e-book licences are policed and can be revoked at the discretion of the e-book retailer as a Norwegian Kindle customer discovered when in October they allegedly violated Amazon's terms and conditions and had their digital library deleted, then reinstated.

No right to read ... Amazon removed Animal Farm from their customer's kindles.
No right to read ... Amazon removed George Orwell'sAnimal Farm from their customer's kindles.
Readers are also physically prevented from transferring content to friends and immediate family or between devices by encryption software called Digital Rights Management, devised to protect a creator's copyright from piracy and prevent buyers from on-selling the digital file for profit.

The case of ''repossession'' has been seized on by the copyright activist and Canadian science writer Cory Doctorow, who sells DMR-free copies of his own books to argue for unshackled ownership of e-books. 

On his blog spot Boing Boing, Doctorow said digital licensing deals circumvented the right for books to be transferred, sold or bequeathed to another person, rendering the reader a mere ''tenant farmer''.

Readers' limited rights are one of the main pitfalls with e-books as sold by some retailers, the president of the Australian Booksellers Association, Jon Page, said.

''This is not the first time Amazon has done something like this. They famously removed George Orwell's 1984 from everybody's Kindles when they discovered they didn't have the rights to sell the e-book. This is very easy for the likes of Amazon, Apple and Google to do because they force their customers to store e-book purchases in their walled garden or cloud through their devices and apps."

Retailers like Kobo and ReadCloud make it easier for customers to download e-book files to their computer so they can keep a copy of the digital file on their own system, Page said. ''But it does highlight the fact that e-books are software and that you are purchasing a licence to read - a licence that can be revoked.''

''The inability to legally on-sell or on-distribute digital products may be something which consumers consider in determining whether to purchase a hard copy or a digital product - this will apply to books, but also to products such as CDs.''

Ultimately the convenience of digital reading outweighed most people's concerns, said Joel Naoum, the publisher of the Australian digital-only imprint Momentum.

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

190m tonnes of ice a day has sea rising less than 1mm a year


190m tonnes of ice a day has sea rising less than 1mm a year

Date
Ben Cubby

Ben Cubby

Environment Editor


Antarctica is shedding an average of 190 million tonnes of ice every day, according to a landmark study that used satellites to ''weigh'' the vast landmass.

Although parts of East Antarctica are growing, glaciers in West Antarctica are melting faster, leading to a net loss of ice across the continent, according to the study published in the journal Nature.

''We're confident that the ice cover is shrinking, and the rate along the Amundsen Sea coast is accelerating,'' said the lead researcher Professor Matt King, of the University of Tasmania.
Rapid melting in some parts of the continent is partially offset by heavy snowfalls elsewhere, meaning that the net loss of ice per year is about 69 billion tonnes.Previous studies had struggled to accurately map the land mass under most of Antarctica's huge ice shelves, and this knowledge is crucial to measuring the thickness of the ice.

As more ice melts, the land mass itself is gradually rising at a rate of about two millimetres per year, like a cake slowly baking in an oven.

''It's like if you're standing on a beach with some wet sand, and you move your foot and the print disappears pretty quickly, it just flows back into place,'' Professor King said.

The answer was a new analytical model that was able to make satellite data match the ground-based observations about ice melt and land rise, and revised down the speed that the land is coming up.

The study made unique use of satellite date, from a project known as GRACE, short for Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment. Twin satellites orbit the Earth, 220 kilometres apart and about 500 kilometres above the ground.

As they spin, tiny changes in the mass of the Earth below affect their position in relation to each other, and they carry instruments sensitive enough to measure a change in distance of about 10 micrometres - about a tenth the width of a human hair.

Coupled with global positioning systems, the satellites can send back highly detailed information about Earth's gravity and therefore its landmass, even when the planet's surface is hidden deep beneath the ice.


One result of the findings is that melting ice in Antarctica is not contributing as much to global sea level rise as some other studies have assumed.

While the continent contains enough frozen water to raise global sea levels by 59 metres should it ever all melt, the findings show it is currently contributing less than a millimetre per year.Professor King said the findings showed that sea levels had already been rising faster than they had for centuries without much extra water from the Antarctic ice sheet.

''The melt in some key areas is sped up between 2006 and 2010, when the study ended,'' he said. ''So it shows that sea level rise can be expected to change quite sharply if the melt rate continues to increase, on top of what's already happening.''

