Friday, June 19, 2009

Nestle Cookie Dough Tied to 66 Illnesses From E. Coli

Nestle Toll House Cookie Dough Recall


Photo Credit Anna Molly Madison

Nestle is voluntarily recalling all of its refrigerated cookie dough products in the midst of an E. coli outbreak that has a strong link to the product. Sixty-five people in 29 states have fallen ill after eating the raw cookie dough. Twenty-five of these victims have required hospitalization. There has been no loss of life.

E. coli is a potentially fatal bacteria that can cause bloody diarrhea, dehydration and, in the most severe cases, kidney failure. The FDA has asked anyone possessing the product to throw it away and to not sell or serve these items. Items can be returned to the place of purchase for a refund. While the baked products are considered safe to eat, the FDA is asking everyone to not use the product. Bacteria from the dough can be transferred via hands or other surfaces the dough might come in contact with.



The company has temporarily ceased refrigerated dough production while the FDA inspects the plant. The recall includes refrigerated cookie bar dough, cookie dough tubs, cookie dough tubes, limited edition cookie dough items, seasonal cookie dough and Ultimates cookie bar dough. Nestle said about 300,000 cases of Nestle Toll House cookie dough are affected by the recall, which covers chocolate chip dough, gingerbread, sugar, peanut butter dough and other varieties.
Nestle cookie dough is linked to E. coli and recalled San Jose Mercury News
CNN

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Swiss Franc Weakens Sharply; SNB Has No Comment

The Swiss franc has weakened sharply against other major currencies

The Swiss franc has weakened sharply against other major currencies several hours after the Swiss National Bank said Thursday that it would intervene to stop an irrational rise in the franc against the euro. Asked about the franc's weakening, a spokesman for the SNB said he has no comment.

The SNB left key interest rates on hold at 0.25% earlier Thursday.

By 1335 GMT, the euro was trading at CHF1.5115, according to EBS, up from a post-March 12 intervention low of CHF1.5006 earlier in the trading session. The session high was CHF1.5140.
The SNB last intervened in the currency markets in March, when it sold the Swiss franc to push the euro up from the CHF1.48 area to over CHF1.53.
The Swiss National Bank doesn't have a fixed threshold for intervention in foreign-exchange markets to prevent the franc from rising against the euro, Thomas Jordan, a member of the central bank's policy-setting directorate, said earlier Thursday.
Nonetheless, traders have been keeping a close eye on the Swiss franc, with the euro trading close to the CHF1.50 point in recent days.
The safe-haven Swiss franc has been climbing of late due to renewed fears among investors about the global economy.

Swiss authorities are concerned about the strength of their currency

Swiss authorities are concerned about the strength of their currency because it could reduce the country's exports and increase the risk of deflation. Traders said the Bank for International Settlements sold Swiss francs on behalf of the SNB. The BIS declined to comment.

Sunday, May 31, 2009

What do you need to become a successful entrepreneur?

What are the basics of an entrepreneur?

Do You Have What It Takes to Beat the Odds?
When you start your first business, to paraphrase the prelude to Star Trek, you are about to "boldly go where you have not gone before." -- Stephen C. Harper. Harper explains in Starting Your Own Business, "Someone once defined LUCK as what happens when preparation meets opportunity." Taking that one step further: it's not about relying on luck, it's about being prepared.

Can You Beat the Odds?
The odds of starting a new business and being successful are slim, and anyone who starts their own business can be defined as optimistic. No matter how great you think your business idea is, the cold, hard facts are:
  • More than half of the 800,000 business started this year will not be around five years from now.
  • Only 20 percent of the business started this year will be around in 10 years.
  • Half of the survivors will be producing only a marginal profit.
Don't Be One of the Losers
Before investing your time, effort, and money in starting your own business, you should first answer these two important questions:

"Do I have what it takes to be successful?"

"Am I starting a business where a real and lasting opportunity exists?"

