Yerevan Hosts Armenia-Russia Military Cooperation Committee Sitting

YEREVAN HOSTS ARMENIA-RUSSIA MILITARY COOPERATION COMMITTEE SITTING

PanARMENIAN.Net
October 25, 2011 – 18:47 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – On October 24, Armenian Defense Ministry hosted
the 6th sitting of Armenia-Russia interparliamentary military and
technical cooperation committee.

Collaboration in defense sector was on sitting agenda, Armenian
Defense Ministry press service reported.

The Russian delegation is headed by the Deputy Director of the Russian
Federal Service for Military and Technical Cooperation Konstantin
Biryulin; Armenian delegation is led by Deputy Defense Minister
Alik Mirzabekyan.

The committee sitting will be completed on October 28.

Reaction To Azerbaijan/UN: United Nations "Needs Reform" Says Analys

REACTION TO AZERBAIJAN/UN: UNITED NATIONS “NEEDS REFORM” SAYS ANALYST
Karen Bekaryan

ArmeniaNow
25.10.11 | 15:57

By Gayane Lazarian

An Armenian political analyst believes the fact that Azerbaijan
was elected on Monday a non-permanent member of the United Nations
Security Council for 2012-2013 after Slovenia withdrew its candidacy
shows that the UN needs essential reforms.

On the press conference on Tuesday, head of European Integration
NGO Karen Bekaryan said he wonders how countries which have serious
problems with democracy, directly inherited power, unsettled conflicts
and no great efforts to settle their conflicts, can become a UN
Security Council member.

According to Bekaryan, this international structure has a problem
which means that Armenia, being a full UN member, also has a problem.

In this respect, Bekaryan believes that Armenia must hold discussions
with other countries related to UN’s possible reforms.

Bekaryan, however, states that Azerbaijan’s becoming a non-permanent
member of the UN Security Council will not harm the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict settlement. Becoming a non-permanent member UN Security
Council, Azerbaijan tried to solve two problems for itself.

“This (the membership) gives the Aliyev clan and the Azeri authorities
an opportunity to distract its own nation’s attention from a number
of various problems, and shows that Azerbaijan has some victory
in the diplomatic arena,” Bekaryan says. “Secondly, Azerbaijan has
big problems outside the country, having a poor image in terms of
democratic problems. This status, as at least, Azerbaijan believes,
will give it an opportunity to alleviate criticisms.”

Referring to different sources, Bekaryan states that Azerbaijan has
spent substantial funds to get this position.

“If you observe the list of countries which voted for Azerbaijan, you
will see countries the social-economic situation of which is terrible,
and it is possible to settle issues with them by means of investing
big funds. Of course, the Aliyev clan has not paid that money from
its own pocket, but rather – from the State Budget of Azerbaijan,
depriving its own nation from other plans. There is a positive fact
here – more money is spent on diplomatic, so-called ‘success’ lesser
money will be left for armament,” Bekaryan concludes

Visa Information System (VIS) Introduced In Armenia

Visa Information System (VIS) introduced in Armenia

armradio.am
25.10.2011 16:39

The Visa Information System (VIS), one of the tools supporting the
implementation of the common EU visa policy, was presented today
during an information session in the Embassy of Poland to Armenia.

The purpose of the EU common visa policy for short stays is to enable
the Schengen Area to function efficiently and facilitate the entry
of legal visitors into the EU, while strengthening internal security.

Over the past years, the EU has been developing large-scale IT systems
for collecting, processing and sharing information relevant to external
border management, and VIS is one of the results.

It allows Schengen States to exchange visa data through a central
IT system and a communication infrastructure that links this central
system to national systems. VIS connects consulates in non-EU countries
and all external border crossing points of Schengen States, and then
processes data and decisions relating to applications for short-stay
visas to the Schengen Area.

“The purpose of VIS is to facilitate checks and the issuance of visas.

It also helps fight abuse, enhances security, and protects travellers
from identity theft,” said Onno Simons, First Counsellor of the EU
Delegation to Armenia.

What VIS entails: 10 fingerprints and a digital photograph are
collected from persons applying for a visa. These biometric data,
along with data provided in the visa application form, are recorded
in a secure central database and can be re-used for further visa
applications over a 5-year period. (Fingerprints are not required for
children below 12 or for people who physically cannot provide a finger
scan). When the visa holder arrives at the external Schengen border,
the border authorities have access to VIS to verify the identity of
the visa holder and the authenticity of the visa.

