Die Broke — a new four-part financial plan

Die Broke — a new four-part financial plan

My late and revered colleague Roger Needham gave away a lot of money to our Cambridge College and to the University. When I asked him what motivated him to do this he said, “Well, my wife and I have no children and no relatives, so we figured why should our Executors have all the fun!”. I’ve just discovered (thanks to Kevin Kelly) an interesting book — Die Broke: A Radical Four-Part Financial Plan by Stephen M. Pollan and Mark Levine — which Roger might have enjoyed. Here’s an excerpt:

“You are not a corporation – you are a human being. Your money shouldn’t outlive you. You should exit life as you came into it: penniless. Your assets are resources to be used, for your own benefit and for the benefit of those you love. Every dollar that’s left in your bank account after you die is a dollar you wasted. Use your resources to help people now when you know they need it, when it will do the most good, rather than hoping they’ll be helped when you’re dead. The last check you write should be to your undertaker … and it should bounce.

* Inheritance is a terribly inefficient way to pass wealth to others.

* You need to shift to a more flexible view of work and career, one that abandons the ultimatum of retirement – a false choice between full-time and no time….Similarly you need to shift to a less rigid approach to earned income. No longer can you look at your earned income as continually increasing up until age sixty-five, at which pint it will stop entirely. From now on you need to approach earned income as you do unearned income. It may grow, it may be stagnant, or it may decrease, all depending on market conditions and your own choices.

* The best metaphor I can think of for today’s pursuit of retirement is of a mass of lemmings busily struggling up a steep cliff and then jumping off the cliff into the abyss.

* Dying broke means living well.”

Camera-controlled games come to the Mac

Camera-controlled games come to the Mac

The gizmo that has most enthused my kids this Xmas is EyeToy, a wonderful game released by Sony for the PlayStation2. Now comes news that someone has developed a similar type of game for the Mac, using the iSight camera. I’ve just downloaded the demo. Wonder if it will persuade the kids to stop lusting after a PS2.

Update:It works, but isn’t as slick as the Sony product, so the pressure from the kids will doubtless continue.

Ralsky swears he’s going straight

Ralsky swears he’s going straight

There’s a story in today’s NYT in which Adam Ralsky, one of the US’s most notorious spammers, says the new anti-spam law has forced him to rethink his business plans. According to the article, “He stopped sending e-mail offers for everything from debt repayment schemes to time-share vacations even before President Bush, on Dec. 16, signed the new Can Spam Act, a law meant to crack down on marketers like Mr. Ralsky.

He plans to resume in January, he said, after he overcomes some computer problems, and only after he changes his practices to include in his messages a return address and other information required by the law, the title of which stands for Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography and Marketing.

That is quite a switch for Mr. Ralsky, who has earned a reputation as a master of cyberdisguise. By his own admission, he once produced more than 70 million messages a day from domains registered with fake names, largely by way of foreign countries – or sometimes even by way of hijacked computers – so that the recipients could not trace the mail back to him….”