Surface Pro 3 and Stability; New Free World Class Education; and other items

Chaos Manor View, Monday, June 29, 2015

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Precious, the Surface Pro 3 that I hope to make into a principal machine here – I keep remembering the Compaq HP Tablet I used for so long – woke with her Wi-Fi and Bluetooth forgotten. I have no idea why. Eric came over just after dinner and fixed it, although he has no idea of how. The Surface Pro 3 has had weird problems with wireless, according to reports all over the web, and Microsoft keeps releasing drivers for the wireless device; we may or may not have installed an update; it’s hard to tell. But Precious reports that she’s up to date on everything, and all my local computers can see her, so it’s now possible to transfer files back and forth (or send them to the cloud), so all’s well, although until either there’s more experience of working properly, or we understand what happened, Precious certainly won’t be a primary system here.

But that’s mostly because we’re running a pre-alpha version of Windows 10, and I’m certainly not going to pronounce a pre-release OS reliable enough for work. If I had to do a lot of road work and needed a portable, I’d probably get a MacBook Air and a new ThinkPad; the Air for truly portable, and the ThinkPad for setting up in the hotel room and just leaving there. I’d also carry a small router to let the two talk to each other and shield them from direct connection to the Internet, Since I don’t get to so many computer shows, I probably won’t do all that.

And if I had good reason to believe that the Surface Pro 3 would behave as well as she is just now, I’d take her along – she’s a joy to use when she’s behaving. And if you do get one, invest in a Microsoft Arc Bluetooth Mouse; it really is the best portable mouse I’ve ever used. The Surface Pro 3 has the problem of needing thermal insulation when used as an actual laptop – it does get hot – but if it can sit on a table it does fine.

Meanwhile, the Kindles are working fine. A reader tried to make me a gift of an eBook, and that caused problems: I managed to get it onto my desktop machine where I don’t read books, after which I couldn’t get it onto a Kindle. Worse, I had never saved a local copy, and I couldn’t find it in the cloud again even for the desktop. Well, I could find it, but I’d have to pay for it. This was mildly infuriating. It has to do with the arcane way you must act to accept an eBook gift – well arcane to me — After several futile hours – I didn’t spend all that time working on this but I compulsively kept coming back to it – I eventually gave up and punched the help button on the Fire. Within a minute I get an American who spoke perfect English, who could see my screen but not me; I could see him but not his screen.

Amazon already knew a frightening lot about me. He was able to cause the book to appear in the cloud for downloading. Of course when I got it, it asked if I wanted to pay the extra couple of bucks for audio. The original gift was with audio. I tried to explain that top the Amazon chap, but giving me the audio version was apparently beyond his powers. The score was, I paid at least an hour of time – actually considerably more because I was on the “phone” at least half an hour – and Amazon got the two or three dollars for audio that it never delivered; on the other hand they lost the wages they had to pay for the technical support chap. There may be a lesson there.

But I have the book now, and all my Kindles as well as the Kindle App on my iPhone know it. I just downloaded it to the iPhone; took a bit of figuring out how to get to where to do it, but that’s because there’s no HOME icon on the Kindle app for the iPhone (go to Library, of course) and I kept looking for one. Anyway it works fine although even the Big iPhone 6 is a bit small for me. I like the Kindle Fire a lot, for reading. Just at the moment I’m enjoying Tim Powers’ Hide Me Among The Graves, about Christina Rossetti, her brother Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Swinburne, and other mid 18th Century poets, with back story elements involving Byron and Shelley and vampires and ghosts and why Gabriel Rossetti buried workbooks of his poetry with his dead wife and why they dug them up again (a real event) – in other words a ripping Tim Powers story. It reads good on any Kindle, but the big Fire HDX is easiest to read.

So all is well at Chaos Manor, at least for now. The Kindles are working\, the Surface Pro 3 is working, the Microsoft Arc mouse is fun and portable, and there was a hilarious episode of Major Crimes on the TV tonight.

And I just got email from Eric, there’s a new build of Windows 10 that looks even better, so I’ll do that one tomorrow.

OH – and I have an Amazon Echo but haven’t set it up yet. Stay tuned.

