Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Facebook Expects To Go Public In Spring

Facebook is expected to file for its initial public offering soon — possibly before the end of this year — and is planning to raise $10 billion, Bloomberg reported Tuesday.
Citing an unidentified person “familiar with the matter,” the report said that the social network’s $10 billion round of funding would give it a total valuation of $100 billion, making it the biggest technology IPO on record.

The company hasn’t officially decided when it will file for an IPO.
Facebook executives including co-founder and chief executive Mark Zuckerberg and chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg have made clear that the company is preparing its plans to go public. In a recent interview with TV host Charlie Rose, Zuckerberg said that the company would be making its equity “worth something publicly and liquidly” as a reward to its employees and investors. In May, Sandberg said that an IPO was “inevitable.”
Right now, the record figure for a technology IPO belongs to Infineon Technologies AG, which raised $5.23 billion in 1999. Visa holds the record for the largest IPO in U.S. history, having raised $19.6 billion with its market debut in 2008. A report from the Wall Street Journal notes that two other U.S. companies have debuted with more than $10 billion: General Motors, which had an $18 billion valuation in 2010, and AT&T, which raised $10.6 billion in 2000.
As ZDNet’s Larry Dignan points out, a $100 billion valuation at Facebook would make it more valuable than several big-name companies. He noted that Disney has a market cap valuation of $61 billion, Amazon is worth $88.3 billion, and Cisco is valued at $96.8 billion.
Google’s market cap is $190 billion; Apple’s is $349 billion.
A report from the Journal indicates that the company will file to go public between April and June. Facebook has been drafting a prospectus and speaking with Silicon Valley bankers about raising funds, according to the report.
The company expects to disclose its finances to the Securities and Exchange Commission this spring, as is required of any company with more than 499 investors. Analysts have predicted that Facebook would go public before that spring deadline.
The enormous IPO figure has already raised some eyebrows from those who question whether the company is worth $100 billion and those who wonder if Facebook can continue to innovate while under more investor scrutiny.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/how-would-a-10b-facebook-ipo-match-up/2011/11/29/gIQA5HHd8N_story.html

Friday, November 25, 2011

Warning: Mormon's Attacks Start With Hollywood

It's fun to say the "Twilight" movies are so bad they might be hazardous to your health -- but now that could actually be true!

According to several reports, the graphic birthing scene in "Breaking Dawn: Part One" has caused some moviegoers to suffer from seizures.

In Sacramento, a man told CBS13 he began to have a seizure during the scene and his wife described him as "convulsing, snorting, trying to breathe."

A man in Utah had the same thing happen to him, telling ABC-4, "I didn’t really remember what happened, after that I think I blacked out. According to [my wife], I was shaking and mumbling different noises."

Photosensitive epilepsy, which can be caused by flashing lights, is thought to be the cause. 


http://www.tmz.com/2011/11/25/twilight-breaking-dawn-seizures/

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Take Care Takes Off - Boise Tour Stop Coming Soon

Two great things happened today. Nightology reached 5000 "Likes" and Drake's new album, "Take Care" was released! Throughout the week we will be giving away 50 copies of the new Drake CD so make sure you stay connected. To start if off...the person with the birthdate closest to Drake's will be our first winner- 10/24/86! - Post on Nightology Facebook Page 


Tuesday, November 8, 2011

A Quality Smooth American Revolution


It Would Be Slighty Stoopid Not To Try.


Revolution Vodka is a small, hand batched all American Vodka made from grain harvested right here in the U.S.A. Pure Rocky Mountain Water that’s been filtered through over 600 feet of volcanic rock and soils is blended together the old fashioned way to bring you some of the best and smoothest sipping vodka that’s ever touched your lips. Four column distillation and mixed with carbon and filtered for 10 days means that only the purest vodka gets put in each bottle.

So next time you make a run to the liquor store or order a drink at the bar, make sure you ask for Revolution. You won't be sorry....


www.revvodka.com 
Visit their facebook page to stay updated on the revolution, concerts, and parties.--->
https://www.facebook.com/americanrevolutionvodka


www.facebook.com/nightology.us


Thursday, October 13, 2011

Boise's Halloween Fete- DJs, Live Performances, and Revolution Vodka


Here is the lines up for Halloween Fete 2011


http://therockitscientists.com/category/video/


http://www.lilplayy.com/


www.nayermusic.com



Boise's Halloween Party - Halloween Fete 2011 presented by TEAM MAZDA SUBARU



Team Mazda Subaru present Halloween Fête

A Nightology & Fusion Magazine Event


This Halloween escape the norm and dive into the Nightology and Fusion experience as we transform The Bouquet, a century old landmark, into a venue fit for Boise's trendsetters. Experience live performances, world renowned Dj's, and great drink specials, at the most anticipated Halloween party of the season.

