I missed it in theaters back in 2017. I got it on DVD thru Netflix. Not impressed. Although we have Hugh Jackman playing Logan, not much else is right. Logan has gone to seed, drinks too much and uses stuff. Drives an airport stretch limo, nicely washed and polished, but still a stretch limo. You would never catch me behind the wheel such an under powered, ungainly, hard to parallel park tank. Logan spends a fair bit of his time taking care of Charles Xavier, played by Patrick Stewart. Like Logan, Charles Xavier has gone to seed too. He no longer sees the whole of mankind's future, nor can he do anything about it. The plot, if any, never became clear to me, the movie just kinda rambled along, and never getting anywhere. If Logan or Charles Xavier was trying to accomplish anything, I never figured out what it might be.
Not the best X-man spinoff movie.
This blog posts about aviation, automobiles, electronics, programming, politics and such other subjects as catch my interest. The blog is based in northern New Hampshire, USA
Friday, June 1, 2018
Thursday, May 31, 2018
military-still-wants-belly-gun-v-22-osprey
Full article here. According to the article, Osprey fans and supporters have been calling for a research and development project for a belly gun for the Osprey for years. Strange. We figured out how to mount machine guns on aircraft back in 1915, Antony Fokker did the deed. Bolt the gun to the fuselage somewhere, cut a hole for the gun muzzle to stick out of, and the job is done. You have to steer the aircraft to lay the gun, but that's easier and more instinctive and more reliable than some kinda steerable gun mount. No R & D required, just go do it. We did it back in Viet Nam, the local boys managed to mount a 30 cal Gatling gun on an F4C, and Chuck Yeager scored a number of kills with it. It worked so well that the next version of the F4, the F4D, was built with an internal gun.
Plus, the mission of the Osprey is to carry troops and land them behind enemy lines. Adding guns and ammunition costs range and payload, i.e. an armed Osprey is less effective at its primary mission than an unarmed one. If the landing zone is hot, send some armed escort fighters along with the Ospreys to dust off any bad guys stupid enough to stick their heads up.
Plus, the mission of the Osprey is to carry troops and land them behind enemy lines. Adding guns and ammunition costs range and payload, i.e. an armed Osprey is less effective at its primary mission than an unarmed one. If the landing zone is hot, send some armed escort fighters along with the Ospreys to dust off any bad guys stupid enough to stick their heads up.
Wednesday, May 30, 2018
Obamas to do TV show. It will be non political
According to Variety the Obamas will get a TV show with Netflix. Netflix claims the show will be non political. Really.
Tuesday, May 29, 2018
Palestinians firing mortars into Israel from Gaza
That sort of thing has been an act of war since the invention of cannon. Last time the Palestinians did this they provoked an Israeli invasion that did them a lot of hurt. Seems pretty obvious that the Israelis are prepared to do that again. How much hurt do the Israelis have to inflict to get their message across? And how crazy is the Hamas leadership, asking to get their asses kicked again, for no reason?
I know the Palestinians are still sore about Israeli victory back in 1948. But they gotta learn that they lost, and it ain't likely that they ever will be able to beat the Israelis. Keeping up the hostilities ain't gonna do the Palestinians any good, the Israelis are better educated, more unified, more dedicated, and generally tougher than the Palestinians will ever be.
I know the Palestinians are still sore about Israeli victory back in 1948. But they gotta learn that they lost, and it ain't likely that they ever will be able to beat the Israelis. Keeping up the hostilities ain't gonna do the Palestinians any good, the Israelis are better educated, more unified, more dedicated, and generally tougher than the Palestinians will ever be.
GDPR Notice on my blog
The blogger people tell me that they have posted some kind of message on the overseas versions of my blog, to comply with the new European data privacy law. I cannot see this message. I have no idea what it says. It's a message from the blogger people, not me.
All I can say is that my posts, and your comments, stay on the blog pretty much for ever, and are visible to anyone who visits the blog.
All I can say is that my posts, and your comments, stay on the blog pretty much for ever, and are visible to anyone who visits the blog.