Experience Pays Off
It's important for you to know that both management experience and business knowledge are essential in successfully starting a new business. The lack of these essentials is the main reason almost all businesses fail. In most cases, the entrepreneur:
  • Entered a market that was already crowded with competition
  • Did not offer exactly what prospective customers wanted to buy
  • Failed to make the appropriate changes in business operations to meet a changing marketplace
  • Started the business with insufficient funding
  • For the specific business, lacked sufficient knowledge about one or more of the following areas: legal, financial, purchasing, accounting, employee relations, and marketing
There is no substitute for experience
Did You Know?
  • Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak started Apple Computer with $1,350.
  • Ross Perot started EDS with $1,000.
  • Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield started Ben & Jerry's with $12,000
  • Michael Dell started Dell Computer with $1,000.
  • Phillip Knight started Nike with $1,000.
Key Entrepreneurial Qualities
Regardless of the differences in successful entrepreneurs, they all demonstrate the following nine qualities that set them apart from most people. According to Stephen Harper, all successful entrepreneurs possess the following nine qualities:
  • Opportunity seekers
  • Future-oriented
  • Committed to being the best
  • Market-driven and customer-oriented
  • Value their employees
  • Realistic
  • Tolerant of the tedium
  • Resilient
  • Focused and decisive
Take a Good Look at Yourself and What Drives You
  1. A solid business opportunity
  2. The necessary skills and abilities
  3. The right approach to doing business
  4. Sufficient funds to start and operate the business until it can stand on its own
The first law of entrepreneurship is, "You need to offer what people want to buy, not what you want to sell." Customers do not buy what you like, they buy what they want. -- Stephen C. Harper
You can use this six-step process to help identify what type of business to start:
  1. List problems in the marketplace.
  2. Identify corresponding business opportunities.
  3. Determine the needed capabilities and resources.
  4. Project the financial dimensions.
  5. Rate the opportunities in terms of personal preferences, financial worthiness, and perceived risk.
  6. Select the business opportunity to pursue
If you need an advice, how to start your entrepreneurial career, let us know and we will help you in set up process! You reach us at the Swiss Business Club!

Click
here to join un on the Swiss Business Club!

All the best and kind regards

Lucas

Join the Swiss Business Club!

Are you an entrepreneur?

To become a successful entrepreneur you need to address the following three phases of wealth:
  • Accumulation
  • Preservation
  • Leveraging your Wealth
In the Accumulation Phase, you do all kinds of personal business like
  • Real Estate deals
  • Set up business
  • Doing personal services
  • Creating a Website on the Internet
  • Using and sharing Social Media
  • Creating a Business on Social Networking
  • Day trading
  • Investments in the Stock Market
  • Offering Consulting
  • Providing Network Marketing
  • Creating Joint Ventures
  • Engaging Partnerships
  • Organizing Crowdsourcing
  • Contracting Outsourcing
  • Project Management
  • Shared Services
  • Manufacturing
  • Service business
  • Private banking
  • Asset management
  • Funds management
  • Brokerage
  • Multiple financial service offerings
  • etc

Track one

Track one describes you as an individual

Track two

Track two describes you as a business owner!

You company can do anything and everything as you can do as an individual except to vote and to marry.

You can diversify your accumulation phase into multiple revenues streams of income on both, the personal and the business side.

Build a strong accumulation phase!

If you need a company, let us know and we will help you in set up process! You reach us at
the Swiss Business Club!

Click
here to join un on the Swiss Business Club!

All the best and kind regards

Lucas

Join the Swiss Business Club!

Friday, May 1, 2009

Google offers free Google Profile business cards

Google is teaming up with iPrint.com to give away, as in free, 10,000 sets of 25 Google profile business cards. Added missing link to offer you a free business card that links to your Google Profile.

Control how others see you via Google Profile

It’s part of a promotion for Google’s new Profiles, the company’s free vanity website offering that’s part lifestream, part “Online HQ” for people. You get a URL such as mine that is: http://www.google.com/profiles/lucas.wyrsch.

It’s simple. Sign up for a Google profile, easy to do if you already have a Google account, which everyone seems to these days, and fill out as much info as you deem necessary. You will have an instant control over the search result for your name. Once you confirm the information on the card and fill in your shipping and email information, you’ll get your personal Google profile business cards in 10-12 days. Remember, the promo is only available for people who have an address in the United States of America.

How do you like Google's initiative to create Google Profile

Do you think Google is competing stronger against Facebook in having created this offering?

Thursday, April 30, 2009

SwissNet, Inc. joines Google's Subribed Linked

SwissNet, Inc. Uses Google Subscribed Links

Future Power Generation has created a subscribed link through the Google Co-op program. You will find Future Power Generation on Google Subscribed links on clicking here!

You will find more subscribed links on clicking the Google Subscribed Links Directory! Google Coop allows you to submit an XML document that visitors can subscribe to. Once subscribed, your site will always appear first in their search results and be highlighted. This means that your site is always first and highlighted - no matter what its PageRank.

Monday, April 27, 2009

The One-man bank

One-man bank whose clients trust more than big banks

Flavian Kippel manages and runs all by himself one of the smallest banks in Switzerland, the Spar und Leihkasse in the village of Leuk, , in the southwestern part of Switzerland.



Since the start of the global financial crisis, when Lehman Brothers went bust, more and more clients have been entrusting him with their savings.

What makes the success of this one-man bank?

What do you think?

The creator of Morse code was born on this day back in 1791

Google marks Samuel Morse's birthday with code logo

Google is marking the birthday of Samuel Morse by translating its name into dots and dashes for the day.



Today marks the 218th birthday of the brain behind the Morse code, a universal communications system that revolutionized the world as we knew it.

On 27 April 1791, Samuel Morse was born.