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World Class University Education – Free!

http://investmentwatchblog.com/one-of-the-worlds-top-universities-is-offering-all-of-their-courses-online-to-anyone-for-free/

“Everything would be free, but program participants that want to receive a credential will be required to pay a small fee. The program is available to learners across the globe, all that is needed is internet access.”

The university – MIT.

Charles Brumbelow

Boston, Mass. – For learners who don’t want to invest in a full residential college ride, or who want to avoid the massive amounts of debt associated with university studies, a program called MITx could be a viable alternative.

With the advent of the internet came a revolution of information becoming available to the average person. MIT University took it one step further when they began a program called OpenCourseWare, which allowed anyone to download full course materials for virtually all classes for free.

But the new MITx interactive online learning platform will go further, giving students access to online laboratories, self-assessments and student-to-student discussions.

Read more at http://investmentwatchblog.com/one-of-the-worlds-top-universities-is-offering-all-of-their-courses-online-to-anyone-for-free/#hH9zE2k5MBf1TiMi.99

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Human driver ban and gay marriage decision

Jerry:

Now that the USSC has determined that a person who has a right in one state has that right in all states, I’m waiting for someone from Arizona (where honest citizens can carry guns without permission from the

bureaucracy) to demand that his or her right be recognized in California.

As far as a ban in human drivers in cars, your co-author Larry tossed that idea into a story in which a character watches a drag race and is astonished that the cars were under control of their occupants!

Glad that you continue to improve.

Keith

Doubt that will work, but on the logic of the last decisions it should.

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F-35 vs. F-16.

<https://medium.com/war-is-boring/test-pilot-admits-the-f-35-can-t-dogfight-cdb9d11a875>

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Roland Dobbins

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‘What they’ll do as they reach, say, thirty-five years old is not the concern of an economy based on revolving cubicles, marginal salaries, and importing acquiescent labor.’

<http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2015/jul/09/frenzy-about-high-tech-talent/>

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Roland Dobbins

Pronouncements like the following have become common currency: “The United States is falling behind in a global ‘race for talent’ that will determine the country’s future prosperity, power, and security.” In Falling Behind?, Michael Teitelbaum argues that alarms like this one, which he quotes, are not only overblown but are often sounded by people who do not disclose their motives. Teitelbaum vehemently denies that we are lagging in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, now commonly abbreviated as STEM. Still, he writes that there are facts to be faced:

• In less than 15 years, China has moved from 14th place to second place in published research articles.

• General Electric has now located the majority of its R&D personnel outside the United States.

• Only four of the top ten companies receiving United States patents last year were United States companies.

• The United States ranks 27th among developed nations in the proportion of college students receiving undergraduate degrees in science or engineering.

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A-10 & the GAO

http://www.military.com/daily-news/2015/06/25/gao-rejects-air-force-arguments-to-retire-a10-warthog-fleet.html
In its report, the GAO found that “the Air Force has not fully assessed the cost savings associated with A-10 divestment or its alternatives.”
“For example, A-10 divestment could increase the operational tempo of remaining CAS-capable aircraft, which could increase costs related to extending the service lives of those remaining CAS-capable aircraft,” the GAO said. “To the extent that this occurs, it would reduce the actual savings from the A-10 divestiture below the estimated $4.2 billion.”
On the other hand, the GAO said that savings “could be greater than $4.2 billion because the Air Force estimate did not include the costs for things such as software upgrades or potential structural enhancements that it could incur if it were to keep the A-10.”
“Without a reliable cost estimate, the Air Force does not have a complete picture of the savings it would generate by divesting the A-10 and does not have a reliable basis from which to develop and consider alternatives to achieve budget targets,” the GAO said.
The report stopped short of making recommendations, pending a more detailed GAO assessment and report to Congress later this year on the issues surrounding the potential retirement of the A-10 fleet.

Last week, the Senate by a vote of 71-25 approved the National Defense Authorization Act including funding for the A-10 for another year. President Obama has threatened to veto the bill.
— Once again, the A-10 gets a reprieve. But, His Imperial Highness Obama I wants to veto the bill funding it. Take the ground support task away from the Air Farce and give it to the Army. Or, retire every Air Force officer above the rank of Lt. Colonel who had not flown an A-10 in combat or commanded an A-10 unit in combat. And, promote A-10 fliers/commanders accordingly!
Pete

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Jerry, you’d better be sitting down when you read this one

Seriously.  Sit down.  Now.

