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China is now leading in a lot of areas; it is no longer with her cheap labors; now there are million of young, energetic and bright engineers attract a lot of Hi-Tech companies to build the lab in China. 


How do you feel now? 


How about our young generation? 


Are we able to compete? 


The following article brings my attention and pulls me out from my day dreaming  in my little cozy corner. 


Share with you! 




**********Quoted********


March 17, 2010
China Drawing High-Tech Research From U.S.
By KEITH BRADSHER

XIAN, China — For years, many of China’s best and brightest left for the United States, where high-tech industry was more cutting-edge. But Mark R. Pinto is moving in the opposite direction.

Mr. Pinto is the first chief technology officer of a major American tech company to move to China. The company, Applied Materials, is one of Silicon Valley’s most prominent firms. It supplied equipment used to perfect the first computer chips. Today, it is the world’s biggest supplier of the equipment used to make semiconductors, solar panels and flat-panel displays.

In addition to moving Mr. Pinto and his family to Beijing in January, Applied Materials, whose headquarters are in Santa Clara, Calif., has just built its newest and largest research labs here. Last week, it even held its annual shareholders’ meeting in Xian.










 

It is hardly alone. Companies — and their engineers — are being drawn here more and more as China develops a high-tech economy that increasingly competes directly with the United States.

A few American companies are even making deals with Chinese companies to license Chinese technology.

The Chinese market is surging for electricity, cars and much more, and companies are concluding that their researchers need to be close to factories and consumers alike. Applied Materials set up its latest solar research labs here after estimating that China would be producing two-thirds of the world’s solar panels by the end of this year.

“We’re obviously not giving up on the U.S.,” Mr. Pinto said. “China needs more electricity. It’s as simple as that.”

China has become the world’s largest auto market, and General Motors has a large and growing auto research center in Shanghai.

The country is also the biggest market for desktop computers and has the most Internet users. Intel has opened research labs in Beijing for semiconductors and server networks.

Not just drawn by China’s markets, Western companies are also attracted to China’s huge reservoirs of cheap, highly skilled engineers — and the subsidies offered by many Chinese cities and regions, particularly for green energy companies.

Now, Mr. Pinto said, researchers from the United States and Europe have to be ready to move to China if they want to do cutting-edge work on solar manufacturing because the new Applied Materials complex here is the only research center that can fit an entire solar panel assembly line.

“If you really want to have an impact on this field, this is just such a tremendous laboratory,” he said.

Xian — a city about 600 miles southwest of Beijing known for the discovery nearby of 2,200-year-old terra cotta warriors — has 47 universities and other institutions of higher learning, churning out engineers with master’s degrees who can be hired for $730 a month.

On the other side of Xian from Applied Materials sits Thermal Power Research Institute, China’s world-leading laboratory on cleaner coal. The company has just licensed its latest design to Future Fuels in the United States.

The American company plans to pay about $100 million to import from China a 130-foot-high maze of equipment that turns coal into a gas before burning it. This method reduces toxic pollution and makes it easier to capture and sequester gases like carbon dioxide under ground.

Future Fuels will ship the equipment to Pennsylvania and have Chinese engineers teach American workers how to assemble and operate it.

Small clean-energy companies are headed to China, too.

NatCore Technology of Red Bank, N.J., recently discovered a way to make solar panels much thinner, reducing the energy and toxic materials required to manufacture them. American companies did not even come look at the technology, so NatCore reached a deal with a consortium of Chinese companies to finish developing its invention and mass-produce it in Changsha, China.

“These other countries — China, Taiwan, Brazil — were all over us,” said Chuck Provini, the company’s chief executive.

President Obama has often spoken about creating clean-energy jobs in the United States. But China has shown the political will to do so, said Mr. Pinto, 49, who is also Applied Materials’ executive vice president for solar systems and flat-panel displays.

Locally, the Xian city government sold a 75-year land lease to Applied Materials at a deep discount and is reimbursing the company for roughly a quarter of the lab complex’s operating costs for five years, said Gang Zou, the site’s general manager.

The two labs, the first of their kind anywhere in the world, are each bigger than two American football fields. Applied Materials continues to develop the electronic guts of its complex machines at laboratories in the United States and Europe. But putting all the machines together and figuring out processes to make them work in unison will be done in Xian. The two labs, one on top of the other, will become operational once they are fully outfitted late this year.

Applied Materials has built a 360-employee operation here in Xian after announcing an 18-month program last year to reduce employment by 10 to 12 percent, or 1,300 to 1,500 jobs, including layoffs in the United States and Europe. Mr. Pinto said that the company was readjusting its work force as manufacturing shifted to Asia, but that the Xian facility involved a new approach to researching the design of an entire assembly line and was not replacing laboratories elsewhere.

