The following is excerpted from "Free Competition Is Voluntary Cooperation"
Published by American Institute for Economic Research - June 2003
|
If now we enlarge our viewpoint, so that instead of
considering only a few individuals, we regard the social
group in its entirety, free competition is seen to be
that situation in which men are voluntarily cooperating.
All of the group, by purchasing what they prefer, encourage
those best qualified to provide the desired economic
things including services. Each of the group who
is offering things in the markets voluntarily seeks to
cooperate by performing in that economic role where
he can most effectively serve his fellows and thereby
maximize his own reward in the marketplace.
| |
| |
|
In practical effect, under perfectly free competition, producers
cooperate with consumers by endeavoring to provide
the best of whatever is desired at the least cost. Thus
"competition" and "cooperation" become, under such
conditions, merely different labels for the same highly
efficient economic behavior.
Also important in this connection is the fact that the
economic behavior we label "free competition" or
"voluntary cooperation" results in the greatest possible total
of benefits for all who participate.
| |
|
The following is excerpted from "Back on the Chain Gang"
by Daniel Lyons - Forbes - October 13, 2003
|
Palmisano has made Moffat the supply-chain czar, ruling Integrated Supply Chain (ISC), IBM's fourth-largest division, with 19,000 employees and a $40 billion purchasing budget.
The future, as Moffat sees it, won't be so much a battle among companies as one among supply chains.
If you are not part of this world, you need to know something about the lingo.
| |
| |
|
The "chain" in question stretches all the way from the raw materials at one end of a manufacturing operation to the customer's inventory at the other. In its broadest sense, it includes distribution and logistics; in its grandest aspirations, it contemplates having a customer's order trigger an instantaneous response in every ingredient.
| |
|
The following is an excerpt from "He's confident system can stop any virus"
by Dave Lundy - Chicago Sun-Times - Tuesday, January 22, 2004
|
It sounds impossible, but Bodacion Technologies' Eric Uner claims to have discovered the holy grail of Internet security. Starting at a cool $17,000, businesses can buy Bodacion's "HYDRA" system to protect their Internet servers from every single virus, worm, or Trojan horse on earth. If you don't believe it, you could have tried to penetrate HYDRA to win Bodacion's $100,000 hacker prize. Tens of thousands of people signed up, but no one could, Uner says.
HYDRA's "secret sauce" is the constantly changing algorithms that prevent any type of electronic intruder from getting through. Based around the same "nano-kernel" operating system that Boeing uses to ensure safety in 747s, Uner says his code is verifiably bug-free. His goal is one day to be able to announce to an audience of IT professionals that he can "stop every virus on earth" without provoking laughter.
HYDRA is a Web intrusion prevention system that uses constantly changing algorithms to protect servers. We named it HYDRA because it constantly adapts. The codes disappear as soon as the unit is powered off or probed or analyzed or disassembled.
HYDRA will stop viruses, worms, Trojan horses, all the network attacks from ever getting to Web servers.
| |
|
|
|
It doesn't need to be updated. Put it in your server closet, forget it's there. That's the concept.
| |
|
HYDRA also has a lot of reliability because our operating system is very small and testable. It's just under 13,000 lines of code, compared to 1.5 million for Linux or 50 million for Windows.
| |
|
|
|