Knockout earns green designation
Wed ,30/09/2009Real Estate Weekly, April 1, 2009
With consumer demand rising for eco-friendly pest control, one of the largest pest control companies in the region, Knockout Pest Control Inc., is responding with cutting edge “‘green” services.
The National Pest Management Association awarded the QualityPro Green designation to Knockout, making it the first company in the New York Metropolitan area to do so.
“Now. more than california green design ever. consumers are seeking pest management methods that not only address their household and commercial pest problems but also. address their concerns regarding the protection of the environment.” Arthur Katz. president of Knockout, said
Ed Muscat
Mon ,28/09/2009San Diego Business Journal, Jan 5, 2009 by Andrew Schweizer
Ed Muscat is president of All-Ett Billfolds, which manufactures specially crafted, ultra-thin wallets. Using patented designs, the company touts a healthy alternative to thick wallets that could cause chiropractic issues.
BUSINESS PHILOSOPHY
Essential business philosophy: Take care of the customer.
Best way to keep a competitive edge: Being innovative and not worrying about the competition.
Guiding principles: Be ethical and honest.
Yardsticks of success: Testimonials from customers and building a business through referrals.
Goals yet to be achieved: Balance between work and play.
JUDGMENT CALLS
Best business decision: Buying this company and promoting the wallets’ healthy aspects.
Worst business decision: Waiting too long to hire a bookkeeper.
Toughest business decision: To keep or change the company name.
Biggest missed opportunity: None.
Mentor: My father-in-law.
Word that describes you: Decisive.
TRUE CONFESSIONS
What you like best about your job: Working with customers.
What you like least about your job: The financial side.
Pet peeves: People who cannot make a decision or won’t take responsibility.
Most important lesson learned: Hire competent people.
Person most interested in meeting: Warren Buffett.
Three greatest passions: Family, racing, negotiating deals.
First choice for a new career: This is it. I bought All-Ett after retiring from another business.
PREDILECTIONS
Favorite quote: “The hottest places in hell are reserved for those who, in a time of moral crisis, remain neutral”–Dante.
Most influential book: “The One Minute Manager.”
Favorite status symbol: Porsche.
Favorite restaurant: El Ranchito Taco Shop in Poway.
Favorite place for business meetings: Quiet conference room.
Favorite vacation spot: Italy’s coast.
Favorite way to spend time: Barbecuing with the family and working with the kids.
RESUME
Name: Ed Muscat.
Company: All-Ett Billfolds.
Title: President.
Education: Bachelor of Arts in general business administration, Michigan State University.
Birthplace: Detroit.
Age: 56.
Current residence: Poway.
Family: Married, with six children.
InSite Vision Releases 1Q 2009 Financial Results
Mon ,28/09/2009Wireless News, May, 2009
Wireless News
05-12-2009
InSite Vision Releases 1Q 2009 Financial Results
Type: News
InSite Vision Inc. reported financial results for the quarter ended March 31.
In a release on May 11, the company noted that total revenue for the first quarter of 2009 was $2.3 million with a net loss of $5.4 million.
As of March 31, cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities totaled $31.3 million
No "Thriller" of a media event in Encino
Mon ,28/09/2009San Fernando Valley Business Journal, July 20, 2009 by Martin M. Cooper
Elvis has left the building, Michael Jackson has left the Staples Center, and we’re left with sensory–and media overload.
Those basing an opinion on the sheer volume of the media coverage afforded Michael Jackson’s death would be safe to conclude that his demise spells the end of life on Earth as we know it.
Now we can look forward to near-endless–and breathless–coverage by Entertainment Tonight, TMZ, and all the similar mind-numbing television programs covering Jackson-related lawsuits, drug use, his burial site, and a whole host of post-mortem issues.
There is, of course, a strong Valley connection to all of this. Since the early ’70s, the Jackson family home has been on Hayvenhurst Ave. in Encino, barely a white glove’s throw up the street from Gelson’s.
The media call it the “Jackson Compound,” as if it encompassed a palatial mansion with numerous outbuildings scattered over several acres … nothing could be further from the truth. But it sounds good.
In fact, from now on, friends are expected to speak of the “Cooper Compound” when referring to my modest domicile, located a few blocks south of the Jacksons.
From the moment of Jackson’s death on June 25, fans began trekking to the “Jackson Compound” with the fervor of Muslims making their once-in-a-lifetime religious hajj to Mecca.
Out of pure journalistic imperative I spent some time watching our Encino version of Ringling Bros. Circus.
On the west side of the street, fans quickly erected a make-shift shrine, complete with scrawled messages, balloons, floral bouquets, and even a teddy bear or two. Most of them, quite orderly within iron barriers, tacked items up on the fences of the Jackson home’s next-door neighbors (long-suffering folk they must be!) until the walls were a mass of color more than 30 feet wide.