Mr. Pinto is a well-known figure in Silicon Valley in his own right. While still a doctoral student at Stanford in the early 1980s, he wrote the first widely used two-dimensional computer simulation of how semiconductors work. This allowed engineers to test each one on a computer before building prototypes, shortening the semiconductor development process.

Later, he became a celebrated researcher at Bell Labs.

With China’s economy gaining strength, Mr. Pinto and his wife, then living in Santa Clara, began insisting in 2005 that their sons study Chinese once a week.

Now 10 and 11, the boys are improving their Chinese and mastering the art of eating with chopsticks.

Applied Materials has greater challenges, including fighting technological theft, a chronic problem in China.

The company has taken measures, including sealing its computers’ ports here, to prevent the easy use of flash drives to record data. Employees are not allowed to take computers from the building without special permission, and an elaborate system of computer passwords and electronic door keys limits access to certain technological secrets.

But none of that changes the sense that tectonic shifts are under way.

When Xei Lina, a 26-year-old Applied Materials engineer here, was asked recently whether China would play a big role in clean energy in the future, she was surprised by the question.

“Most of the graduate students in China are chasing this area,” she said. “Of course, China will lead everything.”



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Just received the following article from EM, she wants to share with all of you.




大師看人民幣/美應採懲罰性關稅



【經濟日報編譯謝璦竹、陳家齊】


2010.03.17 02:43 am


 


克魯曼(Paul Krugman,諾貝爾經濟學獎得主)


人民幣匯價被中國政府人為壓低,正對全球經濟造成致命打擊。美國政府應該要硬起來,要求中國立刻修正人民幣低估的問題。如果中方依舊不願改善,美國應該考慮對中國產品施加25%的懲罰性關稅,甚至更高。


實質匯率已漲20%


歐尼爾(Jim O'Neill,高盛公司首席經濟學家)


人民幣經貿易加權後的實質匯率已上漲近20%,已不再被低估。然而,由於大陸通膨復熾,北京當局出於自身利益考量、避免經濟過熱,人民幣未來六個月至一年內可望升值5%


最快下季就會升值


羅比尼(Nouriel Roubini,紐約大學教授)


由於對全球復甦的保守展望,中國未來12個月內將逐步讓人民幣升值4%。第一次升值最快將在第二季,先升值2%,接著再升值1%2%。去年羅比尼曾說,人民幣將取代美元成為全球儲備貨幣。


每年調整3%較合理


林毅夫(世界銀行首席經濟學家、中國全國政協委員)


人民幣匯率並沒有嚴重偏離金融匯率,未來應該在一個靈活的、小幅度的、自主的原則下調整,每年調整幅度幅度約3%較適合。


 


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猜猜看,哈佛大學最受歡迎的是哪一堂課?答對了嗎?

最夯的選修課是「幸福課」,聽課人數超過了王牌課《經濟學導論》。
而教這門課的是一位名不見經傳的年輕講師,名叫塔爾賓-夏哈爾(TalBen-Shahar,Ph.D.)。
塔爾.班夏哈 哈佛大學哲學與心理學博士。

他在哈佛開設的「組織心理學」與「領導心理學」的課程,
分別獲選「最受歡迎課程」的第一與第三名,每學期選修人數高達1,400人,超過學生總數的20%。許多學生向學校反應,這兩門課「改變了他們的一生」。

班夏哈的教學及思想,引起美國主流媒體的爭相報導,
包括《波士頓全球報》、《紐約時報》,以及CNN、CBS、美國國家公共廣播電台。

塔爾賓-夏哈爾,自稱是一個害羞、內向的人。
「在哈佛,我第一次教授積極心理學課時,只有8個學生報名,其中,還有2人中途退課。第二次,我有近400名學生。到了第三次,當學生數目達到850人時,上課更多的是讓我感到緊張和不安。特別是當學生的家長、爺爺奶奶和那些媒體的朋友們,開始出現在我課堂上的時侯。」

我們來到這個世上,到底追求什麼才是最重要的?
他堅定地認為:「幸福感」是衡量人生的唯一標準,是所有目標的最終目標。

「人們衡量商業成就時,標準是錢。用錢去評估資產和債務、利潤和虧損,所有與錢無關的,都不會被考慮進去,金錢是最高的財富。但是我認為,人生與商業一樣,也有盈利和虧損。」

「具體地說,在看待自己的生命時,可以把負面情緒當作支出,把正面情緒當作收入。當正面情緒多於負面情緒時,我們在幸福這一『至高財富』上就盈利了。」

「所以,幸福應該是快樂與意義的結合!一個幸福的人,必須有一個明確的、可以帶來快樂和意義的目標,然後努力地去追求。真正快樂的人,會在自己覺得有意義的生活方式裡,享受它的點點滴滴。」

