Friday, October 29, 2010

Day Trading..

whether the measure is not an expropriation.” The investor may to arbitration if the tax authorities did not agree to consider the issue, or otherwise failed to agree that the measure is not an expropriation. Thus, where the tax authorities decided that the alleged taxation measure is not expropriatory, that puts an end to the claim; the investor cannot proceed with the arbitration since the tax authorities’ determination is final and binding on both the investor and the arbitral tribunal. A similar provision is found in post 2004 U.S. Free Trade Agreements and most of Canada’s Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs) as well as the Japan-Mexico  is the possibility of denying the private investor the opportunity to present its case – on an important issue of alleged deprivation of its property rights - before a neutral and independent tribunal that is a matter of greatest concern from the jurisprudential and academic perspectives.


Although so far there have been few instances when the tax authorities took such a decision nonetheless, it could be argued that the tax veto provision of such treaties is not only a far reaching exception (if not an antithesis) to the cardinal objective of a rule-based investment regime, which is the creation of an effective procedure for the resolution of investment disputes as stated in NAFTA Article 102(1) (e) but also might be misused by the state parties to block otherwise meritorious tax claims. Under  As more of such treaties come into force and trade and investment relations increased between the contracting states, potential investor-state disputes might also increase. On the link between rise in BITs and increase in investment disputes, see, K. Sauvant, The Rise of International Investment, Investment Agreements and Investment Disputes, in Sauvant & Chiswick-Patterson (eds), supra (n. 9).


 In Feldman v. Mexico, award of December 16, 20002, the tax authorities vetoed one of the three alleged measures but could not agree on the other two measures and so the arbitration went ahead on those. Para. 116.  In April 2008, the US and Canada issued a joint declaration that a new tax introduced by the Canadian government in October 2006 did not constitute an expropriation under NAFTA. The joint determination has the effect of blocking the expropriatory taxation claim by a group of U.S. investors who had indicated their ‘intent’ to sue Canada in October 2007 following a decision by Canada to introduce a tax on so-called Income Trusts in the energy sector. See, “Canada, U.S.A. agree to nip expropriation claim in bud in tax case”, Investment Arbitration Reporter, vol.1 No. 3, June 18, 2008. For an analysis of the Canadian measure, see, Y. Fortin, Taxation of Income Trusts: Is it worth the Cost and the Turmoil?, available at:  L. Peterson, NAFTA Safety Valve comes to Rescue, Embassy Magazine,  June 25, 2008, available at:http://embassymay.ca/papers/views/.2008.Canfor Corp. v. U.S., Decision on Preliminary Question, June 6, 2006 at 118 where the tribunal noted that NAFTA’s mandate under Art. 102 (1)(e), was an efficient and effective procedures for the resolution of disputes. J. Byrne, NAFTA Dispute Resolution: Implementing True Rule Based Diplomacy through Direct Access, 35 Texas I.L.J. (2000) 415. On the other hand, it could be argued that the tax carve out or veto in such investment treaties evidences the fact that despite their rule-based formulation, the state parties never “intended to extend an unbounded offer to arbitrate disputes arising from any regulatory or other measure taken by the state.” Bjorklund (2001) supra (n. 8), at 190.international law and most domestic laws, the issue of whether or not an administrative measure amounted to expropriation of private property is a legal question to be answered by the courts or an arbitral tribunal rather than by an administrative agency or agencies of the government. This is because apart from being a constitutional question, it also about how to strike a balance between the protection of private property on one hand and legitimate regulation of same by the state on the other. It is only fair and equitable that such a decision should be made by a neutral and independent tribunal rather than the administrative agency whose actions formed the basis of the dispute.  Viewed from this perspective and considering the political and economic significance of the flexibility of the state to tax, it might be argued that the expropriatory tax provision of the Energy Charter Treaty probably strike a fair balance between the conflicting objectives.
To a large extent, the tax veto procedure is akin to the much criticised Mutual Agreement Procedure under Double Taxation Treaties.Such criticisms include:
Firstly, the competent tax authorities are no
  