Monday, May 28, 2018
Do the players and/or the owners understand?
Understand the real issue that is. The real issue is that we fans don't like players dissing the US flag and/or the American national anthem. It irritates us down deep. I will avoid the more descriptive words for our feelings because they are a little too vulgar for my blog. And when we fans get irritated, we stop buying game tickets and we stop watching games on TV. Which is bad for business. Any fool ought to understand this by now.
Apparently there are a bunch of fools out there. I have heard one bunch claim that President Trump's disapproval was divisive with the owners. Nonsense, the president is just one guy. It's the masses of football fans who have been turned off to the game that matter.
Another bunch of fools say dissing the flag and the anthem is free speech. Maybe it is, but just because speech is free doesn't mean we fans have to like it. We don't. That sort of free speech has taken a solid hit on TV viewership. A little more such free speech and NFL football will be down there with European soccer matches. And only available on U-Tube.
Good luck NFL. Maybe common sense will penetrate before it's too late.
Apparently there are a bunch of fools out there. I have heard one bunch claim that President Trump's disapproval was divisive with the owners. Nonsense, the president is just one guy. It's the masses of football fans who have been turned off to the game that matter.
Another bunch of fools say dissing the flag and the anthem is free speech. Maybe it is, but just because speech is free doesn't mean we fans have to like it. We don't. That sort of free speech has taken a solid hit on TV viewership. A little more such free speech and NFL football will be down there with European soccer matches. And only available on U-Tube.
Good luck NFL. Maybe common sense will penetrate before it's too late.
Sunday, May 27, 2018
US has been getting hostages released
Let's see, those three from North Korea, now one from Venezuela. Neither country is a friend of America. But they released their hostage[s]. Either out of fear of what we might do to them, or a desire to butter up the Yankees to get something from us. Either way, we get our people back. Which is a good thing.
Saturday, May 26, 2018
Keep the banks from going broke
Great Depression 2.0, back in 2008, was caused by big banks and insurance companies going broke. They went broke by making loans to flaky borrowers (Greece, Puerto Rico) and flaky deals (mortgage backed securities and credit default swaps), not keeping enough cash on hand to cover losses. As the smoke cleared, and we launched into an 8 year depression, the Democrats passed a bunch of regulations (Dodd Frank) , and failed to prosecute anyone who was running the failed firms.
I say we could have a more dependable financial sector if the people running it, CEO's and the like, had a real fear of personal retribution when they drove their companies onto the rocks. Start with more aggressive prosecution under existing laws. Pass a law making financial executives personally liable for failure of their firms. Enlist that army of unemployed lawyers to sure to socks off anyone who bankrupts his bank.
In short, scrap the regulations. Bring on the ambulance chasing lawyers.
I say we could have a more dependable financial sector if the people running it, CEO's and the like, had a real fear of personal retribution when they drove their companies onto the rocks. Start with more aggressive prosecution under existing laws. Pass a law making financial executives personally liable for failure of their firms. Enlist that army of unemployed lawyers to sure to socks off anyone who bankrupts his bank.
In short, scrap the regulations. Bring on the ambulance chasing lawyers.
Friday, May 25, 2018
The NORKs, on again, off again, maybe on again?
At least President Trump understands that his mission is to obtain a deal helpful to the United States, rather than just obtain a deal that looks good in the democratic MSM, like Obama did. We want the NORKs denuclearized. We offered the NORKs an end to the embargo, a signed peace treaty to end the Korean War, a guarantee of survival of Kim and of his government, and maybe some investment to spiff up their disastrous economy. Apparently this ain't enough to get Kim to give up his nukes. I assume Kim feels that a good dozen working nukes is a better guarantee of his and his regime's survival than any amount of Yankee promises. Can't say that I disagree with Kim on this.
So, the NORKs made noises about keeping their nukes. And President Trump replied by cancelling the summit. Probably the right move. As of this morning the NORKs are making back off noises, and making lets do the summit anyhow noises.
Say tuned for further developments.
