My Top 10 Favorite Vegas/Gambling Web Sites

June 25, 2008

I Love This Place

Granted This isn’t in any particular order, I just think that these folks have the best sites for anyone going to Vegas.  I purposely haven’t listed any travel sites because I frankly don’t really have much of an opinion between the likes of http://www.vegas.com or any of the other sites out there.

  1. Michael Shackleford’s consumer advocacy sitehttp://www.sweatthemoney.com
    Michael bulletin boards the unethical activities of the casinos and puts them in a hall of shame.
  2. Vegas Today & Tomorrowhttp://www.vegastodayandtomorrow.com
    This could easily be one of the most useful and interesting Vegas sites out there.  For example:  They have a map that shows “Which Hotels Sell Pepsi & Which Sell Coke”)
  3. Five Hundy By Midnight Podcasthttp://www.fivehundybymidnight.com
    Still the most entertaining and laid back Vegas podcast ever produced by a couple – Tim & Michelle – from Minnesota.
  4. Stanford Wong’s Blackjack 21http://www.bj21.com
    The ultimate Blackjack information web site.
  5. Las Vegas Advisorhttp://www.lasvegasadvisor.com
    The broadest most up-to-date monthly publication on Las Vegas.  I wish they were weekly.
  6. Vegas Trippinghttp://www.vegastripping.com
    An irreverent look at of of Las Vegas virtues & vices.  Great articles as well as being the home of the Trippies – the annual awards given to Las Vegas entities.
  7. Vegas Linkshttp://vegaslinks.blogspot.com/
    (No, seriously.  This dude from Vegas Links is psycho.  He’s got so much info, he seriously must be fanatical about Las Vegas and to that I salute him)
  8. LeaveMeAlone-NoTimeShares The Vegas Gang Podcasthttp://www.vegasgangpodcast.com/
    The other Vegas podcast I listen to these days.  Their more topical and quite a bit deeper than Five Hundy but I still like them. 
  9. Two Way Hard Threehttp://www.ratevegas.com/blog
    Hunter’s site – one of the Vegas Gang.  A good, long lived site on Vegas. 
  10. What Brian Thinks about Las Vegashttp://whatbrianthinksaboutlasvegas.com/
    I just like his format.  His content is frankly old, but I still like his humor and his drawings.  It’s creative in a really ‘I-don’t-give-a-@#$%” sort of way – not to mention he’s the maker of the t-shirt to the right.

These sites are rapidly becoming favorites of mine and could overtake someone in the top ten:


Ican’twaitIcan’twaitIcan’twaitIcan’twaitIcan’twaitIcan’twaitIcan’twaitIcan’twait!

June 12, 2008

image


VIDEO: Jane Kim – Sr. Program Manager from the IE8 team on “New IE features”

June 12, 2008

image Why am I posting this?  Well, yeah sure, the IE8 details are interesting.  But on a more personal note, I found Jane Kim’s discussion about her college experience and her major to be strikingly familiar.  The parallels are frighteningly uncanny and I’m curious as to how common this pattern of experiences is amongst Computer Engineering majors.

MEMORIES OF THE UCLA SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING
You see, I graduated from UCLA with a Computer Engineering degree and when I arrived, the “weeder” classes in year 1 started off with 100 students and there were about 8 girls in the class – just like Jane did at Northwestern.  (I’m curious however as to how many were left at Northwestern by the end of her freshmen year though.  We had 5 left and I still remember all their names:  Lisa, Liz, Vivian, Maria, & Karen.)

Additionally, if I had to do it all over again, I’d drop the ‘electrical’ aspect of the major and just gone straight Computer Science because to be blunt – I loathed circuit design.  I’ve been programming since I was 10 years old, (Pilot on the Atari 400s,  BASIC on Apple II’s & Commodore PETs, & Pascal/Assembly on the original IBM PC!) and I never had a problem working 72 hour straight trying to code some little Star Trek game or my own Infocom adventure. 

But I once had two lab partners on a stupid circuit board that was wired with EEPROMs to play “pong” on a CRT and after 24hrs of work on the board, my partners… well… bailed!  Giving up on a lab = “F”, so I stuck around for the next 24 hours trying to figure out what was wrong – following every since single trace and every single wire, reprogramming every chip, and verifying every connection.  Sure enough it was a bad wire but in the end I decided that working on hardware was the equivalent of Hades for me.

