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분류 전체보기에 해당되는 글 84건
- 2012.11.22 운명
- 2012.11.22 The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing
- 2012.11.22 fix you - coldplay
- 2012.11.22 구별
- 2012.11.19 홍차
- 2012.11.19 여자와 철학자
- 2012.11.19 Amazon's Jeff Bezos: The ultimate disrupter
- 2012.11.18 Terry Moore: Why is 'x' the unknown?
- 2012.11.18 단백질
- 2012.11.18 연말이 가장 좋은 이유는..
글
운명
운명은 일시적으로 결정되는 것이 아니라
오랜 시간의 노력과 시련,
알려지지 않은 노동의 기초 위에서 세워진다.
그렇게 결정된 운명은 대부분신뢰할만하고 견고해서 흔들림이 없다.
왜냐하면 그것은
자신이 노력해서 이미 일궈낸 성과들을 토대로
만들어진 것이기 때문이다.
-Romain Rolland
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글
The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing
The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing
Book Description
There are laws of nature, so why shouldn't there be laws of marketing?
As Al Ries and Jack Trout—the world-renowned marketing consultants and bestselling authors of Positioning—note, you can build an impressive airplane, but it will never leave the ground if you ignore the laws of physics, especially gravity. Why then, they ask, shouldn't there also be laws of marketing that must be followed to launch and maintain winning brands? In The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing, Ries and Trout offer a compendium of twenty-two innovative rules for understanding and succeeding in the international marketplace. From the Law of Leadership, to The Law of the Category, to The Law of the Mind, these valuable insights stand the test of time and present a clear path to successful products. Violate them at your own risk.
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글
구별
"세상엔
'하고 싶은 일
할 수 있는 일
해야 하는 일'이 있는데
이 세가지가 겹치면 다행이지만
세상이 녹록치가 않아서
내 의지대로 되는게 아니거든.
이 세가지를 잘 구별해야 해.
그리고 해서는 안될 일은 하면 안되는거야."
-J.H.
오늘 문뜩 그 사람이 해준 말이 생각났다.
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글
Amazon's Jeff Bezos: The ultimate disrupter
Amazon's Jeff Bezos: The ultimate disrupter
By Adam Lashinsky, senior editor-at-large
Amazon (AMZN) executives call these documents "narratives," and even Bezos realizes that for the uninitiated -- and fans of the PowerPoint presentation -- the process is a bit odd. "For new employees, it's a strange initial experience," he tells Fortune. "They're just not accustomed to sitting silently in a room and doing study hall with a bunch of executives." Bezos says the act of communal reading guarantees the group's undivided attention. Writing a memo is an even more important skill to master. "Full sentences are harder to write," he says. "They have verbs. The paragraphs have topic sentences. There is no way to write a six-page, narratively structured memo and not have clear thinking."
MORE: Businessperson of the year - the full list
Jeff Bezos has always done things his own way, whether he's ignoring Wall Street's pleas forconsistent earnings growth or requiring his top people to construct artfully written missives or launching seemingly disparate businesses -- all at razor-thin margins. Only there's nothing random about Bezos's strategy. Indeed, like the memos he makes his managers write, his moves are driven by clear thinking and a cohesive vision, even if it takes a while for rivals to figure out Amazon's motives -- at which point it may be too late.
Bezos is the ultimate disrupter: He has upended the book industry and displaced electronics merchants. Now Amazon is pushing into everything from couture retailing and feature-film production to iPad-worthy tablet manufacturing. Amazon even sells ultracheap database software for businesses. (Oracle (ORCL), take note.) He's willing to take risks and lose money, yet investors have embraced him, pushing Amazon's stock up 30% so far this year. And even as Amazon expands and experiments, Bezos remains zealous about delivering a good customer experience. For all these reasons and more, Fortune has named Bezos its 2012 Businessperson of the Year.
