INTERESTING: Do we “clearly” need government?

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Reading Professor Williams is always challenging to my thinking.

http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=54464

Democracy: Enemy of liberty
Posted: February 28, 2007
1:00 a.m. Eastern

*** begin quote ***

Clearly, we need government, and that means there must be collective decision-making.

*** end quote ***

Having read Ludwig and Rothfarb, I’m not sure that if I agree with that as formulated.

Government imho only has one claim to a valid existence. It should be to protect us from violence, intimidation, and fraud.

There is an often cited Supreme Court decision (which I can’t remember) that says the government has no specific duty to protect, and can’t be held to account when it or its agents fail miserably. So, that wipes out its claim to legitimacy.

So, do we really need a government. We know we don’t need the gooferment.

Does their have to be an ultimate reservoir of force? Or, is that just an open invitation to corruption?

The free marketplace always clears supply and demand.

And, it does, when allowed to work, that job very efficiently, without “checkers”.

The quality movement has taught us that “checkers” are very expensive and introduce their own set of “errors”.

So, a market, that allows one to vote with their buying decisions or buying abstentions, would be the ultimate “voting mechanism”.

Thus, it is NOT “clearly” apparent to me that we need a government that can oppress us or be the gooferment.

I hope that Professor Williams can instruct me in the error of my thinking without requiring a tuition payment?


LIBERTY: Black markets, networking, and laughter to defeat big gooferment

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig6/bylund6.html

A Strategy for Forcing the State Back
by Per Bylund

***Begin Quote***

What this combined strategy all boils down to is a decentralized, voluntary, spontaneous, and for-profit web of actors doing what they perceive as beneficial and thereby replacing most or all of the State’s functions. It provides also a solution to the problem of discussing only what’s wrong and what should be – through doing right where the State does wrong. It means action where it is most important and where it is most beneficial.

***End Quote***

We need to “fight this war” with decentralized internet-like tools. No one can succeed with a head2head fight with a gang that is bigger better armed and with the guise of legitimacy.

I’d add another dimension to the horizontal and vertical.

The laughter dimension.

We have to get people laughing at the gooferment’s ineptitude. We need to get them aghast at the innocent victims of its terror tactics. And, aggrieved at the injustices perpetrated on them.

IMHO that’s an important component of victory.


PRODUCTIVITY: New plan to deal with winrot plaguing XPS

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

http://accessories.dell.com/sna/productdetail.aspx?c=us&l=en&s=dhs&cs=19&sku=341-2178

http://accessories.dell.com/sna/productdetail.aspx?c=us&l=en&s=dhs&cs=19&sku=A0158183

Buy a new hard drive for the XPS. ($200)

Preserve the old one as is.

Install the new one.

And restore from scratch using the recovery and distribution media..

If I missed anything, then I have the old one easily accessible to copy from or fall back to.

After everything works, I’ll take an image backup.

This will serve for the next time.

At some point in time, I’ll nuke the extra drive and use it for Linux effort.

Comments?


MONEY: Everybody should have a cash stash!

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

http://www.thesimpledollar.com/2007/02/25/
why-i-keep-cash-under-my-mattress/

http://tinyurl.com/23s4v4

Why I Keep Cash Under My Mattress
February 25, 2007 @ 9:00 am – Written by Trent
Categories: Insurance

***Begin Quote***

It’s true. After all the financial advice I give out on this site, I keep a decent amount of cash “under my mattress” (actually, it’s in another secure place in my home, but it’s effectively the same thing). At first, this seems to fly right in the face of everything I preach on this site. Why isn’t this money at least earning 4.5% in an ING Direct savings account, if not earning a lot more in a mutual fund or something else? No, because this is a different kind of investment.

***End Quote***

Me too. And, gold coins.

Power outages, political instability, or a bank holiday.

There are all sorts of things that can happen. Bail out a relative? How much is up to you? The Mormons keep a year’s food supply. If you practice stock rotation, it can be a hedge against disruption and unemployment.

Everybody should have a stash!


PRODUCTIVITY: MINDMAPPING as a web service

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

http://duffill.blogs.com/beyond_crayons/2007/
02/mindomo_raises_.html

http://tinyurl.com/33ovfs

THe “Beyond Crayons” blog has pointed out this out.

*** begin quote ***

Mindomo raises the bar for mind mapping software

Mindomo is a Web-based mind mapping software tool that runs in your browser, with the maps being stored on their server. But what distinguishes Mindomo in this growing field is genuine desktop-quality functionality. Pretty much everything you need from basic desktop software is there – rich formatting, curved lines, images and symbols, relationships, notes fields, task data, drag and drop editing, Web hyperlinks, and import from Mindjet MindManager.

