Monthly Archives: March 2011

Waiting for Superman

Kristin and I snagged this from Red-Box on Blu-Ray along with a couple $1 sundaes (quite tasty, thank you for asking) and it wasn’t really the best material for a Saturday night movie.  It didn’t feature any really famous people, it wasn’t particularly uplifting and it will force Kristin and I to consider unpleasant aspects of the future life of our unborn son.  That sad, get off your tush and spend a couple of hours considering the future of our nation.   If you or some one you would watch with is affiliated with a teachers union, you’d likely want to get an idea how they might feel about being painted as the main antagonist in the battle for change in the education system.

Basically, the premise of the movie is that our education system is “broken.”  It was great through about the first three quarters of the 1900’s simply given the fact that we had an inclusive education system that managed to graduate enough college prepped students to keep our engineering and science professions supplied with talent, refuel the education system itself and let the rest find their way.  In the meantime, the strength of economy has begun a very serious shift away from jobs for the minimally educated (manufacturing, etc.) to to those that require a high level of specialization (Information Age) to perform.

The movie is pretty alarming, indicating that no matter where you go, your children who attend public school are unlikely to be prepared for college even if they do finish high school.  I was interested in this and so dug up a census bureau report, linked to from this wikipedia article.  This report reveals that even though just slightly less than 90% of  my current peers graduate high school, less than 30% of them have college degrees.  Is this due to financial reasons?  Maybe?  It could also be, as the movie insinuates, the typical high school graduate is not ready for college.   Something to think about, however.

When you take a gander at that Wikipedia article, look at how much of a difference a degree makes in income and in unemployment rates.  Individual earning (and thus, spending) potential is an item of great concern as we look to the next twenty or so years.  We will have to outspend other developing countries (China) for sparse resources like oil and this is dependent on individuals being able to pay a lot at the pump.  It is clear that many other countries are pumping more highly educated young people than the U.S. currently is – if we care about future generations we should try to close the gap.

In the end, it is supposed to be a motivational documentary so it is going to be a little incendiary.  Hopefully it will get you to do some research, where you are likely to find that things aren’t as bad as a broken down bronx neighborhood school in your hometown – but that things could be quite a bit better, too.

–Nat

To the people who stole our Chase Visa Information

I hope you ordered that $500 worth stuff from NewEgg shipped to your house.  That charge from USPS?  Glad that got denied, guess you’ll have to try another card to ship your crap.

Now I get to hope my scheduled payment happens because I can no longer see my credit card info online.  The auto-payment for T-Mobile, Comcast and other accounts now needs to be changed.  What a waste of my time.

At least it was a credit card and not a debit card…

Jerks.

–Nat

Inexpensive VOIP Serivce

As we proceed in the digital age more and more we are leaving behind our home phone lines and moving towards cell phones.  There are many reasons why you may still want a useful home phone line, however.  For things like calling for 800 support lines where you might burn an hour or so, mostly waiting on hold, for example.  Or if you are trying to carry a minimum of minutes on your cell phone plan or want to be able to dial 911 without hunting down your cell phone in an emergency situation.  Sometimes it can just be nice to use a normal phone instead of trying to rely on potentially spotty wireless coverage in your home.

Traditionally, you would have been tied to the phone company and an expensive minimum fee for your phone line.  With the internet, companies like Vonage and Ooma have started to provide services that utilize the Internet to carry your voice across the country.  This eliminated the concept of domestic long distance but you are saddled with typically either a big upfront cost (Ooma ~$200) or a still sizable monthly bill (Vonage).  Furthermore, some companies that gave a decent multi-year contract price (SunRocket) have gone out of business due to how easy it is to get into the business versus the old phone line model.  Magic Jack was a revolutionary product that allowed you to use a PC for a home phone.  It was/is cheap, but the quality of service and customer support have long been suspect.

Now, for the more tech savvy, you can get the reliability of small business equipment with the call quality of an established VOIP provider on a month to month and minutes used basis.

First, you take this:

http://www.amazon.com/Cisco-SPA2102-Phone-Adapter-Router/dp/B000FKP55K

Add service from a provider like this:

http://voip.ms/

Add a handset and an hour or so for getting your existing router and your new VOIP gateway configured and presto-change-o you are in business.   As near as I can tell, with voip.ms you simply have a minimum of $25 of credit in your account and you pay about 1.25 cents per minute.  So if you use your phone for 100 minutes per month, that’d be a whopping $1.25.  Outbound calls to “toll free” numbers are indeed free.  Plus, you get all the fancy caller-id and features you might normally pay extra for.

You don’t need to plug a phone directly into the VOIP router – you can just plug it into your existing phone line wiring where you might normally plug in a phone and all the other jacks in your home can then be used for handsets.

Potentially, you could spend $50 on the router, add $50 to you account, use an existing handset and not pay for your home service for quite some time.

–Nat