VIS applies to all Schengen States and after a transitional period,
the new EU Agency for large-scale IT systems (to be launched in autumn
2012) will be responsible for the operational management of VIS.

Competent visa authorities may consult the VIS for the purpose of
examining applications and decisions related thereto. In specific
cases, national authorities and Europol may request access to data
entered into the VIS for the purposes of preventing, detecting and
investigating terrorist and criminal offences.

Armenian President To Meet Russian Premier, Moscow Mayor

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT TO MEET RUSSIAN PREMIER, MOSCOW MAYOR

Tert.am
25.10.11

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, who is on a state visit to Russia,
held a meeting Oct. 25 with Valentina Matvienko, Chairwoman of
the Council of Federation, RF Federal Assembly, and Boris Gryzlov,
Speaker of the RF State Duma.

Mrs. Matvienko congratulated the Armenian leader on his successful
visit to Russia, when a number of documents on development of
Armenian-Russian cooperation were signed. She noted that the documents
open up new opportunities for consolidation of bilateral relations.

The sides stressed the important activities of the Armenian-Russian
parliamentary cooperation commission.

At their meeting, President Serzh Sargsyan and Speaker Boris Gryzlov
stressed the importance of cooperation within international agencies,
particularly the CE Parliamentary Assembly.

The sides welcomed and stressed the importance of the developing
cooperation between Armenian and Russian regions. They stressed the
need for promoting this cooperation and realizing the potential for
strengthening bilateral relations.

The high-level political, economic and humanitarian relations
between the two strategic partners are in harmony with the spirit of
centuries-old friendship.

The sides also stressed the important role the Armenian community in
Russia is playing in strengthening the bilateral relations.

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan is also scheduled to hold meetings
with Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and Moscow Mayor Sergey
Sobyanin.

Revue De Presse No1 – 25/10/11 – Collectif VAN

REVUE DE PRESSE NO1 – 25/10/11 – COLLECTIF VAN

25-10-2011

Info Collectif VAN – – Le Collectif VAN [Vigilance
Armenienne contre le Negationnisme] vous propose une revue de presse
des informations parues dans la presse francophone, sur les thèmes
concernant la Turquie, le genocide armenien, la Shoah, le genocide
des Tutsi, le Darfour, le negationnisme, l’Union europeenne, Chypre,
etc… Nous vous suggerons egalement de prendre le temps de lire ou
de relire les informations et traductions mises en ligne dans notre
rubrique

Par ailleurs, certains articles en anglais, allemand, turc, etc,
ne sont disponibles que dans la newsletter Word que nous generons
chaque jour. Pour la recevoir, abonnez-vous a la Veille-Media : c’est
gratuit ! Vous recevrez le document du lundi au vendredi dans votre
boîte email. Bonne lecture.

Lynchage collectif des kurdes en Turquie Info Collectif VAN –
– Le Collectif VAN vous presente cet article
de Maxime Azadi publie le 22 octobre 2011 sur son blog heberge
sur Mediapart. “Après chaque offensive du Parti des travailleurs
du Kurdistan (PKK) contre les forces de l’ordre, les autorites
turques encouragent le lynchage et les kurdes deviennent la cible du
nationalisme turc. Plusieurs attaques racistes ont eu lieu ces derniers
jours a travers le pays. La mort des soldats et des policiers sont
les pretextes de ce lynchage, alors qu’ils mènent une guerre injuste
contre le peuple kurde”.

Hollywood : protestations contre une fanfare ottomane Info Collectif
VAN – – Le Collectif VAN vous invite a lire une
traduction de Gilbert Beguian d’un article en anglais mise en ligne
sur le site de NAM (Nouvelles d’Armenie Magazine) le 17 octobre
2011. “L’intention de cette manifestation hollywoodienne etait
d’attirer l’attention sur un festival culturel turc, d’après les
organisateurs, mais les descendants du peuple armenien, avec d’autres,
s’y sont opposes, en reference au genocide”.

