Once upon a time, the U.S. had excellent streetcar and bus service. In many cities one rarely had to wait more than 10 minutes for a streetcar or bus. And then more people got cars. The car was more convenient and flexible. Fewer people took public transit. As few people took public transit, the service was cut back. As service was cut back, fewer people took public transit. As...
Once upon a time, the U.S. had many excellent regional and local newspapers. And then came television and the internet. The one encapsulated the news into soundbites for the lazy of mind and the other provided a treasure trove for the inquisitive of mind. Either way, fewer people subscribed to newspapers. As fewer people subscribed the newspapers cut back on services. As the newspapers cut back on services, fewer people subscribed. As...
Thursday, June 07, 2007
Friday, June 01, 2007
What new Northwest Airlines?
"The New Northwest" is the headline in the business section of the Star Tribune, May 31, 2007. Is a new Northwest Airlines better? I doubt it.
My wife made a reservation for Toronto-Duluth because she would be able to stay on the same plane through Minneapolis-St. Paul. The previous time she made the trip her luggage didn't make the MSP-Duluth leg of the trip and had to be delivered the next day. So, thought she, having the same plane should solve that problem.
When she checked in at Toronto, she was told that she would have to change planes at MSP. This also meant she would have to walk to another concourse when she got there.
When she boarded the plane, the captain announced the plane would be flying through to Duluth. The crew hadn't even been told of the flight change!
When I checked for her arrival time prior to picking her up, the plane had left the gate about 25 minutes late but hadn't taken off. Just before I left the house I left the house 20 minutes later, the web site said the plane took off eight minutes after it left the gate.
When she got to Duluth I met her at baggage claim. We waited and watched for her bag to come down the chute. The baggage handlers stopped the chute and her bag wasn't there.
We are now at one hour after the original arrival time. We went to the checkin counter staffed by one person and waited our turn. The bag would probably arrive on the next flight which should arrive any minute. It was on that flight. We arrived home one hour and ten minutes after we should have.
My wife's advice for all fliers: always take a book.
My wife made a reservation for Toronto-Duluth because she would be able to stay on the same plane through Minneapolis-St. Paul. The previous time she made the trip her luggage didn't make the MSP-Duluth leg of the trip and had to be delivered the next day. So, thought she, having the same plane should solve that problem.
When she checked in at Toronto, she was told that she would have to change planes at MSP. This also meant she would have to walk to another concourse when she got there.
When she boarded the plane, the captain announced the plane would be flying through to Duluth. The crew hadn't even been told of the flight change!
When I checked for her arrival time prior to picking her up, the plane had left the gate about 25 minutes late but hadn't taken off. Just before I left the house I left the house 20 minutes later, the web site said the plane took off eight minutes after it left the gate.
When she got to Duluth I met her at baggage claim. We waited and watched for her bag to come down the chute. The baggage handlers stopped the chute and her bag wasn't there.
We are now at one hour after the original arrival time. We went to the checkin counter staffed by one person and waited our turn. The bag would probably arrive on the next flight which should arrive any minute. It was on that flight. We arrived home one hour and ten minutes after we should have.
My wife's advice for all fliers: always take a book.
Thursday, May 24, 2007
Why wait for the federal government on health care?
Many people think the only solution to the "health care crisis" is a single-payer, federal system. When we think of a single solution, we often run into political roadblocks put up by others who disagree with that solution, whatever the reason.
One way around is that more and more states are coming up with their own solutions, most of them based on mandated health insurance schemes.
Let's go back to the roots of modern health care. What are the names of many hospitals? Lutheran, Methodist, Brigham and Young, St. Mary's, Our Town Community, and so on. These were local hospitals founded to provide care for people in a region, mostly the poor. The rich had care at home, with doctors sometimes on standby. As our wealth increased, more and more of us were expected to pay a larger share of our health care. By previous standards, almost all of us are wealthy. Do you think everyone had a telephone and a car and ate out at fast food restaurants one hundred years ago?
Medical technology improved dramatically over the decades. Who would have thought to give anybody with heart problems an EKG a hundred years ago? Or open heart surgery, surgery that has saved thousands of lives? Improved technology costs money.
The cost of medical care has spiraled way beyond giving the doctor a chicken for his efforts.
Maybe what we need is more structured tier service. Let's make first-line care more readily available locally. We don't need a facility with MRI and so on to treat broken bones or minor illnesses. And we don't need to rush off to Mayo because we have an easily-treated tumor.