It's not just Fortune that deems Bezos praiseworthy. He counts among his fans Amazon's sharpest competitors and a legion of entrepreneurial imitators. "Jeff is a manic competitor, a delightful human being, and a trusted supplier," says Netflix (NFLX) CEO Reed Hastings, whose company is enduring a full-frontal assault from Amazon's instant-view movie-streaming service. Marc Andreessen, the Netscape co-founder and venture capitalist, marvels at Bezos's "staying power and willingness to withstand beatings." And in the absence of Apple's Steve Jobs, Bezos is the new undisputed role model for founders who want to keep control of their companies. "With Steve's passing, Bezos is the epitome of the venture-backed CEO," says Bill Gurley, another VC and longtime Amazon watcher, as well as the lead investment-banking research analyst for the company's 1997 IPO. "If you were to ask 100 startup entrepreneurs who the CEO is they admire most, he would show up on 95 of the ballots."
Amazon recently released a new e-book product called Kindle Serials. For $1.99, customers get a book delivered to their Kindle e-reader device serially -- say, once a week -- with no additional charge for each new episode. It's an homage to the bygone era when writers like Charles Dickens published their novels in newspapers one chapter at a time before collecting the work in book form. Kindle Serials is not likely to amount to a giant revenue stream for Amazon, which will ring up more than $60 billion in sales this year. But listening to the way Bezos talks about the history of serialization, you get a glimpse of his concept of customer feedback -- and how Amazon acts on it. "Even in Dickens's day, he would take notice of the criticism of the prior installments and use it to his advantage," he says.
How does Bezos use Dickensian continual improvement at Amazon? "We innovate by starting with the customer and working backwards," he says. "That becomes the touchstone for how we invent." Pushing the publishing industry to make books available electronically was a customer-friendly proposition: Readers got instant gratification at lower prices. Amazon Prime, the company's addictively popular all-you-can-eat delivery offering, eliminates friction; if you've already paid for unlimited shipping, then you order what you want, when you want, in the quantities you want. Amazon Web Services, the company's newest big division, offers business customers the same sophisticated online infrastructure technology that Amazon has developed for itself.
MORE: Amazon goes Hollywood
Customer focus is a cultural issue, Bezos says, that distinguishes Amazon from other companies, whose chiefs craft strategy in competitive terms. "When they're in the shower in the morning, they're thinking about how they're going to get ahead of one of their top competitors," Bezos says. "Here in the shower, we're thinking about how we are going to invent something on behalf of a customer."
At 48, Bezos is relatively unchanged from the days when he was the boy wonder of the Internet industry. It is Election Day, and the weather in Seattle is splendid -- meaning it is not raining. Bezos holds court in a conference room in the Day One North building of Amazon's urban headquarters, where no corporate logos adorn the outside of the company's multibuilding campus. ("Day One" refers to his persistent assertion that the Internet is still in its infancy.) Bezos has wisps of gray stubble at the sidewalls of his otherwise bald pate, and his large brown eyes dominate his face. In a wide-ranging discussion about Amazon's culture and management techniques, he is by turns inquisitive and challenging, but also charming and relaxed. By multiple accounts he is the same way internally, though unforgiving of anyone who is ill-prepared. "He is very demanding," says a former insider. "He gets angry when he feels like people aren't being competent."
Nadia Shouraboura, until recently an Amazon vice president in charge of technology for Amazon's global supply chain and fulfillment operation, says she sometimes saw Bezos ignoring the discussion at his own meetings because, she realized later, he was reading e-mails from customers, usually complaints. Those e-mails trigger what Amazon people call a "Jeff B. escalation." By forwarding customer gripes, Bezos is able to have a direct dialogue deep into the company. Ordinary employees see evidence of his insistence on responsiveness. "My initial reaction was, 'You want me to be working on a Friday night on an order that was messed up by half a day?' " says Shouraboura, who recently opened a men's apparel store in Seattle. "Then it sank in. If one customer wrote to Jeff, there are others who didn't. And Jeff wants to understand the screwup to make sure it gets fixed."