Presse armenienne : Revue du 21 octobre 2011 Info Collectif VAN –
– e Collectif VAN vous livre cette Revue de
Presse parue sur le site de l’Ambassade de France en Armenie le 21
octobre 2011. “Selon un rapport de Doing Business 2012, parmi 183
pays, l’Armenie, a ameliores son classement dans plusieurs domaines
economiques de 6 points, passant de la 61e place a la 55e sur la
liste. La Georgie est la meilleure parmi les pays de l’ex-URSS,
occupant la 16e place, la Russie n’etant que 120e. Parmi les pays de
l’ex-URSS, l’Armenie est la première en matière de nombre de reformes
economiques (cinq) effectuees”.

Medvedev: le russe, langue internationale de communication La russe
reste une langue eminente en matière de communication au niveau
international, a declare lundi a Moscou le president russe Dmitri
Medvedev a l’issue d’entretiens avec son homologue armenien Serge
Sargsian.

Rwanda: Retour d’exil de Pierre-Celestin Rwigema Retour d’exil d’un
ancien Premier ministre rwandais. L’ancien Premier ministre rwandais,
Pierre-Celestin Rwigema, est rentre au Rwanda en provenance des
Etats-unis, où il a passe près de dix ans d’exil, a-t-on appris lundi
de source officielle a Kigali. M. Rwigema, qui fut Premier ministre
du Rwanda entre 1995 et 2000, etait exile aux Etats-unis depuis
sa demission du poste de chef du gouvernement rwandais pour des
‘raisons personnelles’.

L’info vue par la TRT (1) Le Collectif VAN vous propose cet article
publie sur la TRT (Television & Radio de Turquie). Les articles de
ce site ne sont pas commentes de notre part. Ils peuvent contenir
des propos negationnistes envers le genocide armenien ou d’autres
informations a prendre sous toute reserve. “Les Etats-Unis ont juge
les operations de la Turquie contre l’organisation terroriste au nord
de l’Irak ” exemplaires ” du point de vue des methodes d’operations
transfrontalières.”

Meïr Wain­trater quitte la rue Broca Victime de l’erosion de son
lectorat, L’Arche, ” le mensuel du judaïsme francais “, a cesse
de paraître en avril dernier. À sa place, un site internet et un
trimestriel animes par une nouvelle equipe verront le jour au mois
d’octobre. Mais pour certains familiers de cette revue chargee
d’histoire, la perte paraît irreparable.

Zahra : Les chretiens de Syrie n’ont pas besoin de protection Le depute
Antoine Zahra, membre du bloc parlementaire des Forces libanaises, a
affirme lundi, lors d’une interview a CNN Arabic, que “les chretiens
de Syrie ne sont pas une espèce menacee d’extinction et qui a besoin
d’etre protegee”. “Les chretiens vivent au Moyen-Orient depuis plus
de 2.000 ans, alors que le parti Baas règne en Syrie depuis seulement
40 ans”, a souligne le depute.

Depeche de l’APA [ 24 oct 2011 19:46 ] – Agence de Presse d’Azerbaïdjan
Le Collectif VAN vous propose un article de l’APA (Agence de presse
azerie) date du 24 octobre 2011. Les articles de ce site (ecrits
generalement dans un francais rudimentaire) ne sont pas commentes de
notre part. Ils peuvent contenir des propos negationnistes envers
le genocide armenien ou d’autres informations a prendre sous toute
reserve. “Le retrait des habitants de Haut-Karabagh a leurs foyers
est necessaire, avant la definition du statut juridique.”

Retour a la rubrique

http://www.collectifvan.org/rubrique.php?r=0&page=1.
www.collectifvan.org
www.collectifvan.org
www.collectifvan.org
www.collectifvan.org
www.collectifvan.org

Restoring A Building Its Past Dignity

RESTORING A BUILDING ITS PAST DIGNITY

Noyan Tapan
24.10.2011

Interview with the Honorary Consul Antonio Montalto on occasion of
the opening of the International Center for Peace and Development
in Gyumri.

– You’re a well known person in Armenia. You’ve been here for over
twenty years, as you arrived immediately after the 1988’s earthquake.

Therefore Armenia has become for you, if not your second home, the
country where you carry out public duties. Let me sum up: Subsequent to
the earthquake, you’ve dedicated many years on restructuring maternity
hospitals, treatment centers and children’s homes. Firstly with an
Italian organization, then by establishing an Armenian organization,
Family Care, with which you are still developing maternity and
childcare health projects.

