Since 1980, almost all of the expansion of black white-collar employment shares have been in the South.
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.
Tuesday, July 08, 2014
Gains in the South
A surprising factoid:
Sunday, July 06, 2014
Round Oak Rag Apple Elevation--Something Completely Different
We had registered Holsteins on our farm, which if I recall meant we had to send in registration papers which included either a sketch of the cow's markings or a photo. I assume the data included the cow's ancestry. And the vet who did the artificial insemination would discuss with dad which bull's semen to use, which one was popular, etc. etc. I never really got into this aspect of the business, and it was a business--but I was aware of the strange names of the bulls, which leads to the title of this post.
Anyhow today, via Northview Valley blog, I get to the bull in the title. He even has his own wikipedia page, although it's flagged as having problems.
Anyhow today, via Northview Valley blog, I get to the bull in the title. He even has his own wikipedia page, although it's flagged as having problems.
Thursday, July 03, 2014
Humans Are Lazy
A quote from a TEchnology Review post--human drivers weren’t trustworthy enough to be co-pilots to Google’s software:
That approach had to be scrapped after tests showed that human drivers weren’t trustworthy enough to be co-pilots to Google’s software. When people began riding in one of the vehicles, they paid close attention to what the car was doing and to activity on the road around them, which meant the hand-off between person and machine was smooth. But that interest faded to indifference over weeks and months as people became too trusting of the car’s abilities. “Humans are lazy,” says Fairfield. “People go from plausible suspicion to way overconfidence.”
Wednesday, July 02, 2014
Lack of Compatibility
From NASCOE's June update.:
"We recently learned that OMB /DAFP made a visit a Pennsylvania county office a few weeks ago. The visit focused on the progress of MIDAS. The group was curious why MIDAS is not being used as the platform for the new farm bill programs, and asked why we continue to utilize 2 systems (Web Farm & MIDAS). We understand that the group seemed to be surprised at the lack of compatibility and interaction of our software programs. Reports were that the visit was beneficial, yet eye opening for the OMB/DAFO group."One thing the IT types who were involved in Infoshare never understood, and I failed to make them understand, was the problem of transitioning from legacy systems to new systems. We went through hell in 1985-7 when we transitioned to the System/36 and everyone was happy to forget the pains. As Santayana said: “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”
Tuesday, July 01, 2014
The Ridiculous II
This article at Modern Farmer shows the extent to which our wealthy society can extend the ridiculous.
I can understand the logic of this dairy farm: maximizing the welfare of dairy cows. Late breeding, no slaughter--cows dying when they "naturally" would. It's not 100 percent clear, but apparently they don't send their bull calves to slaughter either. It all fits the touchy-feely ethos of the food movement, but more so.
I can accept that 100 years from now wealthy nations will get most of their milk and meat from truly industrial process (i.e., bypassing animals altogether). The remainder of the supply might be subdivided with various approaches, some organic, some slaughter free, etc.
But I won't be around to see it and I'm too much a man of my time and place to find it other than ridiculous. A quote:
suckers customers willing to pay more than three times the price of conventional milk? Might one be able to find suckers people willing to get up at 4 am to milk the cows for no pay? Yes, I suppose one might. I still say ridiculous.
I can understand the logic of this dairy farm: maximizing the welfare of dairy cows. Late breeding, no slaughter--cows dying when they "naturally" would. It's not 100 percent clear, but apparently they don't send their bull calves to slaughter either. It all fits the touchy-feely ethos of the food movement, but more so.
I can accept that 100 years from now wealthy nations will get most of their milk and meat from truly industrial process (i.e., bypassing animals altogether). The remainder of the supply might be subdivided with various approaches, some organic, some slaughter free, etc.
But I won't be around to see it and I'm too much a man of my time and place to find it other than ridiculous. A quote:
"At $10 per gallon, the price of slaughter-free milk is almost triple the cost of whole milk, which retails for an average of $3.69 per gallon. The price reflects the cost of producing the milk as well as calf care and “retirement” costs for the herd. (The cost of labor isn’t factored into the price because the farmhands are volunteers).So the true price is probably closer to $20 per gallon, because the labor is being paid/supported by trust funds, etc. Might one be able to find
Monday, June 30, 2014
The Persistence of Myths and Cartoons
I suspect anyone who works in a given field long enough will find numerous errors and myths in the mass media depiction of the field. This has not, I think, changed with the Internet. Whenever I go to wikipedia on some agriculture related stuff, I find errors. If I had energy I might correct them but I don't, mostly. (For example, US agriculture says agricultural activity occurs in "most states".) Or many general statements about agricultural subsidies are wrong or misleading.
