No Runny Eggs

The repository of one hard-boiled egg from the south suburbs of Milwaukee, Wisconsin (and the occassional guest-blogger). The ramblings within may or may not offend, shock and awe you, but they are what I (or my guest-bloggers) think.

Archive for July 13th, 2007

The “Do Not Disturb” lamp is now lit

by @ 20:01. Filed under Miscellaneous.

“Dogfights” is back with new episodes. Tune into the History Channel NOW!

Flagship console underperforming? How NOT to regain momentum – Part 2

by @ 20:00. Filed under Business.

(H/T – Ace)

Remember that price drop on the 60 GB version of the Playstation 3? Many people, including me, thought it was a move to get the PS3 closer in price to Xbox 360. Well, we were wrong – it is to clear the shelves of the 60 GB in preparation for the upcoming $600 80 GB version.

I now put the odds of the PS3 still being around when Gran Turismo 5 comes out at 33%. If you can forgo the wireless network and HDMI, you can get the “common” version of the Xbox 360 (once called “Xbox 360 Pro” – $400) and the HD DVD player ($200) for $600. If you can forgo the hard drive and HDMI, you can get the “Core” version ($300), the HD DVD player and the wireless network ($100) for $600. If you can forgo the wireless network, you can get the HDMI-equipped Elite ($480) and the HD DVD player, along with a larger hard drive and potential integration with Windows Media Edition 2005/Vista Premium/Vista Ultimate (also available with the other Xbox 360s), for $80 more than the PS3. Morever, unlike the all-at-once solution from Sony, Microsoft allows upgradability (of course, at a price).

Meanwhile, the Wii still chugs along at $250, IF you can find it. Never mind that, other than the trick controller, it is essentially the GameCube, and as such, is about as advanced as the PS2 (indeed, certain games on the PS2 can be run in HD, while the best the Wii can do is ED).

Once again, smooth, Sony. REAL smooth. </sarcasm>

I hope we know where Pakistan’s nukes are

by @ 18:59. Filed under War on Terror.

An American Expat has been outlining the problems that Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf has been having lately. Since shortly after 9/11/2001, he has been walking a tightrope between the Taliban (once offically supported by Pakistan)/Al Qaeda/Saudi-funded madrasas on one side and the US on the other. There’s been mounting evidence that he has slipped off the rope, and the Islamokazis that had backed him prior to his tightrope act are poised to succeed in their attempt to take over Pakistan and its nuclear arsenal.

I strongly suspect that, if that happens and nothing is done to either secure or destroy Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal, said arsenal will depart Pakistan for detonation in the West and Israel instead of its intended targets in India. However, I just as strongly suspect that the US does have contingency plans for securing and destroying that arsenal should an Islamist group take control in Pakistan.

Friday video

by @ 18:29. Filed under Miscellaneous.

No, you did not misread that. With no Vent this week from the folks at Hot Air, and Mary Katharine Ham hiring a new producer and thus delaying HamNation, we have but one video – The Original Friday Freefly from Uncle Jimbo, in which he lays the smackdown on the Defeato-DhimmiRATs.

Prayers for the Hansen family

by @ 12:43. Filed under Miscellaneous.

It is so easy to have this happen

Madison "” State Sen. Dave Hansen (D-Green Bay) said his granddaughter died after she ran behind his car as he was backing out of his Green Bay home at about 8:40 a.m. today.

Hansen said the accident killed, Elliana Zaidel, his granddaughter, who would have been 2 on Wednesday.

Hansen said neither he nor his wife, Jane, knew the child had left the home before the accident.

"Ellie adored her grandfather and she was the apple of his eye," said the statement issued by Hansen’s office. "Sen. Hansen is in deep shock and currently attending to the needs of his family. The family requests understanding and respect for their privacy at this time of deep loss and family tragedy and ask people to keep them in their prayers."

The old eggstor.com domain should be moved to Bluehost presently

by @ 11:58. Filed under Miscellaneous.

I’ve got the registration moved over, the files that I had over there moved over, and a request to move the name servers to Bluehost’s name servers in. I even got the old blog’s domain over with a redirect set up to here, so once the name server changes propogate through the Web, it’s buh-bye Yahoo.

Let the fear-mongering begin

by @ 8:55. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin, Taxes.