One way to serve customers is to give them the lowest possible prices, and in that way Amazon is more like the granddaddy of American retail, Wal-Mart (WMT), than its Silicon Valley counterparts. To offer the lowest prices, Amazon is famously frugal. Unlike in much of Silicon Valley, Amazon employees pay for their meals. Desks are slabs of wood that could be used for doors. For years Bezos chose ultracheap shipping rates for customers over expensive TV advertising. The penny-pinching applies to salaries, which are low throughout the 80,000-person-plus organization. "We pay very low cash compensation relative to most companies," says Bezos. "We also have no incentive compensation of any kind. And the reason we don't is because it is detrimental to teamwork."
MORE: Jeff Bezos' fashion foray
Make no mistake, Amazon rewards its teams. It's just that restricted stock that becomes valuable only over time -- and more valuable only if the company succeeds -- is the primary reward. For example, Jeff Wilke, who runs Amazon's North American consumer business, one of its largest, earned a salary last year of $165,000. That reflected a $5,000 raise from the previous year. Save one peer with an ancient employment agreement, no one at Amazon makes more than Wilke. (That includes Bezos, whose annual salary is just under $82,000. Bezos receives no restricted stock awards either. Then again, his founder shares are worth about $19 billion.) For his part, Wilke held restricted stock worth more than $20 million earlier in the year. The stock performance clearly helps retention, but it isn't the primary motivator for Amazon's recruiting. "You go to Amazon because there's something big going on," says Dave Cotter, another recently departed executive who also is working on a startup of his own. "Other companies pay more."
In the world of consumer electronics, new-device launches are as hyped and choreographed as a Justin Bieber concert, and Amazon's most recent Kindle announcement is no exception. It is pitch black inside a converted airplane hangar in Santa Monica until a faint flicker appears at the front of the room. As the lights come up, the source of the light is revealed: The tiny beacon is Jeff Bezos holding above his head a new Kindle Paperwhite, Amazon's latest e-ink device that for the first time includes illumination. The Paperwhite is as nerdily wonderful as Bezos sells it: A lightweight, moderately priced ($119) e-reader for those who like to read in bed in the dark without disturbing the person next to them. Amazon's newest Kindle Fire tablets are cool too -- all priced lower than comparable iPads and pretty darn close in terms of features.
Bezos, like that other guy, has a shrewd and even ruthless side. Executives with Drugstore.com, now owned by drug retailer Walgreen (WAG), still recall that a decade ago Amazon started a health-and-beauty category aimed squarely at the smaller company. Never mind that Amazon owned a significant stake in Drugstore.com at the time and that Bezos sat on its board. Years later, in 2010, Amazon launched a full-throttle push to market baby products to moms at the precise moment it was negotiating to purchase the parent of Diapers.com, an act that could only drive down an acquisition price by striking terror in the hearts of other buyers.
MORE: 5 ways the Kindle can become a top tablet
Bezos is also willing to cannibalize his own companies: Amazon spent nearly $1 billion to acquire shoe retailer Zappos in 2009, but its Amazon shoe site competes directly with Zappos. As well, Bezos is adept both at changing the subject to one of his choosing and at crafting a reality that suits his purposes. Asked if Amazon's price-comparison app, launched during last Christmas's shopping season to the intense irritation of physical retailers, was a gentlemanly thing to do, Bezos responds, "I would broaden that to say we live in a world that is becoming more and more transparent." Similarly, the Amazon CEO is unapologetic about a strategy that for years avoided collecting state sales taxes in locations where Amazon didn't have retail-oriented operations. "We have been very clear for more than 10 years that we are in favor of having federal legislation that simplifies and allows online retailers to collect sales tax," he says. When challenged that advocating a different position isn't the same as complying with the law as it stands, he replies, "Which is what we did." It's a legalistic interpretation, yet it has served Amazon extremely well in establishing strong positions nationwide. In Texas and California, for example, Amazon agreed tobegin collecting sales taxes after negotiating for favorable conditions for new warehouses.
