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
Saturday, June 23, 2018
Smartphone required for parking meters in Cambridge MA
So I find a legal street parking space in Harvard Square. I park, get out, and face up to the parking meter. The meter has a plaque on it directing me to download a "Pay Cambridge Parking Meters" app. I guess the city fathers of Cambridge figure that all their citizens, or at least all Harvard students have smartphones. I'm behind the times, I just have a dumbphone. I finally wind up in a public parking garage that charges $16 an hour.
Friday, June 22, 2018
Farewell Charles Krauthammer
The cancer got him yesterday. He will be missed. His commentary on current events was inspired, intelligent, and at times very witty. The Fox people have been eulogizing him since last night. NPR hasn't even mentioned his death. They don't call it National Progressive Radio for nothing.
Wednesday, June 20, 2018
United States Space Force (USSF)
President Trump is now pushing this. As an old Air Force veteran I am luke warm to the idea. I assume he is talking about creating a Department of the Space Force, with a separate Congressionally approved budget, and moving all the Air Force people and facilities working on space projects over to the new service, creating a new uniform, titles of rank, and regulations for the Space Force, in short setting it up like they did the Air Force back in 1947.
One objection to the idea. The existing armed services actually engage in real combat, the kind where people get killed. I don't see the Space Force mission as involving combat. Launching missiles from an underground command center is pretty risk free. Much of the morale that makes the current armed services so effective comes from membership in an elite fighting force. In my Air Force units the enlisted men never fired a shot in anger or flew into enemy airspace, but they took great pride in keeping their fighter planes in the air, and combat ready. Plus, the enlisted men bore the title of "Airman", until they made sergeant. How would the Space Force enlisted men feel about bearing the title of "Spaceman"?
The United States presently relies upon a whole lot of satellites, recon sats, comm sats, GPS sats, and others. These satellites are not that far up, and in wartime the enemy could shoot them down, or jam their transmissions. It would be nice to defend them somehow. But I don't really see how this might be done. All the enemy needs to do is lob something, with a little maneuvering fuel and an IR sensor, up as high as the target. The target satellite is moving at 18,000 mph, and when it runs anything at that speed it is blown into dust. Bright flash, easily seen from the ground. Short of equipping all the satellites with a battery of anti-missiles, or nuking the enemy launch sites, I don't see any way to stop it.
If the independent Space Force could be freed of the existing Department of Defense (DoD) procurement regulations, it could achieve faster, cheaper, and better procurement, especially of expensive, custom built flight hardware. Current procurement regulations slow everything down, jack up cost, and deliver inferior flaky hardware. Getting out from under them would be a big improvement. But, since the new Department of the Space Force would be under DoD, I don't see this as very likely.
One objection to the idea. The existing armed services actually engage in real combat, the kind where people get killed. I don't see the Space Force mission as involving combat. Launching missiles from an underground command center is pretty risk free. Much of the morale that makes the current armed services so effective comes from membership in an elite fighting force. In my Air Force units the enlisted men never fired a shot in anger or flew into enemy airspace, but they took great pride in keeping their fighter planes in the air, and combat ready. Plus, the enlisted men bore the title of "Airman", until they made sergeant. How would the Space Force enlisted men feel about bearing the title of "Spaceman"?
The United States presently relies upon a whole lot of satellites, recon sats, comm sats, GPS sats, and others. These satellites are not that far up, and in wartime the enemy could shoot them down, or jam their transmissions. It would be nice to defend them somehow. But I don't really see how this might be done. All the enemy needs to do is lob something, with a little maneuvering fuel and an IR sensor, up as high as the target. The target satellite is moving at 18,000 mph, and when it runs anything at that speed it is blown into dust. Bright flash, easily seen from the ground. Short of equipping all the satellites with a battery of anti-missiles, or nuking the enemy launch sites, I don't see any way to stop it.
