Sunday, March 14, 2010
Countdown to 2012
Quakes continue across globe without abating.
Some nations are going to suffer much worse than others, being on fragile tectonic plates to begin with. Some of them may vanish overnight.
Some nations are going to suffer much worse than others, being on fragile tectonic plates to begin with. Some of them may vanish overnight.
A Strategic Stance Worthy of Wil E. Coyote
Recap of some classic statements by global village idiot Martin Crevald.
Saturday, March 13, 2010
Doomsday Vault In Norway Fully Stocked
Dedicated to the proposition that no elite should go hungry following the cull and that all sheeple should serve as fertilizer. A better bulwark against inconvenience was never built. Following the herd trim, the elites will rest secure in the knowledge that the full spectrum of agricultural harvests will still be available to them afterwards.
Friday, March 12, 2010
Asylum Planet
Stablehand philosophy.
Human beings have no right to privacy because a desire for it is only an indication you have something to hide. Therefore privacy is no longer a right.
I don't know who is more vulgar. The elites in the business of turning the earth into a chicken battery pen or the birds they are flushing into their respective cages.
These are ideas you would have expected to flourish during the neolithic in a small tribe of cave people. No member of the tribe can own anything or be expected to have any privacy.
The decline of the West is irreversible. Nothing can halt the downward trend. You cannot have a free society populated by slavish knaves. Who will be the advocate of freedom when the desire for it has vanished? There is only the trough and the fresh hay as a concern. The "freedom" of modern people encompasses the demands you would anticipate amongst cattle. Their "freedom" is the song of the barnyard.
Human beings have no right to privacy because a desire for it is only an indication you have something to hide. Therefore privacy is no longer a right.
"As a social good," says Richard Posner, the federal judge and iconoclastic conservative, "I think privacy is greatly overrated because privacy basically means concealment. People conceal things in order to fool other people about them. They want to appear healthier than they are, smarter, more honest and so forth." That isn't a defense of snooping as much as a warning of the flip side of privacy--concealing facts that are discreditable, including those that other people have a legitimate reason for knowing.
I don't know who is more vulgar. The elites in the business of turning the earth into a chicken battery pen or the birds they are flushing into their respective cages.
These are ideas you would have expected to flourish during the neolithic in a small tribe of cave people. No member of the tribe can own anything or be expected to have any privacy.
The decline of the West is irreversible. Nothing can halt the downward trend. You cannot have a free society populated by slavish knaves. Who will be the advocate of freedom when the desire for it has vanished? There is only the trough and the fresh hay as a concern. The "freedom" of modern people encompasses the demands you would anticipate amongst cattle. Their "freedom" is the song of the barnyard.
Science Klowns Admit Something Apocalyptic Is Happening Then Offer Ludicrous Explanation For Cause
Something apocalyptic is happening.
Vault-Co has been posting about the acidification of the oceans for 8 years continuously.
Which do you believe to be a more likely explanation ...
1. The ocean is absorbing CO2 from the atmosphere through infusion from a low pressure system (air) into a higher pressure (water) system. When your cola goes flat, have you ever had any success in carbonating it again?
2. Deep ocean volcanos are pouring sulphuric acid and other poisons into the seas from below. If you did put the bubbles back into your coca cola, how would you expect to do it?
If you can't answer this question correctly, you shouldn't be reading this blog.
Vault-Co has been posting about the acidification of the oceans for 8 years continuously.
Which do you believe to be a more likely explanation ...
1. The ocean is absorbing CO2 from the atmosphere through infusion from a low pressure system (air) into a higher pressure (water) system. When your cola goes flat, have you ever had any success in carbonating it again?
2. Deep ocean volcanos are pouring sulphuric acid and other poisons into the seas from below. If you did put the bubbles back into your coca cola, how would you expect to do it?
If you can't answer this question correctly, you shouldn't be reading this blog.
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Vault-OS : Now With CueCat Support!!!!!
I got my $3 cuecat plugged into the PS/2 port on my little Aeon PII 133 Mhz machine and have it automatically serving it up into a Powerbasic Form you can use to scan a barcode on inventory with and then use either locally or transmit out onto Ethernet.
This is envisioned working like this - a little "Sentry" sits in the inventory storage with a CueCat device connected to it. Somebody in another room at the comms desk searches inventory and determines that today in order to prepare a meal, we will need barrel #314456 and #765498 for the mess hall. This request is transmitted over the Ethernet as an IPX packet and is retrieved by the inventory machine. The person working in inventory waves the CueCat around a little (extension cord for the CueCat will work up to 3 meters or so) over a couple barrels that look right. A beep signals a correct match on a barcoded label using Code-128 and the CueCat flashes. The matched barrel changes color in the barcode monitor screen to indicate it has been found and is being brought to the mess for tonight's meals. The appropriate deductions can now be done from the inventory manager pending return to storage by also using a barcode to check them in, keeping things constantly up to date. This permits the caloric and nutritional manager to correctly track total stocks of food and show which kinds of food are needed or required to restock. This includes vitamins and minerals.
Note that with DESQView-X installed on the server, it would be possible for another machine to simply remote into the application or view the match by VNC while it is happening.
I have all the indicators for IPX, IC2, Ethernet and DOS SHARE working as well as a DESQView-X flag on the status bar of Vault-OS X86 so it will be possible to prompt the user to remote the barcode scanning at the time.
Because the CueCat is so cheap it should put Barcode scanning into anyone's reach for their inventory and storage. The labels can also be printed off the serial port printer if it is available. All this will be covered in detail in the book on Vault-OS so anyone can install and configure a CueCat.
This is envisioned working like this - a little "Sentry" sits in the inventory storage with a CueCat device connected to it. Somebody in another room at the comms desk searches inventory and determines that today in order to prepare a meal, we will need barrel #314456 and #765498 for the mess hall. This request is transmitted over the Ethernet as an IPX packet and is retrieved by the inventory machine. The person working in inventory waves the CueCat around a little (extension cord for the CueCat will work up to 3 meters or so) over a couple barrels that look right. A beep signals a correct match on a barcoded label using Code-128 and the CueCat flashes. The matched barrel changes color in the barcode monitor screen to indicate it has been found and is being brought to the mess for tonight's meals. The appropriate deductions can now be done from the inventory manager pending return to storage by also using a barcode to check them in, keeping things constantly up to date. This permits the caloric and nutritional manager to correctly track total stocks of food and show which kinds of food are needed or required to restock. This includes vitamins and minerals.
Note that with DESQView-X installed on the server, it would be possible for another machine to simply remote into the application or view the match by VNC while it is happening.
I have all the indicators for IPX, IC2, Ethernet and DOS SHARE working as well as a DESQView-X flag on the status bar of Vault-OS X86 so it will be possible to prompt the user to remote the barcode scanning at the time.
Because the CueCat is so cheap it should put Barcode scanning into anyone's reach for their inventory and storage. The labels can also be printed off the serial port printer if it is available. All this will be covered in detail in the book on Vault-OS so anyone can install and configure a CueCat.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)