Well, that and LISP.  Coding recursion is elegant but it still makes my brain hurt.

 

Jane Kim: From Inventing To Implementing IE Features

COMPUTERS WERE PRETTY COMMON BACK THEN
I think Ritzy, by the way, is wrong.  I don’t know how old Ritzy is, but I graduated about a full decade before Jane did and back then, full computer labs in schools and computers “in the curriculum” were NOT uncommon in major cities on the west coast.  I know that most of the cities along the Pacific Ocean had some form of computers in most of their high schools.  Seattle, San Francisco, Honolulu, Los Angeles, San Jose, San Diego, and Portland – I had friends that I graduated with that came from all those cities and we all had Apple IIs/Macs/PCs in school.  So either Ritzy is 5-10 years older than I am or she grew up in a more rural town.

BTW:  It’s too bad Jane’s still stuck with a crappy office phone.  My Nortel & my Tanjay are more up-to-date than that thing she’s got sitting next to her.  Someone needs to bring Building 50 up to Unified Communications.


Reviews of “21: The Movie” by people that actually live this life

June 9, 2008

image Here’s some reviews of “21” by people that are actually in this ‘business’ and thought the movie was utter crap.

Some seems surprised by the lack of adherence to the book version, which was an exaggeration to begin with.  But anyone that knows the movie industry (especially anyone that’s read the saga of Superman Returns), knows that the media industry is filled with egomaniacal morons that always “think they know better” than the screenwriter and the original author of a story when it comes to selling the movie. 

Ironically, these same studios have formed walled gardens of creativity like Miramax, Fox Searchlight, and other independent studios to get away from just that sort of meddling to create “Pulp Fiction”, “Juno”, “Napoleon Dynamite”, and other great independent flicks.


“You are not my mother!”

June 2, 2008

clip_image001


NEWS: Los Angeles Times – “Animal shelters are under scrutiny”

June 2, 2008

The LA Times did a article that cited some statistics for 2007 about how many animals are brought into county shelters and how many are killed:

"During the last fiscal year, which ended in June, the county system took in 85,975 animals, roughly a third more than the city of Los Angeles. That number includes cats, dogs, rabbits, snakes — even livestock. In the same year, the county euthanized 16,989 dogs, 26,384 cats and 9,429 other animals."

(So if you do the math, 16,989 dogs + 26,384 cats + 9,429 other animals = 52,802 animals killed.  52,802 killed out of 85,975 = 61.4% death rate)

Ignoring the accusations & counterpoints of the article, the bigger point of all of the stats is this:

More than half of all animals – 61.4% – brought into the LA county shelter system were killed in 2007.

I really don’t think the public knows this.  And you know what’s absolutely terrifying to me?  Los Angeles actually has one of the lower levels of euthanasia relative to the rest of the United States.  Other parts of the country kill 90% of the animals brought to shelters.

The animal activist community overuses this quote but I can think of no better time to apply it.  Albert Schweitzer once said, "Think occasionally of the suffering of which you spare yourself the sight."  Think about the pound, the next time you drive by… because with a 61% death rate, it’s like having an animal version of Auschwitz in our own backyard.

The Problem with the Los Angeles Times article:
It’s hard to read the article without some skepticism because I’ve read and seen a lot of things that go against the claims made by Director Marcia Mayeda.  Here’s an example:
http://lacdacc.blogspot.com/2008/02/animal-shelters-are-under-scrutiny.html

Now here’s the full article from the Los Angeles Times:
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-shelter12feb12,1,1114146.story

From the Los Angeles Times

Animal shelters are under scrutiny

L.A. County supervisors examine sites after three civil suits, alleging poor conditions and mistreatment, are filed.

By Carla Hall
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
February 12, 2008

Friend wantedPublic animal shelters will never look like — or be run like — the Four Seasons. But according to animal welfare activists, volunteers and private rescuers, the shelters operated by the Los Angeles County Department of Animal Care & Control sometimes resemble dog pounds of yore.

For months, animal advocates have made allegations of transgressions in the nation’s largest municipal shelter system, including overcrowded and filthy conditions, a failure to administer medications and the euthanasia of healthy animals before the mandatory minimum four-day waiting period was up.

