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Mail 256 May 5 - 11, 2003 

 

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IF YOU SEND MAIL it may be published; if you want it private SAY SO AT THE TOP of the mail. I try to respect confidences, but there is only me, and this is Chaos Manor. If you want a mail address other than the one from which you sent the mail to appear, PUT THAT AT THE END OF THE LETTER as a signature. In general, put the name you want at the end of the letter: if you put no address there none will be posted, but I do want some kind of name, or explicitly to say (name withheld).

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Monday May 5, 2003

Subject:  It's not just the TSA that we need to worry about

 Law enforcement runs amok in Texas as well....

 http://www.dallasobserver.com/issues
/2003-04-17/feature2.html/1/index.html

How Encouraging

Jerry,

While I agree with you that much of our airport security is a show rather than effective, I have felt that the substitution of federal employees for contract workers as screeners has actually improved the process. I was, for the record, not in favor of creating yet another federal bureaucracy.

But I have mostly found the federal employees to be more consistent, less surly, and more apt to at least appear to be tending to business. Thus I was surprised by Alex's experience with the nail clippers that you mentioned. The list on the TSA web site ( http://www.tsa.gov/interweb/assetlibrary/tsa_ppitems.pdf ) which lists what you can and can not take, specifically lists nail clippers as a permitted item, either in checked or carry-on baggage.

I hope that this does not mean that we are entering another period of confusion as to what our masters will permit on planes.

Regards,

Bill Beeman

One of Pournelle's Laws is A Job Not Worth Doing is Not Worth Doing Well. Nail clippers were fine but there was a 1.5 inch FILE attached to it, and that dangerous weapon cannot be permitted on airplanes.

One may smile and smile and not be surly and still see to it that flying is painful.

Jerry,

As a shareholder of the Transmeta company, don't knock the chip, knock the designer. As you know, the system is a system as a whole, not just one chip (granted, the CPU is what we are talking about)

Enjoy the trip.

Rick

I am not sure what that means. There are Tablet PC's not as slow as this. The tablet I have is wonderful in many ways, but there seems to be some interaction with Outlook that brings it to its knees: it is slower than the Armada, also a Compaq. Transmeta sent people samples that were slow but swore the delivered products would be faster. They weren't. Compaq isn't the only company: Sony and Fujitsu were inveigled into using Crusoe chips for laptops, and all seem not too happy with CPU performance.

Transmeta doesn't do low power much if any better than Pentium M, and sure is a lot slower...

BUT SEE VIEW! There is a fix.

 

 

 

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Tuesday,  

Something that came across my inbox today that reminded me of you writing about how America has exported its blue collar manufacturing jobs:

"Joe Smith started the day early having set his alarm clock (MADE IN JAPAN) for 6 A.M. While his coffeepot (MADE IN CHINA) was perking, he shaved with his electric razor (MADE IN HONG KONG). He put on a dress shirt (MADE IN SRI LANKA), designer jeans (MADE IN SINGAPORE) and tennis shoes (MADE IN KOREA).

After cooking his breakfast in his new electric skillet (MADE IN INDIA) he sat down with his calculator (MADE IN MEXICO) to see how much he could spend today. After setting his watch (MADE IN TAIWAN) to the radio (MADE IN INDIA) he got in his car (MADE IN GERMANY) and continued his search for a good paying AMERICAN JOB. At the end of yet another discouraging and fruitless day, Joe decided to relax for a while. He put on his sandals (MADE IN BRAZIL) poured himself a glass of wine (MADE IN FRANCE) and turned on his TV (MADE IN INDONESIA), and then wondered why he can't find a good paying job in..... AMERICA.....

Keep this circulating!!! "

-Dan S.

  There is more to it than that, but the point is clear.

 

 

 

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Wednesday,

 

In New Orleans for WinHEC

 

 

 

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Thursday, May 8, 2003

Hi Jerry

> The following recipient(s) could not be reached:

> 'James Siddall jr' on 5/7/2003 10:45 AM

> 554 Service unavailable; [68.152.107.90] blocked using

> relays.osirusoft.com, reason: [1] send-safe, see

> http://spews.org/ask.cgi?S1062

You have fallen foul of an email black hole.

A number of sites, including spews.org, maintain lists of "known spam sources". They include actual spammers, owners of open relays (that spammers utilise) and spam-friendly ISPs.