We really need better triage care - those who can do all right with a minimum of care, those who need a high-level care, and those who are beyond care. Our first level of triage is the community clinic or hospital. We can probably make the immediate decisions at far less cost than we could at regional mega-care facilities.
We can provide this first line of medical care with local resources, be it local government, church-based, or foundation-based. These can be put in place in a small fraction of time and cost that all the squabbling over a national health care system has taken.
One model is the Green House Project, a series of senior residences for no more than 10 residents, that was started by Bill Thomas in Tulepo, Mississippi. It is more resident-centered than staff-centered. Dr. Thomas is building Green Houses in every state with the help of the Robert Wood Foundation. See "Rethinking Old Age", Atul Gawande, New York Times, May 24, 2007.
In summary, we need a lot of small, local ideas to solve our "health crisis" rather than some super-duper, bureaucratic, one-size-fits-all solution.
One way around is that more and more states are coming up with their own solutions, most of them based on mandated health insurance schemes.
Let's go back to the roots of modern health care. What are the names of many hospitals? Lutheran, Methodist, Brigham and Young, St. Mary's, Our Town Community, and so on. These were local hospitals founded to provide care for people in a region, mostly the poor. The rich had care at home, with doctors sometimes on standby. As our wealth increased, more and more of us were expected to pay a larger share of our health care. By previous standards, almost all of us are wealthy. Do you think everyone had a telephone and a car and ate out at fast food restaurants one hundred years ago?
Medical technology improved dramatically over the decades. Who would have thought to give anybody with heart problems an EKG a hundred years ago? Or open heart surgery, surgery that has saved thousands of lives? Improved technology costs money.
The cost of medical care has spiraled way beyond giving the doctor a chicken for his efforts.
Maybe what we need is more structured tier service. Let's make first-line care more readily available locally. We don't need a facility with MRI and so on to treat broken bones or minor illnesses. And we don't need to rush off to Mayo because we have an easily-treated tumor.
We really need better triage care - those who can do all right with a minimum of care, those who need a high-level care, and those who are beyond care. Our first level of triage is the community clinic or hospital. We can probably make the immediate decisions at far less cost than we could at regional mega-care facilities.
We can provide this first line of medical care with local resources, be it local government, church-based, or foundation-based. These can be put in place in a small fraction of time and cost that all the squabbling over a national health care system has taken.
One model is the Green House Project, a series of senior residences for no more than 10 residents, that was started by Bill Thomas in Tulepo, Mississippi. It is more resident-centered than staff-centered. Dr. Thomas is building Green Houses in every state with the help of the Robert Wood Foundation. See "Rethinking Old Age", Atul Gawande, New York Times, May 24, 2007.
In summary, we need a lot of small, local ideas to solve our "health crisis" rather than some super-duper, bureaucratic, one-size-fits-all solution.
Wednesday, May 02, 2007
An apology that won't be made
Thomas Friedman wrote an excellent article today, May 2, 2007, in the New York Times about what President Bush should say to the regional conference in Egypt about stabilizing Iraq.
Not only does he suggest that Bush apologize for starting and mismanaging the war, but that Bush should call strongly on the Arab and Muslim nations to stand-up to the nihilist terrorists who bomb civilians indiscriminately. Friedman points out that they are already trying to destabilize Muslim governments with killings.
My thoughts are that the "war on terror" cannot be waged militarily but must be waged with police and propaganda. As long as some people see Al Qaeda and its ilk as glamorous for attacking the U.S., there is no hope of eliminating terrorism. The U.S. and Muslim leaders must more actively portray these nihilists as having no plan but to destroy those who try to build a civil society.
Not only does he suggest that Bush apologize for starting and mismanaging the war, but that Bush should call strongly on the Arab and Muslim nations to stand-up to the nihilist terrorists who bomb civilians indiscriminately. Friedman points out that they are already trying to destabilize Muslim governments with killings.
My thoughts are that the "war on terror" cannot be waged militarily but must be waged with police and propaganda. As long as some people see Al Qaeda and its ilk as glamorous for attacking the U.S., there is no hope of eliminating terrorism. The U.S. and Muslim leaders must more actively portray these nihilists as having no plan but to destroy those who try to build a civil society.
Labels:
George W. Bush,
Islamists,
nihilists,
terrorism
Thursday, April 26, 2007
Misdirected energy development
I keep wondering about energy being provided by large companies vs. decentralized energy. I found a couple of interesting statements about this in "A fight over the future of solar", a Perspective article published in CNET News.
Herman Scheer argues that many undeveloped areas of the world will not be able to afford large distribution networks to provide power from centralized power stations. He also mentions how power distribution networks are a terrorist target. I think it was in the 80's some disgruntled people were toppling towers. Distribution networks are also vulnerable to weather and human error.
