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In Europe, farmland used to be owned by the commons during the early medieval period. Because no-one was responsible for it, such commonly owned farmland was often low in fertility and yield.
Later on, the commons were divided up and ownership handed out to peasants by the feudal lords, and wonder of wonders - when you own something, you take better care of it.
Now deciding WHO owns a limited resource - that becomes a REAL problem.
Now, if you see similar technology in an AA-form battery, then we can get excited.
In Australia, the Commonwealth Bank is underwritten/guaranteed by the Government, thus is seen as more stable than credit unions. Additionally, St George, the biggest credit union in Australia, took a nose-dive several years ago.
Bendigo Bank became popular a few years back, but mainly in communities that had branches of major banks shut down. The Commonweath Bank and other banks were seen to be less interested in the average customer, and this drove customers to the credit unions and community banks.
However, since then, the large Australian banks have realised that alienating the average customer was a really bad idea, and have been doing their best to change their business practices.
Overall, the current situation in Australia, is that community banks and credit unions have reached a plateau, and I am personally concerned that with the current economic climate, you will start to see more credit unions collapse like St George. I predict that the Commonwealth Bank will see a return of customers, but not the National Australia Bank - dodgy bastards :D.
Political career is shot - no-one's gonna nominate him for anything.
Volunteer work - maybe, but I doubt he'd get much publicity for it.
Executive - you must be joking, right? Would you let him handle your business?
An author - this one is a pretty strong potential, though whatever he writes would most likely be ghost-written for him.
A speaker - hah. If someone writes the speeches for him. They may trot him out now and again at semi-political rallies, but I doubt anyone would find him interesting enough to listen to full time.
A professor? - of SFA maybe.
Do nothing - 0%, see below.
Other (most likely) - sit at the family ranch, life off the family wealth, give hand-jobs to big oil at social functions, try to keep his daughters out of the porn industry.
We won't see an economic recovery in 2009.
However, most people are quite happy to stick with XP. If there is any haemorrhaging of users to Linux/Mac, it's going to be sllloooooooowwwwwwww.
They don't have the philosophical or business focus to generate new approaches like Google. The public perception of Yahoo is a company that had a good idea then got lazy. In this case, I think the public perception is probably pretty accurate.