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, August 17, 2012
You know Detroit is dead
When your college age offspring cannot tell the difference between a Mercury and a Mercedes.
Where have all the giblets gone?
Beats me. But the last two whole chickens I bought didn't have giblets. Remember them? The liver, the neck the gizzard and the heart, all packed in a little paper bag inside the bird? The liver, sauted, did good things for the stuffing. The rest of it made the gravy. Boil them all for as long as the chicken needs to oven roast with some Bell's Poultry seasoning added to the water. Pick the neck meat, chop the others, and add 'em to the gravy. Use the broth in the gravy too.
Cannot understand what's happened here. Packing the giblets with the bird allows the store to sell offal at chicken prices. I cannot imagine anyone else who would pay $1.29 a pound for chicken necks and gizzards.
Cannot understand what's happened here. Packing the giblets with the bird allows the store to sell offal at chicken prices. I cannot imagine anyone else who would pay $1.29 a pound for chicken necks and gizzards.
Social Security stocks up on Ammo
According to CBS news, the Social Security Administration placed an order for 174,000 rounds of .357 pistol ammunition. Damn, that's a lot.
The article goes on to say that Social Security employs 295 special agents who have arrest powers and work armed.
Social Security should not have armed agents. If they need to have someone arrested, they can call the cops, just like everyone (nearly everyone) else does.
Looks like another good place for a little sequestration to happen.
The article goes on to say that Social Security employs 295 special agents who have arrest powers and work armed.
Social Security should not have armed agents. If they need to have someone arrested, they can call the cops, just like everyone (nearly everyone) else does.
Looks like another good place for a little sequestration to happen.
Thursday, August 16, 2012
Chronicle
A 2012 movie. Three American high school boys are featured. They are an unattractive lot when the movie opens. Loud, rude, given to hooting like chimpanzees. Somehow (pure magic?) they are endowed with real Superman type superpowers. They can fly, leap tall buildings with a single bound, are bullet proof, everything. Way cool.
But nothing comes of it. They remain unattractive anti social jerks. They fail to rise to the occasion and slay dragons, rescue pretty maidens, save the world, or even get a decent suit of clothing.
Depressing movie. Clearly the gift of superpowers does not uplift jerks into defenders of truth justice and the American way. Which may be true, but I like the DC comics legend better.
None of the names in the cast mean anything to me. Camera work is mediocre to poor. Lots of "shake-the-camera" shots. Sound is adequate, you can understand most of the dialogue.
But nothing comes of it. They remain unattractive anti social jerks. They fail to rise to the occasion and slay dragons, rescue pretty maidens, save the world, or even get a decent suit of clothing.
Depressing movie. Clearly the gift of superpowers does not uplift jerks into defenders of truth justice and the American way. Which may be true, but I like the DC comics legend better.
None of the names in the cast mean anything to me. Camera work is mediocre to poor. Lots of "shake-the-camera" shots. Sound is adequate, you can understand most of the dialogue.
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
Ballast shipped all the way to Mars
Curiosity depended upon dropping ballast weights to maintain it's attitude during re-entry (entry?) to the Martian atmosphere. The amount of ballast is surprising. Two heavier weights were dropped to bring the nose up and allow aerodynamic maneuvering. Then six more 55 pound ballast weights were dropped to level the craft off. Six times 55 pounds is 330 pounds of ballast. That's a lot, considering the entire lander only weighed 1924 pounds.
I hate to Monday morning quarterback a successful mission, but you would think they would have used some kind of steering fins sticking out in the airstream. That's a lot of dead weight to blast all the way to Mars.
I hate to Monday morning quarterback a successful mission, but you would think they would have used some kind of steering fins sticking out in the airstream. That's a lot of dead weight to blast all the way to Mars.
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Words of the Weasel Part 27
"The fiscal effort becomes more difficult because the cyclical contraction is more challenging compared with the base line macro economic scenario of the second [bailout] program." said Nikos Magginas, an economist at the Nation Bank of Greece.
And this means what, exactly?
And this means what, exactly?
Grexit
Financial world shorthand for "Greek exit from the Euro". The Economist was doing a long piece about this, listing pros and cons. They point out that the Greek have borrowed hundreds of billions of Euros and in the event of Grexit, the lenders won't get paid back. And so it might be worth giving the Greeks another 100 billion Euro's or so to keep them running a while longer, and prevent (or stave off for a while) realizing those hefty losses. True enough.
What the Economist fails to talk about is the simple fact that the Greeks cannot and will not pay off those loans. They just don't have the money, and no way they can they get the money, not before Hell freezes over.
So we are really talking about when the lenders to Greece have to admit how much money they lost (how stupid they have been). Surely the lenders (banks mostly) would like to put off that day of reckoning as long as possible, but aside from some bank officials having to reveal their stupidity in public, it doesn't make much difference. The money is gone and won't be coming back.
What the Economist fails to talk about is the simple fact that the Greeks cannot and will not pay off those loans. They just don't have the money, and no way they can they get the money, not before Hell freezes over.
So we are really talking about when the lenders to Greece have to admit how much money they lost (how stupid they have been). Surely the lenders (banks mostly) would like to put off that day of reckoning as long as possible, but aside from some bank officials having to reveal their stupidity in public, it doesn't make much difference. The money is gone and won't be coming back.
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