If I were of the opinion that xyz.com was a source of smap, I would advise spews.org and they would add you to the list. Then (if I am using the said black hole) each email I receive would be checked against the latest list and any deemed as spam would bounce.

Unfortunately the checking of reports is sometimes less than Ideal, and many false-positives exist.

From the message above, it looks like your email is going through the relay relays.osirusoft.com which appears to be black listed.

-------------------------------------------------------------------

Michael Smith, Senior Software Engineer michaels(at)aurema.com

Well, why they decided to send mail from the Microsoft Press Room to a black hole is beyond me. The problem has been fixed at my ISP, so all is well,

Yay, Microsoft! (priority one)

 http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1105_2-1000429.html

Roland Dobbins


This is already all over the Internet, so you may have seen it. If not, visit < http://news.com.com/2100-1002_3-1000429.html?tag=fd_top >. Microsoft has already addressed the problem temporarily by disabling password changes, but if you have a Passport it'd probably be a good idea to check its status.

I find it incredible that Microsoft has the nerve to ask us to trust them with our personal and financial information, plans to implement DRM that will give them absolute control of all our computers, and yet allows something like this to happen. Talk about a single point of failure, and one that's failed repeatedly in the past.

I don't dislike Microsoft. In fact, I think many of their applications are the best available. But "Microsoft Security" is truly an oxymoron. I don't have a Microsoft Passport, and have no intention of getting one. Nor do I intend to buy into their DRM scheme, and this is just the latest example of why I'll never trust Microsoft to keep my data secure.

-- Robert Bruce Thompson thompson@ttgnet.com http://www.ttgnet.com/thisweek.html http://forums.ttgnet.com/ikonboard.cgi

 

 

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Friday, May 9, 2003

I am just home so this will be short shrift time.

Disturbing confirmation:

http://www.spacedaily.com/news/shuttle-03p1.html 

Chris Christensen Aspen Research Corporation

NASA bamboozled everyone on Shuttle. Including me. Roland has also sent me this link with the heading "The Truth Will Out."

Maybe.

Subject: RIP - George Morrow

http://msnbc-cnet.com.com/2100-1008_3-1000732.html?
type=pt?=msnbc&tag=alert&form=feed&subj=cnetnews

Ken McIntire

One of the early pioneers from CP/M days. I didn't know him well, but he was a friend of Bill Godbout's and I spent some time in their company. 

Jerry,

I'm afraid Michael Smith is mistaken about relays.osirusoft.com. It is not an open relay, but rather a blocklist used to filter out spam, and one of the sources it uses for checking spam sources is SPEWS (www.spews.org). SPEWS lists spam sources very aggressively. Some IP addresses are blocked as soon as a known spammer shows up as owning them, without waiting for the spam to start flowing. SPEWS will in some cases deliberately expand its blocklist to include addresses not currently used by spammers. In theory this is done when the ISP ignores repeated complaints about the spammer, but sometimes innocents will get caught in the initial net. The point is supposedly to keep the ISP from moving the spammer to a new IP address (as they will sometimes do), but the ISP's other customers who have been caught in the net will complain and put additional pressure on the ISP to take action against the spammer.

In this case, the Microsoft Press Room was in the same IP 'neighborhood' as spammer and spamware peddler send-safe.com and got caught in the dragnet. (SPEWS recently expanded its blocking to cover the whole range 68.152.100.0 - 68.152.140.255, which seems a bit excessive.)

SPEWS is quite effective at stopping spam, but the price in collateral damage is not negligible.

---- Robert Brown http://www.godofwar.com Mr. Bad Example

It is clearly not all that effective at stopping spam. My wife's mailbox is filled with filth, I get enormous amounts of spam I don't have the horsepower to filter properly with a laptop, and we are drowning in it. There has to be a way to stop spammers without destroying our ability to use the Internet. 

Hi!

This is a link to a review of a book about climate change, and the book's premise is the same as yours: We Don't Know, But Finding Out Would Be A Good Idea.

I enjoyed the review, and hope you do, too.

Best Regards,

Doug Hayden

http://www.nybooks.com/articles/16270 

Indeed. Thanks.

SARS

Dear Dr. Pournelle,

The Korean television news, available by satellite at my home, ran an item on SARS and the lack of it in Korea. the Korean MD's have decided that the Korean diet, specifically kimchi, garlic, and soy sauce, serve as a defense against SARS. There is now a shortage of commercial kimchi in Korea. There is also a deafening silence from the US Center for Desease Control on this elegant defense from an epidemic. I wish this was a joke, but I am telling the truth as reported by my wife.

regards,

William L. Jones wljones@dallas.net

Of course there are those who would say they'd rather have SARS than eat kimchi. But in fact I rather like the stuff.

