The prize for the best photos goes to Sheena Prince. She even made us look good.
At the Albany version of the Opera House
The Tusker team
It really does go.
More proof it is Albany.
The bad news was that two days after this public launch, the rear was stoved in -
But that did not deter an admiring crowd at the Albany show -
Thursday, 14 November 2013
Saturday, 9 November 2013
Edward John Eyre - the forgotten explorer
"Eyre - the forgotten explorer", by Ivan Rudolph, tells the great story of Edward John Eyre.
http://www.southaustralianhistory.com.au/johneyre.htm
Amazing that survived, with one reason being his cultivation and use of aboriginal contacts.
He was only 25 (born 1815) when he set out to cross the Nullabor in 1840, but by that time was already an experienced bush explorer. The Nullabor nearly brought him undone, but several bits of luck allowed him to survive, arriving in Albany on July 6th, 1841.
http://www.southaustralianhistory.com.au/johneyre.htm
Amazing that survived, with one reason being his cultivation and use of aboriginal contacts.
He was only 25 (born 1815) when he set out to cross the Nullabor in 1840, but by that time was already an experienced bush explorer. The Nullabor nearly brought him undone, but several bits of luck allowed him to survive, arriving in Albany on July 6th, 1841.
Wednesday, 6 November 2013
Steve Keen on the Nobel Prize for Economics
As well as an interesting perspective on Australian house prices, Steve Keen gives an opinion about the Nobel Prize for economics - i.e. it is really not a "science", in terms of providing clear answers. That does not mean that economics cannot contribute to all sorts of issues, just that it is a case of "buyer beware".
Economics’ odd couple highlights a Nobel folly
By Steve Keen | October 21, 2013 | Debtwatch
- EmailShare5
I would love to be in the audience watching the body language at this year’s “Nobel” ceremony for economics. Robert Shiller, who is far too polite a person to make it obvious, will nonetheless at least fidget as he listens to Eugene Fama’s speech, since Fama continues to dispute that bubbles in asset prices can even be defined. Shiller, in contrast, first came to public prominence with his warnings in the early 2000s that the stock and housing markets in the States were displaying signs of “irrational exuberance”.
Fama came to prominence within economics – though not in the wider body politic – in the 1970s with his PhD research that argued that asset markets were “efficient” not just a first order (getting the actual values right) but even to a second order (picking the turning points in valuation as well).
How can two such diametrically opposed views receive the Nobel Prize in one year? The equivalent in physics would be to award the prize to one research team that proved that the Higgs Boson existed, and another that proved it didn’t.
- See more at: http://www.debtdeflation.com/blogs/2013/10/21/economics-odd-couple-highlights-a-nobel-folly/#sthash.90I73Ru0.dpuf
Monday, 4 November 2013
The completed Whitley
The Whitley completed, together with the team of workers plus hanger-on.
It will be on display at the Albany show.
It will be on display at the Albany show.
Part 2 - Housing hopes: Will the souffle rise twice?
My previous post on house price data from the BIS (How to spot a housing bubble before it bursts, October 15) scotched one part of the ‘No Bubble Downunder’ case: Australia is one of four countries where house prices are more than twice as high as they were in real terms in 1985 (see Figure 1).Part 3 - The housing bubble Whodunnit