Topic: Joe Nocera

Chris Roush of TalkingBizNews looks at new Association of Magazine Media data and finds that business magazines are doing well-better than the rest...

Regulating the Banks

To the Editor: . Joe Nocera's Jan. 17 column, "Keep It Simple," is correct that the Dodd-Frank law is far too complex, offering confusing and often...

How To Prevent A Housing Recovery

There are two fundamental values that are essential to any working capitalist economy: accountability and the rule of law. The reported outlines of...
No longer with the option of saying "no" to its employees, organizations are finding that solutions and techniques exist for managing and securing the mobile devices workers wish to connect to the corporate network.There are best practices for keeping data safe ...

The Way Forward According to Alpert,...

Posted on 10/13/11 at 6:50pm by Robert Hockett . Dear Readers,. . I am delighted to report that a white paper that Dan Alpert, Nouriel Roubini and...

Nocera vs. Sorkin, Bank Capital Edition

One of the consequences of Joe Nocera's move to the NYT op-ed page is that his column now appears on the same day as that of Andrew Ross Sorkin ...

LinkedIn Compared to Facebook

Is LinkedIn (LNKD) a social media rock star or a glorified telephone directory?. . It's been a couple weeks now since LinkedIn held its wildly...

Is Foreclosure Crisis Overblown?

Here are Andrew Ross Sorkin and Joe Nocera of the New York Times having a video debate about the foreclosure crisis. Instead, the government's resources should be directed at uncovering fraud within banks. The government extends banking licenses. A fiduciary duty ...
Who would have thought that an enterprise support lawsuit between SAP and Oracle would be the center of a major dust up between the New York Times and Hewlett-Packard chairman Ray Lane?. In a nutshell, Oracle bought PeopleSoft and J.D. Edwards ...
Three things I found worth reading about real estate right now: Four years ago, the monthly payment on a $300,000 house with 20 percent down and a mortgage rate of about 6.6 percent was $1,533. Today that $300,000 ...