塔爾賓-夏哈爾,希望他的學生學會接受自己,不要忽略自己所擁有的獨特性;
要擺脫「完美主義」,要「學會失敗」。
塔爾賓-夏哈爾,還為學生簡化出10條小貼紙:


1:遵從你內心的熱情。
選擇對你有意義並且能讓你快樂的課,不要只是為了輕鬆地拿一個A而選課,或選你朋友上的課,或是別人認為你應該上的課。

2:多和朋友們在一起。
不要被日常工作纏身,親密的人際關係,是你幸福感的信號,最有可能為你帶來幸福。

3:學會失敗。
成功沒有捷徑,歷史上有成就的人,總是敢於行動,也會經常失敗。不要讓對失敗的恐懼,絆住你嘗試新事物的腳步。

4:接受自己全然為人。
失望、煩亂、悲傷,是人性的一部分。接納這些,並把它們當成自然之事,
允許自己偶爾的失落和傷感。然後問問自己,能做些什麼來讓自己感覺好過一點。

5:簡化生活。
更多並不總代表更好,好事多了,不一定有利。你選了太多的課嗎?
參加了太多的活動嗎?應求精而不在多。

6:有規律地鍛煉。
體育運動是你生活中最重要的事情之一。
每週只要3次,每次只要30分鐘,就能大大改善你的身心健康。

7:睡眠。
雖然有時「熬通宵」是不可避免的,但每天7到9小時的睡眠,是一筆非常棒的投資。
這樣,在醒著的時候,你會更有效率、更有創造力,也會更開心。

8.慷慨。
現在,你的錢包裡可能沒有太多錢,你也沒有太多時間。但這並不意味著你無法助人。
「給予」和「接受」是一件事的兩個面。當我們幫助別人時,我們也在幫助自己;
當我們幫助自己時,也是在間接地幫助他人。

9:勇敢。
勇氣並不是不恐懼,而是心懷恐懼,仍依然向前。

10:表達感激。
生活中,不要把你的家人、朋友、健康、教育等這一切當成理所當然的。
它們都是你回味無窮的禮物。記錄他人的點滴恩惠,始終保持感恩之心。


每天或至少每週一次,請你把它們記下來。















 

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美國大學 一枝獨秀


 


朋友的小孩剛進入UC Berkeley專攻double E; 這是一篇有關美國大學教育水平的專文, 供你參考. 






邱鴻安專欄


 


February 23, 2010 03:21 AM  


 


【邱鴻安】柏克萊加大日前宣布,今年申請該校研究所的人數打破紀錄,超過去年的36600人;從2001年到2009年,申請人數則增加了40%。申請人數大增,除了反映柏大受歡迎,更反映出一個重要的事實:美國的大學,在全球中仍然領先,並未受到挑戰。


 


這幾年,美國很多事物都受到其他國家的挑戰,不再像以前那樣獨大;汽車是一個很好的例子,美國以前是汽車王國,現在不僅三大汽車公司淪為三流,汽車出口已成為歷史,連國內的汽車市場也被別國占據。但是,美國的大學卻依然一枝獨秀;在最新的排名中,全球最頂尖的20所大學之中,非美國的只有三所,在最頂尖的50大之中,非美國的也只有14所。美國的汽車不能出口,但美國的大學卻強勁出口,每年都吸引無數學生從全球各地來求學。


 


為什麼美國的大學具有那麼大的吸引力?據上月出版的新書「偉大的美國大學」〈The Great American University〉,美國的大學大都是「研究型大學」,這種大學著重研究,不重教學〈對大學部學生而言〉,因此成為新知識創造之源,而不斷創造新知識,正是美國得以強大和美國人生活得以提高品質的主要原因。


 


書裏研究了美國研究型大學的興起,又追蹤了它們研發的重要新知識。研究型大學在美國成為模範,只是二次世界大戰後的事,美國大學獲得的諾貝爾獎也只在1940年代以後才多起來。20世紀上半葉以前,美國可借鏡的大學模式有英德法三種,德國著重研究的模式,最後成為美國大學的主流。


 


在新知識的發明方面,書裏列舉了不少例子。在生物和醫藥方面,包括了幹細胞、器官移殖、B型肝炎疫苗、癌病療法和基因接合技術。在自然科學方面,包括了雷射、LEDs 、商品條碼、雷達、電晶體和不少關於電腦的發明。書裏還說,大部分重要新知識都出自125所大學。


 


柏克萊加大正是125所大學的其中之一。柏大目前有99項研究課程,研究生達到一萬人,其中6000人都是博士生(2008-09學年頒發了863個博士學位)。我們可以想像:在龐大的博士生人數中,每人都研究一門學問中的尖端課題,每人又都向著創新知識的目標前進,單是這種景象,已足以震動人心。


 


中國近年崛起,處處挑戰美國,但是在高等教育方面,卻仍然像一個半世紀以來的留學史一樣,學生仍渴望出國留學,而留學的首選之地正是美國。如果中國的大學將來能在全球中領先,學生不再渴望出國留學,屆時才是中國真正崛起之時。(世界日報,2.23.2010)

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A bullet train in China travels 664 miles, from a southern coastal town deep into the interior. The American plan for high-speed rail is to link Tampa to Orlando.




