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So far, he hasn't seen any developing countries that adopt mainstream Western development theories achieve success.
Olympic athletes train for 16 hours per day. Will you become an Olympic athlete if you train for 16 hours a day? Or should you try something different?
 
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HP to jettison up to 30,000 jobs as part of spinoff

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Hewlett-Packard Co. is preparing to shed up to another 30,000 jobs as the Silicon Valley pioneer launches into a new era in the same cost-cutting mode that has marred much of its recent history.

The purge announced Tuesday will occur within the newly formed Hewlett Packard Enterprise, a bundle of technology divisions focused on software, consulting and data analysis that is splitting off from the company's personal computer and printing operations.

The spinoff is scheduled to be completed by the end of next month, dooming 25,000 to 30,000 jobs within HP Enterprise. The target means 10 to 12 percent of the 252,000 workers joining HP Enterprise will lose their jobs as part of the company's effort to reduce its expenses by $2 billion annually.

The cuts expand upon austerity measures that HP has been pursuing for years to offset the damage caused by acquisitions that haven't panned out and a technological shift from PCs to mobile devices that reduced demand for many of the company's key products.

HP has already jettisoned 55,000 jobs during past few years under CEO Meg Whitman, who will be the leader of spun-off HP Enterprise. In an illustration of how far HP has fallen, its job cuts are being made while many other technology companies better positioned to take advantage of the mobile evolution have been on hiring sprees.

For instance, Google's workforce has swelled by 25,000 employees, or 77 percent, during the past four years.

HP's layoffs have been demoralizing blow to a company that provided a template for future Silicon Valley entrepreneurs when William Hewlett and David Packard founded it 76 years ago in a Palo Alto, California, garage. Hewlett and Packard later embraced an employee-friendly philosophy that became known as the "HP Way."

Things began to change at the outset of this century under former CEO Carly Fiorina, now a candidate for the Republican Party's nomination in the 2016 race for president. Fiorina engineered a $25 billion acquisition of PC maker Compaq that angered many shareholders, including heirs of the company's founders. She cut more than 30,000 jobs before she was fired a decade ago.

Fiorina's successor, Mark Hurd, also lowered expenses through much of his tenure and orchestrated an acquisition of technology consultants EDS that many analysts believe did more harm than good. Hurd stepped down in 2010 in a dispute over his expenses and his involvement with an HP contractor.

Despite the upheaval, HP remains one of the world's biggest technology companies. HP Enterprise expects to have more than $50 billion in annual revenue.

Whitman is touting the splintering of HP as a way to breathe new life into two companies that will be better suited to innovate in their own product areas and take care of their customers.

HP Enterprise focuses primarily on businesses and government agencies, while the PC and printing divisions depend on the consumer market for a significant chunk of their revenue.

"Hewlett Packard Enterprise will be smaller and more focused than HP is today," Whitman promised in a Tuesday statement.
 
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Olympic athletes train for 16 hours per day. Will you become an Olympic athlete if you train for 16 hours a day? Or should you try something different?

Western development theories are basically designed to ensure either development at the cost of political slavery or development at the cost of being a peripheral economy forever.

Definitely need to try something different; different in the sense that the model is tailored according to the needs and realities of the country and ever evolving.
 
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you're right, I don't think I've seen lenovo desktops in my company or for that matter in any of our clients, though I've seen a few laptops.

Frankly speaking, I cannot see ANY hardware company selling laptops, desktops, or even smartphones and tablets having any success other than momentary excitement if and when they come up with some really great fun design. Apple is so way ahead but even they have to constantly come up with new features and designs.

But Apple can afford to do the R&D given their margins where as dell, hp, lenovo et all simply compete for the commodity business

To be honest, in my workplace(a big financial/banking company here in London) we do use Lenovo thinkcentre desktops as our main computer hardware system. Lenovo Thinkcentre is renowned worldwide in the business industry. In this field i will say they are indeed world leaders.
Give credit when due.:D
 
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To be honest, in my workplace(a big financial/banking company here in London) we do use Lenovo thinkcentre desktops as our main computer hardware system. Lenovo Thinkcentre is renowned worldwide in the business industry. In this field i will say they are indeed world leaders.
Give credit when due.:D

Oh no doubt, they are a big company and they cannot be big without many major businesses using them.