So, the NORKs made noises about keeping their nukes. And President Trump replied by cancelling the summit. Probably the right move. As of this morning the NORKs are making back off noises, and making lets do the summit anyhow noises.
Say tuned for further developments.
Words of the Weasel Part 52
Informant vs Spy. In real life these two nouns mean exactly the same thing. But in today's strange politics the democrats seem to think that "informant" sounds better than "spy". They are calling the spy planted upon the Trump campaign in 2016 was really only an informant, which sounds so much nicer than spy.
I will admit that "informant" is used in law enforcement stories whereas "spy" is used in military and international stories, but they both work the same. A harmless looking individual is planted on the enemy and passes useful/damaging information to the other side.
If the spy/informant planted on the Trump campaign story holds up, it will cause a furore, probably as big as Watergate.
I will admit that "informant" is used in law enforcement stories whereas "spy" is used in military and international stories, but they both work the same. A harmless looking individual is planted on the enemy and passes useful/damaging information to the other side.
If the spy/informant planted on the Trump campaign story holds up, it will cause a furore, probably as big as Watergate.
Thursday, May 24, 2018
Difference between investment and gambling
I think there is one. Investment means taking good real money and lending it to business enterprises to build factories,power stations, and pipelines, purchase machinery, aircraft, motor vehicles, and ships, to buy inventory, stuff that grows the business. Gambling is fun, but the money doesn't go to finance business, it goes back and forth between players. To keep the economy growing we need to encourage investment and discourage gambling with laws, regulation, and taxes.
The stock market makes investment in stocks attractive, mostly because investors can sell their stock for cash, anytime. And quickly, call your broker, and the sale will go thru that day or the next, and the cash will be in your checking account in another day or so. That's liquidity, and it vastly increases the desirability of stocks as an investment. And companies can issue and sell stock, raising cash for merely printing a stock certificate. If you are starting a company, the ability to issue company stock to raise money is a real boon.
And then we have those things that are mostly gambling. The morning NPR news regularly reports "Dow futures are up (or down)". I don't really know just how Dow futures work, but I seriously doubt that any of the money that changes hands gets to businesses for investment. I think the money just goes back and forth between financial players. Pure gambling. Same goes for "derivatives" another poorly understood (at least I don't really understand them) financial deal which just passes money around among players.
We always need more investment and less gambling.
The stock market makes investment in stocks attractive, mostly because investors can sell their stock for cash, anytime. And quickly, call your broker, and the sale will go thru that day or the next, and the cash will be in your checking account in another day or so. That's liquidity, and it vastly increases the desirability of stocks as an investment. And companies can issue and sell stock, raising cash for merely printing a stock certificate. If you are starting a company, the ability to issue company stock to raise money is a real boon.
And then we have those things that are mostly gambling. The morning NPR news regularly reports "Dow futures are up (or down)". I don't really know just how Dow futures work, but I seriously doubt that any of the money that changes hands gets to businesses for investment. I think the money just goes back and forth between financial players. Pure gambling. Same goes for "derivatives" another poorly understood (at least I don't really understand them) financial deal which just passes money around among players.
We always need more investment and less gambling.
Wednesday, May 23, 2018
Oxford History of the American People by Samuel Elliot Morison
This is American history as it ought to be written. Morison starts with pre Columbian America and takes the story right up to the present day (in Morison's case 1965). Morison is a fine writer, his text reads as well as anything by Bruce Catton or Shelby Foote. He covers everyone of any interest, and every political thought that occurred in America. He leaves nothing out. And he make it all interesting. The book is massive, 1150 pages.
Morison is an fascinating guy. He was a Harvard professor. He held a commission in the Navy reserve. When WWII broke out, Morison became the Navy's historian. He went to sea, pretty much for the duration. He was at the Torch landings in North Africa, he was at Midway. After the war he single handedly wrote the Navy's history of World War II, in fifteen volumes, The History of U.S. Naval Operations in World War II. And he collaborated with Henry Steele Commager to write Growth of the American Republic, (usually known as Morison and Commager) which was the standard college US history text for decades. They don't make Harvard professors like that anymore.
