Fried

Of coarse, the main web server picks 2AM tonight to crash. The roads covered in ice and snow, some places snowing so hard it was hard to tell where the road was.

I had to drive to Bellevue and back to go boot a server. An hour each way, what normally would have been about 22 minutes each way.

Heater fan is not working in the car.. Can’t feel my toes anymore… I’m tired but have to go pick up my wife in another two hours.

This isn’t fun. And there are people out there that don’t have a place to come back to and other people that have to work in it all night. Blah. McDonalds didn’t even have hot chocolate, cleaning out their machine. I wanted something warm and I dislike coffee intensely.

It’s Good Not To Be Blind…

I had one of those oh crap moments a the Tuesday before last. My glasses fell off at night, and when I went to look for them, mostly in the dark and of course not being able to see clearly because my glasses are now on the ground somewhere, I stepped on them, bent the frame severely and ground the lenses into concrete making big pits and scratches.

Amazingly, even though one of the arms was bent almost 90 degrees, I was able to bend it back but looking through the lenses was extremely ugly, especially at night.

This pair of glasses was a polycarbonate lens type that I had gotten at Lens Crafter because I had destroyed accidentally my previous pair and had no usable spare and they were able to do it in a hurry. But after having a set of polycarbonate lenses I didn’t want to do that again, the chromatic aberration off the center of my vision drove me nuts (red/blue fringes around high contrast lines) and in addition they scratch easily.

I don’t know exactly how long I have had the Lens Crafter glasses but it’s been long enough that they no longer had my prescription. Lens Crafter only would do plastic or polycarbonate, I wanted glass, and they were expensive.

So I shopped around for places that would do glass, and Walmart was pretty reasonable, $59 for the exam, $39/lens, and frames $15-$150 where most other places frames started at around$150 and tended to go up to around $1500.

Turns out my vision has changed quite a bit and I no longer need glasses nearly as strong as the ones I had, did have 2.25 diopter, needed only 1.5 diopters. I thought my eyes had pretty much totally lost their ability to accomodate but actually with the new glasses I can focus from infinitity to about 16 inches with the glasses, and up to about 10 inches without, so not all that bad.

Things are so much clearer now, being able to focus over a greater range, distant is clear, I can see the cross elements on the Queene Anne towers from ten miles away, as as well as read the lowest line on the eye charts, it’s strange how bad things can get out of focus but not be noticable when it happens gradually over time.

And then with the glass, I no longer have the issue with noticable chromatic aberration at the sides of my field of view. It’s an accident that turned out to be a positive.

Independence Day

I used to love July 4th, but as I’ve seen our freedoms rapidly eroded over the years I’m finding more and more difficulty finding a reason to celebrate.

We’re not even allowed to set off fireworks here anymore. An annual tradition I looked forward to as a kid, I can not legally share with my children unless we drive far away on $4.50/gallon gasoline.

But I think about other freedoms we’ve lost… I love live music but decent sounding public performances are no longer possible in this area. The reason is sound regulations enforced by local municipalities. They place decibel limits on music that are not based upon good science and are too simplistic to allow for accurate sound reproduction.

First with respect to the science; all sound is not created equal and does not do equal hearing damage. You will find widely on the Internet that it does not matter if the sound is pleasant or unpleasant, except at extreme levels. This is untrue. Unpleasant noise does damage at lower decibel levels than pleasant sounds. Unpleasant noise causes greater constriction of the ear canal and reduces blood flow to the inner ear which over prolonged periods of time does damage to the nerves at volume levels far below those which would do mechanical damage. But most noise research is based upon noise exposure in industrial settings where this type of reaction happens even though it may not happen while listing to your favorite music.

A second problem is that noise in the 1-6 Khz band does the most damage. In an attempt to accommodate this noise meters and noise regulations use a weighted scale called a dbA scale, however the dbA scale only provides an accurate representation of how loud a sound is if that sound is a pure tone at 40 decibles. Complex noises do not follow this curve and your ear is considerably more sensitive at 6Khz than the dbA curve would indicate.

