Monday, January 30, 2006
Doctor Rx
But this has more victims than the people directly involved. I'm a chronic pain patient due to Failed Back Surgery syndrome (that's right...they have a name because it happens so frequently). This means (in my case anyway) that the scar tissue around my spinal cord presses against the cord and causes extreme pain in my lower back, legs and feet. I tried several procedures to control the pain including a morphine pump (which is surgically placed in your abdomen and drips small amounts of morphine directly into the sac of fluid surrounding the brain and spinal cord) and spinal cord stimulator (which is surgically placed in your abdomen and pulses electrical charges directly to the spine via a small wire and electrodes that are threaded through the vertebrae and along the spinal cord)--and had no success. Unless some new treatment comes along, I'm left trying to control the pain via narcotics.
So how am I affected by what Dr. Merrill did? Glad you asked. First, my surgeon changed the narcotic I was taking from Oxycontin to morphine because of the negative press surrounding Oxycontin. No medical reason...just a political one. The morphine made me sick. It took months to sneak up on me, but I was always feeling slightly off and the feeling grew. Towards the end, I was miserable all the time. Why? Because my doctor felt pressure to change the drugs because some idiots like Dr. Merrill were abusing them.
I'm now in the hands of a pain clinic in Philadelphia...a wonderful group of doctors--you couldn't get me to leave. When I began, I could make the trip into Philadelphia every three months. I'd get a checkup to make sure there were no unexpected side-effects and then get scripts for the next three months. Now, I have to make the trip into Philly each month. Why? Because idiots like Dr. Merrill abused the system and the FDA makes everyone come in every month to make it 'harder' for those abusing the system to get away with it.
One of the things about taking narcotics is that they loose their effectiveness as your body accommodates the drug better. Between lost effectiveness and general adjustments to pain levels, my doctor wanted to try me on a higher dose. I take 5 pills per day--150 per month. He wanted to raise that to 10 pills per day--300 per month, but he could not because that number would cause a problem and likely FDA investigation. So I got 150 pills per month---but of a higher dose---more medicine than if I'd taken the 300 per month. But 150 pills can't be sold to 300 people so it's a safer dose? Right and I have a bridge I'll sell you in Brooklyn.
I hate the drugs I take for what they do to me. I have to take 10 laxatives a day to stay regular. I feel dopey most of the time. I'm not as sharp as I was before the meds. I feel like a criminal every time I have to get them from the pharmacy. Don't get me wrong, I couldn't function without them so it's a Love/Hate relationship, but I'd gladly trade them for a cure. That people like Merrill have abused the system and made it harder for me and thousands of people just like me, to get what we need to function makes me sick. Thanks Doc...too bad you can't repay me for the trouble I have to go through so you can make a few extra bucks.
Fla. Guilty of Overprescribing Pain Pills - Forbes.com
Watch Out, obesity be catching.
What's particularly interesting is the fact that obesity world wide is on the rise and does not directly correlate to the way people are eating and exercising. If this were just a phenomenon in the US, I'd be ready to believe the whole thing could be blamed on our terrible diets--lets face it, we supersize to more calories than some people eat in a day. But since this is a world wide phenomenon, I'm more likely to believe that some other factor may be at work.
There's more work to be done on the issue, and I'm not going to stop watching what I eat, but I think everyone should be watching this.
Contagious obesity? Identifying the human adenoviruses that may make us fat | Science Blog
Friday, January 27, 2006
DIY Mousebot
One of the first projects I built was Mousey the Mousebot. One of the magazines readers has expanded on Mousey...check it out.
Mousebot Revisited
Thursday, January 26, 2006
Paper Models
One of my favorite sites for paper models is Fiddlers Green and check out the wonderful Saturn V. There are hours of fun to be had with paper models and what's more, the cost can't be beat. Many of the models are available free, and many more at are very low cost. Fiddlers Green sells their entire line-up for $25 and that's dozens of models.
Here are some links to get you started...
Back to the Moon---with the Russians?
A decade later, the Japanese are still Earth-bound and the Russians are planning a mining base on the moon by 2015 so that they can---you guessed it---mine H3 from the surface.
