Tuesday, May 13, 2008

only in california

Major drug bust at San Diego State University.

Those arrested included a student who was about to receive a criminal justice degree and another who was to receive a master’s degree in homeland security.

“A sad commentary is that when one of these individuals was arrested, they inquired as (to) whether or not his arrest and incarceration would have an effect on him becoming a federal law enforcement officer,” said Ralph Partridge, special agent in charge of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in San Diego.

Yep. You’ve got to wait until after you become a Fed to break the law.

Big Brother (Is Watching Your Heart - and Liver - and Triglycerides….)

New wi-fi devices warn doctors of heart attacks - Times Online

The Bluetooth wireless technology that allows people to use a hands-free earpiece while making a mobile telephone call could soon alert the emergency services when someone has a heart attack, Ofcom predicts.

The communications regulator said that sensors could be implanted into people at risk of heart attack or diabetic collapse that would allow doctors to monitor them remotely.

If the "in-body network" recorded that the person had suddenly collapsed, it would send an alert, via a nearby base station at their home, to a surgery or hospital.

However, Ofcom also gave warning in its report, Tomorrow's Wireless World, that the impact of such technology on personal privacy would require more debate.

This was inevitable. I’m surprised, in fact, that it hasn’t already been implemented. And this won’t be the end. Look for full-body health monitoring on a 24-7 basis, coming soon. It may only go to your home computer, which will contain diagnosis programs, or it may go into the cloud somewhere. But it’s coming. And I expect geezers like me, who are looking for every little edge we can get to help us over the hump into real longevity, will be among the first to snap it up.

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Lots of Microsoft-Yahoo questions

This weekend I don’t know how many times I was asked by friends and neighbors whether I thought the Micorosoft acquisition of Yahoo was going to go through. In particular, I was surprised at how many non-technical people are following the possible deal. The reality is though, I don’t have a clue what’s going to happen. No one does.

Like Mary Jo Foley, the Wall Street Journal and others I have heard rumblings about the proposed deal. Most tech people I know are against it. I’m not, but then again I’m often wrong, so I’m probably on the wrong side of this one. I accept it.

Why do I think a Microsoft-Yahoo mindmelt would be a good idea? It would give Yahoo market leverage and it would give Microsoft new blood–new thinking. The tricky part for both is that Microsoft needs to be careful not to go too overboard in its acquisition so that once if does go through, if ever, that it has the financial strength to leverage it. Likewise, it’s got to be careful not to discourage the Yahoo employees that it very well could benefit from. Same goes for Microsoft’s employees. I also nonsensically like the idea of Microsoft expanding its Bay Area focus. What can I say? I love California–Seattle, not so much.

No matter what happens though, I doubt it’ll have much impact on what I or many of the people I know use or do.

I remember when Microsoft purchased Hotmail. This was one acquisition I was against. The reputation for Hotmail email was terrible. Now, it’s not, even if the name is kind of 1995ish. It just goes to show how things adapt and change.

Monday, May 12, 2008

Heading on Down the Road

Commentary » Blog Archive » The View from the Continent

What they don't seem to understand is that ending U.S. involvement in the war won't end the war. In fact, if Obama or Clinton follow up on their stated commitments, it is likely to trigger mass death and possibly genocide, revitalize al Qaeda, strengthen Iran, and further destabilize the region. The irony would be that the plans laid out by Democrats, if followed, would increase, not decrease, Iraq's dominance of American foreign policy. An Iraq that is cracking up and caught in a death spiral is not something that even a President Obama or Clinton could ignore.

Actually, this analysis is incorrect. We will have a Democrat in the White House next year, and Democrats will control both houses of Congress. And there are too many markers all of the victors will owe to the anti-war left wing of their party, which will be in no mood to accept half measures. Therefore, we will immediately begin withdrawing from Iraq, and I would expect that most of our troops will be gone within a year. (Iran will put a damper on the violence long enough to let the Democrats do what the Mullahs most want, which is get the hell out).

Afterwards, Iran will simply carve up Iraq into the parts it wants, (where the oil is) and the parts it doesn’t care about (where the oil isn’t). In the process, the Sunni minority will be ethnically cleansed, and there won’t be a damned thing Saudi Arabia can do about it.

It isn’t commonly recalled this way, but when Nixon pulled us out of Vietnam, his withdrawal was much less precipitate than the new Dem president’s will be, and he left South Vietnam in better shape to resist the North. Nonetheless, that wasn’t enough for vengeful Democrats, who made sure that not only would South Vietnam get no men from us, it would get no more arms or money, either. Shortly thereafter the South collapsed, and hundreds of thousands were slaughtered, and hundreds of thousands more vanished into camps. Many never came out again.

Did America or the rest of the world care? No, not beyond braying about how the collapse demonstrated how thoroughly the commies had defeated America and its puppet military.

It will be the same in Iraq. Iraq will vanish in a quiet bloodbath, and Greater Iran will emerge. The Sunni and the Shia will then be oil equals, and free to resume their internecine war that has been on hold the past few decades while both united against a US presence. Once we are gone, they will be free to return to their millennial efforts to slit each others’ throats.

In the end, that may be the best solution after all. I don’t care if they all murder each other over there. They are only nominally civilized, and barbarian savages do tend to engage in final solutions. As long as they turn their attention to each other and leave us alone, I have no problems with it.

We will have to find some substitute for the energy they export to us, but we will. The price of oil guarantees it. (And sometimes I wonder if Bush isn’t smarter than he looks - by deliberately declining to do anything effective to manage energy policy in this country, he has effectively ceded that management to the free market. And the free market always finds a better way than statist interventions.)

The world will look very different two years from now. It’s going to be an interesting time.

Of course, you know what the Chinese say about interesting times, don’t you?

Oh, hey! The Chinese! Remember them?