Business
Why Verizon won’t be taking over Charter anytime soon
I have plenty of positive things to say about both companies even if Charter suffered through financial troubles and Verizon’s services is still quite expensive.
You would think that two companies of which one provides some pretty good Internet service and a fairly decent channel line up and another company known for its excellent phone service and outstanding wireless internet coverage would be interested in joining forces against their rivals at AT&T, right?
WRONG! Sadly, these two modest contenders are not at all happy with each other and the St. Louis area doesn’t really know it. Then of course there are the lawsuits between Charter and Verizon. (Note to self: Insert picture of two grown men sissy-fighting with each other in relationship to how these two companies are behaving.)
Charter is still a cable based internet service provider, whereas Verizon can not find a place in the St. Louis market to provide their FTTx (a.k.a. FiOS) service in the St. Louis area. So the duopoly between Charter and AT&T still exists in the St. Louis area in terms of High-Speed Internet service. (Unless of course, Google comes to bless us with whatever they plan on giving out. PLEASE COME HERE, GOOGLE!)
Meanwhile, Verizon, who beat the snot out of AT&T in both Consumer Reports and Zagats consumer ratings this winter, is still both a wireless carrier competing with AT&T, Sprint, and T-Mobile not only provides wireless phone service but wireless Internet as well.
One of the great things about Verizon is that I can use my Motorola Droid and tether it to my netbook using a program called PDANet.
Since it has been a while since I have blogged, I think I should explain some of the details of my netbook.
In February, I became involved with a group called a hackerspace. The local hackerspace group, Arch Reactor, had an open house meeting that I ‘m pretty happy that I went to and joined the group. (Hence no time for blogging as of late.) Most of the time we hang around and talk about making stuff (not necessarily hacking, but also art, electronics including Ardruino, woodworking, robotics, and a bit of gardening).
Since most of the guys bring their laptops or netbooks, I used some of my rainy-day funds to buy a refurbished HP Mini from someone on eBay. It was probably one one of the best purchases I made. The computer is in great condition (with exception for a little scratch on the bottom of the computer), there is an extra-long lasting Lithium-ion battery on it. And it still runs Windows XP.
So what if I don’t have Vista or 7 on this thing? Most of the time I am either on the Internet or using UNIX-like program with Cygwin as well as an arsenal of other free open-source software available for Windows. To which I’ve tossed out just about all the software that comes on this system. Norton Internet Security (TRIALWARE! Annoying as hell!), Microsoft Office (Trialware! Use OpenOffice.org instead!), Microsoft Works (Crap). I wish I could toss out Internet Explorer, especially since I am using Chrome. But I figured, the less Microsoft stuff I have to use, the less of a security threat I can be subject to. On top of that, XP is stable enough to do some fancy computer stuff like changing the startup animation, the login screen, and replacing the GUI interface.
Anyway, back to PDANet.
PDANet is probably the best $20 worth of software that you will ever spend if you are both the owner of a Motorola Droid or other Android enabled device and the owner of a Netbook with Windows or Mac on it.
Using your phone and your computer to tether with each other to have wireless Internet is downright awesome. I would have almost have been tempted to cancel my Charter subscription if only Verizon didn’t allow any other ports to be used for things like IRC chat, SSH, or even Usenet. (AT&T is the same way, so I can probably speculate and say that every other wireless provider also is not really all that keen at the moment to use any other port than the ones used for web browsing.)
Clearly, Verizon (and its rivals) have issues still with people using their network for doing things other than downloading stupid videos of cats playing the keyboard. But like any computer system that can be modified (even Windows and Android), there is a way around it.
Having a netbook is does not mean the retirement of my old Linux system that I built myself. In fact, it opens the door to allowing for me to better my computer skills and to attempt to make the two computers communicate with each other (of which despite their form factor have pretty much the same abilities and hardware standards for the most part).
My loyal Linux machine is in need for some hardware upgrades that due to the current economy, it was much cheaper to find a netbook to take care of some of the dirty work that the Linux machine could have. That and the netbook is about 20 decibels quieter than the Linux Machine. An issue that is on my todo list when I head out to Micro Center, when and if the Missouri state legislature (particularly Cynthia Davis and Jane Cunningham) pull the head out of their butts and realize that a socialized healthcare system is the reform this country needs to get people back to work. The same can be said about the Tea Party which is also threatening to kill Metro. (Vote YES on Proposition A on April 6th! I like riding the bus, but if adding a half-cent sales tax to cut the time I spend commuting to and from Downtown (which is an hour!) is wrong, then I definitely don’t want to be right!)
