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Bloomberg BusinessWeek, Oct 28, 2013

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楼主
发表于 11-1-2013 08:09:44 | 只看该作者 回帖奖励 |倒序浏览 |阅读模式
(1) Christopher Palmeri, What a Pig Demon Says About Chinese Cinema.
http://www.businessweek.com/arti ... films-to-hollywoods
(“A case in point: Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons 西遊·降魔篇. The action-adventure film, featuring a Buddhist monk who battles a pig demon 豬八戒 and a monkey king, is China’s top-grossing film this year, with $189 million in ticket sales”)

Note:
(a) summary underneath the title in print: Local movies are eclipsing US films in the world’s No 2 market
(b) The Italian surnames Palmeri/Palmieri means son of Palmiere (another surname). The latter means “‘palmer’, ‘pilgrim’, an agent derivative of palma ‘palm.’”  
(The English surname Palmer denotes “someone who had been on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. Such pilgrims generally brought back a palm branch as proof that they had actually made the journey.”)
(c) Bona Film Group, Ltd  博纳影业集团 (Beijing-based)  
(d) Chinese-made films
(i) So Young  致我们终将逝去的青春 (2013)
(ii) Tiny Times  小时代 (2013)
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沙发
 楼主| 发表于 11-1-2013 08:10:06 | 只看该作者
(2) Janice Kew and Andrew Roberts, A Croc’s Bumpy Road From Farm to Arm Candy.
http://www.businessweek.com/arti ... rom-farm-to-handbag
(Cow-leather hides are a byproduct of animals raised for beef. For a crocodile farmer, it’s the skins that pay the bills. (Some people consider croc meat a delicacy, but growers such as Van As simply feed it to the other animals.) An average handbag can be crafted from as few as two skins, for which South Africa’s Le Croc farm owner Stefan] Van As gets as much as $600 each”)

Note:
(a) The English surname Kew means
(i) “a cook, Anglo-Norman French k(i)eu (from Latin coquus),” or
(ii) a person from Kew (as in “Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew”)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kew
(c) crocodile
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crocodile
(section 2 Species: Nile crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus), saltwater crocodile ((Crocodylus porosus), and others)

Quote: Although they appear to be similar to the untrained eye, crocodiles, alligators and the gharial [native to India] belong to separate biological families. * * * Crocodiles have more webbing on the toes of the hind feet and can better tolerate saltwater due to specialized salt glands for filtering out salt, which are present but non-functioning in alligators.
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板凳
 楼主| 发表于 11-1-2013 08:10:31 | 只看该作者
(3) Sam Grobart, Apple’s Got You!
http://www.businessweek.com/arti ... or-retail-sales-use

Quote:

“a month ago, when Apple unleashed iOS 7 onto the world. Embedded in the mobile operating system’s flashier interface and multitasking features is a new technology called iBeacon that can pinpoint your location to within a few feet. [However] Search Google for ‘Apple iBeacon’ and you won’t get any results from Apple.com. Look for the term on the company’s website, and you’ll get one hit, a link to Apple’s list of trademarks.

“Prior to iBeacon, iPhones and other Apple mobile devices relied on GPS and Wi-Fi tower triangulation to track their location. Those are great technologies and remain part of iOS, but they’re only precise within 30 feet or so. * * * GPS and Wi-Fi are less useful in smaller spaces such as stores. IBeacon can nail down device location more precisely because it uses Bluetooth Low Energy, a new version of the ubiquitous wireless standard. Bluetooth LE solves a lot of the problems of other tracking technology. GPS signals get fouled up by walls and other objects, cellular triangulation requires a strong wireless signal, and standard Bluetooth quickly drains a phone’s battery. Bluetooth LE can run constantly

“For the past couple of years, the next big location-services technology was supposed to be near-field communication * * * Developed largely by Nokia, Philips, and Sony * * * [its defects:] NFC requires a chip not all devices carry. NFC’s range is so short that a store can’t do much more [such as transmitting ads or promotions wirelessly] than jazz up payments with it

“Retailers have to invest some money to make their spaces iBeacon-friendly, but the cost isn’t onerous. IBeacon’s range is about 84,000 square feet, [independent tech consultant Hari Gottipati says. A typical Macy’s store of 175,000 square feet would need two or three iBeacon transmitters. Third-party manufacturers such as Estimote sell a three-pack for $99.