To ensure that this Halloween is a blast, we booked the acclaimed DJ's/Producers, The Rock-it Scientists, who are just finishing up their international tour and 2 month residency in Shanghai. These two are sure to keep the party jumping on the turntables spinning there mashup remixes. In addition we have performing live, Nayer and Lil Playy. The two are currently taking over the airwaves and Billboard charts, Nayer with Give me Everything, her collaboration with megastars Neo and Pitbull, while Lil Play is making a name for himself with his smash hit Birthday Dress.

Join in the excitement and wear your costume for your chance to win cash and prizes. Prizes will be awarded for the sexiest, most original, and scariest costumes. Doors open at 9:30 p.m. and the party keeps rocking all the way until 4:00 a.m.. Pre-sale tickets are available online at www.tixxfixx.com, October 12th.

This is an 21 and up event.


Nightology Brings Rockit Scientist To Boise- The Bouquet


Nightology & Fusion Magazine present Halloween Fête 

This Halloween escape the norm and dive into the Nightology and Fusion experience as we transform The Bouquet, a century old landmark, into a venue fit for Boise's trendsetters. Experience live performances, world renowned Dj's, and great drink specials, at the most anticipated Halloween party of the season. To ensure that this Halloween is a blast, we booked the acclaimedDJ's/Producers, The Rock-it Scientists, who are just finishing up their international tour and 2 month residency in Shanghai. These two are sure to keep the party jumping on the turntables spinning there mashup remixes. In addition we have performing live, Nayer and Lil Playy. The two are currently taking over the airwaves and Billboard charts, Nayer with Give me Everything, her collaboration with megastars Neo and Pitbull, while Lil Play is making a name for himself with his smash hit Birthday Dress.Join in the excitement and wear your costume for your chance to win cash and prizes. Prizes will be awarded for the sexiest, most original, and scariest costumes. Doors open at 9:30 p.m. and the party keeps rocking all the way until 4:00 a.m.. Pre-sale tickets are available online atwww.tixxfixx.com, October 12th.

Boise's Halloween Party - Halloween Fete 2011

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

King of the castle!

Friday, August 26, 2011

The economics of good looks....






