Thursday, June 25, 2009

A free six-pack

Click HERE for this week's column, in which I suggest six free programs that are ideal for older computers. Paradoxically enough, good freeware is often better and more efficient than the bloated commercial products out there.

Friday, June 19, 2009

The waters are stirring


Click HERE for today's column, which highlights the Pacific's changing naval scene, including last week's incident off of Subic Bay between a U.S. Navy destroyer and a Chinese submarine.

Friday, June 5, 2009

Looking and leaping


Given Saipan’s lousy state of affairs, bailing to the states never looked so good.

Unfortunately, bailing to the states never looked so bad, either; the economy is shedding over a half million private sector jobs per month.

These thoughts are continued in today's column.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Wage stuff and bigger issues, too

Economically, there's so much doggone stuff brewing now that it's hard to know where to start. The minimum wage is a good place, but there are bigger things to contemplate as well, so I also offer some insights into upcoming topics in this week's column. Once again I can't resist the temptation to mention economist Joseph A. Schumpeter, who had an eerily accurate understanding of how mass psychology meshes with economics.

Friday, May 22, 2009

Computers for the Commonwealth


Many people don't know about these yet, but super-small "netbooks" computers are starting a trend in computing.

The first models were, well, "cute" and "intriguing," but that was about it. But the latest models are downright impressive. I think they're just the thing for island living; they're easy to tote, they're cheap, and some models can go as many as six to nine hours on battery power.

Friday, May 15, 2009

When the world is right


"When the man is right, the world is right." That's the moral of a story I got from W. Clement Stone, and I took it to heart as a kid (still do, actually). At the time I had no idea I'd actually get to meet Mr. Stone. So here's today's column.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Chinese 24/7

As a beginning student in Mandarin Chinese, I've been wading through a galaxy of books--phrase books, grammar books, writing books, and text books. The best I've found so far is Chinese 24/7, which I review in today's Tribune. This book has really helped me out a lot.

Here are some related links, as promised in my review:

The book's author, Albert Wolfe, is also author of Laowaichinese.net, and it's via this site that I discovered Chinese 24/7.

Chinese 24/7 has associated audio files that are free to download at Chinese247book.com, which also carries more information about the book.

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Let's not shake on it


Everyone in Saipan, and probably everyone reading these words, has experienced this minor annoyance: You’re sitting in a restaurant, just about to take hold of the cheeseburger you’ve been craving all day, and along comes a colleague of yours who, just your luck, has six visitors in tow. Your colleague, of course, can’t help from dispensing introductions. The hands extend automatically, and you find yourself rubbing more raw flesh than a Bangkok go-go dancer. And you don’t even get a tip or a lady’s drink out of it....(finish today's column here).


Also, here's the link to the Jim Rogers interview I mentioned in my column.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Still strategically strategic


The coming Asian arms race is finally getting notice in the world's press. Today's column is about that gig, and here's a link to a piece in the same vein I did back in 2007.

We're at the juncture where economic changes (namely, Uncle Sam's slide, but, as a secondary factor, China's rise) are going to induce military changes in the Asia-Pacific region. After all, armies march on their wallets.