I'm a big believer that space will be conquered by corporations--not nations. Besides one-up-man-ship, there is no compelling reason for national governments to spend tax money on exploring space (at least not compelling to anyone but a true believer like me--and we don't rule the purse). However, there are very compelling reasons (read that 'big dollar signs with lots of trailing zeros') for corporations to head out into the big black. Right now, we're seeing that with Space Tourism, but before long we'll see other business moving off planet. Things like orbital solar farms, micro-gravity chemistry, mining resources from the asteroid belt and--yes--H3 mining on the moon can provide big returns for the company (or companies) willing to take the risks. I just hope I'm still alive to see the day that access to orbit is as common as access to Disney World.
But back to the Russians. Much as I'd like to believe that they're going to follow through on their plans, I have great doubts that they have the national will to spend the money necessary for such an operation to succeed when they're having so many domestic economic problems. Until their standard of living lets their people live the life that they've been 'promised' by democracy, I can't see them getting much backing. I wish them all the luck in the world, but I'm dubious.
Russia to open moonbase mine - World Breaking News - Breaking News 24/7 - NEWS.com.au
Wednesday, January 25, 2006
WB & UPN Merge
Indiantelevision.com > News Headlines > Warner, CBS team to create fifth US broadcast network
RIM Blackberry Fighting Injunction
Bloomberg.com: Canada
Friday, January 20, 2006
World's Tallest Towers 2006
Alas, fame is fleeting. Before long, TaiPei 101 will be surpassed by the Freedom Tower on the WTC site and Burj Dubai in the United Arab Emerits. The Burj Dubai is especially interesting as it resembles the giant Archologies that Science Fiction has written about for years. One could live and work in the tower, shop and eat in tower, be entertained in the tower. How long will it be before some people live their whole life in such a building without needing to leave except maybe to vacation?
World's Tallest Towers 2006 - Forbes.com
Thursday, January 19, 2006
Supreme Court upholds Oregon's suicide law - Yahoo! News
This issue isn't over though. The Court ruled that the Attorney General did not have standing to over-rule the Oregon law...It did not rule directly on the issue at hand. We'll see this one again and again and again till someone acknowledges that we can criminalize doctors for their compassion or not, but the practice will continue regardless.
Supreme Court upholds Oregon's suicide law - Yahoo! News
Tivo Who?
... Ok, I had to pause there to wipe the drool off my chin, but I'm ok now...well...as ok as I get anyway. To drive the whole system, they choose the Pentium D 840 "Extreme Edition" which gives dual-core, hyper-threaded Pentium 4 processors! Package the whole thing in the Silverston LC16M with LCD display, tons of memory, power and heat dissipation and you've got the king of PVRs--and for the low, low price of $4284.90. Cool!
SnapStream Blog » Blog Archive » Godzilla PVR
via [Gizmodo]
Slashdot | Konica Minolta Quits Photography Market
Slashdot | Konica Minolta Quits Photography Market
The Big Bank and the Little Consulting company that could.
Harkening back to the Internet boom days when money flowed freely, the domain name 'sex.com' sold for a reported $14 million dollars. That name will probably pay for itself, but what really struck me was how this reminded me of another domain name that sold for big bucks.
Back in the day, a bank that I worked for decided to start an Internet division. Rather than leverage the banks own name recognition, the bank spent thousands to hire the finest marketing folks to do focus groups to find names that would make people feel comfortable and financially secure sending their hard earned cash through the Internet. The focus group finally found a name that made the bank's leadership giddy with delight and they moved to quickly begin buying letterhead, setting up marketing campaigns and all of the other things one does when they start a new company--but not an Internet company. When it came time to actually setup the website for the fledgling company...guess what...www.the-new-bank-name-here.com was already taken. Yes, they'd spent millions of dollars getting ready without doing a simple who-is to make sure the TLD was available.
Turns out that the small consulting company that had been using the TLD for years was based only an hours drive from the bank's headquarters, so up the highway went the bank's negotiators with a command to bring back the name 'at any price'--and that's what they did. It's unclear exactly how much was paid for the TLD, but it was in the neighborhood of the price just paid for sex.com.