My main point is PCs, whether laptop or desktop or even most servers are nothing but commodity. There is very little differentiation. Apple is different.
 
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World Bank high-income economy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"A high-income economy is defined by the World Bank as a country with a gross national income per capita above US$12,735 in 2014, calculated using the Atlas method"

List of high-income economies (as of July 1, 2015)

According to the World Bank the following 80 countries (including territories) are classified as "high-income economies".[1] In parenthesis the year(s) during which they held such classification.[3]

Andorra (1990–)
Antigua and Barbuda (2002, 2005–08, 2012–)
Argentina (2014–)
Aruba (1987–90, 1994–)
Australia (1987–)
Austria (1987–)
The Bahamas (1987–)
Bahrain (1987–89, 2001–)
Barbados (1989, 2000, 2002, 2006–)
Belgium (1987–)
Bermuda (1987–)
Brunei (1987, 1990–)
Canada (1987–)
Cayman Islands (1993–)
GuernseyJersey Channel Islands (1987–)
Chile (2012–)
Croatia (2008–)
Curaçao (1994–)b
Cyprus (1988–)
Czech Republic (2006–)
Denmark (1987–)
Equatorial Guinea (2007–)
Estonia (2006–)
Faroe Islands (1987–)
Finland (1987–)
France (1987–)
French Polynesia (1990–)
Germany (1987–)
Greece (1996–)
Greenland (1987–)
Guam (1987–89, 1995–)
Hong Kong (1987–)
Hungary (2007–11, 2014–)
Iceland (1987–)
Ireland (1987–)
Isle of Man (1987–89, 2002–)
Israel (1987–)
Italy (1987–)
Japan (1987–)
South Korea (1995–97, 2001–)
Kuwait (1987–)
Latvia (2009, 2012–)
Liechtenstein (1994–)
Lithuania (2012–)
Luxembourg (1987–)
Macao (1994–)
Malta (1989, 1998, 2000, 2002–)
Monaco (1994–)
Netherlands (1987–)
New Caledonia (1995–)
New Zealand (1987–)
Northern Mariana Islands (1995–2001, 2007–)
Norway (1987–)
Oman (2007–)
Poland (2009–)
Portugal (1994–)
Puerto Rico (1989, 2002–)
Qatar (1987–)
Russia (2012–)
Saint Kitts and Nevis (2012–)
Saint Martin (2010–)
San Marino (1991–93, 2000–)
Saudi Arabia (1987–89, 2004–)
Seychelles (2014–)
Singapore (1987–)
Sint Maarten (1994–)b
Slovakia (2007–)
Slovenia (1997–)
Spain (1987–)
Sweden (1987–)
Switzerland (1987–)
Taiwan (1987–)
Trinidad and Tobago (2006–)
Turks and Caicos Islands (2009–)
United Arab Emirates (1987–)
United Kingdom (1987–)
United States (1987–)
Uruguay (2012–)
U.S. Virgin Islands (1987–)
Venezuela (2014–)
 
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Economics can’t be reduced to single, perfect model
By Dani Rodrik -- Published: 2015-9-15 23:48:01

Different approaches needed, based on local characteristics


Ever since the late 19th century, when economics, increasingly embracing mathematics and statistics, developed scientific pretensions, its practitioners have been accused of a variety of sins. The charges - including hubris, neglect of social goals beyond incomes, excessive attention to formal techniques, and failure to predict major economic developments such as financial crises - have usually come from outsiders, or from a heterodox fringe. But lately it seems that even the field's leaders are unhappy.

Paul Krugman, a Nobel laureate who also writes a newspaper column, has made a habit of slamming the latest generation of models in macroeconomics for neglecting old-fashioned Keynesian truths. Paul Romer, one of the originators of new growth theory, has accused some leading names, including the Nobel laureate Robert Lucas, of what he calls "mathiness" - using maths to obfuscate rather than clarify.