*** end quote ***

I always liked mind mapping as a pair-of-dimes (paradigm) for communicating ideas. It seems better than power point for “mapping” a problem space. I’ve used it when consulting to scope engagements. I think it made me look smarter than I really was because when I’d “build” my map in real time, it would engage the audience like no powerpoint presentation ever did for me. It was tricky when they’d take it in a different path than I planned. The pitches always “sold” so I think it’s a great tool.


XPfails – luggable – GADWIN PRINT SCREEN v3.5 – This is now the second most annoying problem

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Recap:

For some reason, after several months of use, now when I start GPS35, it doesn’t appear to “do” anything. It doesn’t splash. It takes memory. (I can see it in XP’s process list.) But, it just doesn’t do anything anymore. I’ve uniunstalled and reinstalled. Help?

Haven’t found any help. Need to dig deeper and harder.


FUN: 23 fascinating facts

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/
this_britain/article2296846.ece

http://tinyurl.com/39jbl9

23 fascinating facts about the number twenty-three
To most, it’s just what comes between 22 and 24. Yet to surprisingly many – including the makers of a new film – it means much more.
Cahal Milmo and Tom Willetts explore a bizarre obsession
Published: 23 February 2007

*** begin quote ***

17 The first morse code transmission – “What hath God wrought?” – was from the Bible passage Numbers 23:23. In telegraphers code 23 means “break the line”.

*** end quote ***

Weird, but you can’t just read one!

-23-


XPfails – luggable – PLAXO acting differently

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

I was transferring my LinkedIn contact to my Outlook address book and Plaxo stopped check to to see if they were in Plaxo. Strange?

Update at 0930: plaxo has returned to operating as expected. Perhaps, their site was “down”. If not site, service? And, there’s no idication in the LookOut client that an add in is dead? Interesting that perhaps is the reason for all the non-responding stuff. 


TECHNOLOGY: Software, who owns what and how do you prove it and use it

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

I was thinking last night that the computer user is in a very weak position as opposed to the software makers.

Microsoft imposes all sorts of limitation on what I have bought and really wants me to rebuy what I already have.

There is the whole “installation” nonsense. Why does software have to be “installed”. Good software, by my definition, just runs. Copy it here, it runs. Copy it there, it runs. I like that “portable” movement.

Then, there is the who serial number, or product key, nonsense. So, I may have bout it, have the distribution media, but if I’ve lost the serial number or misplaced it, I’m dead.

Finally, there is the Activation monster. Activation, Windows Genuine Advantage, and such all conspire to make my life miserable. My personal desktop at home, TYNETOP, has been flag several times by these things. It’ sitting with a McAfee induced error in the registry which periodically offends the Microsoft Gods. I’ve had to call a few times to get it to “reactivate”. And don’t believe the barbara striesand about major changes. That pig hasn’t had any new lipstick for a long time.

So, I’m mad and have no way to discharge the madness, except by blogging about it.


PRODUCTIVITY: WINROT is rapidly making LUGABLE unusable

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

I’m being forced to consider a “bare metal” restore (i.e., wipe everything clean and start over).

And, in thinking about it, perhaps I should buy a new hard drive for luggable and swap it in for my bare metal restore. That’s one way to ensure that I can always fall back should a critical file be missed. After a good restore, (an how does one ever know that you did it all), I could probably get one of those external usb disk drive cases to save the value of the drive.

Argh!


RANT: True charity can NOT come from the gooferment

Monday, February 26, 2007

http://apnews.myway.com/article/
20070226/D8NHEJI00.html

http://tinyurl.com/yq3xll

*** begin quote ***

“If you want to get educated or want to succeed, the welfare office don’t care,” Foster said. “I don’t think they really care what you do once the benefits are gone.”

*** end quote ***

Isn’t that the essence of gooferment? They don’t really really care. True charity requires that personal commitment to the goal. That’s why I like Homefront, spear headed by dedicated troops. They really care and so they are effective.