Compainies firing workers to boost their corporate profits, executive bonuses
It is as if the executives in corporate America think we have “stupid” tatooed on our foreheads.
About a year ago, InBev bought Anheuser Busch to form AB InBev. InBev stated they woud save jobs, which they didn’t. InBev laid off workers while at the same time sheding Busch Theme Parks. And while beer sales are slumping and jobs are being cut, AB InBev reported they made a better profit this year.
But it is not just the world wide distributor of beer that has reported that they’ve made a better profit this year and that the guys on top get to keep their jobs and get a larger than average bonus this year while sacking workers. Citigroup, Bank of America, AIG, GM and Crystler, all reporting an increase in profit, while service, products, and employees all get cut out.
In other words, the guys on top save their own ass, and tell everyone else “your on your own”.
As unemployment spills over 10.2%, the rich get richer, the middle class is being pushed into the lower class, and the lower class have no where to go.
Chances are if you have graduated college in the past couple of years, you are unemployed or working in a low paying job. Although it may seem like the military looks like a way to make money, if you have no interest in fighting in combat or are not physically able to give the military 20 years of your time to serve your country, then DON’T! You can serve your country in other ways, but at this time thouse government agencies are not hiring anyone with a short resume.
It is quite clear that the country is run by a very small, wealthy minority. The private sector continues to show that at this current time, their only interest is to look out for themselves.
We see this when the best military in the world can’t get the manpower or functioning equipment they need to complete a war that has lasted for far too long. The president can send as may troops the generals need, but as long as the private sector sells the same weapons to our enemies as they do with our allies, the war continues at the expense of the people and the families that suffer. But it is no problem for the executives at the top that are double dealing. To them, War is money. The longer the war goes on, the more money they can take from the government.
We see this when not just manufacturing, but white collar work, is outsourced overseas. The free trade model has moved our jobs to China. America is not the only country where jobs are moving to China. Japan, Austraila, Europe, Canada, even Mexico have seen jobs move to China.
Ah, but now China wants total control over foreign patents. Foreign companies now must decide if they still want stay in China, where there is abundant cheap labor and laxed environmental regulations, or go back home an restart manufacturing here. If you are an coporate executive, you don’t care about ideas, labor issues, or the environment. Your interest is to sell whatever you can and build them as cheap as possible and still make a profit even if the product or service sucks.
The Chinese will soon be showing us the hubris of these executives.
Finally, to futher the madness of corporate America’s irrational behavior, there is the issue of healthcare. If your job can provide you with adequate private insurance, and the insurance company is not in the business of finding some way to prove that whatever is ailing you is benign, then more power to you.
However, for the rest of us, especially the unemployed, recently unempolyed, and those in poverty, we don’t have such good fortune to have a doctor on call who will actually look at what is wrong and not pretend there is nothing wrong because you have no medical coverage or the insurance company tells the doctor to ignore it.
It would be great to have a job. It would be great to have insurance. It would be great to let the capitalist system of government leave the private sector alone so that the private sector could do whatever it likes. However, we can’t. Not when people can’t tell the difference between consumerism and capitalism. Not when people can’t tell the difference between socialism and communism. Not when corporations distort the defintions of these words during a time when unemployment is high, wars seem everlasting, and a pandemic is infecting the world but the sick can’t see a doctor because they can’t afford it. And especially when corporations free themselves of being responble for any bad behavior they do.
When the capitalist system fails because it has perverted the idea that consumerism (in which people buy things) not capitalism (in which people save up for things) jumpstarts the economy, then defends this faux capitalism that only serve the people on the top by excluding everyone not just at the bottom but all people that are not at the top, then tells the people who have lost their jobs and benefits “don’t go to the big bad government” and “government run programs are bad and are socialism” (where they use socialism not as the intended word of a system serving the people, but as a synonym for communism), then continue to operate this system for a very long time, people will ultimately become stressed. They will comit crimes, unaware that it is OK to ask for assitance until it is too late. That if several people in the same predicimate can’t convince the government to help them because some corporate lobbyist made an exception to the rules or put in something to kill the bill to provide relief during a time of suffering and recession, they can do this instead of hurt other people.