Samuel Morse was a talented painter who was admitted into the Royal Academy and turned his hand to inventing in 1832, after meeting an expert in electromagnetism on a sea voyage. He later patented his idea for a transmitting messages over electrical wires, which quickly became the standard method of swift long-distance communication. Every letter of the alphabet was translated into a combination of dots and dashes in the code to which he gave his name.

The Morse code

Initially a painter of historic scenes, Morse also had a technical brain and was responsible for creating the single wire telegraph and, most notably, Morse code.



Morse's technical breakthrough occurred almost as a by-product of his painting enthusiasm. Following a tour of France, Italy and Switzerland from 1830-1832 to enhance his painting expertise, Morse returned to America by sea. It was during this homebound voyage that he met up with Charles Thomas Jackson who happened to be somewhat of an expert in electromagnetism. It was observing Jackson's electromagnetic experiments during the long journey home that Morse came up with the concept of the single wire telegraph. His painting plans, the reasoning behind the trip, were immediately put on the back burner so that he could focus his attentions solely on this new project.

Great minds think alike

Morse was not alone in his Eureka moment. William Cooke had also worked to create a commercial single wire telegraph and, thanks to a large pool of cash, was some way ahead of Morse in the development stakes. Professor Charles Wheatstone was also in on the action. The two paired up and patented their electrical telegraph back in May 1837. Fellow American Joseph Henry had also previously dabbled in work on an electrical telegraph. But all was not lost for Morse. Despite reaching a wall when it came to getting signal to travel more than a few hundred yards, Morse knew the power of harnessing the knowledge of others. With the help of Leonard Gale, a professor of chemistry at New York University, Morse managed to send messages that travelled 10 miles of wire.

The Breakthrough

Fuelled by the breakthrough, the two gents were joined by Alfred Vail who brought more expertise and financial resources to the project. Vail was to prove key in the development of Morse code as we know it, expanding Morse's early model of numbers only to include both special characters and letters too. That is how we came to reach the dots and dashes synonymous with Morse code today.

Money makes the world go round

Greater funding was required the make the telegraph a commercial reality. That funding was clearly more likely to go to Cooke and Wheatstone in Europe, so Morse had to look closer to home. Following a demonstration connecting two committee rooms in the US Capitol building, Morse was awarded $30,000 to build a pilot line between Washington DC and Baltimore.

First Puclic Telegraph Office in the United States

The real breakthrough came as Morse used the wire back on 24 May 1844 to say: "What hath God wrought" - a message that marked the official opening of the new communications network. The technology was patented in 1847, following legal battles regarding rightful ownership of the "inventor of the telegraph" moniker. In 1851, Britain adopted Morse's invention as the European telegraphy standard. The use of Morse code also became key to aviation. The Morse code we use today has been tweaked as it based on the Modern International Morse code that was actually developed by Friedrich Clemens Gerke back in 1848.

The rest, as they say, is history.

He died on 2 April 1872 but packed in a great deal of innovation during his lifetime.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

World Wide Web Is Already 20 Years Old

Twenty years ago this month, something happened at CERN that would change the world forever: Tim Berners-Lee handed a document to his supervisor Mike Sendall entitled "Information Management : a Proposal". "Vague, but exciting" is how Mike described it, and he gave Tim the nod to take his proposal forward. The following year, the World Wide Web was born. This week, it's a pleasure and an honour for us to welcome the Web's inventor back to CERN to mark this special anniversary at the place the Web was born.

The celebration

A celebration was held in the Globe on the afternoon of the 13th March to bring together those who created the web at CERN. The event included short presentations from Web veterans, a keynote speech from Tim Berners-Lee, a demonstration of the original browser on the NeXT computer, and a series of presentations from people that Tim believes are doing exciting things with the Web today.

Where the web was born

More information on the beginnings of the web at CERN can be found in the following sites:

Have fun!

Friday, April 17, 2009

Welcome to SwissNet, Inc.

SwissNet, Inc. was created to inform people about business and technological opportunities in Switzerland. You will find us on our website and on our groups at Ecademy, LinkedIn and XING.

If you are interested in Switzerland as a business location, SwissNet, Inc. can help you target this market} With Switzerland's economic resources, Switzerland is one of the top global economic actors. The process of basing a foreign business in Switzerland involves a large number of strategic decisions and administrative tasks. SwissNet Inc. is here to support you by providing the type of preliminary information you will need.

Switzerland, as a country, has excellent structures to enhance your global success strategy.

The Swiss markets offers you access to the German, French and Italian markets and you will be able to test and succeed large global markets. Whether you are selling in Switzerland or you working in Switzerland, SwissNet, Inc. can advise you how to expand and how to find
new contacts, leads and sales on a global scale!

SwissNet, Inc. has the expertise, the cultural background, and the business know-how
to help you achieve your personal and professional aspirations.

Become our partner, associate or ambassador wherever you are!

Just enter into contact with us in clicking here and filling out the questionnaire.