Sunday, April 19, 2009

Diarrhea is messy!

Learned a lesson the hard way last night. When a diaper is full of diarrhea, take the diaper off BEFORE lifting any legs. Also, a full-size garbage bag is a must for diaper bags.

Friday, April 17, 2009

Before you attend a tea party, perhaps you should...

With all the Tea party madness going on (the madness being the poor/inaccurate reporting), and people saying they've had enough big government, bad government, and overall shenanigans, it made me wonder if people actually understand their governments, not just how they work, but what each entity's purpose is. Granted, there's definitely room for debate on this when you get down to the details, but I think the overall purpose is something that can be, at the very least, loosely agreed upon. I think if more citizens were to take some time to think about this, as well as what they want from their governments and how to let their voices be heard, it would help get everyone back on track.

So, with that, I ask that you consider doing the following:

1. Sit down with your family and figure out what's really important to you and your family and classify them into what's concrete (education, roads, polar bears, pizza, etc.) and what's abstract (religion, speech, bearing arms/children, other rights & such, etc.).

2. Now take your list of concrete items and figure out what on that list would benefit just you and your family. This is what is your responsibility. You can always ask for help, mind you, just accept the fact that you may not get it.

3. Next, figure out what on that list would benefit other like minded people, but not necessarily everyone. These things are for organizations/associations/clubs. If money or other resources are needed to help see these things through, you can raise funds as a group to accomplish these things. If you truely believe these things are important, then you will contribute to these groups. Just remember, not everyone cares about polar bears, baseball, mustangs, corvettes, girl/boy scouts, etc.

4. Then, figure out what on that list would benefit others in your area, no matter who they are (transportation, education, historical buildings, etc.) and write your local city council members, county and/or state legislators as appropriate. That old gym used for dances might concern your town or county, but not the state (just think about it).

That's it for your concrete list.

5. As for your abstract list, almost all of these things can be lumped into personal freedoms or prohibitions that you should be allowed to believe without persecution or prejudice.

6. Anything that involves limiting freedom, like speed limits, drinking ages, lifestyle choices, etc. are not necessarily true for everyone, and therefore are subject to debate with those around you at your city, county, and state levels as appropriate. This country was founded by its states, each with their own sets of ideals and personalities. What was important for one, was not necessarily important for another. This is why definitions of limitations were left out of the constitution and amendments.

7. Then take the rest of your list, things that don't limit you or others, things that you believe should be allowed, and write your federal level legislators to make sure this country continues to allow for you to have those freedoms and beliefs.

8. Also, remember that those in your community might not have the same list. If they're writing to their respective powers when you think that what others submitted doesn't agree with what you submitted, you may want to write in protest.

9. Finally, keep in mind that doing all that stuff you wanted isn't free. Just like clubs have dues, governments have taxes. If you don't like your city or state's laws and/or taxes, you can always move to a place that does. Same goes for the country. This may sound harsh, but where you live is more than just a location. You live in, and are a part of, your surroundings, your community, your city, etc.

Hopefully, this helps others as much as it has helped me, and help people realize where certain limitations and freedoms should be upheld.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Bandwidth Usage

In response to the absurdly expensive tiered structure that TWC was proposing for internet usage (which was recently shelved), I thought I'd share some throughput and usage info. Currently, almost every place that provides internet access pays according to their capable throughput. This is regardless of whether it is public works, residential, or business and regardless of whether they use the full throughput (and in the case of cable modems, actual throughput is often less than the max due to shared bandwidth with other subscribers).

MAX throughput/month (if used every second of every month):
  • a 768Kb/s line = 243GB data
  • a 1.5Mb/s line = 586GB data
  • a 3Mb/s line = 1172GB data
  • a 6Mb/s line = 2344GB data
  • a 10Mb/s line = 3516GB data
These numbers are almost impossible to achieve due to latency, content provider's throughput (the pipe at the other side), and minor outages (cut lines, maintanence, spam traffic, etc.).

If you were to download a DVD (4.7GB) over the internet, here's how long it would take (best case):
  • 768Kb/s = 13.926 hours.
  • 1.5Mb/s = 6.962 hours.
  • 3Mb/s = 3.48 hours.
  • 6Mb/s = 1.74 hours.
  • 10Mb/s = 1.16 hours.
Watching streaming videos:
  • 2 hour long stream at 3.0Mb/s (close to DVD quality) is equivalent to 2,700MB.
  • 1 hour long stream at 1.5 Mb/s is equivalent to 675MB.
  • an average 5 minute youtube video (non-hq) is equivalent to anywhere from 11MB to 18.75MB of data.
TWC was proposing $1/GB overage charges for all plans... this means that on top of the $9.99 you might pay on iTunes for a movie, exceding your cap would subject you to have to pay anywhere between $1 and $5 "shipping" to download it from Apple's site depending on its data size (even more for HD quality content).

This sort of turns HD content on its head, not to mention online businesses. If usage caps do become a reality, expect Apple, Netflix, Hulu, and others to start providing physical content distribution hubs.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Catching up...

So, it's been a while since I last posted... A lot has happened, both good and bad, but here's the breakdown of what I lernd over past few months (in no particular order):
  1. Last minute trips overseas are fun! (We won a trip to Koln, Germany for the WGC).
  2. My instincts are pretty keen (Long story, but always trust your heart).
  3. I'm gonna get the flu no matter what I do.
  4. No matter how stressful your day has been, listening to what your family accomplished will calm your nerves.
  5. "Change" is not always immediate or for the better... Changes for the "greater good" will not always include you or I, and "the greater good" is not always "best for everyone".
  6. "Sick at home" is not a fun way to spend New Year's Eve (though it's much more bearable when you're with those you love).
  7. Paulownia trees do indeed grow back when you cut them down to the ground.
  8. Container gardens do not keep out rats (lost my whole garden and various items in my garage to them).
  9. Pho is right up there with chicken and matzah ball soup and when you're feeling ill (especially the spicy stuff).
  10. My son loves trains, cars, Cars, shoes, bears, lipstick (he likes being kissed), "Rock & Roll", and really wants to ride a bicycle and a horse and/or one of our dogs.
  11. Insurance companies take forever (I personally don't recommend Balboa) and are not worth it.
  12. Sites like Instructables.com and MakeZine.com are inspiring me to learn and do more.
  13. I want to accomplish a lot more than I seem to have time for (is this what retirement is for?).
  14. CFL bulbs contain a treasure trove of electronics inside their bases.
  15. Karma works.
Hopefully I'll be able to post a bit more often from here on out...
Enjoy!