Also most sound systems aren’t complex enough to follow this curve so to keep power levels safe at say 100 Hz, they tend to limit the power to the same level at 20 Hz where the ear is much less sensitive. This turns the sound of a kick drum into something like whacking on the end of an oatmeal box and turns bass guitar into just harmonic noise, the fundamentals all too far attenuated to hear well. On the high end, usually 6 Khz is going to be reproduced by the same speaker elements and amplifiers as are used to handle 15 Khz, but the ear is MANY times more sensitive at 6 Khz, and since 6 Khz will be limited to 85 DbA or some such by these damned noise ordinances, 14 Khz won’t be audible. The result is that harmonics of instruments and percussion are all in the wrong proproportions. In the current regulatory context, music can not be reproduced accurately, or to put it more directly, music which actually meets legal restrictions in this area sounds like shit. So if I want to listen to decent music I’ve got to drive to Vancouver BC or somewhere else distant which at $4.50/gallon I can’t afford to do, and now that it requires a passport, I REALLY can’t afford to do it.

You know I’m all for education and if they want to post big signs that say, this music in this establishment may exceed 110 dbA and cause you to go permanently deaf, I’m all in favor. I think that is really actually the ideal solution, measure the levels at various areas within an establishment during a typical performance and post signs regarding the average and peak noise levels likely to be encountered in that particular spot. Then people can simply gravitate to what they are comfortable with.

Pretty soon you won’t be able to ski, water raft, water ski, rock climb, surf, bicycle, oh hell pretty soon even going for a walk will be too damned dangerous. I’m sorry but BIG BROTHER GET OUT OF MY FACE! In my view government has an obligation to protect us from each other but not from ourselves.

Now we used to have this thing called a constitution, it was supposed to provide us with all sorts of inalienable rights, but now if you exercise your first amendment rights you must might be labled an enemy conspirator and tried for treason. The first amendment was supposed to grant you freedom of religion, and I guess that’s true if you’re still a right wing conservative fundamentalist Christian, but if you happen to be anything else forget it. Freedom of the press; well as long as it doesn’t involve graphical depictions, which are restricted in many ways, or any media which really is functionally the press such as broadcast but requires an FCC license thus insuring government compliance, or is on a small enough scale it just doesn’t get read. And then there was freedom of assembly, well, as long as you have the appropriate license and you’re on the right side; and be sure to bring a gas mask.

You’re allowed to own a gun as long as it’s not something that might actually have some effect against a tyrannical government (which I think was why the 2nd amendment wanted us to have that right), so it’s effectively gutted.

The 4th amendment that was supposed to protect us from searches and seizure without a specific warrant or probable cause. Government witch hunts are a regular thing now, random check points on roads, wiretaps without warrants, and probable cause is sufficiently undefined as it amounts to, “whenever we feel like it”.

I had a situation a few years back, I run an internet service, and I used to have a bunch of high powered computers in my basement that drew several kilowatts, about like you might expect from say a marijuana grow operation. One day, Shoreline police show up at my house and demand to be let in to the basement claiming someone made a 9-11 call from there. They had no search warrant but told me I had to let them in because someone called from there and there could be an assault in progress.

So I let them in and they see that all that is there are power hungry antique computers (this was back in the days of 3/670’s and the like) and they left and that was that. But I know what probably happened is they obtained records of power consumption, see that I’m eating a bunch of electricity and this room or area has a thermal signature and make up this BS about a call so they can bust me for a non-existent grow room. Oh I did buy a 250 watt halide bulb and ballast for someone that I experimented with for photography (but too much green light) and also used to work on cars so maybe they somehow had a record of that too. At any rate they didn’t have any real probable cause and that operation was illegal just like all the warrantless wiretaps.

