2009-04-29

Hmmm ... very business-like, but I like it. Check out the photos gallery at the bottom.
I can understand why they say that we are 'a nation of laws', but I think the fact that it's true is a big part of our problem. There are a lot of really irrational and corrupt laws on the books and enforcing them is no virtue, it's merely irrational and corrupt. I think that we would be better off if we adopted the wording from the Pledge and called ourselves 'a nation of Liberty and Justice for ALL' and then made sure that it was true. Yeah, it's a little more work, but I think it would be worth it.
And it's all based on ignorance of the nature of security. The third natural law of security states: All Security is Individual and Relative. The act of having a national information security office guarantees several things:

1) Security measures will be uniform across diverse systems so that no individual system will have security optimized to its own particular vulnerabilities.
2) Hacking any one system will reveal the vulnerabilities of all the rest.
3) Bureaucracies move slowly so solutions will become available just as the vulnerability-exploitation process has run it's course.
4) All systems that are covered by the NIS office will always be vulnerable to personal and political corruption in that office.

What a bargain!
Especially Number 5 ... but don't make the mistake of thinking that practicing these tips will take the place of being ready to go for it.
My God ... it's full of WIN!
And yet ... the Second Amendment isn't about hunting, is it? If you feel better having clearly inferior firepower when the need arises (and I pray it never does), I support your choice. But if I choose to cover all the bases with sport/utility rifles so that I know I'll have the tools to get the icky jobs done, don't pretend that it's some kind of criminal tendency.
More on space tornadoes.

2009-04-26

On the off chance that it turns out to be nothing, we better panic now so we aren't deprived of the opportunity to demonstrate what a Nation of Wussies we've become.
Hmmm ... it's interesting how easy it is to wonder whether the tangos are the good guys or the bad guys when the news is coming out of Africa.

2009-04-25

Some inter-stellar eye candy ...
This is weird.
It can always be worse ...
I'll take one of each!
Space tornados ... why wasn't I notified.
This set of pics from Cassini is awesome (and full of win).
There were far less-promising things than this funded.
Home invasion roundup:

Hmmm ... TSA missed the knives, the passenger that had the knives notified the crew that she had them when she realized it and they still had to turn the plane around and go through a bunch of theatre even though the knives didn't actually pose any risk.
This is a lesson that everyone should learn. Don't do things that are only supportable in an atmosphere of fear, because sooner or later the fear will subside and the formerly fearful will use you as reaction mass to push themselves away from there own sense of guilt and self-loathing. It has always been this way, which is why not torturing is always the correct answer.
I'm tentatively supportive of this (because I do so love it when they fight back), but confidence should always be directly proportional to competence or you're asking for a rather surprised look on your face as you die.
Oh, sure. It's fun ... 'til somebody puts an eye out!
Gotta get me one of these!
Large Hadron Rap
This IS pretty clever.
Reed was charged with possession of an infernal machine and possession of a concealed weapon in a secure area of an airport.
Infernal machine ... that's kinda catchy ... kinda catch-all too, but so what. Let the Supremes sort it out.

Having just over-thrown the existing government (remember King George?), I suspect they envisioned whatever weapons those they might have to face would have. If the other guys, be it criminals or oppressors, had innocent-citizen-mow-down-in-seconds weapons, then the general populace should also have them.

It probably still won't work (because they won't be willing to hire the 9 year-olds) but at least they're on the right track, now.

Cassini has given us some great photos ...
Hmmm ... it doesn't really say how they keep it from interfering with other craft.

2009-04-18

The free sale of those weapons has been an enormous boon for the Mexican drug cartels that now easily outgun Mexican police forces in border provinces. That is a major reason why President Calderon sent the Mexican army into those regions to try to re-establish law and order.
Naturally, the Mexican non-governmental populace, being subjects and all instead of citizens, have no guns and so are prostrate in a battle between an overwhelmingly corrupt government and several government-manufactured criminal enterprises.
O'course, being China and all, he might have just been innocent. That's the problem with not being strongly justice oriented, there's no reason to believe anything that happens within the system.
Hmmm ... never heard of this bunch.
Hmmm ... yesss!
My sense is that torture, or whatever you want to call it, significantly reduced the general invisibility (resistance to selection for interference) with minimal/no counterbalancing increase in invincibility (resistance to interference). If you watched the video linked to the side of the page, you would already know that means that the general security (protection from interference) was reduced.

Additionally:

Yeah, me too.
The flip-side of over-zealous surveillance is that spying can achieve positive results for communities.

