I am pleased to announce the release of my second novel, The Crushing Son. It is set on the Gold Coast, Australia, in the quarrying and concrete industry. It's a business I know a lot about. The story is about family rivalry, intense competition, feuds and the heat that oppresses everyone.
The Crushing Son <<Click Direct Link
Opinions on politics, economics, sport, investment and anything interesting, stocks and shares, art and entertainment, good reads, and cool stuff.
March 30, 2016
March 16, 2016
National Scrapping Decile System
It's not confirmed but rumour has it NZ's National led government is planning to scrap the decile funding model for schools.
The decile system works by paying schools more if their parents are poor, and less proportionately if the parents are rich.
Let's be clear about this. NZ's education system is hanging by a thread. If National really want to screw things up then all they have to do is tinker with a funding system that, while flawed, actually works most of the time.
>>Read Here About These Plans<<
If changing the system, instead of scrapping it, all they need to do is make adjustments. I don't know if they take into account the remoteness of a school, its particular learning needs, or the quality of staff. If they don't already then these sorts of things could be added to a funding formula.
But the plans to pay schools more for such things as a parent in prison or if the student or a family member has been the victim of sexual abuse, seems absurd. As a society, we pay taxes to address issues around that in separate ways.
I can see the day arriving where schools pay an enrolment signing fee for vulnerable families. Gangs would be the first to exploit a system like this. Now you might say I'm being alarmist. Really? The drug kingpins would be into it like pigs into the proverbial.
Some background - a state education is free in New Zealand. That means schools can't make you pay a donation. It means parents can't be made to pay for materials used to learn with (unless you take the materials home), and they can't be made to pay for workbooks either. They can't even make the child take a school field trip and if it is assessed, the school has to provide an alternative.
This system works. What doesn't work, the elephant in the room, is teachers don't work.
Teachers make things up as they go along, they're often incompetent and they're not subject to rigorous scrutiny. The answer to improving the quality of education in NZ is to put a blow torch to the teachers.
No government will address what is really wrong. Maybe that's because the teacher vote is important. So long as teachers get a magic carpet ride, standards will continue to slip.
More from me on education:-
http://kenhorlor.blogspot.com/2014/08/nigel-latta-tvnz-ncea.html
http://kenhorlor.blogspot.com/2014/06/reform-of-nz-education.html
http://kenhorlor.blogspot.com/2014/06/ncea.html
The decile system works by paying schools more if their parents are poor, and less proportionately if the parents are rich.
Let's be clear about this. NZ's education system is hanging by a thread. If National really want to screw things up then all they have to do is tinker with a funding system that, while flawed, actually works most of the time.
>>Read Here About These Plans<<
If changing the system, instead of scrapping it, all they need to do is make adjustments. I don't know if they take into account the remoteness of a school, its particular learning needs, or the quality of staff. If they don't already then these sorts of things could be added to a funding formula.
But the plans to pay schools more for such things as a parent in prison or if the student or a family member has been the victim of sexual abuse, seems absurd. As a society, we pay taxes to address issues around that in separate ways.
I can see the day arriving where schools pay an enrolment signing fee for vulnerable families. Gangs would be the first to exploit a system like this. Now you might say I'm being alarmist. Really? The drug kingpins would be into it like pigs into the proverbial.
Some background - a state education is free in New Zealand. That means schools can't make you pay a donation. It means parents can't be made to pay for materials used to learn with (unless you take the materials home), and they can't be made to pay for workbooks either. They can't even make the child take a school field trip and if it is assessed, the school has to provide an alternative.
This system works. What doesn't work, the elephant in the room, is teachers don't work.
Teachers make things up as they go along, they're often incompetent and they're not subject to rigorous scrutiny. The answer to improving the quality of education in NZ is to put a blow torch to the teachers.
No government will address what is really wrong. Maybe that's because the teacher vote is important. So long as teachers get a magic carpet ride, standards will continue to slip.
More from me on education:-
http://kenhorlor.blogspot.com/2014/08/nigel-latta-tvnz-ncea.html
http://kenhorlor.blogspot.com/2014/06/reform-of-nz-education.html
http://kenhorlor.blogspot.com/2014/06/ncea.html
March 09, 2016
Maria Sharapova
Maria Sharapova has been caught taking performance enhancing drugs. Personally I don't like the way she screams, or yells, or grunts when she hits the ball. She's either trying to put her opponents off or disguising the sound of the racket hitting the ball. It's unsportsmanlike. That said, I don't think we need to get upset over the matter of drugs.