*********quoted from NY Times*******






China Sees Growth Engine in a Web of Fast Trains


By KEITH BRADSHER 2/12/2010

WUHAN, China — The world’s largest human migration — the annual crush of Chinese traveling home to celebrate the Lunar New Year, which is this Sunday — is going a little faster this time thanks to a new high-speed rail line.

The Chinese bullet train, which has the world’s fastest average speed, connects Guangzhou, the southern coastal manufacturing center, to Wuhan, deep in the interior. In a little more than three hours, it travels 664 miles, comparable to the distance from Boston to southern Virginia. That is less time than Amtrak’s fastest train, the Acela, takes to go from Boston just to New York.

Even more impressive, the Guangzhou-to-Wuhan train is just one of 42 high-speed lines recently opened or set to open by 2012 in China. By comparison, the United States hopes to build its first high-speed rail line by 2014, an 84-mile route linking Tampa and Orlando, Fla.

Speaking at that site last month, President Obama warned that the United States was falling behind Asia and Europe in high-speed rail construction and other clean energy industries. “Other countries aren’t waiting,” he said. “They want those jobs. China wants those jobs. Germany wants those jobs. They are going after them hard, making the investments required.”




For more details, please follow the link as: 


http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/13/business/global/13rail.html?pagewanted=1&em

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In the Clear Energy race - Solar Energy, China is now at number 1 in the world. 


And she is even surpassing the US, how about Taiwan? 


*******Quoted**********


February 13, 2010
Op-Ed Columnist
Watching China Run
By BOB HERBERT

It was primarily a symbolic gesture. Way back in 1979, in the midst of an energy crisis, Jimmy Carter had solar panels installed on the roof of the White House. They were used to heat water for some White House staffers.

“A generation from now,” said Mr. Carter, “this solar heater can either be a curiosity, a museum piece, an example of a road not taken, or it can be a small part of one of the greatest and most exciting adventures ever undertaken by the American people, harnessing the power of the sun to enrich our lives as we move away from our crippling dependence on foreign oil.”

Ronald Reagan had the panels taken down.

We missed the boat then, and lord knows we’re missing it now. Two weeks ago, as I was getting ready to take off for Palo Alto, Calif., to cover a conference on the importance of energy and infrastructure for the next American economy, The Times’s Keith Bradsher was writing from Tianjin, China, about how the Chinese were sprinting past everybody else in the world, including the United States, in the race to develop clean energy.

That we are allowing this to happen is beyond stupid. China is a poor country with nothing comparable to the tremendous research, industrial and economic resources that the U.S. has been blessed with. Yet they’re blowing us away — at least for the moment — in the race to the future.

Our esteemed leaders in Washington can’t figure out how to do anything more difficult than line up for a group photo. Put Americans back to work? You must be kidding. Health care? We’ve been working on it for three-quarters of a century. Infrastructure? Don’t ask.

But, as Mr. Bradsher tells us, “China vaulted past competitors in Denmark, Germany, Spain and the United States last year to become the world’s largest maker of wind turbines and is poised to expand even further this year.”

China also has become the world’s largest manufacturer of solar panels and is pushing hard on other clean energy advances. As Mr. Bradsher wrote: “These efforts to dominate renewable energy technologies raise the prospect that the West may someday trade its dependence on oil from the Mideast for a reliance on solar panels, wind turbines and other gear manufactured in China.”

We’re in the throes of an awful and seemingly endless employment crisis, and China is the country moving full speed ahead on the development of the world’s most important new industries. I’d like one of the Washington suits to step away from the photo-op and explain the logic of that to me.

The truth, of course, is that there is no reason at all for this to be happening. The United States, in many ways, is very well prepared to move ahead on clean energy. It could and should be the world’s leader. Many, if not most, of the innovations in this area were developed right here. But much of that know-how, as we are seeing in China (and have been seeing in Germany and other places), is being implemented overseas.

