Adobe is Named No. 1 Software Company

Feb 19, Adobe was named No. 1 in the computer software category on FORTUNE’s list of the World’s Most Admired Companies 2016. This list measures companies’ reputations and is based on a variety of factors, including innovation, social responsibility, product quality, financial soundness and people management.

Microsoft and Salesforce took the No. 2 and 3 spots respectively in the computer software category, and Intuit and Autodesk rounded out the top five. The list will appear in the magazines’ March edition and hit newsstands on Monday, February 22.

The World’s Most Admired Companies is determined by a Hay Group survey of nearly 4,000 top executives and directors from eligible companies. To see the full list of most admired companies, check out the FORTUNE website. To see the industry rankings, use the tools in the Filter box, select “Computer Software”, and click on the Industry Rank tab.

Who Buys Bulletproof Sofas? You Might Be Surprised

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In 2000, John Adrain ran into a problem common among San Francisco residents: He had too much stuff and too little space. But Adrain’s stuff wasn’t the kind you shove in storage-an antique firearms collector since he was nine years old, he wanted to keep his extensive (and expensive) gun collection out of the wrong hands.

Adrian built a gun safe into his bed, creating the first prototype of what is sold today as the BedBunker by his company, Heracles Research Corporation. The beds not only hide firearms but also protect you from them: They are bullet-resistant.

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US Senate defeats resolution to block sale of F-16 jets to Pakistan

Washington: Pakistan is poised to get eight F-16 fighter jets from the US after the Senate rejected a resolution to block the $700 million proposed sale despite objection by some top lawmakers who called Islamabad an “unreliable” ally and questioned its commitment in fighting terrorism.

The joint resolution, which was introduced in the Senate by Senator Rand Paul, a former Republican presidential candidate, asking the lawmakers to block the sale of F-16 jets to Pakistan was defeated by 71 to 24 votes.

To the surprise of many, such a resolution got the support of 24 Senators which is quite significant given that similar motions of disapprovals in the past normally gets support of a few or a handful of lawmakers. India has opposed the sale of eight F-16 fighter jets worth approximately $700 million to Pakistan, saying it disagrees with Washington’s rationale that such arms transfers would help combat terrorism. Before his resolution was defeated by the Senate, Paul said the US does not have the money to “give planes free” to Pakistan while the country is crumbling under a foreign debt of $19 trillion.

“We do not have the money to give to Pakistan,” said Paul starting the debate on the sale of F-16 to Pakistan. “Should we give planes to a country who prison our heroes,” Paul said, referring to the imprisonment of Pakistani-American doctor, Shakeel Afridi, who has been jailed on charges of helping the CIA find Osama bin Laden. Senator Chris Murphy, Ranking Member of Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on Near East, South Asia, Central Asia and Counter-terrorism, alleged that Pakistan has been an “unreliable partner” over the course of the last ten years in the fight against extremism.

“But what I worry more is that these F-16s will provide cover, will provide substitute for truly meaningful action inside Pakistan to take on the roots of extremism. It is frankly too late in many respects to beat these extremist groups if they are so big, so powerful, so deadly that you have to bomb them from the air,” he said.

The debate and voting was held a day after Pentagon commanders appealed to the lawmakers against restricting or conditioning US aid to Pakistan. The voting came as Paul invoked the Arms Export Control Act of 1976 in a bid to shoot down the sale with a resolution of disapproval.

“The relationship between US and Pakistan has been a troubled one. Though the government of Pakistan is considered America’s ally in the fight on terrorism, Pakistan’s behaviour would suggest otherwise. While we give them billions of dollars in aid, we are simultaneously aware of their intelligence and military apparatus assisting the Afghan Taliban,” Paul said.

“In addition to Pakistan’s duplicitous nature, it also has a deplorable human rights record. Pakistan often isolates and unjustly jails religious minorities and Christians like Asia Bibi,” he said. “We have no money in the treasury. We are all out of money. This influences nothing other than to tell the Pakistanis they can continue doing what they want. I urge my colleagues to vote against subsidised sales of fighter jets to Pakistan, and I reserve the remainder of my time,” Paul said for which he received support of 24 Senators.