The drumbeat of criticism peaked last year, with the death of a 10-month-old female Lab mix named Zephyr in the Carson shelter. A volunteer’s photo of the dog’s stiff, outstretched body lying on the concrete floor of its kennel ricocheted through blogs and e-mails of rescuers, volunteers and animal lovers.

Three civil lawsuits, alleging poor conditions and mistreatment, have been filed against the county by various rescue groups and a coalition of volunteers and animal advocates.

After the barrage of complaints, county Supervisor Yvonne B. Burke sent deputies to review conditions at the Carson shelter and then ordered Marcia Mayeda, the director of the county’s animal care agency, to report to the board on the Carson facility and the death of the puppy. Mayeda is expected to appear before the board today.

Coming into a shelter system "like this and trying to make change is like trying to change direction of the Titanic — or an aircraft carrier," said Mayeda, who has been at the helm of the department for 6 1/2 years. "Change doesn’t happen overnight. I can put out great new policies — and that’s the first step — but then the next step is getting everyone to buy into them."

During the last fiscal year, which ended in June, the county system took in 85,975 animals, roughly a third more than the city of Los Angeles. That number includes cats, dogs, rabbits, snakes — even livestock. In the same year, the county euthanized 16,989 dogs, 26,384 cats and 9,429 other animals.

County shelters, which serve unincorporated areas of the county as well as contract cities, are located in Agoura, Castaic, Baldwin Park, Downey, Lancaster and Carson.

Mayeda would not speak about specific allegations in the lawsuits, but she talked about the shelter system in general, which, she says, struggles to cope with a huge population of unwanted animals that arrive at county shelters.

Shown pictures of animals crowded, sometimes as many as eight to a kennel, in a Lancaster shelter, she said, "I would like to see that cut in half." But she noted that some of the photos circulated on the Internet show animals curled up together. "If you look at them, they’re all cuddled up together. They’re not fighting." Mayeda said the county planned to build another animal shelter in the Antelope Valley, which will relieve some of the crowding at the Lancaster facility.

Stray animals are held at least four days, not counting the day they are impounded. If the animal is microchipped or tagged, it is held 10 days as the county tries to find the owner. Sick or injured animals whose suffering can’t be alleviated may be euthanized right away. After that time, animals can be put up for adoption — or euthanized.

Space is at a premium in some shelters. Mayeda acknowledges that animals that stay for lengthy periods may become stressed by the time spent in kennels. Kennel cough and other respiratory ailments can spread quickly through the close quarters of a shelter.

"If we run animal shelters, we have to do it responsibly. And part of that means managing the population," said Mayeda, 43, who brings her own Great Pyrenees dog (a rescue) to work in Long Beach. "Nobody that works at animal shelters that I’ve ever met likes killing animals. It’s unfortunately a necessary part of the job for the greater health of the population at the shelter."

Part of what keeps animals moving out of the system is the network of private rescue organizations that take animals and place them in homes, often on the eve of their scheduled euthanasia. Volunteers help staff the shelters and alert private rescuers to animals they might want to take.

According to Mayeda, Zephyr entered the shelter Oct. 27 and was put on a "hold" by a volunteer Nov. 2. A hold means a volunteer will return within a few days to take the animal and arrange for an adoption or transport it to a rescue group. Mayeda said that while on hold, Zephyr became ill and was treated successfully. But the animal became sick again, and on Nov. 27, the shelter vet recommended that it be euthanized. The dog was found dead the morning of Dec. 1 by two volunteers.

Although some activists and rescuers said the cold contributed to the dog’s death, an independent necropsy found that Zephyr died of pneumonia. In addition, Mayeda said in her report, the Carson shelter’s heating system was working and the night temperature was in the low 50s.

In her report, Mayeda says the dog should have been moved out of the shelter sooner and notes that Zephyr was on hold for a month. "You can’t put a hold on an animal and keep it in limbo," Mayeda said in an interview.

Although Mayeda did not name the volunteer in the interview or her report to the board, the volunteer, who says she has been suspended by shelter officials from her volunteer work for unknown reasons, has a different story. Janet Taylor, who worked a little more than a year as a volunteer at Carson, denied she ever put an official hold on Zephyr. She did look at Zephyr and asked staff to call her if the dog was about to be put to sleep, or "PTS," as staffers call it.

"The actual note read ‘If to PTS, call Janet Taylor,’ " she said. "In other words, if she’s in any kind of danger, if the shelter is full, call Janet Taylor. I never got a call about her — ever."