Richard Thaler, a distinguished behavioral economist at the University of Chicago, has taken the profession to task for ignoring real-world behavior in favor of models that assume people are rational optimizers. And finance professor Luigi Zingales, also at the University of Chicago, has charged that his fellow finance specialists have led society astray by overstating the benefits produced by the financial industry.

This kind of critical examination by the discipline's big names is healthy and welcome, especially in a field that has often lacked much self-reflection. I, too, have taken aim at the discipline's sacred cows - free markets and free trade - often enough.

But there is a disconcerting undertone to this new round of criticism that needs to be made explicit, and that should be rejected. Economics is not the kind of science in which there could ever be one true model that works best in all contexts. The point is not "to reach a consensus about which model is right," as Romer puts it, but to figure out which model applies best in a given setting. And doing that will always remain a craft, not a science, especially when the choice has to be made in real time.

The social world differs from the physical world because it is man-made and hence almost infinitely malleable. So, unlike the natural sciences, economics advances scientifically not by replacing old models with better ones, but by expanding its library of models, with each shedding light on a different social contingency.

For example, we now have many models of markets with imperfect competition or asymmetric information. These models have not made their predecessors, based on perfect competition, obsolete or irrelevant. They have simply made us more aware that different circumstances call for different models.

Similarly, behavioral models that emphasize heuristic decision-making make us better analysts of environments where such considerations may be important. They do not displace rational-choice models, which remain the go-to tool in other settings. A growth model that applies to advanced countries may be a poor guide in developing countries. Models that emphasize expectations are sometimes best for analyzing inflation and unemployment levels; at other times, models with Keynesian elements will do a superior job.

Jorge Luis Borges, the Argentine writer, once wrote a short story - a single paragraph - that is perhaps the best guide to the scientific method. In it, he described a distant land where cartography - the science of making maps - was taken to ridiculous extremes. A map of a province was so detailed that it was the size of an entire city. The map of the empire occupied an entire province.

In time, the cartographers became even more ambitious: They drew a map that was an exact, one-to-one replica of the whole empire. As Borges wryly notes, subsequent generations could find no practical use for such an unwieldy map. So the map was left to rot in the desert, along with the science of geography that it represented.

Borges's point still eludes many social scientists today: Understanding requires simplification. The best way to respond to the complexity of social life is not to devise ever-more elaborate models, but to learn how different causal mechanisms work, one at a time, and then figure out which ones are most relevant in a particular setting.

We use one map if we are driving from home to work, another one if we are traveling to another city. Yet other kinds of maps are needed if we are on a bike, on foot, or planning to take public transport.

Navigating among economic models - choosing which one will work better - is considerably more difficult than choosing the right map. Practitioners use a variety of formal and informal empirical methods with varying skill. And, in my forthcoming book Economics Rules, I criticize economics training for not properly equipping students for the empirical diagnostics that the discipline requires.

But the profession's internal critics are wrong to claim that the discipline has gone wrong because economists have yet to reach consensus on the "correct" models (their preferred ones of course). Let us cherish economics in all its diversity - rational and behavioral, Keynesian and Classical, first-best and second-best, orthodox and heterodox - and devote our energy to becoming wiser at picking which framework to apply when.

The author is professor of International Political Economy at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2015. bizopinion@globaltimes.com.cn

Source: Justin Yifu Lin: China may join the ranks of high income countries in five years
 
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China’s H1 online retail sales surge nearly 49%
September 16, 2015, Wednesday |

CHINA’S online retail sales continue to show strong momentum, growing 48.7 percent during the first half of this year, China e-Business Research Center (CECRC) said yesterday.

Online retail sales hit 1.6 trillion yuan (US$251 billion), 11.4 percent of total retail sales in China. The number of online shoppers rose 19.1 percent to 417 million, said the Hangzhou-based e-commerce tracker.

Cross-border e-commerce has become a new driver of retail sales as online retailers connect domestic consumers with an increasing number of overseas brands, according to CECRC analyst Mo Daiqing.

