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
Wednesday, June 19, 2019
More Free Stuff party offers reparations for slavery
Reparations, cash given to blacks 'cause their ancestors were slaves, surely ought to get more black votes for the Democrat party of more free stuff. Buying votes, much? Ultimate identity politics?
Monday, June 17, 2019
Single failure must not put every store down
Target has managed to hook every cash register in every store to somewhere central. Somewhere center broke yesterday and the day before, locking up every single cash register all over the country, forcing customers to stand in line for hours, or, just leave their purchases and go home.
This should not happen. A Target store is large enough to afford the computers to be stand alone. Target didn't bother to do this, and it will cost them. Certainly I will think twice before doing business with Target, lest I get stuck in line for hours, or have my account information broadcast to every hacker in the world.
Target's disastrous cash register setup has to be the work of ignorant Target suits. No competent engineer would design a system like that. Engineers understand that things break every so often, and that to tie every cash register in the company into a central point is a company wide failure just waiting to happen.
For that matter, cash registers used to work just fine before computers were even invented. And we managed to use credit cards for decades before the automatic approval systems we use today were installed. Target would do well to revive these antique ways of doing business.
This should not happen. A Target store is large enough to afford the computers to be stand alone. Target didn't bother to do this, and it will cost them. Certainly I will think twice before doing business with Target, lest I get stuck in line for hours, or have my account information broadcast to every hacker in the world.
Target's disastrous cash register setup has to be the work of ignorant Target suits. No competent engineer would design a system like that. Engineers understand that things break every so often, and that to tie every cash register in the company into a central point is a company wide failure just waiting to happen.
For that matter, cash registers used to work just fine before computers were even invented. And we managed to use credit cards for decades before the automatic approval systems we use today were installed. Target would do well to revive these antique ways of doing business.
Friday, June 14, 2019
Han Solo. 2018.
This is Han Solo’s origin story. It came out in theaters last year and some
how I missed it. I am a long time Star
Wars fan, I can remember catching the first Star Wars on opening night in Boston
back in the 1970’s. I have caught all
the following Star Wars flicks in theaters, except this one some how.
First thing I
noticed is the cameraman has a new shtick.
Instead of the blackout look, this guy has a new look. The color is faded out to nearly black and
white, contrast is way down, brightness is way down, and the studio air seems
filled with smoke, blurring everything out.
Makes it hard to recognize the actors, they all look like fuzzy shadows
floating thru the gloom. Only in the
last reel do we get some decent video.
To see what was happening I had to pull my chair up to within 4 feet of
the TV screen.
Plot is
indescribable. IMDB took a whole page to
summarize it. WE meet a young Han Solo,
played by an actor I never heard of before.
He did not look at all like Harrison Ford. He carries a blaster in a low slung holster
but somehow his blaster is not as neat as the one Harrison Ford used to carry.
Han has a girl friend, and the relationship is intense enough that first thing
they do upon meeting is an impressive kiss.
She is there for the whole movie but only in the last reel do we learn she
is a traitor working for Darth Maul. We
have a repeat of the Moss Eisley bar scene, a train hijacking like the one in
Firefly, the scene where Han wins the Millennium Falcon from Lando Calrissian
at cards and some others too.
They do the really
fat stereo bit so good that I could hear things coming from way off the
screen. Like when Beckett busts in on
Han and girlfriend smooching in the clothes closet you can hear him coming from
way off the screen.
All in all a meh
movie.
Senate Session June 13
Senate Session, 13 June.
We are getting to the bottom of the bill pile, finally. For openers we sustained the Governor’s veto
of SB 5. All ten of us Republicans voted
to sustain, which was just enough to do the job. This bill would have increased Medicaid
provider rates. The governor’s stated
reasons were that this bill was only good thru 1 July of this year, a date that
is nearly upon us, and that this kind of funding ought to be part of the
budget.
Then we did a lot
of house keeping. 75 bills, previously
passed by the Senate, had gone over to the house, and the house had made small
changes in them. Working off of 50
pages of spreadsheet we plowed thru all 75 of ‘em, approving the house changes
by voice vote in nearly every case. Six
bills were controversial enough to get a roll call vote. In each case the Democrats voted it thru,
14-10. These were: SB 99 and expansion of worker’s compensation
to cover partial disability, SB 148 that allows union recruiters access to all
new employees, SB 196 that allows non academic surveys on our school children,
SB 168 that raises electric rates by requiring more renewable energy, SB2 which
raided the business & economic affairs fund to more “workforce
development”. And SB 263 which would allow disgruntled parents wide latitude to
sue schools and school districts.
We were able to whisk
thru all 75 bills by 12:30. The house was still chewing over more bills,
so we adjourned til 1:30 for
lunch. This was a picnic, hot dogs and
potato salad out on the lawn. Would have
been more fun if it had not been raining hard.
My umbrella was in the trunk of my car, way off in the LOB garage. I got fairly wet.
By 2 PM the house finished up, no more changes and
so we adjourned for the week. I drove
home in the rain. Sun did not show
itself until I was going up into the Notch.
Tuesday, June 11, 2019
WSJ says medical marijuana laws reduce opioid deaths
That's in today's Journal. Funny, NH has medical marijuana and we have an opioid crisis of too many opioid overdose deaths. What's different about NH? Or is the Wall St Journal piece based on flawed research? The Journal piece didn't give any numbers. Is this a reverse New Hampshire advantage?