Taylor said it was only by chance on a walk through the shelter on Nov. 30 that she saw how sick Zephyr was and then scrambled to line up a rescuer. The next morning, the dog was dead.

"I was a really good volunteer," Taylor said. "It’s unthinkable that they’ve done this to me. I didn’t kill that dog."

Taylor contends the Carson shelter was woefully understaffed, meaning animals sometimes didn’t get their prescribed medications.

carla.hall@latimes.com


Please ignore this post

June 2, 2008

VIDEO: Oprah Winfrey – “The Puppy Mill Episode”

June 1, 2008

image The thing I noticed was missing from the Internet was a full copy of the Oprah Winfrey episode raising the awareness of the horror of puppy mills, the greed of pet stores that sell dogs, and the good that comes with dog adoption

http://www2.oprah.com/tows/pastshows/200804/
tows_past_20080404.jhtml

If you haven’t seen this episode, it’s really worth seeing:  The animal world has been abuzz about this show that Oprah did because of the good that it did to raise awareness of the suffering that people shield their eyes from seeing every time they buy a dog from a pet store or the Internet. 

The Lessons To Be Learned are

  • 99% of all animals sold in pet stores or on the Internet are born in inhumane & abusive conditions. 
  • No legitimate breeder would sell their dogs in pet stores or over the Internet.
  • Don’t rationalize your purchase by thinking you’ve ‘saved’ a dog by buying one:  You do not save dogs by buying them from these people – you only perpetuate the problem and fund this terrible abuse.

Anyway, once I was able to record the episode on my own, I did some quick editing, and walla:  Piece of cake.  So here it is in all it’s glory in case you missed it.  Edited end-to-end, without commercial interruptions, into two trimmed videos – part 1 & part 2.  (The reason it’s not just one single video is because there’s a limit on how much you can upload to MSN Soapbox for playback, and the episode exceeds that limit so I had to split it into two parts)

Oprah Winfrey on Puppy Mills – Part 1

 

By the way, anyone that wants a copy of the entire edited video:  It’s 42 minutes & 37 seconds – approx. 170MB total in a multipart ZIP file.  (Get http://www.winzip.com to unpack it)

http://cid-97895bbb8ad10f37.skydrive.live.com/embedrowdetail.aspx/Public/OprahOnPuppyMills.ziphttp://cid-97895bbb8ad10f37.skydrive.live.com/embedrowdetail.aspx/Public/OprahOnPuppyMills.z01http://cid-97895bbb8ad10f37.skydrive.live.com/embedrowdetail.aspx/Public/OprahOnPuppyMills.z02http://cid-97895bbb8ad10f37.skydrive.live.com/embedrowdetail.aspx/Public/OprahOnPuppyMills.z03 

INSTRUCTIONS:
You need to download all 4 files into the same folder, then use WinZip to open it by double clicking on the OprahOnPuppyMills.zip file – this will extract the file OprahOnPuppyMills.wmv by stitching together the contents of all 4 50MB files and produce a single 170MB file.  (Let me repear:  Windows’ native ZIP functionality will NOT work – you must download and install WinZip from http://www.winzip.com.)

The resulting file requires Windows Media Player and is standard definition (i.e. TV broadcast) quality.  Mac users can download the software needed to play Windows Media HERE and Linux users can download MPlayer which will play Windows Media, HERE.

If you’re running another platform, or you can’t install the necessary Windows Media codecs, please leave me a comment and I’ll convert the file to another codec like MPEG4 or whatever it takes and repost it somewhere for you to download on a private site.


Looks like our dog!

May 30, 2008

VIDEOS: Pedigree Adoption Drive commercials

May 30, 2008

Pedigree will always have a soft spot in my heart.

Sarah McLachlan’s ASPCA ads can absolutely bring you to tears but so do the commercials from Pedigree’s Adoption Drive. 

 

imageHere’s the videos of all the actual dogs in Pedigree commercials that are looking to be adopted.  The videos depict the circumstance that each dog found themselves in through no fault of their own:

There are a few follow ups that return to the dogs that did eventually get adopted but just like the real world, more than 50% of them never got adopted.


Posh Puppy of Beverly Hills closed

May 29, 2008

My wife and I went driving through Beverly Hills today on the way to dinner at Restaurant Row on La Cienega.  We drove by a store called "Posh Puppy" which seems innocuous enough until we saw that it had been closed down.  A giant "for rent" sign hung in front of the building and the inside was dark.

