Canadian Business Blog ? Blog Archive ? Why Venture Capital is so …

Greg Smith, president of Canada?s Venture Capital and Private Equity Association (CVCA), described the current landscape of Canadian entrepreneurship:

?Canada has an historic opportunity to become an innovation leader by making major investments that enable our best technology businesses to realize optimal growth and compete on a global stage,? he said in a statement. ?However, in order to act decisively on this opportunity, we must first overcome challenges to supplying VC funds that, in turn, supply entrepreneurs.?

Without VC initiatives, small companies with big ideas are being caged by cash crunch ? running low enough on cash so that it has a significant impact on operations. Exponential growth can also cause a company to be short on working capital. Business growth requires a steady cash flow, enabling the acquisition of equipment and personnel. Lacking VC, companies may be forced to unload assets or sell a part of the business to raise crucial funds.

The cheapest forms of financing are the sources taken for granted:

-????????? Cash in bank account

-????????? Revenue from sales

-????????? Financing from tangible assets (accounts receivable factoring, purchase order factoring).

Aside from borrowing from friends and family, the next funding options come from cost-heavy debt or equity financing. Debt financing directs small businesses to traditional institutions, banks and credit unions, and many small businesses run into trouble meeting financing prerequisites. Equity financing or ?share capital? ? funding through selling common or preferred stock to individual or institutional investors ? is dilutive in nature and requires loss of ownership and possibly control of the business.

In order to get to an operable stage, small businesses can also consider bridge financing and financing from intangible assets. Bridge financing is used to gain immediate cash flow while waiting for an expected inflow of cash. Basically bridge financing provides a forwarded payment for future sales or anticipated inflow of cash. Financing on intangible assets, such as SR&ED (Canada?s Scientific Research and Experimental Development credit program), is not often offered by the traditional institutions but is a non-dilutive form of bridge financing. North Innovation Fund (NIF) is one such source of funding, providing accrual SR&ED financing to support small business and entrepreneurs. NIF released their first Fund this month in response to the increasing demand of funding alternatives for start-up companies in Canada. SR&ED financing will bridge the funding gap for companies with R&D initiatives and new ideas to help make the leap to commercialization.

NIF offers a unique opportunity which includes support in identifying SR&ED activities and a friendly approach to funding. Initiatives like NIF will help push Canada to forefront of growth and innovation.

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Picture of the Day (talking-points-memo)

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ARM announces new quad-core Cortex-A15 Hard Macro variant

ARM announces new quad-core Cortex-A15 Hard Macro variant

It’s pretty much a year to the day that we reported the possibility of a quad-core Cortex-A15 from ARM, and look what just came across the wire! It’s the Cortex-A15 Hard Macro — the first design from ARM we’re aware of that packs four A15 cores. The Hard Macro edition is of particular interest as it aims to help manufacturers bring products to market more quickly and at a lower cost. The chip variant runs at 2GHz, with performance of over 20,000 DMIPS if you were wondering. Notably, it operates with the same power usage of the A9 hard macro, which should mean it’s got good efficiency credentials, and it’s the first in the family to be based on 28nm process. There’s no indication where we might see this turning up, but with the firm spilling the full details at the IEEE Symposium later this week, we’re sure we’ll find out soon enough.

Continue reading ARM announces new quad-core Cortex-A15 Hard Macro variant

ARM announces new quad-core Cortex-A15 Hard Macro variant originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Apr 2012 12:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Change Management : clipclip

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Source: http://www.clipclip.org/victorsmith/clips/detail/1199493

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Tiny Business Accounting Firms | ArticleBro.com

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Small business accounting firms helps the individuals to maintain proper records of the accounting companies? holdings. It should be recorded in a proper way and should be maintained periodically. Over 20 years experience, Auraiya Accounting Companies have contributed to the financial success of many individuals and businesses for the small sector. They work with the partnership with the clients to improve their financial, lifestyle and business achievements. The continued growth of the firm has always occurred purely through client referrals and aim to continue the high standard of expectations. The accounting firm specializes in small to medium businesses as well as individuals.
There are number of ways to improve the small accounting businesses. Choosing of best Accountant is very essential for the growth of the Accounting Company. The specialized knowledge of the Accountants will helps in the tax authorities, investors, managers of the Company. Accounting companies aim to provide the friendly and efficient service for all accountancy requirements, from traders and partnerships to the limited companies.
Accountant Auraiya works to achieve outstanding results and peace of mind in their financial and taxation affairs. Accountants are working for the Accounting companies.
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Source: http://articlebro.com/2012/business/ethics/tiny-business-accounting-firms/

