Around the Town in Oakmont PA

My thoughts and musings on life, technology and living in my adopted home town.

Tuesday, January 31, 2006

Sherman set the way back machine...........

For those of you old enough to remember there was a major story in Pittsburgh fifty years ago today. It was on January 31st, 1956 that that a B-25 bomber crashed into the Monongahela River and sank in full view of the public. Over the years this story has attained the status of an “X-File” because the aircraft supposedly was never found. There are a number of theories some of which include the possibility that the plane was carrying atomic weapons and was spirited away in the middle of the night. The fact remains that to this day no one has every found the remains of the airplane even though at best we are talking about water only twenty feet in depth in the river. One of the great Pittsburgh mysteries.

Monday, January 23, 2006

I'm sorry I just couldn't let it pass.....

I know in a previous posting I said I would reserve my ranting for another time but as I prepared for bed I was reminded where some of my friends will be tomorrow and what they will be doing all day. I hope next year to be in better health so that I can join them. Latter today they and a number of other people from the Pittsburgh area will be talking about “the buss” and it will have nothing to do with Sunday's victory over the Denver Bronco's.

Instead they will be talking about the buss that they will board to make the trip to Washington DC where they will join with others from all over the tristate area and the rest of the country. There they will make their feeling know to our elected representatives about the serious injustice that continues to take place in our nation. That is the taking of millions of innocent lives of unborn children some in a manner so despicable that when described in detail you would believe you are hearing some grotesque tale from a World War II death camp. And no, I am not exaggerating for effect, this is a fact!

As a human being I believe that when history looks back on our time from the future we will be judged very harshly for permitting these atrocities to continue, and make no mistake, atrocities are what they are. As a Christian I believe the Holy Bible when it tells me that a day will come when we all will stand before God to be judged. I have grave fear of what his judgment will be in this matter that our generation, in this nation, has permitted these acts to be visited on the most defenseless of one of his greatest gifts to us. I hope all of you will keep those that travel to protest this injustice in your prayers and that you will continue to pray for leadership in our government that will bring these practices to an end.

And now on to Detroit! ! !

It has been quite some time since I had “Steeler fever” but I think it may be going around. After the stadium debacle where the will of the voters was thwarted even after they made their wishes know at the ballot box I had a very sour taste in my mouth for any of the professional sports teams in Pittsburgh. I still have a problem with the amount of attention lavished on these teams by the community when all of that passion could be directed to other things that could use the support and enthusiasm of the people of the city and the surrounding areas that would go a long way toward making this a better place to live.

I will however save that rant for another time. For now I hope the team and all of those that support them will relish in their victory today and wish them the best for their next contest in Detroit. My hat is off to the Pittsburgh Steelers for a hard fought season and a well earned AFC championship.

Thursday, January 19, 2006

Quill pens, ink wells and ledger books

I saw a news story recently that I found interesting since it concerns a topic that I have been talking about with friends and relativities for some time now. It is one that we all should be thinking about in this day and age as it has a direct effect on our everyday lives.

What I'm talking about is the idea of a national identification card. The news story announced by our Secretary of State and the head of Homeland Security proposes that we make use of modern technology to replace the current passport for crossing the northern and southern land borders into the United States.

The implications of and the reasoning behind this plan are obvious even to those that don't follow current events in the news. I think it has more far reaching ramification's for our society than even its advocates realize. The issue of a national identity card had been debated for a number of years now and that debate has intensified is the post 9/11 world.

Like so many other matters in our country this one has become both political and polarizing. I see three major groups among our population. Two of them are firmly on one side of the issue or the other. There are a number of very sound arguments on both sides of the debate and I could easily become an advocate for either side. Civil liberties groups and privacy advocates want no part of this plan and see any attempt to initiate a national ID card as in incursion on fundamental rights by the government. Government agencies like Homeland Security, law enforcement and a large number of ordinary citizens view this as a reasonable measure to be taken to insure our safety and to thwart efforts by terrorists bent on visiting great harm or destruction on us.

Yet a third group either has no opinion one way or the other and it some cases is completely uninformed and disinterested in the topic. Many of these will be influenced by one of the two previously mentioned groups or the mass media who I believe tend to align themselves with the former of these groups rather than the latter. Since the initial proposal affects only border crossings I think this large middle group will remain uninterested for the time being most of them not being affected one way or the other by any changes in the law.

This will leave the debate about this first step toward what I think will eventually will become the de facto national ID card the subject of advocate groups on both sides of the issue. I hope that the average citizen will become more interested and offer input on the subject but at this point I am not optimistic.

The reason I find this topic so interesting is that I have long advocated a debate on what I feel is the core issue here. Are we going to make use of the technology available to our modern society or will we shun it due to fears of how it could be misused? This annoys me to no end because we continue to concentrate on selected parts of a given topic rather than make a decision on the core issue which would nullify these other matters one way or the other.

I tell my friends that years ago accounting was done by rooms full of men working at desks with ledger books making entries with quill pens dipped in ink wells. These armies of men have been replaced by computers making the work much faster and more efficient. It also opened up the means for fraud and theft that never existed with the old manual system. Also making any efforts of that nature by those so inclined much easier to perpetrate. While the more modern system has its problems I don't know of anyone who is advocating a return to the manual system because of them. First because it doesn't make any sense but more importantly because it would cause business and trade to grind to a halt in our modern society. We as a people have weighed the consequences of using this new technology and made a collective decision that despite its drawbacks it is in our best interest.

I feel much the same way about the national ID card. There are many ways that our nation could benefit from each individual having a unique identifier. An “electronic finger print” if you will. So many of the problems that I hear being discussed in the news such as voting fraud, identity theft just to mention a few could be resolved by such use of technology and computers.

