Archive for the ‘Free Software’ Category

Show Me the Money, Guidewire Software

Although business headlines still tout earnings numbers, many investors have moved past net earnings as a measure of a company's economic output. That's because earnings are very often less trustworthy than cash flow, since earnings are more open to manipulation based on dubious judgment calls.

Earnings' unreliability is one of the reasons Foolish investors often flip straight past the income statement to check the cash flow statement. In general, by taking a close look at the cash moving in and out of the business, you can better understand whether the last batch of earnings brought money into the company, or merely disguised a cash gusher with a pretty headline.

Calling all cash flows When you are trying to buy the market's best stocks, it's worth checking up on your companies' free cash flow once a quarter or so, to see whether it bears any relationship to the net income in the headlines. That's what we do with this series. Today, we're checking in on Guidewire Software (NYSE: GWRE) , whose recent revenue and earnings are plotted below.

Source: S&P Capital IQ. Data is current as of last fully reported fiscal quarter. Dollar values in millions. FCF = free cash flow. FY = fiscal year. TTM = trailing 12 months.

Over the past 12 months, Guidewire Software generated $22.0 million cash while it booked net income of $12.6 million. That means it turned 8.5% of its revenue into FCF. That sounds OK.

All cash is not equal Unfortunately, the cash flow statement isn't immune from nonsense, either. That's why it pays to take a close look at the components of cash flow from operations, to make sure that the cash flows are of high quality. What does that mean? To me, it means they need to be real and replicable in the upcoming quarters, rather than being offset by continual cash outflows that don't appear on the income statement (such as major capital expenditures).

For instance, cash flow based on cash net income and adjustments for non-cash income-statement expenses (like depreciation) is generally favorable. An increase in cash flow based on stiffing your suppliers (by increasing accounts payable for the short term) or shortchanging Uncle Sam on taxes will come back to bite investors later. The same goes for decreasing accounts receivable; this is good to see, but it's ordinary in recessionary times, and you can only increase collections so much. Finally, adding stock-based compensation expense back to cash flows is questionable when a company hands out a lot of equity to employees and uses cash in later periods to buy back those shares.

So how does the cash flow at Guidewire Software look? Take a peek at the chart below, which flags questionable cash flow sources with a red bar.

Source: S&P Capital IQ. Data is current as of last fully reported fiscal quarter. Dollar values in millions. TTM = trailing 12 months.

When I say "questionable cash flow sources," I mean items such as changes in taxes payable, tax benefits from stock options, and asset sales, among others. That's not to say that companies booking these as sources of cash flow are weak, or are engaging in any sort of wrongdoing, or that everything that comes up questionable in my graph is automatically bad news. But whenever a company is getting more than, say, 10% of its cash from operations from these dubious sources, investors ought to make sure to refer to the filings and dig in.

See original here:
Show Me the Money, Guidewire Software

Free tax help is available as filing deadline nears

Free tax help is available in the Kansas City area as the April 15 filing deadline approaches.

The Internal Revenue Services Free File online service provides access to branded software to prepare and electronically file taxes.

Face-to-face help preparing taxes similarly is available at several locations through the IRS Volunteer Income Tax Assistance program.

VITA is available in the Kansas City area through the KC Cash Coalition. It is available free to households that earned $51,000 or less.

Among many area VITA locations:

Metropolitan Missionary Baptist Church at 2310 E. Linwood Blvd. in Kansas City. It will provide access to trained tax preparers 6-8:30 p.m. Wednesday and 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Saturday.

TRCB-Living the Word Ministries at 6158 Raytown Trafficway in Kansas City will provide help 5:30-7:30 p.m. Thursday and 10:30 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday.

New Legend at 650 E. Fifth St. will provide help 9-11 a.m. and 1-7 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday. Call 816-659-6236 for an appointment. Some volunteers at the site speak Vietnamese.

Tax services are available 9 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays at the Full Employment Council at 4720 Paseo in Kansas City.

Other area VITA sites and additional information are available from the IRS online or by calling 800-906-9887, and from KC Cash Coalition online or by calling the United Way at 816-474-5112.