If the independent Space Force could be freed of the existing Department of Defense (DoD) procurement regulations, it could achieve faster, cheaper, and better procurement, especially of expensive, custom built flight hardware. Current procurement regulations slow everything down, jack up cost, and deliver inferior flaky hardware. Getting out from under them would be a big improvement. But, since the new Department of the Space Force would be under DoD, I don't see this as very likely.
Tuesday, June 19, 2018
I'm running for Senate!
The phone rang the other day. It was Bruce Perlo of the NH Republican Party
asking if I would stand for election to the NH senate. I was flattered, and honored, and so I said “yes”. Filing for the September primary closed last
Friday and since no one had filed, the party is entitled to submit a name. My name came up.
It’s the NH first
senate district. The district is Coos
and Grafton counties. It starts at the
Canadian border and reaches down a bit south of Franconia Notch. The current incumbent
is Jeff Woodburn, a democrat. It’s the
biggest NH senate district, at least in land area. It’s thinly populated, but that doesn’t make
driving around the district any easier.
I got down to the
Secretary of State’s office in Concord
yesterday and filed the necessary paperwork.
It was $10 to file, I had the cash on me, and I got a receipt. Chuck Morse, Senate President wanted to meet
me. We had a nice talk. I should have worn coat and tie, but Jeanie
Forester had assured me that it wasn’t necessary.
What can you do to
help me run? First, just tell everyone
you know that I am running, and I am a good guy. I’m not a household name up here, especially
in Coos County. Next time you have a party or a cookout,
invite me. I don’t eat much, and I am a
fairly entertaining speaker. I’ll say
“Please vote for me” and give reasons, and tell a few war stories.
Sunday, June 17, 2018
Combined arms operations. Test of the officer corps
The German army in WWII showed the world the power of combined arms, infantry, with artillery support, tank support, air support. It was potent enough to crush the French, largest army in Europe in 1940, an army that had stood off German attacks for four years just twenty years earlier. The Anglo Americans needed a year of combat experience in North Africa to learn how to do it.
Doing combined arms operations is complicated. To order a single infantry or tank unit into action is simple, give them the objective, and the time and date. Then it's up to the unit commander to bring his men into action. Not too hard.
Now consider doing an operation with artillery support. You want the guns to shell enemy positions until your men reach them. Then you want to "lift" the barrage to strike enemy rear areas while your men assault the front line positions. You have to order the artillery units into position, and make arrangements to get tons and tons of shells up to the guns. You have to coordinate with the artillery, make sure that both artillery and infantry are using the same maps of the action. You have to make sure that both the artillery and the infantry know just where the attack is going in, and especially when the attack goes in. Before the introduction of walkie talkies in WWII, the timing was the Achilles heel. The attack usually was late, for any one of a number of reasons, and there was no way for the artillery to know this. So they would lift the barrage as scheduled, even if the infantry was hours from making contact with the enemy. Once the infantry had walkie talkies to control the artillery things got a lot better.
Tank support was not as complicated as artillery. Order the tank unit[s] to attack at the same time as the infantry. Make sure the infantry is knows the tanks are friendly tanks, lest they start pot shotting them with bazookas.
Air support can be tricky. The aviators, especially single seat fighters, are never all the sure where they are. It's real easy to get confused and bomb your own forces. This happened repeatedly. The best of coordination, aerial photos of the target area, special marking on friendly vehicles, and forward air controllers will improve things.
Getting all this stuff right is what you have officers for. If they don't get it right, they are apt to loose the battle. A division commander who could put all this together and get it right was a rare asset.
Doing combined arms operations is complicated. To order a single infantry or tank unit into action is simple, give them the objective, and the time and date. Then it's up to the unit commander to bring his men into action. Not too hard.
Now consider doing an operation with artillery support. You want the guns to shell enemy positions until your men reach them. Then you want to "lift" the barrage to strike enemy rear areas while your men assault the front line positions. You have to order the artillery units into position, and make arrangements to get tons and tons of shells up to the guns. You have to coordinate with the artillery, make sure that both artillery and infantry are using the same maps of the action. You have to make sure that both the artillery and the infantry know just where the attack is going in, and especially when the attack goes in. Before the introduction of walkie talkies in WWII, the timing was the Achilles heel. The attack usually was late, for any one of a number of reasons, and there was no way for the artillery to know this. So they would lift the barrage as scheduled, even if the infantry was hours from making contact with the enemy. Once the infantry had walkie talkies to control the artillery things got a lot better.