I think the oil companies and the power companies have to recast themselves more as energy companies, providing not energy but energy solutions. This may be providing self-contained systems for a factory or a residence, especially a rural residence, or providing linked systems for small areas. Whether we bring coal hundreds of miles or string hundreds of miles of power lines, we lose energy doing so.
I would hope that energy companies first look to their own energy needs and how they could become less dependent on other sources.
Herman Scheer argues that many undeveloped areas of the world will not be able to afford large distribution networks to provide power from centralized power stations. He also mentions how power distribution networks are a terrorist target. I think it was in the 80's some disgruntled people were toppling towers. Distribution networks are also vulnerable to weather and human error.
I think the oil companies and the power companies have to recast themselves more as energy companies, providing not energy but energy solutions. This may be providing self-contained systems for a factory or a residence, especially a rural residence, or providing linked systems for small areas. Whether we bring coal hundreds of miles or string hundreds of miles of power lines, we lose energy doing so.
I would hope that energy companies first look to their own energy needs and how they could become less dependent on other sources.
Labels:
energy,
national defense,
power,
solar power
Mallard Fillmore
I mentioned the "Mallard Fillmore" comic strip in my latest column, "General Ization battles truth" for the Reader Weekly. I posted it today to my website; and when I do so, I add as many links as possible, one of them being to the Mallard Fillmore strip. When I find a URL I often visit the site.
I found out that the creator, Bruce Tinsley, was fired by the paper where he created the strip. The website said it was because he "wouldn't tone down its conservative bias." I agree that it has a conservative bias and is often off the wall. But firing him just plays into the hands of those who say the media is "liberal".
I think a better solution would have been to have a "truth squad" cartoon that debunked some of Tinsley's outrageous statements. For example, when Mallard bashes the post office for damaging packages, the "truth squad" could ask, and maybe answer, how many packages UPS or FedEx damage.
I found out that the creator, Bruce Tinsley, was fired by the paper where he created the strip. The website said it was because he "wouldn't tone down its conservative bias." I agree that it has a conservative bias and is often off the wall. But firing him just plays into the hands of those who say the media is "liberal".
I think a better solution would have been to have a "truth squad" cartoon that debunked some of Tinsley's outrageous statements. For example, when Mallard bashes the post office for damaging packages, the "truth squad" could ask, and maybe answer, how many packages UPS or FedEx damage.
Labels:
conservative,
liberal,
Mallard Fillmore
Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Are "Wars on..." successful?
First there was the "War on Crime" which had mixed results. Many Mafia leaders were caught and prosecuted, but crime is still a problem in many cities.
Then there was the "War on Drugs" which has filled many prisons. But drugs still come into the country and find buyers.
Now we have the "War on Terror". Some think it is succeeding: "We will keep the enemy on the run." (George W. Bush, October 19, 2006) Unfortunately, he thinks the enemy is in Iraq and Afghanistan, but it is global and growing larger. In fact, the war in Iraq probably helped al Quaeda grow. See "Al Qaeda Strikes Back", Bruce Reidel, Foreign Affairs, May/June 2007.
With the military already stretched thin, Bush is giving hints that he would like to attack Iran. Riedel writes that al Qaeda would like to see Bush attack Iran. Consider that the Iranian weapons found in Iraq may have been smuggled in by al Qaeda with the hope of proking the U.S. to attack Iran.
Would the U.S. leaving Iraq strengthen the terrorists' position or weaken it? If the U.S. leaves, Iran may come in to protect the Shia majority against the Sunni insurgents and the Sunni-based al Qaeda. A good general often lets somebody else do the fighting.
Then there was the "War on Drugs" which has filled many prisons. But drugs still come into the country and find buyers.
Now we have the "War on Terror". Some think it is succeeding: "We will keep the enemy on the run." (George W. Bush, October 19, 2006) Unfortunately, he thinks the enemy is in Iraq and Afghanistan, but it is global and growing larger. In fact, the war in Iraq probably helped al Quaeda grow. See "Al Qaeda Strikes Back", Bruce Reidel, Foreign Affairs, May/June 2007.
With the military already stretched thin, Bush is giving hints that he would like to attack Iran. Riedel writes that al Qaeda would like to see Bush attack Iran. Consider that the Iranian weapons found in Iraq may have been smuggled in by al Qaeda with the hope of proking the U.S. to attack Iran.
