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THE VIEW FROM CHAOS MANOR

View 234 December 2 - 8, 2002

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Monday  December 2, 2002

First, I have to do some serious work on Burning Tower. Then the December column has to be done. I have to get a machine shipped off to Duke University for use in image comparisons. And over the weekend I had some conversations with David Weber, and I'm being a bit inspired to put together a new Hornblower in Space Opera set probably in the time of the First Empire; although I have some ideas for a story called "Lisabetta" that would take place in the "no FTL" universe I put together that includes Birth of Fire and the Laurie Jo Hansen/Aeneas Mackenzie stories. Which might in fact make a rather interesting space adventure series set in the future of about 80 years from now.

Which is to say, I have work to get done, and it's going to take up a good bit of time, leaving me a bit less for this place unless there's something important to write.


A Policy for America

We had panels at the LASCON that included a discussion of Republic vs. Empire. It's astonishing how many of my old friends have become warhawks. And it may be that we have gone so far in marching the king's men up the hill that we have to do something with them other than march back down again.

Deposing Saddam Hussein will be no great problem. What we do after that is something else again. We will have two clients, either of which we could use to defeat Iraq; alas, if we use one we really alienate the other. The Turkish Army isn't going to appreciate an independent Kurdistan on Turkey's southern border. The Kurds aren't going to want to overthrow Saddam for us without the promise of independence --- and won't be happy if we use the Turks to do the job.

Meaning we may have to put an appreciable army over there because we don't have clients we can rely on. After which we will have to govern. And governing a place with that much oil is going to be a difficult task, with great temptations, and splendid opportunities for corruption.

Rome's republic began its sharp decline after the Second Punic War when Rome inherited Sicily and Sardinia, two rich provinces that were never intended to be incorporated into the Republic and thus never to have citizenship. This meant they were governed by officials appointed in Rome and responsible to Rome, not to the people they governed; and they were rich provinces, and the tax farming was good and lucrative and being governor was worth competing for and ---

Meanwhile, the stern old Good Government types stood ready to prosecute any politician (of the opposite party) who had profited in any way from being part of the government. Many of the prosecutions were justified in that they were certainly violations of the laws, but at the same time the laws were stricter than the morality and ethics of the governing class, and enforcement was largely done on political motivations. Perhaps nothing of that sort can ever happen here.

Eventually popular political figures appealed directly to the people against the court systems. Some of those popular figures were military as well as civilian politicians. Perhaps nothing of that sort can ever happen here.

And perhaps it is not too hard to see the future.

What Must Be Done

People keep asking me what I would do were I in charge.

Ideally I would bring our troops home, shore up the Navy, tell the world "We are the friends of liberty everywhere, but the guardians only of our own," and disentangle the United States from the disputes in Europe, the Balkans, Korea, the Middle East, and generally everywhere. At the same time I would take the money at present paid in subsidies to clients and allies and others -- some $4 billion a year to Israel and more than $2 billion a year to Egypt, for a start -- and put that into developing energy independence programs.

I would develop and deploy light water nuclear reactors on the grounds that the fuel is nearly free: we have at least 15,000 surplus warheads, each with 2 to 4 kilograms of 90% enriched fissionables (fuel grade is about 10% enriched) so the expensive part of making nuclear fuel is a sunk cost: we may as well get some good out of it, since we ought to get rid of those warheads anyway.  I would put money into X projects to develop cheap access to space: over the long haul, solar power from orbit and orbital industries can be environmentally benign while very economically effective, given only reasonably cheap access to space.

Regarding access to space: airlines operate at about 3 to 5 times fuel costs. It takes about the same amount of fuel to get a pound to orbit as it does to fly it to Australia from the US. Rockets are not really less efficient than jet engines (they have to carry their oxidants, but they experience far less drag over the course of their flight because they aren't in the atmosphere very long). There is no reason why getting to orbit need be much more expensive than a first class ticket to Australia. (Of course that means savable and reusable space ships, not expendables.)

 Given costs of that magnitude, solar power satellites become quite cost efficient -- their major cost has all always been the cost of getting to orbit. Space industries including mining and fabrication on the Moon become feasible given airline levels of costs to orbit.

None of this is science fiction or even all that hard. There is no new science needed. There is engineering development needed, and some of it is tricky. Rocket engine designs are mostly engineering but there is also a bit of the black art to them in determining chamber flows and combustion stabilities and the like -- but what that really means is you have to build things and fly them because we don't have either the inputs or computing power to do  third decimal point accuracy simulations, and most of what is needed in rocket science is third decimal accuracy. (Example: A 700,000 pound Gross Liftoff Weight [GLOW] rocket will be 90% fuel and oxidant; of the remaining 70,000 pounds, about 90% will be structure and tankage and plumbing and shrouds and life support and reserve fuel and other stuff. The remaining 7,000 pounds is payload, but note that this is down in the 3rd decimal place, and there's a real difference between a payload of 700 pounds and one of 15,000 pounds -- and the best calculations we have can't narrow it more than that, and some show that it won't have a payload at all [won't quite reach orbit]. You have to build and fly things to find out what payloads you will get, and how to nickel and dime those up by redesigning structures and making things lighter.) 