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/environment/weather/190m-tonnes-of-ice-a-day-has-sea-rising-less-than-1mm-a-year-20121022-2817w.html#ixzz2ABh7YOVq







Sunday, October 21, 2012

'People used to stare at my disfigurement. Now they can stare in amazement'

'People used to stare at my disfigurement. Now they can stare in amazement'

Date
WASHINGTON: A man who spent 15 years as a recluse after suffering injuries in a gun accident says his life has been transformed by a facial transplant.
Richard Lee Norris, 37, received the full face transplant in a 36-hour operation in March. It involved replacing both jaws, teeth, tongue, skin and underlying nerve and muscle tissue from his scalp to his neck. Now, seven months on, doctors say he eats primarily by mouth and can taste and smell.
''For the past 15 years I lived as a recluse, hiding behind a surgical mask and doing most of my shopping at night when fewer people were around,'' Mr Norris said. ''People used to stare at me because of my disfigurement. Now they can stare at me in amazement and in the transformation I have made. I am now able to walk past people and no one even gives me a second look.
Richard Norris shown now, during his recovery and before his face transplant seven months ago after he was injured in a 1997 gun accident.
Richard Norris shown now, during his recovery and before his face transplant seven months ago after he was injured in a 1997 gun accident.
''My friends have moved on with their lives, starting families and careers. I can now start working on the life given back to me.''
Mr Norris continues to gain sensation in his face and is able to smile and show expression. His doctors say the motor function on the right side of his face is about 80 per cent normal and on the left side about 40 per cent.
Mr Norris's operation is the 23rd face transplant since doctors began doing the procedure seven years ago. The transplant was carried out by more than 150 doctors, nurses and other staff, under the professor of surgery at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, Eduardo Rodriguez.
''Our goal for Richard from the beginning was to restore facial harmony and functional balance in the most aesthetic manner possible through the complex transplantation of the facial bones, nerves, muscles, tongue, teeth and the associated soft tissues,'' Professor Rodriguez said.
''Richard is exceeding my expectations this soon after his surgery, and he deserves a great deal of credit for the countless hours spent practising his speech and strengthening his new facial muscles. He's one of the most courageous and committed individuals I know.''
Much of the research into the technology behind Mr Norris's surgery began in response to injuries suffered by US soldiers.
with Associated Press



Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/data-point/people-used-to-stare-at-my-disfigurement-now-they-can-stare-in-amazement-20121019-27wmd.html#ixzz29tWpxfgR

Sunday, October 14, 2012

57 cents church

I thought this was a good story to share with you.

Until the next time, cheers.




57 cents church

A little girl stood near a small church from which she had been turned away because it was "too crowded."

"I can't go to Sunday School," she sobbed to the pastor as he walked by.

Seeing her shabby, unkempt appearance, the pastor guessed the reason and, taking her by the hand, took her inside and found a place for her in the Sunday school class. The child was so happy that they found room for her, and she went to bed that night thinking of the children who have no place to worship Jesus.

Some two years later, this child lay dead in one of the poor tenement buildings. Her parents called for the kindhearted pastor who had befriended their daughter to handle the final arrangements.

As her poor little body was being moved, a worn and crumpled red purse was found which seemed to have been rummaged from some trash dump.

Inside was found 57 cents and a note, scribbled in childish handwriting, which read: "This is to help build the little church bigger so more children can go to Sunday School."

For two years she had saved for this offering of love.

When the pastor tearfully read that note, he knew instantly what he would do. Carrying this note and the cracked, red pocketbook to the pulpit, he told the story of her unselfish love and devotion.

He challenged his deacons to get busy and raise enough money for the larger building.

But the story does not end there...

A newspaper learned of the story and published It. It was read by a wealthy realtor who offered them a parcel of land worth many thousands.

When told that the church could not pay so much, he offered to sell it to the little church for 57 cents.

Church members made large donations. Checks came from far and wide.
Within five years the little girl's gift had increased to $250, 000.00--a huge sum for that time (near the turn of the century). Her unselfish love had paid large dividends.

When you are in the city of Philadelphia , look up Temple Baptist Church , with a seating capacity of 3,300. And be sure to visit TempleUniversity, where thousands of students are educated.

Have a look, too, at the Good Samaritan Hospital and at a Sunday School building which houses hundreds of beautiful children, built so that no child in the area will ever need to be left outside during Sunday school time.

In one of the rooms of this building may be seen the picture of the sweet face of the little girl whose 57 cents, so sacrificially saved, made such remarkable history. Alongside of it is a portrait of her kind pastor, Dr. Russell H. Conwell, author of the book, "Acres of Diamonds".


This is a true story, which goes to show WHAT GOD CAN DO WITH 57 CENTS.