various braindroppings. infrequent. some incoherent. Please COMMENT, critique, complain, and send me a link to your blog or photos page. You can also click "follow" and get an email upon addl. posts. thnx!
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Tea Partiers: I agree with you...
You didn't get mad when Bush borrowed more money from foreign sources than the previous 42 Presidents combined, or when over 10 billion dollars in cash just disappeared in Iraq? You didn't get mad when a covert CIA operative got outed, or when we stopped trying to catch Bin Laden? And you didn't get mad when the Patriot Act got passed, the government was illegally wiretapping us, or even when you found out we were torturing people? You didn't get mad when you saw the horrible conditions at Walter Reed. You didn't get mad when Bush rang up 10 trillion dollars in combined budget and current account deficits, or when we let a major US city basically drown.
You didn't get mad when we gave our very richest few citizens, who had more money than they could ever spend, over a trillion dollars in tax breaks, and we didn’t hear you complain during the worst 8 years of job creations in several decades? You didn't get mad when lack of oversight and reduced regulations from the Bush Administration caused US Citizens to lose 12 trillion dollars in investments, retirement, and home values, or when over 200,000 US Citizens lost their lives because they had no health insurance. No,… you finally got mad as hell, when a black man was elected President and decided that people in America deserved the right to see a doctor if they are sick. - So, illegal wars, lies, corruption, torture, job losses by the millions, stealing your tax dollars to make the rich richer, and the worst economic disaster since 1929 are all okay with you, but helping fellow Americans who are sick...Oh, Hell No!! ??
re-condensed from author unknown
Monday, January 25, 2010
2010 CES Summary
32 years ago, I attended CES f or the first time. I was working at a small “wholesale” car stereo business that sold and installed “OEM” (original equipment manufacturer) radios to car dealers. The business was called Liberty Radio, and was owned by Wally and Gloria Nathan, who had done the same thing in NY and had recently moved to
I was a young, green kid, only 19, and had only been to
Well, the show sounded like a great idea to Eugene and I, but we were both too broke to spring for the expensive hotel rooms. But when we mentioned it to our friends Louie and Mark, Louie’s Dad arranged for a room at the Stardust for the whole 4 days, and since some guy up there still owed him money on a drapery job, he threw in free tickets to the hotel’s big show! So, we were off to Vegas, with all of the typical anticipations of the bright lights and big city, even for back then, in the 70’s. We were feeling like big dogs, staying in what was then one of the nicest casino hotels, especially when, to our total surprise, we were seated front row center at the show, with the show girls kicking their legs over our heads!
But for me, the consumer electronics show itself was the biggest thrill. Every consumer electronic gadget known to man, at that point in time, along with prototypes of what was just about to come out, perfectly displayed for you to touch, test, and ask any question about! I was in heaven! I think I knew right then that some aspect of consumer electronics would become my life-long passion and career. We did meet up with Wally and Gloria up there and watched him enjoy playing craps, as I continued to do for another 31 consecutive years.
Later when I had my own car stereo store, I would always encourage my employees to go as well, even to the point of arranging “CES-on-the-cheap” excursions with under-construction motorhomes full of young guys, sleeping wall-to-wall in sleepingbags, at the Circus-Circus RV Park. This year, I again stayed at Circus RV park, only it was in our new (to us), quite finished motorhome, and we never needed to use the public restroom or showers at the rv park! I guess some things get in your blood and stick.
But this year, the dynamic of seeing the actual show was quite different for me, as Wendy, Ethan, and
I guess I sound jaded, but I still enjoy attending CES just as much as I did 32 years ago because, in viewing the progress of our technological toys, you can see the continuing evolution of our species and our society, and it’s always incrementally more civilized, even if it’s occasionally less civil. 32 years ago, the average person wasn’t thinking about the advent of such gadgets as personal computers, digital music and photography, cell phones, and the internet. But those of us that attended CES did, because the world’s leading tech visionaries made a point of describing the positive impacts those next-year’s-toys would have, to not only drive their current marketing efforts, but also plant seeds of anticipation that would lead to consumer demand and therefore help drive the R & D that much harder.
I’ve always felt that those in the consumer electronics field are some of the most optimistic about our chances for a peaceful, sustained future. Like Gene Roddenberry, we’re all sure that technology will ultimately save the day, and provide us with the leisure time required to interact with one another long enough to realize that we’re all together on this marble, and really, all just one big tribe.
Was this year’s CES interesting? It was fascinating. Just like the last 32 years, and just like the next 32. Beyond that, I can’t imagine it. If I tried, my head would just sorta explode. So, what did I see that stood out to me as truly whiz-bang? I would have to say, - nothing. No one thing shone above the rest by such a great margin as to be in the “got-to-tell-you-‘bout” category. But one thing stood out… in this huge recession, there were still 120,000 attendees buying billions of dollars worth of gadgets to stock their store shelves and sell to their customers, that still want more and more ways to pass their time, interact with others, and improve their lives. I’m still having a blast, just trying to “dial it all in”.
for details of cool gadgets consider: www.engadget.com or even my ces summary from last year here on this blog.