The conference that I attended in Palo Alto spotlighted the need to move to a low-carbon economy in the U.S. and exemplified some of the resources available to make it happen. It was sponsored by the Brookings Institution and Lazard, the investment banking advisory firm. The participants included the leaders of — and major investors in — companies that are making great strides in the alternative energy industry. But much of their business is done overseas because right now in America’s wacky, dysfunctional public sector there is no clear vision of a viable clean-energy economy, and, thus, no clue about how to get there.

The network of world-class universities and advanced research institutions in the U.S. is by far the most impressive in the world: think Harvard and Stanford and Berkeley and M.I.T. and on and on. If you add to that the venture capital community in the U.S. with its vast experience and the willingness of investors to take risks, and the sheer entrepreneurial talent of the American business community, you end up with an array of resources fully capable of moving the U.S. into a low-carbon, high-growth and extraordinarily productive economy that would be the envy of the world.

But for that to happen — as Bruce Katz, a Brookings executive who was one of the organizers of the conference, pointed out — America’s corporate, civic and political leaders will have to “articulate what’s really at stake here.”

And what’s at stake is the future of the American economy. The low-carbon era is coming. We can be dragged into that newer, greener world by leading countries like China; or we can take up the challenge and become the world’s leader ourselves.


*******Unquoted*********


What I always said is Talk is Cheap, We should always ask ourselves, what is our approach for this. 





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The following article may provide some information for learning foreign language faster and cheaper. 





Quoted from NY Times:


February 5, 2010, 6:38 pm
More on Online Language Learning
By ERIC A. TAUB

Last week’s article on online language learning apparently hit a nerve; not only was it widely e-mailed, but a number of people told me about other language courses that I had missed in my research.

In addition, a few factual corrections to the article are in order. Starting with the latter, the free language courses at the BBC’s Web site may not work in all countries. For example, the videos cannot be played in the United States, but other elements of the program do work.

The Oxford Translator applications for the iPhone have changed their name; they are now known as the Odyssey Translator apps.








And Tell Me More (not TellMeMore) currently offers both online and CD-ROM-based language courses for the PC; it’s an online version for the Mac that is forthcoming later this year.

Other language learning programs include Busuu.com, a free and fee-based online service where one can learn English, French, German, Italian and Spanish. In addition to online lessons, users can connect to others around the world via video chat to practice and teach a language. For an additional 8 euros a month, students can get access to audio podcasts, audio for more than 3,000 key phrases, and other tools.

The founders of Fluenz believe that adults do not learn language in the same manner as children, so rather than concentrating on simple words of objects, a video tutor teaches learners complete sentences. The new product is available in four languages, including French, Italian, Mandarin and Spanish, starting at around $220.

Those who enjoy spending time in libraries can try Mango Languages, a free online language-learning service offered in hundreds of the nation’s libraries. Each of the 22 languages includes 100 lessons, and can be accessed remotely by those with a library card. The program can also be purchased for individual use if a local library does not offer it.

Among iPhone apps, LiFE Chinese, German, Italian, Japanese, Russian and Spanish (each $3) offer users the ability to watch a native speaker speak various phrases, review them and record one’s own voice. The apps also include information about each country’s culture.

Open Culture offers links to YouTube videos and other content to help you learn one of 37 languages, including Catalan and Yiddish, and all the most popular tongues.

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F-16 is the air fighter we like to purchase from US. 






We have some Mirage fighter which we bought from France before. 




We need more good fighters to well prepare and safe guard our Freedom.




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線上中文書籍   這裡有太多的書本可以看了:


 


   http://books.google.com.tw/books


 


   都是全文


 


   共有七百多萬本書的全文可看

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青藏鐵路(tibet):國父創想,中共製造

China becomes a superpower in the world. 


This is one of the stunning projects in the recent China's effort to becoming a superpower in th the world. 


For Tibet railroad, it only took them 5 years to build it; however beneath it, there are still some social problems.


I like to ask if the people's happiness is more important or the Tibet Railroad Project ? 


I believe the answer will be 50/50. 


We like to see China's rising but in the same time we like to see her improvement in more civilized approach.


The following video is old, still provide very good information for us. 







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Just see the following news from Yahoo Kimo site. 


If the breakfast is good for men, I think it will also keep the women pretty, healthy and wealthy.


Let's talk about breakfast in next time. 


Hope you enjoy the breakfast from now on!!!!!