I put the reaction from around the World down to anti-Russian hysteria. In particular, this applies to those companies quick to dump her.
There is massive hypocrisy here. I think the whole world is doping. You think I'm over-reacting? Come on people, look at these athletes. Look at the bodies on them, the muscle, the recovery times event to event, the speed. Are people blind? Look at the women, they're hulks.
Rest assured, all world class athletes are on something pharmaceutical. It just comes down to whether what they're doing is allowed or explicitly banned by the authorities. I have no doubt in my mind that most top athletes are assisted with drugs by government agencies. In Christchurch you can go to sport nutrition stores selling supplements and find 'test beater' kits. Do these work? Why would they be selling them if they don't work?
I put the reaction from around the World down to anti-Russian hysteria. In particular, this applies to those companies quick to dump her.
There is massive hypocrisy here. I think the whole world is doping. You think I'm over-reacting? Come on people, look at these athletes. Look at the bodies on them, the muscle, the recovery times event to event, the speed. Are people blind? Look at the women, they're hulks.
Rest assured, all world class athletes are on something pharmaceutical. It just comes down to whether what they're doing is allowed or explicitly banned by the authorities. I have no doubt in my mind that most top athletes are assisted with drugs by government agencies. In Christchurch you can go to sport nutrition stores selling supplements and find 'test beater' kits. Do these work? Why would they be selling them if they don't work?
Degrees in New Zealand
Someone may help here, I've got a few questions about New Zealand's University level degree structure.
I get that the New Zealand Qualifications Authority set a bachelor's at 360 points and bachelor's with honours at 480. Therefore it takes 3-4 years to complete based on 120 points each year. A proportion of the courses, at least 72 points, must be at level 7 and so on.
But why isn't there an outfit offering their courses night and day, seven days a week, all year round. If you break the year into three semesters and 60 points each semester, an honours degree is completed in three years - the first two years for the bachelors, then a final two semesters for the honours.
Is there a rule about how much you can study full-time on one subject in one twelve month period? And if there is, how about 120 points toward one degree with another semester each year spent doing another degree.
Something like this:-
Year One: Semester One: Second Degree, Semester Two/Three: Main Degree
Year Two: Semester One/Two: Main Degree Semester Three: Second Degree
Year Three: Semester One: Second Degree Semester Two/Three: Main Degree
First (Main) Bachelor's - 360 points
Second Bachelor's - 180 points plus cross-credit 90 points (say): 270 points, meaning the second degree could be completed with another year of part-time study.
Usually it takes five years to do a double degree.
I'm completing a novel at the moment so you can see I've got far too much time on my hands.
Thinking about this, BPP University in the U.K. offers two year accelerated degrees, such as an LLB (Hons), studying full time. If I understand right, this school has the largest law student enrolment in England (mostly this is because they do the professional component upon graduation which brings their numbers up). These people come out and go straight to becoming Solicitors or Barristers.
Note: BPP also do an LLB (Hons) [Distance Learning] either full-time, full-time accelerated or part-time. Sounds clever, according to data I checked, they have one person doing this degree in NZ. I wonder who that person is? If you think about it, this is a real option (if perhaps quite expensive).
Consider a case where the person is born in England, or their parent or grandparent was born there. They could get a degree that is fully up to speed upon arriving to work there.
Graduates from NZ will be quick to tell you their qualifications are accepted, well yes, but that degree has to go through a process of equivalence and more courses may have to be taken to bring the person up to speed (maybe EU law and so on). This way the student living in NZ with the right to work in England, has a qualification immediately accepted, no questions asked.
Technology is changing the landscape of tertiary education. The problem with using the internet was how do you stop cheating? Anyone could be on that keyboard, right? And in the past that was true.
But now, without going as far as requiring fingerprint or retinal identification (though somewhere that's probably being done), you could run courses with virtual chat rooms for tutorials and classes, even labs. That way you can see if the student has someone sitting next to them helping. A proportion of the course could be viva voce (oral).