Would the U.S. leaving Iraq strengthen the terrorists' position or weaken it? If the U.S. leaves, Iran may come in to protect the Shia majority against the Sunni insurgents and the Sunni-based al Qaeda. A good general often lets somebody else do the fighting.
Labels:
George Bush,
Iran,
Iraq,
War on Terror
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
National Defense includes climate and energy
The Eisenhower Administration promoted the Interstate Highway System as necessary for national defense - to be able to move men and material quickly around the country.
Some lone voices are calling for energy and climate to be considered national defense issues. Energy is obvious because petrodollars are funding terrorists and authoritarian governments. It is ironic that the fuel needed to fight in Iraq and Afghanistan is being provided by the people who supply major funding to terrorist organizations.
Climate change as it affects food supplies will cause major instability in many countries, leading to worse governments and more stress among nations. See Terror in the Weather Forecast by Thomas Homer-Dixon, New York Times, April 24, 2007.
Some lone voices are calling for energy and climate to be considered national defense issues. Energy is obvious because petrodollars are funding terrorists and authoritarian governments. It is ironic that the fuel needed to fight in Iraq and Afghanistan is being provided by the people who supply major funding to terrorist organizations.
Climate change as it affects food supplies will cause major instability in many countries, leading to worse governments and more stress among nations. See Terror in the Weather Forecast by Thomas Homer-Dixon, New York Times, April 24, 2007.
Labels:
climate change,
energy,
governance,
national defense
Monday, April 23, 2007
Whither Iraq?
In 1808, Napoleon thought he "decided" the campaign in Spain by "dispersing the formal Spanish armies," but "had inadvertently encouraged the local populace to resort to guerrilla warfare". He still didn't solve the problem in 1810-1811 sending 300,000 troops into Spain. Spain's population was over 11 million.
"Mission accomplished" was the banner in 2003, Iraq's army was vanquished. Four years later about 150,000 troops are trying to quell guerrilla warfare in a country of over 27 million.
And George W. Bush isn't as good a commander-in-chief as Napoleon was. Unfortunately, they both share the characteristic of hubris, thinking they knew better than anyone else.
For a hopeful outlook, see "How to Win in Iraq, and How to Lose", by Arthur Herman, Commentary, April 2007, http://www.commentarymagazine.com/cm/main/viewArticle.aip?id=10856&page=all
Will George W. Bush put in the necessary diplomacy to make it work? Or will his strategy be lots of high-tech bang-bang?
"Mission accomplished" was the banner in 2003, Iraq's army was vanquished. Four years later about 150,000 troops are trying to quell guerrilla warfare in a country of over 27 million.
And George W. Bush isn't as good a commander-in-chief as Napoleon was. Unfortunately, they both share the characteristic of hubris, thinking they knew better than anyone else.
For a hopeful outlook, see "How to Win in Iraq, and How to Lose", by Arthur Herman, Commentary, April 2007, http://www.commentarymagazine.com/cm/main/viewArticle.aip?id=10856&page=all
Will George W. Bush put in the necessary diplomacy to make it work? Or will his strategy be lots of high-tech bang-bang?
Labels:
George W. Bush,
Iraq war,
Napoleon
Friday, April 20, 2007
Astute analysis or lucky guess?
As the fiasco of the fired District Attorney unfolds and Attorney General Alberto Gonzales comes under increasing criticism from Republican Senators, I wonder if I was making a good prediction in my April Fool's column for the Reader Weekly, "Tomorrow's news you can use today" or just a lucky guess.
I started with the premise that Gonzales would resign rather than face a lot of questioning from the Senate or possible impeachment from the House. From there, the President's house of cards would collapse, leading to a surprise replacement for Bush.
I will say that the fruits of giving more allegiance to party than to the Constitution are starting to ripen.
I started with the premise that Gonzales would resign rather than face a lot of questioning from the Senate or possible impeachment from the House. From there, the President's house of cards would collapse, leading to a surprise replacement for Bush.
I will say that the fruits of giving more allegiance to party than to the Constitution are starting to ripen.
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
Flawed science understanding
A letter writer in today's Star Tribune claims that the global warming predictions are based on the same science that can be "incapable of accurately predicting local conditions just hours into the future." The Strib titled his letter "Global warming, Flawed science".
I think his understanding of science is what is flawed. First, what is accuracy in weather forecasting? Does he want the exact temperature to the nearest degree and the exact amount of precipitation to the tenth of an inch? Even if he wants the temperature within five degrees and definite precipitation if predicted, it might not happen. Weather does not behave with such precision; there are just too many unknown quantities. We are dealing with chaos.