FRANCE looked back this week at the 1911 theft of the Mona Lisa from the walls of the Louvre. It was one of the most startling art heists in history, but the emotions it still arouses go beyond that. Stealing Leonardo da Vinci’s painting was like stealing beauty itself. And beauty has lost none of its power to bewitch, bother and get its own way, as three new books on the economic advantages of good looks confirm.
Physically attractive women and men earn more than average-looking ones, and very plain people earn less. In the labour market as a whole (though not, for example, in astrophysics), looks have a bigger impact on earnings than education, though intelligence—mercifully enough— is valued more highly still.
Beauty is naturally rewarded in jobs where physical attractiveness would seem to matter, such as prostitution, entertainment, customer service and so on. But it also yields rewards in unexpected fields. Homely NFL quarterbacks earn less than their comelier counterparts, despite identical yards passed and years in the league. Not everything comes easier: good-looking women seeking high-flying jobs in particularly male fields may be stymied by the “bimbo effect” until they prove their competence and commitment. But the importance of beauty in the labour market is far more pervasive than one might think.
The same is true in other markets. Women have traditionally traded looks for economic support in marriage. A Chinese study confirms that the husbands of unappealing women earn about 10% less than those of their dishier counterparts. Attractive people also have an easier time getting a loan than plain folks, even as they are less likely to pay it back. They receive milder prison sentences and higher damages in simulated legal proceedings. In America more people say they have felt discriminated against for their appearance than because of their age, race or ethnicity. Pretty people, it seems, have all the luck. These books attempt to explain why that is, and what, if anything, should be done about it.
Daniel Hamermesh, an economist at the University of Texas, has long written about “pulchronomics”. In “Beauty Pays” he reckons that, over a lifetime and assuming today’s mean wages, a handsome worker in America might on average make $230,000 more than a very plain one. There is evidence that attractive workers bring in more business, so it often makes sense for firms to hire them. Whether rewarding them accordingly—and paying their less attractive peers more stingily—is good for society is another matter.
In examining the case for legal protection for the ugly, Mr Hamermesh relies to a degree on the work of Deborah Rhode, a law professor at Stanford University and author of “The Beauty Bias”. Ms Rhode clearly struggles to see why any woman would willingly embrace fashion (particularly high heels). She is outraged that virtually all females consider their looks as key to their self-image. She cites a survey in which over half of young women said they would prefer to be hit by a truck than be fat. Her indignation is mostly moral. Billions of dollars are now spent on cosmetic surgery—up to 90% of it by women—at a time when almost a fifth of Americans lack basic health care. The more women focus on improving their looks, Ms Rhode argues, the less they think about others.
Discriminating against people on the grounds of personal appearance should be banned, she says. It limits a person’s right to equal opportunity, reinforces the subordination of groups where unappealing characteristics, including obesity, are concentrated (ie, the poor, some ethnic minorities), and restricts self-expression. Yet because ugliness is harder to define than race or sex, some argue that anti-discrimination laws are impossible to maintain. And anyway, say employers, appearance is often relevant to the job at hand.
Ms Rhode sees the hurdles, but argues that they can be dealt with. In places where “lookism” is already prohibited (eg, Washington, DC), such statutes have not provoked a flood of frivolous cases, she says. Occasionally beauty is essential to a business (ie, modelling, but not air-hostessing). But concerns about an employee’s effectiveness often reflect the biases of employers, not customers. Laws influence attitudes over time, she says, by denying those with prejudices the opportunity to indulge them.
“Honey Money”, Catherine Hakim’s provocative book, is a different kettle of fish. Where Mr Hamermesh and Ms Rhode see discrimination, she sees an opportunity for women to enhance their power “in the bedroom and the boardroom”. She argues that “erotic capital” is an underrated class of personal asset, to set beside economic capital (what you have), human capital (what you know) and social capital (who you know). Ms Hakim attempts to quantify a complex mix of physical and social assets, consisting of beauty, sex appeal, self-presentation, social skills, liveliness and sexual competence. Like other sorts of capital, the erotic kind is important for success; but unlike others it is largely independent of birth and class. It is especially valuable for poor people, young people, the newly arrived and the otherwise unqualified. In heterosexual settings it belongs primarily to women.
Ms Hakim suggests that women have more erotic capital than men to start with, mainly because they have had to work at it for centuries. But women have the erotic upper hand for another reason: the male “sexual deficit”. Despite the fact that both sexes are more sexually active than ever before, from the age of about 30 women’s libido tends to fall off while men’s does not. Because women have less interest in sex than men, it is, to put it crudely, a seller’s market. In the power dynamic of couples, controlling access to sex is more important than earning more money, says Ms Hakim. It is the woman’s main bargaining chip, as most still earn less than their partners. Feminists who want women to throw away their femininity are overlooking a powerful asset, Ms Hakim argues.
This is controversial stuff. Even those who reject the notion that women are just not that into sex can support Ms Hakim’s call for the full legalisation of prostitution and surrogate pregnancies for profit, thus giving women the freedom to earn a return on whichever personal asset they choose.
All three authors are in or fast approaching their 60s. They are contemporaries of the generation of feminists who waged war against the beauty culture, leaving unshaved legs and allegedly burned bras in their wake. But life has moved on. Sexualised images are everywhere, and the world that has emerged is one in which no one can afford to pretend beauty does not matter. Men too, having lost their monopoly of well-paid jobs, are investing in their erotic capital to enhance their appeal to mates and employers. They are marching off to gyms and discovering face cream in record numbers. Perhaps this explains Mona Lisa’s bemused smile. She knew what was coming.


http://www.economist.com/node/21526782


Thursday, August 18, 2011

Vote For Miss Idaho!

It takes a little more then just looks to be Miss Idaho. Beauty, elegance, intelligence - the list goes on and there is one girl who surpasses all the qualifications and more. Erna Palic has got it going on this year representing Eagle, Idaho.

Take a good look at the girls here running for Miss Idaho. Vote for the Miss photogenic here but if I can same you some time - Vote Erna Palic.


http://www.missidahousa.com/contestants.php?pageant=m&year=2012