29 January 2010

Monty, uniforms and a couple of oddities

Monty : He is on the move as he has started to walk.

School Uniforms:
They are arguing about the cost of school uniforms on TV3. I am in favour of uniforms but don't understand why we don't have basically the same uniform throughout the country and just change the logo. Shades of the Nazi's I hear them say. Tough.


As for the cost - it is just a racket. They can only buy from one supplier and I don't think the Schools are even smart enough to get a cut from each sale.

Some USA oddities: Why do the say the date as May 5 except for their big celebration they say 4th of July like us??

Just reading that as they only have a Census every 10 years (and it is probably well short of the true population position) it means the re-distribution of the Congressional seats only takes place every 10 years. But worse,all they do is expand the size of the electorates - no new ones seem to be created.

In 1776 they had 57,000 people for every seat and now it is up to over 600,000. In Boulder, Colorado the population in 1950 was 20,000 and now it is nearly 100,000 but it still has 9 City Councillors??

This cartoon sums up the US and their attitude to the 'evil' of Socialism. They can't seem to understand that they have many institutions that are state owned including the big mortgage banks that they have had to bail out, Freddy Mac and Fannie May, the Tennessee Valley Authority their largest power producer as well as many other organisations including liquor outlets. Odd is the word.

Machu Picchu



Wetter than us: It has been raining in Peru and specifically Machu Picchu. They have had to organise helicopters to get people out and up to Cuzco (it is higher than Machu Picchu). It has become a real disaster area as the rain has torrented down causing the river to rise dramatically. When we were there it was quite a drop down at the highest point of about 8 metres to about 2- 3 metres at the lowest to the river from the road.

As you can see from the pictures below they
must have had a tremendous amount of rain.

This is a photo taken by us on our trip of the river in the village. See how little water there was at that time although it got much deeper further down; deep enough to power a small hydro station.


Now are the photos from the news services of the current situation.


The Police/Army manning the railway station


The rescue helicopters landing at Cuzco.



27 January 2010

Security Again.

Money and madness - again: In the US, airport security is administered by the Transportation Security Administration. (TSA)

It's a stressful job needing high calibre staff, but unlike Israel the people at the front lines of the battle to keep the skies safe are among the lowest paid of all federal employees; and they have one of the highest injury rates. This is due to lifting heavy bags. Plus much of the time there is a lot of standing and staring intently at monitors.

Salaries, which start at about US$25,000 are one of the lowest rates in the federal government.

Unbelievable as it may seem the agency has been without a permanent chief since President Obama took office. In the usual American fouled up system all the Government heads change with a change of Government.

Obama's last nominee withdrew because he was blocked by some Senate Republicans who object to giving transportation security officers the right to bargain for a contract.

The right to bargain for a contract. Are they mad. Yes.

You Can't Stop It




Openess: With the publication of the picture of Willie Apiana, and the subsequent more disclosure policy of the Government about the SAS, it seems it is just a further step in the power of the Internet and modern communications and information. Personally I disagree with the publication of the photo but, like the current Whale Oil Blog attacking name suppression, those days are gone.

However I must say the picture is a very impressive and powerful. One American website had as its heading "The baddest ass on the planet". I think they mean arse.

Power: Talking about power, we have had another power outage in Auckland due to a fire caused by dipping power lines and the inability to get onto the property to cut the trees due to the farmers objection.

I think the farmer was a bit over the top and his grievance is about money. He wants compensation for the use of his land. Fair enough. But the law does not allow them (Transpower) to pay him so his beef is really with Government - not that I have any brief for Transpower who I think are just incompetent with short term goals to make money now and bugger the future. Of course, as usual they blame the previous management - it is never my fault.

They say the the CEO is on $1 million per year. Good grief.!!

I am sure if the old NZ Electricity Department was running it the salary would be around $300,000 and they would be so much more efficient. The profit motive is not always the most efficient method especially when an organisations needs to have a time frame of 20-30 years out into the future. People being paid, in many cases on a bonus/profit based system, can't think like that.



Bill McLaren: A great voice of Rugby died aged 86 on the 19th January. What I most remember about him, apart from his brillianty understated commentary, was his addition, in the Scottish way, of the 'S' to his words - 16 stones - lines-out. Sadly missed.

Gruffalo: One of Kipp's favourite books at the moment. I see the BBC ran a 30 minute TV show at Xmas in the UK. I hope one of our stations pick it up.