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Republicans Vote in Louisiana Primary (WSJ)

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‘Hunger Games’ mania could lead to box office record

LOS ANGELES, March 22 (TheWrap.com) – This much is fact: “The Hunger Games” will open bigger than any movie so far this year. The question is, will it set a record?

Some box-office watchers say it’s the $125 million question.

John Fithian, president of The National Association of Theater Owners, said Thursday that he expects the picture to open to between $115 million and $120 million.

That would make it the biggest March opening ever, surpassing “Alice in Wonderland,” which opened to more than $116 million in 2010.

It would also put it in the company of just 19 movies that have opened to more than $100 million.

“Alice” is the 10th-biggest opening ever, and “Shrek the Third,” which opened to $121.6 million in 2007, is No. 9 – a distinction both pictures could well lose this weekend.

The industry water-cooler game of “how huge” being played this week is a stark contrast to the one played two weeks ago, when Hollywood was placing bets on how badly “John Carter” would flop.

Lionsgate, which is releasing the PG-13 movie, is trying to manage expectations. An individual close to the studio told TheWrap that the studio is a little trapped: If the studio predicts $115 million and it “only” takes $110 million, it’s a disappointment.

The studio spent about $100 million to make the movie, which became $80 million after tax incentives.

This much is clear: Opening weekend is going to be huge.

The audience survey firm NRG shows that overall awareness of the movie is an astonishing 92 percent. Among females younger than 25, overall awareness is an almost-impossible 96 percent.

Equally impressive: 66 percent of those surveyed report “definite” interest in seeing the movie and 43 percent say it’s their “first choice.” Among the target audience of females younger than 25, 76 percent say they have “definite” interest and 59 percent call it their “first choice” for the weekend.

Critics like it, too. Metacritic gives it a 69, Movie Review Intelligence rates it a 72.1 and Rotten Tomatoes scored it an 88.

To accommodate the predicted flood of moviegoers, Lionsgate is releasing the movie at 4,137 locations and, Fithian said, on more than 10,000 screens.

The movie that opened in the most number of locations was the 2010 “The Twilight Saga: Eclipse,” which opened at 4,468 locations to “only” $64.8 million.

“We’re adding screens every minute,” Fithian said. “We’re adding shows at 3 o’clock in the morning.”

The 2-hour, 22-minute movie, based on Suzanne Collins‘ trilogy of young adult novels, has generated the sort of interest reserved for mega-blockbusters like “Harry Potter,” “Dark Knight,” “Spider-Man” and “Twilight Saga” films.

Because “Hunger Games” looks to be such a juggernaut, no other movie is opening in wide release this weekend.

The movie is about a dystopian future in which the government of the North American nation of Panem punishes its citizenry for a years-ago revolt by forcing two children from each of its 12 districts to compete in annual “Hunger Games” – televised death matches in which the only way to win is to kill all the other children.

Jennifer Lawrence stars as Katniss Everdeen. Josh Hutcherson plays Peeta Mellark and Liam Hemsworth stars as Gale Hawthorne. Elizabeth Banks, Wes Bentley, Woody Harrelson, Lenny Kravitz, Donald Sutherland and Stanley Tucci also star.

Billy Ray, author Suzanne Collins and director Gary Ross adapted Collins’ best-selling novel.

If you don’t want to face the crowds or can’t get in to see “The Hunger Games” this weekend, don’t despair. The studio has the rights to three more films, and the critical reaction and fan support suggest it will stay in movie theaters for quite some time.

