Auteur Sujet: mpei The Odd Truth, Dec. 3, 2003  (Lu 3 fois)

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mpei The Odd Truth, Dec. 3, 2003
« le: Décembre 26, 2024, 01:51:42 pm »
Fsmk Judge: DA s Staff Can Try Nichols
 Deficits at the government s pension insurance program surged to a record $11.2 billion in 2003 - three times larger than any previous shortfall, with the outgoing director warning Thursday that taxpayers c stanley cups ould be called on for a bailout.Steven Kandarian, executive director of the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., said the program wasn t yet in a financial crisis. But he urged Congress to act soon to reform the nation s private pension system, which is being squeezed by low interest rates, a stanley cup  subdued stock market and laws that do not require employers to maintain full funding levels in their retirement plans.The agency s single-employer program posted a net loss of $7.6 billion for its 2003 financial year ending Sept. 30, added to a $3.6 billion shortfall in 2002.Falling interest rates and a record number of pension plan bankruptcies - mostly in the steel industry - sent the program deeper in the red.PBGC still can continue to pay retirement benefits to workers and retirees enro stanley cup deutschland lled in bankrupt plans, but the growing financial troubles threaten  the agency s ability to continue to protect pensions in the future,  said Kandarian, who announced last week his plans to leave after more than two years at the helm.        One very real solution to the pension problems is  the taxpayer might be called upon to make those payments  to workers if the PBGC falls further into debt, he said.The PBGC was created in 1974 to guarantee payment of basic pension benefits. About 44 million American Rsyh Chernobyl never looked more post-apocalypic than in this new drone film
 Like Google Glass, the Apple Watch is the beta version of a technology that might one day exist. It suggests a future of effortlessly wearable data devices, more graceful than phones. But one science fiction writer thinks Apple has it all stanley cup  wrong 鈥?and that future wearables will be a lot simpler than you think.     https://gizmodo/apple-watch-everything-you-need-to-know-1632172509 Watching the news about Apple Watch, Robin Sloan  author of Mr. Penumbra   24-Hour Bookstore  noted that the simple smart rings from Ringly, pictured above, are more likely to be the kind of thing we ;d see decorating the arms and fingers of people in the future. The price tag is all wrong, he noted in his tweet, but the design is right. https://twitter/embed/status/508452494012207105 What Sloan is suggesting is that people won ;t want one computer in their pocket and another on their wrist. Instead, they ;ll want something that turns the phone   alerts into something fun and cryptic. You can program these rings to flash a particular color when your best friend calls, but one can easily imagine a future where you c stanley botella an also set it to vibrate when it geolocates your parents or boss to within 50 meters. It   a public way of signaling something private. Sometimes we overthink what the future will want. stanley cups uk  Maybe what we want out of our wearable technology is more like a tap on the shoulder and a secret glance, rather than stock prices scrolling on our wrists.