Intel's Ronler Acres Plant

Silicon Forest
If the type is too small, Ctrl+ is your friend

Saturday, January 13, 2024

Screw Your Electronic Dodads

Tubes delivered documents from the floor of a typewriter factory in England in 1954.
Walter Nurnberg / Hulton Archive / Getty Images

No, it's not the German Chancellory, but it is the coolest picture I could find of a pneumatic tube system.

From a report on RT

Berlin’s concerns over possible espionage have led to distrust in more modern message delivery techniques, a report has claimed

German leader Olaf Scholz has shelved plans to phase out a 19th century-era pneumatic tube system that is being used in Berlin’s chancellery to distribute about 1,000 documents per month amid fears that more modern electronic systems may pose an espionage risk, a report by Der Spiegel has claimed.

For decades, Germany’s government headquarters has relied upon the archaic system, which uses compressed air to send capsules containing documents between 36 stations inside the building. The network costs just $16,000 to operate annually – far less than some other more sophisticated electronic message delivery methods.

The documents are often “generally urgent transactions that cannot be forwarded electronically or via house courier service, for example, because they are subject to secrecy or have to be signed in the original,” a government spokesman said, according to Der Spiegel on Thursday.

The network of tubes was intended to be phased out by 2025. Still, according to a report by the German daily Suddeutsche Zeitung, Scholz has put those plans on hold – with the newspaper citing concerns over an alleged increase in Russian espionage attempts since the onset of the conflict in Ukraine in February 2022 as the primary reason.

Time to trot out the old saw about houses and locks. When people first started using computers nobody was worried about the security of the data because nobody else had a computer that could process it. As more people got computers they discovered that these things could be handy, kind of like when people first started building houses. They weren't worried about someone breaking in because there weren't any locks. But then somebody realized that there weren't any locks and started walking in and stealing stuff. So people started putting locks on their doors and we've been doing it ever since. Computers are still trying to figure out what locks work and what locks don't, The guys who are good at figuring out how to make locks for computers are the same guys who are good at figuring how to break those locks, so it's probably going to be a while before we have a system we can agree on. Given the nature of computers it may not even be possible to build a really secure system. And given the rampant corruption running around loose in the world, even a truley secure system can be compromised.


Leave the Bar

What the absolute fuck


Blog List

I just updated the list of Blogs I Read. For some reason it only shows the first ten, you have to click on Show All to see all 24 of them. There are other blogs I read occasionally, notably According to Hoyt. I generally like what she has to say, but she's not on the list because her posts are too long for me so I seldom read them.

I also added a list of media sites that I follow. ZeroHedge is written by Tyler Durden, the lead character in Fight Club. If you haven't seen that movie you should go see it. 

I used to read Aljazeera, but ever since the massacre in Israel this fall it's been all evil Jews all the time. Aljazeera is funded by the government of Qatar, and Qatar is rumored to be providing safe haven for Hamas leaders. It's too bad because they used to have some good stories. I wonder who is going to be willing to protect Qatar when the Israelis come calling. Will it be Russia or the USA? I suspect Israel won't care, as soon as they finish with Hamas stooges in Gaza they will be going after the Hamas leaders wherever they are.


Friday, January 12, 2024

Patsy Cline-Walkin' After Midnight


Patsy Cline-Walkin' After Midnight
shygal2007

I dropped the girls at the Tina Fey / Amy Poehler show, so Ross and I went out to Bar 3 to have a drink while we waited for the show to be over and this tune came on. Haven't heard it in a long time.


Rocket the Kasbah

Tam has a post up about this morning's air strike by the US Navy on the Houthis, with video.

MV Agusta Motorcycle

MV Agusta

This MV Agusta motorcycle is likely a 1972 model. When this model was introduced in 1966 it was the first production motorcycle with a four cylinder transverse engine. The Honda CB750 with the same transverse engine layout was introduced in 1969. 

The MV Agusta displaced 750 cc and used DOHC (Dual Over Head Camshafts). It also used a shaft to drive the rear wheels instead of a chain. This is kind of nuts since you need to use two sets of right angle gears to transfer power to the rear wheel. I don't know of anyone else who has done this. I've heard of MV Augusta motorcycles before, but only in the context of racing. This is not surprising since the MV Agusta cost $6,500 and the Honda only cost a shade over $2,000.

Wikipedia has a long article about the history of this Italian company and the variety of motorcycles and other machines that they built.


The IBM 360 Will Roll Right Over You


Reading & Northern 2102 blasts out of Port Clinton
SteamTrainVideos.com

JMSmith points out a post by Richard Cocks - Oh, For a Competent Elite - wherein he bemoans the state of our world and as an example tells us of some trouble he has had with air travel, which prompted me to comment:

Airlines, like Amazon and credit card companies use large computer systems. They mostly work, but when they fail, any attempt to correct the error is going to be an exercise in frustration. Don’t waste your time. Arguing with one of these systems is like arguing with a freight train. You can yell all you want but the train don’t care and if you try to impede them they will roll right over you and crush you flat. I don’t know but I suspect that problems with airlines can be alleviated by buying first class tickets.