(Editing By Zorianna Kit)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hunger-games-mania-could-lead-box-office-record-094448019.html

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Restaurant: Bistro Union, London SW4

Bistro Union, London SW4

Bistro Union, London SW4: May well turn into a real boon for the neighbourhood, but it has yet to hit its stride. Photograph: Katherine Rose for the Guardian

The neighbourhood restaurant is a hard thing to master ? harder than it looks. Adam Byatt is a?talented chef who has been on something of a journey in that respect. He mastered it with his first restaurant, Thyme, a?serious eatery of about 10 years ago with one of the worst imaginable locations, on Clapham Park Road opposite the exit from Sainsbury’s car park. He cooked multi-small-course menus at decent prices to happy locals, and was always busy. Then came a?mistake: Byatt relocated Thyme to Covent Garden. Same food, higher prices, no more regular and local customers; this turns out not to be a?formula for success. So he moved back to Clapham, to a restaurant by the common that, in its previous incarnation as The Polygon, was a strong candidate for the worst restaurant in London.

  1. Bistro Union
  2. 40 Abbeville Road,
  3. London
  4. SW4?6NG
  5. 020-7042?6400
  1. Open all week, lunch Mon-Sat, 11am-3pm, dinner Mon-Sat, 6-10.30pm, Sun brunch 11am-4pm. Three courses with wine and service, from ?40 a head.

I live nearby and used to give The Polygon a go at roughly one-year intervals. The last time we went, my wife took an 18-inch-long strand of hair out of her seared tuna. We looked over to the open-plan kitchen. There was a white rasta with 18-inch-long dreadlocks plating up food at the pass. We vowed never again. Then Byatt moved back to Clapham and The Polygon reopened as Trinity, and joy has been unconfined.

Byatt is still cooking at Trinity, but he has now opened Bistro Union on Abbeville Road, a different take on the local restaurant. Where Trinity has tablecloths and fairly formal service (though in a friendly and informal atmosphere), Bistro Union has zinc tables and bar snacks. Trinity’s is the kind of food that could (and should) have a Michelin star; Bistro Union’s is the kind where the question doesn’t seem relevant ? it’s a place you might go for a glass of wine and a pickled quail’s egg, or pork scratchings, or a fish finger sandwich, or steak and chips. They do high tea, and they do a children’s meal between 5pm and 6pm: I’ll be interested to see if that catches on.

The chef at Bistro Union is Karl Goward, who was for some years head chef at Fergus Henderson’s St John Bread & Wine in Spitalfields. That pedigree might lead you to expect an emphasis on British ingredients and recipes ? and you’d be right: that’s exactly what they’re doing here. The?menu is a long list of things that are fun to eat, from radishes with smoked cod’s roe for ?3 to smoked sardines for ?1.50 to ham and eggs for ?6 and toad in the hole for ?11.

It sounds as if it should be perfect, for a neighbourhood place. It isn’t yet, though, and I say that with some surprise, since Trinity is pretty much my favourite restaurant. The execution of the good ideas is competent, but not more than that. The toad in the hole, for instance, is a good quality Cumberland sausage set down on an agreeable batter in a?hot skillet; that’s all fine, but then a small boat of gravy is poured over, which sizzles to dramatic effect, but makes the batter soggy. Guinea fowl Kiev is a nice idea, on the basis that anything Kiev is so uncool it’s swung all the way back around to being cool again. But the dish arrives as a large, sausage-shaped thing in a heavy, breaded coating, and really is so weighty that it isn’t all that great to eat. Baked aubergine is served with mint and a cow’s curd that, thanks to its dressing, ends up too sweet, without the cooling, sour twist you want. Chips are strong on potato flavour but a tad dry and heavy.

Other dishes that have worked well: a rich, pretty and very satisfying fish pie; a dead simple but still lovely piece of bream, baked in paper and served with a fennel salad on the side (a trick there, since when you see bream and fennel on the menu, you assume they’ll be cooked together); knickerbocker glory, the English apotheosis of jelly and ice-cream together, looks gorgeous and?ticks all its sweet boxes. If the pace of Bistro Union were to pick up?a little, and the kitchen does its best work more of the time, this place will be a?real boon for its neighbourhood, but it hasn’t yet hit?its stride. I say again, the neighbourhood restaurant is hard.

? Bistro Union, 40 Abbeville Road, London SW4, 020-7042 6400. Open all week, lunch Mon-Sat, 11am-3pm, dinner Mon-Sat, 6-10.30pm, Sun brunch 11am-4pm. Three courses with wine and service, from ?40 a head.