My first reaction was “Dear God in Heaven.”  I think you know me well enough, over the years, to know it takes a LOT to get me to react like that.

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/06/24/hackers-stole-secrets-of-u-s-government-workers-sex-lives.html

I don’t know whether the law even provides penalties appropriate for someone screwing up THIS badly.

I don’t believe it is even POSSIBLE to screw up this badly by accident.

And it sort of doesn’t matter whether it was by accident or on purpose, this is so bad.

–John

Hackers Stole Secrets of U.S. Government Workers’ Sex Lives

Infidelity. Sexual fetishes. Drug abuse. Crushing debt. They’re the most intimate secrets of U.S. government workers. And now they’re in the hands of foreign hackers.

It was already being described as the worst hack of the U.S. government in history. And it just got much worse.

It’s scary all right. And it’s all true.

I wonder if Senator Obama was in those files?

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Elon Musk, First Martian? A Serious Conversation About the Future in Space – Bloomberg Business

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-06-24/elon-musk-first-martian-a-serious-conversation-about-the-future-in-space

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Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

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Home Wi-Fi comes of age;

Chaos Manor View, Sunday, June 28, 2015

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My love/hate relationship with the Surface Pro 3 – named Precious again , as it was when I first got it – with Build 10130 of Windows 10 experimental has moved well into love again. Everything just seems to work. I am using it Wi-Fi only; I think some of the problems have been with the docking station, either hardware or more likely drivers as they develop the beta version of Windows 10. Perhaps not; but in any event Wi-Fi has been good enough now that we have the new Ruckus Wireless Wi-Fi Access Points (APs), which support each other. There are four of them, one upstairs, one in the back bedroom, one in the kitchen, and of course one in the downstairs office which is my main office now. We have one Wi-Fi SSID, and it all pretty well Just Works.

The Ruckus APs are not just repeaters, or standalone units. Repeaters receive a signal and rebroadcast it, which cuts into the throughput speed. Instead, each AP acts as a node on the network, under central control of the ZoneDirector, which hands off your device’s connection to the closest AP. This is far simpler than the manual “Which network is strongest?” game we were playing before.

Professional wireless also automatically balances the load across all radios, avoiding congestion from every device talking to a single AP. I’m told that’s harder with Apple devices, particularly iOS (iPhone and iPad) ones, which like to stay affiliated with one AP, even as you move around. I haven’t seen that, but of course this house is fairly small.

Gear of this class scans routinely for interference (Including between APs), changing channels as necessary. This is much more critical on the more-congested 2.4 GHz band, crowded with rogue devices (including your phone in hotspot mode), microwave ovens, baby monitors, and the like, than the less-crowded 5 GHz band.

Ruckus also does beamforming, aiming more of the radio signal at the receiving device, instead of an omnidirectional pattern directing it everywhere. This extends range while decreasing interference.

The good news is, the pro gear tracks all that so you don’t have to.

I also have a new Microsoft Arc Touch Bluetooth mouse for Precious. It is an optical mouse that turns off when you fold it flat, and turns on into a comfortable mouse when you bend it into an arc. Setting it up was simple, and It Just Works. It was not obvious – to me at least – from the pictures how it worked as a mouse, but it is a real mouse, and works on all the surfaces I’ve tried it on as well or better than the Microsoft Red Eye mice I normally use. Bending it into an arc wakes up Precious.

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Grandmaster Larry Niven was over and we spent the afternoon being interviewed by a TV documentary maker who was more interested in art than stories, but it went well even so. Nothing may come of it, but you never know. At least they were well prepared. But it sure used up the day.

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I have quite a lot of mail from gay marriage enthusiasts asking why I do not rejoice with them. I understand why they are happy; but I don’t rejoice when fundamental changes are made in the Constitutional powers by any process other than amendment regardless of the change. Read Chief Justice Roberts’ dissent for details.

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Surface Pro as laptop

I bought a Surface Pro at the 2013 TechEd (for $400!). It’s a fine computer and a decent replacement for my laptop and old homebrew desktop. I added a docking station (Pluggable UD-3900) to connect my two 24” monitors. It’s not as convenient as the docking station for the Surface, but it was half the cost. The little Surface drives it all just fine.

It’s awkward as a laptop because it’s just not mechanically fit for the job. However, if you put it on a laptop cooling pad, it works great.