The corporate system is based on greed and jealousy. Why should you suffer because you were fired so your employer could get a raise especially if you did a good job and didn’t have a poor performance record? Why should the next genereation of the workforce be paid less than there parents if they’ve recieved a better education and have worked to live a better life than their folks have?
We’ve been told that “hey, you shouldn’t pay you taxes” while at the same time accept the cost of rising fuel prices, the loss of alternatives when it comes to shopping, cheap breakable goods from big box stores, diminishing water, food, and environment quality, failing schools, high health cost, and small government, all so that small minority can preserve their way of life.
To call these feeling “raging against the machine” or to say “there is nothing you can do about it” and to actually do nothing about it endorses the continuity of the status quo, no mater who you vote for.
We have a great, intellegent leader as president right now. And everyone who has stalled or shotdown any of his plans to do something or to save jobs, lives, and property has done this because they have everything they need and people to provide it for them until suddenly they are themselves inconvienced either by their own family or someone they know needs something done. Suddenly, autism is a big deal because some senator or corporate excutive has a child with autism. Military spending becomes a big deal because someone’s best friend is joining the military. Automobile safe becomes a big issue because they were in a car accident recently. The environment becomes an issue because they suck at hunting or fishing and wonder where are all the wild critters they saw as a child.
Things shouldn’t be done because the lawmakers are affected by them. They should be done because at some point everyone is going to need something they want that the government can help them with, no strings attatched.
Yet, people feel threatened when the president gives a speech to school children. They feel threatened by his endorsement of public healthcare. They feel threatened that he might not provide more than enough or less than enough (in that they want the exact number, nothing more or less) troops to end our wars, apprehend terrorists, and secure our country. They feel threatened by fair trade, efficent cars, workers with benefits and insurance. They feel threatend because some uberliberal California law maker created a federal madate to preserve some turtles living in farmland that needs water for irrigation. (A more moderate liberal would have provided an alternative to support the farmers and the turtles…like rerouting where the water comes from.) And they feel threaten that they have to pay more on taxes which mathematics–which is NOT partisan–says they have to anyway.
And these people have hired voices to tell those without “don’t seek out, stay where you are!” And they are concerned that the country is falling apart.
If the healthcare bill fails in the Senate–or is thwarted by some partisan action to preserve the status quo–expect a new group of individuals to come out of the wood work to take down the fearmongers that preserve the stats quo. Because after a while, people will realizes that yes they have had enough and it is not the fault of the guy in the Oval Office. It is the guys in the high rise office buildings who right now are worried for their lives that some angry mob will try to harm them because they now have more than anybody else because they have take more than they deserve.
The TEA Party is misguided or they are misguiding. They are standing up for the rich minority either because they are the rich minority or they are to ignorant to realize they are supporting their oppressors. You will find that many of the TEA Party supporters still are employed, still are better off than the majority of this country that is suffering, and rarely–if in any case–part of or wish to identify themselves as part of the 10.2% that is unemployed.
You will not go to jail for not buying health insurance or using public healthcare. The country is not headed towards communism, it is headed toward oligarchy, to which to stave off the oligarchs, social programs need to be reinstated or installed.
America is hungry for the change that they asked for, and the president wants to deliver, but it is the status quo that continues to deny the things that we have worked hard for.
Disney Takes Over Marvel. WORST. MERGER. EVER.

"Worst. Merger. Ever."
Being a comic book fan, one of the advantages that Marvel had was that it was its own company. Where as DC Comics is a subsidary of Time Warner.
Well, those days are looking to come to an end. Earily this morning, Disney announced the purchase of Marvel for about $4 Billion. It would also mean that Disney would acquire the intellectual property of Marvels 5000 characters.
Disney is no stranger to comics. In the late 1980s and earily 1990s, Disney had their own publishing group Disney Comics. Anyone who remember Disney Adventures magazine is also no stranger to Disney’s work in comics. This lasted until 2007 when the maganzine closed up. In 2005, it developed a partnership with Slave Labor Graphics (Milk & Cheese, Squee, Rex Libris) to redevelop various Disney properties in comic book form like Tron, Haunted Mansion, and Gargoyles.