The Post's Glenn Kessler recently identified an error in the pages of the NYTimes, in columnist Tom Friedman's column. (It took as fact Dean Rusk's comment in the Cuban missile crisis, that we were eyeball to eyeball and the other guy just blinked--not true.)
I'm reminded of a famous cartoon, I think it was, showing a guy working late and telling his wife: 'there's something wrong on the Internet". But the Internet is great--I just googled to find that cartoon so the link was added after I wrote.
Speaking of cartoons, I strongly recommend this book--very funny
The Post's Glenn Kessler recently identified an error in the pages of the NYTimes, in columnist Tom Friedman's column. (It took as fact Dean Rusk's comment in the Cuban missile crisis, that we were eyeball to eyeball and the other guy just blinked--not true.)
I'm reminded of a famous cartoon, I think it was, showing a guy working late and telling his wife: 'there's something wrong on the Internet". But the Internet is great--I just googled to find that cartoon so the link was added after I wrote.
Speaking of cartoons, I strongly recommend this book--very funny
Sunday, June 29, 2014
Alas, Poor USDA, I Knew You When
From Farm Policy
Chairman Lucas explained that, “It turns out that the three software platforms that were necessary to use the computers to, in a speedy fashion, address these issues would not cross match. And I’ve had conversations with the Secretary of Agriculture himself about this. He’s assured me that the best minds at IBM have been working diligently on it. But what it amounts to is because everything won’t speak to everything else in their computer system, they’ve had to mechanically do it, to manually fill out the forms.Yes, more than 20 years ago this was an issue. Obviously Congressional "pushing" has had no effect.
“And I know that slowed the process down, and I know a lot of our neighbors out there have appointments that run over into July to have time with an FSA employee to fill out the paperwork to do it. But I would urge people: be patient, make sure you’ve got an appointment, be prompt, take the information that’s requested of you to bring. It is worth your time to do. We are pushing, encouraging USDA in Washington, D.C. to do whatever it takes to make the systems work together.
Saturday, June 28, 2014
The Ridiculous and the Great: What's the Difference
This is ridiculous: a post on a person who's developed the second largest drone company in the world. What the bio for Jordi Munoz at the company's site doesn't say is he started at 20 and is now 28,
Jordi Muñoz is co-founder and CTO of 3D Robotics. He was born in Ensenada, Mexico, and raised in Tijuana. He studied briefly at Ensenada’s Center for Technical and Higher Education before moving to southern California in 2007, where in his free time he designed and built his first drone. The autopilot ran on circuitry he lifted from a Wii remote.
Soon Jordi was making a living off his ingenuity. He hacked a toaster that he bought at Target, turned it into a reflow oven, and set up a small manufacturing facility in his apartment, designing UAV parts and selling them to pilots around the world.
Jordi’s work impressed Chris Anderson—the two met virtually through the DIY Drones online community—who supported Jordi with an initial $500 check. Chris continued to advise Jordi’s production efforts over email, and in 2009 the two co-founded 3D Robotics. In 2012, Chris quit Wired to join Jordi full time.
Jordi lives with his family in San Diego
Thursday, June 26, 2014
Research Using Acreage Report Data
Here's a report from a Stanford team which used acreage report data.
Lobell's team examined an unprecedented amount of detailed field data from more than 1 million USDA crop insurance records between 1995 and 2012.Wonder what other conclusions could be supported by "Big Data" in the form of FSA or RMA datasets?
"The idea was pretty simple," he said. "We determined which conditions really matter for corn and soy yields, and then tracked how farmers were doing at different levels of these conditions over time. But to do that well, you really need a lot of data, and this dataset was a beauty."
The takeaway appears to be this: "But in the past two decades we saw very small yield gains in non-irrigated corn under the hottest conditions. This suggests farmers may be pushing the limits of what's possible under these conditions."
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
Line of the Day
"Also, “Man Bites Man” is always going to be an interesting story. “Man Kills Man” is, sadly, not a novel event."
Joel Achenbach, on World Cup soccer and other diversions from serious concerns,
Joel Achenbach, on World Cup soccer and other diversions from serious concerns,
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