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Gina Rinehart, Australian mining magnate and now media mogul
Posted by Metro in Uncategorized on February 20, 2012

Outside her native Australia, Gina Rinehart’s name is likely to be met with quizzical looks – but all that could be about to change, because the 57-year-old from Western Australia is on track to become the world’s richest woman.
Rinehart is a mining magnate who has built her fortune in the iron-ore-rich hills of the country’s Pilbara region – an area the size of Spain, around 700 miles north of Perth. Forbes has just estimated her personal worth at $US18bn (£11.3bn) – putting her ahead of Google’s founders, and fast advancing on the $26bn family fortune controlled by Christy Walton, of the US Wal-Mart dynasty.
Rinehart is known as a workaholic and for her strong political views, but has always been publicity-shy. however, a new, high-profile business deal, and a public row with her family, mean the multibillionaire’s days of privacy are numbered.
Last week her company, Hancock Prospecting, launched a raid on one of Australia’s oldest newspaper groups, Fairfax Media, which owns the Sydney Morning Herald and the Age in Melbourne, together with the Australian Financial Review and a string of radio stations. the swoop made Rinehart the largest single shareholder with a stake of just under 13%.
“I think her move into Fairfax is a power play,” says Adele Ferguson, a senior financial journalist for Fairfax whose unauthorised biography of Rinehart is due for publication this year. “She’s probably hoping to get some editorial influence, even if it’s a perception thing. Journalists might think twice about what they are writing about her if she is the company’s biggest shareholder.”
Rinehart’s assault on Fairfax followed her acquisition of a 10% stake (and a seat on the board) in the commercial television network, ten.
“She wants to influence debate,” says the Perth-based business writer Tim Treadgold, who follows the mining industry. “She wants to force Australian governments to pay greater heed to the resources sector because she genuinely believes that the future of this country is as a supplier of raw materials to China, not as a manufacturer in competition with China,” said Treadgold.
Some of Rinehart’s views may be controversial, but she is a woman Australians are increasingly taking notice of.
She is a climate change sceptic (last year she helped fund the controversial visit to Australia of the climate change denier Lord Monckton) and has previously promoted the idea that Western Australia secede from the rest of the country. She once looked into the feasibility of using a nuclear bomb to create a harbour on the north-west coat of Australia.
Rinehart is against the government’s proposed new tax on mining profits and in favour of bringing in cheap “guest labour” from Asia for the mining sector.
Treadgold calculates that Rinehart’s Pilbara mine, Hope Downs (which she owns in equal partnership with Rio Tinto), is likely to deliver her a profit of close to $A3bn (£2bn) a year when it reaches full production of 45m tonnes a year.
When combined with Rinehart’s other mines due to come on line in the next few years, Treadgold believes she could be on her way to being the richest person in the world. a Citigroup Global Markets paper last year on the next generation of mines around the world estimated that three of the top ten were owned by Rinehart’s Hancock Prospecting. “What hit me was that she was named [in the report] alongside the usual corporate suspects like BHP, Anglo American and Xstrata but what you have to realise is that she owns these mines personally,” he said.
The scale and speed at which Rinehart has accumulated her wealth is nothing short of breath-taking. Born Georgina Hancock, in 1954, she is the daughter of the legendary Western Australian mining figure Lang Hancock – the so-called “King of the Pilbara”. Lang is credited with discovering vast tracts of iron ore deposits in the region in 1952 where his family had been pastoralists for generations.
He was regarded in equal measure as a visionary and ruthless opportunist. He did business with the Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu and reportedly suggested “no-good half-caste” Aborigines be sterilised so they would “breed themselves out in the future”.
Lang died in 1992, leaving the family business to his only child, Gina, then a 38-year-old widow with four children. It was in serious trouble, bar a 2.5% royalty stream from iron ore sales on mining leases belonging to Rio Tinto in the Pilbara (a deal done by her father in the 1960s). in today’s terms it’s estimated that the royalty brings Rinehart an annual revenue of about $US107m a year.
But since Lang’s death, Rinehart has built Hancock Prospecting into an important player in the Australian resources boom. As well as 50% of the massive Hope Downs mine, she owns another huge mine in the Pilbara, Roy Hill, which is expected to begin exporting in 2014. She also has other investments in exploration for uranium, lead, gold, diamonds and petroleum.
The power of the mining and resources industry is reshaping the Australian economy. As the world’s largest exporter of iron ore and coal (much of it bound for China and Japan), rising commodity prices have brought increased profits which in turn have buoyed the economy.
Australia was one of the few developed countries to escape recession during the global financial crisis – because mining filled the national coffers and kept the economy strong.
Rinehart sees the resources sector as the future of the Australian economy and her views on the Labor government’s plans to increase taxes on mining profits are well known. in 2010, she donned some expensive-looking pearls and shouted “Axe the tax” from the back of a flat-bed truck in Perth.