FUN: So what are politicians really watching … …

Monday, February 26, 2007

… … when the lens caps are on?

http://timesnews.typepad.com/news/
2007/02/politicians_pla.html

Friday, February 23, 2007
Politicians playing soldiers: picture special

;-)


TECHNOLOGY: Interesting Google problem

Monday, February 26, 2007

http://www.south-brunswick.blogspot.com/

Yesterday, I was trying to post on “the Blog of South Brunswick”. I couldn’t get Google to authenticate me. After too much tinkering, I realized that I had another GMail session open in another Firefox window. Closing that, allowed the signon to proceed and all worked fine. So, if you’re having trouble with Google authentication, look to what you’re signed on to in other windows.

p.s., I got my post in. That’s two.


RANT: Minor fender bender puts me on “tilt”

Monday, February 26, 2007

I was in a minor fender bender yesterday. Argh! Some bozo with NYC plates made an illegal left. I couldn’t stop. And, hit the car in front of me. And, of course, he proceeded along on his merry way. Argh! I hope there’s a special place in hell for him. I’m watching for him. Any way, first accident in decades. Now I have all sorts of hassles with the insurance. Rate will go up. And, I just on tilt. Like the pros on the poker shows, it was just a bad break. Argh! That still doesn’t make it any less aggravating to me.


LIBERTY: The FAIRTAX: A TROJAN HORSE FOR AMERICA?

Monday, February 26, 2007

http://www.jpfo.org/fairtax.htm

The FAIRTAX: A TROJAN HORSE FOR AMERICA?
By Claire Wolfe & Aaron Zelman

***Begin Quote***

We’re likely to end up with both a national sales tax and an income tax. Even if legislation required abolition of the income tax (as HR 25 does), a “national crisis” would soon cause the income tax to be “temporarily re-instated” and the Internal Revenue Service would remain in our lives on an “emergency basis” that never ended.

***End Quote***

Sorry, but, I don’t trust the gooferment. Taxes, income – estate -sales, are nothing more than theft by an armed gang. And, while now, I don’t have the power to resist, I don’t agree with “putting lipstick” on this particular pig! The JPFO article makes many good points, not the least of which is that it conditions the sheep people to accept taxation by the government gang as legitimate. And, stealing from someone is never moral. If I did it, I go to jail. If you did it, you’d go to jail. But the government does it, that’s ok?

Nope, no fair tax for me. I’m not going to agree to being robbed. I might get robbed, but I’m not going to say “it’s ok”.


RANT: Not a good day today!

Sunday, February 25, 2007

Arghhh! Maybe I’ll calm down and be able to blog about it.


TECHNOLOGY: Dealing with junk faxes

Sunday, February 25, 2007

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/
2007/02/23/BUGKCO9M0F1.DTL

*** Begin quote ***

Over the past few years, she estimates she’s received hundreds of junk faxes — each one costing her money by using up paper, ink and electricity. Weiss has tried repeatedly to opt out from receiving additional faxes.

*** end quote ***

Might I suggest either of two strategies to help the poor besieged fax receiver?

One, put a PC on the phone line and set it up to receive faxes. While it doesn’t prevent junk faxes (spam faxes might be called spaxes?), it would allow here to save paper and toner. For example, depending upon what software she was using, (I have a copy of WinFaxPro10 that I no longer use. She can have it. I moved to strategy #2), the PC would, give her a set of “files”, one each for transmission, that can be quickly “thumbed thru”. The good can be printed; the bad sent to the electronic bit bucket. Saves the paper and toner. Can dispose of the “trash” rather quickly. I even believe that it has “rules” that you can trigger from the ANI with the fax. (ANI is caller id in techie terms).

Two, she could use a service like eFax. Essentially it does the same thing, but she’d have to subscribe and change her number. (i think inbound is free?) It turns faxes into emails. The ANI is in the message subject line. Depending upon what email package she uses, again rules can send some of the junk to that bit bucket. Again, no wasted toner and paper,

If she was strapped for funds or not “into” computers , I’d use Strategy One. A technically literate friend can put this together rather easily. Even if she doesn’t have a computer, she doesn’t need much to do this. I bet the whole shebang would be under $500. Heck she have have one of my “toxic waste” computers (The one’s that when a relative out grows, they give it to me to “recycle”.) Might cost her more to get it from Jersey than buy something locally. As I said that can be put up on on almost any old one that works. Bet WalMart has something new for under 500$!

As a business person, if she’s computer literate, then I’d use Strategy Two. I think efax, and others of it’s ilk, have very modest fees last time I looked.

Either one might be cheaper and less exasperating for her. She can fax me at my free efax number 781-723-3746 if she wants some commiseration.


MONEY: Alternative Minimum Tax to hit 23M taxpayers. Here’s one way to a flat tax.