Consider dust devils. Walking down the street, one may see a small whirlwind of snow or dust, no more than a foot in diameter and three feet high, that comes and goes in an instant. What happens if the sun shines through a hole in the clouds on a large parking lot? Isn't there going to be a big temperature difference between the parking lot and a park or lake nearby? Weather is filled with these little anomalies that can affect local weather.
However, if one looks at weather prediction as giving the general trend for a given area, then I think most forecasters do a darn good job. Rarely do we have a forecast of a clear, sunny day and get a rainstorm. On the other hand, we may get a forecast of precipitation and get none, the weather having been blown in a different direction by some of the chaos that can't be measured.
In other words, weather forecasters and climatologists can make reasonable predictions about trends, but they cannot give precision for a very specific locale or time. For example, in global warming, Europe may get colder. Why? If melting Greenland glaciers dump enough fresh water into the Atlantic, the Gulf Stream could be disrupted by either the decreased salinity or the cooler water. If the Gulf Stream is disrupted, Europe will get less warm air.
I think his understanding of science is what is flawed. First, what is accuracy in weather forecasting? Does he want the exact temperature to the nearest degree and the exact amount of precipitation to the tenth of an inch? Even if he wants the temperature within five degrees and definite precipitation if predicted, it might not happen. Weather does not behave with such precision; there are just too many unknown quantities. We are dealing with chaos.
Consider dust devils. Walking down the street, one may see a small whirlwind of snow or dust, no more than a foot in diameter and three feet high, that comes and goes in an instant. What happens if the sun shines through a hole in the clouds on a large parking lot? Isn't there going to be a big temperature difference between the parking lot and a park or lake nearby? Weather is filled with these little anomalies that can affect local weather.
However, if one looks at weather prediction as giving the general trend for a given area, then I think most forecasters do a darn good job. Rarely do we have a forecast of a clear, sunny day and get a rainstorm. On the other hand, we may get a forecast of precipitation and get none, the weather having been blown in a different direction by some of the chaos that can't be measured.
In other words, weather forecasters and climatologists can make reasonable predictions about trends, but they cannot give precision for a very specific locale or time. For example, in global warming, Europe may get colder. Why? If melting Greenland glaciers dump enough fresh water into the Atlantic, the Gulf Stream could be disrupted by either the decreased salinity or the cooler water. If the Gulf Stream is disrupted, Europe will get less warm air.
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
Logging can be dangerous
This past weekend we went to our cabin to gather firewood, mostly for next year. We were considering taking small trees from a path we were widening, but we discovered two recently broken trees close to the cabin.
We first delimbed and cut in fireplace lengths the former top of the larger tree, about nine inches in diameter. After we had moved all that away, I started to cut the trunk at about two chain saw bar lengths from the ground. I cut about half-way through on the west side of the tree, the direction I wanted it to fall. Then I started cutting on the east side of the tree an inch or two above the other cut. The saw jammed!
I pushed the tree to the west and got the saw out, but the tree didn't fall. I cut a bit more and the tree started to fall, but to the south. I was not in the way or had gotten out of the way, and it crashed down.
Omigosh! My wife had been working about 30 feet away to the southwest of the tree. I looked in panic for her and didn't see her. She had gone inside for some reason. Whew!
Moral: always have lots of clear space when cutting down trees and keep others well away.
My accuracy is one reason we're asking a professional logger to fell some trees near things that could be damaged, like our cabin or the solar panel for the sauna.
We first delimbed and cut in fireplace lengths the former top of the larger tree, about nine inches in diameter. After we had moved all that away, I started to cut the trunk at about two chain saw bar lengths from the ground. I cut about half-way through on the west side of the tree, the direction I wanted it to fall. Then I started cutting on the east side of the tree an inch or two above the other cut. The saw jammed!
I pushed the tree to the west and got the saw out, but the tree didn't fall. I cut a bit more and the tree started to fall, but to the south. I was not in the way or had gotten out of the way, and it crashed down.
Omigosh! My wife had been working about 30 feet away to the southwest of the tree. I looked in panic for her and didn't see her. She had gone inside for some reason. Whew!
Moral: always have lots of clear space when cutting down trees and keep others well away.
My accuracy is one reason we're asking a professional logger to fell some trees near things that could be damaged, like our cabin or the solar panel for the sauna.
Monday, April 09, 2007
Why don't I allow comments?
I decided not to allow comments to this blog because they can be too time consuming. If time is a problem, I could ignore them; but that is not in my nature. If someone sends me a meaningful message, then I feel I owe them a response.
