RAND, Aerospace, Jiu Jitsu, and other matters. Mail 682 20110706

Mail 682 Wednesday, July 6, 2011

 

 

 

 

Article about RAND that you might enjoy.

 

http://www.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/27657

 

–Gary Pavek

 

 

RAND was a think tank, and over time it became too intellectual for General Schriever and Air Force Systems Command. Schriever, who built the modern Air Force and who understood megamissions very well, caused the creation of the Aerospace Corporation, which was to be “practical” rather than theoretical. Schriever ordered two major studies of the future of the Air Force: Project Forecast, which dealt with winged aircraft, and Project 75, which was a study of missile systems. Both were intended to answer the megamissions question. For more on megamissions see my lecture at the war college. Colonel Francis X. Kane was the Director of Project Forecast. Project 75 was done at Aerospace with Bill Dorrance as Director; I was the Editor of the study. Both were very influential in the development of USAF weapons systems.

RAND and Aerospace Corporation worked together. RAND considered Aerospace a bit too rough and ready, too operations oriented with too little regard to matters intellectual. Aerospace people thought of RAND as too theoretical with too little regard for practical matters. The Air Force generally required RAND critiques of major Aerospace studies, and most RAND Air Force studies required similar participation from Aerospace before the final report could be written. This cross fertilization was often useful and sometimes very much so, but it could lead to considerable frustration as well.

RAND had managed to establish the principle that RAND people were always on duty thinkers, and thus should fly first class when on company business since they were expected to work during the flights. This sometimes meant that a RAND intellectual would be flying first class while the spouse sat back in steerage with the Aerospace troops when we all went to a major conference. (In those days families often went to major conferences (paying their own way while the staffer got a paid ticket.) Aerospace Corporation staff were also expected to work while on the road, but weren’t authorized first class tickets. In practice, at least in my case, we did so much travel that we got upgrades from the airlines, so the RAND first class privilege wasn’t as important as it might have been.

There were other major government owned think tanks, mostly on the East coast. MITRE and Lincoln Labs were the two I worked with.

RAND published a wide variety of documents on many important matters. Herman Kahn’s Techniques of Systems Analysis, a RAND document, was the best (indeed nearly the only) systematic introduction to systems analysis/operations research in publication for some years, and remains one of the best even today. RAND did studies on such matters as “hostile trade”, a study of Japanese economic warfare in previous centuries.

Everyone used to enjoy visiting RAND in Santa Monica, and the Indonesian rijsttafel restaurant down the street.

 

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Birthright Lottery on its way

 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/8619677/Babies-to-be-won-monthly-in-first-IVF-lottery.html

 

Tim of Angle

 

Think of it as science fiction in everyday life…

 

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The Last Shuttle

 

Dear Dr. Pournelle,

 

I hope this finds you well. It may be a deficiency in my searching prowess, but I haven’t seen much recent commentary from you about the impending last shuttle flight. I’d ask that you be gentle to the old bird, oinking and inefficient flying pork-barrel that she was. For those of us who were starry-eyed kids in the seventies she was as close to the promised Flying Car as we will likely ever get in our lifetimes. In these mean and loathsome times it is difficult to imagine sitting in a cherry tree dreaming of Mars, but it was once possible. Maybe it will be again someday. Until then, the shuttle will remain our last attempt to grasp the stars. Please be kind to her memory!

 

In addendum, I guess I need to re-read Fallen Angels again. Great book, but of all the damnable futures to come true, why that one…?

 

Thanks again,

 

Jeff Stoner

 

I did a long piece on this in today’s view. Thanks. As to Fallen Angels, we tried to be logical when we wrote it.

 

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U.S. Warns Terrorists Might Try to Plant Bombs Inside of People – FoxNews.com

 

Jerry,

 

Here come the Semtex breast implants!

 

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2011/07/06/us-warns-terrorists-might-try-to-plant-bombs-inside-people/

 

No doubt the detonator could be disguised as a pacemaker.

