Coping more or less View682 20110707 – 1

View 682 Thursday, July 7, 2011

 

 

Experimenting with Livewriter. This is a running daybook as I experiment with this.

 

Flying blind.  We are trying to update to using LiveWriter instead of Wor 2007 in Blog Publish mode, and my understanding is limited. I do not much like Livewriter as an editor, but perhaps I can get used to it. Autocorrect seems to work. In fact it works far too well. I do not seem to be able to insert t e h as a single word no matter how hard I try. It will correct to the. In standard Word if you backspace over an autocorrected word and enter the misspelled word again, it accepts that. There seem to be other anomalies.

Meanwhile the odious Firefox is driving me nuts. Does anyone know how to refresh the session manager list for Firefox? And is the latest of Firefox stable enough to let me let the system upgrade?

All this administrivia associated with getting the site working would be fine, but it means an end to creative thought until it is done. I came upstairs with the notion of several essays. They get blown out of my head as I try to deal with this stuff.  I really liked the old FrontPage system which I didn’t have to think about much. I am looking forward to new habits when the machines don’t get in the way of thinking.

Now top see if this will post.

= = = = = =

That worked. The problem is that Livewriter has no recollection of anything previous, so it does not seem to be able to bring back anything older, or to link to anything previous. It is as if today were the first day of the new era. All the old book marks and everything else seem to be history, because when I installed and connected with Livewriter, Word 2007 in Blog Publish mode lost all contact with the site, and Livewrtier does not seem to know that Word Blog mode ever existed. In the old FrontPage the “master” copy of everything was local here, but with the WordPress blogs the only copies are out there in the cloud.  At some point we’ll figure this out, but Livewriter doesn’t seem to recognize anything it didn’t itself create and publish.  But at least we are this far along.

= = = = = = =

I suppose I can link to previous stuff by opening it on the web and copying the URL I get, then pasting that into this. For example, this ought to link to the space essay.  Let us see if it does.  And it does.

And that worked. So we have communications with the past, but there is no way to edit any of that until I can convince Word Blog Publish mode to link back up with the old stuff. But of course communications between Livewriter and the old Blog Mode will never be very good. Still, I can live with all this. I have just seen a button here called source. 

A very clean html, cleaner in many respects than any we have seen before.  Now for another test.

 

firew  flag  compass  argue 

The Fireworks seem to be here, and working. The flag is waving.

And they publish and work in publication.  SO far so good. This is a lot better than the old Word Blog mode was. Now to get used to it. It does mean that I pretty well have to be connected on line at high speed in order to do anything, but I can manage that.

I note that many see the fireworks and flag waving. When I view this in Firefox the compass and the cat and mouse work, but the flag is not waving and there is no action in the fireworks. But at one time I did see them working. I don’t really understand, but at some point we can figure it out. It’s progress.

bottle01

 

WHAT I have not found is any way to insert a bookmark. With Word Blog I could not put in a bookmark in blog mode, but I could do that in Word normal and cut and paste a line with a bookmark in it. I do not see how we can do internal referencing in this. I hate that. But we’ll keep poking about and seeing how we can make it happen.

As of last publish the fireworks stopped working. I did preview here and they worked. They still work here, but on line the fireworks are gone and the flag is no longer waving. All this is minor stuff. I gave it a whack with an insert of the bottle, and that works, I will now try to reinsert the flag an fireworks.

flag  firewk-grn  gremlin

 

I’ll keep playing with this, but I have other works to do.

Farewell to Space-Faring View 682 20110705-2

View 682 Wednesday, July 06, 2011

 

 

Quietus : No More Spacefaring Nation

 

The Final Shuttle Launch for Friday has been cancelled, but it’s still the end of an era. Actually it’s the end of several eras, particularly the America as a space-faring nation era inaugurated by John Kennedy. The twist is that Shuttle killed space-faring.

Kennedy ran for President on “the Missile Gap” in which he claimed that the USSR had more ICBM missiles than the United States, and the US was in danger of losing a three-day war to the USSR. Since the Soviet Sputnik satellite had gone up and surprised us all, a lot of people believed that. It was a key factor in the election. After the election Kennedy needed something that would show we were winning the technology race. He also had a real vision of America as a space-faring nation. He had a dream and he sold that dream to America. God Bless Him.

When Kennedy announced that America would go to the Moon before the end of the 1960’s, there were only a handful of space scientists and engineers who thought we could do it. Chris Kraft in particular thought that Kennedy had promised more than we could deliver. Werner von Braun believed it could be done, and the technical design of the Apollo project was mostly his. The design was important because there were more goals than simply putting a man on the Moon.