So far, the larger websites that cover comic book news have had mixed opinions of the Disney-Marvel Merger. Largely becase they repersent the consumers and the publishers, not the business men at the top.
Disney has offered $30/share for MVL stock in exchange for 3/4 of a share of DIS. Why not a whole piece? I mean, even from a business perspective, its like saying you want to trade your whole sandwich for a sandwich that was quarter eaten. Hopefully, MVL shareholders will reject the takeover.
Disney has also assure consumers that if the takeover goes through it would not affect the production of various Marvel movies with Paramount (Iron Man 2), Sony (Spider-Man series), Fox (X-Men), and Universal (The Incredible Hulk).
Still, if you are like me and don’t buy comics from either DC or Marvel–not out of protest but for a different reason that I will explain–you can always get comics from other publishers. As mentioned above, Slave Labor Graphics is one of them. Top Cow Productions (Witchblade, Wanted), Dark Horse Comics (Hellboy), IDW Publishing (30 Days of Night), Oni Press, Devil’s Due Publishing (Hack/Slash), Image Comics (Todd McFarlane’s Spawn), New England Comics (The Tick!), Aspen Comics (Michael Turner’s Fathom, soon to be a movie staring Megan Fox), and Top Shelf Productions. There’s also manga and web comics.
Overall, the smaller publishers seem to do a better job than DC and Marvel because the have a larger degree of freedom to do thinks with smaller audiences. DC’s Wildstorm and Vertigo imprints are also good, but if you really want to enjoy comics, check out the ones from the publishers in the previous paragraph and definitely check out web comics.
But if anything happens like “Hanna Montana: Herald of Galaticus” or “Jonas Brothers meet the Fantastic 4″ happen, then it’s all over for Marvel.
No Love for Big Box Stores: Best Buy is a Bad Buy
In order to raise awareness of local merchants, the a Local Shopping category has been added to this blog.
Best Buy is trying to move in on the musical instrument business with the hype generated by Guitar Hero and Rockband, Best Buy is now planning on selling musical instruments on top of the home theatre, home audio, computer equiment, computer service, home appliances, movies, music, and video games. A store that tries to sell everying? Does this sound familiar?
Having run their competition out of business only to be resurected online, Best Buy is now setting their sights on Musical Instrument Retailers like Hazelwood’s Dale’s Music or Clayton’s Ron Busch Guitar Studio. Athough Best Buy is more than likely interested in taking out a much larger entity: Guitar Center.
While Best Buy lacks alot of what Musicians offer (lessons, stuido for recording music, better quality of products), it shouldn’t stop musicians or consumers for that matter from making a visit to IHateBestBuy.com.
The smaller stores need to mobilize quickly to prevent the Big Box Stores from putting them down.
Advertising coming eventually
According to WebsiteOutlook.com the combined assets of this website and its predicessor currently have a net worth of about $2200. In the five years that the old website has been online, it has manage to make itself worth about $1200, where as in the five months that this website has been online, it has earned a net worth of $970. Either through web robots or actual clicks, this site manages to recieve 111 hits per day while making a small $1.33 per day in advertising revenue, which is ironic considering that there are no advertisments on this website yet, just links to other websites that are worth endorsing.
I recently added quite a few links to local businesses and blogs in order to increase the awareness that these companies exist. Some companies did not make the cut primarely due to the fact that they run their company out of their home rather than an office building or commercial retail area. (It sucks working from home. Especially if you don’t have any co-workers to collaborate with at a reasonable meeting place.)
Seeing as how quickly this site is accumulating net worth, though not at the rate of what Google or Yahoo! make, I am considering making a layout change in the future such that I can ad a box for advertising with Project Wonderful.
The folks at Google are not very keen about advertising on websites for blogs that may sometime discuss topics such as hacking, energy independence, politics, or anything controversial. Generally, when they are discussed here, it to raise awareness of subjects that are not racy gossip or scandel. There are pleanty of those website. By adding a stream of revenue to this website, it is our hope that this website will attract a larger audience, increase business for the local links, and put a dent in the mediocrity that journalism pushes.

A Waterskiing squirrel is amusing, but it is NOT news!
So help out the St. Louis and Missouri blogosphere and economy. Spread the word that we are out here!