In the recent years you’ve decided to renounce to donations and to
finance your projects with your own enterprises, such as with a Bed
and Breakfast in Yerevan and the pottery production. Furthermore,
you have organised language courses, the founding of a library,
various other activities and now the Center. Why have you decided to
found this Center and why in Gyumri?

– I think it isn’t appropriate to say that “I’ve decided”. It is
certainly a way of living up to something, until, at one stage, this
something becomes bigger than a single decision and circumstances
prevail on individual orientations. Japanese painters used to say:
it’s the painting that creates the artist. This statement, even if
apparently paradoxical, bears much truth, which can be extended to
activities of all kind. My collaborators and I wished to give our
contribution to regenerate this town, and to do so you first need
to give value and beauty back to things around you. Our goals, now
partially realized, were seeing an historical building healing its
wounds and being restored respecting local traditions, or gaining
square meters of abandoned areas to provide dignified community
facilities. The Center foundation is part of this larger project. It
was about giving life back to one of the town’s most beautiful
building and we would like it to be used mostly by Gyumri’s young
people as well as students from other towns. However, there’s a part
of it which is less evident and which doesn’t specifically concern
the Center’s purpose, yet it is as important. I’m talking about the
building restructuration process in respect of all those who worked
for it. Construction site and office workers bonded and got passionate
about the project. It’s this kind of human interaction which is behind
and inside the stone walls that may be represents for me the most
important outcome. As for your second question, Gyumri has a great
cultural patrimony, a very fine architecture and an extraordinary
human potential. Unfortunately it is a devastated town, but slowly it
is rebirthing and I believe its rebirth will be able to be driving
all Armenia. And it is when you see people putting their heart in
what they’re working for that you can say a town is coming alive again.

– Why have you chosen this building that you have completely
reconstructed?

Is there a specific purpose in the edifice’s choice?

– First of all it’s because it’s beautiful. All the buildings here,
built between the second half of 1,800 and the first years of the
1,900, are of remarkable beauty. This one in particular is special
because it is a rare example of Art Deco. The Liberty Style gives a
touch of grace and lightness to the heaviness of the black tuff stones.

Furthermore, we saw that the interior was giving us the opportunity to
divide and organize the space to serve several functions. There’s also
a nice courtyard that could become a little agora. Actually, let me
add that it’s not correct to say that we’re completely rebuilding it.

Our bigger effort is salvaging as much as possible its original aspect
and sometimes this means having to demolish changes that the various
owners made in the time.

– “Peace an Development” are very beautiful designations, yet they
have a quite broad significance. Everyone can have his own concept
and view of peace and development.

What is yours?

– I would say the two terms go together, there’s not one without the
other. Peace stands for tolerance and comprehension which accordingly
represents the opportunity for other cultures to exchange. One of
today’s plagues is the idea that the identity can be created in
conflict and exclusion of other identities. There’s nothing more
wrong and ill-fated then such a state of mind which, on the contrary,
indicates uncertain and lost identities. The nation’s identity forms
and grows through the dialogue with other cultures, and that means
to start with the will to know the other rather than rejecting him. I
wish that in this Center we shall be able to discuss freely of these
issues and subsequently be able to realize something in practical
terms. That’s why the word International coming after Center is no
less important. One issue I’m particularly interested in it’s the
opportunity of opening a cultural bridge between Armenia and Turkey
and this is why, among other activities, I’d like the Center to
welcome Turkish university students as well.

– What may the Center bring to Gyumri and Armenian people?

– Knowledge, trainings and wider opening to the rest of the world.

Accordingly, it is important, for example, to promote tourism. I’m not
talking about the packaged and rapid tourism whose only aim is bringing
home some exotic images, but about the more significant one of those
who have a real interest toward different cultures and traditions. This
is why, together with other activities, we’re organizing local craft
workshops (pottery and carpet manufacture) in which the tourists, if
they wish, will be able to take part during their visit. Therefore,
your question could be returned: What may Gyumri and Armenian people
bring to the Center?

– And to you personally?

– A lot, just like everything this country gave me so far. As far as
I am concerned, in Armenia I found a strong meaning in my life. All
I do for the country is a gratitude token for what it gave and keeps
giving me.

– What are your next projects or ambitions?

– Life throws at you unexpected surprises. You just have to know
how to welcome coming opportunities which often are better and more
exciting than what we dreamed and wished about. We’ll see…

The opening of the International Center for Peace and Development
will be held at Abovyan Str. 182 (Gyumri) on October 25th at 12 am.

