Pages tagged bubble:

Create a jQuery Popup Bubble » Digital Visions Queenstown
http://www.dvq.co.nz/web-design/create-a-jquery-popup-bubble-effect/
Wall Street on the Tundra | vanityfair.com
http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2009/04/iceland200904?printable=true¤tPage=all

The indispensable Michael Lewis reports from Reykjavík on the de facto bankruptcy of Iceland. An amazing story: the country's currency is kaput, its debt is 850 percent of G.D.P., its people are hoarding food and cash and blowing up their new Range Rovers for the insurance. This was the result of a collective madness stunning even by US standards of financial insanity. Lewis asks how a 300,000 person fishing nation with one of the highest living standards in the world managed to turn itself into a national hedge fund? Lewis reports on an inbred country where, among other things, the men are largely nuts and the women seem to have completely given up on them, The result is the first lesbian head of state, an all-female political party, and the nation's only profitable bank run entirely by women. Like most of what Lewis writes about the intersection of people and large sums of money, this is another "drop whatever else you are doing and read this" article.
on the financial meltdown ef Iceland
Iceland's collapse. "One of the distinctive traits about Iceland’s disaster, and Wall Street’s, is how little women had to do with it."
"Iceland’s de facto bankruptcy—its currency (the krona) is kaput, its debt is 850 percent of G.D.P., its people are hoarding food and cash and blowing up their new Range Rovers for the insurance—resulted from a stunning collective madness. What led a tiny fishing nation, population 300,000, to decide, around 2003, to re-invent itself as a global financial power? In Reykjavík, where men are men, and the women seem to have completely given up on them, the author follows the peculiarly Icelandic logic behind the meltdown. "
Iceland’s de facto bankruptcy—its currency (the krona) is kaput, its debt is 850 percent of G.D.P., its people are hoarding food and cash and blowing up their new Range Rovers for the insurance—resulted from a stunning collective madness. What led a tiny fishing nation, population 300,000, to decide, around 2003, to re-invent itself as a global financial power? In Reykjavík, where men are men, and the women seem to have completely given up on them, the author follows the peculiarly Icelandic logic behind the meltdown.
Bubble Effect with CSS | AEXT.NET
http://aext.net/2009/11/bubble-effect-with-css/
Bubble Effect with CSS | AEXT.NET
Bubble Effect with CSS | AEXT.NET - http://aext.net/2009/11/bubble-effect-with-css/
Jon Rohan · Creating Triangles in CSS
http://www.dinnermint.org/css/creating-triangles-in-css/
I’ve come across a few techniques and tips in my career, and one of them is this neat trick to create triangles in CSS.
Learning jQuery: Your First jQuery Plugin, “BubbleUP” | AEXT.NET
http://aext.net/2010/02/learn-jquery-first-jquery-plugin-bubbleup/
A tutorial on writing your first jQuery plugin.
There are many posts available detailing how to write your own jQuery plugin. It won’t take long before you realize that building in jQuery is very simple. Continuing in our jQuery Learning Series, here we’re going to build your first jQuery plugin. It’ll generate a bubble effect for your menu list and we’re going to call it BubbleUP. What is BubbleUP? BubbleUP is a fun and easy plugin to get you started in jQuery. The effect is a nice starting point for learning the basics and many of the steps involved in creating other more intricate plugins you will make in the future. With this plugin, images in a list will enlarge with a smooth animation when you move your mouse over it. Then, if you move the mouse out, it will reset to the original size with the same smooth animation. * Download * Demo Implement jQuery This is a plugin for jQuery, so we first have to implement the jQuery library in our webpage header (you must upload jQuery to your server or link to Google’s hosted v
jQuery Plugin Tutorial
The Atlantic Online | December 2008 | Pop Psychology | Virginia Postrel
http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/print/200812/financial-bubbles
imperfect people create imperfect financial situations, regardless of prior experiences. fascinating!