-Jay

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Elon Musk: self-driving cars could lead to ban on human drivers | Technology | The Guardian

http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2015/mar/18/elon-musk-self-driving-cars-ban-human-drivers

I doubt Congress will ever decide that, but courts?

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Obergefell, and black-letter text.

Dear Dr. Pournelle:

Here’s the Ninth Amendment, in full: “The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.”

Here’s what Justice Kennedy wrote in his majority opinion in Obergefell: “The nature of injustice is that we may not always see it in our own times. The generations that wrote and ratified the Bill of Rights and the Fourteenth Amendment did not presume to know the extent of freedom in all of its dimensions, and so they entrusted to future generations a charter protecting the right of all persons to enjoy liberty as we learn its meaning.”

This is exactly right. What the Ninth Amendment explicitly says is, as you learn that meaning of liberty over time, the Bill of Rights should not be construed as a comprehensive limiting list, denying and disparaging what you find in addition through the years.

In other words, the Bill of Rights sets a *minimum* to our freedoms and liberties as American citizens, not a maximum. One would think that someone who has made sacrifices to defend liberty would recognize this.

Here’s what Justice Scalia wrote in dissent: “(The majority) have discovered in the Fourteenth Amendment a ‘fundamental right’ overlooked by every person alive at the time of ratification, and almost everyone else in the time since.”

Yup. And just for the literalists who querulously ask, “Where in the Bill of Rights does it mention the freedom of {x}…?” — Well, the Framers saw them coming. They wrote the Ninth Amendment to tell them that’s the black-letter text of how the process works. They in fact hesitated to pass a Bill of Rights at all, precisely because they didn’t want the literalist argument to have any credence or capacity to limit freedom, and it was only with Mr. Madison’s drafting of the Ninth they were persuaded the Bill of Rights would be a good thing.

He who has ears to hear, let him hear.

Hoping this finds you well,

Hal O’Brien

Assume you are correct in every measure. This argues new powers for Congress and state legislatures; not more powers for the courts and bureaucracy. How do nine unelected individuals appointed for life determine when the moment has come? They decide that it has, but they have not the power to implement their decision.  Only a legislative body can make laws.

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You and Middle-earth

Well let me say something about your books. I really love Footfall and its awesome use of Orion drive. I also know you and Larry Niven from Atomic Rockets website, where there are a lot of information about science fiction stuff.
Then I stumble upon this: http://www.projectrho.com/public_html/rocket/macguffinite.php
When I read that page, I found an excerpt from you. Bind Your Sons to Exile.
I could spout all the statistics from memory. Moria: first inhabited asteroid. Mining colony. Average distance from the Sun, 2.39 AU, or 357 million kilometers. Irregular shape. Average radius, 7.5 kilometers, minimum 4, maximum 11 km. Mass, 1.78 trillion tons, or about one ten-billionth of Earth mass. Rotation period 8.2 hours. Period, 3.69 Earth years, or 1348.6 Earth days, or 3947 local days’. Surface gravity, 0.2 cm/sec2 , two ten- thousandths of an Earth gee, just enough to keep you from jumping off the place.
If you jumped as hard as you could you’d go up a couple of kilometers, and take hours for the round trip. It wouldn’t be a smart thing to do.
Composition, varied, with plenty of veins of metals. Moria was once part of a much bigger rock, one big enough to have had a molten core. Then it got battered to hell and gone, exposing what had been the interior. Now you can mine: magnesium, uranium, iron, aluminum, and nickel. There’s gold and silver. There’s also water and ammonia ices under the surface, which are a hell of a lot more important than the metals. Or are they? Without the metals we wouldn’t be out here. Without the ices we couldn’t stay.
Our supporters on Earth called us the cutting edge of technology. We were the first of a series of asteroid mine operations that would eventually liberate Earth forever from shortages of raw materials. The orbital space factories already demonstrated what space manufacturing could do; and with asteroid mines to supply raw materials, the day would come when everyone on Earth could enjoy the benefits of industry without the penalties of industrial pollution.
Bind Your Sons to Exile (1976)
Then I remember that Moria is also a dwarf mine in Lord of the Rings, and it also contain precious metals such as mithril.
But of course, as a science guy I need to separate between correlation and causation. Who knows that it is just coincidental?
So I’ve searched for your books, so I can get the bigger picture. Then I found this:
http://www.goodreads.com/author/list/39099?page=4&per_page=30&title=Jerry_Pournelle
The Battle of Sauron. And that is what drives me to ask you directly about this. Do you read Lord of the Rings? What is your opinion about that?

