Stanford Commencement Speech from Steve Jobs

I don’t know what Apple CEO Steve Jobs thinks of Ayn Rand, or if he’s even read the novels, but he is an inspiring visionary in many ways, and recently gave a commencement speech at Stanford that’s worth reading.
Here’s an excerpt, after his harrowing tale of getting kicked out of his own company, starting other companies, and eventually finding himself back at the helm of Apple:

I’m convinced that the only thing that kept me going was that I loved what I did. You’ve got to find what you love. And that is as true for your work as it is for your lovers. Your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. And the only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you haven’t found it yet, keep looking. Don’t settle. As with all matters of the heart, you’ll know when you find it. And, like any great relationship, it just gets better and better as the years roll on. So keep looking until you find it. Don’t settle.

See the full speech for more.

Building an 'Atlas Shrugged' Portfolio

An interesting commentary on world stock markets from Conrad de Aenlle in the International Herald Tribune:

The most attractively priced stock markets are often in countries that subject businesses to the most onerous taxation and regulation. What’s a capitalist to do? Consider building an “Atlas Shrugged” portfolio.
John Hatherly, head of global asset allocation for M&G Investment Management in London, judges the United States and China to have the most dynamic, investor-friendly economies, but he prefers to buy them on the cheap through European and Japanese companies that sell into those markets or, better yet, use them as manufacturing bases.
Just like the frustrated business owners in Ayn Rand’s novel who close up shop and move abroad to enjoy a less fettered commercial environment, the companies Hatherly likes – Japanese carmakers, British drug companies, German banks among them – are doing as little as possible in their putative homes and seeking out opportunities in more vibrant markets.

See the full article for more information.

The Atlasphere in Time Magazine

Earlier today I noted that the Atlasphere has been getting an unusual number of new signups, over the past few days. And these people are finding us by typing the name of our site into various search engines — meaning, they’d heard about our site from somewhere else. Somewhere … big.
Now we know where: Time magazine has included the Atlasphere in its June 13th roundup of the latest trends in online dating:

?ATLAS HUGGED Need to narrow the choices? E-daters this summer are flocking to a growing number of super-specialized singles sites. Bikers, smokers, Democrats, NASCAR devotees and people with sexually transmitted diseases can surf sites of their own. Even randy Ayn Rand aficionados can gather at TheAtlasphere.com to flirt over Atlas Shrugged.

Leave it to Time magazine to lump Ayn Rand’s novels together with sexually transmitted diseases…
Thanks to Atlasphere member Jonathan Rick for giving us the heads-up!

The Atlasphere Tops 3,000 Dating Profiles

A quick update on the growth of the Atlasphere:

  • As of today, we have over 3,000 dating profiles in our database
  • We are fast approaching 7,000 directory profiles as well
  • About 70% of our new members are creating dating profiles

In the past few days, we’ve been getting more than 30 new signups each day. Many of these new members are finding us through a search engine query for the phrase “atlasphere” — which means they knew about our site beforehand.
This is unusual, and suggests there is a huge word-of-mouth factor kicking in, or we were mentioned in a mainstream media outlet, or…?
If you have any idea what’s going on, we’d love to know!

2005 Liberty Film Festival in West Hollywood

From the press release:
HOLLYWOOD, Calif., June 15 /PRNewswire/ — The 2005 Liberty Film Festival, Hollywood’s premier event for conservative and libertarian film, will be held this October 21-23, 2005 at the Pacific Design Center in West Hollywood. The Liberty Film Festival showcases films that celebrate the traditional American values of free speech, patriotism, and religious freedom.
The festival is currently accepting feature and short film submissions (both documentary and narrative). The festival will hold three juried competitions for Best Feature Film, Best Short Film, and Best Screenplay (unproduced). Best Feature Film and Best Short Film winners will each be awarded the Libertas Prize. The Screenplay Competition will have a $1000 prize. The deadline for all entries is August 21, 2005.
The Liberty Film Festival continues its innovative programming this year with a Producers Series, which includes panels on Film Production, TV Production, Screenwriting, and Film Finance & Distribution. The Festival will also feature a debate on the 1950’s blacklist. Festival speakers will include Oscar and Emmy-nominated producers, directors, writers and actors. The Festival will also feature a Tribute to John Wayne, and a 100th Birthday Tribute to Ayn Rand.
Visit the Liberty Film Festival web site for more information.

Romantic Realism in Batman Begins?

Judging by the trailers (see trailer 1, trailer 4, and the tv spot), it appears that the new Batman movie may have significant elements of romantic realism (the portrayal of realistic, heroic, life-promoting values, like in Ayn Rand’s novels). Is it possible that a Batman movie might finally be … a good movie? Judge for yourself. Movie opens this Friday, June 17th (some locations say June 15th).