"For almost a century Poincaré's Conjecture has tempted, taunted and ultimately vanquished some of the brightest minds in mathematics. Now, a little-known Russian scholar has astonished the rarefied world of topology – the science of surfaces – by coming up with what appears to be the first formal proof – probably."

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/
science_medical/story.jsp?story=403578
 

Henry Stern Dayton, OH

===============

Dr. Pournelle:

Thanks for creating and maintaining a great web site.

I thought you and your readers might be interested in this: http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=
story&cid=96&ncid=96&e=1&u=/space/20030507/sc_
space/rocketeers__setting_their_sights_on_suborbital_flights
 

Keep up the good work,

David L. Marchman President

Thanks!

From: Stephen M. St. Onge                                            saintonge@hotmail.com

Date: May 6, 2003                                                           subject: Links of possible interest

Dear Jerry:


        In the current New York Review of Books, Freeman Dyson comes through with an interesting article on global climate change, and the uncertanties in the science.

 

        There's also a good article on the fall of Bagdhad.

 

       Finally, check out the new magazine titled _The New Atlantis_, here.  "The aim of this journal is to help all of us to think a little more clearly about the burdens and blessings of modern technology—both in our national politics and our everyday life; to help us avoid the extremes of euphoria and despair that new technologies too often arouse; and to help us judge when mobilizing our technological prowess is sensible or necessary, and when the preservation of things that count requires limiting the kinds of technological power that would lessen, cheapen, or ultimately destroy us.  It will consider the larger questions of technology, human nature, and modern democracy, and the practical questions of governing science."

Best,
        Stephen


DELENDAM ESSE SAUDI ARABIA!

 

Thanks

Subject: Son of Thor?

The USAF had a contractor team build a bomb that works like the Thor system you have described, dispensing 3500 "penetrators" over a 100 yard area. See http://www.aviationnow.com/avnow/news/channel_
aerospacedaily_story.jsp?id=news/usaf05053.xml
  for details.

Edmund Hack

Thanks.

Dear Sir,

Noting your comment in the mail of 2 May:

>"We have so hedged manufacturing and legal employment about with regulations and requirements and provisions that many of the solid blue collar jobs have been exported and won't return. I need to think about the implications of this." <

Your observation about the importance of jobs is not new as you've noted before. Interestingly, this concern appears deeply rooted in Western society, at least in so much as reflected in Caesar's concern reported by Anthony Everitt in his "Cicero: The Life and Times of Rome's Greatest Politician," which you recommended in January, 2003.

Writing of Caesar's actions as he wielded dictatorial power in about 46BC, "Caesar enacted at great speed a number of important and well-judged reforms. ... In order to discourage the replacement of jobs for citizens by slave labor in the countryside, at least one third of the cattlemen on Italy's large ranches had to be freeborn."

I don't know how successful Caesar and his successors were in the effort to protect jobs, nor the reason for Caesar's interest. However, it would be interesting to note how the passing of reasonable employment opportunities from an economy affected its later stability and endurance.

--

Cheers,

Art Russell

mailto:artrussell@mindspring.com http://education.gsu.edu/spehar

"Failure is no accident" - Dr. Phil

================

 

 

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Saturday, May 10, 2003

Jerry,

I recall reading your comments about political correctness at google.com.

Google apparently has decided the air guns are bad. The story is from gunnewsdaily.com.

http://www.gunnewsdaily.com/rw514.html 

jim dodd San Diego

But despite Google's "social conscience" they gladly accept paid advertisements for porn, beastiality, online gambling, alcohol, and sites offering homosexual sex toys.  A search for "porn" reveals paid advertisements from such socially acceptable sites like "kinkychicks.net," "analrush.com," and  "LuciousLabias.com."  But advertisements for the sale of Red Ryder air rifles are forbidden.  Go figure!  We don't think those sites, despite some being incredibly crude, should be banned by Google.  In fact, any site that complies with the law and Google editorial guidelines should be allowed to advertise so long as they are not offensive, even Red Ryder BB air rifles.

Amazing. It's their site, of course and they refuse advertisements as they wish, but it does seem odd. And in fact searching on air guns on google certainly shows plenty of sources for them. I am not sure I believe this report.

And see below.