Note:
(a) summary underneath the title in print: Location-tracking iBeacon is already on millions of devices
(b)
(i) Bluetooth
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bluetooth
(2400–2480 MHz [within ultrahigh frequency (UHF) in electromagnetic radiation]; Created by [Swedish] telecom vendor Ericsson in 1994; section 1 Name and logo)
(ii) Harald Bluetooth
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harald_Bluetooth
(Harald "Bluetooth" Gormsson; c 935-c 986; reign c 958- c 986; section 5 The nickname “Bluetooth”)
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4#
 楼主| 发表于 11-1-2013 08:10:41 | 只看该作者
(4) Paul M Barrett, Mega Death. America’s biggest undertaker is buying a rival to get even bigger. But is its growth coming at the expense of grieving families?
http://www.businessweek.com/arti ... expense-of-mourners

Quote:

(a) “In the death-care industry, as practitioners call it, SCI [for the full name, see quotation (e)] casts a long shadow. Based in Houston and publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange, it operates more than 1,800 funeral homes and cemeteries in the US and Canada. It has 20,000 employees and a market capitalization of $4 billion. For 40 years, SCI has gobbled competitors as the pioneer consolidator of a fragmented industry.

(b) “Already No 1 in death care in North America, SCI expects by early 2014 to ingest the next-largest chain, Stewart Enterprises, based in New Orleans. In one gulp, SCI will grow to 2,168 locations. If the $1.4 billion transaction gets antitrust clearance from the Federal Trade Commission, the combined company would control some 15 percent of the US industry, with much larger shares of prime markets in Florida, Texas, and California.

(c) “small operators do cling to one competitive advantage: The [SCI] chain charges customers more than independently owned rivals. Whatever cost savings SCI achieves, it keeps or passes along to its shareholders. Zahn recently cut his price for a no-frills cremation to $1,000. Nearby SCI-owned competitors using the central Fort Lauderdale facility charge $1,450 and higher. Nationally, SCI charges $3,396 on average for a cremation with memorial service—30 percent more than independently owned rivals, according to data compiled by Everest Funeral Package, a Houston-based “concierge” funeral planning service. For traditional funerals, SCI charges $6,256 on average (excluding casket and cemetery plot), 42 percent more than independents.

(d) “The $16 billion-a-year US funeral industry comprises roughly 25,000 mostly small, family-owned businesses, but it’s consolidating with the spread of chains such as SCI and Stewart. Average profit margins are growing, according to research company IBISWorld, from 5.8 percent in 2008 to 6.5 percent in 2013.

“‘We are really a cash cow,’ Aaron Foley, SCI’s assistant treasurer, told attendees at an investment conference in August in Chicago. Based on its current inventory of ‘pre-need’ contracts—under which consumers put down money for eventual funerals, locking in the current prices—SCI has ‘a backlog of future revenue of $7.5 billion,’ he boasted. That figure would jump to $9.2 billion with the Stewart merger. ‘We are going to be poised to benefit from the aging of America, the baby boomers,’ Foley said. Deaths in the US are forecast to increase at an average annual rate of 1.1 percent over the next five years. At SCI, earnings per share rose 26 percent in the first half of 2013. ‘This growth,’ Foley said, ‘was driven in large part due to the strong flu season’—ie, a lot of old people got sick and died last winter.

(e) “SCI’s founder and chairman, Robert Waltrip * * * grew up in the 1940s in a second-floor apartment above his father’s modest funeral home on Heights Boulevard in Houston. In the ’60s, young Waltrip began acquiring rivals, combining their operations. He called the technique ‘clustering’ and compared it to that of McDonald’s. By 1970 he’d given his company its singularly vague name and made Service Corporation International the first publicly traded funeral chain. * * * Through all the ups and downs, Waltrip became very wealthy. A barrel-chested man who speaks with a Houston drawl, he owns large ranches in Texas and Colorado and raises prizewinning cutting horses and cattle.

My comment:
(a) There is  no need to read the rest, except reading the graphic in Web page 1 to compare prices of funeral costs between independently owned funeral homes and SCI.
(b) This is one of the three feature stories--and also the cover story. The cover reads: “Death Inc. You can’t escape fate--or SCI. Inside America’s fastest-growing merchant of death.”
(c) megadeath
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megadeath
(a term for one million deaths by nuclear explosion)
(d)
(i) cutting horse (n; First Known Use 1881);
“an agile saddle horse trained to separate individual animals from a cattle herd”
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/cutting%20horse
(ii) cutting (sport)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cutting_(sport)
(The sport originated from cattle ranches in the American West, where it was the cutting horse's job to separate cattle from the herd for vaccinating, castrating, and sorting)
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