I've a hold on Shirley Sherrod's new book [at the library], but here's a brief review.
[Updated]
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.
Monday, November 12, 2012
Sunday, November 11, 2012
The Progress of New Terminology and Technology
Reading Notice CP-686 on the forthcoming use of MIDAS with GIS for acreage reporting, replacing CARS.
Two terms new to me: "subfield" and "cross-over commodity".
Remembering the fiasco of the ASCS-578 in 1985 (and 86, and 87) I wish them luck. Actually, I hope over the years the number of problems has been reduced, but acreage reporting was probably the area where the conflict between national standards and local conditions was most obvious. Before computers, much of the conflict was hidden from the national office; State and county offices made things work. Introduce the computer and local variation becomes a problem.
I suspect, without any evidence whatsoever, that part of the resistance to "electronic health records" on the part of doctors and others is based on this sort of thing.
Two terms new to me: "subfield" and "cross-over commodity".
Remembering the fiasco of the ASCS-578 in 1985 (and 86, and 87) I wish them luck. Actually, I hope over the years the number of problems has been reduced, but acreage reporting was probably the area where the conflict between national standards and local conditions was most obvious. Before computers, much of the conflict was hidden from the national office; State and county offices made things work. Introduce the computer and local variation becomes a problem.
I suspect, without any evidence whatsoever, that part of the resistance to "electronic health records" on the part of doctors and others is based on this sort of thing.
Saturday, November 10, 2012
You Are There
Something reminded me of the old radio program "You Are There" (late 40's). It featured recreations of famous events in history, narrated by an announcer. The one I particularly remember was the signing of the Magna Charta, with the announcer talking about the angry barons and building the tension over whether King John would sign or fight.
Anyway, turns out the tapes of that program are available online (why am I surprised). The list of all the programs is revealing: almost nothing after 1900, a couple on women's rights, almost nothing on civil rights, and some oddities, at least by today's standards: The Trial of Samuel Chase? (A justice impeached but acquitted in 1804/5)
I guess it was radio's equivalent of today's History Channel.
Anyway, turns out the tapes of that program are available online (why am I surprised). The list of all the programs is revealing: almost nothing after 1900, a couple on women's rights, almost nothing on civil rights, and some oddities, at least by today's standards: The Trial of Samuel Chase? (A justice impeached but acquitted in 1804/5)
I guess it was radio's equivalent of today's History Channel.
You Never Do It Right the First Time: ORCA
That's my motto, and it seems the Romney campaign didn't heed it. By
keeping their ORCA centralized data system under wraps until late, and
not giving it a test run, it collapsed and burned on election day.
Not covered in the story: I'm intrigued by their decision to do a centralized effort, as opposed to a 50-state effort. Seems like the sort of thing Republicans accused us bureaucrats of, believing in the wisdom of the central government. In this case, at least, the community organizer outdid the business executive.
[Update: Fairfax county school system installed a new math system this fall, with online books, which is causing problems. Apparently they decided not to do a pilot, based on past successes with other subjects.]
Not covered in the story: I'm intrigued by their decision to do a centralized effort, as opposed to a 50-state effort. Seems like the sort of thing Republicans accused us bureaucrats of, believing in the wisdom of the central government. In this case, at least, the community organizer outdid the business executive.
[Update: Fairfax county school system installed a new math system this fall, with online books, which is causing problems. Apparently they decided not to do a pilot, based on past successes with other subjects.]
Friday, November 09, 2012
Call Me Stick-in-the-Mud
I have to admit a shameful fact: I don't own a mobile device, no iPhone or iPad or Android or anything.When you stay as close to home as I do, there's not that much point. In other words, if you're not mobile, you don't need a mobile device.
Thursday, November 08, 2012
Margaret Chase Smith Is Happy
20 women senators in the new Congress, she was the only one when I became conscious of politics.
Thank Goodness Washington's Not Battleground
I see the great bureaucrats in Washington state have now succeeded in counting 58 percent of their ballots.
Tuesday, November 06, 2012
My Own Prediction
Nate Silver's book will hit the NYTimes best seller list. (I'm about a third through and it's very good.)
Voting
Voted about 1:45. Took about 30 minutes. The line was wrong [sic], but I can't say it was the longest ever, but possibly it was. Memory fades. They used both touch screen and paper ballots. Unfortunately people irrationally choose the touch screen so there was a 10 minute wait for those, while if you were smart enough, I wasn't, to vote paper there was no wait after your eligibility had been confirmed.
[Updated to note my freudian slip.]
[Updated to note my freudian slip.]
Monday, November 05, 2012
The Value of Female Leaders?
Apparently Bangladesh has been doing quite well over the last 20 years, during which they've had mostly female prime ministers.
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