I could go on because there just seems to be no end, I mean the fifth amendment is side-stepped by plea bargaining, and you can say yes but you give that up voluntarily if you enter a plea bargaining agreement but not really because they make the threat so large if you don’t agree that most do. You can get fined 250,000 for swearing on the radio. Yep, now if that isn’t a violation of the eight amendment I don’t know what is, but rather than go to trial most people faced with an obscenity charge by the FCC will just pay the initial lower proposed fines and give up their rights. And really what is an obscenity is a highly subjective issue. I hear songs played with part of the ‘u’ removed from ‘Fuck’ so that it sounds something like ‘Fuh..ick’ and I guess it passes because they keep playing it that way. Personally, I think that’s bullshit and if people don’t like it they can change the station just like they can change the URL on their browser if they don’t like my blog. If they Really don’t like that they can boycott the stations advertisers. In my view, the government shouldn’t be involved in programming at all, otherwise you get arbitrary application of the law to any stations which don’t happen to espouse the current administrations views, which is exactly the situation we have today and why 99% of AM talk radio is radical right-wing nut-cases.

The 12th amendment is one I think we should abolish; get rid of the electoral college and go to a direct popular vote; with no Diebold voting machines allowed.

The 13th amendment is meaningless if you can replace slavery by ownership with economic slavery. You are still just as effectively owned. Granted, slavery is no longer against race lines and I guess that’s an improvement, now it’s just a matter of economic class, but we still have slavery.

Personally, I’m not a believer that 9/11 had anything to do with angry Arabs, it had everything to do with people that wanted an excuse to totally usurp the constitution and grab power over the US people.

I used to be able to freely travel to Canada, I can’t now. I can’t afford passports for the entire family so we just can’t go. Never mind I have birth certificates, drivers license, a car licensed in the US, and am probably in a gazillion databases they have access to. It’s a bunch of BS used to restrict our freedoms. Most of the 9-11 hijackers were here on legal student visas anyway so all of these measures would not have prevented the 9-11 event.

I’m sick at the moment and probably would not have celebrated with great zeal even if the constitution actually meant something, we still had real freedom, gas wasn’t $4.50 a gallon and I could afford to go somewhere, but still I wish that were the case.

Quality Parking

Just got back from taking my wife to work, and right across the street from where she works was this quality parking job:

Park Your SUV

People buy these things because they think they’re safe; they’re not. They do eat a lot of gas and pollute a lot of air. Good to see one of them off the road. If you don’t drive safe, ten tons of scrap metal isn’t going to make you safe. 4-wheel drive only helps you go. It doesn’t help you stop or turn.

Lack of Posts

Sorry, I have not been very active here recently but I’ve been really super-busy with business and financial issues.

I’m pretty sure from the feedback I get from him that my father would prefer I never post here. He thinks I’m a nut case and I think he is extremely materialistic. It’s a frustrating and depressing situation to put it mildly.

We now have DSL in most parts of the United States where DSL is available. I would like to find some ways to provide it in Canada as well since we have a dial-up user base there too but data transport is so expensive in Canada that most providers only provide measured or capped service and I really do not want to do that.

Here in the States we can now provide broadband services to Qwest, Verizon, BellSouth, SBC/ATT, and Covad service areas (Covad is a CLEC based DSL provider and overlaps much of service territory of other ILECs).

Need to find a way to better track new orders and get them through more efficiently but we’ll work that out.

I have added some photos to my gallery and recently re-arranged it to make them easier to find since I use them for web work among other things. Take a look, it’s at http://www.eskimo.com/~nanook/gallery.

Where Will We Meet Now?

Update

This was Dimitri’s not Alfy’s. For some reason the wrong name came to mind but my daughter just reminded me of the correct name.

Someone recently set fire to Romeo’s Pizza on 147th St and 15th Ave NE, in Shoreline, previously was Dimitri’s Pizza and it was where Eskimo North held user meetings after Godfathers went out of business. I haven’t been in since it became a Romeo’s, but as Dimitri’s it had great Pizza and the owner was a very pleasant person.