It's a fine read by one of the best American historians ever.
Morison is an fascinating guy. He was a Harvard professor. He held a commission in the Navy reserve. When WWII broke out, Morison became the Navy's historian. He went to sea, pretty much for the duration. He was at the Torch landings in North Africa, he was at Midway. After the war he single handedly wrote the Navy's history of World War II, in fifteen volumes, The History of U.S. Naval Operations in World War II. And he collaborated with Henry Steele Commager to write Growth of the American Republic, (usually known as Morison and Commager) which was the standard college US history text for decades. They don't make Harvard professors like that anymore.
It's a fine read by one of the best American historians ever.
Tuesday, May 22, 2018
Give all the teachers a 40% raise
That's what an op ed in Tuesday's Wall St Journal calls for. The writer seems to feel that teachers ought to get paid more, to bring their salaries in line with say civil engineers. OK, nice thought and all. But.
I'm still a believer in capitalist free market theory. You pay enough to attract the people you need, and no more. The modest wages paid to teachers are a signal to young people that we have a goodly supply of teachers and you could do better and make more money in other lines of work. That's what the market is supposed to do, issue price signals to workers and suppliers, when there is a shortage of something, be it Hershey bars or school teachers, the price goes up, more people take up teaching, or candy companies make more candy bars. It's a system that has served us well, allocated labor and capital intelligently, and given us fantastic prosperity. The Soviets tried to operate without the market and they only lasted 70 years.
The same op ed did note that teachers of math and science, who are always in short supply, get paid more than the average teacher. Hint to aspiring teachers, do a math or science major in college rather than the ed major.
I guess my other problem with the mare 'em more idea is that we have poured more and more money into public schools. The vast funding increase has not improved our children's education, at least by objective measures like test scores. They have remained flat over the decades while school funding has doubled.
I'm still a believer in capitalist free market theory. You pay enough to attract the people you need, and no more. The modest wages paid to teachers are a signal to young people that we have a goodly supply of teachers and you could do better and make more money in other lines of work. That's what the market is supposed to do, issue price signals to workers and suppliers, when there is a shortage of something, be it Hershey bars or school teachers, the price goes up, more people take up teaching, or candy companies make more candy bars. It's a system that has served us well, allocated labor and capital intelligently, and given us fantastic prosperity. The Soviets tried to operate without the market and they only lasted 70 years.
The same op ed did note that teachers of math and science, who are always in short supply, get paid more than the average teacher. Hint to aspiring teachers, do a math or science major in college rather than the ed major.
I guess my other problem with the mare 'em more idea is that we have poured more and more money into public schools. The vast funding increase has not improved our children's education, at least by objective measures like test scores. They have remained flat over the decades while school funding has doubled.
Monday, May 21, 2018
Why was Prince Harry wearing a black uniform?
I thought Harry had served in the British Army, you know, the Redcoats. He was wearing a black uniform, with his pilot's wings and some ribbons, at his wedding yesterday.
Hair Products popular with Black Women may contain harmful chemicals
Thus saith UnScientific American on their website. They go on at some length, listing a whole bunch of organic chemicals that I am unfamiliar with. I never took organic chem. On the other hand, they failed to mention, anywhere, ever, just HOW MUCH of these allegedly harmful chemicals were present in the hair products. Modern chemical analysis is so sensitive that it can detect small amounts of anything, just about anywhere. The article failed to let us readers know if these harmful chemicals were present in just tiny trace amounts, or in amounts large enough to matter.
Sunday, May 20, 2018
The Economics Profession ain't diverse enough
Thus saith The Economist. They been running the occasional think piece about economics. This week they ran the last of the series. And all they had to talk about was the lack of diversity, women and blacks, in economics faculties. It's a worthy thought, I think.
But I'm more interested in whether economics as a "science" gets it right or not. Actually I consider economics as much as an art as a science, sorta like history. In fact economics could call itself economic history. Since you cannot run experiments in economics, at least not on the scale of a national economy, the people object, the best economists can do is gather observations, like they do in geology and astronomy. So although economists use a lot of mathematics ('cause a page of equations looks so cool in a paper) it isn't really a full science like physics and chemistry. It's scientific, sometimes.