A former West Australian attorney general , Jim McGinty, told the Age newspaper that the image of her splashed across media outlets left an indelible impression. “All I could think of was Gordon Gekko shouting ‘greed is good’,” he said. “Gina was basically saying ‘I don’t want to pay my fair share of tax.’”
She got her message across. two weeks later, the then prime minister and chief proponent of the tax, Kevin Rudd, was dumped by his party. a much watered-down version of the tax is due to pass the senate early this year.
Rinehart has always guarded her privacy carefully. She is rarely seen out and about in Perth and refuses almost all interview requests. So do her friends. Others fear they will be sued if they speak against her.
But her recent foray into media ownership has cast a spotlight on her – and on a bitter family feud with three of her four children that would not be out of place in a Hollywood script.
Rinehart’s three oldest children are trying to have her removed as the head of a family trust set up by Lang Hancock. the trust owns almost a quarter of Hancock Prospecting.
She has sought orders in two courts (including the high court) to have details of the dispute suppressed. but last Friday some details spilled out in court, including a security report commissioned by Rinehart that argued her four children and five grandchildren faced heightened security risks, including kidnapping, murder and terrorism as a result of the publicity surrounding the dispute over the family trust.
Rinehart’s eldest child, John, launched a blistering attack on his mother the next day. “I can support my wife and children in a modest manner from the work I do but I can’t provide the level of funds required to deal with security issues – real or imagined – associated with begin the son of a woman worth more than $A20bn,” he said in a statement.
“When my mother buys a few hundred million dollars worth of Fairfax, it’s going to draw some attention,” he continued. “But she won’t share a penny to help protect he grandchildren from the risks she – the trustee of our family trust – is creating by her own actions. What more can I do than communicate to any kidnappers out there – over my dead body and you will be wasting your time anyway. if you think you are going to get anything from my mother, good luck.”
Emails revealed in court showed her other children had requested money for bodyguards, chefs and housekeepers.
“I don’t think you understand what it means now that the whole world thinks you’re going to be wealthier than Bill Gates – It means we all need bodyguards and very safe homes!!” wrote Hope Rinehart.
However the dispute with her children is settled, Rinehart’s colossal wealth means she will continue to make and indelible mark on Australian life – both economically and, with her recent acquisition, through the media too.
Gina Rinehart, Australian mining magnate and now media mogul
Images and reviews vital to mobile internet
Posted by Metro in Uncategorized on February 17, 2012

Smartphone users like social signals
A study has shown that people seeking internet information using their mobile phones are more likely to click further if there are images and reviews present.
The research, conducted by digital agency Mediative, monitored people using the Google Places application on the iPhone to see how their eyes and fingers responded to details shown.
A group from Canada, aged 21 to 45, was asked to imagine they were on a road trip with a friend who wanted to get a tattoo in each city they stopped at. They therefore had to use Google Places to find a tattoo parlour in each location.
On viewing search results, eye-tracking and click-tracking measurements showed that members of the test group spent more time looking at images than other features. Furthermore, the presence of positive reviews on a listing – referred to by Mediative as ‘social signals’ – made it more likely that people would click to read more.
The project follows a study in November 2011, which monitored a similar situation using desktop computers. In several respects, the behaviour of desktop computer users and smartphone users was very similar, including the movement of the eyes from left to right before moving downwards.
Trust
However, the main difference observed between the two was that a smaller screen size enhanced the importance of images and reviews.
Mediative’s report stated: “Given the small space of the iPhone screen, some people will have their attention pulled to the right to look at an image, and may continue a scan down to the next image, before resuming a left-to-right scan pattern.
“In the examples we used in this study, in almost every case it meant that they would scroll down until they hit a listing with a better than 3-star review.”
Mediative concluded that a high position and social signals were vital to the success of a listing and that people need to feel they can trust a website before proceeding to read more about it.
Mark Baker, online marketing manager at theEword, said: “We all know that images draw the eye, but their enhanced effect when displayed on a smartphone means that businesses should think carefully about how they design and optimise their mobile websites.
“Likewise, people are more likely to place faith in your business if your Google Places listing features a good number of positive reviews from previous users.”
3 Easy Steps For Good Tattoo Websites
Posted by Metro in Uncategorized on January 26, 2012
Shopping for a particular tattoo and a tattoo artist is important and you must choose a website that is reliable. here are some steps to help you start your search.
If you just put in tattoo or tattoo website in the Google search box, thousands of sites will appear. you need to redefine your search to be more specific. Type in a keyword and add your city and state so you can find a tattoo shop close to your location. If you are looking for a specific tattoo design, type that in so you don’t get as many sites coming up.