International Seminar At Matenadaran Dedicated To The 500th Annivers

INTERNATIONAL SEMINAR AT MATENADARAN DEDICATED TO THE 500TH ANNIVERSARY OF ARMENIAN PRINTING
Alisa Gevorgyan

“Radiolur”
24.10.2011 15:49

Matenadaran Research Institute of Ancient Manuscripts, in cooperation
with the Ministry of Culture and the CIS Interstate Humanitarian
Cooperation Fund, holds an international seminar in Yerevan dedicated
to the 500th anniversary of Armenian printing.

The seminar has brought together experts from CIS and Baltic States,
Georgia and a number of European countries. Representatives of
local organizations of the sphere are also actively involved in the
activities of the seminar.

Participants of the seminar will discuss the problems of the
sphere and the ways of their resolution, maintenance of the funds
and the achievements of the participant countries in the field of
reconstruction.

Director of Matenadaran Hrachya Tamrazyan is proud of the fact that
the Institute of Ancient Manuscripts has much to present to the world.

Master classes, round-table discussions, cultural programs will be
organized within the framework of the events dedicated to the 500th
anniversary of Armenian printing.

Walter Isaacson Interview: Steve Jobs Weighed All The Options For Hi

WALTER ISAACSON INTERVIEW: STEVE JOBS WEIGHED ALL THE OPTIONS FOR HIS CANCER TREATMENT
By Leander Kahney

Cult of Mac

Oct 24 2011

Earlier today I got a chance to talk to Walter Isaacson, Steve Jobs’
authorized biographer. Isaacson’s 620-page book hits bookstands today.

He spoke while preparing to check out of his hotel in New York, where
he’s conducting a whirlwind media tour for the book, which promises
to be one of the biggest hits of the year.

In our interview, Isaacson revealed that Jobs was actually a lot more
active in his cancer treatment than previous reports have suggested.

He also thinks Apple will be OK without Jobs because he spent a decade
building a great team and an institution infused with his DNA. And
that the man, like the company he built, was an intriguiging mix of
the arts and sciences.

Leander Kahney: It’s an astonishing piece of work. I’m amazed.

Walter Isaacson: You know more about this than anybody.

LK: I didn’t know so much. He was so private.

WI: He was private but he also wanted his story told.

LK: I read that you were pretty skeptical initially – or reluctant.

WI: When he first talked to me in 2004 I thought he was a young enough
guy, I’ll do it in 20 or 30 years when he retires. I didn’t realize
that he was sick. In fact, it wasn’t until 2009 that we started
talking seriously.

LK: He knew then that he had cancer, right?

WI: He was about to be operated on, yes.

LK: But he didn’t tell you that, he kept it quiet?

WI: I don’t think he told a lot of people until he had his operation.

LK: How was the experience of the last two years?

WI: It was intense. He was more intense and more emotional and more
open than I expected. We spent a lot of time just in conversation
walking and talking. The essence of him I think is the ability to
tie a great emotional intensity to a kind of rational technological
business sense.

LK: Did you like him?

WI: Yes. I liked him when I first met him in 1984 and I sort of liked
him but was rather charmed by his intensity.

LK: Right. A lot of people talk about his charisma. But that’s
different to getting to like somebody. So you got to like him. Did
he scream at you?

WI: He got mad at me when he saw a proposed design for the cover
about eight months ago. He expressed himself in a full and frank
manner when we were on the phone. He told me a variety of words that
he thought of the proposed cover. Then he said that he would really
only go forward if he had some input into the cover design and I spent
about two seconds thinking about that and said sure. He’s got the best
design eye in the world so I was quite happy for him to have input and
mentioned it in the introduction to the book so that everybody knows.

LK: This was the only input he’s had in the book?

WI: Right. He told me he didn’t want to read it in advance and he
said that there would be a lot in there that he wouldn’t like but he
didn’t want it to feel like an in-house book.

LK: How do you feel about it? How do you think it turned out?

WI: I think that it has a narrative arc to it of a person who is both
rebellious and part of a counterculture, but who can connect to being
sensible and scientific and businesslike. To me, that’s the essence
of his life. It’s connecting these two opposing strands. That of the
counter-culture and poetry and that of processors.

