jp.jpg (13389 bytes)

THE VIEW FROM CHAOS MANOR

View 152 May 7 - 13, 2001

read book now

HOME

VIEW

MAIL

Columns

BOOK Reviews

 

  For Current Mail click here.

Last Week's View                    Next Week's View

emailblimp.gif (23130 bytes)

Highlights this week:

 

This is a day book. It's not all that well edited. I try to keep this up daily, but sometimes I can't. I'll keep trying. See also the monthly COMPUTING AT CHAOS MANOR column, 4,000 - 7,000 words, depending.  (Older columns here.) For more on what this place is about, please go to the VIEW PAGE.

If you are not paying for this place, click here...

Day-by-day...
Monday -- Tuesday -- Wednesday -- Thursday -- Friday -- Saturday -- Sunday

For Previous Weeks of the View, SEE VIEW HOME PAGE

Search: type in string and press return.

 

For an index of previous pages of view, see VIEWDEX.
See also the New Order page, which tries to make order of chaos. These will be useful.
For the rest, see What is this place? for some details on where you have got to.

Boiler Plate:

If you want to PAY FOR THIS there are problems, but I keep the latest HERE. I'm trying. MY THANKS to all of you who sent money.  Some of you went to a lot of trouble to send money from overseas. Thank you! There are also some new payment methods. I am preparing a special (electronic) mailing to all those who paid: there will be a couple of these. I am also toying with the notion of a subscriber section of the page. LET ME KNOW your thoughts.
.

If you subscribed:

atom.gif (1053 bytes) CLICK HERE for a Special Request.

If you didn't and haven't, why not?

If this seems a lot about paying think of it as the Subscription Drive Nag. You'll see more.

For the BYTE story, click here.

 

For Current Mail click here.

The atomz Search returns:

Search: type in string and press return.

 The freefind search remains:

 

   Search this site or the web        powered by FreeFind
 
  Site search Web search

 

 

 

line6.gif (917 bytes)

This week:

Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday

TOP

Monday  May 7, 2001

DSL IS PROMISED

Today is column day, and I have most of it done. One of the items will be a writeup of how we got Niven wirelessly connected, so Eric was over to be sure I got the details right.

Over time Eric has been trying to make contact with PacBell on my behalf, and today he tried once more, sitting patiently for about half an hour on hold, until he was connected, not with an Elbonian, but a pleasant and intelligent young lady named Andrea; and shortly after they had arranged details, I was put on to confirm it, and on May 16 PacBell will have someone out to connect me up. I get 344 KBS guaranteed, with a maximum of 1.5 megabits; if I choose I can later upgrade to 1.5 mb minimum guaranteed with a maximum of 6 megabits for about 3 times the cost, but still considerably lower than the cost of the T1 line I had been willing to pay for. We will start with the 344. If that works I will seriously consider the upgrade.

I get a DSL modem, fixed IP address, and connection to the Internet. I'll keep my Earthlink accounts and mail addresses. PacBell is aware of Linux but doesn't support it: once they get the signal here I am on my own in connecting to the NetWinder. That shouldn't be much of a problem.

Actually I have had a NetWinder 3 here for weeks but I never installed it because the NetWinder 2 works like a doorknob, and I haven't had time to fix things that ain't broke, as you'll see when the column goes up. My plan is to take the NetWinder 2 off line without touching it, install the NetWinder 3, and configure it to use the new DSL system. That way I can always retreat to 56K if I have to...

More on May 16, but it sure sounds real. I even have a confirmation number.

 

TOP

 

This week:

Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday

TOP

Tuesday, May 8, 2001

The column is in. Now to pay the bills.

Bob Thompson sends me an article in The Register that says gee whiz, EX Creator had the same problems in version 4 as in 5 but "nobody ever noticed." Bah. Thompson and I have been warning people for years. Use Nero BURNING ROM and forget EX Creator.

http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/4/18797.html


This may or may not be a virus alert:

(If you post this to your Web page, please attribute it to: Paul S R Chisholm <psrchisholm@yahoo.com> instead of the From: address this message was sent from.

My wife just got half a dozen or so messages of the form:

Subject: Homepage

You've got to see this; it's really cool!

(or words to that effect in the body) and a .VBS attachment.

FYI. --PSRC

You have been warned.

 

 

TOP

 

This week:

Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday

TOP

Wednesday, May 9, 2001

It hit 100 in the Valley yesterday. To do my part on energy I left the windows open and the air conditioner off (except for the tiny ultra-efficient one in the cable room where the servers live). 

It's said to be headed north of 100 today too. So to save energy...

With any luck we will get down to the beach house for a few days today. I'll have granddaughter pictures to bore you with, and I'll get some fiction writing done.

 

I don't know if California could open the  nuclear plant that was closed because "it was close to a fault line" back in the days when people believed the nonsense about how we didn't need more electricity, we could conserve our way to prosperity, and the "soft path" would solve all our problems. Of course those artists who sold this silly view to California are vewwy vewwy quiet now that their chickens have come home to roost.

