Friday October 28, 2005 | ${log.root}/lowem.log Inflation, Investing and Everything |
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Six months today. That's how long I have now been with the current company, since the crash. It's been a usual workday, building the app, attempting to fix bugs, and such. Not that much different from any other workday. But it's a kind of personal milestone for me. It means that half a year has passed since the previous company "couldn't make it" and dropped the entire R&D team. Their operating phrase was "to let go" but it was the same as "retrenchment without benefits". So, in this way, Biow and I were "let go", along with the CTO, his wife, and the rest of the team including Gwun Wai and his brother. You could say that I could have seen it coming, since one of the "story arcs" of this blog, and its predecessor, has been tracking the progress of "globalization", in particular the "race to the bottom". How the wage differential between Singaporeans and "you-know-who" has been over two times, and how that differential between Americans and "the-usual-suspects" has been over ten times. You could also tell from the difficulty they had getting new projects. The previous company directors have even told some of us in private about the desperate bidding wars that they encountered, how the companies have been undercutting each other to get the deals at any cost. Hell, you could even tell from the way they cut back in the kitchen/pantry (cheaper and cheaper biscuits, less and less drinks, and then finally, none at all). You know, you could perhaps check in the corporate pantry if you want to see how well a company is doing ... Well, it's a little different now. The slight uptick in the economy in the earlier part of the year has created some jobs here and there, and I'd suppose I've been fortunate enough to have been able to secure one of these. Better pay, better prospects, and stock options to boot. At a company which is an established technological leader in its field, and recipient of contracts for projects in the hundred-million-dollar league. The price? Vastly increased complexity. Much less margin for error. Being part of the military-industrial-complex. But I don't really mind the last bit, and the fact is, in the grand scheme of things it's a small role and it's not that they design missile guidance or some such. Actually, in light of the looming advent of peak oil and its various implications, I would *want* to be part of sectors that will do okay, at least medium-term-wise. These sectors might include government, military/defence, finance, logistics, healthcare/biotech, energy and resources. Full circle? You could say that. I started my career (such as it is) in the military/defence sector. Cyberwarfare (blue team), firewalls and such. And now I'm back in this sector. For Biow, it's at least as interesting, she's now back in the same company that she first started work in. Again, finance sector too. Full circle as well. What's ahead? Raising the family, continuing to work, paying down the debt, paying the bills, saving/investing the leftovers. And continuing to watch the horizon and beyond for anomalies that might spoil a good day. Well, if you've been following this blog at all, you know what I mean :) See also : 1. Random musings (2005-10-28 19:20:34 SGT)
[Musings]
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peakoil.com -> usatoday.com : ExxonMobil, which stunned Americans on Thursday by reporting nearly $10 billion in profit for the third quarter, says it has no plans to invest any of those earnings in developing alternative or renewable energy — something other oil companies do. The Sierra Club, an environmental group often critical of the auto and energy industries, said : "Americans want clean sources of energy that protect public health, reduce pollution, curb global warming, and save consumers money. Instead, ExxonMobil has worked to make America more dependent on oil." Investments by oil companies in alternative and renewable fuel development are common, which makes Exxon's stance stand out. For instance Shell, which reported third-quarter earnings of $9.03 billion, up 68% from a year earlier, has a unit dedicated to solar and wind energy. It's called Shell Renewables, and the energy company considers it one of its five core business operations. (2005-10-28 17:56:25 SGT)
[Energy]
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