But there are questions about its viability — will consumers buy into losing control behind the wheel?Speaking only for myself, I could see buying it--I'm nearing the point where my self-confidence is my driving ability is starting to fade, so an old geezer I've love the ability to delegate 99 percent of the driving to a computer. I suspect that's how the innovation will come; something like Segway which was promoted as revolutionary but has turned out to be a niche filler. Between geezers and drunks there's a big niche to fill.
Blogging on bureaucracy, organizations, USDA, agriculture programs, American history, the food movement, and other interests. Often contrarian, usually optimistic, sometimes didactic, occasionally funny, rarely wrong, always a nitpicker.
Friday, May 18, 2012
Google's Driverless Car Comes to Washington
Here's a Politico report on the car's success in navigating Capitol Hill streets, not the halls yet. It includes this question:
A Glimmer of Hope for Target Prices?
Apparently House Ag Committee is leaning to preserving target prices, but perhaps on planted acres. That's according to today's Farm Policy.
There's fear of a collapse of prices.
And there's infighting between regions and crops.
And so it goes.
There's fear of a collapse of prices.
And there's infighting between regions and crops.
And so it goes.
Thursday, May 17, 2012
Good Looking Redheads and Drone Aircraft and Tractors
The last piece of the interview (total about 18 minutes) is the most surprising one, albeit military and not agricultural.
Poor Software Design: British Style
A couple blogs I follow have noted a report over in the UK that there are 17,000 pregnant men in the National Health System. At least one of the blogs commented it's a reminder of how easy it is to get garbage into an automated system and thus we should be careful in our reliance on reports.
That's all true, but the problem really is a design problem: apparently there's no validations on the entries for this particular field, or at least there's insufficient validations. One could presumably also find in the report some women with prostate problems and men with gynecological problems. Absence of thought is a universal.
That's all true, but the problem really is a design problem: apparently there's no validations on the entries for this particular field, or at least there's insufficient validations. One could presumably also find in the report some women with prostate problems and men with gynecological problems. Absence of thought is a universal.
Organic = Smug Self-Righteousness?
That's my impression from the research reported on at Barking Up the Wrong Tree. It's not eating the organic food which makes one a jerk; it's being exposed to the concept. Apparently the logic is the exposure makes one more conscious of morality, hence more judgmental and less willing to help others.
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
Small Dairy Help
Cornell U. extension has some things to help "small dairies", which have been going out of business in New York forever.
They use a 100-cow dairy as an example of "small", which still strikes odd because 30 or so was the average when I grew up (we had 12). Though in surfing the web the other day I ran across claims of being able to handle milking of 200-300 cows with one person (maybe on the Wikipedia talk page, not sure). That's not Moore's law of transistors, but it's a better improvement in productivity than higher education.
Cornell also has a map showing "Small Plants for Pasteurized Milk, Yogurt, etc.). and a set of benchmarks (size of farm, milk per cow, acres per cow, etc.). I'd think breed would be important: one farm has 25,000 lbs per cow, which has to be Holstein, another has 13,000 lbs, which has to be Jersey or Guernsey or whatever.
They use a 100-cow dairy as an example of "small", which still strikes odd because 30 or so was the average when I grew up (we had 12). Though in surfing the web the other day I ran across claims of being able to handle milking of 200-300 cows with one person (maybe on the Wikipedia talk page, not sure). That's not Moore's law of transistors, but it's a better improvement in productivity than higher education.
Cornell also has a map showing "Small Plants for Pasteurized Milk, Yogurt, etc.). and a set of benchmarks (size of farm, milk per cow, acres per cow, etc.). I'd think breed would be important: one farm has 25,000 lbs per cow, which has to be Holstein, another has 13,000 lbs, which has to be Jersey or Guernsey or whatever.
Move to Massachusetts, It's Best
Here's a reasonably convincing article at Slate which boosts that far-left bastion of liberalism, Massachusetts. There's some surprising and counter-intuitive statistics included.
Who Invented Plywood?
Sometime ago there was a listing of the most important inventions of the 20th century. I thought of that while viewing this video on plywood (it's rather arty and for all the warning about table saws, they don't use a guard)--I owe a hat tip to someone, not sure who.
Anyhow, I went to Wikipedia and found the answer(s):
Anyhow, I went to Wikipedia and found the answer(s):
- the ancient Egyptians
- Imannuel Nobel, father of the Alfred of dynamite fame. Although his Wikipedia entry just credits him with inventing the lathe used in plywood manufacture, but that may have been the key innovation needed to make plywood on a mass scale.
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Misinformation from the Times: Food
The Times has an interview with an NIH mathematician today who says, in part:
Sounds to me as if he's been reading Mr. Pollan. The truth of course is there was no such long lasting change in policy. Yes, Earl Butz said "fence row to fence row", but his impact on farm policy was mostly gone by the time Jimmy Carter was elected . We had annual production adjustment programs into the 1990's and beginning in 1986 removed millions of acres of cropland from production through CRP.Did you ever solve the question posed to you when you were first hired — what caused the obesity epidemic?We think so. And it’s something very simple, very obvious, something that few want to hear: The epidemic was caused by the overproduction of food in the United States.Beginning in the 1970s, there was a change in national agricultural policy. Instead of the government paying farmers not to engage in full production, as was the practice, they were encouraged to grow as much food as they could. At the same time, technological changes and the “green revolution” made our farms much more productive. The price of food plummeted, while the number of calories available to the average American grew by about 1,000 a day.Well, what do people do when there is extra food around? They eat it! This, of course, is a tremendously controversial idea. However, the model shows that increase in food more than explains the increase in weight.
Can Obama Win Alaska?
On this chart showing the support within different states for same-sex civil marriage, Alaska sticks out as a McCain supporting state which also supports SSCM. Makes me wonder: since Palin won't be on the Republican ticket in 2012 is there a chance for Obama to win Alaska? Nah, probably not. Just a day-dream.
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