LK: It sort of parallels the very essence of Apple too.

WI: He told me at the very beginning in 2009 that Edwin Land (of
Polaroid) had once told him that standing at the intersection of
humanities and technology was a great place to be. I think that made
a deep impression on Steve and it turned out to be a theme that became
part of the book.

LK: One of the biggest revelations from the book was his delayed
cancer treatment.

WI: Yeah. That fits into the theme in a way because it wasn’t just
as if he was trying counterculture cures, or whatever you want to
call it – a New Age way of treating it.

He was doing that but at the same time he starts soliciting the
best scientific advice, including targeted therapies and stuff at
the frontiers of DNA sequencing. So it’s sort of both sides of his
personality become engaged and eventually they connect.

Now, it took him longer. When he decides to have the operation after
people are telling him to and he’s absorbed the information. I think he
would have preferred, once he knew he was going to have the operation,
I think he thought he should have done it sooner. But that’s only in
retrospect, I’m sure.

LK: So he was actually more proactive? He was looking at all the
different options – alternative as well as traditional?

WI: Right. And I don’t make it incredibly clear in the book but I do
talk about all the DNA sequencing and frontline scientific approach.

So you have that connection even with his cancer situation – the
connection of that New Age rebel who resists conventional authority
and the rigorous believer in technology and science. And in the end,
the science wins out and he does all sorts of therapies that keep him
alive wonderfully for seven years, during which he brings out iPods
and iPhones and iPads. And he kept on, as he put it, being one little
lily pad in front of the cancer for many, many years.

LK: I was struck that he always obsessed with death. He almost had
a Freudian Thanatos syndrome.

WI: Yes, a lot of people wrote about it and talked about it. He talked
about life being an arc and that were all going to die. I also think
that it comes from his Buddhist training that life is a journey and
that the journey is the reward.

LK: The Buddhism thing. I don’t really recall him talking about it
at all. Was he really a Buddhist? Did he really believe?

WI: He felt he got a lot from his Buddhist training. He told me – and
it’s in the book – he had gone on a quest for enlightenment to India
and he comes back with the Zen Buddhist appreciation for intuition
and experiential, he calls it, and wisdom. And he says not everything
can be done analytically. This intuitive experiential wisdom that he
learned to appreciate – and, if I might say, that too fits into the
arc of the narrative that I was describing of there being two parts
of Steve’s personality and he’s able to connect the ethereal part to
the analytical part.

LK: What about the spiritual part? Believing in life after death,
in reincarnation?

WI: At the very end of my book I have him talk about that, sitting
in his garden. It’s the last page of my book. He said he’s 50/50.

Sometimes he believes there’s an afterlife and we all live on and the
experiences we have live on. And sometimes he thinks it’s a switch,
when you die, ‘click,’ you’re gone.

I think he felt that. He kept telling me, ‘It’s the great mystery.’
And for somebody like him, he could appreciate the mystery instead
of just trying to know the answer. The journey is the reward.

LK: How do you think Apple is going to do without him?

WI: I think that his goal was not just to create great products but
to create a great company that had this connection between creativity
and technology infused into its DNA. He felt that’s why he had to be
rough on people at times, to create a team that would have a company
that would last for generations. That’s why he was so interested in
designing the new headquarters because he believed it would be an
enduring expression of that. I think that he has a pretty amazing
team. People say that he was hard to work with but the proof is in
the pudding and people actually remain loyal to him and he created a
team of A players and they stay fanatically loyal to him. For all the
talk – including in my book of him being hard to work with – you also
have to look at what was the outcome. You have a team in there now
that ranges from Tim Cook to Jony Ive: from totally focused engineers
to very artistic people. And I think that Apple is the company most
likely to be around in generations from now, like Disney.

LK: Andy Herzfeld at the end of the book had a very interesting quote
that he felt that Steve was sometimes unnecessarily mean.

WI: Steve answered that to me by saying, ‘There’s probably a more
velvet-gloved way to have done things. We all talk in code but that’s
not who I am. I’m just some middle class kid from California. And we
have rip-roaring arguments at Apple where we can each tell each other
that you’re full of shit and to me that creates the best team. And
it makes sure you don’t get the bozo explosion where there’s too many
mediocre people there.’

I think that there was probably a more velvet-gloved way to do things.