The story would be crazy if it ended there, but even better, the new Internet bank was made the 'victim' of a merger and was closed and gone before it really got started. The TLD you ask? A quick look as I'm writing this shows that the little consulting company that held up the big bank for the name is happily using it today. How is this possible you ask? Did they return the money you ask? You ask a lot of questions don't you? Well anyway, the little consulting company wrote into the original sales agreement that should the big bank ever stop using the name for their new Internet bank, the TLD would revert to the little consulting company at no cost. And so it goes.
Slashdot | Domain Name Sold for Millions
Thursday, January 12, 2006
Who's Your Daddy?
IBM and Verizon have both added a nail in the coffin of the myth that your company is going to care for you. Both companies froze their traditional pensions leaving older workers scrambling to replace the future income. More examples? Hewitt Associates reported a 60% increase in the employee portion of health benefits from '01 to '04. Other companies are shifting 401k fees to the employees while others are dropping retirees from their health-care coverage.
This article gives some good advice that can be summed up as 'Be your own Daddy.' It's advice to live by. The years when an employee would go to work for a company when they left high school and retire from that same company 40, 50 or more years later are gone. Companies have secumbed to the call of the immediate profit and things will never be the same.
Reuters Finance: Be your own Daddy
Mercedes S-Class: A Car for Rich Geeks
'...packing a bundle of electronics that would make David Hasselhoff green with envy.'
So says Wired's Bruce Gain as he describes the 2007 S-Class. Probably the most amazing feature he describes is the Distronic system which is an advanced cruise control that uses 24GHz radar to sense vehicles in front of you. Set the distance you want to keep between you and the vehicle ahead and your desired speed and the system will take it from there. It'll speed up and slow down to keep you right where you should be. Gain is braver than I though as he put the system to the ultimate test and kept his feet off the pedals while the Distronic system decelerated from 90 mph to a dead stop when traffic stopped ahead--Wow.
The Distronic cruise is the coolest feature, but there are loads of other ohhs and ahhs. A seat that gives you a massage during the long ride home, night vision heads up display, GPS navigation and more puts you (literally) in the seat of luxory.
But don't expect all this to come cheap. Gain says that the estimated price will top out over $100,000 in the US. I guess I'll just have to wait until the really cool features end up on my Ford Explorer. Yeah right...don't hold your breath...but it's cool anyway.
Wired: The Ultimate Geek Car?
Nikon Dropping Most Film Cameras
Nikon - Press room - Press Release
Tuesday, January 10, 2006
Mac OS on Intel Chips
ABC News: Apple debuts Intel iMac after record sales
Wednesday, January 04, 2006
Walmart Wants to Start Their Own Bank
Their request isn't without its critics though. The banking industry is trying like crazy to squash the idea. Not only do they not like the idea of loosing the millions in fees they're currently collecting from Walmart, but the idea of allowing an eight hundred pound gorilla play in their sandbox has them practically catatonic with fear. Right now, Walmart has over 1000 3rd party bank branches in their stores. If they were replaced with Walmart banks, they'd be a huge industry player over night. Walmart claims that they aren't interested in doing this, but I frankly can't believe that they'd be able to pass up an opportunity that good.
Congress has asked the FDIC to put off making a decision until they have public hearings and fill the vacancy left by Chairman Donald Powell who resigned in November so this isn't going to be decided soon. Keep an eye out for more news as this promises to be an interesting battle.
CNN Money: Wal-Mart Bank faces tough opposition
Congress botched digital TV -- Say it isn't so!!
But this all means that 70,000,000 TV sets in this country will become boat anchors. That's where our
This reminds me of nothing so much as the Roman Senate sponsoring games in the Coliseum to keep the people happy while they systematically ran Rome into the ground. The economy is a mess, but you can watch all the TV you could ever want in stunning digital clarity that's degraded to the same old TV you've always watched through a digital converter that is almost guaranteed to cost more than the vouchers you might get. Welcome to Pax Americana.
FORTUNE: Congress botched digital TV - Jan. 4, 2006