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As It So Happens

8/25/2013

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The American power grid is an outgrowth of a competitive war of titanic proportions between two vastly different visions for delivering electrical power.  The war was initially between two men of genius caliber intellect.  It quickly grew beyond them to those that supported them, and beyond.  The visionary wunderkinds were Thomas Edison and Nickola Tesla.

The war between these two men was the stuff of legend.  Their competing visions for electrical power boiled down the DC model promoted by Edison and the AC model promoted by Tesla.  Both models were radically different from each other.  The struggle for supremacy of the electrical distribution hegemony brought out the best and the worst in both men and their corporate backers.

Much has been said and written about this period of strife.  The purpose of this piece is however not to chronicle in detail this period.  Rather it is my purpose to ask a simple question.  In the decades since this struggle was concluded and Tesla's AC model won, we have seen the task as building a grid of electrical distribution and making that grid as efficient as possible.  All the effort has been place on managing the grid.  And we have settled into a world of balkanized oligarch's ruling regionalized monopolies that have a stranglehold on the consumer.

My question is this, What's next?  Where is the effort for innovation in the world of power generation?  The battle for creation of new methods and new processes seems to have ended when the battle between Edison and Tesla concluded.  Sure we have experimented new technologies and we have created more efficient methods of delivering power.  The revolutionary time of Edison and Tesla seems to be gone.

There don't appear to be any great thinkers working on the question of what's next.  There don't appear to be men and women on the stature of their progenitors of the grid efforting this issue.  A dearth of fundamental basic research is where we find ourselves.  Researchers don't seem to be interested in revolutionizing the situation.  They seem be content to put their efforts into innovating the status quo.  Essentially making the mouse trap a more effective, not in reviewing if the mouse trap is needed at all is where we reside.

The status quo is untenable.  Our civilization is struggling under an archaic model that is verging close to a century in age.  And while the grid's impressive size and scope in the first world, it is a staggering problem for the developing world.  As nations attempt to make the herculean leaps that first world nations made a century ago, their population sizes and the grids and power plant necessary to support them are becoming environmentally challenging.

Take the athletes that competed in the Beijing Olympiad for example.  Across the glod they spent a minimal amount of time there, because of poor air quality.  As pollution goes, China's environmental situation is bad verging worse.  Even with the efforts to clean things up for the Olympics, it was a difficult situation.  As other nations of China's size attempt to make their leaps the global impact is likely to be disastrous.

I am not a doom and gloom let's all return to the 17th century agrarian life, sort of person.  Nor am I suggesting radical change for the overall individual electrical consumer.  what I am saying is that our civilization needs the next gargantuan innovation that fundamentally alters the electrical model.  Our world is waiting with baited breath for that which comes next.

The world needs a cheap, clean, and low impact, user friendly invention that shifts away from the grid delivery model, that while necessary in the past, can no longer be relied upon.  Some suggest solar and wind are the way forward and there are benefits to this suggestion.  It does however fail the test I laid out for what is needed and are both useless in poor weather conditions or times of zero wind.

Some suggest that nuclear power offers the best way forward.  It also fails the test I laid out.  Furthermore the recent earthquake in Japan demonstrates that even when the best and brightest build these plants to the highest standards, they are still horrendously risky endeavors.  These plants are also among the most costly ways to produce energy.  Also even with more than half a century of experience with this power type, we do not have a functional solution for how to handle the waste they produce.

Each other method currently deployed carries with it risk.  They all have ecological costs and human health risks attached to them.  None have zero environmental impact.  No have zero risks to human health.  All are products of the last race for innovation and power production.

What we need is something that is fundamentally new.  We need something sets the consumer free from their corporate masters, that attempts to enslave them.  We need something that renders obsolete the old model and ushers in the next age of human development and progress.  Anything less is not what's next, and it is by extension that which already is.  And as such is an effort to arrange the Titanic's deck chairs for the best viewing angle of the eventual calamity that will claim us all.

We need a revolution, not to change which company bills the consumer.  Rather a revolution that sets us all and our world free.  We owe the next generation nothing less.

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Embrace the Holy Frying Pan

11/28/2010

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So much of our life occurs within the context of the oblivious mundane.  The repetivie instances of daily life, in which we do what we do largely on autpilot.  The run of the mill things that happen each and every day, unrealized and uninspected moments flow by us without acknowledgement.  And given the limitations of the human intellect and attention span, this is as it should be.

There are other moments, much rarer moments, in which none of that is true.  These moments come to us, by what appears to be their own volition.  They come to us with a will, an energy, and an intellect all their own.  And their appearance is never sublte.  Once they arrive in grand and dramatic fashion, it is obvious that the status quo has cesased to be.  And honestly, it is clear that what was will be no more and that a new norm has arrived.  This new norm will define our context.

I would love to say that these moments are painless and enjoyable.  I would howver be guilty of dishonesty if I allowed that perception to settle in.  The truth, at least for me, is that they are difficult and painful.  More often than not they are akin to a baseball bat to the head.  As the change they bring with them in their wake is always difficult to accept and adjust to.

Rightly or wrongly, they are like a frying pan to the head.  Rightly or wrongly, watching an existing order of things pass from existence is never an easy thing much less be a participant in.  And when the source of these changes being divine, becomes known, it doesn't make it any easier to walk through.  Participating in the demise and or genocide of an order, an existance, a life never is.

Our feelings of such things notwithstanding, the change such holy frying pans betoken cannot be deterred or denied.  The event comes and works its will regardless.  Subsequently it becomes more important to accept them to understand our need or them.

This is largely because our creator knows that the real and lasting changes we need in our lives, more often than not, we cannot produce in and of ourselves.  Human beings are typically builders, we build the life our context allows and affords us.  There are just moments when our context will no longer support our growth to the next level.  When that happens usually God will launch the ICBM of change into our life.

Knowing this to be true, it falls to us to embrace the baseball bat, the frying pan, or the missile and endeavor to grasp what was removed, what remains, and what was added.  Grousing about the pain it caused does no good.  So I say, embrace the holy frying pan!  Ride the lightning as it enters our context, knowing that its all for our greater good that it came there in the first place.
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The Simple Pleasures

4/10/2010

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Life, as I have come to grasp it, is all about the simple pleasures.  I didn't used to think like this.  I used to think life was about the grandiose and big picture items.  I used to think that they were what defined me.  Things like, what profession employs me, how well I am doing in that profession, what kind of house I have, where I live, what kind of car I drive, etc. 

I have come to understand, much like the writer of the book of Ecclesiates did, that these are nothing.  They are a chasing after the wind.  In essence, they are nothing more than the wind rushing through your ears as you are chasing hard after some mirage in the distance.  They have no substance, no weight, no mass that can be measured or quantified in real terms.  They don't matter, and they don't last.

What I have come to understand that has value are the little things.  Taking pleasure in a simple moment.  Enjoying the company of my wife on a nice spring day outside on our patio for instance.  Taking my daughters to the park and letting them play until they are too tired to complain about anything.  Enjoying a single cigar for the plenary pleasure that it is.

Unlike the big and the grandiose that are like chaff in the wind, these simple pleasures matter.  They last, they abide in your spirit in ways that cannot be fully understood in the mortal coil.  No person at the end of life is ever going to regret not spending more time at work, or pursuing their career more aggressively.  Not  taking pleasure in the little things will form these regrets.

So my advice is this... relish the little things, and revel in them.  Understand that the moment in which you reside will not ever come this way again exactly like this.  Hold those in your in your life close to you and never let them go...  Have a good weekend.
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