Cap Popped?

Looks like hell has frozen, after all. At least hell has gotten as cool as a nice tall pint of speciality beer. The Pop The Cap initiave to bring high-alcohol speciality beers to North Carolina has gotten the bill through both legislatures. If the Gov has no objections, it will become law August 13th, or sooner.

The usual government-is-your-mommy crowd spoke up against the bill. New Government Mommies are Triangle representatives Fred Smith and former Raleigh city councilman Neal Hunt. Anyone arguing that teens wanting a buzz will somehow want to pay $6 a beer instead of drinking a 50 cent Beast is seriously fooling themselves.

Help top this one off by letting the governor know you want your high-end beer now!

Here’s to us!

in Uncategorized | 123 Words | Comment

Burr On The NWS Duties Act (a.k.a., the Accuweather giveaway)

I wrote our senators recently to ask that they not tie the hands of our wonderful, public weather source: the National Weather Service. I wrote an eloquent letter emphasizing the lifesaving importance of this information.

Today I got a letter from Richard Burr’s office (say what you want about the guy, but at least his staff responds to inquiries). Here’s his response:

Dear Mr. Turner:

Thank you for contacting me with your concerns about the National Weather Service (NWS) Duties Act 2005 (S. 786). I appreciate hearing from you on this issue.

I believe that the NWS provides an essential service to protect life and property. In North Carolina we rely on weather information, particularly along our coast. I am concerned about any legislation that undercuts the ability of NWS to provide essential information, such as hurricane and tornado warnings.

S. 786 was introduced in April 2005 by Senator Rick Santorum (R-PA) and referred to the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation for consideration. S. 786 allows all data, information, guidance, forecasts, and warnings received, collected, created, or prepared by the National Weather Service (NWS) to be issued in real time, without delay for internal use, in a manner that ensures that all members of the public have the opportunity for equal access to such data, information, guidance, forecasts, and warnings.

Hearings and additional study will help show us if any changes are needed to ensure the essential mission of NWS is being carried out, while not creating a mission-creep into areas that the private sector can provide information.

Again, thank you for contacting me. If you have any additional questions or comments on this issue, please feel free to contact me or visit my website at http://burr.senate.gov.

Sincerely,

(signature)

Richard Burr
United States Senator

RB: asn

So, let’s pick this apart, shall we?

“I believe that the NWS provides an essential service to protect life and property. In North Carolina we rely on weather information, particularly along our coast. I am concerned about any legislation that undercuts the ability of NWS to provide essential information, such as hurricane and tornado warnings.”

Okay, so I connected with this one. The value of the data is unquestioned. He’s with me here.

“S. 786 was introduced in April 2005 by Senator Rick Santorum (R-PA) and referred to the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation for consideration. S. 786 allows all data, information, guidance, forecasts, and warnings received, collected, created, or prepared by the National Weather Service (NWS) to be issued in real time, without delay for internal use, in a manner that ensures that all members of the public have the opportunity for equal access to such data, information, guidance, forecasts, and warnings.”

This paragraph is generally in agreement, too. I’ve highlighted a few key points. One of them is “all members of the public.” This is code for “businesses, too,” though generally I don’t consider a business to be a member of the public. Perhaps Certain Commercial Forecasting Companies Based In Pennsylvania (CCFCBIP), in particular. I believe the crux of the bill is that a CCFBIP didn’t think NWS was being free enough with its information. Thus, the “equal access” part. None of the sites I’ve found seem to say exactly what that information is. Thus, the “equal access” part. I seems to be some private beef which has now been taken to Congress. Anyone with further information is welcome to share.

“Hearings and additional study will help show us if any changes are needed to ensure the essential mission of NWS is being carried out, while not creating a mission-creep into areas that the private sector can provide information.”

Ding, ding, ding! We have a winner! Anytime someone says “it will take more study,” they mean “I’ve made up my mind and you lose.” I’m not buying for a minute that Burr’s on the fence here.

Now for the coup de grace:
“while not creating a mission-creep into areas that the private sector can provide information.”

Burr’s saying “I don’t want to tie the hands of the NWS, but … I’m going to tie the hands of the NWS!” There you go. Big business wins. We the people lose.

I’ve got nothing against commercial forecasting companies. Indeed, some of my best friends are commercial forecasting companies. If you want to compete with a free service, knock yourself out. But if your product sucks to the point that you resort to hobbling the public service, particularly one which has been around for almost one hundred and fifty years, good luck. Maybe you should fix your business plan instead, hmmm?

This should be a wake-up call to open-source advocates as well. The NWS uses a ton of open-source tools to create its forecasts. If this bill becomes law, would the NWS be prohibited from sharing these open-source tools with the public, especially if the “private sector” sells one? Or would they be prohibited from developing tools in-house to create the forecasts of commercial ones exist?

