Keith Roberts Offers an Investment Strategy Based on Ancient History

July 18th, 2011

What had a greater impact on business, the Iron Age or the invention of coinage? What might these developments tell us about more recent historical changes such as globalization or the computer revolution? These are the issues that Keith Roberts, author of The Origins of Business, Money, and Markets, explores in a recent op-ed in Forbes.

Roberts argues that an understanding of Ancient History gives us a better understanding of the impact of change over time and its effect of business and economies. While the political importance of the Iron Age cannot be denied, Roberts suggests that its impact on business, despite its ability to create wealth, was limited.

Roberts compares this with the invention of coinage in Ancient Greece during the late seventh century. Roberts writes:

As sales for money replaced barter, economic exchange became faster and more frequent. Monetary prices improved information about values and supply and demand, reducing risks for traders and vendors.

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Entrepreneur Foster ?14 Launches NYC Real Estate Firm

July 16th, 2011

This is the first in a series of stories about  Hamilton student-entrepreneurs.

After working on several real estate deals, earning her license and starting her own company, McKenzie Foster ’14 is well on her way toward building the real estate career she wants. Her wealth of experience, detailed plans for the future, and dedication to her goals promises to build a bright future for this rising sophomore.

Foster first became interested in real estate in seventh grade after studying New York City history at the Horace Mann School. She explains that New York’s real estate reflects the city’s rich history, and being able to work with these properties, particularly from the prewar era, allows her an inside look at the detail and background that makes each building unique. Foster began working in real estate when she was 15; by 16 she had finished her first deal, and had another one completed when she was 17.  Because she was too young to hold a real estate license at the time, her father, a real estate broker, finished the transactions and closed the deals. At 18,

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Tags: Estate, Real Estate

Interview: Bill Grueskin and Lucas Graves on the Changing Business of News

July 16th, 2011

Why does the New York Times website, which gets close to thirty million unique users, generate so much less revenue than the print newspaper, which has nine hundred thousand weekday subscribers? It just doesn’t make sense?Bill Grueskin

Bill Grueskins question is one that motivated his decision to write, with Lucas Graves and Ana Seave, The Story So Far: What We Know About the Business of Digital Journalism. The book is based on extensive interviews the authors conducted with news organizations, both old and new, and reveals how they allocate resources, what patterns are emerging in revenue streams, and what might generate revenue more effectively.

Throughout the week, well feature elements of the book but we begin with an interview with Bill Grueskin and Lucas Graves in which they discuss the book. In the interview, Graves and Grueskin talk about the importance of their project and how it started. They also talk about how and why news organizations will have to change their relationship with advertisers to survive as well as vexing issues confronting digital journalism such as aggregation. <

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Tags: News

Weiner, Weiwei, and More from University Press Blogs

July 13th, 2011

The following is a roundup of some excellent posts from our fellow university press blogs:

Yale University Press interviews the husband-and-wife biologist team John and Colleen Marzluff, co-authors of Dog Days, Raven Nights.

Marjorie Cohn asks if the assassination of Osama bin Laden was illegal on the NYU Press blog.

Translation Its a Living: Harvard University Press features Jane Marie Todds acceptance speech for the Translation Prize for Nonfiction by the French-American and Florence Gould Foundations.

The Indiana University Press blog recaps the annual meeting of the American Association of University Presses here and here.

MIT Press offers an excellent roundup of coverage about Chinese artist Ai Weiwei.

Elvin Lim on The Sleaze Factor (one guess about which congressman the essay is about) at the Oxford University Press blog.

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Tags: Blogs, Press Blogs, University Press, University Press Blogs

The Trees of Central Park

July 10th, 2011

Edward Barnard, author of New York City Trees: A Field Guide for the Metropolitan Area, recently teamed up with the birder Ken Chaya to produce a map of nearly every tree in Central Park.

Their efforts were recently the subject of a story on NPRs Morning Edition. There are more than 20,000 trees in Central Park and Barnard and Chaya were able to map 19,933. In an effort to pinpoint the exact locations of all those trees Barnard and Chaya began to see the park in different ways, discovering new aspects of the park, and coming to a greater appreciation of Olmsted and Calvert Vauxs design for the park.

For more, here is a video in which Barnard and Chaya talk about their two years of mapping Central Park:

Tags: Central Park, Park

University Press Blogs: The Week in Review

July 7th, 2011

A gay liberationist looks at gay marriage on the Cambridge University Press blog.

A video from the Harvard University Press blog: Serena Mayeri discusses her book Reasoning from Race: Feminism, Law, and the Civil Rights Revolution.

The Indiana University Press blog continues its excellent recap of the annual meeting of the American Association of University Presses with a look at discussions of governance practices.

Sarah Sobieraj, author of Soundbitten: The Perils of Media-Centered Political Activism, comments on the misguided emphasis activists often place on mainstream media attention via the New York University Press blog.

The Oxford University Press blog features Dario Salvucci on the multitasking mind.

Peter J. Dougherty, director of Princeton University Press, pays his respects to Herbert S. Bailey, who directed the press from 1954 to 1986.

Joe Mathews and Mark Paul, authors of California Crackup on the low expectations for the state budget on the University of California Press blog.

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Tags: Press, University Press