Posts Tagged ‘life’
Steve Jobs,” the authorized biography of Apple’s co-founder and former chief executive written by Walter Isaacson, was the bestselling book on Amazon.com this year, according to the online retailer’s website.
That’s an impressive accomplishment considering the book was published in late October, and had less than two months to rise to the top. Jobs died Oct. 5.
Intriguingly though, while the Steve Jobs biography was one of the bestselling e-books for the Kindle, it was not THE bestselling book. That honor went to “The Hunger Games,” a young adult book originally published in 2009 that is set to become a major Hollywood movie release in March 2012.
The Steve Jobs biography was the No. 3 bestselling book for the Kindle. It was also beat out by John Grisham’s “The Litigators,” which was also published in October.
One more interesting note from the bestseller list: The parody not-for-kids book “Go the F– to Sleep” was the No. 10 bestselling print book on Amazon for the year. This is interesting because proofs of the book went viral on the Web before it was published. It turned out that rather than spoiling the surprise, the proofs fueled sales in a very big way.
Singapore rose two notches to sixth spot as the most expensive city in Asia after four Japanese cities and Seoul, owing to the strong Singapore dollar and a 5.7 per cent rise in the average price of goods and services.
Also, for the first time in at least 10 years, Singapore is deemed more expensive than Hong Kong, which turned up at ninth spot in terms of most costly locations in Asia, according to the latest Cost of Living Survey conducted by ECA International.
‘When we look at the overall cost of ECA’s basket of goods and services in Singapore a year ago, these items were 1.7 per cent less expensive in Singapore than when purchased in Hong Kong,’ says Mr Lee Quane, Regional Director, ECA International, Asia. ‘Now those same items are 8.5 per cent more expensive in Singapore than Hong Kong.’
Globally, Singapore has catapulted to 31st spot from 42nd a year ago while Japan, owing to the strong yen, retains its grip on the top spot as world’s most costly location. Hong Kong has dropped 26 places to 58th position in the global ranking – the largest fall of any city in Asia – despite the price of goods there having increased.
Vienna’s excellent infrastructure, safe streets and good public health service make it the nicest place to live in the world, consulting group Mercer said in a global survey which put Baghdad firmly in last place.
German and Swiss cities also performed especially well in the quality of living rankings, with Zurich, Munich, Duesseldorf, Frankfurt, Geneva and Bern in the top 10.
The Austrian capital, with its ornate buildings, public parks and extensive bicycle network recently reduced the cost of its annual public transport ticket to 1 euro a day.
Serious crime is rare and the city of around 1.7 million inhabitants regularly tops global quality of life surveys.
But Mercer warned that top-ranking European cities could not take their position for granted in the survey, which assessed more than 200 cities.
“They are not immune to any decrease of living standards should this (economic) turmoil persist,” Mercer’s senior researcher Slagin Parakatil said on the company’s website.
Rank | City | Country |
1 | Vienna | Austria |
2 | Zurich | Switzerland |
3 | Auckland | New Zealand |
4 | Munich | Germany |
5 | Düsseldorf | Germany |
6 | Vancouver | Canada |
7 | Frankfurt | Germany |
8 | Geneva | Switzerland |
9 | Bern | Switzerland |
9 | Copenhagen | Denmark |
11 | Sydney | Australia |
12 | Amsterdam | Netherlands |
13 | Wellington | New Zealand |
14 | Ottawa | Canada |
15 | Toronto | Canada |
16 | Hamburg | Germany |
17 | Berlin | Germany |
18 | Melbourne | Australia |
19 | Luxembourg | Luxembourg |
20 | Stockholm | Sweden |
21 | Perth | Australia |
22 | Brussels | Belgium |
22 | Montreal | Canada |
24 | Nurnberg | Germany |
25 | Singapore | Singapore |
26 | Canberra | Australia |
26 | Dublin | Ireland |
28 | Stuttgart | Germany |
29 | Honolulu, HI | United States |
30 | Adelaide | Australia |
30 | Paris | France |
30 | San Francisco, CA | United States |
33 | Calgary | Canada |
33 | Oslo | Norway |
35 | Helsinki | Finland |
36 | Boston, MA | United States |
37 | Brisbane | Australia |
38 | London | United Kingdom |
39 | Lyon | France |
40 | Barcelona | Spain |
41 | Lisbon | Portugal |
42 | Milan | Italy |
43 | Chicago, IL | United States |
43 | Madrid | Spain |
43 | Washington, DC | United States |
46 | Tokyo | Japan |
47 | New York City, NY | United States |
48 | Seattle, WA | United States |
49 | Kobe | Japan |
49 | Pittsburgh, PA | United States |
49 | Yokohama | Japan |
Singapore has come out tops in Mercer’s Quality of Living and Safety surveys. The city ranked 25th in the Quality of Life survey and eight in the safety one.
Singapore beat countries like Tokyo (46), Hong Kong (70) and Kuala Lumpur (76) in terms of quality of life to be the highest ranking Asian country on the list.
Singapore rose in the rankings after coming in 28th last year.
This year, the survey separately identifies those cities with the highest personal safety ranking based on internal stability, crime levels, law enforcement effectiveness and the host country’s international relations.
Luxembourg tops this personal safety ranking, followed by Bern, Helsinki and Zurich – all ranked at number two.
Singapore, ranking eight, is the only Asian country in the top 30.