November 2011
This 28-Year-Old Is Making Sure Credit Cards Won't Exist In The Next Few Years
Ultimately we're trying to build the next Visa, not the next PayPal. We're building a human network based on how we think the future of payments will work. The current model needs to be blown up.
October 2011
Credit en ligne suisse
August 2011
July 2011
[Varolo] The best way to earn money online.
June 2011
April 2011
March 2011
Compare mortgages, credit cards, CDs, checking and savings
February 2011
Data Mining, Predictive Analytics, Statistics, StatSoft Electronic Textbook
January 2011
Credit Suisse - The Inflation Experience
December 2010
Provenance XG Final Report
Provenance refers to the sources of information, such as entities and processes, involved in producing or delivering an artifact. The provenance of information is crucial in deciding whether information is to be trusted, how it should be integrated with other diverse information sources, and how to give credit to its originators when reusing it.
Kids go on expensive buying sprees in iPhone games -- Shanghai Daily | 上海日报 -- English Window to China New
So where does the money come from? Kelly Rummelhart of California has part of the answer. Her 4-year-old son was using her iPad to play the game and racked up US$66.88 in charges on her credit card without knowing what he was doing.
Awesome, incredible, gorgeous.
November 2010
Square
October 2010
Firebug Metamorphosis
September 2010
August 2010
Twitter Creator Jack Dorsey on Plane Crashes, the Ghost of Britney Spears, and the Difficulty of Defining Influence | Fast Company
June 2010
May 2010
The Subtle Technology of Indian Artisanship: Change Observer: Design Observer
Since raw material is usually expensive, the craftsman must know how to make the most of what he’s got. This often brings to the fore his economical genius for gathering, managing and storing materials. It is only through working the material repeatedly that the craftsman becomes familiar with its properties well enough to coax it into shape. But while we see the craftsman’s contribution as his genius for forming material, we rarely give him credit for more abstract design thinking about the broad implications of his creation.









