Dow Jones Industrial To Fall 4000 Points In 2012? - Joseph Granville Jan. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Joseph Granville, a technical analyst who has been publishing the Granville Market Letter from Kansas City, Missouri, for more than 40 years, talks about the outlook for the US stock market. He speaks with Adam Johnson on Bloomberg Television's "Street Smart." (Source: Bloomberg) Tuesday, January 24, 2012 Joe Granville Predicts Another Earthquake: "Dow Jones INDU to 8000" Earlier this morning I was told that our most popular post on Monday was "Long-time bear joins bulls: Controversial Joe Granville says Dow could rise 800 points"* from August 2008. Joe was wrong on that one. Here's his latest via BusinessWeek, Jan. 23, 2012: Granville Says Dow Industrial May Drop Toward 8000 in 2012 Joseph Granville, whose "sell everything" call in 1981 sparked a decline in US stocks, said the Dow Jones Industrial Average will drop toward 8000 this year because of waning momentum and volume. "Volume precedes prices," Granville, 88, a technical analyst who has been publishing the Granville Market Letter from Kansas City, Missouri for about 50 years, said in an interview on "Street Smart" on Bloomberg Television. "You are seeing much lower volume. That tells you that prices are going to go much lower, much lower than most people think possible and very few people have projected." The Dow average has gained 4 percent this year to 12708.82 at 4 pm in New York. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index has ...

DRONES over US AirSpace - Maker wonders why people are so CONCERNED. Drones are becoming more and more a part of the way America does business - they have been used in modern day warfare to target those believed to be dangerous or a threat to the security of the United States, but very soon they will be a permanent fixture on America's landscape. The FAA has been adopting new rules to expand the use of small drones domestically, and by 2012 UAVs are expected to dominate the country's airspace. Trevor Timm of the Electronic Frontier Foundation brings his take on whether Americans should worry about what law enforcement is doing. A polarizing debate is emerging over whether the unmanned aerial vehicles, commonly referred to as "drones," should be allowed into US airspace for use by local law enforcement and private businesses. "No longer a tool used strictly by the military to take out terrorists overseas, drones of all shapes and sizes will soon be in our skies here at home for surveillance missions by local police departments, energy companies looking to build pipelines and farmers looking to feed thirsty crops," CNET's Jeff Glor reported Wednesday. Drone technology may already be a billion-dollar industry, but as Ryan Gallagher blogged Tuesday for Slate, "One of the most significant barriers the industry faces is undoubtedly public opposition. There are critics on all sides of the political spectrum. In the United States, that includes not only campaign groups like the ...

YAD 4 AGM Report (2011-2012)

This video is a report that showcase all the events that YAD 4 had participated in from the year 2011-2012. The video features a Group Photo of all YAD members in 8:08. I have permission to use all 5 songs featured in the beginning. The song "We are young" belongs to SME.

Research Business DAILY Report — August 22, 2012

Sponsored by TMRE: www.iirusa.com Today: 1) Mobile Device R-on-R insights from Research Now. 2) MIndwave Research's Erik Telford shares novel Mobile Device thoughts. 3) Deloitte study says 16- to 24-year olds social network or speak on mobile devices as thy watch TV. 4) Google Consumer Surveys gets direct competition.

Research Business DAILY Report — August 21, 2012

Sponsored by TMRE: www.iirusa.com Today: 1) Brian Fine's smartphone R-on-R results. 2) What an analytically-fit company looks like. 3) Three tips for potent business Tweets. Bonus coverage: If you liked the movie, "The Social Network," you will appreciate a Digiday link that shows how Eduardo Saverin tried to sell advertising for Facebook in its first year: www.digiday.com

Research Business DAILY Report — August 16, 2012

RBDR is sponsored by Decipher. Click here (www.decipherinc.com to check out "Beacon," Decipher's Industry-leading survey software. Today: 1) Customer Experience guru Harley Manning explains why it trumps other business concerns. 2) Kathryn Korostoff of Research Reporter expresses her concerns about mobile research.

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