Sunday, February 25, 2007

http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110009705

Bill Clinton’s AMT Bomb
Why millions in the middle class may see their tax bill explode.
Friday, February 23, 2007 12:01 a.m. ESTtitle

***Begin Quote***

As tax season nears, Democrats in Congress are discovering they have an urgent political bomb to defuse–the alternative minimum tax. The AMT already hits four million Americans, and without new legislation this year it will explode in the pocketbooks of 23 million taxpayers come April 15, 2008.

***End Quote***

What you don’t want to pay “your fair share” “for the children”?

We don’t need “tax reform”. The Fed will just inflate everyone into a straight no deductions one sizes fits all tax.

Shesh.

And, what part of “I don’t consent” does the gooferment gang of thugs not understand?


GUNS: The 416 is … “best”; Army is sticking with the M4 and M16. Huh?

Sunday, February 25, 2007

http://www.armytimes.com/news/2007/02/atCarbine070219/

Better than M4, but you can’t have one
By Matthew Cox – Staff writer
Posted : Friday Feb 23, 2007 5:27:44 EST

Delta Force worked with a gun maker to come up with a better weapon. The 416 is now considered in many circles to be the best carbine in the world, but the regular Army is sticking with the M4 and M16.

*** BEGIN QUOTE ***

March 4, 2002. An RPG tore into the right engine of an MH-47 Chinook helicopter loaded with a quick-reaction force of Rangers in the Shahikot Mountains of eastern Afghanistan. The Chinook crashed atop Takur Ghar, a 10,000-foot peak infested with al-Qaida fighters.

Enemy fire poured into the fuselage, killing Rangers even before they got off the aircraft. Capt. Nate Self crawled out.

*** AND ***

Once behind cover, Self tried to fire again, but his weapon jammed.

Instinctively, he tried to fix it with “immediate action,” a drill he’d practiced countless times.

“I pulled my charging handle back, and there was a round stuck in the chamber,” he recalled.

Like the rest of his men, Self always carried a cleaning rod zip-tied to the side of his weapon in case it failed to extract a round from the chamber.

“There was only one good way to get it out and that’s to ram it out with a cleaning rod,” he said. “I started to knock the round out by pushing the rod down the barrel, and it broke off. There was nothing I could do with it after that.”

*** AND ***

To Col. Robert Radcliffe, the man responsible for overseeing the Army’s needs for small arms, the M16 family is “pretty damn good.” It’s simply too expensive, he said, to replace it with anything less than a “significant leap in technology.”

Since 2000, that leap centered on development of the XM29 Objective Individual Combat Weapon — a dual system featuring a 5.56mm carbine on the bottom and a 25mm airburst weapon on top, capable of killing enemy behind cover at 1,000 meters.

Seven years and more than $100 million later, the 18-pound prototype — three times the weight of an M4 — is still too heavy and bulky for the battlefield.

“We think that somewhere around 2010, we should have enough insight into future technologies to take us in a direction we want to go for the next generation of small arms,” said Radcliffe, director of the Infantry Center’s Directorate of Combat Developments at Fort Benning, Ga.

“We will have M4s and M16s for years and years and years and years,” he said.“We are buying a bunch of M4s this year … and we are doing it for all the right reasons, by the way. It’s doing the job we need it to do.”

But many soldiers and military experts say this mind-set is off target now that soldiers are locked in a harsh desert war with no end in sight.

“We are not saying the [M4 and M16 are] bad,” said former Army vice chief of staff retired Gen. Jack Keane. “The issue for me is do our soldiers have the best rifle in their hands.”

*** END QUOTE ***

Well, General, (General, Gen Real, Generally Unreal), I’d say they were. I’d probably call them POS. That’s what they are. And, I’d like to hear what you’d say if you were in a fire fight and had the thing stop shootin on you! Betcha we could NOT print it here or put it on the tv news for the family! Ahh, yes, and we also have another good post office bureaucrat Colon-el (Head up his?) looking for the “perfect” answer. He’ll get it around 2010 when he retires to go work for a politically connected gun maker!?!

No, the issue isn’t to have the “best one”! It’s to have a “working one”!!

Is it any reason that the front line troops ALWAYS refer to the REMFs?

Hopefully, they can survive these idiots.


WRITING: Weird dream

Sunday, February 25, 2007

Woke up this morning with a weird dream. Almost a nightmare. Any interpretations?