BTW:  OPRAH’S SHOW ON PUPPY MILLS IS TOMORROW
By a strange coincidence, tomorrow is the rebroadcast of Oprah Winfrey’s famous "Puppy Mill" episode:  The Lisa Ling expose where she brings in hidden cameras to the underbelly of some of the most despicable places you’ll ever see:  Puppy Mills on the eastern seaboard.

I fully planned on recording-editing-and-posting the entire broadcast on the Internet being that it seems no one’s done it yet.   I’ve only seen brief 9 minute clips of the show.  (Could it be that the animal welfare advocates out there don’t have the technical ability to record & edit 42 minutes of video?  Hell – someone give me a call next time.)

POSH PUPPY CLOSED
But before I went through the trouble, I thought I’d skim through YouTube one more time to see if someone had done it yet.  While searching guess what I found:

Posh Puppy closed

At the heart of the problem is that Posh Puppy sold dogs that came from California puppy mills – which we later learned were some of the worst in Southern California.  The owners of Posh Puppy apparently closed the store for the day instead of dealing with the backlash of the protesters present in front of their stores.  The story is here:
http://network.bestfriends.org/truth/news/21651.html

KTLA GETS INTO THE MIX
But I guess some folks just don’t learn.  They continued to sell dogs from the puppy mills and so finally, KTLA broadcast a press conference that "Last Chance for Animals" ran in front of their store:
http://network.bestfriends.org/News/PostDetail.aspx?np=24404&g=e79ce3cf85664250a4cabd781f1da8c6

Guess what?  Posh Puppy’s now out of business.  Apparently folks don’t feel comfortable buying merchandise from an ethically challenged place of business.


Dear UAC whiners: Get over it already – UAC is a godsend.

May 28, 2008

<shakes head>
I’ve noticed that there’s a certain small but vocal group of IT professionals out there that are still whining about UAC’s implementation despite all the incredible good it provides and all the evolutionary improvements made it. 

To the few uneducated folks that are still complaining, "There’s too many prompts from UAC," I’ll take Vegas odds that you haven’t been consistently using Windows Vista with Service Pack 1 on your production machine have you? 

Because if so, you’d notice that there are far fewer prompts now that in the RTM.  And even if you have, by saying that you don’t like the security prompts and you want them removed "because end users won’t read them", you’re effectively absolving end users of their obligation to be responsible for company security.  There is no substitution for end user accountability. 

EVERY USER IS RESPONSIBLE FOR FOLLOWING GOOD SECURITY POLICY & PRACTICES.

HELLO?  APPLICATION INTEGRATION WITH UAC IS EASY
And to the folks complaining, "There are too many applications that balk at UAC," yes, many applications do not adhere to good security practices and UAC catches them when they attempt to do things they shouldn’t.  However, complaining about UAC is like complaining about your Mom when she tells you not to touch the stove because it may or may not be hot.

That being said, all applications can integrate with UAC.  Again, for effect:

ALL APPLICATIONS CAN INTEGRATE SEAMLESSLY WITH U.A.C.

It just requires preparation to ‘bless’ the application using a technology like Privilege Manager from Beyond Trust.  Privilege Manager ultimately eliminates all UAC authorization prompts for applications by providing seamless authorized access to just the specific higher level privileges that an application requires because it’s written with poor security practices.  (For example, it may require the ability to automatically reboot the workstation)  This is infinitely better than providing Local Administrator privileges.  Most customers I work with have already downloaded the software and have been working with it.


Humorous Web Sites that Keep Me Entertained

May 24, 2008

Today, I’ll admit:  I sort of vegged.  I got a bunch of email done and I just plain ran out of will to work.

So I started surfing and thanks to some coworkers, found some web sites that specialize in certain odd types of humor.

INDEXED
For example, take "Indexed".  It’s a web site dedicated to index cards with interesting Venn diagrams and Trend graphs that have some sort of social commentary within them.

The example to the right is a good example of the kind of index cards that are published.  Humorous and lighthearted… the kind of thing you’d RSS subscribe to for a laugh.

http://indexed.blogspot.com/

IHaveNoIdeaWhatYou'reTalkingAboutICANHASCHEEZBURGER
And then there’s ICanHasCheezBurger.  This is basically a collection of photos with humorous captions written on them by the public. 