neutral arbiters of the dispute. To the contrary, they are interested-parties to the case; being the very department whose conduct is either in question (in respect of the host state) or might be in future (with regard to the home state).Hence it is probably in the self-interest of both authorities to agree that the disputed measure is not an expropriation. For as professor Ratner noted, having been defendants in alleged expropriatory claims by in therefore, and especially the most powerful ones, now have a strong interest in ensuring that NAFTA’s aim of cross-border trade and investment is not interpreted to impose obligations to compensate investors simply because bona fide regulations have a serious economic impact on the investor. TheyAltman, supra (n.2), especially chap. 5; Park & Tillinghast, supra (n.6); R. Green, Anti-Legalistic Approaches to Resolving Disputes between Governments: A Comparison of the International Tax and Trade Regime, 23 Yale J. Int’l. L. (1998) 79; A. Gildermeister, Arbitration of Tax Treaty Disputes: The 2008 Model for Income Tax Treaty, TDM (2007). Indeed, all the state parties to NAFTA including the U.S. have had to defend themselves against expropriatory tax claims or potential claims by foreign investors. As such it is in their collective self-interest to take a common joint approach on the issue that preserves each state’s fiscal sovereignty. This is examplified by the NAFTA Free Trade Commission’s binding interpretation of Article 1105 in 2001 following the Pope & Talbot award. See C. Brower, W(h)ither International Commercial Arbitration?, 24(2) Arb. Int’l. (2008) 181 at 189; C. Brower II, Why the Free

Forex - Concepts and Terminologies.

Every foreign exchange transaction involves two currencies. It is important to keep straight which is the base currency and which is the counter currency. The counter currency is the numerator and the base currency is the denominator. When the counter currency increases, the base currency strengthens and becomes more expensive. When the counter currency decreases, the base currency weakens and becomes cheaper. In telephone trading communications, the base currency is always stated first. For example, a quotation for USDJPY means the US dollar is the base and the yen is the counter currency. In the case of GBPUSD (usually called 'cable') the British pound is the base and the US dollar is the counter currency.....

Business Highlights Airlines..

Also in the first half of 2008, Amadeus helped IATA achieve its goal of 100% electronic ticketing
By September 10, Amadeus had enabled e-ticketing for 312 airlines in 155 markets; 72 of these airlines host and operate their complete e-ticketing technology with Amadeus.

Amadeus offers an ever-wider range of IT solutions for airlines. Sixty-one airlines now use Amadeus Altéa Customer Management Solution. In the first half of 2008 Lufthansa became the first airline to begin using the inventory management module of the Star Alliance Common IT Platform, built and managed by Amadeus, following a flawless migration in the first months of 2008.  Once implemented, the platform will offer participating Star Alliance airlines seamless access to a single repository of passenger data to improve customer service and operational procedures. Amadeus also signed a major IT agreement with Singapore Airlines and renewed its IT partnership with British Airways in the first half of 2008.

Using Amadeus’ online booking technology, airlines generated Euros 4.77 billion in the first half of 2008. 1.4 billion web pages were downloaded with 99.9% reliability using the technology in the first six months of the year. Several of the world´s leading airlines now use Amadeus’ e-commerce technology.

On 4 April, at an industry conference hosted by Amadeus in Bangkok, the company presented the Amadeus Airline Retailing Platform, which will transform the global distribution system from a purely distribution channel to a retailing platform through which airlines can also access and leverage functionality to clearly differentiate their brand as in their direct distribution channels.

The new platform, which will be rolled out in phases over the next two years, brings significant enhancements in three key areas:
In the first half of 2008, hotel bookings made through the Amadeus Global Distribution System generated  Euros 1.3 billion for the global hotel industry, an increase of 10.9% compared with 2007. Hotel nights booked rose by 9.3%, meaning Guests are also staying longer than before, with the number of nights booked up by 9.3% from a year earlier and each booking now averaging more than two nights. 77,000 hotel properties currently distribute their inventory through Amadeus.

Amadeus signed 60 hotel brands around the world to its Worldwide Commission Manager, a solution designed to enable hoteliers to easily track commission payments and boost revenue. Over 20,000 hotel properties in Amadeus have subscribed to this initiative so far.

Amadeus’ hotel IT offer continues to grow strongly with significant sales of its multi-property  Property Management Solution to hotels including, The Real Hotel Company of England and Vienna International, a fast-growing chain of hotels headquartered in Austria. Over 1,000 hotel properties now use the Amadeus Revenue Management System.

On 10 June, Amadeus announced a major step-forward in its diversification strategy with the acquisition of a controlling interest in Onerail, which provides a suite of technology solutions to the rail industry. The acquisition adds a fully-integrated inventory, pricing, reservation and distribution system, enabling domestic and international distribution, alongside other forms of transport – such as air or car – to Amadeus' suite of solutions for rail companies. Increasingly, rail companies with long-distance and high-speed routes are building links with airlines, such as code share and interline agreements. This enables trains to play a greater role in an integrated transport network by bringing passengers from secondary towns to major "hub" airports. The high-speed rail network today carries about 400 million passengers and is expected to quadruple in size by 2020.

Amadeus was selected to power the online insurance service on qantas.com, the website of Australia’s leading national carrier Qantas. The insurance service, provided by Australian insurance company QBE, enables customers to seamlessly and quickly pay for their chosen insurance policy while booking airline tickets.