I will be the first to admit that such a system has potential for being abused and that safe guards would have to be built into the system. If we are not yet there we are approaching a time when encryption and other technologies will make such a system manageable if one key component is addressed. That “key component” is you and I, the citizens of this country. It requires that we become involved enough to educate ourselves on the subject sufficiently to make an intelligent decisions about who we should trust to implement such a system and know the questions to ask to insure that there is proper oversight in its use.

I realize in this day and age when such a small percentage of the population bothers to exercise their right to vote that this may be asking a lot. I would at least like to have a public debate on the subject to weigh the advantages and disadvantages involved so that we can be proactive rather than reactive on the topic. If we do nothing eventually a situation will occur that will have us make a decision in haste and select the first solution offered which may not be the one best for our interests.

Editorial: Playing catch-up / The county's 911 system is progress, sort of

As an a amateur radio operator and a man with two sons that are involved in emergency services work this is a topic that I have discussed on a number of occasions with both friends and family. I was somewhat disappointed that the editorial writer did not offer any pointers to possible solutions to the problem. The criticisms are right on the money and given the area's history not that hard to see and point out. Problems however still exists because of the round about way the solution was arrived at with some of the core issues never being addressed.

I would like to see the entire county divided into quadrants, six at the most preferably less, each with its own call center and radio dispatching point. There should be a single uniform radio system with everyone on the same band. It doesn't have to be a trunked system and I would prefer that it was not. What I would like to see is county government seek out competent and knowledgeable people who understand the technical requirements of their communications needs that will work up a plan based on sound engineering practices. I don't hold out much hope that will be the case but one can wish.

So here is what the editorial page of the Post Gazette had to say about Allegheny County's 911 system.

Editorial: Playing catch-up / The county's 911 system is progress, sort of
Wednesday, January 18, 2006
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

In 2006, Allegheny County has finally joined the 1990s. The county this week is moving emergency dispatchers out of the last of its regional dispatch centers, the final step in consolidating to one countywide 911 system.

That is certainly a good thing, promising both improved service and increased efficiency. But given that it's 69 years since Britain debuted its "999" system, 38 years since the first 911 call placed in the United States, 24 years since Minneapolis-St. Paul launched a seven-county enhanced 911 system, 20 years since Allegheny County proposed a consolidated system and 16 years since the state began providing funding for countywide systems -- excuse us if our enthusiasm seems a bit faint.

The delay comes courtesy of our feudal system of 130 municipal nation-states. Local cities, boroughs and townships resisted when the county first proposed a centralized system in 1986, refused to bend when the state got involved in 1990, then achieved an ironic watershed in 1996, when 14 municipalities finally got together -- not to back consolidation -- but to sue to block the county's attempt to force them to share six dispatch centers.

To read the entire story follow this LINK.

Wednesday, January 18, 2006

The interception explained

Well it took me a while to figure it out but I now understand the interception call from the officials during Sundays Steeler game.


Sunday, January 15, 2006

On to Denver.........

Well my inkling was correct and the Steelers came to play football today. The Colts on the other hand didn't seem to have their heads in the game. Don't know if they believed the hype and were already planning for Denver or if they just had a bad day. In the end it still wound up being a heart stopper right down to the end. I think the key though is that these guys are hungry and they want to win. They have the right attitude.

Much as I enjoy watching the Steelers play I was up most of the night because of some pain I was having from my bout with the flu. So I fell asleep in the chair in the living room and missed a good deal of the game. Probably just as well since I did not need to be doing any yelling and screaming. Well it will be good to see everyone in a good mood tomorrow after the win. I was writing a rant very late last night when I couldn't sleep about the fact that the mood of the entire area seems to follow the success or failure of the team this time of the year. I think there are things far more important in life that I wish people would get as excited about as the local football team and I may still finish those thoughts and post them latter. For now I wish the home town team success next week in Denver.

Let is snow..... Let it snow..... Let it snow........

I just know I'm going to regret writing this but I can't resist. As I have mentioned in previous posts I have never been a fan of winter or winter weather. So after several days of temperatures well above the seasonal norm I was not looking forward to this weekend in which the local prognosticators were calling for anywhere from a dusting to four inches of the white stuff depending on whose version you listened to.

Well Saturday came and went and we did get more than our fair share of rain as predicted and the temperature has returned to a more winter like thirty one degrees although in typical Pittsburgh fashion they are saying that by the beginning of the week we will be back in the fifties.

Right now however, outside the window to my ham radio shack the sun is shining quite brightly and the sky is blue with big white puffy clouds. If this is winter, bring it on! As I said I know I'm going to regret this latter as this type of weather, much as I would love it to, just can't last until spring. For now however I will look out my window at the bright sunshine and hum “Let it snow, let it snow, let it snow....” to myself and smile. Enjoy the day and GO STEELERS!

Thursday, January 12, 2006

Happy New Year 2006

After a fairly long hiatus, at least in the blog world, I'm back at the keyboard. I had a truly great Christmas holiday and shortly there after came down with the flu which I'm still recovering from. I sincerely hope that the new year has started off on a much better note for you.

There are several thing happening around Oakmont that I wanted to write about and now having taken not only the last two weeks of 2005 as vacation and then being sick for the first week of 2006 I am somewhat behind at work. None the less I will try to update the blog on a more regular basis.

Some of the things that have caught my attention is that ground has been broken at the site of the former Exxon station on the corner of Allegheny Avenue and Hulton Road and construction is finally under way on the new pharmacy that will be built there.

There are also some significant changes taking place in our police department. I have every intention of being at the next council meeting to ask some questions about these changes. At this point I don't have an opinion pro or con on most of the changes taking place but I do want to learn more about them and the logic behind them. I look forward to another good year in Oakmont.