15 January 2010

Some photos



Brian & Valerie have a new dog - as we can see they are in the UK - Snow!!!

Still only half back with the Desktop working and the Laptop not. Had to visit a friend at his workplace and when telling him about the problems one of his staff said they had the same troubles. After a couple of weeks of mucking about with Telecom they gave up and got somebody in. You would think that Telecom realising the problems would sort it out. Ha bloody ha!!

Anyway onto the photos. Finally got around to looking at the Xmas ones.What a great shot of Monty at the Playcentre Xmas Party. Not walking yet but a real tiger, always smiling and yapping away!! Who does he take after ???


Kipp at the Playcentre Xmas Party with his present.

Monty has been eating

Below - Kipp and Cody getting a driving lesson at the Playcentre Xmas party then Kipp puts his lessons into action on his bike.




Joe with Monty at the Playcentre Xmas party
Monty has discovered the trampoline
Who is that holding Monty?

Food and lollies


Both in a pensive mood

Kipp the buggy boy
Kim and Monty

Hi Mum - Look what I've found!!
Kipp beside the Police car at the Playcentre Xmas party

Kipp and his drum
Monty in his tiger outfit 'driving' us all mad!!
Hmmmmmmmmmm
C & W at the Innerwheel Xmas function.

13 January 2010

Actually only a half back

PC off again: Went online this morning and for the first hour everything was OK. Then when I tried to go online later nothing!!

Laptop hasn't been able to connect most of yesterday but I wasn't concerned as it would come online at times. Then it went off permanently. So both were offline. Did the usual pull the plug but no use.

As a last resort phoned Telecom. The guy. who from the discussion in the background. would have been in the Philippines, was quite good - at least his English was understandable.

After about an hour he managed to get the Laptop online but he thought with the updated Modem there was a problem with the Ethernet Driver for the desktop. So will have to get Joe to look at that.

Why is it always that something that is touted as new and improved is always (well at least 90% of the time) more expensive and worse. Why can't they leave it alone if it is working? As they say - if it ain't broke don't fix it!!! Of course they say it will be better but I have found thisto be rare.
As we have found out with the new modem. It will be faster they say; but is certainly doesn't seem to be. And again all the problems.


Simple: Which brings me to simple. Why do they (they usually being the heads of the company's or politicians) want complex answers instead of simple ones.

Why don't we make it compulsory to have both car and house insurance? Only 98% in a recent poll wanted compulsory car insurance!! But the politicians prevaricate.

Why can't we get ownership papers to a car.

Why don't they raise the drivers age? Most polls show that 18 is favoured as a minimum. The Government are talking about 17. But we all know (and have known for 20 years) that 15 is far too low.
They are complaining about overseas visitors crossing onto the wrong side of the road. Again simple. In Britain, outside the city's, the middle line on the road every few K's has a series of arrows pointing left to remind you what side of the road you should be on.

Save petrol. Simple let us turn left (as the Yanks turn right) against a red traffic light treating it as a Stop sign. Up the road from us, as we now shouldn't - but do - go across the Pedestrian crossing while somebody is on any part of it (not halfway as previously) we can get held up through two or three rotations of the lights as people cross. Madness. So we just break the law.

We need to know who has what guns - not just who has a licence. We changed our system from that to the present nutty one. The other day a guy in Auckland had his house raided (for reasons not connected with guns) and they found he had 70 weapons. But he had a licence so nothing illegal.
There are probably a dozen other simple ideas but............

An Ozzie has ripped a lot of firms and people off and even after having lost Court cases and Disputes Tribunal hearings he just leaves the country. We could stop him if it was personal but as Company debt we can't. Why not - just change the law so that Directors can't do a runner!!

Quiz: We think it starts again tonight so we will go and have a meal and see. Part of our team, Brian and Jeanette, have just become grandparents, so are down South.

11 January 2010

I'm back

Computer: Have had problems with the Desktop and haven't been on line, except through the Laptiop, for a few days. Dust again it would seem is the culprit, causing overheating. However, took the opportunity to get my Guru to put in the new Telecom modem that I failed to get going last time. But looking at it, the Modem seems different and it doesn't have the CD that caused problems last time.

So it is now faster???

The online speed tests say the Download speed is - and it isn't - depending on who you believe.
It certainly doesn't seem so.


Last October on the Desktop it was
Speedtest.net Download 2.6,Upload 0.12.
Consumer NZ Down 4.27 Up 0.13
Why the great difference defeats me. Does the Consumer NZ test only refer to NZ?

