For the four people who read this blog here’s a tip: go read the new blog of the real writer in my family. My mom’s new blog, Riverside, can be found here.
Winston-Salem and Dell in the Register
Dell’s revised land deal with Winston-Salem is the subject of a Register article with the headline, "Dell Sucks Another $7 Million Out of North Carolina." Here’s a couple of excerpts:
Originally, Forsyth County and Winston-Salem officials had agreed to
front the cost of the 200-acre site housing Dell’s new plant. But
lawyers negotiating the deal grew concerned that, among other things,
the arrangement made it possible for Dell to sell and profit from land
the city bought. Hence the new deal in which Dell kind of, sort of pays
for the land but doesn’t really. The Winston-Salem City Council
approved the change this week and is in the process of signing new
contracts, The Register has learned."Now, Dell pays us directly for the land," said Derwick Paige,
assistant city manager of Winston-Salem confirmed in an interview with
us. "However, of the $7m that they pay us, we will put all the money in
a general fund and take $1.5m to put toward infrastructure improvements
and the other $5.5m we’ll give to them over a two year period in the
form of grants."With the extra $7m, Dell’s total North Carolina incentives package
now comes to $284m. That’s $244m more than Virginia, the second leading
bidder for Dell’s factory, was reportedly willing to offer.Dell’s package includes the land money, tax breaks, police
protection, special Dell training classes at local colleges, new roads
and a host of other fixes. In return, Dell could deliver as many as
1,600 jobs to the city, although it can fire close to half that amount
and maintain the package perks. Locals have complained that the company
has received unfair advantages that will harm smaller businesses. The
net benefit for employment in the city is far from clear.
Ouch.
Still, I have to say that even with all these incentives I’m still glad that Forsyth County won Dell. Sure we probably overpaid, but the long-term economic affect is more than likely going to be very good. Stay tuned.
Cross posted at Winston-Salem Business.
Fee for Free
Fred Wilson at A VC has a post about how some businesses are making money with free services.
Definitely worth a read, and be prepared to do some thinking once you do read it.
A Positive Story Involving Medicare?
According to this post on Daniel Drezner’s blog, in which he references an article by Gina Kolata in the New York Times, Medicare is prepared to give doctors, free of charge, the software to computerize their medical practices. The savings for each doctors office could be as much as $100,000.
Of equal interest to me is that the system they are going to give the doctors is called Vista, which is not owned by any company (i.e. it is open source) and is already being used by Veterans Affairs hospitals and inpatient/outpatient facilities.
As with other open source software the real power lies in the ability for any number of developers to create improvements or new applications for the system. Then individual users can pick which components are worth using or implementing.
One example cited is the suggestion of a VA nurse to use barcodes on prescription medications and on patients’ wrist bands. The person administering the medicine scan’s the drug and the wrist band and if there’s a mismatch between the wrist band and the drug the system catches it. Programmers added this feature and it led to an 80% drop in drug errors at the VA.
Medicare has rightly identified the backwardness of doctors’ offices as an impediment to an improved healthcare system. Let’s hope for all our sakes that this new system leads to improved, and cheaper, care.
**Last note** – Vista has always been available for free via a Freedom of Information Act request, but nobody knew it.
7 Money Mantras
Boing Boing has a post about Michelle Singletary’s (syndicated personal finance columnist from the Washington Post) personal finance book "7 Money Mantras for a Richer Life." In the post they list the seven mantras which I’ll just go ahead and list here for you:
I particularly like #1.
Politicians With a Sense of Humor
A couple of Guilford County, NC commissioners (both Democrats) are catching heat for going to the National Association of Counties’ annual conference in Hawaii. As you’d expect some of those applying the heat are leaders of the Guilford County Republicans.
Which makes the "Aloha, wish you were here" postcard that Paul Gibson (Democrat) sent to Billy Yow (Republican) kind of funny. Read about it and see a scan of the card here at the Inside Scoop.
Who knew, politicians with a sense of humor.
Today’s Reads: July 22, 2005
- Lazy Reporter Calls Reporter Lazy (Moore’s Lore)
- Bank of Wal-Mart (Moore’s Lore)
- China Unpegs Itself (NY Times via Ed Cone)
- Is This the Future? (Greensboro News & Record Editor’s Blog)
- To Billy, from Paul (with love?) (Greensboro News & Record Inside Scoop Blog)
- World’s Worst Excerpt (Book) — The Maddest Mad Scientist: The CIA’s Dr. Sidney Gottlieb (Boing Boing)
- Get Rich Slowly (Boing Boing)
- A Progress Report on Infoworlds del.icio.us Experiment (Jon Udell’s Blog via MicroPersuasion)
- Chronicle to Cut 13% of Guild Jobs (Grade the News via Dan Gillmor) –Editorial Note– According to this article the San Francisco Chronicle is losing over $1 million a week, and lately it’s been more like $2 million a week. This for a paper with a virtual monopoly in its city.
- Senior Executive Bloggers Make the Case for Blogging (NevOn)
- Blegging for Health Care Experts (Daniel Drezner)
- In Defense of Free (A VC)
- CEOs are Faking It (ComputerWorld via Fark)
- Dell Sucks Another $7 Million Out of North Carolina (The Register via Fark)
Today’s Reads: July 21, 2005
- Word’s Straight from a Mother’s Heart – (Winston-Salem Journal)
- What Happened to Unconditional Surrender (Cal Thomas) –Editorial comment–This guy’s a nut-job.
- Run a Conference Then Invite Bloggers (MicroPersuasion)
- 10 for 10 (MicroPersuasion)
- Merck: Another shot in the foot…(PharmaEdge)
- Online Screw Ups Affecting the Workplace (Daniel Drezner)
- Only 9% of Americans Have a Good Idea of What an RSS Feed Is (Dana VanDen Heuvel)
- On the Ground War Coverage via Blog ** (Michael Yon) –Editorial comment–This is a personal blog from someone on the ground with US Troops. I haven’t had the time to find out who he is, but I think he’s a journalist.
- Over the Top Police Blotter Write-ups (Boing Boing)
Any Attention is Better Than No Attention
Whether it’s for vanity’s sake or not, I regularly get a kick out of looking at the stats for this blog and seeing where the visitors are coming from. The vast majority come from searches, and when I track back the visitor I can see exactly what they were searching for when they found this blog. Here are some of the search terms that I rank high for in Google or Yahoo. My rank is in the parentheses next to the term and some comments after a couple:
- How to torment neighbors (3) – I’m really not that bad.
- Kid Rock unedited version of American Bad ass video (7) – No idea why I’m on this one.
- increase wi-fi range (7) – More traffic from this one post than almost any other.
- HOAX STEVE JOBS COMMENCEMENT SPEECH (4)
- boss cheating (5) – Oops.
- NOrther Virginia contractors (1) – I guess typos pay off sometimes!
- allure jeans (1) – No I don’t wear them.
- worst 10 jobs in america (13)
- not bad funny stuff (4)
- viagra alzheimer’s research humor (1) – This one kind of disturbs me.
- drink more ovaltine (1) – The folks at Ovaltine must hate me.
Again I have to say, "Behold the power of blogs."
In Good Company?
I just found the Washington Post’s blog dedicated to the Supreme Court nomination and something I noticed is that they are using Typepad for their blog platform. That’s the same platform I’m using for my blogs, which I think is a nice endorsement for a. Typepad and b. My tech choice.
I’ve been known for picking some technological lemons (i.e. every PC I purchased for about five years, bouncing from eMachines to HP), so I’m happy to see that I’m in good company…if you consider the Post good company.