But people who wear velvet gloves don’t often make a dent in the
universe.

LK: Yes there’s definitely truth to that but there’s also the
experience with Daniel Kottke, his good friend, and how he didn’t
have any early shares in Apple.

WI: I talked about that on 60 minutes last night. I don’t know how to
say this politely but you have to make certain cut-offs. This is the
two sides of Steve, which is the old rebel side but also the rigorous
business side. And you have to say: “At this level people get stock
options.” But then you can’t go and randomly say, ‘But this kid was
in college with me and in the garage and I love him so let’s give
him some.’

Eventually Kottke did get options too. But Steve has a very emotional
impact on people, so when he acts in a very rational way it can
upset people.

LK: I see, okay.

WI: Also, you have to judge people. You have to judge if these people
are valuable to the future of the company.

LK: It always seems the company first.

WI: I think his passion for perfection drove him to care intensely
about having only the best players at Apple. ‘A Players’ like to work
with A players and that was his goal at Apple.

LK: And did he very much achieve this in your opinion?

WI: Absolutely. I mean look, and maybe I’m part of the reality
distortion field, but home run after home run. People said the iPod
is not going to work. Then the iPhone, the iPad. Each one of these
digital hub devices becomes a home-run out of the blue.

Likewise, ten movies in a row (at Pixar) are home runs. So you have
to look at the result.

How many home runs does any other company have in a row? One or two
or three? But not this many. And so you know, this is the company
that will be remembered a generation from now.

LK: Do you think Pixar is a good example of why Apple will be okay
without Steve?

WI: Yes, once again it’s a company that stands at the intersection
of the liberal arts and technology. And once again he has created a
great headquarters for it and he also nurtured a great team. Pixar
is doing just fine and Apple is doing just fine.

LK: Well, better than just fine. Could I just ask you just one question
that the readers asked? They asked about his Armenian heritage. Did
he speak Armenian?

WI:-No. His mother was a refugee from Armenia. Clara Jobs was an
Armenian refugee but her parents came over and as far as I know Steve
never spoke any Armenian.

LK: What was his favorite App? Did he have one?

WI: He told me that he loved the newspaper apps because he really
hoped the iPad would be able to save the business of journalism just
as the iPod helped music.

LK: Great. Many thanks for your time.

http://www.cultofmac.com/125703/walter-isaacson-interview-steve-jobs-weighed-all-the-options-for-his-cancer-treatment/

Russia To Implement Infrastructure Projects In Armenia

RUSSIA TO IMPLEMENT INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS IN ARMENIA

Vestnik Kavkaza
Oct 24 2011

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has outlined prospects for the
development of investment cooperation between Russia and Armenia in
the energy sector, particularly in nuclear and thermal power generation
sectors, News-Armenia reports.

By underlining the importance of the nuclear sector for mutual
cooperation between the countries, the Russian president also stressed
that the countries should go beyond this cooperation. He recalled
that the volume of Russian investments in Armenia is approaching $3
billion, and expressed confidence that this figure will grow.

In particular, Russia needs to develop infrastructure projects,
especially rail transport, Medvedev said.

The president also named the development of communication and
information technologies among the promising areas of co-investment,
recalling that Armenia began to actively implement broadband internet
before Russia.

Leonid Gusev: "There Are People Among Armenians And Azeris Ready To

LEONID GUSEV: “THERE ARE PEOPLE AMONG ARMENIANS AND AZERIS READY TO PEACEFULLY RESOLVE THE KARABAKH PROBLEM”

Vestnik Kavkaza
Oct 24 2011

The topic of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict again was the focus of
attention, in light of the visit of President Serzh Sargsyan to Russia,
as well as celebrations of the 20th anniversary of the independence
of Armenia and Azerbaijan.

The senior researcher at the Analytical Center of MGIMO, Leonid Gusev,
told Vestnik Kavkaza that the Armenian and Azerbaijani diasporas,
as well as Armenians living in Armenia and Azerbaijanis living in
Azerbaijan, have different views on the Karabakh issue.

The expert mentioned – as a positive outlook on the problem – a book
recently published by Azerbaijani analysts, who call for investment
of up to $40 billion in the Nagorno-Karabakh area, in order to find
a solution to existing problems. Gusev also noted that it would be
good if Armenia offers something for its part which will facilitate
the peaceful development of the situation in the area.