'The Chorus' – An Antidote Against Cynicism

The Chorus is a new French film recently released on DVD with English subtitles. It tells the inspiring story of an unsuccessful composer, Clé­¥nt Mathieu, who takes a job as a supervisor in a reform school for delinquent minors. When Mathieu realizes that the boys can sing derisive ditties, he organizes a chorus and uses his music to rehabilitate the boys’ troubled souls.
Mathieu’s nemesis is the headmaster Rachin, a sadistic disciplinarian who cynically dismisses the evident impact of Mathieu’s chorus on the boys, but uses it to push for his own promotion. Rachin does not hesitate to admit a sociopathic teenager to his school in order to oblige a well-connected psychiatrist interested in conducting a “test case.”
The contrast between the attitudes of Mathieu and Rachin toward the boys extends into their overall attitudes toward life. While Rachin grumbles that he never wanted to end up heading a reform school, Mathieu finds a new life for himself as the head of the chorus.
Sometime, a negative review can capture the essence of a movie with surprising accuracy. A review on Filmcritic.com describes The Chorus as: “An embarrassingly mushy story of an ordinary guy’s yeoman efforts to change the world.” Indeed, it is, and he does change the lives of the boys, one of whom goes on to become a world-renowned conductor.
The Chorus was nominated for the categories of Foreign Language Film and Music at this year’s Academy Award.

Retail Clothing Entrepreneur Steve Shore

From a recent article in Newsday about business partners Steve Shore and Barry Prevor:

Summer 1979: Two teenage boys stand on top of a van at the Roosevelt Raceway flea market, shouting into a megaphone. They exhort customers to buy the $1 T-shirts spread out on a tarp at the foot of the van. A crowd gathers, snapping up the bargain T’s.
June 2005: Forty-somethings Steve Shore and Barry Prevor stand in the middle of their Broadway Mall store, Steve & Barry’s University Sportswear. Instead of megaphones, they advertise with graphic blue and yellow signs. Instead of tarps, the selling floor is laid with wood. Their T-shirts are now $8.
In the past 26 years, these childhood friends have quietly built a national mini-empire of stores that deliver basic clothing at what they call “ridiculous” prices. Nothing in the chain’s 70 stores costs more than $10 – from women’s boot-cut jeans to kids’ shorts to heavyweight hoodie sweatshirts emblazoned with a Top 10 college name.
The Port Washington-based company is relatively unknown here in its own backyard. That’s largely a function of strategy: Prevor and Shore keep costs down by finding very inexpensive real estate, often in second- and third-tier malls around the country. Their growth has been concentrated in Midwestern and Southern states.
But now Steve & Barry’s sits on the cusp of explosive growth, with a just-signed lease for its first Manhattan location and plans to double the number of stores over the next year. And they’re not shy about saying they’re creating a revolution in retail, thanks to a formula of rock-bottom prices and smart-looking shops.

The article continues:

Early on, they established a price ceiling of $10 and a reputation as “the good guys,” especially for budget-conscious consumers. For Shore, in particular, this is a deeply felt mission.
He leans forward, eyes shining with intensity as he discusses the company’s pricing policy. “Our slogan can’t be ‘We won’t screw you,’ because that just can’t be a slogan. But they [customers] know they can come to us and not be taken advantage of.”
Still, he and Prevor bristle at the notion that their prices spring from some sense of charity or altruism.
“I’m an Ayn Rand fan, and I don’t like the word ‘altruistic,'” Prevor said. “It’s more that we understand that our self-interest is tied in with our customers’ self-interest.”
Prevor and Shore clam up when the subject turns specifically to their self-interest. After a whispered conference, they offer a tidbit: Sales are in the nine figures, somewhere between $100 million and $1 billion.
But they won’t reveal their annual profits or profit margins. (As a private company, they’re not required to disclose that information.) They simply say they’re doing very well, thanks for asking.

See the full article for more information.

Ayn Rand Analyzed at Theory of Constraints Conf

From Atlasphere member Michael Round:
The Theory of Constraints for Education will have its 8th International Conference in Seattle, Washington, USA, August 11 – August 14.
The Theory of Constraints, made popular in industry by way of the novel The Goal, is an improvement philosophy based on simple yet powerful thinking processes Socratically derived in a non-contradictory manner.
The Theory of Constraints for Education applies these thinking processes to develop clarity and conceptual understanding in the student.
2004 TOCFE Virtual Conference presentations included a logical analysis of Francisco’s “Moral Meaning of Money” speech, in addition to an analysis of Anthem and Jonathan Livingston Seagull.
Michael Round
USA Director
Theory of Constraints for Education

Ayn Rand Fan Rep. Christopher Cox to head SEC

According to several news stories (Reuters, Fox News, CNN), President Bush has named U.S. Rep. Christopher Cox as the White House’s choice to head the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The choice will need approval of the U.S. Senate.
Rep. Cox wrote a favorable review of The Letters of Ayn Rand for the New York Times Book Review and is widely recognized as a strong advocate of free markets, limited government, and lower taxes. A U.S. House Republican from California since 1998, Rep. Cox has a JD/MBA from Harvard.