Hmmm ... it could ... but for some reason it never does. Perhaps they should do a stakeholder analysis.

2009-04-16

Texas did secede in 1861, but the North's victory in the Civil War put an end to that.
Somehow, I don't think it would go much better this time, but ...


For having our pulse, and all ... they sure seem to apologize a lot.

Update: They were even warned that it was dumb.
A cool space pic ...
Microsoft has announced two new projects aimed at helping governments increase multiagency effectiveness, reduce costs, and help combat threats to public safety and security.
I wonder if they mean those kind?


Possibly coming to a car near you.
I still can't believe that this didn't turn out to be a hoax.
This is becoming more frequent and it's putting the citizens in a position of having to assume that anyone forcing their way in are bad guys even if they're saying they're the police.

2009-04-15

The rural poor?!? I want one, too.
There is still a great deal to be learned (and unlearned, apparently) about this whole sorry event.
Gotta love Montana ...
Hmmm ... it needs audio capability.
Here's a depressing site ...
Hmmm ... may be time for a test-drive.

2009-04-14

Officers recovered a vast cache of weapons including an anti-aircraft gun capable of firing 800 shots per minute, a number of rifles and an array of ammunition.
Hmmm ... mostly looks like a vast array of empty magazines to me ... but the girl looks like she could be my next ex-wife 8o)

(via Drudge Report)

Additionally ...


It could have been a lot worse. Still ... I hope the daughter is OK.
I'm not sure what to make of this, but whether he was doing something illegal or not he (and everyone) should have any data you don't want being looked at on an encrypted drive.

Additionally ... some thoughts from Orin. (via Volokh)
Interesting idea ...
This worked out nicely (except for the guy dyin', of course).
The problem with this argument is that it misses the 'fact' that ex-felons having guns is not any more of a problem than 'good citizens' having them. The problem starts when the ex-felon has one and the good citizen standing next to him (or her) doesn't. I can see no reason why anyone not currently in jail or prison should be disallowed from being armed. Moreover, Columbine would never have happened if guns were as ubiquitous as they were meant to be by the founders, because the type of abuse that supposedly precipitated it doesn't happen in polite (read 'armed') society.
This almost looks like it could be real, but the file itself reads like some kind of pulp paperback. It's actually cheezy-sounding, so if it is real I'm very embarrassed for whoever the author was.

Update: This also seems unlikely.

Update: I can't believe it's not bullshit ...
It looks like piracy may become somewhat less safe in the near future.
Ford seems to be having some 'better' ideas, again. One of which was maintaining a sane financial base.

2009-04-12

Some eerie pics of seed pods ...

(via MeFi)
A little physicist humor ...
It's probably a good idea to remember that this is possible. It's a shame to go after the wrong person ...
A solar boat ... might be worth keeping an eye on.
I think we may need to get some 10 year olds involved in this ...
This doesn't look like a very comfortable way to arrive.
Some interesting discussion on Missouri campus CCW bill ...
An interesting piece comparing death sentences to life without the possibility of parole.
It's usually a bad idea to shoot them in the back ...
An interesting question ...
The difficulty here is that gubmints really have no 'desires' that can be furthered by continuing work on the space station. On the other hand, there are numerous fields of endeavor that have private firms that would benefit from having a presence in zero-g, pharma and materials come to mind. We need to come up with a way to treat ISS like Antartica, so that a private firm that has the desire and where-with-all to get there and hook on can do so with the understanding that the fact of being able to get there ensures there right to be there once they arrive.
Police Chief Greg Anderson issued an alert Friday asking for help in tracking down the individuals responsible for a series of dangerous pranks pulled on motorists traveling on Burlington Road.
There is frequently a disconnect between the citizens and police in such situations. Pranking is usually done by the young, and is usually done as a sort of self-test to determine ones own boundaries relative to the adult world. We all did it during that age. The citizens may desire police intervention but expect that the intervention will follow the form of 'OK, this is what happens, go and sin no more' which is the 'proper' form for the intervention to take to ensure that proper development of the young citizen in question takes place. Unfortunately, the state of the police paradigm is such today that there is no distinguishing between ritual interaction with our youth, and regular police-function interaction. The result is that the pranking youth is victimized rather than guided and leaves the experience with no feeling of obligation to the society he is trying to find his place in. I think that the main cause of this disconnect is that too many police officers are not old enough to have seen there own children go through this phase, and may not recognize that the pranking is a necessary part of growing up and is not, in fact, an indicator of criminal intent or tendency.
Oh! OK. Well ... let's roll over and go back to sleep then (prediction alert).
Stylin' for a chain lock, but it really doesn't overcome the weaknesses in all chain locks.
This sounds like fun ...