吃早餐的男人 錢途無量
更新日期:2010/01/27 04:11

〔編譯鄭曉蘭/綜合報導〕男人能否擁有日幣千萬年收入,取決於吃早餐的習慣?日本以系列腦力訓練著作聞名的東北大學加齡醫學研究所教授川島
隆太,去年底所進行的「早餐相關意識與實況調查」發現,大部分高所得的男性商務人士,都有規律吃早餐的習慣;有此習慣的大學生,大多也都是應屆考取。


川島曾出版「早餐決定我們的腦」一書。他在去年11月以400名大學生和500名35至44歲的男性商務人士為對象,實施網路調查,從中分析吃早餐的習慣與成功人生的關聯性。

商務人士的調查結果發現,年收入日幣千萬(約台幣358萬)以上的高所得
者有82%,每天都會以某種形式吃早餐;收入700萬日幣(約台幣250萬)以上者,也有超過8成幾乎每天(每週4至5日)吃早餐。此外,年收入千萬以上且有吃早餐習慣者,有6成以上都是應屆考取大學,畢業求職獲第一志願公司
錄取者也達6成以上。川島認為,有吃早餐習慣的男性似乎比較容易成為「贏家」。


大學生的調查方面,習慣吃早餐的學生中也有51%順利考取第一志願,74%為應屆考取;另有53%覺得「學生生活相當充實」,還有50%認為「自己用功唸書」。沒有吃早餐習慣的大學生,上述各項目的百分比僅止於個位數到10出頭。

川島教授對此結果分析道:「吃早餐的習慣可謂考取大學、邁向成功人生的第一步。我們可以推測,吃早餐有助實踐規律生活,同時也對商務人士所處



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Anderson Cooper is host journalist for CNN as AC360. 


He is always in the front line to let us know the newest news all over the world. 


The Planet in Peril is one of his most remarkable work. 


Just to share with you in 2 sections. 


Let;s all have the action to love our Planet Earth: 








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The Chateaubriand steak is a recipe of a particular thick cut from the tenderloin, which, according to Larousse Gastronomique, was created by personal chef, Montmireil, for Vicomte François-René de Chateaubriand, (1768–1848), the author and diplomat who served Napoleon as an ambassador and Louis XVIII as Secretary of State for two years. This dish is usually only offered as a serving for two, as there is only enough meat in the center of the average fillet for two portions.
At the time of the Vicomte, the steak was cut from the more flavorful but less tender sirloin[citation needed] and served with a reduced sauce made from white wine and shallots moistened with demi-glace and mixed with butter, tarragon, and lemon juice. An alternative spelling of the statesman-author's name is 'Châteaubriant', and some maintain that the term refers to the quality of the cattle bred around the town of Châteaubriant in the Loire-Atlantique, France.







Chateaubriand with Bearnaise Sauce and Chateau Potatoes

Recipe from Everyday Is A Party Cookbook, by Emeril Lagasse, with Marcelle Bienvenu and Felicia Willett, published by William Morrow, 1999




Show: Emeril LiveEpisode: Emeril's Supper Club


Ingredients
1 whole beef tenderloin, 5 pounds or under, trimmed
2 tablespoons butter
Salt
Freshly ground black pepper
8 tablespoons butter
20 tourneed small white potatoes
1 tablespoon finely chopped parsley



For the Sauce:
3 tablespoons white vinegar
3 tablespoons white wine
10 peppercorns, crushed
2 tablespoons finely chopped shallots
1 tablespoon chopped tarragon
1 tablespoon water
3 egg yolks
1 cup unsalted butter, melted
1 tablespoon finely chopped parsley leaves



Directions

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F. Season the beef with salt and pepper. In a large skillet, over high heat, melt the butter. Add the beef and sear for a couple of minutes on each side. Place in the oven and roast for 20 to 25 minutes for medium rare. Remove from the oven and rest for 5 minutes before slicing. Serve with potatoes and chateaubriand sauce

For the potatoes: In a saute pan, over medium heat, melt 8 tablespoons of butter. Add the potatoes and season with salt and pepper. Saute the potatoes for 3 to 4 minutes. Place the potatoes in the oven and roast the potatoes until golden brown and tender, about 20 minutes, shaking the pan every 5 minutes. Remove from the oven and add the parsley. For the Sauce: In a saucepan, combine the vinegar, wine, peppercorns, shallots, and tarragon. Bring the liquid to a boil and reduce to 1 tablespoon. Add 1 tablespoon of water. Combine the reduced liquid and egg yolks in a stainless bowl, over simmering water. Whisk until frothy. In a steady stream, add the butter until the sauce thickens. Season with salt and pepper. Strain the sauce through a chinois and set aside.





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There is new science as Green Chemistry, it is to focus on the worse situation we are facing now. We have consumed a lot of natural resources, as the same to create something which we can not even destroy it. Please see the following news for the Pacific Garbage Patch:




 

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700 doctors with MSF were refused to land at US controlled Airport at Port-au-Prince at Haiti after the strike of Earthquake.


Of course their arrival was soon arranged with French foreign minister complaint and took action to UN. 


This tape will provide us more understanding for this outstanding organization.


p>








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Rodin's master works.
I hope you like it.