As you can see by my frequency of posts here that I was probably right. My email is even worse, I have 27 "unanswered" messages and have been running about that for over a week. Each of these require some action on my part, paying a bill, visiting a web site, or responding to a friend or relative.
I think I understand the complaints of some users of the Genealogy Roundtable on GEnie when I was its sysop in the last century. They just didn't have time to check everyday if someone responded to their query nor did they have an evening to spare to participate in an online discussion. Worse yet, their monthly costs could mount up at $12 or $6 an hour, much of that "wasted" time at 1200 or 2400 bits per second.
Even though my online time is "free", I feel like my users did in the use of my own time. I, like you, am being constantly bombarded to participate in some forum or other. Companies want us to visit their forums to get answers to our problems rather than answer them specifically. Political and advocacy organizations want us to visit their sites and participate in the "discussion". Publicly traded companies want us to get annual reports online rather than as paper copies; how fast can you scan 100 pages online?
All of our creditors want us to pay online rather than by check. Let's see, two minutes to write a check and put it in an envelope, but five minutes to go to the site, log on, read the statement, enter the payment, verify the payment, submit the payment, and log off.
Let me end on a positive note. The Web provides a vast resource of reading material. I could not move from the New York Times to The Atlantic to local papers to newspapers around the world as fast, even if my library stocked all these publications. Second, if I find something I would like to save, I don't have to go to the copier with a stack of dimes for a single article. With a quick cut and paste I can save the file in a folder that fits, not in some physical overcrowder drawer, but in a tiny bit of space under my fingertips.
We've come a long way from the cards in and cards out when I started in computers 48 years ago. And we ain't seen nothing yet!
As you can see by my frequency of posts here that I was probably right. My email is even worse, I have 27 "unanswered" messages and have been running about that for over a week. Each of these require some action on my part, paying a bill, visiting a web site, or responding to a friend or relative.
I think I understand the complaints of some users of the Genealogy Roundtable on GEnie when I was its sysop in the last century. They just didn't have time to check everyday if someone responded to their query nor did they have an evening to spare to participate in an online discussion. Worse yet, their monthly costs could mount up at $12 or $6 an hour, much of that "wasted" time at 1200 or 2400 bits per second.
Even though my online time is "free", I feel like my users did in the use of my own time. I, like you, am being constantly bombarded to participate in some forum or other. Companies want us to visit their forums to get answers to our problems rather than answer them specifically. Political and advocacy organizations want us to visit their sites and participate in the "discussion". Publicly traded companies want us to get annual reports online rather than as paper copies; how fast can you scan 100 pages online?
All of our creditors want us to pay online rather than by check. Let's see, two minutes to write a check and put it in an envelope, but five minutes to go to the site, log on, read the statement, enter the payment, verify the payment, submit the payment, and log off.
Let me end on a positive note. The Web provides a vast resource of reading material. I could not move from the New York Times to The Atlantic to local papers to newspapers around the world as fast, even if my library stocked all these publications. Second, if I find something I would like to save, I don't have to go to the copier with a stack of dimes for a single article. With a quick cut and paste I can save the file in a folder that fits, not in some physical overcrowder drawer, but in a tiny bit of space under my fingertips.
We've come a long way from the cards in and cards out when I started in computers 48 years ago. And we ain't seen nothing yet!
Tuesday, April 03, 2007
Parking is too cheap!
Many people think parking is too expensive, especially those who use meters. But if you look at the larger pictures of global warming and national defense it is far too inexpensive.
Shopping centers, even strip malls of four or five stores, offer free parking. These are located all over a city of any size. Free parking is a disincentive to taking a bus. From the perspective of global warming, buses may pollute more than cars, but we need buses for those who can't or shouldn't drive. So, each car adds to the pollution. Also, each car adds to the oil we need to import, and oil wealth is supporting unstable nations and terrorists. What will the cost to our economy be when the next terrorist attack comes?
Even paid parking is too cheap. If I take the bus to a fitness center, it costs me $1.20 round-trip in non-peak hours. I can park on the street for $1.00 for an hour, and I get to come and go on my own schedule. I can park in the ramp for $1.25 for an hour or $1.75 for two hours. If one of my bus trips is in a peak hour, then my fare will be $1.85.
If my wife and I go together, then our combined fare is $2.40 or $3.70. Since we have a car already and it costs only a few pennies in fuel for the two-mile trip, why should we take the bus.
Even downtown parking is too cheap. One lot is $3.75 all day. One person driving alone would pay $2.50 for bus fare, but two would pay $5.00. Wouldn't trudging out to the street or garage in the snow to one's car be easier than trudging to the corner through the snow and worth the extra $1.25 per day?