An equally fascinating show unfolded on the east side of the street … a show starring the world’s media.
Yours truly was in charge of media at the annual Academy Awards for ten years, but I’ve never seen so many huge satellite dishes in one place at one time (11, at one count). Somehow they reminded me of the aliens in H. G. Wells’ War of the Worlds, striding relentlessly across the landscape. Hundreds –no exaggeration–of reporters, videographers, sound people, technicians, all were there to record, and report, the slightest bit of information.
Overhead, beginning at daybreak the day of the Staples Center memorial service, three or four helicopters swirled and hovered over Encino, making sure we had an unfettered aerial view of the goings-on on television, but oblivious to the infuriated residents below awakened by their noise.
On my weekend walk (I delude myself into thinking it’s part of my exercise regimen) from the Cooper Compound to the Starbucks at Ventura Blvd. and Hayvenhurst Ave. and back, still unshaven and unshowered, KABC-TV’s Luanne Suter gave me my 15 seconds (not minutes, in my case) of fame. She asked me about the inconveniences of the continuing closure of Hayvenhurst, automobiles parked bumper-to-bumper on every side street, and strangers wandering through the neighborhood every hour of the night and day.
Being the consummate public relations professional, I lied through clenched teeth, muttering something about it being a minor inconvenience.
At an Encino Neighborhood Council meeting convened on July 8 in the musty but venerable Encino Woman’s Club, more than one local excoriated the media overkill. Interestingly, the media’s intrusion into the life of local residents engendered much more heat than the visiting fans (a word derived from the word “fanatic”) who visited the family home (uh, sorry, compound).
Finally, at about 11 p.m. on Wednesday, July 8, the LAPD opened Hayvenhurst Ave. to through traffic.
The highly regarded Pew Research Center for the People & the Press, an independent opinion research group that studies attitudes toward the press, politics and public policy issues, looked at the Jackson media coverage (dare we say overkill?) in its most recent survey.
Their survey revealed that “nearly two-in-three Americans say news organizations gave too much coverage to the story.”
A separate analysis by the Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism showed that from the announcement of Jackson’s death on Thursday to the end of the day Friday, “60 percent of the news coverage studied I was devoted to his death, his life story and his legacy.”
And this while protests continued in Iran, healthcare reform legislation was being considered, the California budget impasse continued unabated, Congress was debating a federal greenhouse gas bill, and a train crash in Washington, D.C., left nine people dead.
The cult of celebrity lives … even when its objects do not. When Jackson’s death was reported, Google, Yahoo, and the social networks, were near-overloaded with traffic
Rolling walker
Mon ,28/09/2009Nursing Homes, April, 2004
HUGO Anywhere has introduced the HUGO rollator, a rolling walker with a seat. The HUGO weighs 16.5 pounds, has 8″ wheels for easy navigation, hand brakes for better control, and a cushioned seat and backrest. The hand brakes also lock the HUGO for stability when sitting, and the grips provide comfort and control. It has a detachable nylon basket, and a secret velcroed compartment under the seat
Research and Markets: Convergence Is Key in the Portable Media Devices Market in the United States
Mon ,28/09/2009Wireless News, January, 2008
Wireless News
01-16-2008
Research and Markets: Convergence Is Key in the Portable Media Devices Market in the United States
WIRELESS NEWS-January 16, 2008-Research and Markets: Convergence Is Key in the Portable Media Devices Market in the United States (C)2008 10Meters – http://www.10meters.com
Research and Markets has announced the addition of Portable Media Devices in the United States to its offerings.
In a release, Research and Markets noted that report highlights include:
The consumer intelligence series of reports published from 2001 display our commitment to the US market, providing market intelligence based on original and unique data, as well as years of experience.
This research is supported by our dedicated US editorial team and industry…
Retailers trotting out pricey toys
Sun ,27/09/20090 Comments | Deseret News (Salt Lake City), Nov 23, 2006 | by Chris Rugaber Associated Press
WASHINGTON — You better watch out: this holiday shopping season could be one of the priciest ever as the most tech-laden and expensive gifts for kids of all ages, from the $299 animatronic pony Butterscotch to a $300 pinball machine, show up at your neighborhood Wal-Mart or Target.
Even if Santa doesn’t leave the elusive $500 Sony PlayStation 3 under your tree, there’s still Hasbro’s $249 Nerf Showtime Hoops, a basketball “gaming system” with an electronic scoreboard and a recorded voice that can announce whether your child has launched a “brick” or hit “nothin’ but net!”
Or you can go to Wal-Mart Stores Inc. to pick up a red Ford Mustang Power Wheels, a $250 battery-operated car for children 3 years old and up. The Mustang is a Wal-Mart exclusive made by Mattel Inc.’s Fisher-Price division, though many other models can be found at other retailers, such as Toys “R” Us.