From login a certain amount of required attendance at tutorials, lectures online in real time (some could be missed and caught up with delayed viewing, perhaps 60/40 split as a minimum), seminar presentation, and oral answers to questions.
The student then presents essays and completes assignment questions in own time by due dates. If you do all this I don't see the point in the classic three hour exam, but if one were required then it could be open book with the student at home after log in and video link so the examiner can see the person receives no help.
I think with BPP, exams are held in a room you have accepted by them, somewhere separate, or you deliver yourself to their location. That's fine but with technology the way it is now, I think it is practically redundant.
Columbia University in New York have real time webcasts that are free if you register. This means academic heavyweights talking about complex topics like corporate ethics and transformational thinking. You can see where this is headed, they'll be offering degrees this way next (though New York is seriously out of sync with NZ - ouch - 5am starts).
Or consider our neck of the woods, Bond University in Queensland offers accelerated programmes, such as a Bachelor of Business in two years, or a law degree in eight semesters.
For a law degree think about this; a Bond University law degree started in January 2016, eight semesters taken sequentially has the law degree done in two years and two semesters. Now okay, no student loans for Kiwis over there, but if money is no object then I'd say a Kiwi would have to think about jumping the ditch. They can live and work there, so they would be up and practising while back home their classmates were still studying.
Why doesn't New Zealand offer accelerated programmes?
Edited to add: Found one college in Auckland, offering a Bachelor of International Business in 7-9 semesters, in theory it could be done in less than three years.
I note they have holidays. How Bond University do a similar degree in two years, is they don't stop, they just keep going.
If you think about this, it's totally logical. You could have day and night shifts, with overlapping lectures Monday to Friday and Wednesday to Sunday. Combine real time webcasts, like those done by Columbia University in New York, with face to face lectures and tutorials, assignments, essays and online tests.
Edited to further add: Someone has pointed out how acceleration may work at the University of Canterbury (eg) a student with direct access to Chemistry second year, by virtue of their Year 13 grades from high school, can complete an honours degree in chemistry in 3 years.
I get that the New Zealand Qualifications Authority set a bachelor's at 360 points and bachelor's with honours at 480. Therefore it takes 3-4 years to complete based on 120 points each year. A proportion of the courses, at least 72 points, must be at level 7 and so on.
But why isn't there an outfit offering their courses night and day, seven days a week, all year round. If you break the year into three semesters and 60 points each semester, an honours degree is completed in three years - the first two years for the bachelors, then a final two semesters for the honours.
Is there a rule about how much you can study full-time on one subject in one twelve month period? And if there is, how about 120 points toward one degree with another semester each year spent doing another degree.
Something like this:-
Year One: Semester One: Second Degree, Semester Two/Three: Main Degree
Year Two: Semester One/Two: Main Degree Semester Three: Second Degree
Year Three: Semester One: Second Degree Semester Two/Three: Main Degree
First (Main) Bachelor's - 360 points
Second Bachelor's - 180 points plus cross-credit 90 points (say): 270 points, meaning the second degree could be completed with another year of part-time study.
Usually it takes five years to do a double degree.
I'm completing a novel at the moment so you can see I've got far too much time on my hands.
Thinking about this, BPP University in the U.K. offers two year accelerated degrees, such as an LLB (Hons), studying full time. If I understand right, this school has the largest law student enrolment in England (mostly this is because they do the professional component upon graduation which brings their numbers up). These people come out and go straight to becoming Solicitors or Barristers.
Note: BPP also do an LLB (Hons) [Distance Learning] either full-time, full-time accelerated or part-time. Sounds clever, according to data I checked, they have one person doing this degree in NZ. I wonder who that person is? If you think about it, this is a real option (if perhaps quite expensive).
Consider a case where the person is born in England, or their parent or grandparent was born there. They could get a degree that is fully up to speed upon arriving to work there.
Graduates from NZ will be quick to tell you their qualifications are accepted, well yes, but that degree has to go through a process of equivalence and more courses may have to be taken to bring the person up to speed (maybe EU law and so on). This way the student living in NZ with the right to work in England, has a qualification immediately accepted, no questions asked.
Technology is changing the landscape of tertiary education. The problem with using the internet was how do you stop cheating? Anyone could be on that keyboard, right? And in the past that was true.