Sure, "if only Californians had taken conservation seriously..."  And if only we hadn't had to accommodate and find jobs for immigrants, and if only we hadn't had to compete with overseas workers, and if only --- sure lots of if only would lead to a state which might, just might, get through this crisis on the power plants we have. Might. But then the crunch would still be inevitable.

Long ago Petr Beckmann pointed out that one didn't need laws requiring people to conserve diamonds.  If you let the price of energy reflect its true value, then the price will rise, people will conserve as needed, and if profits get high new power sources will be built. That is Economics 101 as it used to be taught before the days of Wishful Thinking 101-102-103 which are now required courses: required so that you will accept the 'soft path' hooplah. Which scads of people and nearly all the politicians did.

If you could conserve your way to prosperity, Bangla Desh would be the wealthiest nation on earth. After all, they have pretty smart people, who get the most out of nearly anything there: visit and you will see people picking up discarded pull rings off soda cans in the hopes that they can fashion something useful from them. But if all your ingenuity and capital are devoted to that sort of thing, it tends to depress economic growth...   

The real impact of the Industrial Revolution came with distributed energy. The quarter horsepower motor. Machine shops that could be set up in garages. Cheap distributed energy plus human ingenuity almost always equals prosperity and plenty of it; devoting your talents to conservation doesn't produce growth, merely survival. Conserving electrons doesn't always make sense. There are plenty of them in the universe.

The crunch will continue until we have more power plants.

As to what kind of power, two make sense: in the short term, nuclear fission. We have the technology. France and Japan have done much of the industrial engineering operations analysis for us, and use US reactor designs. Three Mile Island was a terribly expensive experiment that showed that even when everything is done wrong the worst that happens is we lose an expensive plant; moreover, it showed how to prevent everything from going wrong. 

France and Japan do well by nuclear energy. We could too. With enough electricity we could cease burning fossil fuels, with great benefit to the environment. We could also tell our Arab friends to drink their oil or sell it to someone else, because we could become self-sufficient out of this hemisphere's oil, using it mostly for transportation while we convert our cars to electrical over the next thirty years.

Meanwhile we start serious work on solar power satellites. That requires cheap access to space, but then so does strategic defense. Cheap access to space requires reusable -- and SAVABLE -- spaceships. Ships, not ammunition.

We can solve the energy crunch in the short run -- three years -- by licensing a standard plant design, much as the French and Japanese have done, and getting the legal harpies -- excuse me, concerned legal eagles who wish to do well by doing good -- out of the way. Again I point to France and Japan as examples.

We can solve the long term with solar power, but that requires access to space, which requires some new rocket engines. I know how to do that, too: first, give space to all three military services, and give each service about $2 billion a year to spend any darned way they see fit on getting usable spacecraft. We used to do things that way: interagency completion isn't wasteful it's vitally necessary.

Next we give 10 $2 billion contracts to as many companies, with four year terms: use that money to build the best flying reusable hardware you know how. At the end of 4 years we will have a flyoff, and the best three designs will get contracts to continue. The hardware need not make orbit, but it must be SAVABLE (has a chance of safe landing after failures on takeoff), REUSABLE (put it into the work statement that it has to fly out of sight twice in one day), OPERATIONS DRIVEN (must be able to fly often: say 15 flights in one month).

We built DC/X for under $50 million. Not paper. FLYING HARDWARE. What man has done, man can aspire to.

My own design would be the SSX Max Hunter, Genera Graham, and I proposed back in 1986 and which was built in miniature as DC/X, and flown successfully by USAF. NASA took it over and burned it up on the first first flight.

SSX will need new engines, and in fact engine development is the key to all this, but the way to get those is get some firms competing to build space ships that need the new engines and let them find ways to develop them. An enhanced RL-10 at about 1200 psi chamber pressure and using methane rather than hydrogen may be the answer. There are other concepts that will work. The thing is to think of them as engines like aircraft engines and not as rocket ammunition that needs to be used once and once only.

Once we have cheap access to space, Space Solar Power Satellites work: every economic model  I know shows they are profitable if but only if the cost of getting the materials to orbit is down around the cost per pound of air freight. That turns out not to be impossible or even all that difficult if the R&;D costs for new engines are charged off to strategic defense (which also needs cheap access to space).

So: that's the way out. I doubt we will take it, but it is the only way out I see.

Incidentally, if we do build working Space Solar Power Satellites (SSPS), we will build a scientific base on the Moon and send an expedition to Mars on third shifts and weekends.

A note: I wrote the above from memory. Apparently at least one of the nuclear plants that the eco-sillies got closed was  re-opened. I may be wrong in my recollection that there was another closed on eco-freaky grounds. On the other hand I know from personal experience that the original San Onofre reactor, which had at least 20 years useful life remaining, was closed as part of a deal allowing SCE to bring units Two and Three on line. It was nucular and thus it was a good thing to get it closed even if there were two more of the evil things being built. The opposition to energy by the soft path zealots knew and knows no bounds.