 

Jim Crawford

 

If I were running al Qaeda, I would think of rumors to start and operations to make which would cause the United States to react by harming itself. This looks like one such. The costs of TSA are tens of billions a year and the humiliation of the American people. The costs to al Qaeda are fairly small. QED

 

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What It Costs to Resist Hackers

 

Very interesting story about cyber-security in the LA Times. I’ll just sample a couple of lines:

 

http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-hacking-security-20110705,0,7934527.story

 

The business of protecting computers and servers from intruders has been growing nearly 10% a year since 2006, but security industry officials say 2011 may be the busiest yet. Companies are expected to spend $75.6 billion, easily surpassing last year’s record of $63 billion….

 

Sony has alone estimated it will lose more than $170 million from hackers breaching its PlayStation Network in April and stealing credit card information of its 70 million members. The damage includes loss of revenue and additional spending on security enhancements and legal fees.

 

Mike

 

 

Are these shovel ready jobs?

 

 

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Laid-Back in the Lab, Maybe, but They Spurred the Weapons Race

 

Interesting NYT article at http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/05/science/05bomb.html?ref=technology about the competition between the very bureaucratic Los Alamos folks and those at Lawrence Livermore.

 

 

    In 1952 the physicist Ernest O. Lawrence <http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/1939/lawrence-bio.html> assembled a group of young scientists to design weapons that were radically different from those being designed at Los Alamos National Laboratory <http://www.lanl.gov/> in New Mexico, the nation’s original nuclear weapons <http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/science/topics/atomic_weapons/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier> lab.

    …

    Dr. Francis researched the history of the nation’s nuclear weapons program when she was in graduate school at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the mid-1990s.

    …

    In a recent telephone interview she said the photos revealed the casual approach to designing weapons that prevailed at Livermore, in a significant contrast to the more formal, bureaucratic national security culture that was characteristic of Los Alamos.

 

    She said the rivalry between the labs played an essential role in the emergence of intercontinental ballistic missiles, which required lighter, more powerful weapons.

 

    “It is not an exaggeration to say that the competition between the labs was as significant — or even more significant — as the United States-Soviet Union competition in driving innovation in the arms race,” she said. “This led to a culture of entrepreneurialism at Livermore, a less conservative approach to weapons design and riskier endeavors.”

 

 

Regards,

 

John

 

John Harlow, President BravePoint

 

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“It is because we only teach the students how to memorize, and we test them and test them, and punish them if they cannot pass the tests.”

 

http://www.salon.com/life/feature/2011/07/03/kosher_chinese_excerpt/index.html

 

Actually, we don’t teach memorization in the sense of addition and multiplication tables, and memorizing and reciting poetry. In fact, in many cases it’s pretty hard to determine just what has been taught; many universities have concluded ‘not much’ and institute routine remedial courses for incoming freshmen.

 

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Intelligence Computer Doesn’t Work

 

It seems even the U.S. military is not immune to poor technical

support and a lack of mastery of the cycles of innovation:

 

<.>

How much money does it cost to build a computer system which shares

real-time intelligence among troops fighting in both Iraq and

Afghanistan? The question is still out, but we know for sure that the

$2.7 billion the Army has spent didn’t accomplish the goal.

 

That’s the report from experts and analysts familiar with the system,

and which have used the system, and concluded that not only does it

not work the way it was supposed to, it is actually making

intelligence sharing more difficult.

</>

http://news.antiwar.com/2011/07/05/experts-armys-2-7-billion-intelligence-computer-doesnt-work-properly/

 

This incident outlines lacking mastery; mastery of the cycles of

innovation is an important indicator of national power in most RAND

and CIA models. This was one area we could point to and say that

America still had an edge. China has a better Supercomputer, the

Japanese have something better than that, and our guys can’t even get

decent tech support… *sigh*

——–

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

 

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Indian tribes welcome much-maligned FEMA homes EarthLink – U.S. News

 

http://my.earthlink.net/article/us?guid=20110706/4377c311-901d-4aae-8656-3824fd5669e9

 

Dear Jerry:

 

It’s not exactly a silk purse made from a sow’s ear, but this story says

that not all government actions are fruitless.

