Updated: 9/3/2004; 9:29:05 AM.
John Robb's Weblog
Thriving on rapid change.
        

Thursday, November 13, 2003

 Amazon.  The Golden Ratio:  The Story of Phi, the world's most astonishing number
7:29:17 AM    Comment_ Trackback []

 Scientific American.  Cheap plastic memory.  1 gigabyte per cubic centimeter. 
7:24:42 AM    Comment_ Trackback []

 BingNYTimes FriedmanOne could easily do a revisionist history of 9/11 and show how it was simply the opening salvo in an attempted coup within Saudi Arabia — with the attack on America meant only as a bank shot to undermine one of the main supports of the Saudi ruling family. Last week's Riyadh bombing was just the latest episode in this civil war, involving hard-core Islamists out to overthrow the moderate/Westernized/indulgent Saudi elite.   NOTE:  this begs the question:  did the US invasion of Iraq improve the chances of a coup in Saudi Arabia?
7:20:08 AM    Comment_ Trackback []

 The biggest part of the winning the war on terrorism isn't our machinations in the ME, it is keeping the global economy growing over the long term (and expanding that growth to new areas of the world).  New data indicates that the management of the US economy is key to making this happen (something the Bush team seems uniquely ill prepared to do -- could you imagine a Russian, Mexican, or East Asian financial crisis with the Bush team at the helm??  Yikes!).  IF our economy falters, the global economy will contract severely spreading terrorism faster than we can stamp it out.  This is from Stephen Roach:

In all my years in this business, I’ve never come across such a worrisome and potentially lethal confluence of imbalances. For starters, they are global in scope. A lopsided world economy has never been so dependent on one growth engine — the United States. Over the seven-year 1995 to 2002 interval, revised figures now indicate that the US accounted for fully 96% of the cumulative increase in world GDP (at market exchange rates); that’s nearly three times America’s 33% share in the global economy. (Note: Previously, our estimates suggested that the US had accounted for 64% of the increase in world GDP over the 1994 to 2001 interval; revised statistics now place the total increase in world GDP over the 1995 to 2002 interval at $3.164 trillion and the US gain at $3.045 trillion over the same period.) In other words, outside of the United States, the rest of the world accounted for only 4% of the cumulative increase in global GDP over the seven years ending in 2002. While the strength of the dollar has exaggerated America’s contribution to world GDP growth over this period, there can be no mistaking the extraordinarily narrow base of this US-centric global growth dynamic.


6:30:48 AM    Comment_ Trackback []

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