Archiving Government websites: Should it really be this hard?

When I did the Government 2.0 Taskforce, one of the subjects that was earnestly discussed was archiving of government sites. It's a big problem in government. I could never see why it should be a big problem. After all you can look at anything written on ClubTroppo since it st...

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Posted in IT and Internet, Economics and public policy, Web and Government 2.0

Clairvoyance in the commentary box: a vignette from the psychopathology of modern life

I remember being at a wedding reception talking to someone who was 70 odd. I asked them whether in their day it was normal for the bride and groom to put the tip of the knife in the cake and then beam at the cameras for two or three minutes - celebrities on their special day....

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Posted in Society, Sport-general

Missing Link Friday - Australia Day etc

Katie's Australia Day - Brazilian style! Food blogger Katie Quinn Davies' Australia Day recipes. Australia Day from afar: "One of the most surprising things for me to experience out of Australia was people saying–even in the American South!–Australia’s really racist, isn’t it?...

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Posted in Missing Link

An overheard bus conversation. Recounted without comment.

A) Hey, you know what today is? Invasion Day! B) What? A) Invasion Day. B) Invasion Day? A) Yeah, 'cause it's the day they invaded us Kooris. B) Oh, InVASion Day A) So all those people wearing Australian flags are celebrating Invasion Day. 'cept the ones that feel sorry for us...

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Posted in Uncategorised

Gizmodo loses it: Google has not turned evil (at least not yet . . .)

What a load of old sensationalist nonsense. I'm seriously starting to worry about Giz. If I want to search anonymously there is a thing called an anonymous tab. And I don't log into my Google account outside work because why would I? - My phone is logged in. That's how the fir...

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Posted in Uncategorized, Economics and public policy, Law, Innovation

Bailing out British Leyland - The Iron Lady's feet of clay

British Leyland devoured billions pounds of taxpayer's money before it was finally broken up and sold off. According to New York Times journalist Nelson Schwartz the Thatcher government's bailout "remains the classic example of a futile government intervention." Mrs Thatcher w...

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Posted in Politics - international

The Day the LOLcats died

Quite funny http://youtu.be/1p-TV4jaCMk

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Posted in Uncategorized

Steve Jobs, Friedrich Hayek and Design: the column

https://youtu.be/x6f4ZB2xnF8 (Four minutes of extracts from a 27 minute video which can be watched here .) Herewith my column for the SMH and Age in Ross Gittins' spot while he's on vacation. It's the column of the essay which is here . As he was wheeled around on the emergenc...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Innovation

Another immortal game

White to play Vidmar vs Euwe 34. ? See game for solution. As Troppodillians know my definition of an immortal game is one that involves some serious sacrificing and that the only pieces of the winners side that are left on the board have a role in the final checkmate. Click th...

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Posted in Chess

A yawning gap opening up between Australia and NZ

I wouldn't be expecting the New Zealand economy starts catching up to Australia any time soon. While they have their usual ideological stoushes there's something that sticks out like a ham sandwich at a bar-mitzvah. NZ is capital starved. Owing it seems to our compulsory super...

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Posted in Economics and public policy

Missing Link Friday - Left-wing Paulbots, the Great Gatsby curve and the politics of evil technologies

The Jericho amendments: At Grog's Gamut Greg Jericho checks out the Australian Public Service Commission's new guidelines for public servants engaging in public comment. Some of the principles are "so obvious or dumb as could only be written by a public servant", says Jericho,...

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Posted in Missing Link

Escaping fortress Australia in the world of ideas

The way the world of copyright is set up to gouge each individual market separately is growing costlier and costlier particularly for small far away markets like our own. I'd love to buy an Amazon Kindle Fire and subscribe to Amazon Prime . But there's not much point doing the...

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Posted in Economics and public policy

Productivity growth: what proportion is driven by firms' internal smarts (or luck) and what proportion by entry and exit?

Restructuring and productivity growth in uk manufacturing We analyse productivity growth in UK manufacturing 1980-92 using the newly available ARD panel of establishments drawn from the Census of Production. We examine the contribution to productivity growth of 'internal' rest...

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Posted in Economics and public policy, Innovation

Conflicts of interest in economic research

Tell me about it! From Bloomberg View . Academic economists have recently become the unaccustomed subjects of intense scrutiny. The 2010 documentary “ Inside Job ” drew public attention to the board seats, consulting gigs and sponsored research that tie many of them to Wall St...

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Posted in Economics and public policy

Ron Paul is a socially tolerant left-wing radical?

“Oh, my goodness, the John Birch Society! ... Is that bad? I have a lot of friends in the John Birch Society" ( Texas congressman Ron Paul ). In Tuesday's Sydney Morning Herald , Tom Switzer describes presidential hopeful Ron Paul as a socially tolerant free-market crusader wh...

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Posted in Politics - international

Does Linking Worker Pay to Firm Performance Help the Best Firms Do Even Better? (Yes, depending on how you do it and a bunch of other things)

Does Linking Worker Pay to Firm Performance Help the Best Firms Do Even Better? This paper analyzes the linkages among group incentive methods of compensation, labor practices, worker assessments of workplace culture, turnover, and firm performance in a non-representative samp...

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Posted in Economics and public policy

Thomas Paine

Thomas Paine was a remarkable fellow who lived at a time of, and helped bring about two great revolutions of the modern age - the American and French ones. His time discovered political pamphleteering in a way that's quite similar to blogging today. People wrote pamphlets and...

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Posted in History, Political theory

Keeping the riff-raff's snouts out of the 'higher' professions' trough

Herewith, a few days late, is my column in Ross Gittins' place from last weekend. There are a couple of things I would have liked to have covered in the column but didn't for lack of time. The first is that I suspect the biggest payoff in the area of law is not liberalisation...

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Posted in Economics and public policy

Journalists as truth vigilantes?

When New York Times public editor Arthur Brisbane asked whether Times reporters should challenge the 'facts' asserted by the newsmakers they write about a large majority of readers responded : "yes, you moron, The Times should check facts and print the truth." That's pretty mu...

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Posted in Journalism

Capitalism is only harmful when bad people abuse it (and other conservative myths)

"Capitalism made America great - free markets, innovation, hard work - the building blocks of the American Dream. But in the wrong hands some of those dreams can turn into nightmares." 'When Mitt Romney Came to Town' http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BLWnB9FGmWE Promoted by Winni...

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Posted in Politics - international