This is what X programs are for, and we ought to have several of them going. Of course we don't, and NASA doesn't want any.

In any event, while I trust the American Military, understand that what the military is good at is breaking things and killing people. I trust our engineers more than our diplomats, and I think money invested in energy independence better spent than money invested in conquests -- and healthier for the republic. Conquests feed imperial ambitions.

Not Ideal

We are not in an ideal situation, and there is considerable history, including not only 911 but our response to it, and the perceptions of others. We cannot look like fools. We must not make empty promises or threats.

So: were I in charge I would begin the campaign for new energy technologies and emphasize that new policy while beginning to stand down from adventures that make people hate us (as opposed to hating their neighbors). 

I would make it clear that in future we will behave like a republic, not like the World Empire. We have some continuing obligations, but we will try in future to reduce those, not expand our entangling alliances and overseas commitments. We are the friends of liberty everywhere, but we are the guardians only of our own. Our people may be horrified at the way you live, but we will not send our soldiers to impose our ways on you.

I would tell the world that we will protect our citizens, and some of them will undoubtedly try to persuade you to live in ways you do not like. That is their affair so long as they don't use force. You may forbid them entry to your lands, but if they come in peace you must let them leave in peace if you don't like their examples or their missionary efforts. But so long as you do that, you may have your silly -- even disgusting -- customs and practices. 

But whether I'd invade Iraq as a demonstration of our resolve I do not know. My foreign policy would be to make it very clear to the ruling class of every nation on Earth:  "If you harbor the enemies of the people of the United States and allow them to use your nation to plan and stage attacks on the American people, you will be replaced; your protests that those who follow you will be worse are uninteresting. We have the same message for them, too."

The Afghan campaign was a beginning at propagating that salutary message. It may be that an Iraqi campaign will be needed to drive the point home. On the other hand, it may not be: we may also teach the lesson that "If you do comply with our wishes and make it clear that you neither want to nor can harm the people of the United States, we will leave you alone no matter how great a villain you are." And that may be what the current Administration has in mind. I am certain Colin Powell believes it.

So there we are. But whatever we do about Iraq, it is criminal that we are not pouring out the funds needed to reduce our dependence on that part of the world. We have the technology for energy independence over, if not my lifetime, certainly over yours. Why don't we start?

For a continued discussion see:

Discussion and Disagreement  This takes you to a lined thread that includes considerable discussion of this topic.

 

 

 

 

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Tuesday, December 3, 2002

Got considerable work done on Burning Tower yesterday and today. I also built Esperanza, a new AMD system with the new nVidia chip ASUS motherboard. Full report in the column.

Continuing to work on the column. Sable is alternatively driving us nuts and the sweetest dog alive, which is about what is expected. She is growing. There's nothing really wrong with her that being able to run her around the block won't cure, but the vet insists she needs more shots and it will be January before we can safely take her where other dogs are or have been. At the moment she's asleep under my desk, having bitten nearly everything in the Great Hall -- and that is a lot of stuff. And she looks so peaceful now...

I need to uninstall Office from a main machine so that I can run benchmarks. Annoying. But I think probably necessary, although I am no great fan of benchmarks. Still it's worth having some comparison figures.

I find I don't play Everquest much any more. Earth and Beyond eats time but it's not as addictive as Everquest was. Interesting. Earth and Beyond as a sustaining program for Everquest addicts? The problem with Everquest is that if you won't play a LOT, then by the time you get to a certain level and get certain equipment and abilities, they will have tweaked the game so that nearly everyone has that equipment and those abilities; which make you wonder what all the striving was about.

I have the new AGE OF MYTHOLOGY game from Microsoft. I like that series, but the RTS is too fast; I wish I could pause things to give orders.

 

 

 

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Wednesday, December 4, 2002

Continued work on Burning Tower,  and the column. I am also due to write a foreword to Dvorak's latest book. And that blasted COMDEX report. And I am making notes on a new book about Lisabetta. And 

 

I got a lot of work done on Burning Tower, as well as a full hike up the hill.

 

 

 

 

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Thursday, December 5, 2002

Steve Sailer, reviewer for UPI, has invited me to come with him to the reviewer's showing of Lord Of The Rings. Naturally I leaped at the chance. I ought to try to get on the reviewer invitation list for high-tech movies while I am at it, but one thing at a time...

Niven was over. We have done a lot with Burning Tower and it gallops along. And it is column time.