 

Regards,

 

Francis Hamit

 

I am sure there is a lesson in this story, but I am not sure that you and I draw the same conclusions here.

 

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Public education

 

Jerry,

 

The state of public education in Atlanta:

 

http://www.ajc.com/news/investigation-into-aps-cheating-1001375.html

 

Jim

 

Somehow I am not astonished.

 

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You wrote: “We have far too many who seem to have majored in self-esteem while in fact learning little that is estimable.”

 

https://jerrypournelle.com/chaosmanor/?p=340#debate

 

Confidence often passes for accuracy, but the two are not synonymous.

I believe you are onto something here. People go to school and schools sell them confidence. Yes, you can pass our dumbed down tests! Yes, you can pass through our degraded program! Yes, you can pay us for the rest of your life! We used to focus on solutions, now we focus on good feelings. The whole thing is a scam. They sell confidence — it’s a con; it’s a scam!

 

The whole economy is the same scam. It won’t get better by being cynical about it. It won’t get better by being stoic about it.

Complaining about it has not helped; nobody seems to listen. But, fret not. I’ve decided I will not despair, I’ll just emigrate if it comes to that. This is not my problem. I did not create this problem. And, I will not accept this as my problem. If the people do not get their act together, I’ll move. I’m done paying for others’ idiotic choices.

 

——–

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

 

I am a bit old to run, and I don’t have too many places to go. Back in the Cold War days I had my survival company. Mel Tappan chose to go to Oregon. I could have joined him, but as I said then, the best way to survive a nuclear war is not to have one, and I could do a lot more about that in Los Angeles than I could from the Rogue River. I stayed and developed the Council I chaired, and perhaps it did some good in developing the concepts of and arguments for Strategic Defense. Through General Schriever and others we had a path to the President so our arguments did not get lost. I don’t have all those paths now. But I remind you all that despair is a sin. Sail on. And on. And on.

 

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Asian pollution halts global warming

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/07/04/us-climate-sulphur-idUSTRE7634IQ20110704

 

Isn’t this Fallen Angels in reverse?

 

(Actually, the physics in FA is better…)

 

Jim

 

We worked hard on that book.

 

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Voting and citizenship

 

You recently mentioned Heinlein’s views on voting qualifications as

laid out in Starship Troopers.

 

Nevil Shute had similar ideas that he laid out in his 1950 (or so)

book “In the Wet”. The book revolves around a fever dream of some

events that take place about 50 years in the future ie; 2000. Very

prescient in many ways. He predicted the European population

implosion and one of the plot points is a sort of goofy Prince of

Wales who has no desire to succeed his mother the Queen.

 

In any event, a major plot point is what is called “The Seventh

Vote”. By that time voting qualifications had changed. Every adult

citizen got one vote. However, you could earn additional votes. I

seem to recall that clergy got an additional vote, military service

got one, finishing school another, raising a child who stayed out of

trouble another and so on. One could earn up to 5 additional votes or

6 total. The Queen could award the “Seventh Vote” for some sort of

meritorious service. In the novel the hero saves the queen from a

bomb and gets the seventh vote for that.

 

I have always thought the idea of one man/one vote was not a good way

to run a country. Seems to me that the people who contribute more

should have more say in how it is run. Maybe we need a system where

one gets extra votes for meeting certain milestones. Or perhaps base

it on taxes. 1 vote for paying up to $1,000. Another for paying

1-10,000. Another for 10-50,000 and so on.

 

There are many other ways that multiple votes could be awarded, all

of which have merits and demerits.

 

The problem is that now people can, or think they can, vote themselves rich.

 

As Bastiat asked in “The Law”, if it is immoral for me to use a gun

to take $100 from you, why is it moral to have someone else do it in

the name of government?