2009-04-10

We really need a war on ignorance and hypocrisy!
Despite this, I have a hard time believing that Iran (or anyone else for that matter) would be satisfied with destroying an Israeli (or anyone else's for that matter) city or 10 knowing that it is a dead-bang certainty that their country would then becoming a rather large, radioactive, smoking-glass crater. There is a valid argument to be made for FedEx-ing them a couple of 10 megaton nukes and saying "Welcome to the big time. Don't fvck up!"
SCC is the best show ever!!!
Hmmm ... outting Area 51. What's not to like?
Looks like it was a pretty cool plane ... before the crash.
I have difficulty understanding this. The stand-off is between a US guided-missile destroyer and a lifeboat and the Navy feels it's prudent to send back-up for the destroyer.
I do so love it when they fight back.
I don't recall having one of these when I was in high school.

2009-04-09

It would probably have been better if I hadn't seen this.

(via Overlawyered)
Well, at least he's where he can get helped gang-buggered.

(via The Agitator)
Wonder if maybe we need to 'boost the cume' a little bit, intelligence-wise.
Economy of scale ... quickly, please.
You would think that since Y2K, somebody in government or business would have come up with a contingency plan to manually override computer control in the event that something like this took place. Networked systems are fine, but we all know that everything from lightning to EMP to Gamma Ray bursts in distant regions of space could knock the computer controls out for extended periods. It's not like we don't know how to manually control the power grid. And anything that has the potential for catastropic negative externalities if hacked should simply never be connected to a network. Neither the software nor hardware should even have the capability of being networked.

Update:

"The end result is that, as part of our modernization, we've made ourselves more vulnerable," said James Lewis, a senior fellow at the nonprofit Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS).
I wonder if it comes with A/C.

2009-04-08

I imagine this goes on quite a bit more that we hear about ... except the 'getting caught' part.
Oops! How embarrassing!
I do so love it when they fight back.
An Easter reminder ... I guess?!?!
This is very cool!
What tied these shootings together is that both incidents occurred with guns that, until four years ago, were illegal under the Federal Assault Weapons Ban (FAWB).
Gee, and all this time I thought it had only been illegal to import or make new ones.

I don't recall seeing anywhere that post-post-ban weapons were used in these incidents. If someone else did please correct me on this.
Hmmm ... there's this:

HARRISBURG — The killing of three Pittsburgh police officers will renew gun control efforts in the Pennsylvania Legislature, but the outlook for enacting laws remains doubtful because the National Rifle Association has "a stranglehold" over lawmakers, a key House member said Tuesday.


And then there's this:

Helmke blamed the NRA for "fear mongering" that leads people to believe the government is coming for their guns, as friends said Richard Poplawski feared. Police said Poplawski killed two of the officers with a shotgun and used an AK-47 to exchange gunfire with SWAT team members and other officers.
I'm thinking that it might not be the NRA that has people thinking the gubmint might be coming for their guns.
Ummm ... 22 inches ... cheap!

2009-04-07

In that the actions they're defending significantly decrease your invisibility and don't provide any counter-balancing increase to your invincibility, it's pretty clear that they aren't defending it to improve your security.
High-tech, WWII-style.

(via Dry Roasted Blend)
What our economy actually needs is a product that is so desirable that about 50 million people are willing to scrimp and save to get one. This isn't quite it, but with a some smart automation and some economy of scale it would be.

(via Instapundit)
Bruce is fairly crunchy, today (but thought-provoking as ever.)
It's cheaper to be invisible than it is to be invincible.
It appears that the military showed quite a bit of restraint while this was going on.

2009-04-06

Hmmm ... a fundamentally new way to search my interwebz. I can't wait.
My sense is that Nicotine Replacement Therapy would be far more effective if there were several more step decreases in nicotine from each system than are currently available. Once you've gone from 4mg to 2mg, you should be able to them move on to 1mg, 1/2mg, 1/4mg and so forth. It's still a huge leap from a 2mg piece of gum to a 0mg piece of gum.
I wish this was a little closer to Vegas.
If college were always this fun, everyone would go.
Gotta love the timing on this ...
"We get all worked up after every earthquake, but it's not in our culture to construct buildings the right way in a quake zone, that is, build buildings that can resist (quakes) and retrofit old ones. This has never been done," Boschi said.


That's a darn shame!
It seems likely that whoever develops the capability to project force from orbit with any effectiveness will be the superpower for the next hundred years or so. In the mean time, this is probably a good idea.