I’m sure you’ve seen them.  Usually they entail cute photos of cats or kittens since that’s how this whole trend/concept originated… with kittens. 

Now, as you can see by the photo to the left, it’s expanded to… other species.

http://icanhascheezburger.com/

 

 

GRAPHJAM
song chart memesBut one of my favorite "thinking humor web sites" is Graph Jam. 

Essentially it’s a collage of community created graphs that illustrate fictional scenarios that can be depicted using business charts and graphs created in Excel.

Some of them are quite entertaining as you can see to the right.

http://graphjam.com/


What is it that I do these days

May 24, 2008

Although my title hasn’t changed in 9 years, my job has changed rather dramatically over the years.

Someone asked me at a wedding the other day, what it is exactly that I do.  If it’s someone in the computer industry I usually just say, "Systems Engineer" since most people in this field know what that is.  If it’s a lay person however, I usually go through the machinations of describing how Microsoft has a hundreds of products and how the combination of them create what people know today as the 800FLOWERS.COM e-commerce site or how it is that their "Outlook Email" works and what it takes to get that set up in companies.

This time, I simply showed him this on my PDA.  It was a lot quicker.

image


My life & the Fair Tax

May 15, 2008

I woke up one day in early April a couple years ago, and got a surprise call from my accountant.  She’d figured out the taxes for my wife and I, and much to my chagrin, we were going to owe a gargantuan amount of money.

THE MARRIAGE TAX
We didn’t fully understand why until later, but it seems that when you get married and live in TWO separate "primary households", (two homes with two mortgages) you get to write off a lot more on your Federal income taxes in aggregate.  But now that we only had ONE "primary household" since we lived under the same roof (and a ‘rental property’) we no longer had the combined benefit of two mortgage interest deductions:  Only one.  The result was a massive 5 digit tax bill.

I got married and suddenly, we’re getting raked over the Federal Tax fires.  As we struggled to pay this monstrosity, I said to myself – this is just not right.

TAX BRACKETS & THE AMT
A year later, after we’d made adjustments to our Federal Tax withholdings, we received a similar call early in April.  It’d happened again:  Despite saving a lot more for taxes, we owed another 5 digit tax bill.  It seems this time, we’d gotten raises at work and were thus moved into another HIGHER tax bracket.  To make matters worse, I suddenly became very familiar with this thing called the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) which is essentially a special tax scale that supercedes the normal tax scale that people pay on, if you make over a certain amount of money. 

What’s especially frightening about the AMT is that you can’t deduct a lot of things you could under the standard income tax like Property Taxes, State/Local taxes, Medical Expenses, etc. and if your taxes calculated under the AMT tax scale is higher than the standard federal income tax, then that’s what you have to pay.  So the more money we earned, the higher the percentage rate we were being taxed at increased – ANNND the fewer deductions we can take.

I got a raise at work, and now I don’t just have to pay more, I have to pay a disproportionately higher amount more.  I said to myself – this is just not right.

FairTax.orgTHE FAIRTAX
After feeling miserable for a few weeks, I picked up a copy of The Fair Tax Book on a lark.

WOW.  The Fair Tax is a proposed national sales tax on new finished goods & services of 23%.  In exchange, it eliminates all Federal Income taxes, Payroll taxes (social security, medicare, medicaid taxes that companies pay in conjunction with employee salaries that amount to 9.1% of each worker’s income), capital gains taxes, death/estate taxes, and it gives every citizen a monthly "prebate" or stipend to refund every family an amount of collected taxes to keep everyone at or below the poverty level from paying a dime of Federal taxes. 

I still have a few questions however unlike the Forbes-advocated Flat Tax (a completely different idea from the Fair Tax), the Fair Tax did something I didn’t even think was possible:  It collected the same amount of Federal Income taxes, while minimizing – even potentially reducing my Federal tax burden.  (Because after all, if I don’t buy anything, I don’t pay taxes) 

So how is this plan "revenue neutral" – i.e. make the same about of money as today’s income tax?  You can’t of course ‘fabricate money’ out of thin air – it has to come from somewhere.  But if not from people like me, then who?  The key to how the Fair Tax works lies in what appears to be 3 ‘new’ sources of Federal Income Tax:

  1. TAX "SIDE-STEPPERS" & THOSE BENEFITING FROM TAX LOOPHOLES
    The average citizen pays 25% in Federal income taxes.  Guess what percentage income tax the "wealthy" pay?  The answer is 15% or less.  The reason for this is, typically, the rich don’t make income.  They make INTEREST/CAPITAL GAINS on money that resides in banks or investments, and the tax on capital gains is 15%. 