Tattoo Websites Key Qualities
A good site should have certain qualities that are different from everyone else’s site. keep visiting different websites until you find one that has the following qualities:
Access to free galleries
Layout of website is good
Search engine result is high
Has customer service and contact info
Images and informative articles
Virus-free
Good reviews
Has affordable rates
Has referrals to local tattoo artists
Has a questions and answers page
Is safe for transactions
Look for these qualities in a tattoo website you choose to make sure that you’re getting real information. Don’t believe everything you read unless it is from a trusted source.
Choose Favorite Websites And Surf
Surf, Surf, Surf until you find three to five reliable websites. Once you do it will be easier to find what you are looking for. When you find that website you can rely on you can relax and not have to worry about being scammed. Tattoo shopping has become much easier because of reliable sites, you just have to take time to find them.
Free Tattoo Designs Online – Stencils, Templates & Flash Tattoos That Are Downloadable and Printable
Posted by Metro in Uncategorized on January 20, 2012
The tattooing world is indeed an art-filled world. The tattoo itself is considered art. once you decide to get one, means you’re letting your body be the canvas for this skillful art. but like other important things in life, getting a tattoo requires careful planning. The creation of a masterpiece – that is your tattoo – involves making right and wise decisions.
Tattoos are very popular and a lot of people wanting to get one have loads of ideas, but often feel stuck at times on the tattoo design they want to get. The planning starts here. The tattoo design probably is the most important thing that you have to consider. We’re living in the so-called Internet era, where everything is just a click on your computer away. If you’re trying to find a design for your tattoo, you can just Google it up, my friend Voila You’ll see stencils, templates, and even flash tattoo designs pop on your screen. all you need to do is download and print them. that seems simple.but not quite alright.
Why? because these free tattoo designs online are usually of low quality. more so, they are not unique. would you want to have a tribal tattoo and find that a stranger on the bus has that exact same design? I don’t think so. Don’t rely completely on these free designs. It’s better to think of an idea and try some initial sketches if you’re artistically inclined. If not, you can have it sketched and designed by an artist-friend or just go directly to your trusted tattooist.
Now you’re sure of your design, be ready for the pain and the final outcome. You’ll soon be a walking work of art. Wear your tattoo with pride
Free Tattoo Designs Online – Stencils, Templates & Flash Tattoos That Are Downloadable and Printable
Apple may hurt shareholders with patent war
Posted by Metro in Uncategorized on January 8, 2012
The Federal Court has ruled that Samsung can sell its computer tablet, the Galaxy Tab 10.1. Photo: AFP
Company should take a leaf from Google’s book and license its patents broadly, say experts.
Steve Jobs, the co-founder of Apple, told his biographer that he’d rather wage “thermonuclear war” with Google than make deals to share its technology with the maker of the Android operating system.
That was no empty threat. in the 18 months before Jobs died on October 5, Apple sued HTC, Samsung Electronics and Motorola Mobility, the three largest Android users. it alleged that the phone makers stole Apple’s technology and asked courts to make them stop.
Now, as rulings start coming in, it might be time for a détente that helps Apple maximise the value of its patents, said Kevin Rivette, a managing partner at 3LP Advisors, a firm that advises on intellectual property. When courts side with Apple and impose bans on infringing products, competitors can often devise workarounds; in cases where Apple doesn’t win import restrictions, it would be better off striking settlements that ensure access to a competitor’s innovation, he said.
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“A scorched-earth strategy is bad news because it doesn’t optimise the value of their patents – because people will get around them,” said Rivette, whose clients include Android licensees. “It’s like a dam. using their patents to keep rivals out of the market is like putting rocks in a stream. the stream is going to find a way around. Wouldn’t it be better to direct where the water goes?”
Steve Dowling, a spokesman for Cupertino, California-based Apple, declined to comment for this story.
Early victories
For a time, Apple’s strategy looked sound. in October, an Australian court banned the sale of Samsung’s Galaxy 10.1 tablet in that country, and the US International Trade Commission agreed to consider an import ban on sales of certain HTC devices.
Then the tide began to turn. Apple suffered a setback November 30 when a higher Australian court overturned the ruling against Samsung. On December 22, a German judge said he was unlikely to uphold an import ban on a version of the Galaxy, which Samsung had modified in response to a ban on the original design.
The ITC gave Apple only a partial victory on December 19 by ruling that HTC had violated only one of four patents Apple said it infringed. the patent covered so-called data detection, a feature that helps users make a call, send an e-mail or find an address on a map with a single keystroke.
Can’t last?
HTC decided to drop the feature. That’s a significant loss for HTC, since the capability has come to be an expected part of using a smartphone. still, the ruling reinforced predictions that Apple won’t succeed forever in preventing Android rivals from selling gadgets with the now-familiar hallmarks of Apple’s pioneering devices. These include touch screens and app stores.