Click on Any Image for a Larger Image

Romeo's, formerly Dimitri's, Torched.
Romeo's, formerly Dimitri's, Torched.
Romeo's, formerly Dimitri's, Torched.
Romeo's, formerly Dimitri's, Torched.
Romeo's, formerly Alfy's, Torched.


Ancient Human Found in China

I found this article in BBS News interesting because it provides interesting information about early modern humans.

The Chinese unearthed human remains believed to be between 39,000 and 42,000 years old. There is evidence to suggest that the remains were of a hybrid individual, that is to say the result of interbreeding between modern humans and early human species such as Neanderthal or Homo Erectus. I’ve always believed this was likely, I think it is likely there are some Neanderthal genes in me.

The other thing that was interesting is that there were evidence this individual was wearing shoes, 40,000 years ago.

Most people today seem to be of the belief that we are the first advanced civilization, and that aside from civilization, or predecessors were incredibly primitive. This believe seems to be held in spite of evidence of burials, religious ceremonies, and art by Neanderthals.

Things

There have been some positive developments recently.

A number of things have hurt my business, chief among them my own mental state however, another thing that has been a major problem is dial customers moving to broadband connections and not being able to provide the latter in most locations.

Recently that has changed, a company we had used to provide DSL connectivity in the Western Washington 206 LATA was bought out by a larger company and while initially this resulted in total confusion with us not knowing what high speed services could be provided in what areas, this has been resolved.

We are now able to provide DSL in any part of Qwest and Verizon’s service area that they have equipped to provide DSL (where DSLAMs are installed and qualified cable exists).

What is more the pricing on the higher speed circuits is favorable relative to what it previously was. Now I just have to figure out how we are going to price and re-work the DSL web page.

A second thing that has happened is that we are also looking at some high-speed WiMAX based wireless solutions and I believe at least one of these is likely to be viable.

In the long term it is my belief that most end-user connectivity will be wireless. The only thing that has really prevented this in the past was the unavailability of adequate bandwidth and affordable coding technology. These things are rapidly becoming historic.

I can’t imagine people settling for being tied down with wires when they can flip open a laptop or turn on a pocket PC or PDA and be connected at high speed, affordably, anywhere.

Anywhere deserves some qualifications, there probably won’t be WiMAX service on the top of Mt. Everest for a while. However, owing to the deep reach of WiMAX, I expect that it will eventually cover more footprint than cellular or PCS service. WiMAX can reach as far as thirty miles from the base, which makes it practical to cover larger rural areas, and to reach areas that would have been prohibitive for cell service because of difficulty of placing a cell tower closer.

What has made much of this technology possible is new modulation schemes. These modulation schemes aren’t actually totally new but only recently have digital signal processors become sufficiently powerful to allow them to be used for high speed data transmission.

I’ll cover this more in the near future on my Radio and Wireless blog.

Oil

First there was “peak-oil”, the basic idea behind peak-oil is that production peaks at the point where about half the resources are consumed and then production declines and prices sky rocket. No doubt there will be a time when oil production peaks but quite possibly for reasons different than half of the worlds reserves being used up.

Oil production forecasting is difficult for a variety of reasons. For starters the Hubbert curve is based upon fitting data to a curve without understanding the underlying mechanisms. Sometimes this works but sometimes it fails miserably.

A second problem that makes oil forecasting difficult is that oil is a broad term that applies to a wide range of mixtures of hydrocarbons that are generally liquid at room temperature. Further adding to the complexity is the fact that it is possible to “crack” heavier hydrocarbons and make them into lighter molecules, and it is possible to combine short molecules into longer molecules to turn natural gas into liquid fuels. Doing either involves added expense.

Naturally oil which contains high quantities of molecules that have a high market value without the need for cracking or combining are tapped first since they are the most economic to get to market. These oils, light sweet crude, constitute only about 1/3rd of the worlds reserves.