But the real question is do the economists really know what they are doing?
But I'm more interested in whether economics as a "science" gets it right or not. Actually I consider economics as much as an art as a science, sorta like history. In fact economics could call itself economic history. Since you cannot run experiments in economics, at least not on the scale of a national economy, the people object, the best economists can do is gather observations, like they do in geology and astronomy. So although economists use a lot of mathematics ('cause a page of equations looks so cool in a paper) it isn't really a full science like physics and chemistry. It's scientific, sometimes.
But the real question is do the economists really know what they are doing?
Saturday, May 19, 2018
Eradicating Polio
A piece on NHPR the other morning talked about eradicating polio in Pakistan. The Pakistani's mounted a massive vaccination campaign, thousands of workers, going every where, and vaccinating every child they found. The case rate dropped from several hundred polio cases a year down to this year, just one case so far.
Trouble is, the vaccination program is encountering Pakistani parents who refuse to allow their children to be vaccinated. The one polio case this year was a child whose parents refused vaccination, several times. Vaccination program workers are reporting resistance and threats of violence.
I gotta wonder about a culture so poisonous that it prefers to see their young children die of a horrible disease rather than give them a life saving vaccine. I remember back when the polio vaccine was first invented. They set up tables outside in the Saxonville School yard, and in one day, they vaccinated every single kid in Saxonville including me. Parents supported it 100%.
Trouble is, the vaccination program is encountering Pakistani parents who refuse to allow their children to be vaccinated. The one polio case this year was a child whose parents refused vaccination, several times. Vaccination program workers are reporting resistance and threats of violence.
I gotta wonder about a culture so poisonous that it prefers to see their young children die of a horrible disease rather than give them a life saving vaccine. I remember back when the polio vaccine was first invented. They set up tables outside in the Saxonville School yard, and in one day, they vaccinated every single kid in Saxonville including me. Parents supported it 100%.
Friday, May 18, 2018
Driving back from DC.
It took me 11 and 1/2 hours this time, from DC motel to Mac's Market in Franconia. It was pouring down rain in DC when I left at 7 AM. It was heavy enough to create that road fog, a mix of falling rain, real fog, and spray thrown up by tires, that hangs over the roadway obscuring vision. It was so thick I could not see an unlighted vehicle at all, and even the lighted ones were hard to see until I was right on their rear bumper. The rain lightened up by the time I got to Delaware, and was pretty much dry at New York. The sun was out by the time I reached Vermont.
Pretty much every thing moving up and down the East Coast has to get thru, or get to, New York. I tried the George Washington bridge this time, right around 12 noon. A mistake, traffic is terrible, long periods of just plain stuck in traffic. I think Tappan Zee bridge is a better deal. They have the new Tappan Zee span open to traffic, and they are taking the old span down.
The other touchy spot is Philadelphia, the last break in I95. Coming up from the south on I95 in Delaware, you want to take the Delaware Memorial Bridge. Don't follow the I95 signs to Philadelphia, you will get dumped off on city streets in North Philadelphia, or pushed onto I295 going the wrong way. Looks like they never will finish I95 thru Philadelphia. Stick with the Jersey Turnpike.
Pretty much every thing moving up and down the East Coast has to get thru, or get to, New York. I tried the George Washington bridge this time, right around 12 noon. A mistake, traffic is terrible, long periods of just plain stuck in traffic. I think Tappan Zee bridge is a better deal. They have the new Tappan Zee span open to traffic, and they are taking the old span down.
The other touchy spot is Philadelphia, the last break in I95. Coming up from the south on I95 in Delaware, you want to take the Delaware Memorial Bridge. Don't follow the I95 signs to Philadelphia, you will get dumped off on city streets in North Philadelphia, or pushed onto I295 going the wrong way. Looks like they never will finish I95 thru Philadelphia. Stick with the Jersey Turnpike.