On 10 April, Amadeus announced the creation of a new business unit to provide tools for international leisure distribution. The unit is called TravelTainment – The Amadeus Leisure Group and brings together three Amadeus leisure technology businesses: TravelTainment, Amadeus Tours, and the product management and development for TOMA, a tour package distribution solution. TravelTainment – The Amadeus Leisure Group initially focuses on Amadeus' existing market portfolios in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, France, Holland, Belgium, Poland and the UK and other markets beyond Europe such as North America and Canada.

The combined leisure offering of TravelTainment, The Amadeus Leisure Group, is the only multi-market, multi-channel, community distribution system for selling leisure content of all types, including alternative packages, hotels, charters, Low Cost options and cruises. Leisure customers have access to a unique database of 470 destinations covering over 80% of the world's leisure destinations.

Take-up of Amadeus e-Travel Management – the online travel management solution for business travellers – continues to grow strongly: bookings made by travellers through Amadeus e-Travel Management grew by 59% from August 2007 to August 2008. Amadeus developed important new features for the solution in 2008 including the launch in September of version 11.2 of Amadeus e-Travel Management, which includes additional content from two major Brazilian carriers Gol and TAM and also the ‘unused ticket trader’ which saves travel agents up to 13 steps in the ticket refunding process, initially available to the US........

Google Search in Shortcuts

Have you ever wondered how to search Google for terms inside a specific website? Or find how many sites link to yours? Below is a list of common advanced search techniques with descriptions and examples:
Search for an exact phrase
"exact phrase to search"
Will return only results with the exact phrase.
Search within one website
site:www.website.com "search phrase"
This example searches through website.comfor the phrase “search phrase”.
Search for link to a specific website
link:www.website.com
Will return all the websites that have a link to .website.com.
Exclude words or phrases from search results
search phrase -excluded
Searches for the phrase but will only return results excluding the text after the minus sign.
View a cached version of a web page
cache:www.website.com
View a cached version of .website.com
Search for a specific type of file
google ebook filetype:pdf
Searches for only PDF files containing ‘google ebook’
Search for phrase only in websites’ title tag
allintitle:"google articles"
Searches for web pages with “google articles” in the title tag.
Search for keyword only in website’s URL
inurl:googlearticles
Searches for pages with ‘googlearticles’ in the URL, including the domain name and subdomain or page names.
These are a great way to quickly search from Google’s home page, without having to click over to the advanced search...

Google PageRank.....

PageRank is Google’s primary method of ranking web pages in their index. PageRank refers to a hidden value (presumably between 1 and 10) that ranks a page based on importance....
Web pages with higher PageRank (PR for short) are thought (by Google) to be more important, and thus get ranked higher than pages with lower PR...
When one web page links to another web page, they give that page some of their PageRank. This concept is what gives PageRank its power. The theory behind it is this: Let’s say a large, popular website (let’s say bio-techinfo.blogspot.com) links to your web page. The page on their site would likely have a high PR. Google looks at this link to you and gives you a higher PR because they trust bio-techinfo.blogspot.com...
When Google indexes your website, they search for links to your pages, which are called backlinks. The number and quality of backlinks to your website’s pages have a major impact on your PageRank.
Simply put, the more quality links you can get to your website, the higher your website will rank in Google Search......

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

How To Make a DNA Model Using Candy...


Making DNA models can be informative, fun, and in this case tasty. Here you will learn how to construct a DNA model using candy. But first, what is DNA? DNA is a nucleic acid that contains the genetic information for the reproduction of life. Its shape is that of a double helix and its appearance is somewhat of a twisted ladder or spiral staircase. DNA is composed of nitrogenous bases (adenine, cytosine, guanine and thymine), a five-carbon sugar (deoxyribose), and a phosphate molecule.

Nucleic Acids


                                                                             Nucleic acids allow organisms to transfer genetic information from one generation to the next. There are two types of nucleic acids: deoxyribonucleic acid, better known as DNA and ribonucleic acid, better known as RNA.

When a cell divides, its DNA is copied and passed from one cell generation to the next generation. DNA contains the "programmatic instructions" for cellular activities. When organisms produce offspring, these instructions, in the form of DNA, are passed down. RNA is involved in the synthesis of proteins. "Information" is typically passed from DNA to RNA to the resulting proteins.
Nucleic acids: Nucleotides
Nucleic acids are composed of nucleotide monomers. Nucleotides have three parts:
  • A Nitrogenous Base
  • A Five-Carbon Sugar
  • A Phosphate Group
Similar to what happens with protein monomers, nucleotides are linked to each other through dehydration synthesis. Interestingly, some nucleotides perform important cellular functions as "individual" molecules, the most common example being ATP.
Polynucleotides
In polynucleotides, nucleotides are joined to one another by covalent bonds between the phosphate of one and the sugar of another. These linkages are called phosphodiester linkages

The Cell-Cell Structure...