In 2006, both non-OPEC production and OPEC production increased last year over 2005, and at faster rate increase than 2004-2005. A factor in this increased production was higher crude prices during much of last year. This is an important point, on average about 1/3rd of the oil in the ground has been economically extractable. A higher percentage can be extracted at higher oil prices.

For example, it costs around $7/barrel to pump a barrel of oil out of the ground in Saudia Arabia, about $14/barrel in California, $15 a barrel to extract oil from tar sands in Alberta Canada or from oil shale in Colorado.

Canada has become the United States largest oil supplier with oil from Alberta tar sands where there are some 300 billion barrels of recoverable oil. In the US there some 2.6 trillion barrels of oil locked up in oil shale in Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming. California has approximately 70 billion barrels of heavy crude.

Russia’s production of deep abiotic oil that doesn’t exist according to most western geologists continues to climb. They claim people supporting this theory are just making it up but can’t explain how Russia’s production from deep wells that have drilled past any sedimentary deposits and through granite capstone keeps increasing.

Then there are the White Tiger and Black Lion fields of Vietnam. Both of these involve drilling into granite basement rock and there where oil shouldn’t exist, it does. Wallace G. Dow, refutes the claim of abiotic genesis for this oil claiming that the granite has been uplifted and overlies a sandstone formation that is the source of the oil. This is one of those things that I guess is yet to play out but I believe the abiotic oil theory is credible, even if it doesn’t apply to these particular fields.

The reason I believe the abiotic theory is credible is two fold. First, the raw materials, hydrogen and carbon, of which hydrocarbons are comprised, is extremely plentiful on earth. The oceans are huge reservoirs of hydrogen and oxygen, two parts hydrogen to every one part oxygen. You see carbon everywhere, every life form that exists, coal, oil, natural gas, carbonate rocks, in the form of methane hydrates on the ocean floor, carbon is abundant.

There is a simple reason that carbon is abundant in the universe. After hydrogen fusion, stars fuse helium into carbon. Stars as massive as the sun only do this in the core, and so these elements remain behind as part of a white dwarf at the end of the stars evolution. Stars more massive than about eight suns will go on to fuse carbon in the core into heavier elements but there will be a carbon shell that will be blown off when the star eventually goes super-nova. Carbon is the 4th most abundant element in the universe after hydrogen, helium, and oxygen.

Generally speaking, light elements like these are considered volatiles, and planets that are either heavier or farther from the sun do a better job of retaining their volatiles and not losing them into space.

Thus mercury, which is both light and close to the sun has no atmosphere or water and would be expected not to have much carbon or other light elements as well. The reason is that heat accelerates these atoms to escape velocity and they are lost in space. The heavier an element, the tighter a planets gravitational force holds onto it. Thus hydrogen is lost most easily, then helium, and so on.

Now if we look at our nearest planetary neighbor, Venus, we see a planet that has close to Earth’s mass and radius. Venus’s mass is 4.87 x 1024 kilograms, Earth’s mass is 5.98 x 1024 kilograms. Venus’s equatorial radius is 6051.8 km, Earth’s equatorial radius is 6378.14 km.
Earth’s larger radius means that at the surface you’re standing a tad farther from the center of gravity and so the gravity on Venus’s surface is about 90% of earths. If you weighed 200 lbs on Earth, you’d weigh 180 lbs on Venus.

So Venus, is both much hotter and it only has about 90% of Earth’s gravity and yet, Venus had enough carbon to make an atmosphere of CO2 100 times thicker than Earth’s. Venus also lacks plate tectonics, so it’s quite possible even more is trapped inside the planet. Earth’s atmosphere is approximately 385 parts per million CO2 which means Venus’s atmosphere has approximately, 260,000 times as much CO2 as Earth’s.

That should give you an idea of just how much carbon is likely to be present on Earth, a whole bunch!

Laboratory experiments have been done where carbonate rocks, water, and iron oxides, all of which are present in the mantle, are heated to 1000C under high pressure and what emerges is a mix of hydrocarbons approximating that which is generally found in deep deposits.