Postrel on a laboratory experiment where people buy and sell a guaranteed and specified security. "Here, finally, is a security with security—no doubt about its true value, no hidden risks, no crazy ups and downs, no bubbles and panics. The trading price should stick close to the expected value. At least that’s what economists would have thought before Vernon Smith, who won a 2002 Nobel Prize for developing experimental economics, first ran the test in the mid-1980s. But that’s not what happens. Again and again, in experiment after experiment, the trading price runs up way above fundamental value. Then, as the 15th round nears, it crashes...you don’t just get random noise. You get bubbles and crashes. Ninety percent of the time. So much for security. "
These lab results should give pause not only to people who believe in efficient markets, but also to those who think we can banish bubbles simply by curbing corruption and imposing more regulation. Asset markets, it seems, suffer from irrepressible effervescence. Bubbles happen, even in the most controlled conditions.
financial bubbles
At least that’s what economists would have thought before Vernon Smith, who won a 2002 Nobel Prize for developing experimental economics, first ran the test in the mid-1980s. But that’s not what happens. Again and again, in experiment after experiment, the trading price runs up way above fundamental value. Then, as the 15th round nears, it crashes. The problem doesn’t seem to be that participants are bored and fooling around. The difference between a good trading performance and a bad one is about $80 for a three-hour session, enough to motivate cash-strapped students to do their best. Besides, Noussair emphasizes, “you don’t just get random noise. You get bubbles and crashes.” Ninety percent of the time.
Progressive enhancement: pure CSS speech bubbles – Nicolas Gallagher — Blog & Ephemera
http://nicolasgallagher.com/progressive-enhancement-pure-css-speech-bubbles/
Speech bubbles are a popular effect but many tutorials rely on presentational HTML or JavaScript. This tutorial contains various forms of speech bubble effect created with CSS2.1 and enhanced with CSS3. No images, no JavaScript and it can be applied to your existing semantic HTML.
Steven Gjerstad and Vernon Smith Explain Why the Housing Crash Ruined the Financial System but the Dot-com Collapse Did Not - WSJ.com
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123897612802791281.html
WSJ article that has one part of the housing collapse that I hadn't heard before. Apparently inflation data that gets reported and looked at by the Fed and other regulators doesn't include home prices, it includes rental prices. Since the housing bubble was driven by mortgages, rents didn't spike nearly as much home prices. Had a truer picture of inflation been reflected in the numbers regulators been looking at the rate would have been double what was reported and likely regulators would have had to act in some way.
A great piece on the differences between the housing crash and the dot com bubble.
WSJ.com | Bubbles have been frequent in economic history - Steven Gjerstad and Vernon Smith explain why the housing crash ruined the financial system but the Dot-com collapse did not
fantastic wsj essay on formation of bubbles, experimental economics
BubbleUp jQuery Plugin to Spice Up Your Menu | AEXT.NET
http://aext.net/2010/04/bubbleup-jquery-plugin/
plugin menu zoom
Jam Today? / When the Education Bubble Finally Pops
http://blog.jamtoday.org/post/70265208/when-the-education-bubble-finally-pops
In a post published earlier today, John Robb claims that as “there is reason to believe that costs of higher education (direct costs and lost income) are now nearly equal (in net present value) to the additional lifetime income derived from having a degree…this situation has all the earmarks of a bubble. A bubble that will soon burst as median incomes are adjusted downwards to global norms over the next decade.
James Levy: Learning Is Not A Spectator Sport
"In a post published earlier today, John Robb claims that as “there is reason to believe that costs of higher education (direct costs and lost income) are now nearly equal (in net present value) to the additional lifetime income derived from having a degree…this situation has all the earmarks of a bubble. A bubble that will soon burst as median incomes are adjusted downwards to global norms over the next decade."
John Robb claims that as “there is reason to believe that costs of higher education (direct costs and lost income) are now nearly equal (in net present value) to the additional lifetime income derived from having a degree…this situation has all the earmarks of a bubble. A bubble that will soon burst as median incomes are adjusted downwards to global norms over the next decade.
Awesome Bubble Navigation with jQuery | Codrops
http://tympanus.net/codrops/2010/04/29/awesome-bubble-navigation-with-jquery/
navigation for my company
Awesome Bubble Navigation with jQuery
http://tympanus.net/Tutorials/BubbleNavigation/
idea for soccer site
Awesome Bubble Navigation with jQuery
http://tympanus.net/Tutorials/BubbleNavigation/
Awesome Bubble Navigation with jQuery