Systemax picks up the remains of Circuit City
Systemax, Inc. announced the resurrection of the Circuit City name and trademark this week and plans to relaunch CircuitCity.com.
Systemax bought the rights to the CompUSA name in 2008 after the computer retail giant collapsed in 2007. The relaunch of CompUSA.com did spur the relaunch of about 30 stores, mostly in Texas and Florida.
This acquisition of intellectual property does not mean that the local Circuit City will be reopening anytime soon. That’s bad news for folks who like to browse around for items in real life. On the other hand, its never too late to send Systemax a letter asking them to relauch the local store. (This means you, mall manager of the St. Louis Mills. The place just hasn’t been the same since Circuit City folded. Tell them to bring it back!)
Having the name and trademark doesn’t amount to anything. It is like paying for the rights to call myself Barack Obama when I really am not the real Barack Obama.
If you are wondering what the new CircuitCity.com will look like, look at CompUSA.com or TigerDirect.com.
Best Buy and Wal-mart are already working to send their disinformation teams to quietly finish off Circuit City for good as attempts by the Big Box Stores to purchase the intellectual property as well as take control of the consumer electronic market.
From past experiences, I’ve found purchases of consumer electronics from the Big Boxes to be mediocre. Wal-mart is no exception with its censored music selection. (It’s cheap for a reason. Support your local record store!) If you are going to go out and buy that new television or new video game system, your better off getting it from an consumer electronics retailer, not a Big Box Store.
Twitter to Big TechCos: Take a hike!
Twitter has told the guys at Apple, Google, Microsoft, and everyone else eyeing to buy the mobile blogging service that they are not for sale.
In a world where big businesses acquire their rivals in an effort that is to ultimately a ploy to snuff out competition, Twitter has made a good decision.
Being offered money means nothing unless you can maintain control. Of which Apple, Google, Microsoft, Facebook, News Corp (owners of MySpace) seem to offer money, but never any control by the original owner.
In St. Louis, we have seen the cost of the surrender of ownership. Factories close down. Philanthophic assests terminated. Jobs losts and businesses moved elsewhere.
Had Anheuser-Busch made the same decision as Twitter, the St. Louis would still be the corporate headquarters of the company.
In order to run any business, a company should have steadfast leadership. It should never be sold if the business is doing well (such as having a product or service that customers use often or depend on) and should only sellout if the company is not making a sufficent profit to keep operating or maintain stability, or unless there is fair mutuality.
Business leaders should also consider the welfare of their workers. Most people don’t really like their employer well enough to be friends with them. With the advent of social networking, many employees choose to keep their employer out of their list of friends especially if they are young or like to party. The horror stories in the media where some guy gets fired because he posted pictures of himself at a bachlor party for his friends only to be fired by his uber-conservative stick-in-the-mud boss the next day doesn’t exactly encourage people on Facebook or MySpace to add their supervisor to their buddy list.
Just because you have a job doesn’t mean you have to settle down. (That is what marriage is for! *rimshot*)
What you do outside of work, not on work property, not during work hours, and not with any thing relating to the company should not be of any concern of the employer. Unless the company finds out that you are dating the boss’s daughter or selling company secrets, their is no reason for them to pry into what you do outside of work. Remember that trust depends on mutuality. If the company does not trust you to do your job, why should you in trust them to not finding an excuse to fire you for things that should never threaten your job security?
Good leadership requires employers to be stern, but not make their employees feel miserable or afraid. You can still be friends with your boss, just don’t be a brownnoser or add him to your social network. If anything, have a separate account for business.
Yahoo! killing GeoCities (It’s not the first time they’ve done this)
Much like a surly landlord who doesn’t take care of the apartment complex he owns tosses out all of his tenants, Yahoo! has decided to toss everybody out.
GeoCities was where I first started developing webpages, until Yahoo! moved in, took everything over, owned Webring (which was terrible!).
Frustrated with Yahoo!’s shenanigans with GeoCities, I moved to another free webhosting service, which abrupting died near the end of the Dot Com Bubble. It was there that I moved to Blogspot until I was able to scroung up enough money for my own webdomain in 2004.
Meanwhile, Yahoo! deleted EVERYTHING that I had that I could have used on a resume dating back to 2000, when I moved to Yahoo! after Excite wiped out all the e-mail that I was not able to archive.