 

Be well,

John R Henry CPP

“All progress is made by a lazy person looking for an easier way.” –

Lazarus Long

 

Neville Shute had a very good novel in which multiple voting schemes were used. We tend more to egalitarianism now. Of course the equality theory is absurd: it is true mystically, or religiously, in the same sense the compared to man all earthworms are equal, so compare to God all humans are equal. There is more difference between Einstein and God than between Einstein and the village idiot. In that sense they are equal, but in no other. Given multiple votes for achievements is very much against the egalitarian principle.

In classical philosophy injustice consists of treating equal things unequally, but just as important it is unjust to treat unequal things equally. That seems to be lost, along with religion, in this modern world; yet if we have lost religion, we have actually lost even the pretense of equality. C. S. Lewis understood this thoroughly. Without recognition of inequality there can be no equality.

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LA Times does something useful?

 

You may have seen this a ka-jillion times already, but here it is again.

 

http://www.marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2010/08/la-times-ranks-teachers.html

 

It’s a link to a blog that discusses the LA Times apparently trying to link teachers to performance! With statistics that already exist but the LA County Unified doesn’t report! This appears to be legitimate public service?! And the Teacher Union are organizing a boycott?!

 

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-0819-teachers-union-20100819,0,5684383.story

 

Wow.

 

Thanks again for the site; just started reading it again more (and re-upped the sub., too) after hearing you on TWiT. I hope you do more of those! Picked up “Oath of Fealty” in a used bookshop just the other day also…interesting how it in some ways presaged the “gated communities” and other items of latter-day “civilization”. The discussions on taxes and “social contract” must have seemed weird in the 80s? Funny too how wireless comms. and the “mainframe” model of computing were “missed” in that era of S.F. Next up: “The Gripping Hand”…you and Niven do rip along at a good pace you know?

 

Jay R. Larsen

BA, MBA

Farewell to Space-Faring View 682 20110705-2

View 682 Wednesday, July 06, 2011

 

 

Quietus : No More Spacefaring Nation

 

The Final Shuttle Launch for Friday has been cancelled, but it’s still the end of an era. Actually it’s the end of several eras, particularly the America as a space-faring nation era inaugurated by John Kennedy. The twist is that Shuttle killed space-faring.

Kennedy ran for President on “the Missile Gap” in which he claimed that the USSR had more ICBM missiles than the United States, and the US was in danger of losing a three-day war to the USSR. Since the Soviet Sputnik satellite had gone up and surprised us all, a lot of people believed that. It was a key factor in the election. After the election Kennedy needed something that would show we were winning the technology race. He also had a real vision of America as a space-faring nation. He had a dream and he sold that dream to America. God Bless Him.

When Kennedy announced that America would go to the Moon before the end of the 1960’s, there were only a handful of space scientists and engineers who thought we could do it. Chris Kraft in particular thought that Kennedy had promised more than we could deliver. Werner von Braun believed it could be done, and the technical design of the Apollo project was mostly his. The design was important because there were more goals than simply putting a man on the Moon.

One design was to do the Moon Project in steps: first we build a capability for routine access to orbit through reusable rockets. Start sub-orbital, but make them savable and reusable. Build X ships, and from them learn how to build better ships. The X-15 was a step in that direction. With routine orbital access the rest would be simple: build an on-orbit assembly capability, send up the parts, put them together in orbit in what would amount to a space station – the Von Braun Wheel was a popular candidate – then when the ship was assembled, send up the fuel and oxidizers. The moon ship would go to the Moon, land, and return to Earth orbit. Crew transfers to the space station and returns. Note that by the time of the Moon Launch (from orbit) the most fuel expensive part of the operation – Earth to Space Station, then Space Station back to Earth – would be routine. We’d know how to do it.

This looked both logical and safe, and from everything then known about the Soviet program, we’d beat the Russians.