For a critical reply on that see mail.

TOP

 

 

 

This week:

Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday

read book now

TOP

Thursday, May 10, 2001

In San Diego with mild grinding of teeth.

You can save yourself money if you keep good records as your memory begins to fail. I have two machines down here, a laptop and the refurbished Fergie (A fast princess). Fergie recently got rebuilt -- see the column -- and has once again become the desktop I lug down here when I want to write. Not that I am unhappy with the Compaq Laptop, and I suppose I could even hitch it up with external keyboard, mouse, and monitor -- Niven does that for his main system -- but I am used to having resources like DVD-RAM that are impossible for Fergie; anyway I carry both.

Before I left I published the Chaos Manor web site from Regina, the big dual Pentium Compaq Professional Work station I use for most web work, to Fergie, as well as to King Armadillo the Compaq laptop. Apparently I didn't click the publish sub-webs button because I didn't bring over the Archives and Slowchange sub webs, which gives my index page a horrid appearance, but I think it's ok out where you see it.

I also found or thought I had found that I didn't have ws_ftp on Fergie. Of course I found this last night late after Roberta was in bed. I knew I had it on the laptop, but of course there's no network down here, and I didn't have a crossover cable, and the Zip drive I had brought with the intention of using it as sneakernet was SCSI with an ancient db-25 connector rather than a modern SCSI connection, and I don't have a SCSI cable here, and I don't know where my Zip 100 duel parallel/scsi drive is (I think Roberta has it in her kit for when she comes here alone but of course she didn't bring that given that I brought the wrong half of everything I own.)

So I went to Fry's because I have to get some stuff for Phil's machine anyway: "Smart Power" supplies don't turn the darned fan on IN THE POWER SUPPLY until it's getting late and hot. STUPID. How much power are we "saving" with this useless "feature." At least Niven and I have another bureaucrat to roast in the revision of Inferno we are doing.  So I needed to get Phil a PC Cool power supply that blooming works and runs the fan as it ought to. So I looked for another Zip - 100 dual parallel/SCSI drive at Fry's.

They don't make them any more. Parallel or SCSI. Not both. So since I have never had a Zip 250 I bought a reconditioned parallel 250. Brought it here to the beach house. No problems with installation on the Compaq laptop. Copy ws_ftp. Install the Zip 250 parallel on Fergie. No problem. Start to transfer the files. "Directory exists to you want to overwrite files with the same name?"

Meaning that I just hadn't bothered to put it in the startup menu. Oh well. It didn't cost that much, and it's something else to write about but it sure helps if you remember what you are doing. I also got a $4 crossover cable that would have done it too, but I do like having a working Zip when I am doing creative work; another safety copy can't hurt. 

It's a pretty day out there. Now to do some writing.

 However, there was a letter about my energy musings yesterday that has sparked a reply I probably won't leave up after I cool off.

 

 

 

 

TOP

 

 

 

This week:

Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday

TOP

Friday, May 11, 2001

Trying to work on fiction. Goes slowly, but then it always does... Lots of discussion of the power crisis in mail.

And for more on the VIA chip set, also see mail.

 

 

TOP

 

 

This week:

Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday

TOP

Saturday, May 12, 2001

Still at beach. All the action is in mail.

I like Olympus Cameras a lot, but their web site sucks rocks, and the combination of one of their cameras and Windows 2000 is deadly.

I have their USB Smart Media installed on my COMPAQ Armada laptop. I suspect I installed back when that was running Windows 98, and when I upgraded to 2000 it just worked; because I cannot for the life of me install the Smart Media Reader on Fergie.

Sure, first I had to go into the BIOS and turn on the USB port; it was off by default. Wonderful, but that's iWill and VIA. So I did that. Then I tried to install. The Olympus CD ROM autoplays, starts setup, says "This cannot be installed on this operating system," and dies.

OK, go to the laptop. See what driver it is using. Hah. OK, copy that on a floppy. Come back to put that on Fergie. Can't read the floppy. Open the machine, wiggle the wires, restart. Copy the .inf and .sys files. Try again. Install. 

The Windows 2000 wizards are too clever by half. Remember this useful phrase. You will find you will need it again and again when discussing Microsoft products.

The short version is that no matter what I do, FINISH always says something failed. I have copied everything relevant from the laptop, which has Windows 2000 and runs the USB Smart Media reader just fine, to Fergie, which even sees the Olympus reader in the unplug or eject hardware button in the tray -- but will not see the reader itself. 

I can copy all my photos to the laptop without problems. I can even transfer them here via sneakernet. But Bloody Hell! If Microsoft would just let me say "install it anyway, I don't care what the inf files say: just do it. But I can't. Update driver gets me another wizard. None of it works. Sigh.

 

 

TOP

 

 

This week:

Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday

read book now

TOP

Sunday, may 14, 2001 Mother's Day

One present to my wife is no on-line activity today.

 

 

  TOP

      Current View                                                         Current Mail

 

birdline.gif (1428 bytes)