The comparisons to Apple and Jobs go only so far, of course, and in some ways the two companies and their celebrated founders are polar opposites. Amazon, unlike Apple, has a low-price, low-margin strategy almost across the board. A favorite Bezos aphorism is "Your margin is my opportunity." In fact, whereas Apple has long prided itself for premium prices -- with the operating margins to show for it: 31% in 2011, vs. 2% for Amazon -- Amazon sells at the bare minimum needed to break even, on the assumption it will make money elsewhere. It's a completely different approach. Apple uses its platform to sell high-profit devices; Amazon sells low- or no-profit devices to pump ever more volume onto its platform.
Amazon also tolerates businesses under its roof that are unconnected to one another. Amazon Web Services, for example, has nothing in common with Kindles, and that's just fine with Bezos. He allows each to operate independently as long as they adhere to Amazon's overall values. He calls this "distributed innovation," and it contributes to a nimble corporate mindset that allows Amazon to branch out into new areas.
A strong strain of pragmatism, or practicality, runs through Bezos's decision-making. Sure, he has his credos, and he cites them frequently. "The three big ideas at Amazon are long-term thinking, customer obsession, and a willingness to invent," he says. But he doesn't let other tried-and-true practices hem him in. That aversion to TV advertising, for example? Going up against Apple and others in the device business has changed his mind, and Amazon is advertising its Kindles aggressively for Christmas. Amazon is also an overwhelmingly headquarters-centric company. Yet to get closer to the hardware designers he needed for the Kindle, Bezos opened the now 1,500-strong Lab126 operation in Cupertino that is so close to Apple that some Amazon employees can see Apple buildings from their windows. Pragmatism may be preventing Bezos from pulling the trigger on long-rumored initiatives such as same-day delivery and a move into brick-and-mortar retail -- two projects that remain tremendous financial challenges, even for a company of Amazon's scale and execution prowess. Another long-rumored project, an Amazon phone, seems perhaps more manageable.
MORE: This man wants to destroy Amazon
Bezos reveres invention. Other companies have more of "a conqueror mentality," he says. "We think of ourselves as explorers." Yet he's not too proud to copy others. As such, the success offlash-sales sites like Gilt begat Amazon's MyHabit site. Groupon's (GRPN) momentum in daily deals led to AmazonLocal -- and a so far losing investment in LivingSocial. Diapers.com clearly encouraged Amazon Mom. And so on. "You want to look at what other companies are doing," says Bezos. "It's very important not to be hermetically sealed. But you don't want to look at it as if, 'Okay, we're going to copy that.' You want to look at it and say, 'That's very interesting. What can we be inspired to do as a result of that?' And then put your own unique twist on it."
Bezos even takes a practical approach to his love-hate relationship with Wall Street. Having worked at a hedge fund in his twenties, he understands the investor mentality probably better than most CEOs. Perhaps as a result, for the first many years of Amazon's existence, Bezos frustrated investors by refusing to realize Amazon's profit potential. Then, around 2007, Amazon's investments began to bear fruit, and investors were delighted. The stock is up 10-fold in the past six years. "We believe in the long term, but the long term also has to come," says Bezos, explaining that periodically Amazon wants to "check in" with its ability to make money. Thus, in 2007, Amazon more than doubled its profit, to $476 million, on a 38% increase in sales to almost $15 billion.
The "check-in" made a dramatic impact on investors, including short-sellers who had wagered against Amazon's shares. "There were so many investors that were short Amazon's stock in 2006 and 2007 that when the shares moved from $35 to $100 they lost their jobs," says Brian Pitz, a bullish-on-Amazon analyst at investment bank Jefferies. Amazon currently happens to be in another of those investment phases. It is spending heavily on Kindle development, additional data centers, and new warehouses. These investments produced an unexpected loss of $274 million in the third quarter, and Pitz expects full-year earnings of just $107 million -- well below the profitability of five years ago. (Bezos says he can't predict how long the investment phase will last, "and even if I could, I wouldn't tell you.") Still, bearish investors have been cowed. Despite the disappointing earnings report, Amazon's shares are worth more than 100 times Wall Street's estimates for next year's earnings. Says analyst Pitz: "Now you are either long term on Amazon or on the sidelines."