    What’s even worse is that most of these folks know "a way" to keep money out of sight from the IRS (Bahamas, Brazil, Switzerland, etc.) meaning that they make interest/capital gains tax free on much of what they have.

    The Fair Tax doesn’t worry about income or capital gains.  It doesn’t tax them.  Instead it taxes purchases of new goods & services so if they buy a new yacht or a new car, they’re going to pay their federal taxes.   Buying gas for that new car or boat?  Taxes.  Any new good or services that the person consumes is taxed.

  2. THE UNDERGROUND ECONOMY
    The average legal business contributes an additional 9.1% of their total payroll (above and beyond worker’s salaries) to pay for federal payroll taxes.  These taxes along with a matched amount from workers, pay for Social Security, Medicare, & Medicaid. 

    So guess how much drug pushers, illegal gamblers, & underground import companies pay in payroll taxes?  The answer is ZERO.  And because it’s impossible to find these folks much less monitor them, they never get taxed, ever, despite the huge amount of money that goes through their ventures.

    Now, since these people will pay no income taxes but they’ll have to pay a sales tax on every bottle of liquor or Hostess Cupcake they buy in their daily lives, they’ll naturally be paying taxes, and monitoring the 5M legitimate businesses in America is a 100x easier to do than monitoring 300M individual citizens.

    The proposed Federal Tax incidentally includes the INTERNET – the biggest tax loophole in America.  Why should someone be exempt from paying taxes just because they’re buying a book across a border, where as a local book retailer making a contribution to the local economy has to pay taxes and be at a disadvantage to the Amazon.com’s of the world.  Ludicrous. 

  3. TOURISTS & UNDOCUMENTED IMMIGRANTS
    Visitors & undocumented immigrants pay absolutely no Federal income tax to sustain the US economy – yet they enjoy all the benefits of federally funded hospitals, law enforcement, fire & rescue organizations and other services.  Now, since they’ll be paying an embedded federal tax at retail stores for any goods & services they purchase, they’ll have no choice but to contribute to the Federal coffers. 

    The kicker here however is that NON-CITIZENS DO NOT GET THE PREBATE.  Without citizenship, there is no funds distributed to these folks’ households to bring them up to the poverty line.  They get no free lunch any more.  The only way to get the prebate is to be a citizen of the US, encouraging immigrants to apply for citizenship legally & fairly.


Puppy Size

May 8, 2008

clip_image001"Puppy size"…  Danielle keeps repeating it over and over again.

We’ve been back to this animal shelter at least five times.

It has been weeks now since we started all of this,’ the mother told the volunteer.

‘What is it she keeps asking for?’ the volunteer asked.

‘Puppy size,’ replied the mother.

‘Well, we have plenty of puppies, if that’s what she’s looking for.’
‘I know, we have seen most of them,’ the mom said in frustration.
Just then Danielle came walking into the office.

clip_image002‘Well, did you find one?’ asked her mom.

‘No, not this time,’ Danielle said, with sadness in her voice.

‘Can we come back on the weekend?’

The two women looked at each other, shook their heads and laughed. 

‘You never know when we will get more dogs.

clip_image003Unfortunately, there’s always a supply,’ the volunteer said.
Danielle took her mother by the hand and headed to the door.

‘Don’t worry, I’ll find one this weekend,’ she said. 
Over the next few days both mom and dad had long conversations with her.
They both felt she was being too particular.

‘It’s this weekend or we’re not looking anymore,’ Dad finally said in frustration. 

clip_image004‘We don’t want to hear anything more about puppy size either,’ Mom added. 

Sure enough, they were the first ones in the shelter on Saturday morning.

Now Danielle knew her way around and ran right for the section that housed the smaller dogs.

Tired of the routine, mom sat in the small waiting room at the end of the first row of cages.

There was an observation window so you could see the animals when visitors weren’t allowed.

clip_image005Danielle walked slowly from cage to cage, kneeling periodically to take a closer look.

One by one the dogs were brought out and she held each one.