Ignatius Rivaldi

Well, yes – I have read the Lord of the Rings epic, and I much enjoyed it. Thank you for asking. When I wrote that, I was hoping that we would have asteroid mines by 2015. It appears I was a bit early in that prediction.

Video of the F9 first-stage anomaly and vehicle loss can be seen at https://youtu.be/ZeiBFtkrZEw?t=23m34s

space.access@mindspring.com

But we have a commercial space program, and Moore’s Law is inexorable (although not as first expressed).

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Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

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SCOTUS Threatens the Constitution; Meanwhile at Chaos Manor Windows 10 and Surface Pro are working.

Chaos Manor View, Friday, June 26, 2015

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There’s good news at home, and not very good news nationally. But perseverance fixed my computer problems, and that is what it will take to remedy the recent Supreme Court decisions. We need to keep a Senate Majority, get a sane President, and wait. This Liberal Court does not believe in the Constitution, nor, the evidence indicates, in black letter law. We’re back to emanations and penumbras and SCOTUS has asserted a supremacy that it does not have.

We’ve lived through Constitutional crises before, and Hamilton was right in the Federalist, the courts are the weakest branch of government. They have asserted legislative powers before, sometimes getting away with it and sometimes not; we have to see to it that they do not get away with it this time.

There’s a problem: While the Court assertion of legislative authority is dangerous, on some issues it is nearly irrelevant. Gay marriage is one of them: while it is unlikely that Congress would assert a right to gay marriage anytime soon, a lot of Members feel relief that they won’t be called upon to vote on the issue. The swings in public opinion are wide, and cases like the elderly bakers run out of business for refusing to bake a gay wedding cake will produce more swings, but the direction is clear. Very few – almost no one – would deny the legal rights associated with marriage to gay couples, and many places tried to substitute what amounted to marriage in all but name, preserving the word “marriage” to its ancient meaning, one man and one woman. That was not enough, and thus the Court found in the Constitution (as amended) a right to marriage that would have been abhorrent to the Framers, and to those who adopted the amendments. It is only recently that legislatures have been willing to legalize gay marriage, and not all of them have done so; yet it is clearly a legislative matter. It is also clearly a matter for the states. The Constitution gives Congress no power to define marriage nor the Federal Government no power to perform weddings.

As a practical matter it took that power to itself, and no one really objected. Perhaps they should have.

In any event, since (I believe) a vast majority now accepts the idea that gays are entitled to civil union indistinguishable from marriage, it leaves little to fight over; still, it ought to be left to Congress and the State legislatures. Courts are to interpret laws and apply laws; in some cases perhaps to discover laws (common law marriage as an example); but legislatures make law, and when you remove that distinction you put into danger the notion of the rule of law; a government of laws, not men; and that is extremely dangerous. Rule of law is essential to stable government.

The ancients, and some moderns, knew and know that good government is a blessing, and a rare one at that. These court decisions undermine the rules that have given these United States the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity; we strike at that heritage to our peril. We sow the wind.

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Meanwhile at Chaos Manor, we had many adventures with the Surface Pro 3 and its experimental Windows 10. It isn’t worth recounting the full story, but it consumed the day: I could not make it see Wi-Fi networks, and after a while it wouldn’t even turn Wi-Fi on.

Eventually I used the docking station to get it to connect to the Internet with an Ethernet connection, and as it fought me all the way, I tried to refresh, then update, the Surface Pro. It wouldn’t refresh but it finally decided to update. That took a long time, and was fitful, but eventually I had Build 10130 of the trial Windows 10. I took it out of the docking station (and thus off the Internet, no Ethernet) and restarted it, and Lo! It searched networks, found the new Wi-Fi, and once I typed in the password it worked fine, or seems to. I am about to take it into the breakfast room to play with as I eat lunch. More later, but it looks good.

Back after lunch.