Even if the weather is nice, one has to plan one's schedule around an every half-hour bus. Forget something as you leave your house and you are late for work.
See also my article "Cost sharing or cost shifting"?
Shopping centers, even strip malls of four or five stores, offer free parking. These are located all over a city of any size. Free parking is a disincentive to taking a bus. From the perspective of global warming, buses may pollute more than cars, but we need buses for those who can't or shouldn't drive. So, each car adds to the pollution. Also, each car adds to the oil we need to import, and oil wealth is supporting unstable nations and terrorists. What will the cost to our economy be when the next terrorist attack comes?
Even paid parking is too cheap. If I take the bus to a fitness center, it costs me $1.20 round-trip in non-peak hours. I can park on the street for $1.00 for an hour, and I get to come and go on my own schedule. I can park in the ramp for $1.25 for an hour or $1.75 for two hours. If one of my bus trips is in a peak hour, then my fare will be $1.85.
If my wife and I go together, then our combined fare is $2.40 or $3.70. Since we have a car already and it costs only a few pennies in fuel for the two-mile trip, why should we take the bus.
Even downtown parking is too cheap. One lot is $3.75 all day. One person driving alone would pay $2.50 for bus fare, but two would pay $5.00. Wouldn't trudging out to the street or garage in the snow to one's car be easier than trudging to the corner through the snow and worth the extra $1.25 per day?
Even if the weather is nice, one has to plan one's schedule around an every half-hour bus. Forget something as you leave your house and you are late for work.
See also my article "Cost sharing or cost shifting"?
Sunday, April 01, 2007
Tectonic shift in politics coming?
Before I started writing blog entries today, I checked my friend Harry Welty's blog, http://www.lincolndemocrat.org
He had an interesting link to Andrew Sullivan's blog entry on "Why we went to war".
I thanked Harry for posting the link and replied:
He had an interesting link to Andrew Sullivan's blog entry on "Why we went to war".
I thanked Harry for posting the link and replied:
Thanks for posting the link to “Why We Went to War”. I’ve long suspected that it was more “projection of power” than real defense. However, if it had been executed properly it might have worked. But then ideologues have an unrealistic view of their own capabilities. I think about Carl Becker’s assertion that Lincoln went to war not so much to quell a rebellion or to abolish slavery but to keep the power of the whole United States against depradations on a splintered America by European powers. See, “The United States: An Experiment in Democracy”. Sorry, I don’t have a page number.I had also emailed him a link to David Brooks' column "No U-Turns", New York Times, March 29, 2007. Brooks said that the political environment is not for the rugged individualism of Goldwater and Reagan. He called it the "Liberty vs. Power paradigm". He wrote that the new paradigm is "security leads to freedom".
I sort of agree that Goldwater and Reagan aren't the future of the GOP but its a mystery to me how the party can recover from Bush,Cheney, Rove, Dobson and company.I replied:
I think the only hope for politics is some new, grand coalition like I suggested in my April Fool Reader article. It doesn’t have to be Olympia Snowe, but somebody of stature who works on governance rather than power and posturing. Maybe Kathleen Sebelius of Kansas or Arnold Schwarzenegger of California. The latter can’t become President under the current rules, but he could be an enabler.I did send webforms to Snow, Sebelius, and Schwazenegger with the link to my article and the hope that they would continue their work on the common ground.
Retired? I'm too busy!
A friend is using blog software that has a bug for certain browsers. If he uses block quotes in some conditions, the text is lost against the background. He said that he has too many other things to do detect and fix such errors.
I replied:
I’m kinda with you on not maintaining your blog for all comers. I also find it amazing how we retirees can find so much to occupy our time that we can’t do all we want to do. Shouldn’t we be out fishing, golfing, or skiing, and when we’re not doing that curled up in front of the fireplace with a good book?
I replied:
I’m kinda with you on not maintaining your blog for all comers. I also find it amazing how we retirees can find so much to occupy our time that we can’t do all we want to do. Shouldn’t we be out fishing, golfing, or skiing, and when we’re not doing that curled up in front of the fireplace with a good book?
What does "Support our troops" really mean?
Garry Trudeau had an interesting take on "Support our troops" in today's "Doonesbury". Two soldiers are discussing whether support means providing them with ammo and armor so they can keep fighting or letting them come home to their families and friends.
Labels:
Iraq war,
President Bush
Human effect on global warming
Some argue that the human effect on global warming has not been proven because some scientists don't think so and that even the scientific community does not give 100% certainty to this assertion.