Bizarre

I read in the LA Times this morning that a gangster in Federal Prison seems to have smuggled out some of his sperm to his wife; she used it to impregnate herself. Or so it is alleged. And he was then overheard to say that a toddler in the visiting room was his child although he had been in prison for several years.

Whereupon, according to the paper, both he and his wife have been indicted for criminal conspiracy, and he faces an additional 35 years on his Federal sentence, while she faces 10 years.

For what?  For having a baby without permission of the Emperor? This is the sort of thing we expect from a Caligula. One doubts the President ever heard of this: it's just bureaucratic tyranny, the worst kind of pettiness. What crime was committed? Against whom? Who was harmed? It is not something I would have advised him to do, but why is it a federal crime? Conspiracy.

I hope I am wrong and that I misread the article. I have been busy today and I have had no chance to look into this. But I am horribly afraid I have NOT misread it. After all, the Attorney General of the US allowed the sounds of slaughtered animals to be played at high volume to a house full of children: those were probably the sounds those children were hearing the night before they were burned to death by action of the FBI. No one much cares that this happened: why should anyone be embarrassed that they want to send a mother to prison for ten years because her husband is in prison and gave her some sperm without permission?

If the baby were NOT his, then would there be a federal crime?

Ye gods. For more see mail.


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Friday, December 6, 2002

Lord of The Rings:
The Two Towers

If you liked the book you will love the movie. If you were indifferent to the book, you will HATE this movie: it's long and very faithful to the story. There are lots of battles, well done. There are a few love scenes, they are cold and Nordic like the mythology from which Tolkein took his inspiration; there's no way to make a chick flick out of this and they didn't try. If you don't like battles, you won't like this movie.

It does not end where The Two Towers ends, nor does the narrative stay constant covering first Rohan and the Return of Gandalf, then Frodo and Smeagol ending with Frodo captured by Shelob and Sam discovering that Frodo isn't dead, but taken. The movie winds between the two stories, which makes it more like one movie, but can be a bit confusing. It works, and I think they could not have done it any other way: it would have been two movies, one with an ending and one without, had they told the story the way Tolkein told it. On the other hand, Tolkein had a reason for spinning out the story the way he did.

The Ents begin as terrifying and end as a bit too cute. Smeagol/Gollum is wonderful, very believable. And the Sword has not been reforged yet...


I have a data base product called Alpha Five. It came on a CD in a box with a ton of books, and I am told it is "like dBase 2" in its utility.

I wouldn't know because it keeps wanting activation keys and stuff and tells me anything I do will go away in 45 days if I don't have them. The keys that were sent with it don't work, and I have no assurance that any they do send will work.

Companies that are determined to make you worry about them and are more concerned with being pirated than they are with customer satisfaction are doomed. I think this one is. I would be pleased to hear from people who have used it and think it is worth getting past their paranoia. Meanwhile, I am uninstalling this mess; I already put in a Licensing Key. Now they want "Activation Keys" and I am not about to go to the work of creating and filling a data base when I have no idea of what they will require next. More, I thought I was creating a new data base but there seem to be all kinds of entries of people I don't know already in the mail list. Why?

It says I can import from Outlook, but when I try the screens the help wizard shows are not the ones that the program is showing me. 

I have been fighting this thing, and it now offers me by mail an activation key. Of course it is huge and silly, and they invite me to cut and paste -- but my mail system is on one machine and I was trying to install Alpha Five on a different machine. First lesson: if you can't receive email on your machine you sure don't want to try running Alpha Five on it unless you like copying about a hundred number pairs in a precise format.

You really have to be determined to use Alpha Five. I am not sure I have enough sincerity.

And see mail.


While I am at it, how the heck do you merge and compare documents in Word 2002 or XP or whatever they call it this week?  I know how it's done in Word 2000 but they have changed it all in XP, and I cannot figure it out. Once again HELP is ZERO use, but then it's Microsoft HELP so of course you know it will be useless.  One wonders just how Microsoft manages to hire such people: you'd think one might slip up and actually have an entry for questions like "How do I merge and compare documents?"  But of course they don't.

So has anyone done document merging and comparison? I want to take two versions of a book, compare them, look at the differences, and accept or reject changes. I do that all the time in Word 2000 and that's one reason we use WORD. Now I am trying in 2002 or Word XP or whatever, and apparently I have to copy both versions onto a machine that has 2000 in order to do it.

OK, I figured it out. When you tell it to Merge, it puts a tool bar up at the top, instead of floating a command box in the text. It's actually better this way. But try to find that out from the HELP!!

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Saturday, December 7, 2002

Pearl Harbor Day

But see also mail.

Getting the column out, but there are social activities as well. This is one hectic week.

 

 

 

 

 

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Sunday, December 8, 2002

The column must be on the wire tonight. 

 (Monday: It went out. Update here this evening.)

 

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