1600:  The Surface 3 Pro works very well.  I need a mouse – I don’t manipulate a stylus well, and right-clicking is a real chore – but that’s me.  I make no doubt that most of you would make do nicely without.  Anyway I am looking at offers of wireless mouses for the Surface 3 Pro, and also for a good messenger bag carry case for it. I’m in no hurry.

In the breakfast room I was able to use it just fine for everything: looking at news, making notes, Word.  The keyboard is no harder to use than this comfort-curve, and actually might be better.The keys are larger. I had problems correcting mistakes because of my clumsiness in using the stylus for right clicks, but I may have made fewer errors, too.  OneNote and a good tablet make wonderful research tools, and this new build of Windows 10 works – all the infuriating problems of the Surface 3 Pro seem to be gone – works well so far.  I haven’t used it enough to be sure, but this moves far towards recommended status.

Microsoft is infuriating, but this is the third mark of this tablet/laptop and it begins to look as if they may be getting there. I want to experiment with using it as a tablet, without keyboard; and get more familiar with this way of doing things, but my first impression was favorable – after the frustrations of the last weeks – and I can hope we’re on the way to a beautiful friendship.

If I have to produce a lot on the road, and particularly if I am holding the machine in my lap, I think I would still prefer a MacBook Air (for ease of carrying) or a ThinkPad ( for usefulness) but I now am not sure that’s a permanent preference. The Surface Pro 3 – I haven’t given him a permanent name, but he’s earned one and it will come soon – with OneNote begins to look as if it could be what I’ve wanted all my life: something that just works.  Of course they may improve it and scuttle that opinion…

So: I’m looking for a carry case messenger bag, and for a good wireless mouse that will travel with the Surface Pro 3. Suggestions welcome. 

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ISIS once more demonstrates why it cannot be allowed to exist.

Day of terror: Islamist attacks around world follow ISIS’ Ramadan message

http://www.foxnews.com/world/2015/06/26/man-beheaded-in-apparent-terror-attack-at-factory-in-france-local-media-say/

Terrorists gunned down dozens of tourists on a Tunisian beach, left a severed head atop a fence outside a French factory and blew up a Kuwaiti mosque Friday in a bloody wave of attacks that followed an ISIS leader’s call to make the month of Ramadan a time of “calamity for the infidels.”

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I recommend this article on the nearly forgotten Druze:

http://www.wsj.com/articles/israels-druse-minority-shows-unity-with-its-syrian-kin-1435244258

Israel’s Druse Minority Shows Unity With Its Syrian Kin

Minority presses prime minister to intervene as brethren in Syria clash with Islamists

Members of the Druse community carry flags at they walk toward the border fence between Syria and the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, near the Druse village of Majdal Shams, to watch the fighting in Syria on June 16. ENLARGE

Members of the Druse community carry flags at they walk toward the border fence between Syria and the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, near the Druse village of Majdal Shams, to watch the fighting in Syria on June 16. Photo: baz ratner/Reuters

By

Joshua Mitnick

Updated June 25, 2015 7:23 p.m. ET

HURFEISH, Israel—The men of this Druse village in the Galilee mountains proudly don shirts from their days in elite Israeli combat units. But now they fear the same military is helping Islamist rebels in neighboring Syria who fight the pro-regime Druse minority.

Druse straddle both sides of the contentious border and many of them in Israel accuse the military of quietly allying with Islamist rebels to topple Syrian President Bashar al-Assad while many Syrian Druse are fighting for the Assad regime.

The article gives some introductory background on the Druze.  Druze to not allow conversion, so they are not proselytizing; and those who live in Israel are not only citizens, but many are police and security officers. Only the elders know the full extent of Druze beliefs; some of the religion is secret, even from most of its members. The Druze position in the Lebanon settlement is Chief of Staff of the armed forces.

See  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Pact

  • The President of the Republic is always a Maronite Catholic.
  • The Prime Minister of the Republic is always a Sunni Muslim.
  • The Speaker of the Parliament is always a Shi’a Muslim.
  • The Deputy Speaker of the Parliament and the Deputy Prime Minister are always Greek Orthodox Christian.
  • The Chief of the General Staff is always a Druze.
  • Parliament members are always in a ratio of 6:5 in favour of Christians to Muslims
  • Under this agreement Lebanon thrived, and Beirut became “The Paris of the Middle East.”