One design was to do the Moon Project in steps: first we build a capability for routine access to orbit through reusable rockets. Start sub-orbital, but make them savable and reusable. Build X ships, and from them learn how to build better ships. The X-15 was a step in that direction. With routine orbital access the rest would be simple: build an on-orbit assembly capability, send up the parts, put them together in orbit in what would amount to a space station – the Von Braun Wheel was a popular candidate – then when the ship was assembled, send up the fuel and oxidizers. The moon ship would go to the Moon, land, and return to Earth orbit. Crew transfers to the space station and returns. Note that by the time of the Moon Launch (from orbit) the most fuel expensive part of the operation – Earth to Space Station, then Space Station back to Earth – would be routine. We’d know how to do it.

This looked both logical and safe, and from everything then known about the Soviet program, we’d beat the Russians.

Kennedy rejected this plan. First, we were in a race with the Soviets, and he was concerned that we would lose. Second, and less well publicized – it did not, as the Saturn/Apollo approach did, mean the reindustrialization of the South. It was important to the Moon Mission that Lyndon Johnson be on board. He had the Congressional power that Kennedy, formerly a Congressman and junior Senator without mu Congressional influence, never had. Johnson insisted that most of the heavy work be done in the South. Geography dictated that eastern launches would go from Florida. The Saturn/Apollo plan called for a great deal of heavy industrial work in Houston, Huntsville, and Michoud, Louisiana. No one pays much attention to Michoud now, but at one time it was terribly important – and if it had remained so, Shuttle would have been a different and far safer spacecraft and the Challenger disaster would not have happened. But that’s another story.

Once we were committed to Saturn/Apollo, with its enormous disintegrating totem poles, and once the nation was committed to winning the space race so that there were few fiscal restraints, the race was on and it was expensive. Terribly expensive. At a time when the national budget was under $100 Billion a year, Saturn/Apollo would cost $20 billion officially, and actually more as talent and research in other military operations were altered to apply to Apollo.

The problem is, there were no private industries with capabilities to manage anything this big and complex. The most complex operation in the history of the world was D-Day, the Sixth of June, 1944; Saturn/Apollo was a contender to be the new first place in complexity, and was certainly second. No private industry could have managed D-Day and no private corporation could have managed Apollo. The only “companies” used to managing hundreds of thousands of employees to accomplish a particular goal at a particular time were the military. Although the pretense was that NASA was a civilian operation, and most of it was, Saturn/Apollo was done with military managers and in the military way. The “soldiers” were civilian development scientists and technicians, of course; but the people doing the managing were military, and they did it the military way, which is to divide the enormous task into a series of comprehensible tasks and assign someone capable of getting that done to each task. This meant concern for getting the job done – mission oriented — and little to none for the concerns of the people assigned. “You, man. You are in charge of getting me an operating space suit design. It has to do the job, and it has to be ready on time. Go do it.” “Uh, General, I’m a control systems engineer –” “I know that. I also see your record. I know you can do this job, and this is the job I have to get done. Go for it. Dismissed.”

And on. In every case the notion wasn’t to put the best man in the right job. It was to be sure that a good enough man was in every job, and also to have enough redundancy with overlapping jobs to make sure that each job got done and was done on time to fit in so that on a certain July day in 1969 an American would step onto the surface of the Moon.

That happened. It happened on time, and while hardly under budget, it got done. The US could afford it. And during that era of Mercury and Gemini and Apollo and The Right Stuff, America was promised a space-faring capability, enthusiasm for space rose in the general population, space was popular, and the NASA legend grew. And we went to the Moon.

 

The problem was that we won to early. By the time of Apollo the Russians understood that they couldn’t win, and they gave up on the race, and told the world it wasn’t worth winning anyway. The grapes were sour. (For those with a modern education, that image is from a story in Aesop’s Fables, and if you never read those as a child, you ought to; you’ve missed something.) So by the time we landed on the Moon, it wasn’t so clear why we were doing it, or what we would get out of it; but it was clear that America was Number One, and our ability to go to space, do things, and come home was the demonstration of that. It wasn’t precisely The Dream, but it would do.

But we had built Saturn/Apollo, a huge disintegrating totem pole, and we hadn’t used Saturn for building any infrastructure in space. More: we accomplished Apollo the military way, goal oriented, damn the expenses, hire everyone you need, assign enough people to be sure the job was done. We had created an army of 21,000 development scientists and technicians.

And the Iron Law took over. If you don’t know Pournelle’s Iron Law of Bureaucracy, please go read it.

NASA was told to build systems that would make space operations cheap and routine.

The real job of NASA was to develop a system that would employ 21,000 development scientists and engineers. They did. The result was Shuttle, which was designed to employ 21,000 development scientists and engineers without regard to the success or failure of Shuttle as a spacecraft. In that sense, Shuttle was a complete success.

And it did some missions well. It did others horribly. We never developed a decent on-orbit capability. We never developed a decent working space suit for construction in space. But we did have a system whose budget was independent of its operations. Note that the Shuttle budget was pretty much the same year after year, independent of the number of missions. I used to say that the cost per mission of Shuttle was either zero or infinity: If we had five missions in a year the annual cost was the same as in the years when we had zero missions.