One by one she said, ‘Sorry, you’re not the one.’ 
It was the last cage on this last day in search of the perfect pup.

The volunteer opened the cage door, and the child carefully picked up the dog and held it closely.

This time she took a little longer.

‘Mom, that’s it!  I found the right puppy!  He’s the one!  I know it!’ she screamed with joy.  ‘It’s the puppy size!’
clip_image006
‘But it’s the same size as all the other puppies you held over the last few weeks,’ Mom said.

‘No not size, the sighs. When I held him in my arms, he sighed,’ she said.  ‘Don’t you remember?

When I asked you what love is, you told me love depends on the sighs of your heart? 

The more you love, the bigger the sighs!’

The two women looked at each other for a moment.

Mom didn’t know whether to laugh or cry.  As she stooped down to hug the child, she did a little of both.

‘Mom, every time you hold me, I sigh.

clip_image007When you and Daddy come home from work and hug each other, you both sigh.

I knew I would find the right puppy if it sighed when I held it in my arms,’ she said.

Then holding the puppy up close to her face she said, ‘Mom, he loves me. I heard the sighs of his heart!’

Close your eyes for a moment and think about the love that makes you sigh.

I not only find it in the arms of my loved ones, but in the caress of a sunset, the kiss of the moonlight and the gentle brush of cool air on a hot day.

They are the sighs of God.

Take the time to stop and listen; you will be surprised at what you hear.

‘Life is not measured by the breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away.’


On the Yahoo! acquisition

May 6, 2008

I was prepared to write something simple… something about why our "walking away" was the right move to make and that while I was still disappointed that an agreement couldn’t be made, I was proud that our leadership didn’t do anything stupid like up our offer anything ridiculous.  And I was also ready to respond to certain two-bit Northern California hacks in the media announcing how "Microsoft failed" and "Yahoo won" etc.  Ahem.

Then the Wall Street Journal, CNN, and Bloomberg chimed in, among others, and… well… pretty much did the typing for me.


ESPN: You guys are a piece of work

May 6, 2008

This is the kind of shady billing that really chaps my hide.

ESPN INSIDER FORCES SUBSCRIPTION AUTO-RENEW
If you sign up for "ESPN Insider", they actually force you to auto-renew.  This means that one day, you look at your credit card and you see $49 charge from ESPN on there.  No email notification, no nothing.

ESPN.com will automatically renew and charge a Customer’s account as follows:
* Once per month for a Monthly Subscription
* Once every six (6) months for a Six-Month Subscription
* Once per year for an Annual Subscription

I’ve NEVER heard of this.  Usually, they make auto-renewal an optional element of membership for convenience, (in the form of a checkbox or some kind of indicator stating that that was your will) but subscription services NEVER automatically force people to perpetually auto-renew.

NO WAY TO CANCEL ONLINE
And not only do they basically just take your money automatically, then they have no way on their web site of "canceling" your account.  They take the tact of basically making it difficult to cancel your account through obscurity.  I challenge you to try to figure out how to unsubscribe.

I did an Internet search and turned up a phone number to call.

Call 1-888-549-ESPN to cancel an account.
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/news/story?page=help/insider/faq#cancel


“Just Pick One”

May 6, 2008

I’ve seen a lot of political videos on both sides of the fence but this one is definitely one of the funniest!


INFO: Reinstalling Zune Drivers in Windows

May 5, 2008

image Interestingly enough, if you do a repair installation (an Upgrade install over an existing installation) of Windows, Zune’s driver apparently disappears. 

I recently did a repair install myself and to my dismay, my Zune no longer synced when I attached it via the cable to the USB port of my laptop.  Windows said that it needed a driver all of a sudden and when it searched Microsoft Update for the driver, it came back empty.  I pointed to the original install files and no joy:  Windows didn’t find the driver there either.

The obvious solution is to simply uninstall the Zune software and reinstall it, to make sure that the drivers got installed into the OS.  Of course I was a little worried:  I didn’t want to have to reinput all of my podcast URLs – especially since I had no idea where it stored this information on the drive.

Fortunately, all that configuration information remained after I uninstalled the software and reinstalled it.  And as expected, once I did that, Windows picked up my connected Zune immediately and started the process of syncing the new podcasts and clips I’d made available.

So the good news is that the workaround is simple.

The bad news is, why is getting the Zune driver such a pain in the butt?