Jeff Bezos reads for fun too. A science-fiction buff who is funding space exploration as a side project, he just finished The Hydrogen Sonata by Iain Banks. "Read it on both Paperwhite and Fire HD, with Whispersync keeping my place between the two," he writes in an e-mail, referring to the Kindle feature that synchronizes a reader's progress across devices.
Given what he's built in the 17 years since turning on the Amazon store, Bezos might be forgiven for thinking of his legacy. He isn't. "I have joked that I want my legacy to be 'World's Oldest Man,'" he deadpans. The father of four has, however, gained insight over the years into what makes him tick. "I have realized about myself that I'm very motivated by people counting on me," he says. "I like to be counted on. I like to have a bunch of customers who count on us. I like being part of a team. We're all counting on each other. I like the fact that shareholders are counting on us. And so I find that very motivating." As he speaks, Bezos is so focused on not letting down customers, he clearly doesn't need a six-page memo to get there.
--Reporter associates: Doris Burke and JP Mangalindan
This story is from the December 3, 2012 issue of Fortune.
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글
Terry Moore: Why is 'x' the unknown?
I have the answer to a question that we've all asked. The question
is, Why is it that the letter X represents the unknown? Now I know we
learned that in math class, but now it's everywhere in the culture --
The X prize, the X-Files, Project X, TEDx. Where'd that come from?
About
six years ago I decided that I would learn Arabic, which turns out to
be a supremely logical language. To write a word or a phrase or a
sentence in Arabic is like crafting an equation, because every part is
extremely precise and carries a lot of information. That's one of the
reasons so much of what we've come to think of as Western science and
mathematics and engineering was really worked out in the first few
centuries of the Common Era by the Persians and the Arabs and the Turks.
This
includes the little system in Arabic called al-jebra. And al-jebr
roughly translates to "the system for reconciling disparate parts."
Al-jebr finally came into English as algebra. One example among many.
The
Arabic texts containing this mathematical wisdom finally made their way
to Europe -- which is to say Spain -- in the 11th and 12th centuries.
And when they arrived there was tremendous interest in translating this
wisdom into a European language.
But there were problems. One
problem is there are some sounds in Arabic that just don't make it
through a European voice box without lots of practice. Trust me on that
one. Also, those very sounds tend not to be represented by the
characters that are available in European languages.
Here's one
of the culprits. This is the letter SHeen, and it makes the sound we
think of as SH -- "sh." It's also the very first letter of the word
shalan, which means "something" just like the the English word
"something" -- some undefined, unknown thing.
Now
in Arabic, we can make this definite by adding the definite article
"al." So this is al-shalan -- the unknown thing. And this is a word that
appears throughout early mathematics, such as this 10th century
derivation of proofs.
The problem for the Medieval Spanish
scholars who were tasked with translating this material is that the
letter SHeen and the word shalan can't be rendered into Spanish because
Spanish doesn't have that SH, that "sh" sound. So by convention, they
created a rule in which they borrowed the CK sound, "ck" sound, from the
classical Greek in the form of the letter Kai.
Later when this
material was translated into a common European language, which is to say
Latin, they simply replaced the Greek Kai with the Latin X. And once
that happened, once this material was in Latin, it formed the basis for
mathematics textbooks for almost 600 years.
But now we have the
answer to our question. Why is it that X is the unknown? X is the
unknown because you can't say "sh" in Spanish. (Laughter) And I thought
that was worth sharing.
(Applause)
저는 약 6년전에 아랍어를 배우기 시작하면서 아랍어가 지극히 논리적인 언어라는 것을 깨달았죠. 아랍어의 어휘나 문장은 수학 방정식 처럼 문장의 각 부분의 의미가 극도로 명백하고 많은 정보를 전달하니까요. 우리가 현재 서양의 과학이나 공학에서 유래한 것이라고 생각하는 것의 엄청나게 많은 부분은 사실 서력기원 첫 몇세기 동안 페르시아인, 아랍인 그리고 터키인들이 이미 생각해 냈던 것들이죠.
그중의 하나는 아랍어로 알자브라라고 말하는 체계이죠. 알자브라의 대략적인 의미는 "이질적인 부분을 조화시키는 체계"인데 이것은 후에 알제브라 , 즉 대수학이라는 영어 단어가 되었죠. 이와같은 예는 많이 있지요.