 

There was a lot to like about Shuttle but mostly because she was all we had. She ate the budget for X programs that might have taken the Reusable spaceship approach. NASA carefully killed all potential rivals to Shuttle. It also killed a number of concepts that couldn’t be built with Shuttle. No other approaches wanted or needed. It’s Shuttle or nothing, and back in Reagan’s day America’s space capability and a demonstrated ability to do Strategic Defense was an important part of the strategy to end the Cold War.

 

I will miss the old girl even so. Shuttle was the enemy of the space plan I had hoped to bring about through SSX. If you want to know more about that, see The SSX Concept, and How to Get to Space. I wrote both those long ago, but they are still relevant.

View 682 20110706-1

View 682 Wednesday, July 06, 2011

This is the first post for today. I have written a fairly long piece on the end of Shuttle, and America in Space, and it will go up as a second View for the day.

I am catching up, but still far behind. Mail is accumulating. The Column needs to be written. And Rick Hellewell continues to build this site. This afternoon I am going to try a new word processor editor for WordPress that may solve some of the problems.

 

 

A Needed App

 

I just had a think. In another conference someone asked how you do autograph sessions with eBooks. I suddenly thought of an app. When you invoke it, it brings up the cover of a book you have on the smart phone, and activates the camera. The next picture would be of the fan with the author (taken I suppose by a bookstore clerk). It might even allow a short recorded message from the author. I have no idea if anyone would want this, but I wouldn’t mind having some mementos of that kind from favorite authors.

 

  

Folding my Tent View 20110705-1

View 682 Tuesday, July 05, 2011

Heading for Home and Reviews

  We spent the weekend in San Diego. We had intended to stay longer, but there were complications, and I will shortly strike this set and pack things away. For no especial reason I am reminded of a poem memorized in about 4th grade, when country school education in the United States included deliberate inclusions of what was then seen as the national culture. No reason was ever given for the inclusion of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s poetry for the pupils in 4th grade at Capleville consolidated where the students were mostly farm children, because it would never have occurred to anyone to ask: the United States had a common culture, and many common metaphors and phrases, and that was that. Longfellow was part of our common treasure. You learned some of the beauties of English and some common usages, and by memorizing and reciting you learned other useful skills. In any event the poem was “The Day is Done”, and I dare say that most people my age will still recognize the last verse. There are other verses that evoke memories. If you have never read it, you may like it. If you once read it in school the remembrance may be pleasant. We had expected to stay at least another week, and I brought down two large boxes of books to be worked into the new launch of Chaos Manor Reviews along with some adventure stories. I let Chaos Manor Reviews slip a bit earlier this year. That was in part due to health matters, and in part due to the impending changes. The new BYTE will be launched shortly, and I will be doing Computing at Chaos Manor on a more regular basis – it will be in BYTE and also at the usual stand at www.chaosmanorreviews.com. BYTE will doubtless have its own commentary policy. Mine remains: write me. In any event I had intended to write a new column while I was here. I will start on that when I get home. We have not abandoned Chaos Manor Reviews, and my thanks to all those who have expressed concern. I seem to have recovered from what I can only conclude was a long term flu that attacked me early this year and didn’t relent until early June.

Evolution

This site evolves. We had several odd crises over the weekend. One of them resulted in the loss of mail from subscribers. Subscribers have a “Groucho” that is intended to escape spam filters and bring that mail to a higher level of attention than my general mail, but from Friday night until Monday evening, and mail that had the secret word tag got deleted rather than given priority. If you sent mail over the weekend it may have gone into a black hole. That is fixed now. Rick has made some new additions to the site that have not yet been fully implemented, but the intended result is to allow those who liked the old scheme of a file for a week given in the order it was posted for that week will be able to have that again. Those who like last in first out blogological order will be able to keep that. We’ll see. So far as I am concerned this place is very much under construction… I have tried another internal link system, this time to a header. We will see if that helps. I see it doesn’t work. WordPress really doesn’t like internal links, and although in theory it will link to a section, in practice it seems not to. Another time. I have another method to try. We will get there. I am very late on both the Mail here and Chaos Manor Mail. I’m trying to catch up. Meanwhile, I have to fold my tent and steal away. Back this evening.

= = = = = = =

1815: Home, safely. Long drive, and apparently everything decided to update while I was gone: I was more than two hours installing updates to Windows and Firefox and the inevitable Adobe daily updates, and other stuff. But we are here, and all it well. Everything seems to be working.

The radio news was all about the Florida verdict of a case I have not really been following. I owe you all some mail, and a Chaos Manor Reviews Computing at Chaos Manor column. I have not forgotten. And I do seem up to getting the stuff done. Hurrah.

But it is dinner time…

= = = = = = = =