Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- How About Them Apples?
- Browser Wars: Google Chrome Passes Firefox With 20% Share; Mish Chrome Test Run
- 483 Ukrainian Military Tired of War, Seek Asylum in Russia
Posted: 04 Aug 2014 06:47 PM PDT On July 30, Moscow blocks Polish fruit, veg imports, mulls EU ban citing "systematic violations of international and Russian phytosanitary requirements". Everyone understands this was retaliation for further EU sanctions on Russia. Russia has slapped a temporary ban on fruit and vegetable imports from Poland, claiming the products breach its standards.Revenge Reuters reports Russian ban on Polish produce is revenge for EU sanctions Moscow, which buys more than 2 billion euros worth of EU fruit and vegetables a year making it by far the biggest export market for the produce, said the ban was for sanitary reasons and denied a link to the sanctions.Surprise? If EU bureaucrats really were surprised by this, they are stupider than I thought, which is saying quite a lot. Why anyone should be surprised by this is a mystery. Retaliation should have been widely expected. Poland Mocks Russia's Ban on Polish Fruit In response to the ban, Poland Mocks Russia With Eat More Apples Campaign. The produce ban is expected to affect Polish apples more than any other product. Poland is Europe's largest producer of apples, with more than half of its production going to Russia.Eat Apples Poles may get drunk on cider for a week or two while eating more apples than usual. Then what? The Population of Russia is about 146 million. The Population of Poland is about 37 million. Polish will have to eat about 4 times as may apples per person as they used to. Assuming that happens (which it probably won't beyond one week at most), at what price? Poland is going to have a lot of apples it will not know what to do with. The Ukrainian economy is in ruins over the war and the collapse in trade with Russia as the cry from President Obama and Senator John McCain for for more sanctions on Russia grows. Sanctions are not not very bright. No one wins in a trade war. And Europe is about to find out in a big way. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
Browser Wars: Google Chrome Passes Firefox With 20% Share; Mish Chrome Test Run Posted: 04 Aug 2014 01:47 PM PDT I have been a Mozilla Firefox user for what seems like forever. I never liked Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser. Lately, Firefox has been quite irritating, especially when I have a large number of windows open. Firefox frequently crashes, then every page goes down. This has happened before at times, but crashes are even more frequent now. Also Firefox frequently locks up, and Adobe Flash is the culprit. This problem also seems to have gotten worse. To fix the lock-up problem, I open up Task Manager and kill adobe flash player. My Firefox pages then instantly free up. Chrome Passes Firefox With 20% Share Today I read, Chrome Passes 20% Share Milestone, Locks Up 2nd Place. Computerworld - Google's Chrome browser in July broke the 20% user share bar for the first time, according to data published Friday by Web measurement vendor Net Applications. Browser Wars Mish Chrome Test Run After reading the above article, I decided to give Chrome a spin. Chrome imported my tab favorites from Firefox flawlessly. Initial Appearance Different The appearance on my blog looked different in each of IE, Firefox, and Chrome. It looked worst, by far, in Chrome. I could not get the fonts and text sizes to match. The solution to that problem was to modify font-families specified on my blog. I went with a simpler scheme of "font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;" across the board after reading Which Font Should I Use for My Web Page?. That scheme may not be the best, but it is likely to be the most consistent across all browsers. Helvetica Curiously, when I was attempting to fix the display issue with settings rather than in blog code, I noticed Helvetica, a popular font is not even in the selection list. . Each Window a Different Task After the appearance issues were fixed, I liked what I saw. Task manager shows that each open Chrome window is its own task. If a page crashes (I purposely crashed a Chrome page in task manager), you get a response that looks like this. Firefox Crashes and Memory Leaks In Chrome, if one page crashes they all don't crash. I setup Firefox that way at one time, but the plugin container used an enormous amount of memory when I tried it, and I had to switch back. Other users still report Firefox Crashes for various reasons. I do believe Firefox has a memory leak of some sort. Memory use goes up and does not fully recover even if you start closing pages. In Chrome, unlike Firefox, Google reports "Adobe Flash Player is directly integrated with Google Chrome and enabled by default". Hopefully, this will prevent the freeze-ups I experienced with flash in Firefox. Translation, Settings, Other Features Chrome provides built-in translation, a feature that will come in very handy for me. I frequently translate pages from Spanish or German, and now Russian and Ukrainian as well. The process was very cumbersome before. Now, it's one click. Also, Google Chrome allows you to pick up settings and sessions from one computer to another. This is very handy for me, although some will object to Google storing all the information required to accomplish that task. Anyway, I like what I see so far. If I run into no Chrome issues, it will be goodbye to Firefox for me. It appears others may be making the same choice. If you wish to give it a try, here is the Google Chrome Download Link. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
483 Ukrainian Military Tired of War, Seek Asylum in Russia Posted: 04 Aug 2014 10:08 AM PDT Back in April, thousands of Ukrainian soldiers defected to pro-Russian side. It's been a while since we have seen reports like that. Today we have another report: 483 Ukrainian Military Seek Asylum in Russia. The spokesman for the Border Guard Service of Russia, Vasili Maláyev informed that during the night of Sunday, "about 438 Ukrainian military approached the Russian border guards to seek asylum. According to the decision of the Border Guard Service of Russia , officials opened a humanitarian corridor and allowed into Russia to those who need shelter."That is a rather curious source, and the English on the site was broken. I fixed a couple of spots. The only other non-blog news media reference I could find was from RIA: Over 400 Ukrainian Military Personnel Request Refugee Status in Russia. Of course, Western mainstream media has no interest in reporting such things. Here are some additional details from RIA. "Overnight 438 Ukrainian military personnel turned to Russian border guards with a request for refugee [status]," the head of the FSB's border control in the southern Russian region of Rostov, Vasily Malaeyev, said.Ukraine's 72nd and 79th Brigades Pounded Only the first link made reference to the 72nd Mechanized Brigade, a claim that seems highly credible. For my July 26 reference to the entrapment of of the 72nd brigade, please see Who's Winning the War in Ukraine? Answer May Shock You! For a video on the demise of part of the 79th brigade, please see Ukraine's Army Advances; Unguided Rockets Kill Civilians; Demise of Rebels? Lost Territory Nonetheless, the rebels have lost half the territory they once held, some in scorched earth policies of the Ukrainian army, with no regard to civilians. If the rebels lose much more territory, it will be over. Yet, my sources tell me the rebels are ordering Winter supplies in assumption the war will last quite some time. Ukrainian Army Stretched to Limit? For yet another piece of the puzzle, one that possibly indicates the Ukrainian army is stretched a bit too far, please consider Ukrainians Ordered to War, Women Burn the Military Writs Regardless of who "wins" militarily, the scars will take years, if not far longer to heal, and Ukraine will be beholden to the IMF and other creditors for decades. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
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