But now, without going as far as requiring fingerprint or retinal identification (though somewhere that's probably being done), you could run courses with virtual chat rooms for tutorials and classes, even labs. That way you can see if the student has someone sitting next to them helping. A proportion of the course could be viva voce (oral).
From login a certain amount of required attendance at tutorials, lectures online in real time (some could be missed and caught up with delayed viewing, perhaps 60/40 split as a minimum), seminar presentation, and oral answers to questions.
The student then presents essays and completes assignment questions in own time by due dates. If you do all this I don't see the point in the classic three hour exam, but if one were required then it could be open book with the student at home after log in and video link so the examiner can see the person receives no help.
I think with BPP, exams are held in a room you have accepted by them, somewhere separate, or you deliver yourself to their location. That's fine but with technology the way it is now, I think it is practically redundant.
Columbia University in New York have real time webcasts that are free if you register. This means academic heavyweights talking about complex topics like corporate ethics and transformational thinking. You can see where this is headed, they'll be offering degrees this way next (though New York is seriously out of sync with NZ - ouch - 5am starts).
Or consider our neck of the woods, Bond University in Queensland offers accelerated programmes, such as a Bachelor of Business in two years, or a law degree in eight semesters.
For a law degree think about this; a Bond University law degree started in January 2016, eight semesters taken sequentially has the law degree done in two years and two semesters. Now okay, no student loans for Kiwis over there, but if money is no object then I'd say a Kiwi would have to think about jumping the ditch. They can live and work there, so they would be up and practising while back home their classmates were still studying.
Why doesn't New Zealand offer accelerated programmes?
Edited to add: Found one college in Auckland, offering a Bachelor of International Business in 7-9 semesters, in theory it could be done in less than three years.
I note they have holidays. How Bond University do a similar degree in two years, is they don't stop, they just keep going.
If you think about this, it's totally logical. You could have day and night shifts, with overlapping lectures Monday to Friday and Wednesday to Sunday. Combine real time webcasts, like those done by Columbia University in New York, with face to face lectures and tutorials, assignments, essays and online tests.
Edited to further add: Someone has pointed out how acceleration may work at the University of Canterbury (eg) a student with direct access to Chemistry second year, by virtue of their Year 13 grades from high school, can complete an honours degree in chemistry in 3 years.
March 08, 2016
Bluesen 32" HD LED Television
My old television finally conked out. It was a Sony Trinitron I'd been using for the last 6-7 years and which I bought off Trade Me for $50. Back then I actually went out of my way to get a Sony Trinitron as they have such a good picture. I found one that had rarely been used and had a picture like new.
Now the old style televisions are out. TV's are no longer bulky and heavy. They're now light and flat.
I went down to Noel Leeming Appliances and bought the cheapest 32" I could find in the store. The find was a Bluesen BL32C11NZ for $299.99. I've got no idea who Bluesen are, but I figure for that sort of money I couldn't really miss. The last time I forked out for a new TV, I paid over $1,000.
Setting this TV up was a breeze. I've got a simple but older system and I needed to keep everything in play. It's all set up and working well. I would allocate about two hours to get it the way you like it, including all the fiddling with personal settings.
Firstly, I want to record using my VCR. This is because one of the children has a VCR for playing back tapes upstairs. Tapes are very handy. They're cheap, portable and simple.
To set up the Bluesen I attached the aerial cable to the aerial input on the side of the TV. Turned everything on and the TV found the analogue VCR on channel 1. This took maybe 2 minutes to do. Now I can watch Freeview through the VCR and into the TV. Doing this I can still record shows, but alas as I don't have a dual tuner, can't watch another channel while recording.
Like this - Rabbit ears aerial > aerial cable >Dish TV freeview terrestrial set top box > RCA connector > into back of the VCR > Aerial transfer cable > Bluesen TV.
From source the feed is found under ATV.
Then to connect up the DVD player. This is an old one and does not come with HDMI. It is RCA red/white audio and yellow video like the cables that connect the set top box with the VCR.
DVD > RCA cable > TV audio left and right and video at back of TV. The DVD feed can be picked up on source AV, right below ATV.
