After reading this article, you have to wonder how long until the government either mandates a) no WiFi routers can be sold without basic monitoring & authentication procedures in place and enabled, and b) it is illegal to circumvent monitoring & authentication procedures on WiFi routers. Content owners, corporations outside the technology field, homeland security experts, and law enforcement would all pile on behind such a bill, without a doubt. After all, only someone who’s engaging in criminal activity would need unmonitored access to the Internet.
Did We Watch the Same Game
Did this guy and I watch the same Super Bowl? I found this year’s commercials to be the weakest in years, while the game was above average as far as interest goes. Maybe I’ll have a different opinion after I watch the YouTube links.
Update: No, still no. I watched the ads and turns out I had actually seen most of them, but they were so weak they were forgotten before they were over. My verdict stands: weakest bunch of Superbowl ads in years.
When the Troops Come Marching Home
NewDonkey asks the critical questions about Iraqi troop withdrawl.
I raise this point not to annoy people with details, but because the growing obsession of many antiwar folks–and for that matter, of their critics– with calendar dates may miss the more fundamental question that needs to be raised about Iraq: which missions would we be turning over to the Iraqis, and which missions would be continued, and for how long? Isn’t that at least as important as how many months a given proposal would provide for withdrawal of an ill-defined number of troops?
In my day to day job, we call that scope. And scope is one of, if not most often the key, element, to determining how many resources are needed to do a job. If we don’t talk in terms of the missions (i.e. scope) of what the Iraqis will do and what the US forces that remain will do, we’ll have not only botched the war, and the aftermath, but even the withdrawl.
You have to love Geno Auriemma, head coach of the UConn women’s basketball team. After beating Marquette in a close game, he has these remarks on the fans.
It was a loss for Marquette, but a record home crowd of 4,000 was another sign that the Golden Eagles’ program is progressing.
“The crowd really lifted us and carried us,” Mitchell said.
Auriemma complemented the rowdy Marquette fans — sort of, anyway. The coach deadpanned that he couldn’t believe some of the things fans were yelling near the Connecticut bench.
“I’m losing faith in the Catholic education,” Auriemma said. “I know it’s Milwaukee, and people drink a lot.”
But, Auriemma, added, the crowd could “never be worse” than the fans at Rutgers.
“Rutgers fans, they’re just born miserable and they stay miserable all their life,” Auriemma said.
Don’t worry Geno. We don’t obsess over you like you clearly do about us.
The Real Deal
I’m sick and tired of hearing all the analysis on the Rutgers sports cutting that’s just plain wrong. The Athletic Director has made his logic pretty straightforward, and the budget cuts are the secondary reason, not the primary. They were merely the opportunity he needed.
Seriously, another example of someone who’s missing the boat was found in the Opinions section of the Daily Targum.
Their argument is as follows: New Jersey is facing an enormous fiscal problem – a $4 billion deficit – and a taxpayer revolt, for which no solution is currently visible. Support for Rutgers has never been enthusiastic in the Legislature, and tuition has been rising steadily for the past seven years. Last year’s budget cuts resulted in widespread layoffs, course cancellations and a freeze on hiring. The prospects for the future look grim, and the total amount of money coming to the University from all sources is finite. Beyond these facts, there is a basic assumption about the role of the University in New Jersey.
The real reason for the cuts is that Rutgers had 30 Division 1A sports, which put Rutgers significantly above the average size of a Division 1A athletic department around the country. Combine that with the fact that of the three programs that had 30 sports, Rutgers had the smallest budget, $38 million, vs. $60 million and $100 million at other schools. The end result is that ALL the sports programs were being shortchanged by competing for scarce resources.
The budget cuts merely highlighted the fact that the athletic department would only be receiving limited, targeted funding increases in the next few years. Given the overall cuts to the University, Rutgers athletic budget was not about to double in the next few years to make up the funding gap with other peer insitutions. Hence, some sports were cut to try to fund all the remaining sports.
Yes, as I said, some sports will receive increased funding (i.e. football). However, within any space, if your ability to acquire external funding is limited at best, you have to maximize your ability to produce internal growth. Of all the sports in the mix at Rutgers, only three have any shot of being revenue generators, specifically football, and men’s and women’s basketball.
Granted, these are also among the most costly programs to run. And they cost even more money to run well enough to have a chance to achieve the success required to produce a positive return. So, while other sports are being cut, an investment is being made in to the revenue generating sports with the idea that at a minimum they can become self-sufficient and in a best case scenario begin producing a return that will help increase the overall atheltic budget, benefiting all programs.
I don’t pretend to know if this scenario will turn out to be true. I have seen plenty of ink spilled on the idea that very few atheltic programs have revenue-positive basketball and football programs, and I don’t know if Rutgers will prove to be an exception. I do know, however, that the budget cuts were simply not the primary cause of these cuts, even if they were the opportunity. And if you want to get them back, you need to understand this fundamental idea. Simply offering up the funding alone won’t get the job done, because it’s not really about money in the short term.
More I Heart SOTU
A couple of thoughts on the SOTU as I watched tonight.
* Overall I thought Bush’s speach wasn’t bad, and he did a fairly decent job of delivering it.
*Condi Rice needs a new stylist. She looked like a vampire.
* Was John McCain winking when George Bush mentioned earmarks, or is his left eye dysfunctional.
* Speaking of earmarks, I like how the leader of the party in charge of the most abusive Congress in history is suddenly railing against them now that they’re no longer in power.
* Cheney perched over Bush’s shoulder gave the impression he was the puppet master. This was highlighted by the fact that both drank a glass of water at the same time midway through the speech.
* Why didn’t all the Democrats stand when Bush said we don’t want a nuclear Iran? Seriously, do they SUPPORT a nuclear Iran? I was reminded at how Democrats can be idiots on foreign policy at times.
* The health insurance policy was not well described. Whether this is intentional or unintentional I don’t know, but I’m suspicious.
* I can’t wait to see the whole balanced budget idea.
* While the Sunni/Shia Middle East conflict was oversimplified, and al Qaeda was perhaps too liberally mixed in with at least some of the events in Iraq, he nonetheless highlighted the fact that the situation a) isn’t progressing well, and b) has the potential to (d)evolve in to a wider regional conflict between Iraq, Iran, Turkey, Syria, and other powers. This has become an increasingly real concern due to our involvment in Iraq.
* Why will 20,000 more troops make a difference? And how does that actually reflect a change of strategy?
In any case, here we go.
I Heart the SOTU
While a few people mentioned that today Bush gives the State of the Union address, I’m more interested in Northwest’s changes to their Worldperks program due to be announced either tomorrow or Thursday. That clearly shows where my priorities are.
Long Overdue
“I figured I’d better get it in before we waited another 10 years,” he said after turning it in Friday with the $171.32 check. “Fifty-seven years would be embarrassing.”
Because showing up after 47 years is so much better than 57.
It’s 3 a.m. and I should not be awake. Unfortunately this January “heat wave” has the house too hot to sleep in.