Bank of America: I told you so!
I'll say it again: the solution to phishing is out-of-band authorization of transactions.
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bankofamerica phishing lifelock sitekey anti-fraud
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(they come free with the car rentals). Attached left is the view through the front windshield of my car; as you can see the driver must jostle our way through the crowd of people, bicycles, scooters, horses, dogs--rarely with the aid of traffic lights. Light collissions are common and hardly noticed. But still I had to ask my driver on the highway to please stop using the oncoming lane of traffic (which routinely forced approaching vehicles to veer out of the way). In the image on the right, he is stopped and given a 100-rupee traffic ticket, but I couldn't tell why.
The highlight of my week was meeting Rajesh Jain, founder of India World (the high-value acquisition that served as poster child of India's internet bubble). Rajesh is the Bill Gross of India, prolifically founding, funding or running startup after startup (get a sense for his metabolism and creativity on his blog). Among his more ambitious projects are a thin client service that promises to deliver India's households with computer, bandwidth and software for $10 per month.
So Chini Krishnan, the Mumbai native who runs Vimo (photographed above left of Rajesh), salvaged my day by guiding me through the backstreets to Strand Book Store (it's not easy to find anything there--there are no street signs). Strand is the Kepler's of India, selling real books--even God Delusion!--for 56 years (the man who checked out my purchases had worked there for most of them). Strand is so popular that it expanded to its current footprint, including the upstairs, of 500 square feet--the envy of the neighborhood! I hadn't intend to buy much, but somehow Strand sells at roughly 20% of US prices, so I filled my suitcases. (Sorry, Clark.)india mumbai keplers christophermoore yousuck vimo chinikrishnan rajeshjain grapefruit
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I don't want to achieve immortality through my work. I want to achieve it through not dying. --Woody Allen
As a defense mechanism against age, I've started taking the red wine extract resveratrol, which studies increasingly point to as a fountain of youth, virility, and athletic prowess in laboratory mice. (My supplement regimen should at least impress Minnie.). I owe my new-found immortality to Sirtris, the Bessemer-funded startup that's advancing its highly concentrated formulation of resveratrol through FDA trials.
Stem cell therapy is also touted for cheating death, as I was reminded today by Alan Colman (before he rushed off to the Clapton concert). Dr. Colman had made Dolly the cloned sheep--the first one ever outside Sand Hill Road. I met the former Oxford professor in Singapore, whose government (America, try to imagine this) seems to actually encourage scientific research (image left: Singapore's Biopolis). Dr. Colman's current startup develops stem cells that can turn into heart muscle for heart attack victims, or insulin-producing cells for diabetics.
If all that fails, I have another strategy for staying the same age forever: yesterday would have been my birthday, had I not skipped the date altogether by crossing the international date line. Hah!
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An act of God? (If so you'd think His Omnipotence would stretch our oil supply now that we REALLY need it.) More likely, it's a great example of early day entrepeneurship, because Judah Macabee was nothing if not a scrappy entrepeneur. He recruited a great team and executed more nimbly than the much larger, incumbent Syrian army. With only a day's supply of oil, he likely teased that fire, closed the Temple doors to mitigate wind and oxygen levels, and restricted the flame to peak hours of animal sacrifice. Judah, inventor of the low burn rate, knew better than anyone how to Get Big Cheap!Technorati Tags: hanukah atheism entrepreneurship burn+rate
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