Alibaba’s Tmall continues to dominate China’s online business-to-consumer market, with a 57.7 percent share. Its rival JD.com comes in second at 25.1 percent, followed by in distant third by Suning.com at 3.4 percent.

CECRC also noted that more transactions are being made on mobile Internet as online retailers move to encourage consumers to shop with their mobile apps on smartphones and tablets.

Robust online sales also boosted the revenue of China’s courier services by 33.2 percent during the same period to 120 billion yuan. CECRC estimates the revenue will top 290 billion yuan for the whole year.
 
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Chinese logistics firm buys 51% of UK’s Henry Bath & Son
Source: AFP | September 16, 2015, Wednesday |

CHINA’S biggest logistics firm, CMST Development Co, said it will acquire a majority stake in Henry Bath & Son, a 221-year-old firm which was one of the founders of the London Metal Exchange.

Beijing-based CMST Development will buy 51 percent in warehouse operator Henry Bath from owners Mercuria Capital Partners for around US$60 million, it said in a statement to the Shanghai Stock Exchange.

Henry Bath was founded in 1794, according to its website, and almost a century later went on to play a role in setting up the London Metal Exchange, now the world’s reference market for base metals.

It is the latest acquisition of a symbolic European asset by a Chinese firm, following the sales earlier this year of Italian tire maker Pirelli and French holiday group Club Med.

Liverpool-based Henry Bath now has a global platform in warehousing and logistics capabilities, with subsidiaries in the Netherlands, the United States and Singapore, according to its website. Its business mainly involves nonferrous metals, coffee and cocoa.

CMST operates logistics centers in major cities in China including Beijing, Shanghai and Tianjin, and its business ranges from storage and warehousing to e-commerce and metal inspection, according to the company’s website.

The deal will help CMST “improve its international influence in the nonferrous metals warehouse industry,” according to its statement.

The deal is subject to regulatory approval of Chinese authorities.
 
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A day in the life of a Chinese app addict: how the world's biggest O2O/B2C/C2C market works


Online retail sales hit 1.6 trillion yuan (US$251 billion), 11.4 percent of total retail sales in China. The number of online shoppers rose 19.1 percent to 417 million, said the Hangzhou-based e-commerce tracker.

CECRC also noted that more transactions are being made on mobile Internet as online retailers move to encourage consumers to shop with their mobile apps on smartphones and tablets.

I have just bought some books in Taobao(40% off) whilst I was having my breakfast in a noodle restaurant.
 
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Huawei joins UK's 5G development efforts
September 16, 2015

The University of Surrey Tuesday opened its 5G Innovation Centre (5GIC), bringing together leading academic expertise and key industry partners including Chinese company Huawei to develop the next generation of wireless technology.

The 5GIC is the world's largest academic research center dedicated to next generation mobile and wireless connectivity, according to the university. It houses over 170 researchers and attracting over 70 million pounds (around 108 million U.S. dollars) of investment.

In addition to Huawei, the center also partners with telecom carriers such as EE, O2, Vodafone, and technology firms including Fujitsu and Imagination Technologies.

The center's researchers have already developed a technology that enables speeds of one terabit per second (Tbps) - more than 1,000 times faster than the highest 4G speed, and filed over 15 patents.

"While we have already achieved record-breaking speeds, 5G is not only about delivering faster mobile internet. It is a transformative set of technologies that will radically change our private and professional lives by enabling innovative applications and services, such as remote healthcare, wireless robots, driverless cars and connected homes and cities, " said Prof Rahim Tafazolli, Director of the 5GIC.

Opening alongside the Centre is the 5GIC's new testbed facility, providing researchers with a fully-functioning advanced 4G network. Over time, it will be upgraded to include fully-fledged 5G technologies and large scale Internet of Things (IoT). By 2018 the testbed will be able to deliver 10Gbs/per cell, ten times faster than the highest speed available over 4G.

"The Government wants Britain to be the best place in Europe to innovate and we are committed to supporting collaborations like this one to ensure pioneering research continues to improve people's lives," said Jo Johnson, UK's Minister for Universities and Science.
 
