Well, here we are folks. A new season of American Idol. Besides the awkward, forced comedy bit at the beginning between Ellen and Simon, Ellen isn’t a terrible judge. She’s obviously judging from the paradigm of total-stage-presence, though, as she is just doesn’t have the ear for the vocals.
Like a phoenix from the ashes, I rise again to blog…
…Renewed in spirit, and with fresh new opinions to opine…
…Unashamed of even the most poorly-researched commentary…
…and unafraid of being lampooned, harassed, technologically abused, and left for dead.
Here’s a quick smattering of topics to get us up to speed:
Politics:
Congress now has a “jobs agenda” instead of a “jobs bill.” Switching from an actual bill to an agenda seems to mean it will be even less likely that anything actually gets done in congress. Is there a negative approval rating? That’s seems to be what they are heading for. People were harassing Obama that he got very little of his ambitious agenda done in his first year, but I would definitely say Congress gets the prize for completely wasting its time working on mondo-legislation that will be forever gridlocked. My solution? Congress needs to focus on incremental, consensus change. Get what you can get, because it will be better than getting nothing at all.
Religion:
Lately I’ve been reading a biography of Brigham Young. So far, I’m at 1848, right after he’s entered the Salt Lake Valley for the 2nd time. Here are few things I didn’t know I never wanted to didn’t realize:
Brigham came from a very poor family
He was one of the most ardent protectors of Joseph Smith, oftentimes threatening and exposing apostate church members who were seeking to harm him.
He served only one mission to England, which was less than 18 months, and still baptized and gathered over 8000 converts. The message was not well received in London, but was best received in the British countryside among the working class.
Brigham left Winter Quarters shooting directly for the Great Basin, in spite of others who made strong cases for California or Oregon. It wasn’t quite the ‘wandering children of Israel with miraculous discovery of the Salt Lake Valley’ portrait that has oft been painted.
After Brigham got to the Valley, he basically turned back around and went directly back to Winter Quarters. I wasn’t sure I knew that. He left most of the men of the initial 1847 company there to start planting winter crops, and his thoughts then turned exclusively on initiating the massive migration the following spring.
I’m surprised how poor of a writer he was. All of the direct quotes from his diary are extremely poor in grammar and spelling, while things like “Journal of Discourses” are just replete with flowery language. He must have been a much better orator than he was writer, and he certainly had some help committing it to paper later.
American Idol:
I’m not going to be able to watch the Top 12 Boys and Girls until Thursday… so stay tuned for a massive blog on Thursday.
A2 has been sick, so I’ve been focused on barking at her that she’s not drinking enough fluids. She, for her part, is putting Vicks vapor rub on her feet in order to keep from coughing at night. Does this sound completely illogical to anyone else but me?
Work has been busy. I’ve been swatting software bugs faster than you can spell supercalifragilesticexpialidocious. (I think I spelled it wrong)
I’m feeling a bit uninspired. I think being married is training me have fewer opinions and just defer to what my spouse says. Even though other married men are nodding their heads as they read this, it doesn’t make it right.
Blogging is on the decline. I think blogging hit its peak in 2008-09, but now that there’s been movies about blogging, it’s going out of vogue. Those of you who know me know that, if anything, I’m EXTREMELY conscious of staying in vogue. This is why I’m still sporting a hair style from 2003.
Does anyone even read this, still? Or have I completely falled off of your blog reading list.
So Mrs. Brows and I spent last Saturday working on our finances, fixing our budget for this year, and trying to predict the future. In the process, we started talking about our retirement savings strategies.
I always joke about retiring by age forty. How nice would it be to not have to formally work at anything for the rest of your life? Or any of your life, for that matter?
The thing is, I have a bunch of jobs and projects I want to do on my own time. I have enough to keep me busy for two lifetimes, I think. It’s too bad that feeding and sheltering myself (and now my family) has to take precedence over doing those various projects.
I could seriously be happy sleeping in until 9 or 10 every day, getting up, enjoying some relaxing music while I cleaned the house, exercised, worked on a few personal or church projects, made a fresh lunch and dinner, and played a game or went on a walk.