Kennedy rejected this plan. First, we were in a race with the Soviets, and he was concerned that we would lose. Second, and less well publicized – it did not, as the Saturn/Apollo approach did, mean the reindustrialization of the South. It was important to the Moon Mission that Lyndon Johnson be on board. He had the Congressional power that Kennedy, formerly a Congressman and junior Senator without mu Congressional influence, never had. Johnson insisted that most of the heavy work be done in the South. Geography dictated that eastern launches would go from Florida. The Saturn/Apollo plan called for a great deal of heavy industrial work in Houston, Huntsville, and Michoud, Louisiana. No one pays much attention to Michoud now, but at one time it was terribly important – and if it had remained so, Shuttle would have been a different and far safer spacecraft and the Challenger disaster would not have happened. But that’s another story.

Once we were committed to Saturn/Apollo, with its enormous disintegrating totem poles, and once the nation was committed to winning the space race so that there were few fiscal restraints, the race was on and it was expensive. Terribly expensive. At a time when the national budget was under $100 Billion a year, Saturn/Apollo would cost $20 billion officially, and actually more as talent and research in other military operations were altered to apply to Apollo.

The problem is, there were no private industries with capabilities to manage anything this big and complex. The most complex operation in the history of the world was D-Day, the Sixth of June, 1944; Saturn/Apollo was a contender to be the new first place in complexity, and was certainly second. No private industry could have managed D-Day and no private corporation could have managed Apollo. The only “companies” used to managing hundreds of thousands of employees to accomplish a particular goal at a particular time were the military. Although the pretense was that NASA was a civilian operation, and most of it was, Saturn/Apollo was done with military managers and in the military way. The “soldiers” were civilian development scientists and technicians, of course; but the people doing the managing were military, and they did it the military way, which is to divide the enormous task into a series of comprehensible tasks and assign someone capable of getting that done to each task. This meant concern for getting the job done – mission oriented — and little to none for the concerns of the people assigned. “You, man. You are in charge of getting me an operating space suit design. It has to do the job, and it has to be ready on time. Go do it.” “Uh, General, I’m a control systems engineer –” “I know that. I also see your record. I know you can do this job, and this is the job I have to get done. Go for it. Dismissed.”

And on. In every case the notion wasn’t to put the best man in the right job. It was to be sure that a good enough man was in every job, and also to have enough redundancy with overlapping jobs to make sure that each job got done and was done on time to fit in so that on a certain July day in 1969 an American would step onto the surface of the Moon.

That happened. It happened on time, and while hardly under budget, it got done. The US could afford it. And during that era of Mercury and Gemini and Apollo and The Right Stuff, America was promised a space-faring capability, enthusiasm for space rose in the general population, space was popular, and the NASA legend grew. And we went to the Moon.

 

The problem was that we won to early. By the time of Apollo the Russians understood that they couldn’t win, and they gave up on the race, and told the world it wasn’t worth winning anyway. The grapes were sour. (For those with a modern education, that image is from a story in Aesop’s Fables, and if you never read those as a child, you ought to; you’ve missed something.) So by the time we landed on the Moon, it wasn’t so clear why we were doing it, or what we would get out of it; but it was clear that America was Number One, and our ability to go to space, do things, and come home was the demonstration of that. It wasn’t precisely The Dream, but it would do.

But we had built Saturn/Apollo, a huge disintegrating totem pole, and we hadn’t used Saturn for building any infrastructure in space. More: we accomplished Apollo the military way, goal oriented, damn the expenses, hire everyone you need, assign enough people to be sure the job was done. We had created an army of 21,000 development scientists and technicians.

And the Iron Law took over. If you don’t know Pournelle’s Iron Law of Bureaucracy, please go read it.

NASA was told to build systems that would make space operations cheap and routine.

The real job of NASA was to develop a system that would employ 21,000 development scientists and engineers. They did. The result was Shuttle, which was designed to employ 21,000 development scientists and engineers without regard to the success or failure of Shuttle as a spacecraft. In that sense, Shuttle was a complete success.