 

 

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Sunday, May 11, 2003

Bruce Moomaw, "Explaining Thirty Years Of Fudge," t (Space Daily, referenced above):

"There was never any thought that those [RCC] panels would withstand a 20,000 foot-pound kinetic energy strike [such as Columbia's foam fragment produced]. ... Kinetic energies of a 2 1/2 or 3-pound hunk of foam when it's traveling 700 feet per second -- that's high school physics."

700 feet per second (some 427 mph) would, if the above figures are accurate, be the difference in speeds between the orbiter and the foam piece when contact was made. Two factors might contribute to this difference: continued acceleration of the orbiter after the foam seperated, and deceleration of the foam. My question: does everyone agree that that's the speed delta, and that 20,000 foot-pounds is therefore a good estimate of the strike energy? All this high-school physics is too complex to make it into popular press articles.

Mike Juergens mjcom99@hotmail.com

A 700 fps speed differential seems high. (30 mph is 44 fps  30 : 44 as x is to 700, cross multiply the terms 30 times 700 equals 44 x or x = 300*700 / 44 =  477 mph if I haven't done something backward this early.) That speed differential seems a bit high, but let's see.  Quick assumptions: the foam simply stops in atmospheric drag when it falls off, shuttle is doing 4 gees = 128 fps/second, v = at, so to get 700 fps you need 700/128 = 5.4 seconds acceleration, s (distance traveled) = 1/2 * a * t^2 so 1/2 * 5.4 * 5.4 * 128 = more than 1800 feet, and I don't think the Shuttle is 1/4 mile long. It's also early Sunday morning and I may have got something wrong but I don't think so.

The fundamental equations are v = at, and s (distance) = 1/2 a T^2, and the fundamental constant is g = 32 ft/s/s.

But in fact wouldn't 70 feet/second, which isn't impossible, do a pretty good job with a pound of foam?

>Quick assumptions: the foam simply stops in atmospheric drag when it falls off

Actually, your assumption seems to be that the foam keeps going at the speed it had before it separated, and the delta v is totally due to the shuttle accelerating into it. You solved for distance for the delta to be 700 fps, and found it to be too long.

 

If the foam did simply stop, the shuttle would hit it in a fraction of a second, acceleration would be a minor factor, and the delta would equal the speed of the shuttle, the foam being at speed 0. If the foam decelerates sharply, the outcome approaches this case, and the most important thing to know is the shuttle speed when the foam separated.

 

If the foam decelerates more gradually, then both the acceleration rate, which we know, and the deceleration rate, which we don't know, are factors. But in any case I don't see the delta getting to 700 fps unless the shuttle was going at least that fast, and the foam decelerated sharply. If the films of the foam strike have been presented real-time, seperation to impact was less than 1 second. On that basis, impact energy may well have been as cited. I just wondered if this was a generally understood and accepted data point. If impact energy was low, then the analysis while the shuttle was airborne looks better, and we need to consider other failure mechanisms, such as a colision with orbital debris.

 

BTW, my way of converting FPS to MPH was (FPS * 60 * 60) / 5280. And the answer is 477.27, and I made a transcription error in my last message.

Mike Juergens mjcom99@hotmail.com

===

Jerry,

I'm nowhere near as competent in math as you are - my math training ended with geometry and trigonometry in high school.

But shouldn't you include the _deceleration_ rate of the piece of foam (due to drag) - as well as the acceleration rate of the shuttle - when determining the collision speed?

Sincerely,

Calvin Dodge Certified Linux Bigot (tm) http://www.caldodge.fpcc.net

That will teach me to try to work on this stuff at 0800 before coffee. Thanks. But I think the mystery is solved:

 

Hi, Jerry.

The speed of the foam that hit Columbia was about 500 mph, according the video analysis done by the CAIB. The foam took quite a bit less than a second to strike the wing once it broke off the tank. The acceleration of the foam wasn't caused they the acceleration of the shuttle, but by the foam being picked up by the slipstream between the tank and the shuttle. I don't rememver the exact velocity of the shuttle at that point - I think it was in excess of 1500 mph, but the airstream between the tank and the shuttle was moving somewhat slower.

This has been discussed extensively in the CAIB press briefings and public meetings, transcripts of which are on their web site.