See original here:
Free tax help is available as filing deadline nears

Jawbone offers 2.0 software update for Big Jambox

Available as a free download via Jawbone's MyTalk, the update adds new features and performance improvements, including better battery life.

A free software update is now available for the Big Jambox (click image to enlarge).

In the past, Jawbone has provided firmware updates for its Jambox mini portable Bluetooth speaker to improve performance and add new features. Now its larger wireless speaker, the Big Jambox, gets its own 2.0 software update today.

The 2.0 update is a free download that's available on Jawbone's MyTalk platform (you have to register and install software on your computer to receive the update). According to Jawbone, here's an overview of the new features:

In recent weeks, Jawbone has been discounting both its original Jambox and Big Jambox, dropping the price by $50 (the Big Jambox lists for $299.99).

CNET gave a four-star rating to the Big Jambox, which competes with Bose's highly rated SoundLink Bluetooth Mobile Speaker II. While the Jambox offers significantly better battery life than the Bose speaker, the SoundLink Bluetooth Mobile Speaker II has done much better in the marketplace, according to sources who are familiar with the mobile speaker market.

Go here to see the original:
Jawbone offers 2.0 software update for Big Jambox

Where The Free Software Movement Went Wrong (And How To Fix It)

The biggest change Ive seen in the tech industry in the past decade isnt social media, cloud computing, big data, consumerization or even mobile. Its the mainstream acceptance of open source. Even 10 years ago open source was controversial. Back then open vs. proprietary arguments would still erupt at meetings and parties. Back then vendors spread FUD about open source. Today, every vendor wants to call themselves open.

Why is that? Writer Evgeny Morozov traces it back to Tim OReilly and his media/conference empire in a long piece for The Baffler published this week.

According to Morozov, OReilly hijacked Richard Stallmans free software movement and turned it into the more corporate-friendly open source movement. From there, OReilly would go on to redefine web freedom as freedom for companies like Google to do whatever they want online, and to redefine open government not as a movement for transparency and accountability but as the need to give free data sets to for-profit companies.

The piece raises important questions about the Californian Ideology and how it influences policy and about the consequences of sacrificing principles in the name of pragmatism. But I think Morozov misses some crucial reasons that open source supplanted Free Software.

Morozov sort of glosses over the differences between open source and Free Software. Free Software, as the saying goes, is free as in speech, not as in beer. The primary freedoms, as Morozov notes, are: users should be able to run the program for any purpose, to study how it works, to redistribute copies of it, and to release their improved version (if there was one) to the public.

But most open source software as defined by the Open Source Initiative is also free software, as defined by the Free Software Foundation. So whats the problem? The difference between the two movements is that Free Software is a social movement, and open source is a methodology. In an essay titled Why Open Source misses the point of Free Software, Stallman complains that the freedoms promoted by the Free Software Movement are not discussed by open-source advocates, and that because of that, the public in general remains deeply confused about what open source even means.

Morozov writes that the difference between the two is that free software emphasizes users and that open source emphasizes developers. But I would submit that free software is also primarily interested in developers as well, in that the freedoms it emphasizes are ones that matter to developers, but very little to the rest of us. Thats where the movement went wrong.

Sure there are a few non-developers who care about this stuff activists and other security-conscious people have reason to want to study the software they use, or to have it reviewed by trusted networks. But try telling graphic designers that they should use GIMP instead of Photoshop because they can study the code, modify it and release their own version. Or try telling a data analyst why they should use Libre Office instead of Excel, or a musician why they should use Ardour instead of Logic. See how far you get.

All this raises the question: did open source eclipse Free Software because OReilly is such a gifted marketer, or because people just dont care that much about the freedoms that Stallman cares about? Is it any wonder that developers are the primary users of free software?

To hear the old timers tell it, it was Apache that won the mainstream over to open source by 1) providing a really good server (that happened to be free) and 2) having a license that made it very clear that a company wouldnt be sued for using it for commercial purposes, even if they built some custom software on top of it.

Original post:
Where The Free Software Movement Went Wrong (And How To Fix It)

The Fierce Tiger .. Created Doee – Video


The Fierce Tiger .. Created Doee
via YouTube Capture.

By: Created Doee

Continue reading here:
The Fierce Tiger .. Created Doee - Video