Tuesday, May 15, 2018
Win 10 makes posting photos a pain
Used to be, back in the last decent Windows, Windows XP, you could hit photo upload in say Facebook, and you would get a set of snapshots of each photo in the directory. Which made it pretty easy to click the photo you wanted to post. Not too shabby.
Well, the Micro$ofties managed to break that in Win 10. Aren't we glad that Micro$oft has such a large programming staff with time to break stuff. In Win 10 all you get is a bunch of faceless icons, all alike, and you have to guess which one is the one you want to post.
Good Work Micro$ofties.
Well, the Micro$ofties managed to break that in Win 10. Aren't we glad that Micro$oft has such a large programming staff with time to break stuff. In Win 10 all you get is a bunch of faceless icons, all alike, and you have to guess which one is the one you want to post.
Good Work Micro$ofties.
Driving down to DC, surveying the traffic
After posting about Ford getting out of the car business, at least the small econobox car business. I took note of what was on the road on the way down from Franconia to DC. It does seem like fewer econoboxes, more pickups, more SUV's and the smaller SUVs that the car people call "crossovers". About half the pickup trucks had company names painted on their doors, but the other half looked to be be privately owned.
And lots and lots of heavy trucks, 18 wheelers. I figure that's a sign of a good economy, all those 18 wheelers on the road are either hauling some company's product to the customer, or going empty to pick up a load. Lots and lots of heavy trucks on the interstates is a good sign.
And lots and lots of heavy trucks, 18 wheelers. I figure that's a sign of a good economy, all those 18 wheelers on the road are either hauling some company's product to the customer, or going empty to pick up a load. Lots and lots of heavy trucks on the interstates is a good sign.
Notes to Architects of Hotel/Motel[s]
I've on a trip to DC and have stayed in two pretty new
hotels or motels on the way. Used to be
hotel was a multi story city building where you carried your bags in the front
door and up to your room, and a motel was a one or two story building, each
room with an exterior door, and you parked in front of you room door and
carried your bags in These two places
were sorta hybrids. You entered thru the
front door, they were only a few stories tall
On points I should call them hotels.
But somehow that seems pretentious for what these places were, so I
think of them as motels.
Improvement number
1 would be to find a floor covering that is not slippery as ice when wet. Bathroom floors were glossy ceramic
tile. Stepping out of the shower was
just asking for a fall. Surely there is
a tile product with a little grit in it to give some traction to a wet
foot. One place had a nice looking
asphalt tile with a wood grain pattern to it in the bedroom. Looked OK, but was slippery as all hell when
wet. Place had big sliding glass
windows, that leaked when it rained, giving puddles on the bedroom floor. Nearly broke my neck getting up to go to the
bathroom at night.
Improvement Number
2, go with US
standard light switches. Both places had
groovy Euro style switches, that were hard to see, even by day, and didn't feel
like light switches in the dark, when you need to turn the lights on.
And while we are at
it, lets go with water faucets clearly marked for hot and cold water. At least colored red for hot and blue for
cold. A single tiny color dot isn't
enough.
One place had high
definition TV cabled into all the rooms.
The working channels did show nice video. About half the channels showed just error messages
suggesting I check the antenna connections.
Some channels flicked off and then on.
Changing channels was slow, it took the high def TV 10-15 seconds to
lock onto the high def digital signal and show a picture. The TV would not remember it's channel
settings, so turning it on in the morning meant you had to go looking for a
watchable channel all over again.
And signage. The Holiday Inn folk had the right idea back
in the '60s, big sign, bright lights, make sure every one can see the
place. The place in DC had a tiny little
sign, hidden by the brighter lights of a gas station, that I missed in the
dark.
Thursday, May 10, 2018
Glad to see three American's freed from North Korea
At least they got out of Kim's jails with their health, unlike poor Otto Warmbier. All three of them are obviously of Korean ancestry, but the press has uniformly called them Americans, which is a good thing. And the fact that Kim let them go indicates that Kim wants something from the Americans and he thought letting these guys go would put the Americans into a better frame of mind.
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