Initially I scrolled down source menu too far and got DVD in black and white only on another source feed (which I thought was interesting). Found the colour line right below the TV channel in the on-screen menu - D'uh.
Picture quality is favourable. As this set is Asian in origin, the colours tend toward red, and brightness.
I customised the settings thus:-
From the set top box balanced brightness and contrast. Set HD resolution to Native.
On the TV, for picture, personalised and backed off from Dynamic setting a tad.
Colour temperature, backed off red and blue, enhanced green. The Asian colour palette sees a lot of red and they think blue cools things off. Green and blue are really similar, so I change the green by raising it in proportion to blue. At the moment I have red 40, green 50, blue 40. With a setting like this you get less of a chocolate box effect.
Aspect ratio. The standard setting is to have 1080i HD resolution and 16:9 from the set top box and 16:9 on the TV. I sit quite close to the TV so I went with 4:3 letterbox from the set top box into 4:3 on the TV (anything else on the TV and it distorts, be careful). I noticed a slight improvement in picture quality by setting HD resolution to Native.
Turned off noise reduction.
The picture is acceptable, though nothing can compete with the venerable Trinitron.
Sound from the Bluesen is crappy. Very tinny, lots of treble. I actually went down to zero treble and up to 100 bass, then sat the TV on a soft surface to adsorb sound from the speakers which emit sound from the base and downward. I had noticed the sound was bouncing off the table the TV was sitting on. The sound is better but still not very good. This is the Bluesen's worst feature.
Horrors, when I first turned the TV off and then switched on again, the channel it was tuned in on, just the one analogue feed from the VCR, had been lost. Ouch. Checked online to find this is a common problem with modern TV's. It's the software not loading correctly. Funny thing, while I could retune and all settings were then remembered, I turned the TV off a couple of times and each time I restarted I had to quickly retune that channel in again. It's as if part of the thing had saved but another hadn't.
Solution was to restore factory defaults (which didn't change the clock - funny that). Then when I tuned the channel in after restoring factory defaults, the channel stored in memory and goes to this one channel when restarted. Phew. This could be a glitch and the restoring of the factory defaults may need to be done again. I'll watch for this and if it happens again then I'll be quick to squeal.
[Update @ 09/10/2018: the TV is still working fine. It has turned out to be a bargain. The Dish TV set top box died pretty quickly, turns out they're rubbish. I needed this to receive the digital signal and to convert that signal to analogue so my VCR could record. So I don't do that now, I simply watch the TV alone. It is theoretically possible play back videos on the VCR but I don't do that either as the TV often needs to auto tune the channels in and once I do that I also need to retune the VCR channel and that's just a pain. So videotapes are only watched by the kids upstairs from old stock and we don't record any more at all. Instead we watch DVD's which can be bought very cheaply, especially old movies.]
Now the old style televisions are out. TV's are no longer bulky and heavy. They're now light and flat.
I went down to Noel Leeming Appliances and bought the cheapest 32" I could find in the store. The find was a Bluesen BL32C11NZ for $299.99. I've got no idea who Bluesen are, but I figure for that sort of money I couldn't really miss. The last time I forked out for a new TV, I paid over $1,000.
Setting this TV up was a breeze. I've got a simple but older system and I needed to keep everything in play. It's all set up and working well. I would allocate about two hours to get it the way you like it, including all the fiddling with personal settings.
Firstly, I want to record using my VCR. This is because one of the children has a VCR for playing back tapes upstairs. Tapes are very handy. They're cheap, portable and simple.
To set up the Bluesen I attached the aerial cable to the aerial input on the side of the TV. Turned everything on and the TV found the analogue VCR on channel 1. This took maybe 2 minutes to do. Now I can watch Freeview through the VCR and into the TV. Doing this I can still record shows, but alas as I don't have a dual tuner, can't watch another channel while recording.
Like this - Rabbit ears aerial > aerial cable >Dish TV freeview terrestrial set top box > RCA connector > into back of the VCR > Aerial transfer cable > Bluesen TV.
From source the feed is found under ATV.
Then to connect up the DVD player. This is an old one and does not come with HDMI. It is RCA red/white audio and yellow video like the cables that connect the set top box with the VCR.
DVD > RCA cable > TV audio left and right and video at back of TV. The DVD feed can be picked up on source AV, right below ATV.