    See also https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Israeli_Druze

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    http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB11154342288815824014704581070312593496554 

    Editor’s note: Below are excerpts from Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia’s dissenting opinion in the ObamaCare case King v. Burwell; on Thursday the court ruled 6-3 for the Obama administration. A related editorial appears nearby.

    The Court holds that when the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act says “Exchange established by the State” it means “Exchange established by the State or the Federal Government.” That is of course quite absurd, and the Court’s 21 pages of explanation make it no less so. . . .

    This case requires us to decide whether someone who buys insurance on an Exchange established by the Secretary gets tax credits. You would think the answer would be obvious—so obvious there would hardly be a need for the Supreme Court to hear a case about it. . . .

    Words no longer have meaning if an Exchange that is not established by a State is “established by the State.” It is hard to come up with a clearer way to limit tax credits to state Exchanges than to use the words “established by the State.” And it is hard to come up with a reason to include the words “by the State” other than the purpose of limiting credits to state Exchanges. . . .

    The Court interprets §36B to award tax credits on both federal and state Exchanges. It accepts that the “most natural sense” of the phrase “Exchange established by the State” is an Exchange established by a State. (Understatement, thy name is an opinion on the Affordable Care Act!) Yet the opinion continues, with no semblance of shame, that “it is also possible that the phrase refers to all Exchanges—both State and Federal.” (Impossible possibility, thy name is an opinion on the Affordable Care Act!) The Court claims that “the context and structure of the Act compel [it] to depart from what would otherwise be the most natural reading of the pertinent statutory phrase.”

    The entire dissent is worth reading,

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    http://www.wsj.com/articles/the-political-john-roberts-1435272535

    For the second time in three years, Chief Justice John Roberts has rewritten the Affordable Care Act in order to save it. Beyond its implications for health care, the Court’s 6-3 ruling in King v. Burwell is a landmark that betrays the Chief’s vow to be “an umpire,” not a legislator in robes. He stands revealed as a most political Justice.

    The black-letter language of ObamaCare limits insurance subsidies to “an Exchange established by the State.” But the Democrats who wrote the bill in 2010 never imagined that 36 states would refuse to participate. So the White House through the IRS wrote a regulation that also opened the subsidy spigots to exchanges established by the federal government.

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    Chief Justice Roberts has now become a co-conspirator in this executive law-making. With the verve of a legislator, he has effectively amended the statute to read “established by the State—or by the way the Federal Government.” His opinion—joined by the four liberal Justices and Anthony Kennedy—is all the more startling because it goes beyond normal deference to regulators.

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    Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

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    The Surface Pro wastes my time.

    Chaos Manor View, Wednesday, June 24, 2015

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    The good news is that Niven, Barnes, and I had a great story session, and we have themes to make this a great science fiction novel. We had a great lunch too.  The bad news is that I had to waste the afternoon on computer neepery. Now back when I did that stuff for BYTE that would have made good news, but I’m not so much in that business any more.

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    Windows has improved Outlook and thus made it hard to use. It used to be that it was a very simple matter to View Unread Only in an Outlook folder, but no more. Actually, it was hard to use before. Now it is simpler, but finding out how to do it, not so much. I managed finally. Which is why I continue my love hate relationship with Microsoft. They mean well, and eventually…

    Of course Windows “improved” Skype too, and made it impossible to edit contacts, at least on the Mac version; so Dr. Jack Cohen, who works with authors like Terry Pratchett and Annie McCaffrey and Niven and Barnes and me, recently changed his Skype ID and was invisible to us today because Skype wants to keep his old ID and doesn’t show him on-line. I try to edit the old contact I have for him – I know the new SKYPE address – but I can’t find a way to do that. Fine, I’ll delete the old. Won’t do it. Well, add a new one with the proper Skype address. Won’t do that. Eventually he called me, and when I answered it created a new Jack Cohen contact with a different Skype address. It works. I called him with it. But Microsoft as usual improved things so that they are very hard to use by their existing customers.

    Maybe it’s better with the Surface Pro? They didn’t bother testing the Mac improvements because after all, who at Microsoft uses Macs anyway?

    And it’s worse. We got rid of the old Wi-Fi nets here and put in a new one that works – but the Surface can’t find it. It doesn’t find the Ethernet either, so attempts to get help just cause endless search for nets, which it can’t find. I ask how to make it find a net. Endless nothing.