Tank support was not as complicated as artillery. Order the tank unit[s] to attack at the same time as the infantry. Make sure the infantry is knows the tanks are friendly tanks, lest they start pot shotting them with bazookas.
Air support can be tricky. The aviators, especially single seat fighters, are never all the sure where they are. It's real easy to get confused and bomb your own forces. This happened repeatedly. The best of coordination, aerial photos of the target area, special marking on friendly vehicles, and forward air controllers will improve things.
Getting all this stuff right is what you have officers for. If they don't get it right, they are apt to loose the battle. A division commander who could put all this together and get it right was a rare asset.
Saturday, June 16, 2018
That FBI Inspector General Report
The report includes numerous emails and text messages showing ridiculous amounts of anti Trump bias on the part of FBI personnel, but the report writers claim that this appalling attitude did not affect their actions.
I say that is Bulls**t. People displaying that sort attitude, in writing no less, will do whatever they can to tip the election their way. Leaking of uncomplimentary material, spying, politically motivated prosecution, intimidation, and more.
Surely Comey's work in the Hilary Clinton email scandal, first declaring it to be un prosecutable, then declaring that the Anthony Weiner laptop information required re opening the case is heavy duty interfering the in the 2016 election. Fortunately it damaged Hilary's chances more than it hurt Trump's chances. Comey was never a very smart guy, he thought he was helping Hilary when in actual fact he was damaging her.
I say that is Bulls**t. People displaying that sort attitude, in writing no less, will do whatever they can to tip the election their way. Leaking of uncomplimentary material, spying, politically motivated prosecution, intimidation, and more.
Surely Comey's work in the Hilary Clinton email scandal, first declaring it to be un prosecutable, then declaring that the Anthony Weiner laptop information required re opening the case is heavy duty interfering the in the 2016 election. Fortunately it damaged Hilary's chances more than it hurt Trump's chances. Comey was never a very smart guy, he thought he was helping Hilary when in actual fact he was damaging her.
Friday, June 15, 2018
Courts are OK with AT&T - Time Warner Merger
The courts may be OK with it but I am not. Both companies are huge, revenues in tens and hundreds of billions a year. Both are plenty large enough to prosper on their own. Both are so big that they won't get any economies of scale by merging.
Both companies are in the same line of work, namely providing cable TV. Merge them and they will find it easier to hike my cable fees. Just by example Time Warner managed to chisel my cable bill up to $62 this month from $35 a few years ago. They just hike my cable bill a few dollars here and a few dollars there. And Time Warner (now calling itself "Spectrum") is the only game in town up here. It's pay what ever they ask or do without broadband and Fox News Channel.
The Wall St Journal was all in favor of the merger. They did a lot of fancy explaining that this was a vertical merger, and that both companies were really in different businesses. This I do not believe. They are both TV cable companies.
If the anti trust people were doing their jobs, we would not need "too big to fail" protection in things like Dodd-Frank. If it's too big to fail, then it ought to be broken up as a monopoly.
Both companies are in the same line of work, namely providing cable TV. Merge them and they will find it easier to hike my cable fees. Just by example Time Warner managed to chisel my cable bill up to $62 this month from $35 a few years ago. They just hike my cable bill a few dollars here and a few dollars there. And Time Warner (now calling itself "Spectrum") is the only game in town up here. It's pay what ever they ask or do without broadband and Fox News Channel.
The Wall St Journal was all in favor of the merger. They did a lot of fancy explaining that this was a vertical merger, and that both companies were really in different businesses. This I do not believe. They are both TV cable companies.
If the anti trust people were doing their jobs, we would not need "too big to fail" protection in things like Dodd-Frank. If it's too big to fail, then it ought to be broken up as a monopoly.
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