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L'escargot a la Bourguigone; is one of best known French appetizers in the high class restaurants. 


It is easy to prepare, 


First take out the snail from the shells,  remove the stomach, clean and  gutted; then  cooked with chicken broth, red wine, shallots, garlic, butter, salt, pepper and parsley; 


After completely cook, put the meat into the shells; and pull the remaining sauce on it.


You can see the above picture it is served with Cheese, Ham, Bread and Red Wine (Burgundy)


For detail recipe and cooking instruction, please refer to the following site:


http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/emeril-lagasse/escargot-a-la-borguignone-recipe/index.html







Snail on the leave


not all the spices are eatible. 


Refer to the following link to obtain more detail  information; 


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Escargot








L'escargot a la Borguignone


It is served with special snail tong and fork as the above picture. 


Some people does not familiar how to use the snail tong, and accidentally the snail jump up and fly to other table, it is the scene often can see in the movie. 















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Published: January 21, 2010
 
 
BEIJING — China said on Thursday that its economy rose by 10.7 percent in fourth quarter compared with a year ago, as the country continued to surge forward even as many other nations are still trying to punch through the global recession. That was up from a revised growth rate of 9.1 percent in the third quarter.

Please following the link for more details:


http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/21/business/global/21chinaecon.html?emc=eta1


In from the strong power like China, Japan and US.


What can we do more to survive????????


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Good News!!!


 


垃圾零掩埋達標 郝龍斌:台北領先國際30年


中央社 更新日期:2010/01/19 11:00



(中央社記者唐佩君台北19日電)2005年全球許多城市在舊金山簽署環保宣言,2040年達垃圾零掩埋、資源全回收目標,台北市長郝龍斌今天宣布,台北今年已達成目標,不但提前30年,還是第一個達到目標的城市。



郝龍斌上午出席由天下雜誌主辦的「天下經濟論壇」,以「攜手共創綠色先進城市」為題發表專題演講時表示,目前是充滿挑戰也是充滿機會的時代,推動綠能革命過程中,主政者必須能抗拒壓力,堅持立場。



他舉例,近期台北市政府首開先例,將制定「工商業節能輔導自治條例」,明定工商業節能,空調溫度需提高到26度以上的規定,媒體批評台北市這項政策不近人情,許多企業更表達反對,但他強調這項措施將能省許多電力,推動綠色革命要付出代價,現在是一個選擇,大家要「Change or Die」。



此外,郝龍斌感謝台北市民接受挑戰,配合以垃圾費隨袋徵收,推動垃圾減量資源回收,近4至5年垃圾已減量60%。



他更表示,台北市2005年在舊金山與許多城市共同簽下環保宣言,要在2040年達到垃圾零掩埋、資源全回收目標,而這個目標,台北市在今年已達到了,不但提前30年,台北市更是簽署宣言中第一個達到目標的城市。



郝龍斌表示,台北市的環保努力,被中國上海以永續城市參與上海世博會,這是台北的驕傲,非常希望這些做法能推廣至中國及全世界,讓抗暖化行動做得更好。



他強調,台灣從傳統產業到資料科技產業,未來將是ET(Energy Technology)產業的年代,台北是有創意、充滿活力的城市,希望未來能擬定很多環保政策;台北市在11月要辦國際花卉博覽會,除讓國際看到台北,也教導市民養成環保的生活習慣,台北已準備好扮演台灣綠能的先驅角色。990119





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Norway is richest country in the world.


The following article is quoted from NY Times for your reference.


I just hope that our goverment is able to figure out how to imporve our country in the world class level.


If  we are the member of UN or not?


If it is so important; we should always ask ourselve as " Are we ready for it?"


I believe that we still have a lot room to work on.


Best wishes for the Ma's administration team. I hope more people with vision and wisdom are able to assist our President Ma.



The promenade for the new opera house in Oslo, which is transforming a seaside area into a business and residential community.


 


 
May 14, 2009


Thriving Norway Provides an Economics Lesson




OSLO — When capitalism seemed on the verge of collapse last fall, Kristin Halvorsen, Norway’s Socialist finance minister and a longtime free market skeptic, did more than crow.


As investors the world over sold in a panic, she bucked the tide, authorizing Norway’s $300 billion sovereign wealth fund to ramp up its stock buying program by $60 billion — or about 23 percent of Norway ’s economic output.


“The timing was not that bad,” Ms. Halvorsen said, smiling with satisfaction over the broad worldwide market rally that began in early March.


The global financial crisis has brought low the economies of just about every country on earth. But not Norway.


With a quirky contrariness as deeply etched in the national character as the fjords carved into its rugged landscape, Norway has thrived by going its own way. When others splurged, it saved. When others sought to limit the role of government, Norway strengthened its cradle-to-grave welfare state.