I could get used to travelling a few times a year, or even travelling most of the year if I could. I love seeing new places and getting to know new cultures.
I could spend time volunteering, mentoring, running a side business, mastering a (low impact) sport, learning more musical instruments, or learning how to cook better. I’m not at a loss for ideas of how to spend my time! Really, I’m not!
The problem is… all of it takes money, and so I spend most of my life chained to a desk and a computer to work most of my life to support the rest of my life.
Why retire by 50? Well, as an artist, I enjoy symmetry. The first 25 years of my life were focused on education, and being the consummate planner that I am, I now plan to spend the next 25 years working, and the following 25 in retirement. I’m thinking I’ll be gone by 75 or so…
Yeah… I’m the creepy dude planning his own demise. I ask, why not?
After working for weeks on end in a fabric covered container, with no vacation in sight or in recent memory, sometimes you just wish you had your own private island.
Granted, my island would have more sandy beaches than this, but this picture is a start. I want to open my large sliding doors and windows to open air breezes. I want to enjoy lazy days on the deck, eating slow roasted BBQ and soaking up the sea breezes.
I have a few days worth of posts of outlandish stuff that I really want. Today is day #1.
I want a Tesla Model S
http://www.teslamotors.com/models/index.php
This car is the second car from a new technology/car company, Tesla, who is focused solely on developing electric vehicle (EV) technology. The first Model S is supposed to roll of the line in 2011.
Tesla was the first company to have a real-live electric vehicle on the road with its Roadster. The Roadster is a Porche competitor in speed, handling, and PRICE, costing upwards of $120,000. But this price isn’t just buying a car, it’s really investing in a company that is the future of electric vehicles. Tesla’s business plan was to develop the EV technology from the high-end to the low end, starting with a customized, performance vehicle and using the extra margins to reinvest in the research and development of the technology.
Now, with the Roadster (phase 1) complete and almost 1000 Roasters on the road, Tesla is moving on to Phase 2: the Model S. It’s been in planning for some time now, but the recession put the brakes on another round of funding that was needed to build out the infrastructure for mass production. However, a recently secured a Department of Energy loan will now outfit the plant in California where the Model S will be mass produced.
The idea for Model S is that it will be a Lexus/Audi/Infiniti competitor, and will be the first mass produced Tesla. After government subsidy, it will be about $50,000.
And it will have a range of 300 miles, about the same as a tank of gas and an internal combustion engine.
Tesla’s technology is far superior to anyone else’s, their car’s designs are incredible, and they are pushing the envelope on the car purchasing and maintenance experience.
To prove that their cars are for DRIVING and not just for the showroom, Tesla drove a Roadster from its headquarters in California to the Auto Show in Detroit… and they didn’t even wash it afterwards, proving that this car could go the distance. All the other manufacturers had their little concept vehicles, but not one of them has a working car on the market like Tesla.
Electric vehicles are a good answer to a lot of current problems with transportation:
An electric car is simple. An electric car consists of three basic components: batteries, a computer, and a big motor. The part count in an internal combustion engine pales in comparison. Imagine having a vehicle without hundreds of fallible, frictioned, moving parts that wear down and fail at the worst possible time. Granted, even an EV will have maintenance problems, with its complex computer hardware and sensors, but it will be nowhere near the complexity and fallibility of the internal combustion engine.
Offloading the energy fueling our cars to the electric grid makes sense as an alternative to gasoline. Currently, the energy to drive a Tesla costs about 2 cents per mile driven. Plus, the electricity can then come from various renewable or non-renewable means: coal, nuclear, wind, solar, etc. Either way, EV is the most realistic way of significantly reducing our dependence on foreign oil and taking control of our own country’s energy policy.
Zero emissions. Nuff said. Cleaner urban air is better for everyone. (Granted, the emissions for non-renewable fuels go somewhere… but at least it doesn’t get blown in my face from a tailpipe as I walk the streets)
The problem, though, is battery technology. Currently, the batteries are the single largest weakness of the car. Significant breakthroughs in this technology must be made to make it commercially viable to give the car a long enough lifespan to make sense for average consumers.
Here are a few videos to wet your appetite:
Finally, Tesla Roadster wins a drag race between four performance cars: