That's how it came across on the TV news. To hear the newsies tell it, if the government had possessed a specialized group of experts the adminstration could have brought Healthcare.gov smoothly into service. The newsies talked about liberalizing government hiring rules so such a group could make a job offer to talented people in a timely fashion. And some other stuff.
It won't work. Government departments are staffed with civil servants, lawyers, defeated politicians, and political cronies. Losers. This kind of people couldn't design a tic-tac-toe board. No way can a government department do anything creative. To build a website, you need engineers. Good engineers don't work for the government. Engineers want to work at places where they can do new designs, and see their designs get built and shipped. All the government does is paperwork. Engineers hate paperwork, and so they take jobs out in the real economy, where they get to do real work.
When the government needs something designed, it needs to go out for bids to private industry. Far as I heard, Obama didn't do that. He retained control of the design deep inside HHS and did a no bid contract award to a Canadian firm with a dubious record. The Canadians did what they were told to do by HHS and what they were told to do didn't work.
Moral of the story. Go out for bids. Get three bids. Pick the low cost bidder, as long as he is qualified (you think he can do the job). Even better, go out for firm fixed fee bids. Cost plus bids will be expensive. Only if you cannot get firms to submit firm fixed fee bids do you accept cost plus bids.
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
Monday, January 6, 2014
Sunday, January 5, 2014
Google Image Search
So I'm making a model railroad car. I google for some photos of such a car. Get a lot of hits. Most of 'em are photos of other guy's models, rather than photos of the real thing. Conclusion. There are more model trains than real trains.
Cannon Mt ski weather
It's warmed up today, high 20s. My roof is melting off and the icicles are dripping heavily. Dispite all the TV newsie talk about super cold coming, it's "seasonable" here in NH. In actual fact, after all sorts of end-of-the-world-as-we-know it blather on the TV, we got a decent snowstorm (9 inches) followed by a one day cold snap where it got down to -9 or -10 Fahrenheit. Nothing unusual.
Unfortunately, the local weather forecasts are predicting rain tonight.
Unfortunately, the local weather forecasts are predicting rain tonight.
Saturday, January 4, 2014
US Defense Budget, The Aviation Week View
First some numbers. Aviation Week is good on numbers, unlike the mainstream newsies.
Estimated 2014 Budget: $612.5 billion. ($847 billion including non-Defense personnel costs)
Percent of GNP 4.4 %
Personnel under arms 1.4 million active, 850,000 reserves
Deployments Major operations in Irag and Afghanistan. deployments in 90+ other countries.
A few comments. Back when I was in high school, defense spending was 10% of GNP. So 4.4% doesn't seem outrageously high to me. Those 850,000 reserves have been called up repeatedly to fight in Iraq and Afghanistan. The regulars have been doing back to back combat zone deployments. We ought to have a larger Army and Marine Corps to spread the burden out a little more evenly.
The Air Force is thinking about scrapping all the KC10 tankers, all the B1B bombers, and all the A10's. And the last batch of Global Hawk recon drones. They want to keep the B52's, the KC135's and the F35 program.
Estimated 2014 Budget: $612.5 billion. ($847 billion including non-Defense personnel costs)
Percent of GNP 4.4 %
Personnel under arms 1.4 million active, 850,000 reserves
Deployments Major operations in Irag and Afghanistan. deployments in 90+ other countries.
A few comments. Back when I was in high school, defense spending was 10% of GNP. So 4.4% doesn't seem outrageously high to me. Those 850,000 reserves have been called up repeatedly to fight in Iraq and Afghanistan. The regulars have been doing back to back combat zone deployments. We ought to have a larger Army and Marine Corps to spread the burden out a little more evenly.
The Air Force is thinking about scrapping all the KC10 tankers, all the B1B bombers, and all the A10's. And the last batch of Global Hawk recon drones. They want to keep the B52's, the KC135's and the F35 program.
Cannon Mt ski weather
It's good and cold. I had -9F earlier this morning. But the sun is out, and it's warmed up to -5F. No wind to speak of. Cannon is skiable if you dress warmly.
Friday, January 3, 2014
Cannon Mt ski weather
It snowed all night. I have 9 inches of fresh powder on my deck. It's cold, like 5 below this morning. We have a little sun. Forecast is for really cold tonight and tomorrow.
Windows bug causes sound stuttering & SLOW computer
Over Christmas, trusty, aging Compaq 1750NX got into trouble. First darling daughter, home for the holidays, websurfed somewhere evil and infected him with a rootkit. After blowing said rootkit away with TDSSkiller, and a second one with Combofix, poor old desktop still ran SLOW. In good shape he used to boot up in 45 seconds. Now he was taking two minutes. And every thing ran SLOW. The audio stuttered while doing the Windows warmup "Ka Ching" sound. Task Manager was showing 80 90 percent CPU usage when nothing was running.
I finally tracked it down and fixed it. I ran Process Explorer, a fancier version of task manager. Process Explorer showed me that hardware interrupts were sucking up all the CPU time. A quick google (Hard ware interrupt virus) got a lot of hits, from which I learned that Windows was shooting itself in the foot.
The disk drive is supposed to transfer disk data to main memory using "direct memory access" (DMA) whereby blocks of data are moved into memory without CPU work. For nostalgia sake there is a primitive mode called programmed I/O (PIO) whereby the CPU has to move disk data byte by byte, (one move instruction per byte) and interrupt the CPU when each byte is ready to move. PIO was used back in the dawn of computing, and the PIO mode is a historical curiosity. Somehow, the disk drive software had put the disk into PIO mode, slowing the entire computer.
How to fix.
Start Device Manager. (Start->Settings->ControlPanel-. System->Hardware->Device Manager). Click on IDE ATA/ATAPI controllers. Click on "Primary IDE Channel". Click on "Advanced Settings". If "Transfer Mode" shows as "PIO", that's your trouble. The three boxes ought to read "Device Type Auto Detect" : "Transfer Mode DMA if available" : "Current transfer mode Ultra DMA mode 5".
If the boxes are wrong, you can fix it by forcing Windows to remove and reinstall the driver. Click on the "Driver Tab". Then click "Uninstall". Windows will then ask to reboot. Let it. That's it. All fixed.
You don't need to get into Process Explorer, that was just the aid that tipped me off to what was happening. Just go to Device manager and inspect the IDE ATA/ATAPI controllers.
This is NOT a virus, it's a bug in Windows.
I finally tracked it down and fixed it. I ran Process Explorer, a fancier version of task manager. Process Explorer showed me that hardware interrupts were sucking up all the CPU time. A quick google (Hard ware interrupt virus) got a lot of hits, from which I learned that Windows was shooting itself in the foot.
The disk drive is supposed to transfer disk data to main memory using "direct memory access" (DMA) whereby blocks of data are moved into memory without CPU work. For nostalgia sake there is a primitive mode called programmed I/O (PIO) whereby the CPU has to move disk data byte by byte, (one move instruction per byte) and interrupt the CPU when each byte is ready to move. PIO was used back in the dawn of computing, and the PIO mode is a historical curiosity. Somehow, the disk drive software had put the disk into PIO mode, slowing the entire computer.
How to fix.
Start Device Manager. (Start->Settings->ControlPanel-. System->Hardware->Device Manager). Click on IDE ATA/ATAPI controllers. Click on "Primary IDE Channel". Click on "Advanced Settings". If "Transfer Mode" shows as "PIO", that's your trouble. The three boxes ought to read "Device Type Auto Detect" : "Transfer Mode DMA if available" : "Current transfer mode Ultra DMA mode 5".
If the boxes are wrong, you can fix it by forcing Windows to remove and reinstall the driver. Click on the "Driver Tab". Then click "Uninstall". Windows will then ask to reboot. Let it. That's it. All fixed.
You don't need to get into Process Explorer, that was just the aid that tipped me off to what was happening. Just go to Device manager and inspect the IDE ATA/ATAPI controllers.
This is NOT a virus, it's a bug in Windows.
Labels:
Device Manager,
IDE ATA/ATAPI,
Process Explorer,
Windows runs slow,
XP
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)