Regards, Keith

-- Keith Soltys 

Well that ought to be good enough.  Now what did it weigh? If 500 mph then that's probably rounded from 477, which means the 700 fps number is about right, and the mv^2 energy would be considerable.

and:

I suspect that the foam might have been accompanied with several pounds of ice accumulation because of the incomplete coverage of the tank

Gene

Indeed

 

===============

Airport Security

I ran into a TSA employee, still in uniform, while at the post office. While standing in line we got into a conversation. The nice young woman joked that TSA stands for "takes scissors away" and implicitly made it clear that she & most of her fellow employees were there because the work was easy, the money decent & the commute not too bad. A deep committment to making us all more secure was clearly not on her agenda. I guess the others are there 'cause they like the power. Luckily my lifestyle & work make it possible for me to drive or sail on the few occaisons I need to leave my neighborhood.

Dick peace, freedom & keep your word

Would it matter a lot if they were sincerely dedicated to security? Nothing they can do would prevent a suicide bomber from waiting until there is a huge jam of people at the security line, then blowing himself and all the TSA people and all the machinery to kingdom come; which would shut down at least one major airport and probably more than one.

====

Google doesn't block searches for air rifles. They don't, however, accept paid advertisements for them.

When you do a google search, companies pay to have ads appear in a slightly different type face and background color along the top and to the right of the main Google results.

The nice thing is that the paid ads are "outside" the search area. The search area results are purely a function of Google's algorithm (and webmasters' attempts to spoof it).

So, the user can make a choice as to whether to consider paid advertising or not.

In the air rifle case, Google is making a choice about the advertising they will accept. It's their right, but that choice causes me to have contempt for them. The only way to get them to change is to switch to another search engine and send Google a letter/email telling them why you're switching. Get enough people to do that and their numbers will drop. "Money talks".

Steve Setzer

===

Jerry,

I believe you missed the point made by your recent correspondent who sent you the link about air guns advertising being banned on Google.

It's not the PageRank system of finding links that has changed, it's the policy for paid advertising accepted by Google that has changed.

If you "google" for "air guns" at this moment, there will be only one paid advertisement (at least a few seconds ago when I did so that was the result).

That is what the purveyor of air guns in the linked page is complaining about, and perhaps he indeed has a point. I suppose the question is: at what point does a company's services become so pervasive and/or influential as to enter the realm of utility and/or monopoly?

Norman Ferguson

It's certainly their right. I never pay attention to paid placements anyway -- in fact I tend to avoid them and look for the first hits that were not paid for. Particularly when some of the paid placements tell me I can get Jerry Pournelle cheaper at their establishment. Some of the paid placements are just plain silly.

I already have my air rifle from the days when I was an editor at Survive Magazine...

I don't know for sure about "Air Guns", but they took my advertisement for the "FloridaGuns.com" website a few months ago. A search of "Gun Training" returned one add for a firearm training program at the top of the page. A search for "Air Gun" pulled up adds (one for the airgunstore.com site).

Al Lipscomb.

Maybe they've changed policies?

 

 

=================

From: Stephen M. St. Onge                                                            saintonge@hotmail.com
 
  subject:     Persistance is admirable, but . . .
 
Dear Jerry:
 
        This is ridiculous.  The FBI has decided that Dr. Steven Hatfill definitely was behind the anthrax letters, but don't ask to see the proof, because they don't have it.  Just a "highly circumstanial case" that apparently isn't strong enough to take to trial.
 
        So instead, they're thinking of finding some other federal crimes to charge him with.
 
        Hmm, instead of "ridiculous," maybe I should have said "Unamerican, unjust, and frightening" ?
 
Best,
        Stephen
 
DELENDAM ESSE SAUDI ARABIA!

I thought the Constitution was intended to prevent that kind of arbitrary power in the government, what with having to be confronted with accusers, and a speedy trial and all, but apparently things have changed a lot.

Subject: Recovered.

http://www.cnn.com/2003/WORLD/meast/05/07/
sprj.nilaw.iraqi.artifacts/index.html

 Roland Dobbins

And more will be, over time.

Subject: Confessions of a spammer.

http://www.oregonlive.com/business/oregonian/
index.ssf?/base/business/105256787116000.xml

Roland Dobbins

The path to spamming success requires expensive investments in software and the agility to adjust to the technological warfare between spammers and companies that try to block their messages. It also requires the stamina to withstand daily hate mail and even death threats.

Shiels decided a spamming career wasn't worth the personal cost.

...

He spent about $10,000 on software to harvest e-mail addresses, to disguise his online identity and to send millions of messages a day.

The Poor Man got death threats. Awww....

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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