And it did some missions well. It did others horribly. We never developed a decent on-orbit capability. We never developed a decent working space suit for construction in space. But we did have a system whose budget was independent of its operations. Note that the Shuttle budget was pretty much the same year after year, independent of the number of missions. I used to say that the cost per mission of Shuttle was either zero or infinity: If we had five missions in a year the annual cost was the same as in the years when we had zero missions.

 

There was a lot to like about Shuttle but mostly because she was all we had. She ate the budget for X programs that might have taken the Reusable spaceship approach. NASA carefully killed all potential rivals to Shuttle. It also killed a number of concepts that couldn’t be built with Shuttle. No other approaches wanted or needed. It’s Shuttle or nothing, and back in Reagan’s day America’s space capability and a demonstrated ability to do Strategic Defense was an important part of the strategy to end the Cold War.

 

I will miss the old girl even so. Shuttle was the enemy of the space plan I had hoped to bring about through SSX. If you want to know more about that, see The SSX Concept, and How to Get to Space. I wrote both those long ago, but they are still relevant.

View 682 20110706-1

View 682 Wednesday, July 06, 2011

This is the first post for today. I have written a fairly long piece on the end of Shuttle, and America in Space, and it will go up as a second View for the day.

I am catching up, but still far behind. Mail is accumulating. The Column needs to be written. And Rick Hellewell continues to build this site. This afternoon I am going to try a new word processor editor for WordPress that may solve some of the problems.

 

 

A Needed App

 

I just had a think. In another conference someone asked how you do autograph sessions with eBooks. I suddenly thought of an app. When you invoke it, it brings up the cover of a book you have on the smart phone, and activates the camera. The next picture would be of the fan with the author (taken I suppose by a bookstore clerk). It might even allow a short recorded message from the author. I have no idea if anyone would want this, but I wouldn’t mind having some mementos of that kind from favorite authors.

 

  

Great Flash and Other matters Mail 682 20110705

Mail 682 Tuesday July 5, 2011

 

This ought to have been posted yesterday.

Subj: Fwd: Best Flash Mob Ever

         http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FATQ0ayQXsA

Jim

It is certainly worth watching. Exuberant.

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Hary Brown

It’s a Michael Caine movie now available to stream on Netflix. He is a pensioner who chum is killed by the local gangbangers. But Harry was a Royal Marine once.

John

“In preparing for battle I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable.”

Dwight David Eisenhower

I have not seen that, but this is a favorite plot with me. I even liked Streets of Fire which had a similar theme. I like stories in which bad guys pick the wrong victim…

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DSK

So, DSK gets put on suicide watch at Rikers until he resigns from the IMF — this is all before the investigation occurs. The maid is connected to the mob, etc. Now, like a row of sharkteeth the next accuser stands ready to put this guy away. This is so blatantly obvious.

——–

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

It does seem rather a parody of real justice. We still don’t know everything but where is all the money coming from?

 

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The Day is Done

I was struck by your comments concerning “The Day is Done” and agree with your thoughts on the decline of education in the face of increasing money spent on it. My students (I teach CS at a liberal arts college) often seem to resent the idea that earning the grade they want involves a great deal of talent and time investment. Most come out of high schools with GPAs > 4 with homework commitments of less than an hour a week. Of course, the shift has been going on for a while. I still remember an episode of “The Brady Bunch” where Greg was forced to watch/help his father recite “The Day is Done” at a school show; the point was that such old poetry had no place in the “hip” world he inhabited. And, in elementary school in the late 70s, I was considered strange for picking Kipling’s “If” to memorize for a class poetry day. On the other hand, my 83 year old father can still recite “The Gettysburg Address” and Leigh Hunt’s “Abou Ben Adhem” flawlessly—they and many other pieces shaped his worldview.

kenny

Kenny Moorman

Abou Ben Adhem, may his tribe increase– Sixth Grade. It’s in the California Sixth Grade Reader I am working into a (public domain so very minimum priced) eBook. Along with a number of other poems and stories we all once knew or at least had heard of. Like Horatius at the Bridge. Incidentally you can find Horatius and the other Lays of Ancient Rome on this site with a short introduction.