And in the midst of the worst global downturn since the Depression, Norway’s economy grew last year by just under 3 percent. The government enjoys a budget surplus of 11 percent.


By comparison, the United States is expected to chalk up a fiscal deficit this year equal to 12.9 percent of its gross domestic product and push its total debt to $11 trillion, or 65 percent of the size of its economy.


Norway is a relatively small country with a largely homogeneous population of 4.6 million and the advantages of being a major oil exporter. It counted $68 billion in oil revenue last year as prices soared to record levels. Even though prices have sharply declined, the government is not particularly worried. That is because Norway avoided the usual trap that plagues many energy-rich countries.


Instead of spending its riches lavishly, it passed legislation ensuring that oil revenue went straight into its sovereign wealth fund, state money that is used to make investments around the world. Now its sovereign wealth fund is close to being the largest in the world, despite losing 23 percent last year because of investments that declined.


Norway’s relative frugality stands in stark contrast to Britain, which spent most of its North Sea oil revenue — and more — during the boom years. Government spending rose to 47 percent of G.D.P., from 42 percent in 2003. By comparison, public spending in Norway fell to 40 percent from 48 percent of G.D.P.


“The U.S. and the U.K. have no sense of guilt,” said Anders Aslund, an expert on Scandinavia at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington. “But in Norway, there is instead a sense of virtue. If you are given a lot, you have a responsibility.”


Eirik Wekre, an economist who writes thrillers in his spare time, describes Norwegians’ feelings about debt this way: “We cannot spend this money now; it would be stealing from future generations.”


Mr. Wekre, who paid for his house and car with cash, attributes this broad consensus to as the country’s iconoclasm. “The strongest man is he who stands alone in the world,” he said, quoting Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen.


Still, even Ibsen might concede that it is easier to stand alone when your nation has benefited from oil reserves that make it the third-largest exporter in the world. The money flowing from that black gold since the early 1970s has prompted even the flintiest of Norwegians to relax and enjoy their good fortune. The country’s G.D.P. per person is $52,000, behind only Luxembourg among industrial democracies.


As in much of the rest of the world home prices have soared here, tripling this decade. But there has been no real estate crash in Norway because there were few mortgage lending excesses. After a 15 percent correction, prices are again on the rise.


Unlike Dublin or Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, where work has stopped on half-built skyscrapers and stilled cranes dot the skylines, Oslo retains a feeling of modesty reminiscent of a fishing village rather than a Western capital, with the recently opened $800 million Opera House one of the few signs of opulence.


Norwegian banks, said Arne J. Isachsen, an economist at the Norwegian School of Management, remain largely healthy and prudent in their lending. Banks represent just 2 percent of the economy and tight public oversight over their lending practices have kept Norwegian banks from taking on the risk that brought down their Icelandic counterparts. But they certainly have not closed their doors to borrowers. Mr. Isachsen, like many in Norway, has a second home and an open credit line from his bank, which he recently used to buy a new boat.


Some here worry that while a cabin in the woods and a boat may not approach the excesses seen in New York or London, oil wealth and the state largesse have corrupted Norway’s once-sturdy work ethic.


“This is an oil-for-leisure program,” said Knut Anton Mork, an economist at Handelsbanken in Oslo. A recent study, he pointed out, found that Norwegians work the fewest hours of the citizens of any industrial democracy.


“We have become complacent,” Mr. Mork added. “More and more vacation houses are being built. We have more holidays than most countries and extremely generous benefits and sick leave policies. Some day the dream will end.”


But that day is far off. For now, the air is clear, work is plentiful and the government’s helping hand is omnipresent — even for those on the margins.


Just around the corner from Norway’s central bank, for instance, Paul Bruum takes a needle full of amphetamines and jabs it into his muscular arm. His scabs and sores betray many years as a heroin addict. He says that the $1,500 he gets from the government each month is enough to keep him well-fed and supplied with drugs.


Mr. Bruum, 32, says he has never had a job, and he admits he is no position to find one. “I don’t blame anyone,” he said. “The Norwegian government has provided for me the best they can.”


To Ms. Halvorsen, the finance minister, even the underside of the Norwegian dream looks pretty good compared to the economic nightmares elsewhere.


“As a socialist, I have always said that the market can’t regulate itself,” she said. “But even I was surprised how strong the failure was.”



This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:


Correction: May 22, 2009
An article on May 14 about Norway ’s relative economic stability in the midst of a global downturn misstated its debt status. While the government enjoys a budget surplus and is a net creditor, it has liabilities related to social security and other programs equal to about 50 percent of its gross domestic product; its ledger is not “entirely free of debt.”


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