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Chinese logistics firm buys 51% of UK’s Henry Bath & Son
Source: AFP | September 16, 2015, Wednesday |

CHINA’S biggest logistics firm, CMST Development Co, said it will acquire a majority stake in Henry Bath & Son, a 221-year-old firm which was one of the founders of the London Metal Exchange.

Beijing-based CMST Development will buy 51 percent in warehouse operator Henry Bath from owners Mercuria Capital Partners for around US$60 million, it said in a statement to the Shanghai Stock Exchange.

Henry Bath was founded in 1794, according to its website, and almost a century later went on to play a role in setting up the London Metal Exchange, now the world’s reference market for base metals.

It is the latest acquisition of a symbolic European asset by a Chinese firm, following the sales earlier this year of Italian tire maker Pirelli and French holiday group Club Med.

Liverpool-based Henry Bath now has a global platform in warehousing and logistics capabilities, with subsidiaries in the Netherlands, the United States and Singapore, according to its website. Its business mainly involves nonferrous metals, coffee and cocoa.

CMST operates logistics centers in major cities in China including Beijing, Shanghai and Tianjin, and its business ranges from storage and warehousing to e-commerce and metal inspection, according to the company’s website.

The deal will help CMST “improve its international influence in the nonferrous metals warehouse industry,” according to its statement.

The deal is subject to regulatory approval of Chinese authorities.

Club Med. Haven't seen those commercials in ages:enjoy:
 
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Now Huawei is into panels。What's next?DRAM?:lol:

Wed, Sep 16, 2015

Hon Hai hoping to join Huawei in building panel factory in Guizhou

By Lauly Li / Staff reporter

Hon Hai Precision Industry Co (鴻海) is reportedly teaming up with China’s Huawei Technologies Co (華為) to produce high-definition slim panels in China, but regulatory obstacles remain.

As part of its efforts to expand Hon Hai’s flat-panel business in China, the Taiwanese company reportedly plans to invest 25 billion yuan (US$3.92 billion), while Huawei would invest 5 billion yuan and the Guizhou provincial government would inject capital to build a 6G low-temperature polysilicon (LTPS) TFT-LCD plant in the province, the Chinese-language Commercial Times reported yesterday.

The newspaper said that the Guizhou plant would become operational at the end of 2018 or at the beginning of 2019, with initial monthly capacity of between 25,000 and 30,000 sheets.

The high-definition slim LTPS are widely used on mobile phones, such as on Apple Inc’s iPhone models.

This would be Hon Hai’s latest investment in LTPS panels after its joint investment with its LCD panel maker subsidiary Innolux Corp (群創光電) in a LTPS plant in Kaohsiung last year.

Innolux, in which Hon Hai has about a 4.61 percent stake, is playing a supporting role of providing advice and employees in the deal, and Hon Hai is taking the leading role in the planned investment, the report said.

Hon Hai responded to the newspaper story by filing a statement with the Taiwan Stock Exchange, saying “if there is any planned investment, the company will propose the plan to its board for approval.”

A source in Hon Hai, who declined to be named due to the sensitivity of the planned investment, told the Taipei Times that “Hon Hai cannot comment too much on the report for the time being, but the company is drafting an investment plan for building an LTPS panel plant [in China].”

However, the Investment Commission said it would reject Hon Hai’s proposed investment, because Taiwan’s China-bound investment regulations only allow Taiwanese panel makers to invest in flat-panel plants in the country.

“Hon Hai is not a panel maker, so it cannot invest in China’s flat-panel plants. However, if the investment is proposed by Innolux, then the commission will accept the application and deliberate it,” commission executive secretary Emile Chang (張銘斌) said by telephone.

Chang said the commission would evaluate the details of the planned investment and see if it would pose national security risks to Taiwan.

Hon Hai shares dropped 0.47 percent and Innolux’s stock price declined 1.31 percent yesterday in Taipei trading, while the TAIEX fell 0.57 percent.

Hon Hai hoping to join Huawei in building panel factory in Guizhou - Taipei Times
 
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