24.1.07

iPOD Currency Evaluator

Australian bank develops iPod Index to measure currency values
By Meriah Foley
22 January 2007


SYDNEY, Australia (AP) - An Australian investment bank has developed a new indicator for tracking international currency values using the cost of an Apple iPod as a benchmark.

The theory goes like this: If the price in U.S. dollar terms of an iPod Nano is more expensive in Australia than it is in the United States, then the Australian currency may be overvalued.

The concept behind the iPod Index is based on The Economist magazine's Big Mac Index, which uses the cost of a McDonald's hamburger to compare currency values.

"A key difference between the iPod and Big Mac approaches is that Big Macs are made in a host of countries across the globe whereas iPods are predominantly made in China," said CommSec's chief economist Craig James.

As such, exclusive of duties or taxes, the tiny music player should cost nearly the same everywhere.

"If there were substantial price differences customers would switch their purchases to other countries, especially given the power of the Internet," he said.

But a comparison of 26 counties shows significant variation.

In the United States, an iPod Nano retails for US$149.00. But in Brazil, which topped the index, a 2-gigabyte Nano costs the equivalent of US$327.71.

Canada is the cheapest place to pick up an iPod at US$144.20.

In Australia, an iPod is valued at US$172.36, which has led the bank to suggest that the currency is overvalued.
"The index suggests the U.S. dollar has potential to appreciate against a range of major currencies, with the Aussie dollar about 15 per cent overvalued against the greenback," James said.

Death of a VJ

John Majhor played an integral part of my early adolescence. He hosted a Toronto video programme (before MUCHMUSIC) called "Toronto Rocks". This was THE show to watch if you were 11-18 years old in the mid 80s. There wasn't the Internet, there wasn't (as said above) MuchMusic - nothing. This was it. You had to wait for your favourite video to be played. Or, call in and request a video. Sigh ... RIP Mr Majhor. My youth goes with you. :o(



John Majhor, 53: Voice of CHUM

Former CHUM disc jockey John Majhor, pictured in 1991.

Commanding personality made shift easily from radio jock to video host
24 January 2007 Tamara CherryStaff reporter

To a generation of Torontonians that came of age before MuchMusic, John Majhor was the iconic voice – and also face – of rock and roll.

Majhor was the rare charismatic radio personality who was able to make the transition easily to television. Quick on his bare feet – he disdained wearing shoes, finding "they bug me for some reason" – and sporting a silver hoop earring in his left lobe, his shining brown hair and flirtatious smile made him a commanding television presence.
He died yesterday morning, surrounded by family in his suburban Minnesota home following a five-month battle with cancer. He was 53.

During the '80s, he was CHUM's prime rock interviewer, rubbing shoulders with Elton John, Meat Loaf and George Harrison, to name a few. But to his family, he was all that and then some.


"I think that what you hear on air from him was him – just a very straightforward guy, always a sense of humour, but also a very caring person," said Samantha Majhor, niece of the former 1050 CHUM disc jockey and host of Citytv's Toronto Rocks.

12.1.07

Bolly, bolly, bolly! Get your bolly here ...



Bollywood world premiere wows Toronto fans
JOHN MCKAY
Canadian Press
TORONTO — Forget Brangelina. Or TomKat.
When it comes to Bollywood cinema, no screen couple is hotter than Abhishek Bachchan and Aishwarya Rai. And Toronto's South Asian community was out in force Thursday evening for the world premiere of Guru, the pair's latest film.

The only thing that's depressing about this is that a Bollywood film gets more attention than a home-grown Canadian film. Oh, Canada ... sigh.