I got a lucrative consulting contract in the city for which I needed a room like an extended stay. It was in Downtown. Around the corner from the Fiftieth Precient (which isn’t in downtown), where someone I know practices out of. And, I had to go give cash deposit (huh?). It was snowing. So I went in with an envelope stuffed with money and the application. AND after I had slipped it into the tiny slot. Some one came and told me it was a terrible place and I should look around. I didn’t care it was a lucrative contract. So to humor him I walked around the corner and realized it was a nursing home. With dogs and cats. So I left, wondering how I’d get my money back and what I’d tell people. After all it was a lucrative contract.

I woke up as I got back in the car. Thankfully.


XPfails – luggable – MSWORD AND OPENOFFICE is failing

Saturday, February 24, 2007

Argh! Both Microsoft Word2003 and Open Office are locking up on my alumni ezine. Argh! I was able to finish with Zoho Web-based word processor. Saved the issue. Seems to work nicely.


WRITING: Lessons Learned?

Saturday, February 24, 2007

1. Why Letters Why Unknown Letters Why Collect Thoughts

2. Lessons Learned

3. The Shouldas, Wouldas, and Couldas

4. You Only Get One Life

5. “Start with the end in mind”

6. Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me.

7. “By their fruits, so shall ye know them.”

8. The “monopoly money” dream

9. Diagnose the “hidden rules”

10. Trends versus Fads versus Enduring Values versus Principles

11. “Fun”

12. Habbits — ruts or grooves

13. Happiness, as well as success, is the state of a process aot a destination or a quality

14. Primitive “self reliance” & Robinson Crusoe

15. Data, Information, Knowledge, & Wisdom — Knowing what you don’t know

16. Cars & other depreciating assets

17. The habits you create today will be with you the rest of your life.

18. Follow DiVinci’s advice.

19. Do something with your other hand.


INTERESTING: My “lessons” are one of my next books!

Saturday, February 24, 2007

ALSO IN:

http://www.lewrockwell.com/north/north511.html

Reflecting on 35 Years of Marriage
by Gary North

*** begin quote ***

If you have learned any other lessons, send them to me (at gary north –at– gary north dot com).

*** end quote ***

Why that was one of my future publications! :-)


LIBERTY: Ron Paul as President

Friday, February 23, 2007

http://groups.google.com/group/DiggFreedom/browse_thread/
thread/736a75a194bd120c?hl=en

http://tinyurl.com/3dsvdg

 

“because all the major candidates are deeply flawed. “

***Begin Quote***

The one candidate who has always talked about the real issues. This is great news. It will take a lot of effort by his supporters to give him a chance–he is not a friend of big corporations. When he was elected to Congress well over 90% of his support came from individuals. Anyone who is serious about seeing Ron Paul as President needs to be proactive.

***End Quote***

I can NOT imagine what a Ron Paul administration would be like.

But, I’d like to see it!


GUNS: Can we “aim” the bears at the commissioner

Friday, February 23, 2007

http://www.nj.com/sports/ledger/index.ssf?/base/
sports-0/1172209964102120.xml&coll=1

http://tinyurl.com/ynrptv

New game code delays bear hunt
Friday, February 23, 2007
BY FRED J. AUN
For the Star-Ledger

***Begin Quote***

In the proposed new state game code you’ll find this sentence: “There is a closed season for black bear until the commissioner approves a comprehensive policy for the protection and propagation of black bear.”

***End Quote***

And, if and when a bear hurts or kills a person or pet, what will happen to the commissioner?

Can you say “nothing”?


TECHNOLOGY: Nuance at NW’s Cool Tools

Friday, February 23, 2007

http://www.networkworld.com/columnists/2007/
022607cooltools.html?page=1

http://tinyurl.com/yt5j99

Dragon voice recognition system
Cool Tools By Keith Shaw, Network World, 02/22/07

***Begin Quote***

This version seemed to work only with Windows 2000 and XP; we couldn’t try this on a new Windows Vista system, and it looked like Version 9 wouldn’t be available for Vista.

***End Quote***

I LOST NO TIME TELLING THEM HOW MUCH I THINK THEIR SUPPORT SUCKS!

Just don’t expect any support for your problems from Nuance Software. If you go for it and it happens to work on your windoze box, you’ve won the lottery. I have tried both Dragon and Via Voice, both “supported” by Nuance, and have had mixed results. Sometimes it works; sometimes it doesn’t. Just because you get it running, don’t think you’re home free. And, if you have problems, even if you pay their “per incident” support fee, don’t expect to get anything resembling an answer. If you have deduced that I think the “suck”, you’re right.