However today with the new modem installed
Speedtest.net Down 1.08 Up .038
Consumer NZ Down 10.67 Up 0.55

So what is the truth - who knows.

Anyway the main thing is that the Desktop is back - and so am I.


03 January 2010

Pay peanuts - get monkeys

Peanuts and terrorism: Further to my post of a couple of days ago I read an article about what I mentioned then. El Al the Israeli airline. Why don't they have the same problems.

Pretty simple it seems and also they don't have the long security waits.

While most airports groan under the weight of another change in security, one word should keep popping out of the mouths of the bureaucrats and so called experts: Israelification. But it won't - because they think it is cheaper to carry out the same old checks they have always done and not understand that humans are better than machines.

How can we make our airports more like Israel's, which deal with far greater terror threat with much less inconvenience.

Israeli security takes only a few minutes - whatttt!!!

It seems they have a system that protects life and limb without annoying you to death. Despite facing dozens of potential threats each day, the security set-up at Israel's largest hub, Tel Aviv's Ben Gurion Airport, has not been breached since 2002

How. The first thing they do is to look at who is coming into the airport.

The first layer of actual security that greets travellers at Ben Gurion is a roadside check. All drivers are stopped and asked two questions: How are you? Where are you coming from? This also applies to everybody on board a bus.

Two benign questions. The questions aren't important. The way people act when they answer them is. The highly trained personnel are looking for nervousness or other signs of "distress" — behavioural profiling. Once you've parked your car or got off the bus, you pass through the second and third security perimeters.

Armed guards outside the terminal are trained to observe passengers as they move toward the doors, again looking for odd behaviour. At Ben Gurion's half-dozen entrances, another layer of security is watching. At this point, some travellers will be randomly taken aside, and their person and their luggage run through a magnometer.

You are now in the terminal. As you approach your airline check-in desk, a trained interviewer takes your passport and ticket. They ask a series of questions: Who packed your luggage? Has it left your side?

The technique is that they look into your eyes — which is very embarrassing. But this is one of the ways they work out if you are suspicious or not. It takes 20, 25 seconds. Lines are staggered. People are not allowed to bunch up into inviting targets for a bomber who has got this far.

At the check-in desk, your luggage is scanned immediately in a purpose-built area. What if you have escaped the attention of the first four layers of security, and now try to pass a bag with a bomb in it?

What would every other airport do? Panic. Evacuate the terminal.

How many people are in most terminals? Sometimes thousands. It will take hours and cripple and disrupt everything.

A screener at Ben-Gurion has a pair of better options.

First, the screening area is surrounded by contoured, blast-proof glass that can contain the detonation of up to 100 kilos of plastic explosive. Only the few dozen people within the screening area need be removed, and only to a point a few metres away.

Second, all the screening areas contain 'bomb boxes'. If a screener spots a suspect bag, he/she is trained to pick it up and place it in the box, which is blast proof. A bomb squad arrives and wheels the box away for further investigation.

Five security layers down: you now finally arrive at the only one which Ben-Gurion Airport shares with the rest of the world — the body and hand-luggage check. But at Ben Gurion things are done completely differently.

First, it's fast — there's almost no queuing. That's because they're not looking for liquids, they're not looking at your shoes. They just look at you. The madness is that even today with the heightened security the rest of the world will check your items to death.

But they will never look at you, at how you behave. They will never look into your eyes.

That's the process — six layers, four hard, two soft. The goal at Ben-Gurion is to move fliers from the parking lot to the airport lounge in a maximum of 25 minutes.

Of course they also use off-site security - how was the ticket paid for, what is the buyers background etc. It is a coordinated intelligence gathering operation that produces a constantly evolving series of threat analyses and vulnerability studies.

It seems that there is little or no intelligence and threat analysis done in Canada or the United States.

So. Eight years after 9/11, why are we still so stupid, so un-Israelified?

As I said we underrate humans. Pay peanuts get monkeys.

02 January 2010

The day after


The day after: It is now the 2nd day of the new decade. We had the boys overnight which meant I was far too busy to update on New Years Day. But it was a great day as they weren't picked up until late afternoon which meant Joe & Sarah had a good break. They went and saw Avatar in 3D and seemed to enjoy it. Weather was fine but windy so the holiday period has been good weather wise but it is deteriorating now.

For once - so far- little has happened on the news front with probably the only major item being the knighting of Peter Jackson.

A couple of manipulated pics below.