Happy Winter Solstice, everyone! Let’s make those days a little longer for a change, shall we?
December 2006
Nifong’s Rape Case Collapses
Troubled Durham district attorney Mike Nifong has dropped rape charges against the Duke Lacrosse suspects after the accuser, Crystal Gail Mangum, changed her story yet again. Mangum reportedly told Nifong that she “couldn’t be sure” she was raped.
Hmm. Maybe she also “couldn’t be sure” she was sexually assaulted and/or kidnapped, which are the remaining charges these accused Duke students face thanks to overzealous Durham prosecutors.
Drop it, Nifong. Drop it all right now. Then save what’s left of your dignity by apologizing to these young men and the citizens of Durham. Continue reading
Highlights of 2006 Number 9: Home Improvements
What would a yearly review be without reviewing the home improvements done throughout the year? After all, homeownership is much like a hobby, isn’t it?
This year got off to a great start when I threaded cable conduits into the attic and crawlspace of the house. This allow me, the biggest geek on the planet, to easily run more copper throughout the house whenever I feel the need. It wasn’t easy work but it makes any future work that much easier.
Since I apparently can’t get enough of hanging out in the attic (and crawlspace), I worked with Kelly for a few hours to add insulation to our attic. It was a fantastic return for three hours work and 120 bucks! Now our AC can keep our upstairs cool, to pretty much any temperature we set. The noise from outside is greatly dampened, too.
We did some yard things, too. We finally dug up the dead trees lining our front walk and replaced them with crepe myrtles, (which may or may not be dead, too). We moved the apple tree from the front yard to the back. We also created a flowerbed on the south side of the house.
We put in a vegetable garden behind our garage, filled with tomato plants and others. Through neglect or poor soil the tomato plants yielded few fruits. The garden did yield an opossum, which had shacked up under our house. Amazingly, the opossum lived to see another day. We still have occasional critters pry open our outside garbage can. Ah, living on the edge of wilderness!
We had a carpenter replace the rotting wood on our porch, the victim of a poor porch design. The original builder neglected to put treated wood on the porch, or even to prime the wood he used. Things look much better now, though there is still some work to be done.
The highlight of our home improvements, though, is the new playset in the backyard. We bought it at BJs and had it delivered and built profesionally. It soon became the hub of activity for the neighborhood kids, as well as instantly boosting the athleticism of our kids. It’s been one of the best investments we’ve made this year: one that will pay off for years to come.
Highlights of 2006 Number 10: Naked Noggin
Two thousand six was the year I took stock of my not-so-flowing locks and dispensed with them. I made the move right before Thanksgiving, surprising most of my relatives and friends with a totally bald head.
“So, what happened to your hair, Mark?” my neighbors would call. “You lose a bet?”
I chuckled along with everyone else. I looked so different that people who have known me for years would basically trip over me before recognizing me. Still, I decided the bald-with-goatee look wasn’t for me. Now the goatee is gone and the hair is staying short, but not shaved.
I think its a good look. I don’t know if I’ll keep it, but my hair isn’t getting any thicker nowadays. Time will tell.
Highlights of 2006
It’s time for my annual Highlights series, recalling ten special events of the previous year. Look for the first entry tonight.
Caught Red Handed
Whoa. Any respect I had for Al Gore has just plummeted.
Time For Electric Wheels?
So the planet is heating up due to global warming, gas prices are high, oil comes from a Mideast more unstable than ever, and my car isn’t particularly fuel-efficient. I’ve seen Who Killed The Electric Car? and An Inconvenient Truth. And, naturally I’m a geek, one with a pioneer spirit. Thus its should be no surpise that I’ve been looking at electric vehicles, or EVs.
I checked out my first EV in April. A member of the Triangle EAA electric car club was selling one of its member’s cars. I was impressed until the test drive revealed a slight problem. As I rounded the first turn, the car stalled. Something apparently went wrong with the battery pack. Not knowing what an electric car was all about, I got cold feet about it and bought a far more environmentally-friendly vehicle instead.
Fast forward to December. This weekend I attended my first Triangle EAA meeting. Surrounded by veteran EV owners, I gained a lot of knowledge about EVs as well as a comfort that if anything should go wrong there is an EV posse to back me up. Knowing what I know now, I could have easily fixed up that stalling car.