So this really is not the first time that Yahoo! has taken stuff of the Internet without notifying users. But this time is different.
In what may be the coming signs that Microsoft and Yahoo! are about to tie the knot, Yahoo! is killing off a free service that MSN does not have: Free Web Hosting.
While there are advantages to paid webhosting (MySQL databases, SSH, a domain name), free webhosting is always a good place to start to get you feet wet on the Internet. It’s how I got started in web development and eventually computer programming.
Callaway County Nuclear Plant Bill Nuked!
After spouting off untruths like “Greenpeace [rather Patrick Moore who was kicked out of Greenpeace] approves of nuclear power” and “Nuclear Power is renewable energy”, the State Capitol killed the Missouri Clean and Renewable Energy Construction Act.
First off, nuclear power is NOT a renewable source of energy. It can be advertised as an “alternative” to coal, oil, or natural gas, but it is certainly NOT renewable.
Secondly, nuclear power is NOT clean energy. Aside from the waste produced by nuclear reactors, there is the radiation. Science tells us that pretty much everything is radioactive to a certain degree. The human body produces radiation but at very low levels. This non-ionizing radiation is given off as body heat. But the radiation given off by enriched uranium, a common fuel used in nuclear reactors, is poisionous due to the ionizing radiation released the various isotopes. So much so that when it is handle, it is packaged in layers of concrete. Until there is some way to scrub out the radiation, be it from peaceful usage of nuclear power or the horrors of nuclear weapons, nuclear material will remain the most dirty form of energy next to coal.
Finally, nuclear power is NOT green energy. There is nothing “green” about radioactive waste. The tranportation of it is also not green. While it chance that the truck carrying it to the waste being stollen or in an accident are very low, the waste still has to be packed up in concrete again and transported to someplace underground where it could seep into a water table. It also takes many years for some of the leftover isotopes to decay. Many of the half-lifes of the most hazardous elements have half-lifes that are couted in centuries. Most garbage in a common landfill would decay many times over compared to the waste. Even the concrete that contains them would crumble before the waste decays.
But business men do not understand that. All they see is a way to make money over a relatively short amount of time.
In recent months, we have seen the work of their ilk, even watch as some of them die off from thier addiction to greed. I’ll admit, I’d like to be rich some day, but at a much slower rate.
Unless you are willing to pay the burdens of higher taxes that come with the luxtury of a higher income, what is there to complain about?
These $400,000 per year executives moaning over a 33% income tax by the federal government have no reason to complan, especially since the math is in their favor. 33% of $400,000 is $132,000 in taxes. Keep in mind they still have 66% of that $400,000 to keep. Which is $264,000 to do whatever the heck they want. More than likely, have of that will go into investments that still make them money. Still, that is $132,000 of money they can still spend annually, while if for some instance they put the other half of that $132,000 in an Investment Savings Account with a rate of 0.15%, it would take atleast 7 years for them to make a million dollars in comparison to a person making $40,000 per year, who is taxed 10% (leaving them with $36,000 depositing half of that into savings each year) it would take 53 years. For someone making $100,000 being taxed 25%, it would take 26 years. Of course, these figures don’t account for pay raises or other stuff taken out of a paycheck.
Overall, they’re living a pretty good life. So what do they have to be unhappy about? Not enough sand near their vacation house in the Hamptons?
It’s one thing to write out one of those giant checks to a foundation, it is another to go out of your way and actually do something good for others.
What good is it being rich when you don’t do anything to help those who aren’t. I don’t mean work at a soup kitchen. If you’re running a energy company and are making even in your sleep, why aren’t you investing in affordable RENEWABLE energy, of which you can make more money since the system pays for itself when properly maintained?
There are people who have been laid off in Grantie City and Ameren wants to build a nuclear plant? Why don’t they build it out of steel made in India and anger hundreds of steel workers while they are at it?
Ameren will attempt to sneak this bill in again, just wait and see.
And if that doesn’t work, they will attempt to make it appear like we are running out of energy by imposing rolling blackouts for a power shortage that does not exist. Didn’t someone else try doing that? *cough*Enron*cough*
We don’t need a bill to change the rules. We need a bill that creates REAL renewable energy and creates new jobs in an area that need it.
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