Hope is the thing with feathers
That perches in the soul,
And sings the tune without the words,
And never stops at all,
And sweetest in the gale is heard;
And sore must be the storm
That could abash the little bird
That kept so many warm.
I've heard it in the chillest land,
And on the strangest sea;
Yet, never, in extremity,
It asked a crumb of me.
-- Emily Dickinson
"Laws are like sausages; it is better not to see them being made." Chancellor Otto von Bismarck
Sunday, July 18, 2010
Monday, July 12, 2010
My ISP Sucks
After countless calls to my Internet service provider (ISP) and four visits from various technicians, it appears that our house connection is finally working at reasonable speeds (10 Meg download).
Most infuriating parts of the whole experience so far?
Yes, I know that unfair additional charge for those weeks only amounts to about $10. I'll still probably end up going to jail over it.
Most infuriating parts of the whole experience so far?
- Realizing that the complicated way I had my modem "bridged" to my wireless router was in fact totally unnecessary and probably negatively impacting my speeds. The only reason it was ever set up that way was because my ISP said to do it that way.
- Being told to disconnect my router and recycle my modem EVERY SINGLE TIME I talked to anyone at my ISP (at least 20 times all together), even though I knew the problem wasn't on my end.
- Having the technician show up in the middle of my work day and being surprised when I wasn't cool with just losing my Internet connection for an indeterminate amount of time. Ever heard of "working from home?"
- Being told "Yep, we fixed it on our end; the slow speed problem is on your end" and being forced to dismantle my network for the umpteenth time, only to have the guy interrupt me half way through that process to tell me, "Oh, I just got an IM from [some other guy]. He says that we haven't actually increased your connection speed yet. It'll be fixed by this coming Friday."
- Having it not be fixed by that coming Friday. Or the next Friday. Or the next.
- Being told by "tech support" that I should call customer service once this is all over to get my billing straightened out. Excuse me? I thought I was already talking to customer service. I actually said, "So you can't say to me 'I'll make sure that your billing gets straightened out, sir'?" And I was told, "Nope we [tech support] can't call customer service."
Yes, I know that unfair additional charge for those weeks only amounts to about $10. I'll still probably end up going to jail over it.
Friday, July 9, 2010
Make PDFs
For those of you who want to be able to make .pdf files so that anyone and everyone can reliably view the things you send them, use this.
http://www.pdfforge.org/.
It's free, it's slick, and it allows you to turn your Word docs, Excel spreadsheets and other weird files directly into .pdf files.
Immensely useful.
http://www.pdfforge.org/.
It's free, it's slick, and it allows you to turn your Word docs, Excel spreadsheets and other weird files directly into .pdf files.
Immensely useful.
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
Who Makes the World's Stuff?
Who makes the world's stuff these days? Not the United States, certainly. We don't make much of anything here in the U.S. anymore. All of our manufacturing jobs have been off-shored and outsourced and shipped overseas to China and Taiwan and other points east, where wages are low, unions are scarce, environmental protection is an afterthought, and billions of people stand in line to do work once done in the U.S. for a fraction of what we used to charge.
The United States, having served as the global manufacturing leader for most of the last 100 years, has let that all slip away and has become a weak, reactive slave to consumerism. . . choosing to buy what we need instead of making it ourselves.
Isn't that right? I mean, that's what we've been led to believe, isn't it?
Wrong. As the the Financial Times pointed out in June of 2010, "The U.S. remained the world's biggest manufacturing nation by output last year."
Not China. Not Taiwan. The United States, thank you very much. We make the world's stuff. Still. For now.
But as that same article points out, the U.S. is poised to relinquish that crown to China in 2011 unless something dramatic happens.
Will that happen? Probably. Powers greater than me will decide that one way or the other. I'm just pleased that we're there, right at the top, vying for the lead. It's like finding out that you're almost as good at something today as you were back in high school. Maybe we're not as far gone as we've been led to believe we are.
And maybe there's hope. There are still things the U.S. does better than anyone else on the planet, I believe.