수학적인 지혜가 담긴 아랍 책들이 11세기 및 12세기에 스페인으로 전해졌지요. 이런한 아랍어 책들이 도착했을 때 이들 책에 담긴 지식과 지혜를 유럽 언어로 번역하려는 엄청난 욕구가 있었는데
이 런 번역을 하는데 몆가지 문제들이 있었죠. 그중의 하나는 많은 연습을 하지 않는 한 유럽 사람들이 비슷하게 발음을 할 수 없는 아랍어 소리들이 있다는 거죠. 네, 정말 그런 소리들이 있습니다. 그런데 대부분의 그런 소리는 유럽 언어의 알파벳에는 없는 소리죠.
이 단어는 그런 좋은 예의 하나죠. 이건 쉐인이라는 글자인데 우리 귀에는 '쉬'처럼 들리죠. 이 글자는 '쉐이론'이라는 단어의 첫 글자인데 쉐일론은 "어떤 것(something)"이라는 의미인데 영어 단어 something과 마찬가지로 그 어떤 정의되지 않은, 알지 못하는 것을 의미하죠.
아랍어에서는 '쉐이론' 앞에 정관사인 'al'을 앞에 붙이면 "알쉐이론"이라는 단어가 되는데 이 단어의 의미는 "그 모르는 어떤것" 이죠. 이 단어는 이와같은 10세기의 유도증명 같은 고대 수학에 자주 나타나죠.
그 런데 이런 책들을 번역하던 중세 스페인 학자들은 스페인어에는 "쉐"라는 말이 없기 때문에 쉐인이라는 글자와 쉐이론이라는 단어를 스페인어로 쓸 수 없었던 문제가 있었죠. 그래서 그들은 고대 그리스어의 알파벳에서 "커" 비슷하게 들리는 카이(Kai)라는 글자를 빌려서 사용하기로 결정했죠.
그 후에 이러한 스페인의 번역문이 유럽의 공통어인 라틴어로 번역되었는데 그 번역을 하던 학자들이 그리스어의 카이라는 알파벳을 라틴어의 X로 간단히 교체했죠. 이리하여 모든 라틴 번역 문서는 X를 사용하게 되었고 그 후 거의 600년 동안 수학 교과서의 기본 문서로 사용되었죠.
자 이제 우리의 원래 질문으로 돌아가죠. 왜 우리는 모르는 것을 X자로 표시할까요? 우리가 모르는 것을 X자로 표시하는 이유는 스페인어로 "쉐"라는 발음을 할 수 없기 때문이죠. (웃음) 전 이것이 퍼뜨릴 가치가 있는 이야기라고 생각했습니다.
(박수)
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단백질
*출처 : EBS
단백질
단백질은 우리 몸에서 수분 다음으로 많이 들어 있는 것으로 식사를 통해 체내에서 필요한 단백질을 규칙적으로 공급해 주는 것은 건강을 위해 필수적이다.
(1) 아미노산
① 구조
㉮ 단백질의 기본 구성 단위로서 탄소, 수소, 산소 그리고 질소로 구성된다.
㉯아미노산은 한 분자내에 염기인 아미노기(NH2)와 산성인 카르복실기 (COOH)가 탄소에 결합되어 있다.
㉰ 아미노산의 일반 구조
㉱ 아미노산의 종류는 R에 결합하는 분자에 의해 결정된다.
② 펩티드 결합
아미노산의 결합 방법으로 한 아미노산의 아미노기(NH2)와 다른 아미노산에 있는 카르복실기(COOH)에서 수분 한 분자가 제거되면서 결합한다.
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글
연말이 가장 좋은 이유는..
대형 서점들이 재고 안남기려고 책 할인 행사를 많이 한다는 거!!
다만 안타까운 건 인기서적들만 할인한다.
그래도 그중에 고를 게 있어서 좋다
11월 28일은 잠실교보에서 로지코믹스 반값행사 하는 날!!!
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