The N.C. House Public Utilities Committee meets Wednesday morning to vote on the horrible Time Warner Cable bill “Level Playing Field Act.” also known as H1252/S1004. Please call the Committee members [PDF] and let them know what a horrible bill this is.
Google celebrates Samuel Morse
It’s Samuel Morse’s birthday and in tribute Google has replaced its logo with a morse code version.
As a former Navy code jockey, I appreciate the dots and dashes. Thanks, Google!
Annie Louise Wilkerson park
Yesterday morning the kids and set off on a preview of Raleigh’s upcoming Dr. Annie Louise Wilkerson Nature Preserve park. I’d heard about it from my Parks board meeting and wanted to see it for myself, so we all got drinks and snacks, loaded the dog in the car, and headed north.
The park is very much like it was when Dr. Wilkerson bequeathed it to the city. A long, winding driveway leads into the middle of a woodsy expanse of property, with two big meadows at the center. Two homes and a barn stand testament that this was the doctor’s home for over 40 years. Tall grass in the meadows long in need of a cut is the only thing that seems out of place.
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A pirate listens at 40
Kelly and I saw Jimmy Buffett and the Coral Reefer Band again last night, courtesy of a friend’s comp tickets. Jimmy and the band played Raleigh on their “SummerZcool” tour, and while they did play here last summer, band appearances have become rarer in Raleigh lately. I’ve never understood why this is the case, as Jimmy has consistently sold out here. I admit to wondering what we might have done to upset him.
We rolled into Walnut Creek Amphitheatre around 6:30 with a little time to check out the crazy parking lot scene. There were Parrotheads everywhere and we had to scramble for one of the few parking places left in the lot. I was in awe at the kind of machine Jimmy has built in thirty-plus years of touring. The guy gets little or no airplay and yet he still attracts a huge following of loyal Parrotheads.
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Playing for Change
During the “recess” in last night’s Jimmy Buffett show, I was captivated by a music video shown of various international singers singing Bob Marley’s One Love. Watching these talented, diverse singers perform this beautiful song was powerful and spellbinding, so much so that a minute went by before I noticed Jimmy had quietly wandered back on stage, strumming a ukulele and singing to himself with the video. It’s all part of the Playing for Change foundation.
More of this, please!
Owl calling
Around 5 AM this morning I was dozing happily when my attention was drawn to a quiet but repetitive sound outside our bedroom window. A Great Horned Owl was saying good morning from the nearby woods. It may have been the one we’ve seen recently, that last made an appearance in our back yard in March.
I listened to it call for about ten minutes before it meandered away. In the calm, quiet morning, I found this hooting especially soothing. It was a nice reminder that nature is all around us.
Time Warner Cable CEO raked in $14 millon last year
According to an Associated Press analysis, Time Warner Cable CEO Glenn Britt received over $14 million in compensation last year in salary, stock, bonuses, and benefits. And this was down 8 percent from last year.
…. Britt received a salary of $1 million last year, unchanged from 2007, and a performance-based bonus of $6.4 million, down from $7.8 million a year earlier, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing.
He received other compensation worth over $82,500, which included more than $25,000 in life insurance premiums, a car allowance and a company savings plan match.
Britt also received nearly 104,000 restricted stock units worth $2.86 million on the date they were granted. He received 374,610 stock options as well with an exercise price of $27.51, worth $4 million when they were granted on March 3, 2008. However, the options are currently worth less given that Time Warner Cable shares closed at $27.37 Monday, slightly below the exercise price.
It’s interesting to note that Wilson built their own triple-play (voice, video, data) fiber network that will serve them for the next twenty years all for the cost of just two years of Glenn Britt’s compensation.
This is a company that needs protection from municipal broadband systems. Yeah, right.
Raising the broadband bar in NC
There’s been plenty afoot in the N.C. General Assembly this session regarding broadband internet, as those couple of you who read my blog are well aware. Now there’s an effort by the telecom industry to define “broadband service” in North Carolina. House Bill 283 would define any Internet service with speeds faster than 1.5 Mbps down and 384 kbps up.
So let me ask you … how many of you would consider that “broadband?” How many of you would die a slow death using the Internet at those speeds? A measly 1.5 Mbps/384kbs might have been considered “broadband” 15 years ago but it certainly doesn’t pass for that today, now that countries like Japan have jaw-dropping 160 Mbps cable modem service. Arguably these slow speeds weren’t considered “broadband” 15 years ago, either!
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Kintiskton
I found a bunch of web hits from a subnet belonging to an organization called Kintiskton. Their server was spidering my blog without identifying itself as a bot or a spider:
65.208.151.113 – – [23/Apr/2009:07:50:24 -0400] “GET /wp-content/uploads/2009/03/amazon.gif HTTP/1.1” 403 362 “http://www.markturner.net/category/Musings/” “Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1)”
65.208.151.116 – – [23/Apr/2009:07:50:29 -0400] “GET /2009/01/06/interview-day/ HTTP/1.1” 403 350 “http://www.markturner.net/category/Musings/” “Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1)”
65.208.151.114 – – [23/Apr/2009:07:50:33 -0400] “GET /2008/06/ HTTP/1.1” 403 333 “http://www.markturner.net/category/Musings/” “Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1)”
Bad spider! Bad!
Here is the whois record:
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Raleigh opposes H1252/S1004
Yesterday afternoon, Raleigh City Council passed a resolution opposing H1252/S1004, the so-called “Level Playing Field Act.” This opposition was mentioned prominently in today’s committee meeting, where I definitely think it swayed opinions.
Here’s the text of the opposition resolution:
A RESOLUTION TO EXPRESS THE CONCERN OF THE CITY OF RALEIGH ABOUT CERTAIN PROVISIONS OF RECENTLY INTRODUCED LEGISLATION REGULATING GOVERNMENT PROVISION OF BROADBAND SERVICE AND CABLE TELEVISION SERVICE.
Whereas, Senate Bill 1004 and House Bill 1252, companion bills entitled The Level Playing Field Act, have been introduced in the 2009 Regular Session of the North Carolina General Assembly; and
Whereas, it is possible that the bills do not provide the level playing field implied in their titles for local governments versus private providers; and
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