Initially I scrolled down source menu too far and got DVD in black and white only on another source feed (which I thought was interesting). Found the colour line right below the TV channel in the on-screen menu - D'uh.
Picture quality is favourable. As this set is Asian in origin, the colours tend toward red, and brightness.
I customised the settings thus:-
From the set top box balanced brightness and contrast. Set HD resolution to Native.
On the TV, for picture, personalised and backed off from Dynamic setting a tad.
Colour temperature, backed off red and blue, enhanced green. The Asian colour palette sees a lot of red and they think blue cools things off. Green and blue are really similar, so I change the green by raising it in proportion to blue. At the moment I have red 40, green 50, blue 40. With a setting like this you get less of a chocolate box effect.
Aspect ratio. The standard setting is to have 1080i HD resolution and 16:9 from the set top box and 16:9 on the TV. I sit quite close to the TV so I went with 4:3 letterbox from the set top box into 4:3 on the TV (anything else on the TV and it distorts, be careful). I noticed a slight improvement in picture quality by setting HD resolution to Native.
Turned off noise reduction.
The picture is acceptable, though nothing can compete with the venerable Trinitron.
Sound from the Bluesen is crappy. Very tinny, lots of treble. I actually went down to zero treble and up to 100 bass, then sat the TV on a soft surface to adsorb sound from the speakers which emit sound from the base and downward. I had noticed the sound was bouncing off the table the TV was sitting on. The sound is better but still not very good. This is the Bluesen's worst feature.
Horrors, when I first turned the TV off and then switched on again, the channel it was tuned in on, just the one analogue feed from the VCR, had been lost. Ouch. Checked online to find this is a common problem with modern TV's. It's the software not loading correctly. Funny thing, while I could retune and all settings were then remembered, I turned the TV off a couple of times and each time I restarted I had to quickly retune that channel in again. It's as if part of the thing had saved but another hadn't.
Solution was to restore factory defaults (which didn't change the clock - funny that). Then when I tuned the channel in after restoring factory defaults, the channel stored in memory and goes to this one channel when restarted. Phew. This could be a glitch and the restoring of the factory defaults may need to be done again. I'll watch for this and if it happens again then I'll be quick to squeal.
[Update @ 09/10/2018: the TV is still working fine. It has turned out to be a bargain. The Dish TV set top box died pretty quickly, turns out they're rubbish. I needed this to receive the digital signal and to convert that signal to analogue so my VCR could record. So I don't do that now, I simply watch the TV alone. It is theoretically possible play back videos on the VCR but I don't do that either as the TV often needs to auto tune the channels in and once I do that I also need to retune the VCR channel and that's just a pain. So videotapes are only watched by the kids upstairs from old stock and we don't record any more at all. Instead we watch DVD's which can be bought very cheaply, especially old movies.]
March 03, 2016
Scott Kelly Sets Record
An example of media bias. Scott Kelly has been reported as having set a record aboard the International Space Station. Most reports are careful to mention that it is a NASA record. Of course, because he set the record along with Russian Mikhail Korniyenko. Does anyone mention that in those reports? Hmm (Okay a few do, buried deep somewhere).
And this 'record' really isn't even a record. The outright record of time in space on the one mission is held by Valeri Polyakov aboard Mir (437 days), and in second place Sergei Avdeyev (379 days). Kelly/Korniyenko are actually in 4th place.
That folks is a wooden medal, not even bronze. Is the USA that desperate for good news?
Oh and the person that has spent the most time in space, across multiple missions, is another Russian Genady Padalka (879 days).
Is all this time in space valuable? On many fronts it is, but getting to grips with zero gravity is another matter entirely. Those on the ISS are actually equivalent to sky divers. They are weightless, falling, not experiencing zero gravity. They experience the same amount of gravity on their bodies as we do on the surface of the planet.
It's an amazing sight going out at night to see the ISS fly across the sky. It looks like a shooting star, except it never burns up. Sometimes though, I wonder why we are told some of the things we hear. Are they after more money? And what do they need the money for?
Mars, I mean really, it's a dead planet. It died because as a planet it is not viable. I don't want to contribute to someone landing on it and I think the taxpayer should not have to pay for any of it either. Doing so would be a waste of time IMO.
