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...clad upper portion with an irregular and eye-catching window pattern, which is built on top of and within an existing six-story masonry warehouse. It was the SHoP architects who discovered the old warehouse. Then they went to Jeffrey M. Brown Associates, a Philadelphia-based developer and former client, to broach the idea of partnering with him to purchase and transform the property. That architects-as-developers business model is one they have since used to generate several other projects...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ShoPping Around | 3/19/2008 | See Source »

DUBAI Vertu's Constellation ($4,650) includes a concierge, which a local client used to plan a wedding...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The A List | 3/17/2008 | See Source »

...order to fully understand the disastrous implications of this decision, one must consider the fact that Microsoft does not actually sell a copy of Windows to either companies or customers; instead, it merely licenses the rights to its software on a per-client basis. With its planned termination of new license sales, Microsoft is essentially forcing its customers into upgrading either their hardware or software. Given Vista’s particularly steep hardware requirements—according to The New York Times, only about six percent of business computers will be able to run it—this transition should...

Author: By Eugene Kim | Title: Don’t Pull the Plug | 3/16/2008 | See Source »

...charge of "quality assurance" records for CCA prisons across the U.S. He says that in 2005, after CCA found itself embarrassed on several occasions by the public release of internal records to government agencies, Puryear mandated that detailed, raw reports on prison shortcomings carry a blanket assertion of "attorney-client privilege," thus forbidding their release without his written consent. From then on, Jones says, the audits delivered to agencies were filled with increasingly vague performance measures. "If the wrong party found out that a facility's operations scored low in an audit, then CCA could be subject to litigation, fines...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Scrutiny for a Bush Judicial Nominee | 3/13/2008 | See Source »

Companies often try to show their best face to customers, and safeguard internal records with "attorney-client privilege." But according to Stephen Gillers, a leading expert on legal ethics at New York University, CCA's use of that privilege seems like "a wholesale, possibly overreaching claim," similiar to the blanket assertions of major tobacco companies that tried to keep damaging internal documents from public view. Those assertions of privilege have been rejected by federal judges as an attempt to improperly conceal their internal data on the dangers of smoking from customers, the courts and legal adversaries. CCA could also...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Scrutiny for a Bush Judicial Nominee | 3/13/2008 | See Source »

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