 

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Subject: Researchers create rollerball-pen ink to draw circuits

Almost like Motie technology:

http://www.physorg.com/news/2011-06-rollerball-pen-ink-circuits.html

Tracy

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A bit of hope for alternative fuels –

http://www.platts.com/RSSFeedDetailedNews/RSSFeed/Oil/6245497

Alternative fuels for the military need to be “drop-in”: Navy Sec’y

I see real hope for alternative fuels and Mabus says why I think it can happen, “The sheer size of the military needs, Mabus said, means that “what we can do, what the military can do, is we can bring a market.”

I hope.

R,

Rose

Bringing a market is often all that is needed. If NASA had done space that way…

 

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Subj: Good nukes! TVA signs letter of intent to buy B&W small modular reactors

http://www.babcock.com/news_and_events/2011/20110616a.html

 

>>The Babcock & Wilcox Company (B&W) (NYSE:BWC) announced today that Generation mPower LLC (GmP), a majority-owned subsidiary of Babcock & Wilcox Nuclear Energy, Inc., has signed a letter of intent with the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) that defines the project plans and associated conditions for designing, licensing and constructing up to six B&W mPower small modular reactors (SMRs) at TVA’s Clinch River site in Roane County, Tenn. … GmP remains on track to deploy the first B&W mPower reactor by 2020 at TVA’s Clinch River site. …<<

Rod Montgomery==monty@starfief.com

 

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Fallen Angels – life imitates art.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/07/04/us-climate-sulphur-idUSTRE7634IQ20110704

Roland Dobbins

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‘The man who makes war without the approval of elected legislators is no longer a president, but a king.’

http://www.americanthinker.com/2011/07/the_man_who_would_be_king.html

The King of England constitutionally had the right to make war on whom he pleased. He needed Parliament to pay for it. Congress was explicitly given that power in the Constitution with the English precedent in mind.

 

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Obama Losing Canada’s Oil to China

Jerry,

This story really requires no comment from me, but I’ll point out that given a pipeline the US would have a competitive advantage that would enable the purchase of Canadian oil at a discount. We are all going to have to learn how to walk.

http://www.newsmax.com/InsideCover/BarackObama-FredUpton-China-Oil/2011/07/02/id/402295?s=al&promo_code=C8BF-1

Jim Crawford

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Littoral Ship Corroding: USN cut protection from specs

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/06/shipbuilder-blames-navy-as-brand-new-warship-disintegrates

Gee, whoda thunk it? Steel + aluminum + salt water? Naa, don’ need no cathodic protection system…

73s/Best regards de John Bartley K7AAY

Amateur Radio – the first technology based social network

 

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Day Book and off-line “blogging”

Dear Jerry,

I’m a long-time reader of your great stuff.

First, i wish you the best with your health.

Second, i am also very interested in the issues you raise, including “sequence of blog posts” and “day book”…

“The business of chronological and blogological order still needs resolution. Not much I can do about that either, except to try to keep various bundles of thoughts together rather than letting them get spread out across a number of separate posts. That requires a bit of forethought, which means that the concept of a day book, a log of one’s thoughts and actions for the day, gets lost and nearly impossible. That needs rethinking because this was conceived as a day book, not a “blog” as that has come to be understood.”

One software that addresses some of this is called MacJournal (http://www.marinersoftware.com/products/macjournal/) which may give you some of what you want, including keeping the master copy of your blog posts on your local machine. I am just starting to use it, and learn its capabilities, but it looks promising.

Take care,

Tom

Rick is working on a plan that will allow viewing this place in any order one likes. It takes a bit to develop. We’ll see. Stay tuned…