The whole thing smells fishy. Burr’s response only confirms it.

WRAL Serves Up Podcasts

Raleigh’s Capitol Broadcasting loves to get ahead of the crowd when it comes to cool new stuff. Capitol’s WRAL-TV was the first television station in the country to broadcast in high-definition. WRAL-FM is one of the first to broadcast in digital stereo. Now Capitol is in the leading edge again: offering podcasts of its programming.

Get WRAL’s podcasts here:
WRAL News
WRAL News specials
WRAL’s Headline Saturday
N.C. Spin
WRAL’s Spiritual Awakening

If there’s a more innovative broadcaster around, I haven’t found it.

New: Metric Computer Unit: The Moore

Computers make plenty of use of the metric system. Memory, disk space, and processor speed are all measured in metric units. How come we don’t have a metric unit for computer power? We can call it a Moore, after Intel’s Gordon Moore’s famous “law” that computer power would double every two years.

I spent part of this weekend working with older, surplus PCs. An old IBM desktop machine with a 166 MHz processor and 16 MB of RAM ran Windows 95 with amazing speed, considering its age. The application response was snappy on this old hardware. I can only imagine how it would run on a modern, gigahertz system.

A Moore would be used to define a set type of performance. For instance, a Moore could refer to application performance by a system with W operating system, with X processor, Y memory, and Z I/O. Performance would be measured relative to this standard, in Moores.

That way one could properly account for the effect of bloatware on the performance of a modern computer. What do you think?

in Uncategorized | 175 Words | Comment

Solid Rocket Booster Video

Here’s a bittorrent I created of the space shuttle solid rocket booster video from the STS-114 mission I mentioned yesterday. It was shown on NASA TV Saturday.

I learned from this excellent Wikipedia article that the SRBs ascend to about 42 miles before they begin their tumble back to earth. Thus in five minutes, the boosters thunder back to earth from an altitude of 220,000 feet. Its impressive to think that these boosters go through such incredible stresses during launch and recovery and then get reused again. Watching the video gives me a new appreciation for the ingenuity of our space program.

in Uncategorized | 100 Words | Comment

NASA Solid Rocket Booster Video

I’ve been following the current STS-114 space shuttle mission on NASA TV. This mission, being the first since Columbia disintegrated upon reentry, is one of the most photographed in the history of the shuttle program.

Tuesday’s launch showed some stunning video taken from a camera onboard the shuttle. While it was impressive, what I saw today was truly breathtaking. Today NASA rolled video taken from cameras on the solid rocket boosters during launch. In the span of ten minutes, these rockets go from rest to 18,000 MPH and back again.

The ride up isn’t interesting to watch, as all you can see is the side of the external fuel tank. Then the boosters exhaust themselves, the explosive bolts fire, and the silent rockets float away from the shuttle and tank. From then on, the boosters take an eerie ride back into the clutches of gravity.

I’ll resample this video and post it this weekend. It is awesome to watch.

Update: Download the video here.

in Uncategorized | 163 Words | Comment

Finger On The Pulse

I had the stitches taken out of my finger on Tuesday. The wound has healed very nicely, just as I expected. Before long, I expect there’ll be no trace of my tragic encounter with the fan.

The nurse decided to take my vital signs while I was there, just to make it official. Blood pressure was 118/73 and pulse was 56. Imagine if I was actually in shape!

My pulse when the stitches went in was 135, so you could say that getting stitches out is more fun.

in Uncategorized | 85 Words | Comment

The Other Keyboard

Two weeks ago, Kelly’s parents sent us their Baldwin piano. I could not stop grinning the night it arrived, and have barely stopped now. Though its been over twenty years since I had a piano in the house, I am in wonder at how my fingers just know where to go. I’m rusty, but I can still play.

This past weekend, I played a few songs for the kids. In spite of my wounded left pinky, I loved every minute of it. The kids didn’t, however. Hallie ignored me for ten minutes, then walked up, looked me in the eye and said sternly “We are all done playing piano now! We are all done playing piano now!”

I look forward to dusting my playing skills off, and watching our kids learn how to play this beautiful instrument themselves.

War? We’re At War? Really?

I read a good commentary yesterday questioning George W. Bush’s repeated crowing about us “being at war.” It quoted an Army lieutenant returning from Iraq who were perplexed that the only ones who were sacrificing for “war” were the soldiers actually fighting. There’s no rationing, no savings bonds drives, no draft. No tax hikes to pay for war.

The lieutenant has a point. The so-called war is being carried on the backs of America’s military and NO ONE else is burdened by it. If its a war, why is Bush (and Congress, for that matter) still taking copious vacation time? Why isn’t Karl Rove charged with treason? Why aren’t people lining up at the recruiting stations?

On a similar note, why is Osama Bin Laden not hanging from a tree somewhere?
Continue reading

in Uncategorized | 131 Words | Comment