Now, I do have a certain prejudice in preferring theories that can be demonstrated in the laboratory, but one of the things opponents of abiotic oil genesis point to is that the oxygen and carbon budgets at the Earth’s surface have remained approximately constant through millenia.

I believe there is actually a reason for this, and that is that there is a natural recycling of carbon through the plate tectonic system. Hydrocarbons that do make it to the Earth’s surface are eventually oxidized, one way or another. The CO2 is then taken up in part by plants on the surface, where they do decay and some are turned into biotic sources of hydrocarbons, but much more is taken up by algae in the Earth’s oceans. That which is taken up by algae is mostly eaten up by other single celled animals which are mostly eaten by larger multi-cellular creatures which use the carbon and calcium to make, among other things, bone or skeletal structures. These animals eventually die and their skeletons settle to the ocean floor and over time form a thick later of carbonate deposits.

As the sea floor spreads from the mid-ocean rifts and eventually subducts under a continental plate, it carries with it carbonate rocks as well as water, back into the mantle, where the process can repeat itself under great pressures and temperatures creating new hydrocarbons.

So given all of these things, I believe a good portion of the Earth’s carbon, and there is a huge amount of carbon, is tied up in hydrocarbons in the Earth’s mantle, eventually a portion of it escapes through cracks in the bedrock and occasionally pools under certain formations where it can be extracted.

Now, I should add that this isn’t to imply that all oil is abiotic in nature, some carbon does get recycled through biota on land, but that is a small percentage.

Because we’ve largely looked for the biotic oil, that’s what we’ve largely found. The Russians have looked for abiotic oil, and they’ve found it in large quantities.

Even if this is all incorrect, I don’t believe that it is, but even if it were, production figures still show we haven’t reached a peak yet, at least not in 2006, and 2006 oil demand was did not increase as much as predicted, and so after a price peak crude prices fell somewhat.

So the next thing the oil companies tell us is that there is a shortage of refinery capacity in the United States. I posted recently about a Department of Energy report that showed world-wide refinery capacity utilization was 90-95%, while here in the United States in February of 2007, it was less than 83%.

Now the oil companies tell us the refinery capacity is inadequate because refineries are down for maintenance. This is beginning to sound a lot like Enron.

Now we’re seeing a world stock market collapse which is based upon the fear that the world economy will slow, and that of coarse has a lot to do with the US economy, which is in the dumpers because we’ve got a huge trade deficit because of all the oil we import and a huge national deficit because of wars we fight.

The world economy has to grow in order to allow impoverished people to achieve a better standard of living. This is important in terms of a sustainable world economy because in countries where people have a good standard of living, the birth rate is low, population growth is negative, excepting immigration from regions of the world where the standard of living is not good.

Bringing all of the worlds impoverished peoples to an acceptable standard of living is the key towards global population stability and by extension sustainability. Otherwise world population will increase until we hit a resource wall and then collapse as many people starve.

In the long run we need to get off of burning hydrocarbons as a substantial portion of our energy budget because we can’t breath the atmosphere on Venus, and it would have a disastrous effect on global climate.

That said I believe we’d be seeing dramatic climate change now in the absence of our CO2 emissions because we are still coming out of an ice age.

This graph, which is part of a EPA report on climate change, (unfortunately, the graph has been removed from the location I linked to, Nanook 12/16/2012) shows us that although we’ve created a carbon dioxide peak much higher than other interglacial periods, the temperature during this peak is not as great as it has been in previous periods even though the carbon dioxide levels are much higher.

This isn’t to say that carbon dioxide plays no role in global warming, but given previous peaks and carbon dioxide levels it doesn’t appear to be a huge role at current levels compared to temperatures that would be expected to occur as we come out of the last ice age.

So I feel at best it’s increasing the rate that something would have happened at naturally but that we’d be seeing global warming eventually regardless and thus from my perspective, the world economy and poverty really deserve a higher priority.