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2012/mar/23/bistro-union-london-sw4-restaurant

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lines and colors :: a blog about drawing, painting, illustration, comics …

Unlike some museum directors who still seem to feel being miserly with images of their public domain artworks is somehow in their interest (perhaps under the assumption that allowing even a few high-res images onto the web will steal the museum?s soul and capture it inside the magic picture making box), savvy museum directors are increasingly demonstrating that providing beautiful hi-res image images on the web of the public domain artwork in their collections is not only good public policy, it?s good museum policy, increasing interest and attention to the museum and its collections.

Of course, providing high resolution images of lots of artwork in a systematic way on a museum?s website takes more than a policy change, and in large museums in particular, takes lots of work and considerable expense.

Such an effort has recently been conducted by the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.

Rather than incorporating it into the museum?s regular website, they have created a separate website called NGA Images to allow access to their databased collection.

Access is, in government fashion, a bit round about and not as convenient as, for example, The Metropolitan Museum of Art?s wonderful new website (see my post here), but the NGA Images website and its database of extraordinary artworks are a welcome addition nonetheless, and the museum and its staff are to be thanked and congratulated for a terrific resource.

The ?round about? part is the condition that, though you can search the database and see reasonably large preview images without it, you have to register and log in to access the higher resolution images (this is free and simple to do).

The images may be reused by the public under their ?Open Access? policy (as well they should be, since everything in the National Gallery belongs to the American public by law ? see my recent rant about ?public domain?).

To search the collections you can use the simple search box on all pages or the advanced search page, or you can browse through one of the themed collections that the staff has begun to provide to introduce some areas of the collection, like French Galleries, Self-Portraits, Music and Frequently Requested.

In all cases be aware that your search or collection returns are initially limited to the number of images par page chosen in the controls at the top of the page. You can also choose thumbnail size, background color and zooming and caption options.

Once in a search or collection, you can use controls under the thumbnails to view more information, add to a lightbox, download the medium-resolution version and, if logged in, download the high resolution version.

NGA Images - access high res images Unfortunately, I found the process less than intuitive and unnecessarily complex (my tax dollars at work). When signed in you should see your name at the top right of the page and not ?Sign In?. Under the image thumbnails, look for the download icon with two lines, mouse over to see a tool tip that this is the link for the hi-res image. This should open a pop up with the image download options (the ?Project Title? and ?Usage? fields are optional. Choose a size and click to download.

The National Gallery is a world-class museum with superb treasures in its collection. In spite of issues with the process of getting to the high resolution images, the museum has added a new treasure in providing us access to them by way of this site.

(Images above, with detail crops: Rembrandt van Rijn, William Merritt Chase, Johannes Vermeer, Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot, Leonardo da Vinci, Claude Monet)

[Via BibliOdyssey]

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Source: http://www.linesandcolors.com/2012/03/23/nga-images/

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Retail IT sales likely to dip 15% in Q1 | Bangkok Business Brief

The high cost of living will likely push local retail IT sales down by 15% in the first quarter, especially for notebook computer, say leading IT retailers.

However, industry players are optimistic the government?s planned

The high cost of living will likely push local retail IT sales down by 15% in the first quarter, especially for notebook computer, say leading IT retailers. However, industry players are optimistic the government's planned megaprojects and wider 3G network coverage will accelerate market demand in the second half.

Bangkok Post

megaprojects and wider 3G network coverage will accelerate market demand in the second half.

Commart Thailand, which started yesterday, serves as an indicator for overall IT spending this year.

Thailand?s retail IT market is expected to grow by 15% to 110 billion baht this year.

The country?s overall IT spending should grow by 12% in a market estimated at 210 billion baht this year, fuelled mainly by sales of tablets and ultrabook computers.

Sales of notebook computers are expected to reach 2.8 million units this year, while tablets sales will top 1 million.

Boonchai Ngouvisitkul, associate director of Acer Computer (Thailand), said IT companies started to see a decline in their sales last month, particularly in notebooks.

Average quarterly notebook sales in Thailand?

Full story from?Bangkok Post?at?http://goo.gl/LYSwN

Source: http://www.bangkokbusinessbrief.com/2012/03/23/retail-it-sales-likely-to-dip-15-in-q1/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=retail-it-sales-likely-to-dip-15-in-q1

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