And this 'record' really isn't even a record. The outright record of time in space on the one mission is held by Valeri Polyakov aboard Mir (437 days), and in second place Sergei Avdeyev (379 days). Kelly/Korniyenko are actually in 4th place.
That folks is a wooden medal, not even bronze. Is the USA that desperate for good news?
Oh and the person that has spent the most time in space, across multiple missions, is another Russian Genady Padalka (879 days).
Is all this time in space valuable? On many fronts it is, but getting to grips with zero gravity is another matter entirely. Those on the ISS are actually equivalent to sky divers. They are weightless, falling, not experiencing zero gravity. They experience the same amount of gravity on their bodies as we do on the surface of the planet.
It's an amazing sight going out at night to see the ISS fly across the sky. It looks like a shooting star, except it never burns up. Sometimes though, I wonder why we are told some of the things we hear. Are they after more money? And what do they need the money for?
Mars, I mean really, it's a dead planet. It died because as a planet it is not viable. I don't want to contribute to someone landing on it and I think the taxpayer should not have to pay for any of it either. Doing so would be a waste of time IMO.
March 01, 2016
Auction Hunters
Have you seen Auction Hunters on the TV? Wondered if it is real? Well, no, it isn't real, it's totally fake.
The stars of the show are Allen Haff and Clinton "Ton" Jones. They're actors. All the storage units are set ups, seeded with stuff that is miraculously worth money. Often the units have guns in them, and they're often rare collectables. The full list of antique and collectables this and that goes on and on.
I don't know for sure, but I think it's likely the 'experts' supply the stuff to be won at auction. They then buy their own stuff back off of old Haff and Ton. The money changing hands are props, probably not even real notes.
We are expected to believe that these expert traders drive an old van with very uncomfortable seating clear across the USA, coast to coast, and they pop in to all these storage unit auctions, which all have value in them. How about the van is different for each location and they fly in to do the filming, yeah that sounds more like it. At best they transport the same van on the back of a truck. Take your pick.
In a later series they open a pawn shop. I have a screen grab from Google street view of this location. There is no pawn shop at 142 Culver Blvd, Playa Del Rey, CA 90293 USA as at May 2015. Here is the shop...
As you can see there is now an Asian health shop there, Tai Chi type of thing. The location was used as the set for the Haff Ton pawn shop when Auction Hunters was being made. Maybe the shop was empty back when they were filming.
You know what really pisses me off about amateurs like these guys? They don't actually know what they're doing.
Winning at auction is a real art. Many of the stunts Haff and Ton claim to use at auctions are actually illegal. These guys are acting. Rival bidders and auctioneers don't let you get away with the shit Haff and Ton pull. They get away with it because none of it is real.
The stars of the show are Allen Haff and Clinton "Ton" Jones. They're actors. All the storage units are set ups, seeded with stuff that is miraculously worth money. Often the units have guns in them, and they're often rare collectables. The full list of antique and collectables this and that goes on and on.
I don't know for sure, but I think it's likely the 'experts' supply the stuff to be won at auction. They then buy their own stuff back off of old Haff and Ton. The money changing hands are props, probably not even real notes.
We are expected to believe that these expert traders drive an old van with very uncomfortable seating clear across the USA, coast to coast, and they pop in to all these storage unit auctions, which all have value in them. How about the van is different for each location and they fly in to do the filming, yeah that sounds more like it. At best they transport the same van on the back of a truck. Take your pick.
In a later series they open a pawn shop. I have a screen grab from Google street view of this location. There is no pawn shop at 142 Culver Blvd, Playa Del Rey, CA 90293 USA as at May 2015. Here is the shop...
Location of Haff Ton Pawn Shop |
As you can see there is now an Asian health shop there, Tai Chi type of thing. The location was used as the set for the Haff Ton pawn shop when Auction Hunters was being made. Maybe the shop was empty back when they were filming.
You know what really pisses me off about amateurs like these guys? They don't actually know what they're doing.
Winning at auction is a real art. Many of the stunts Haff and Ton claim to use at auctions are actually illegal. These guys are acting. Rival bidders and auctioneers don't let you get away with the shit Haff and Ton pull. They get away with it because none of it is real.