Life is both wonderful and majestic. Yet for all of its majesty, all organisms are composed of the fundamental unit of life, the cell. The cell is the simplest unit of matter that is alive. From the unicellular bacteria to multicellular animals, the cell is one of the basic organizational principles of biology. Let's look at some of the components of this basic organizer of living organisms.
Eukaryotic Cells and Prokaryotic Cells
                                                                                                          There are two primary types of cells: eukaryotic cells and prokaryotic cells. Eukaryotic cells are called so because they have a true nucleus. The nucleus, which houses DNA, is contained within a membrane and separated from other cellular structures. Prokaryotic cells however have no true nucleus. DNA in a prokaryotic cell is not separated from the rest of the cell but coiled up in a region called the nucleoid.

                                                                                                        As organized in the Three Domain System, prokaryotes include archaeans and bacteria. Eukaryotes include animals, plants, fungi and protists. Typically, eukaryoitc cells are more complex and much larger than prokaryotic cells. On average, prokaryotic cells are about 10 times smaller in diameter than eukaryotic cells.

Eukaryotes grow and reproduce through a process called mitosis. In organisms that also reproduce sexually, the reproductive cells are produced by a type of cell division called meiosis. Most prokaryotes reproduce through a process called binary fission. During binary fission, the single DNA molecule replicates and the original cell is divided into two identical daughter cells.

Both eukaryotic and prokaryotic organisms get the energy they need to grow and maintain normal cellular function through cellular respiration. Cellular respiration has three main stages: glycolysis, the citric acid cycle, and electron transport. In eukaryotes, most cellular respiration reactions take place within the mitochondria. In prokaryotes, they occur in the cytoplasm and/or within the cell membrane.
The Cell-Cell Structure
There are also many distinctions between eukaryotic and prokaryotic cell structure. The following table compares the cell structures found in a typical prokaryotic cell to those found in a typical animal eukaryotic cell.
Cell Structure Comparison
Eukaryotic and Prokaryotic Cell Structure

Cell Structure
Prokaryotic Cell
Typical Animal Eukaryotic Cell
Cell Wall
Yes
No
Centrioles
No
Yes
Chromosomes
One long DNA strand
Many
Cilia or Flagella
Yes, simple
Yes, complex
Endoplasmic Reticulum
No
Yes (some exceptions)
Golgi Complex
No
Yes
Lysosomes
No
Common
Mitochondria
No
Yes
Nucleus
No
Yes
Peroxisomes
No
Common
Cell Membrane
Yes
Yes
Ribosomes
Yes
Yes




















Animal Tissues: Epithelial Tissue


What are Tissues?
                                 The word tissue is derived from a Latin word meaning to "weave." Cells that make up tissues are sometimes "woven" together with extracellular fibers.

Likewise, a tissue can sometimes be held together by a sticky substance that coats its cells.

There are four main categories of tissues: epithelial, connective, muscle and nervous. Let's take a look at epithelial tissue.
Epithelial Tissue
Epithelial tissue covers the outside of the body and lines organs and cavities. The cells in this type of tissue are very closely packed together and joined with little space between them.

     With a tightly packed structure we would expect epithelial tissue to perhaps serve some type of barrier and protective function and that is certainly the case.

Epithelial tissue helps to protect organisms from microorganisms, injury, and fluid loss.

In an epithelium, the free surface is usually exposed to fluid or the air while the bottom surface is attached to a basement membrane.
Classifying
Epithelia are commonly classified based on the shape of the cells on the free surface, as well as the number of cell layers. Sample types include:

Simple Epithelium: A simple epithelium has a single layer of cells.

Stratified Epithelium: A stratified epithelium has multiple layers of cells.

Likewise, the shape of the cells on the free surface can be:

Cuboidal

Analogous to the shape of dice.

Columnar

Analogous to the shape of bricks on an end.

Squamous

Analogous to the shape of flat tiles on a floor.


By combining the terms for shape and layers, we can derive epithelial types such as stratified squamous epithelium or simple columnar epithelium.
Animal Tissue Types
To learn more about animal tissues, visit:
  • Connective Tissue
  • Muscle Tissue
  • Nervous Tissue
  • Nervous Tissue - Glial Cells
Share Your Opinions
What do you think? Have questions about animal tissue types or epithelial tissue? Come on over to the Biology Forum and share your thoughts, opinions, and feelings...........