    OK I turned it off; forced reset. Only now it won’t turn on. The on switch brings up the word Surface. Endlessly. Take it out of the docking station. It won’t turn on at all. Put it back. The Word surface comes up then the slide down to turn off your PC. Hit return but it slides anyway and goes off.

    I fear I cannot recommend this thing for people who do not have endless time and transportation to some Microsoft store. They are about to convert me to a full time Mac user.

    Well I got it back on, but just barely. I cannot make it search for a wireless net. It just won’t look. Now part of this problem was that I was working at 4 pm and Time Warner experienced its daily slowdown. Part of it is impatience. I resolved the Skype problem, at least to a working level. I am going to solve the Tablet problem by getting an iPad and a new Air. The Air battery expanded without limit in my old one and destroyed itself. It was costly but I could use it. Steve uses his. I no longer get paid to learn how to make things work. I have books to write.

    I still think OneNote and a tablet with pen is the best research tool I know, and I would love it if the Surface Pro worked. That was one reason I wanted reliable Wi-Fi in the house. But the Surface Pro won’t just work, and I have more time to waste trying to make it so. Now the Wi-Fi won’t turn on. Maybe it’s because the Internet is working. I don’t know. There is something weird about that Surface Pro. It looked like everything I wanted, but it just doesn’t work right. One day Microsoft will help users, but this doesn’t seem to be the season.

    And I need to find a way to write fast, and I sure don’t want to waste time learning on unreliable systems.

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    2200:  I have been a bit harsh.  I have not worked much to learn the Surface Pro, and it is an experimental operating system’ I was hoping to learn its quirks while running OneNote at the breakfast table, but Wi-Fi was not reliable there, so mostly it sat waiting for me to do something with it; and I got reliable Wi-Fi and now I can’t get it to use that or any other Wi-Fi.  It’s disappointing, and I expect it’s not its fault entirely; but still it takes up time I should be working with it to produce something. I make no doubt that OneNote and a good tablet is the best research tool around; I’m not sure that the Surface is a good tablet for users.  I think perhaps I will get an Apple tablet because my newspapers are in such small type that I can’t read them at the breakfast table.  And see where it goes from there.  Maybe Microsoft will automatically update the Surface Pro and it will work again.  It’s useless now.

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    Space Access Update #142 6/24/15

      Wednesday, 6/24/15 – We have a new Space Access Update out, #142, with a brief update on Commercial Crew Program funding-fight status, some recent examples of overreach by the program’s opponents, plus a heads-up about a very bad proposed change in ITAR arms-export regulations. You can see this Update at:

    http://www.space-access.org/updates/sau142.html

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    It gets worse: Federal OPM hack affected up to 18 million (ZD)

    In addition to current and former employees, it appears the records of people who had applied for government jobs were also revealed.

    CNN is reporting that the personal data of 18 million current, former, and prospective federal employees was stolen in the cyberattack that targeted the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) hack.

    FBI Director James Comey reportedly gave the 18 million estimate in a closed-door Senate briefing not long after the breach. In addition to current and former employees, it appears the records of people who had applied for government jobs were also revealed.

    Sources at other government agencies confirmed to ZDNet that more than 10 million personnel records were stolen.

    The revelation does not come as much of a surprise.

    J. David Cox, president of the American Federal of Government Employees (AFGE), which represents more than 670,000 federal employees, claimed that the hack was significantly worse than what the Obama administration first claimed.

    Cox claimed “all personnel data for every federal employee, every federal retiree, and up to one million federal employees” was stolen. At the time, Cox also said Social Security numbers had been stolen in an unencrypted format, which he described as “absolutely indefensible and outrageous.”

    Since then, it’s also been shown that the OPM badly mishandled its first efforts to protect employees identity and credit history. The OPM and its contractor, CSID, sent e-mails to staffers that made it possible for hackers to launch phishing attacks on them.

    That said, as this story continues to unwind, the news only looks worse and worse both for how the OPM handled its internal security and for the federal employees whose records have been revealed.

    Neither the FBI nor the OPM confirmed at the time of this writing that 18 million records were revealed. An FBI representative said, “As this remains an ongoing investigation, we are unable to provide any details on this matter at this time. The CNN report noted that the two agencies did not deny it, either.

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    Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

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