Archive for July, 2006

Exploiting The Energy Market For Fun and Profit

// July 27th, 2006 // No Comments » // Business & Politics

Exxon-Mobil reported a record profit of $10 billion this past quarter (up 35%).

I know energy company profits are not a simple thing. It’s something only the egghead economists and energy analysts can truly understand.

You can’t just say that oil prices are artificially inflated in a government-protected monopoly that takes advantage of a wartime, deficit-spending economy to boost its profits to record numbers and put the squeeze on you and me in almost every aspect of our lives.

Oh wait… I guess I just did.

I know it’s not that simple, I know. But it just looks real bad for the oil companies.

Simply put, profit = income – expenses. In the case of the energy companies, it means revenue is outpacing the cost of doing business by a record margin. It’s safe to assume this is due most directly to the market price of oil, rather than reductions in the cost or pace work in other areas or the energy production life-cycle.

While supposedly “driven by anxiety over supplies from the Middle East” (which could be argued at any point in modern history), that alone can hardly justify what’s going on. Calling for a “windfall tax” on the oil company profits is surely the very least our Congress could do.

I had a guy tell me yesterday that the price of stainless steel kitchen appliances are skyrocketing because (don’t ask me how or why, but…) gasoline is used in the manufacturing process (presumably more directly than in the distrubution process). I’ve even seen resturants raising their prices to cover the gas surcharges their suppliers are hitting them with.

Most people only see the effect when they fill up their cars, but we pay the price for these “profits” in almost every monetary transaction that occurs.

“Big oil” is protected from on-high by governments all over the world. It isn’t going anywhere. But the public can make a difference by increasing demand for energy-efficient technologies.

I just realized yesterday that our energy company has a plan we could elect that uses 100% renewable energy sources. They claim that the pollution saved by using this plan is the equivalent of planting 1,100 trees per year. It is slightly more expensive than other plans, but for me anyway, it’s a worthwhile exchange.

Energy-resources will always cost us because there will always be money to be made. But at least we can do something to make the by-products of our consumption less destructive to the world we’re leaving to our children.

IE7 to be Pushed to Users Via Windows Update

// July 27th, 2006 // No Comments » // Technology

IE LogoLater this year, Microsoft will tag IE7 as a “critical update”, forcing users with PC’s set to automatically download and install critical Microsoft updates to use the newer browser.

This is the first major browser update by Microsoft in five years. It will contain some of the features which have long-since made Firefox the browser to beat. It will also have some much-needed security updates that have plagued IE users for years.

Given the backlash that followed the release of Service Pack 2 for Windows XP via Windows Update, this time Microsoft is making available a tool businesses can use to prevent IE7 from being automatically installed by their user base. How generous…

While a browser update from Microsoft is welcome from a security and features perspective, (as previously reported) most of the standards-compliance improvements revolve around bug fixes in their CSS implementation, rather than supporting the latest CSS standards or making any real effort at passing the Acid2 test.

Additionally, as a creator of web-based software, I can tell you that my industry peers are cringing at the prospect of supporting another version of IE while maintaining support for legacy IE browsers. This is no small feat. Larger shops have surely been planning for this for some time and are prepared. Smaller shops may only now be learning of the imminence of the rollout and will soon be scrambling to get their code in-line with yet another non-standards-compliant browser offering from mother Microsoft.

Be a friend, spread Firefox.

Read more at cNet News.

Sky Marshals Name Innocents to Meet Quota

// July 25th, 2006 // No Comments » // Security & Privacy

OK,… this is bad.

“Innocent passengers are being entered into an international intelligence database as suspicious persons, acting in a suspicious manner on an aircraft … and they did nothing wrong,” said one federal air marshal.

RV’s are looking more cost-effective every day…

Slab Poured & Framing Started

// July 20th, 2006 // No Comments » // Life

Home-building isn’t for the faint-hearted. I’ll leave it at that..

We do have a slab now and yes, it seems small. We did get to see the framers lines drawn on the slab prior to framing and yes, the rooms also seem small. There’s really no way to get a true perspective of how things will look until it’s in 3-D.

The power company didn’t install the electrical pole properly so the framers couldn’t use it. Our builder got permission from one of our future neighbors to use their outside electrical outlets for a few days but the framers tools weren’t compatible (?) with the plugs. Our builder spent 3 hours on the phone with the power company until he got their commitment to come back and fix it within two days.

In the meantime, the framers had decided to just rent a generator and, though I haven’t visited, they should be on-site today and underway, unless of course they run out of gas on the way to the site, or have a tummy-ache, or a biblical flood interrupts our six rainless months and washes our slab away. Based on the past few months, I wouldn’t put any of those things past ‘ol Murphy.

Also, our landlord in the house we’re renting has put it up for sale. We’ve been assured we can stay as long as we need but as we’re on a month-to-month contract at this point, that for-sale sign out front looks more like a billboard sometimes, so the prospect of moving twice is looming.

Daily trips to the site aren’t recommended, but are almost irresistible. As long as it’s taken, we still take childlike joy at seeing the least bit of raw materials moved from one side of the lot to the other (“Ooh look! They repaired the erosion control! Wow!”).

For some time now, I’ve come to appreciate the joy of signing a six-inch stack of papers and driving the U-Haul to your already-built new place. This isn’t anything like that, not anything at all. It does have it’s moments of excitement, but it more resembles a starving man being thrown a cracker than anything else. It’ll all be worth it in the end though. I have faith in that.

We’re ready. We’re tired of living in someone else’s house.

We’re also blessed beyond measure, and we’re praying the delays will subside.

Fryin’ Eggs On The Sidewalk

// July 18th, 2006 // No Comments » // Life

Man it’s hot. Temperature guage in my car said it was 118 degrees at 1pm today. Still nothing like 1980 though. I was 7 then and I remember seeing cracks in our yard a foot wide and three foot deep. “Man it’s hot. It’s like Africa hot. Tarzan couldn’t take this kind of hot.” – Eugene Morris Jerome, Biloxi Blues.