Computer Genius Blog :: aka “TheGarage”

October 31, 2004

On the other hand

Filed under: Business — admin @ 3:15 pm

[Editor’s Note: For the sake of argument and fairness, the following is a poor attempt to argue the flip side of the airline debacle. As the writer has little experience with arguing the liberal and/or protectionist point of view, the article tends to be a little ambiguous in it’s support for protectionist policies. Oh well, we work with what we have available!]

Keeping track of airplanes has become a big part of our national security. Considering the type of high-end munitions that were obviously readily and abundantly available even in such a small-time operation as Iraq was under Saddam, an airplane of any size must now be considered a weapon of mass destruction. As has been so horribly demonstrated on 9/11, an airplane is a means of delivering deadly payload to a large population of people. All one would need is a few volunteers willing to die for the cause.

As an aside, during the campaign I wish Bush would have answered the constant “no WMD in Iraq” mantra with a simple, “Saddam had airplanes, didn’t he?”

Of course he had airplanes. A couple dozen twin engine propeller planes each loaded with, oh, say a portion of a mere 270 tons of RDX and HMX explosives would be equally or more destructive than were the jumbo jets loaded with jet fuel that hit the World Trade Center on 9/11. I say a mere 270 tons because that is only a drop in the bucket of the thousands upon thousands of tons of munitions that have been secured and/or destroyed since the invasion of Iraq.

Still, the opposition here in America would chant over and over that there was no connection between 9/11 and Iraq, even the 9/11 commission stated that. Blahbitty blah blah. I guess the implication here is that since Bin Laden wasn’t over for burgers and a romp in the rape rooms every weekend there is no conceivable way that Saddam could ever deliver to terrorists the means of making crude weapons of mass destruction.

Statements like the “no WMD in Iraq” canard clearly represent the bar on the “Global Test” Senator Kerry accidentally referred to in one of the debates. A bar much too high to ever justify aggressive use of military force. We might as well dismantle the damn thing and save the money if Kerry is elected because everybody in the world will correctly assume our military is to look at, but not to touch. Not even in the case of an emergency should you break the glass.

The ability to contribute an airplane, or even a small fleet of airplanes of different types and sizes, and all the high explosives a customer or brother-in-arms can cart away is a significant threat. In my opinion.

So, anyway, back to the airline industry topic in the previous post. In that post I took the position that the airline industry should be left to the market to sort out. In this post let’s consider the flip side. Given the very high threat that a single airplane can represent to our security, would it still be a wise policy to allow the open market to sort out the airline industry. Much of the new investment in the industry would be foreign, I’d assume. Would it be a good idea to allow a foreign company, say Air France, to have a larger control over the airplanes flying in our airspace?

Do the risks of foreign ownership of more of the planes in our airspace merit protectionist policies and taxpayer financial support of badly managed carriers?

If the risks are too great and the airlines are to be subsidized by the taxpayer, is it fair for the employees of these monstrous, inefficient operations to continue to wallow in the excesses of union bargaining when there are other just as deserving Americans who are struggling to keep afloat in industries that are not on the government dole? I think the recent labor negotiations at Delta would indicate that at least some union members may be coming to this conclusion all by themselves. Sometimes conclusions are inescapable. If you want to continue to be among the employed, you had best be prepared to work for less. In some cases, much less.

In other words, why should some Americans have to suffer through the painful changes that the market can sometimes foist on an industry or region while other Americans are protected from it? As a further insult, many of the Americans who are suffering through tough times are the very ones asked to pony up more of their scant resources in order to protect other Americans from the same situation.

If the market is not allowed to sort out the airlines themselves, at least it is appropriate that the market should sort out the labor problems in many union dominated industries.

October 29, 2004

To the airline industry…

Filed under: Business — admin @ 9:08 am

Sorry. But you are nobody special.

It would seem the market is about to deal the airline industry a dose of reality. The reason why fares are perpetually low is not simply because passengers demand them, as is often pointed out on the news reports, but due to the fact that there are too many available seats for the number of passengers to fill them. Just like with every other product or service that is available, air travel is subject to the reality of supply and demand.

In all honesty, immediately after 9/11 I thought under the circumstances it was important to keep the airline industry viable as a show of resilience to our attackers. I didn’t think it was wise to let an industry as large and important as is air travel collapse in the face of a terror attack. Not to mention the havoc such a catastrophic collapse would wreak on the economy with so many jobs lost as well as the added downward pressure on the stock market.

In hindsight, I was weak. I think maybe it wasn’t such a good idea to prop-up the industry. Perhaps public assistance was justifiable for a month or three to account for the extreme circumstances created by the attacks. After that, especially when the management problems in many airline outfits started to become obvious, the industry should have been left to the sometimes cruel mercies of market forces.