“Every Christmas season, there’s more expensive toys,” Scott McCall, Wal-Mart’s chief toy officer, said. This year, toymakers are pushing prices up even more, he added.
Toys have gotten more expensive for several reasons, industry executives and analysts said. The demand is there: Parents have shown a willingness to spend more on children’s gifts. Meanwhile, toy companies are able to make more sophisticated toys because computer chips and robotics keep getting cheaper. The companies can then charge more for those high-tech toys.
Higher prices don’t seem to be holding back sales. “I would say that Butterscotch has exceeded our expectations,” McCall said, referring to the newest member of Hasbro Inc.’s “FurReal Friends” product line.
Chris Byrne, a contributing editor for Toy Wishes, a consumer publication, said that expensive toys have always been available at high-end stores such as FAO Schwarz, which emerged from bankruptcy protection two years ago. What’s notable this year is that mass- market retailers like Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Target Corp. are stocking their shelves with more toys costing $200 and above than they ever have.
One factor behind the trend is the global decline in the price of high-technology parts, such as computer chips and robotics.
That allows toy makers to offer sophisticated toys at surprisingly low prices considering what the toys can do.
The “Butterscotch My FurReal Friends Pony,” for example, is three feet tall with moving eyes, ears, head and tail. The pony can whinny and snort and can be “fed” a carrot, and if children sit on her she will “gently bounce,” the company said.
“There’s a lot of technology, chips and capacity sensors ..
Man in dress robs San Mateo business
Sun ,27/09/20090 Comments | Oakland Tribune, Jul 2, 2009 | by Joshua Melvin
SAN MATEO — A man in a dress, purple gloves and a floppy sun hat robbed a payday loan business Thursday afternoon, authorities said.
The man walked into the business on the 3800 block of South El Camino Real at around 2:15 p.m. and demanded money, said San Mateo police Lt. Mike Brunicardi. The man pushed one of the clerks away from a cash drawer and took an undisclosed amount of cash
Legal
Sun ,27/09/2009Online, Nov/Dec 2008
LexisNexis announced an agreement with Linkedln to enhance its Martindale-Hubbell legal network as a networking destination for attorneys. Additionally, as part of the agreement, abstracts and links to Martindale-Hubbell articles and content will be distributed within the Linkedln network (www.lexisnexis.com).
Lawriter, LLC, a subsidiary of Collexis Holdings, Inc., announced the development of the criminal lawyer grand rapids first professional social network exclusively for law students. Along with the social networking site, CasemakerX will provide free access to the Casemaker suite of applications for the U.S. law student community (www. collexis
Housing construction plunges in October
Sun ,27/09/20090 Comments | Deseret News (Salt Lake City), Nov 17, 2006 | by Martin Crutsinger AP economics writer
WASHINGTON — Housing construction plunged to the lowest level in more than six years in October as the nation’s once-booming housing market slowed further.
The Commerce Department reported on Friday that construction of new single-family homes and contractor beverly hills apartments dropped to an annual rate of 1.486 million units last month, down a sharp 14.6 percent from the September level.
The decline, bigger than had been expected, was the largest percentage decline in 19 months and pushed total activity down to the lowest level since July 2000.
Applications for new building permits, seen as a good sign of future plans, fell for a ninth consecutive month, the longest stretch on record. The October drop was 6.3 percent, pushing permits down to an annual rate of 1.535 million units, the slowest pace in nine years.
David Seiders, chief economist for the National Association of Home Builders, said he believed construction would fall by about 13 percent this year as builders scramble to deal with plunging sales.
“We had an unsustainable boom in housing in both 2004 and 2005 and now we have a correction on hour hands,” he said.
The sharp slowdown in housing this year stands in stark contrast to the past five years, when the lowest mortgage rates in four decades had powered sales of both new and exiting homes to five consecutive records.
The housing weakness trimmed a full percentage point off economic growth in the July-September quarter, when the economy expanded at a tepid 1.6 percent rate.
Housing is expected to continue acting as a drag over the next year but analysts believe the adverse effects of falling sales and construction cutbacks will not be enough to pull the country into a recession.
There were signs that the steep plunge in housing was beginning to level off. The monthly survey of builder sentiment edged up slightly in early November following another small increase in October. It marked the first back-to-back improvements in builder sentiment since June 2005.
The level of building activity in October was 27.4 percent below activity in October 2005, the biggest year-over-year decline since March 1991.
Construction of single-family homes fell by 15.9 percent in October from the seasonally adjusted September level, dropping to an annual rate of 1.177 million units. Construction of multi-family units dropped by 9.1 percent to an annual rate of 309,000 units.
The drop in construction was led by a 26.4 percent decline in the South