Monday, June 10, 2019
Pratt & Whitney to merge with Raytheon. WSJ
Front page of today's Wall St Journal. They called it United Technologies and Raytheon to merge. United Technologies is the holding company that holds Pratt and Whitney. Pratt is one of the only three jet engine makers in the world. The other two are GE and Rolls Royce. That means they are making about a third of all the jet engines made in the whole world. That's big.
Raytheon started up in the 1930's making vacuum tubes and cashed in on the invention of radar in WWII. Raytheon had good connections with the MIT Radiation Laboratory where the American radar effort was centered. A lot of Raytheon people were old MIT grads, they kept in touch, and when the Rad Lab needed something built, they had Raytheon do it. By the time I went to work at Raytheon in the 1970's they were big. They had the fantastic anti ballistic missile radar project which I got to work on. They were doing SAM-D which became the Patriot anti aircraft and anti ballistic missile system in time for the Gulf War. Raytheon was the go-to contractor for Navy ship borne radars and later the Aegis missile systems for Navy cruisers.
Any how, the merger, if it goes thru, to be called Raytheon Technologies Corporation will be the second largest defense contractor, right behind Boeing, and be worth $100 billion.
This will reduce the number of defense contractors, reducing competition, which will raise the price of defense contracts to us taxpayers. Was I Donald Trump (I'm not) I would have the anti trust department over at Justice object to this merger on the basis that it is anti competitive. Anti trust hasn't done anything since they chickened out of supporting Netscape from predatory pricing by Microsoft back in the 1990s. There has been some talk in recent days about breaking up the big tech companies, but I haven't since any real action on that front. Fat as I can see, the DOJ antitrust people simply draw their pay and don't do anything.
Raytheon started up in the 1930's making vacuum tubes and cashed in on the invention of radar in WWII. Raytheon had good connections with the MIT Radiation Laboratory where the American radar effort was centered. A lot of Raytheon people were old MIT grads, they kept in touch, and when the Rad Lab needed something built, they had Raytheon do it. By the time I went to work at Raytheon in the 1970's they were big. They had the fantastic anti ballistic missile radar project which I got to work on. They were doing SAM-D which became the Patriot anti aircraft and anti ballistic missile system in time for the Gulf War. Raytheon was the go-to contractor for Navy ship borne radars and later the Aegis missile systems for Navy cruisers.
Any how, the merger, if it goes thru, to be called Raytheon Technologies Corporation will be the second largest defense contractor, right behind Boeing, and be worth $100 billion.
This will reduce the number of defense contractors, reducing competition, which will raise the price of defense contracts to us taxpayers. Was I Donald Trump (I'm not) I would have the anti trust department over at Justice object to this merger on the basis that it is anti competitive. Anti trust hasn't done anything since they chickened out of supporting Netscape from predatory pricing by Microsoft back in the 1990s. There has been some talk in recent days about breaking up the big tech companies, but I haven't since any real action on that front. Fat as I can see, the DOJ antitrust people simply draw their pay and don't do anything.
Friday, June 7, 2019
Budget Day in Concord.
Senate Session, 6 June.
Budget day. Plus 200 year
anniversary of the Concord state
house. We had a small army of former
Senators in the visitor’s gallery and the senate president introduced each one
by name. And a short joint session where
nice things were said about New Hampshire
history and the progress women have made in politics over the years. No Fast Track calendar this week. We ran thru the 8 bills on the regular
calendar, mostly on roll calls, 14-10, all the Democrats voting for and all the
Republicans voting against. That got us
up to lunch, sandwiches and cookies on the lawn outside. After lunch we started on the budget and
didn’t finish it until midnight. The budget comes in two parts, part 1 (200
pages) and part 2 (180 pages). Over than
style changes it was/is not clear to me what the difference between them
is. Transparent they are not. Would you
believe opaque? No index or table of
contents. I never found any totals of
spending or tax revenues for the whole state, or even of the various
departments of state government. I have
been told that restoration of 100% stabilization grants is in there, somewhere,
but I never found it. The budget is
started by the governor, who asks all his department heads how much money they
need. This list of goodies then goes to
the house, which modifies it to suit them selves. Then it comes to the senate and we make a lot
of changes, or we try to.
We submitted 20
amendments. The Democrats voted each one
down, 14-10. My amendments, one to fund renovation
of the Hitchner building in Littleton
to support White Mountain community college expansion
there, and the other for expansion of the Coos County Family Health Services
clinic in Berlin, both perished
on party line roll call votes 14-10.
Anyhow, that makes this budget a Democrat budget. Lots of new taxes. Lots of expensive goodies like a 1.5% COLA
for state retirees.
It was after 10 PM by the time our last amendment was voted
down. Then we got into a complex, and
amazing bit of parliamentary quibbling than ran on till midnight. We had
originally voted to “divide” the budget into stuff we liked and stuff we didn’t
like. Senate president Donna Soucy had
ruled the budget part 2 “divisible”. In
a voice vote the Democrats overruled the senate president (one of their own
party!) and declared part 2 indivisible. Very unusual to slap down your own senate
president like that. Which meant we could only vote the whole thing
up or down, whereas we wanted to vote for the stuff we liked and against the stuff
we didn’t like. So we called a recess
and waited for the Democrats desire to go home to override their desire to
score an obscure political point. It
didn’t work, and at midnight we
finally held a roll call vote to approve budget part 2. All the Democrats voted for and all the
Republicans voted against. So the
Democrat budget is off to the governor’s desk.
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