Monday, July 5, 2010
Canary in the Coal Mine
Have you lost your job in the last year? I really am sorry if you have, and I sincerely hope you have found work since then.
If you're like me and you've been blessed enough not to have lost your job, you probably still know a few people who have. But for many of us who have remained employed during this recession, I think it is all too easy to know emperically that a problem exists but to not really believe it deep down. No amount of hype on TV or in print can really bring home the fact that people are flat out LOOSING THEIR JOBS as a result of the sad state of the economy right now.
I'm not sure one more piece of scary information will help make this whole deal real for anyone else, but I heard a statistic recently that kind of jumped out at me. In my home state of Missouri, tax revenue (resulting from income taxes, corporate taxes and sales taxes) fell 9.1% during the last year.
That's real, and that's not small potatoes, folks. That's up in the low billions of dollars.
That's a real drop in taxes collected from what people earn (7.6%), because so many people aren't working, and many of those who are still employed have seen their incomes flatline or even decline in the last year. That's a real drop in taxes on companies (~5%) that aren't doing as much business as they did in previous years. And that's a real drop in taxes collected at the cash register (~5%) as people spend less of what they earn.
For some reason, knowing that my state's revenues have dropped by close to 10% in the past year somehow makes the recession more real to me. In a weird way, tax revenues are like the canary in the coal mine. . . a second-hand indicator of the health (or sickness) of its surroundings.
I think there's something bad in the air.
http://www.connectmidmissouri.com/news/story.aspx?id=478120
If you're like me and you've been blessed enough not to have lost your job, you probably still know a few people who have. But for many of us who have remained employed during this recession, I think it is all too easy to know emperically that a problem exists but to not really believe it deep down. No amount of hype on TV or in print can really bring home the fact that people are flat out LOOSING THEIR JOBS as a result of the sad state of the economy right now.
I'm not sure one more piece of scary information will help make this whole deal real for anyone else, but I heard a statistic recently that kind of jumped out at me. In my home state of Missouri, tax revenue (resulting from income taxes, corporate taxes and sales taxes) fell 9.1% during the last year.
That's real, and that's not small potatoes, folks. That's up in the low billions of dollars.
That's a real drop in taxes collected from what people earn (7.6%), because so many people aren't working, and many of those who are still employed have seen their incomes flatline or even decline in the last year. That's a real drop in taxes on companies (~5%) that aren't doing as much business as they did in previous years. And that's a real drop in taxes collected at the cash register (~5%) as people spend less of what they earn.
For some reason, knowing that my state's revenues have dropped by close to 10% in the past year somehow makes the recession more real to me. In a weird way, tax revenues are like the canary in the coal mine. . . a second-hand indicator of the health (or sickness) of its surroundings.
I think there's something bad in the air.
http://www.connectmidmissouri.com/news/story.aspx?id=478120
Sunday, July 4, 2010
America the Beautiful
Friday, July 2, 2010
New York and L.A.
What grinds my gears. . .
I read this morning that the last interview with Dennis Hopper, who died recently, is on news stands in New York and Los Angeles and "will be available nationally on July 6."
This, like the practice of opening movies in New York and Los Angeles days or weeks before opening them in the rest of the country, is part of the reason why 90% of the people in the U.S. hate New York and Los Angeles.
And yes, I know that more than 10% of the nation's population lives in New York and Los Angeles. Some of those folks hate themselves.
Elitist shenanigans.
I read this morning that the last interview with Dennis Hopper, who died recently, is on news stands in New York and Los Angeles and "will be available nationally on July 6."
This, like the practice of opening movies in New York and Los Angeles days or weeks before opening them in the rest of the country, is part of the reason why 90% of the people in the U.S. hate New York and Los Angeles.
And yes, I know that more than 10% of the nation's population lives in New York and Los Angeles. Some of those folks hate themselves.
Elitist shenanigans.
Labels:
elitism,
grinds my gears,
Los Angeles,
New York
Thursday, July 1, 2010
First new post in a while
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