I’m surprised that the Journtinel didn’t split this into umpteen stories instead of the two they did split it into, or do this in a day-by-day drumbeat. Let’s explode this one by one:

“Wah! Milwaukee just can’t spend less than it did last year!” – NRE has issued a Crying River Flood Warning for Milwaukee City Hall and Milwaukee Public Schools headquarters. Since Milwaukee Public Schools doesn’t maintain old budgets online, let’s take a look at the city of Milwaukee budget between FY2003 (the year before the first Doyle budget took effect) and FY2006 (the last year population estimates are available for proper comparison). The city conveniently has a page on their site that summarizes the main budget numbers between FY1988 and FY2006, and that includes not only the amount of total authorized spending (the “Total City budget” line), but the amount of state shared revenue. Despite a drop in state revenue from $249,921,000 in FY2003 to $239,725,000 in FY2006 ($10,196,000 for the math-challenged among you, or 4.08%), and a drop in population from 585,059 in July 2003 (the day after FY 2003 ended) to 573,358 in July 2006 (11,701, or 2.00%), total spending increased from $1,062,827,429 in FY2003 to $1,211,186,519 in FY2006 ($148,359,090, or 13.96%). Inflation was 9.57% over the same period, so if one were to factor both inflation and population loss, if spending were to have remained constant per person, Milwaukee should have increased spending by only 7.38%. Instead, spending increases outstripped the combined effects of inflation and population loss at a 1.61% annual rate.

Somehow, I doubt that MPS showed any more restraint than the city between 2003 and 2006, and I know neither showed restraint last year. They could both use a trim, and a 3.5% trim to put them back at per-taxpayer/per-student FY2006 levels is a good start.

Oh, and Milk Carton. Where were you and your concern for the taxpayers of Milwaukee when your buddy Craps slashed and burned shared revenue to Milwaukee County to try and punish Scott Walker as he was contempating a gubernatorial run? Oh that’s right; unlike you, Walker knows how to live within his means, even as he gets sabotaged by a tax-and-spend County Board.

“Wah! Without massive state subsidies, we won’t have Ambert Alerts anymore!” – NRE has issued a Crying River Flood Warning for Wisconsin Public Radio and a Crying River Flood Watch for Dane County Public Safety Communications Center. While WPR is currently the main dissemination source of statewide activations of the Emergency Alert System, the main EAS system is designed to be quite robust. Indeed, WTMJ-AM/WKTI-FM (Milwaukee’s Local Primary-1 stations) have the same direct link to the state Emergency Operations Center, which creates the statewide activation of the EAS outside of Amber Alerts, that the WPR stations that are the State Relay stations have through WPR’s dedicated monitoring studio (I don’t know if Rhinelander’s SR station, a non-WPR station, has that link to WPR’s monitoring studio yet). All the other LP-1 and LP-2 stations monitor WTMJ, either through a dedicated ISDN line or through a satellite, and have a spare monitoring slot that can be hooked into the state EOC.

Why the lawmakers chose to bypass the state EOC and create a separate activation authority for Amber Alerts, and incorporate only one dissemination channel through WPR, is beyond a sane person’s comprehension. Further, seeing that there already is one private radio station that is a SR station, there needs to be no requirement that the remainder remain welfare radio stations.

“Wah! We won’t be able to make UWM/Wisconsin State University into a rival for the Madistan campus!” – NRE has issued a Crying River Flood Warning for UWM. News flash; we can’t afford two huge public universities, especially with UWM undercutting UW-Madison’s tuition.

“Wah! We can’t possibly make those getting into the most-lucrative business in Wisconsin pay anything approaching what their education is worth!” – NRE has issued a Crying River Flood Warning for the University of Wisconsin Law School. Lawyers, especially in Craps’ Wisconsin, stand to make a mint. Why in the hell can’t they pay $17,000 in tuition? And don’t give me the “It would make Madistan’s law school among the most-expensive in the Big 10.” Last time I checked, Northwestern was the only private university in the Big 10.

“Wah! We can’t possibly keep overpaying nutjob lecturers and offering everybody backup jobs on just a 3.1% annual increase in taxpayer subsidies!” – NRE has issued a Crying River Flood Warning for the entire University of Wisconsin system. In a high-tax, low-income state, we can’t afford the 8.7% annual increase in the subsidy to the money pit known as the UW system the ‘Rats want.

Revisions/extensions (10:17 pm 7/13/2007) – Corrected something related to how the EAS operates.

[No Runny Eggs is proudly powered by WordPress.]