Consider that Lord Kelvin, a prolific contributor thermodynamics, refused to believe that the Earth could be older than his calculations. These were based on the mass of the Earth and the heat loss into space. Even when radioactivity was shown to be a source of heat, and even when he agreed that radioactivity did produce heat, Lord Kelvin stood by his calculations. See Bill Bryson, "A Short History of Nearly Everything". Just because an eminent scientist like Lord Kelvin said the Earth was only 24 million years old didn't make other calculations uncertain or even false.
Some scientists claim that there have always been cycles of warming and cooling and that the Earth is just in another warming time. However, they and their supporters are ignoring the rate of change, which is unprecedented going back over 500 milliion years. Furthermore, the addition of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere had never exceeded 30 parts per million by volume in a thousand years. It has increased by that rate in the last seventeen years. See "Deep ice tells long climate story", a report by BBC News.
Consider that Lord Kelvin, a prolific contributor thermodynamics, refused to believe that the Earth could be older than his calculations. These were based on the mass of the Earth and the heat loss into space. Even when radioactivity was shown to be a source of heat, and even when he agreed that radioactivity did produce heat, Lord Kelvin stood by his calculations. See Bill Bryson, "A Short History of Nearly Everything". Just because an eminent scientist like Lord Kelvin said the Earth was only 24 million years old didn't make other calculations uncertain or even false.
Some scientists claim that there have always been cycles of warming and cooling and that the Earth is just in another warming time. However, they and their supporters are ignoring the rate of change, which is unprecedented going back over 500 milliion years. Furthermore, the addition of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere had never exceeded 30 parts per million by volume in a thousand years. It has increased by that rate in the last seventeen years. See "Deep ice tells long climate story", a report by BBC News.
Friday, March 30, 2007
I've posted my latest Reader Weekly article to my website; see Tomorrow’s news you can use today, an April Fool issue look at what could happen in the White House, Congress, and the world in the next two years.
Tuesday, March 06, 2007
Libraries in schools, frill or necessity
As I rode up the chair lift with an 8-year-old ski student, I asked her what books she's been reading. She said Judy B Jones. I asked her what the books were about. "She does things." "Does she solve problems or get in trouble?" "Gets in trouble." "Does she figure out how to fix things up?" "Generally."
I asked her if she gets Judy B Jones books at the public library or the school library. "School library". "Which do you prefer, the library or the classroom?" "The library." "Why?" "There are so many books."
There is a whole kid world out there that many adults are unaware of. First, I never heard of Judy B Jones until I talked to this girl about her interests. Second, my own expectation of what names sound like led me to assume the wrong name. The heroine of the books is Junie B Jones!
I found this out by a search of the web. Check http://www.randomhouse.com/kids/junieb/books/books.html
For another series that is exciting kids, see Captain Underpants.
Maybe we have schools organized all wrong. Instead of classrooms where children sit in rows or circles, maybe we should have libraries, labs, workshops, and other activity centers. They would be staffed with teachers who would make suggestions and answer questions. On certain days children would move from one activity center to another. On other days they would choose which they wanted to use and when.
Yes, there should be benchmark tests, but they should be written or oral presentations or they should be demonstrations of skills. The demonstrations could be musical or theatrical performances, an art work, or construction of an object.
In other words, schools should be places where kids imaginations and creativity are allowed to soar. Tests should be something that take advantage of kids' desire to show off.
There is no standardized kid; why should they take standardized tests?
I asked her if she gets Judy B Jones books at the public library or the school library. "School library". "Which do you prefer, the library or the classroom?" "The library." "Why?" "There are so many books."
There is a whole kid world out there that many adults are unaware of. First, I never heard of Judy B Jones until I talked to this girl about her interests. Second, my own expectation of what names sound like led me to assume the wrong name. The heroine of the books is Junie B Jones!
I found this out by a search of the web. Check http://www.randomhouse.com/kids/junieb/books/books.html
For another series that is exciting kids, see Captain Underpants.
Maybe we have schools organized all wrong. Instead of classrooms where children sit in rows or circles, maybe we should have libraries, labs, workshops, and other activity centers. They would be staffed with teachers who would make suggestions and answer questions. On certain days children would move from one activity center to another. On other days they would choose which they wanted to use and when.
Yes, there should be benchmark tests, but they should be written or oral presentations or they should be demonstrations of skills. The demonstrations could be musical or theatrical performances, an art work, or construction of an object.
In other words, schools should be places where kids imaginations and creativity are allowed to soar. Tests should be something that take advantage of kids' desire to show off.
There is no standardized kid; why should they take standardized tests?
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)