Monthly Archives: December 2008

Sign of the Times

Today's NYT was amazing: lots of interesting things to read, especially for a Saturday, and almost no advertising.

I don't think I've ever seen a major newspaper with so few ads.

Posted in Econ & Money, The Media | Comments Off on Sign of the Times

Please Tell Me This “Famine of 2009” Stuff Is Wrong

Via !='s entry, aptly titled Rural terror, I'm sent to The Silver Bear Cafe where someone named Stranded Bear Wind has an account of how the economic mess is going to harm this year's harvest in two ways, one overt, one covert. He calls it The Famine Of 2009. The overt problem is that spot shortages of fuel may mean that some crops in the Dakotas don't get harvested fully:

The die has already been cast in the Dakotas, they'll either get the crop in or they won't. If they don't and it winters in the field they not only lose 40% of the yield on that ground they lose 20% of next year's yield in soy beans. The corn makes an excellent snow fence, trapping drifts six feet high, and they're slow to clear in the spring. The farmers have to wait until it's dry enough to plant before they can finish bringing in the corn crop, then they plant their soy, and that delay cuts into the growing degree days available for the soy beans and thusly we see the yield drop.

The covert problem, writes Stranded Wind, is that how nutritious grains are depends on how much they are fertilized

Wheat that gets enough ammonia is 14% protein, if it is unfertilized closer to 8%, and that 43% reduction in total plant protein is going to cause unimaginable suffering in places like Egypt, where half of the population gets subsidized bread. Global end of season per capita wheat stocks have been about seventy pounds my entire life, except the last three years where they've dropped to only forty pounds. One mistake in this area and one of the four horsemen gets loose, certainly dragging his brothers along behind. That mistake may already have been made in the lack of wheat fertilization this fall.

The fall nitrogen fertilizer application has been 10% of the norm. A typical year would see 50% put on in the fall and 50% in the spring. During fertilizer application season the 3,100 mile national ammonia pipeline network runs flat out and the far points on the network experience low flow both fall and spring. If they try to jam 90% of the fertilization into a period of time when the system can only flow a little more than half of the need much of our cropland will go without in the spring of 2009.

Finances as much as weather are the issue with regards to fertilization this fall.

Scary stuff. Please tell me it's wrong.

Posted in Econ & Money | 5 Comments

Seeking Tools for Web Page Design

I am a guy whose idea of a web page design tool has always been stuff like Kompozer, and I've got the homepage to prove it (although, actually, most of that was done by hand back in the day….).

But I was admiring a nice looking web page with good graphics and drop-down boxes the other day, and wondering how they'd done that. A quick look at the codes suggests it was done in iWeb 2.0.4. So I went looking for that.

Turns out, shoulda figured given the i, that's its for Mac, and I'm a PC guy.

I even went so far as to see how you might install a Mac tool on a PC. VMware? OK, been thinking of that to run Ubuntu next to XP. External hard drive? OK, got a few spares acting as paperweights. Bittorent a pirated copy? Forget it.

So … anyone know of a good, ideally free, XP-compatible (or maybe Ubuntu-compatible) web design tool that makes cool pages easily?

Posted in Internet | 5 Comments

For the Paranoid in Your Life

drive.jpgA USB Flash Drive disguised as broken cable. 2GB of extra security at least until the TSA puts it on the watch list.

(Via Schneier)

Or consider the (likely more useful) RFID Blocking Wallet and the RFID Blocking Passport Billfold.

Did you know that there are people out there who specially target paranoids?

Update: pointers to interesting techno-toys welcomed.

Posted in Shopping | 4 Comments

Head v. Head v. Heart

Part of my head says that there may be reasons to nationalize the auto companies in order to insulate workers from the effects of the current panic. Another part of my head says that this ought to be possible via a bankruptcy workout.

In practice, of course, we are not yet ready to do nationalizations (give it a few months and tens of billions) but instead will give the shareholders and management a giant payment from tax money.

Which leads my heart to say something like this.

Posted in Econ & Money | 1 Comment

Memories Are Short

Today's NYT has a buried article on some of the Bush administration's latest good-bye presents for the nation: various appointments that will last long into the next administration.

The article, White House Memo – On His Way Out, Bush Leads Others In, by Jim Rutenberg, claims that these appointments are mostly uncontroversial. If so, that's only because memories are short.

Consider this paragraph:

That same day, Mr. Bush appointed a longtime family friend and former business partner, Fred V. Malek, to the board of visitors of the United States Military Academy. Mr. Malek, who was a partner with Mr. Bush in the Texas Rangers baseball team, will serve for three years. A West Point graduate, he has donated generously to its campus; his appointment, like the others, provoked no complaint.

That's amazing. We're talking about the guy who was Nixon's hatchet man and political manipulator and who wrote the infamous Jew-counting “Malek Memo”. But then forgetting Malek's history appears to be a well-entrenched DC phenomenon.

Posted in Politics: The Party of Sleaze | 4 Comments