Back then at least no one was flying. The pain to the nation outside of the affected companies would have been minimized. The stock market was in steep decline anyway. A few of the worst managed airlines going down in flames would have been like adding some wood to an already hot bonfire. Now, several airlines going down will be like throwing gasoline on a smoldering fire. With the market struggling around 10,000 for… how long now, a year, two… the collapse of an industry will likely receive a cool reception in the investment community.

Yes, it would have been better to get all the pain and suffering over with back then. To any argument against allowing market forces to sort out the airline industry, I point to Southwest, who has consistently been profitable while the other carriers whine, cry, and bemoan their fate as they go broke. If one carrier can manage to be profitable while operating under the same conditions as it’s competitor’s, little excuse is left for other reasons–especially when investors and tax-payers are being asked to foot the bill.

Consider, in the years since 2001 there are probably several entrepreneurs who have been kept out of the airline industry because poorly managed carriers have been kept alive by artificial means, like government largesse. Huge carriers going out of business will not be bad for America. It will be bad for the employees and stockholders of those poorly managed companies but consumers will benefit from the many new carriers that will inevitably spring to life to fill the need of the consumer. Imagine the friendly service consumers will receive from a few dozen small, profitable companies as opposed to what is received from the massive, lumbering, money-losing operations flying the sky’s today.

Its hard to be friendly when you are bleeding to the tune of billions of dollars a year.

October 22, 2004

Still a buyer’s market

Filed under: Business — admin @ 8:29 am

What do you make of this?

Additional Requirements:

• Adhere to IT Policies
• Respond to dialogic calling tree test in a timely manner
• Follow written procedures
• Document tickets in detail
• Use designated entrance and exit doors
• Adhere to disaster recovery evacuation procedures
• Provide updated personal contact information to manager for disaster recovery
• Flexible with work schedule, as additional hours maybe need and/or changes in work schedule.
• During high call volume an analyst maybe asked to work through lunch and/or take later breaks to accommodate call volume.

Does sweatshop pop into your mind. Or is that just me?

I especially like the one “Use designated entrance and exit doors.” Probably they have designated water fountains too.

Flexible work hours is always a benefit to consider when looking for someplace new to work. Especially if you have a long commute or have kids, or both. But I think these guys miss the point.

October 21, 2004

If you hate snakes

Filed under: TheGarage — admin @ 4:23 pm

I had always intended to rotate the artwork in the banner on a regular basis. For those of you who really hated the snake, my apologies for taking so long to update it.

Originally I had planned on updating the graphic once a week. I already have the designs laid out for a couple of months. As with everything else, design is much easier and less time-consuming than actually doing the work. I am sure most everyone can understand how things can get pushed to the back burner.

BTW, all of the photography and graphics on every banner thats ever been on this site has been original artwork and photography. Hey, learn by doing is my motto.

October 17, 2004

Cookies, anyone?

Filed under: Tech — admin @ 5:08 pm

Dvorak is calling for the outright banning of cookies. He always tries to lean a little bit past the mainstream in the name of being controversial. Which is good for circulation, I guess, but really does nothing to solve the problem.

About a year ago–during the lead-up to the passing of the anti-spam bill–I wrote an article with a slightly different take on cookies.

It just seems to me that writing a cookie protocol would be too easy. Set the browser to first and foremost reject any cookie that isn’t compliant with the protocol. Then cookies can be identified according to type and dealt with according to a rules-based system based on cookie type.

Cookies are a serious problem if you have any concerns about individual privacy. More importantly, the blatant win-at-all-costs attitude of the marketers needs to be checked.

Furthermore, as an aside, is hyper-consumerism really in our best interest? Buying all this crap we dont really need is as much a cause of the two-worker family as is over-regulation and over-taxation.

October 15, 2004

5000

Filed under: TheGarage — admin @ 10:05 pm

I just hit 5000 page views. 5000 views in almost 10 months. Lackluster, I know, but I am working on a new plan. Like fuck this shit. LMAO. [Watch the f-bombs. -ed.]

October 5, 2004

Pleasantly uninformed

Filed under: TheGarage — admin @ 9:13 am

Our satellite reception went out sometime last week. The wife is upset. Other than missing a little bit of football Sunday night, I haven’t really missed it much. That’s why I haven’t had it fixed yet.

I may not have a clue as to what is going on in the world, but the stress level is much lower. And that is not such a bad thing.

I was standing in the room when it went out, thank goodness for the kids who would have otherwise been blamed for screwing up the TV. It went from signal to pure snow in a fraction of a second and nothing can bring it back. All connections have been checked. This can mean only one thing…

Component failure!

Which means I have to have a service call. I hate dealing with the satellite service call people.

continuing…

So I call the people who we pay monthly for this crap and they say, “I can refer you to one of our contractors who do our work.” Well, they are in Richmond/Rosenberg. Which is about 90 miles from here. She assures me they do all their work in Brazoria County.

I call them and it is a Sprint voice mail system where I am now asked enter their area code and phone number… I hang up.

To be continued…

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