Legal history isn’t on Apple’s side, said Marshall Phelps, former head of intellectual property at IBM and Microsoft.
“Nobody has ever kept competitors out of any market with patents,” in part because software can usually be slightly changed to find a non-infringing alternative, he said.
Exceptions, he said, include an IBM patent that characterised the basic architecture of a computer and Texas Instruments’s original patent for the integrated circuit, or computer chip. IBM was ordered by the US Department of Justice to license its patent, while Texas Instruments decided to do the same, which has resulted in billions of dollars in royalties, Phelps said.
Many of Apple’s patents, by contrast, relate to the look and feel of devices or particular ways of using a machine, rather than a basic technology breakthrough.
Shift ahead
The question on the minds of many patent lawyers isn’t whether Apple should adapt its legal stance, but when. For now, the company’s approach is costing rivals millions of dollars in fees, distracting management and preventing them from emulating Apple’s products more boldly, said Ron Epstein, a former attorney at Intel who now runs patent licensing firm Epicenter IP Group.
Apple’s patent portfolio remains strong compared with those of rivals, thanks both to the innovations that went into groundbreaking products such as the iPhone and iPad, and to the effectiveness of Apple’s legal department in obtaining patents for those innovations, said Christopher Marlett, chairman and co-founder of MDB Capital Group, an investment bank that advises companies on buying and selling patents.
“Apple has the patents, the money and the expertise to go to war,” Marlett said. “I just don’t see why Apple would seek détente, since they’re the clear leader. Until they’re hit with an injunction by Google or Samsung, they don’t need to get serious about licensing.”
Right back at you
Still, as more companies pour resources into the booming mobile-devices market, Apple should eventually cut deals to ensure access to rivals’ innovations as well, Epstein said.
“How long can you beat everyone else over the head before they can do the same to me?” he said.
Tim Cook, who took over in August when Jobs announced he would be unable to come back as CEO, has many other ways to take advantage of the company’s patent portfolio. the company could probably collect as much as US$10 in royalties for every device sold, more than the amount analysts speculate Microsoft receives from Samsung and HTC, which use its mobile technology, said Rivette at 3LP.
Other arrangements
With US$81 billion in cash and investments, Apple has little need for more. instead, the company could pursue out-of-court settlements that would help it take on Android in other ways, Rivette said. the company could offer to drop its more than two dozen patent claims against Samsung in exchange for an agreement to hold off using Apple technology for six months or a year, he said. Cook could also try to get price breaks or guarantees that would give it greater access to Samsung parts, Rivette said.
Apple and Samsung also could agree to focus on different parts of the market. For example, Apple might make iPad-sised devices while agreeing to stay out of the market for smaller devices with 7-inch displays that could compete with Amazon.com’s new Android-based fire tablet, Rivette said.
If Apple agreed to let Samsung include Apple’s proprietary iTunes software in such a device – an unprecedented and unlikely step, he said – Samsung’s sales would probably increase. That would help slow gains by Amazon, whose push into hardware makes it a threat to Apple. the move also would make Samsung more reliant on Apple, lessening its dependence on Google.
‘Divided loyalties’
“If I’m Apple, I want divided loyalties” from Android licensees, Rivette said. “At this point, it would make more sense for Apple to build an ecosystem that everyone can live in. if you’re going to license, why not go for the big deal where you lock down supply chains, get your technologies broadly adopted and slow down competitors? That is the game.”
Apple should pursue such settlements soon, before it winds up in need of other companies’ technology, Rivette said. the ITC is expected to rule in September on an import ban on Apple and Research in Motion’s mobile devices, for improper use of a photo preview feature patented by Eastman Kodak.
If the Commission decides there was infringement of the Kodak patent, Apple would need to settle the dispute by licensing the technology or buying some or all of Kodak’s patent portfolio to continue selling its products in the US Because Kodak has been actively trying to sell its portfolio of 1100 patents in recent months, Apple runs the risk that they may be purchased by Google, Samsung or another competitor.
Google maps
While Apple is working on its own location-tracking technology, many iPhone and iPad users now rely on Google mapping tools to get directions or find the nearest coffee shop, by way of a partnership between Apple and Google that predates the rise of Android. Nokia, Microsoft and Skyhook also hold valuable patents for tools that keep tabs on a device’s whereabouts. Apple has made little headway in social networking and may need deals with companies such as Facebook to add features that help users connect with one another.
“If Apple wanted to get into social networking, they’d have a big problem,” said Ron Laurie, managing director of Inflexion Point Strategy, a Palo Alto, California-based intellectual property consulting firm.
Working toward settlements sooner would help Apple and its rivals maintain the fast pace of innovation that has fueled the mobile-device market, he said.
“At some point, there has to be some kind of settlement, some kind of peace,” Laurie said.
Bloomberg