EVs are actually much simpler than internal combustion engine (ICE) cars. You have basic parts: a motor, a controller, battery pack, charger, and perhaps a DC-DC converter. Gone are the engine, transmission, fuel tank, radiator, and most other parts that need oil.
EV owners tend to be tinkerers, as well as budding mechanics. That’s because there are currently (hah!) few repair options that don’t involve your own two hands. That’s why clubs like the Triangle EAA are so helpful. You’ve got experienced EV owners who are willing to lend a hand to new EV owners. To buy an EV at this point, you need to trust your skills at troubleshooting. Fortunately, unlike gas engines, working on EVs is anything but a dirty, greasy job. Your handiest tool is a multitester and your mechanical knowledge is mostly simple electric theory.
The one thing that I’m having a tough time understanding is the battery technology. There is a myriad of choices for batteries: lead acid, nickel cadmium, lithion ion, lithion polymer. There’s flooded (wet) cells, gel cells, and AGM (absorbed glass mat) cells. You need at least 13 batteries to power most EVs. Each battery can cost between $100 to $2000, depending on the technology. Each kind has advantages and drawbacks. It’s kind of mind boggling.
With all these battery choices, finding your ideal EV is only half the battle. You’re shopping as much for the batteries as you are for the car.
Since the batteries are likely to be half (or more) of your investment, it makes sense to buy the best charger you can afford in order to keep your batteries running optimally. There are various choices here, too, though not as wide open as the battery choice. I’ve learned that a lot of chargers can be programmed to match whatever batteries they are charging.
Battery technology has coome a long way recently. New technologies are hitting the market which might literally revolutionize transportation. At this point the price for such technology is still out of reach of most drivers. Even so, affordable options exist to make it possible for many to commute solely by electricity.
I’ve still got a lot to learn about EVs. I don’t yet know if one is right for me. On the other hand I seem to have the abilities needed to be a successful EVer. If I can’t make it work, who can?
I’m happy to take MT.Net readers along for the ride as I learn more about this technology.
Famed Animator Joseph Barbera Dies
Joseph Barbera, the fantastic creator of the Jetsons and the Flintstones, among other cartoons, has died.
I found this headline on Fark particularly amusing:
Joseph Barbera dies. Funeral procession to pass same three buildings every two seconds
I’ve Been Everywhere
Wade helpfully (?) provided a map of where he’s lived, so I felt I should to the same. Take a Google Maps tour with me to all the places I’ve called home.
It took me more than 20 minutes to put this together, since it’s an amazing number of places. Those in Florida (aside from the Oak Avenue address that was my grandmother’s when I was born), Massachusetts, and California were during my Navy days. Some of those places were home for as little as two months. My ship was my “moving home” for three years, taking me from San Diego all over the world. Far too many places to mention there so I’ll leave it at that.
Perhaps I’ll put together a map of the places I’ve been, which would be a far longer list. Wow.
Continue reading
How To Win In Iraq
I recently read Fiasco, a damning account of the Iraq war by award-winning journalist Thomas Ricks. Reading the idiotic policies which led to our current situation in Iraq made me so mad at times that I wanted to throw something. It seems that if there was a chance for us to royally screw something up, we took it: with gusto. There are few ways we could have miscalculated as badly as we did in Iraq.
In spite of apparently losing the war, there were some battles that we did win; a few Americans there who understood how Iraqis think. One of them was Travis Patriquin, an Army captain who spoke several languages, including fluent Arabic. Capt. Patriquin worked in the violent city of as Al-Anbar, where his skills actually brought some semblence of peace to the area. Through Patriquin’s work with local sheiks, the citizens of Al-Anbar worked together to oust insurgents, providing a model for other areas to follow.
Capt. boiled down his approach into a PowerPoint presentation so simple even the President could understand it. You need to see it. Right now.
It’s nothing more than simple wisdom and stick-figure illustrations yet its approach is so radically different from the Shock-And-Awe norm, especially in that its actually been successful. His slides have been very popular with the rank-and-file, circulating widely.
If only the rest of the Army had taken the approach that Capt. Patriquin took, perhaps we wouldn’t be mired in the utter disaster we face today. Perhaps we’d have drawn down troops long ago, leaving the Iraqi people in charge of their destiny. Instead our arrogance and ignorance of Arab culture has brought us what we have today. Patriquin showed it didn’t have to be that way.
As brilliantly promising as Patriquin was, he won’t ever see the fruits of his success spreading in Iraq. He was killed by an IED in downtown Ramadi on December 6th.