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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#1
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![]() http://www.marke****ch.com/news/stor...%7D&siteid=rss Feb. 26, 2008 .................................................. ................................................. As the broader market began to regain lost ground, crude prices for April delivery gained 2.3% to a new high of $101.11 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, surpassing crude's last record of $100.65 hit last week. ...Jim Thompson -- | James E.Thompson, P.E. | mens | | Analog Innovations, Inc. | et | | Analog/Mixed-Signal ASICK's and Discrete Systems | manus | | Phoenix, Arizona Voice ![]() | E-mail Address at Website Fax ![]() | http://www.analog-innovations.com | 1962 | America: Land of the Freedom Abusers, Because of the *******s. |
#2
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On Feb 27, 3:59 pm, "Jim Thompson" To-Email-Use-The-Envelope-I...@My-
Web-Site.com wrote: http://www.marke****ch.com/news/stor...7B40D68525%2DB... Feb. 26, 2008 .................................................. ................................................ As the broader market began to regain lost ground, crude prices for April delivery gained 2.3% to a new high of $101.11 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, surpassing crude's last record of $100.65 hit last week. Still massively under-priced. It wasn't that long ago (around 1998-99) I was working on designing oil survey gear when the price was around $15 a barrel. Petrol prices certainly haven't gone up 700% since then... Petrol is still cheaper than milk and bottled water here in Oz. Funny how it all works huh? Dave. |
#3
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On Feb 26, 10:14*pm, "David L. Jones" wrote:
On Feb 27, 3:59 pm, "Jim Thompson" To-Email-Use-The-Envelope-I...@My- Web-Site.com wrote: http://www.marke****ch.com/news/stor...7B40D68525%2DB.... Feb. 26, 2008 .................................................. ..........................*....................... As the broader market began to regain lost ground, crude prices for April delivery gained 2.3% to a new high of $101.11 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, surpassing crude's last record of $100.65 hit last week. Still massively under-priced. Perhaps so. It wasn't that long ago (around 1998-99) I was working on designing oil survey gear when the price was around $15 a barrel. Petrol prices certainly haven't gone up 700% since then... Petrol is still cheaper than milk and bottled water here in Oz. Funny how it all works huh? Dave. I'm developing a milk-powered car. When petrol gets more expensive than milk, I'm gonna make millions. |
#4
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![]() "gearhead" wrote in message ... On Feb 26, 10:14 pm, "David L. Jones" wrote: On Feb 27, 3:59 pm, "Jim Thompson" To-Email-Use-The-Envelope-I...@My- Web-Site.com wrote: http://www.marke****ch.com/news/stor...7B40D68525%2DB... Feb. 26, 2008 .................................................. .........................*....................... As the broader market began to regain lost ground, crude prices for April delivery gained 2.3% to a new high of $101.11 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, surpassing crude's last record of $100.65 hit last week. Still massively under-priced. Perhaps so. It wasn't that long ago (around 1998-99) I was working on designing oil survey gear when the price was around $15 a barrel. Petrol prices certainly haven't gone up 700% since then... Petrol is still cheaper than milk and bottled water here in Oz. Funny how it all works huh? Dave. I'm developing a milk-powered car. When petrol gets more expensive than milk, I'm gonna make millions. Some idiots said they can power a car with water, I tried splitting water and I got 20% return of what I put in. ****.... America you're lying to each other to no end. If you want to know the guy who discovered a solution for fuel problem then he is me. I just act funny that's all. I know a lot more than you gave me the credit. Ain't that a HOOT? ...Jim Thompson -- | James E.Thompson, P.E. | mens | | Analog Innovations, Inc. | et | | Analog/Mixed-Signal ASICK's and Discrete Systems | manus | | Phoenix, Arizona Voice ![]() | E-mail Address at Website Fax ![]() | http://www.analog-innovations.com | 1962 | America: Land of the Freedom Abusers, Because of the *******s. |
#5
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![]() Some idiots said they can power a car with water, I tried splitting water and I got 20% return of what I put in. ****.... America you're lying to each other to no end. If you want to know the guy who discovered a solution for fuel problem then he is me. I just act funny that's all. I know a lot more than you gave me the credit. Ain't that a HOOT? It's just another perpetual motion machine scheme. Water powered cars, 100 mpg carburetors, free energy, these scams have been around for hundreds of years. Every one of them violates well proven laws of science but they succeed because people want to believe. |
#6
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Hey "Jim" (Message-ID: ), your sig isn't even lining
up. Go play with your kindergarten classmates. Well I suppose they don't want you, huh? Tim -- Deep Fryer: A very philosophical monk. Website @ http://webpages.charter.net/dawill/tmoranwms "Jim Thompson" wrote in message ... Some idiots |
#7
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![]() "Jim Thompson" skrev i en meddelelse ... http://www.marke****ch.com/news/stor...%7D&siteid=rss Feb. 26, 2008 .................................................. ................................................ As the broader market began to regain lost ground, crude prices for April delivery gained 2.3% to a new high of $101.11 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, surpassing crude's last record of $100.65 hit last week. ...Jim Thompson What people *should* be watching is the price of Wheat, Soy Beans e.t.c. because that is where trouble will come from. In the middle east, India and Pakistan people are going from being middle class to having to choose between heating and eating! China has enacted price controls - *ensuring* a shortage (maybe they will shoot some farmers to get the point across that it is well to produce at a loss) PS: And welcome to the brand new regime of Ressource limited growth replacing Finance limited growth. South Africa's mines are running below capacity due to lack of electricity. |
#8
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On Feb 27, 9:35 am, "Frithiof Andreas Jensen"
wrote: "Jim Thompson" skrev i en ... http://www.marke****ch.com/news/stor...7B40D68525%2DB... Feb. 26, 2008 .................................................. ................................................ As the broader market began to regain lost ground, crude prices for April delivery gained 2.3% to a new high of $101.11 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, surpassing crude's last record of $100.65 hit last week. ...Jim Thompson What people *should* be watching is the price of Wheat, Soy Beans e.t.c. because that is where trouble will come from. In the middle east, India and Pakistan people are going from being middle class to having to choose between heating and eating! China has enacted price controls - *ensuring* a shortage (maybe they will shoot some farmers to get the point across that it is well to produce at a loss) You can thank the biofuel craze for that. Planting for burning drives up food from supply *and* demand sides, plus all the downstream products--and in other countries--too. Unintended consequences: 1. Al Gore sounds alarm 2. biofuel craze 3. farmers grow feedstock for cars instead of people Results: 4. Human misery increased a. inflation, locally b. food becomes unaffordable in Mexico and Haiti c. people starve 5. Environment not improved a. replacement food grown, appallingly inefficiently b. net CO2 emissions increase Best wishes, James Arthur |
#9
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In ,
James Arthur wrote: on food price inflation You can thank the biofuel craze for that. Planting for burning drives up food from supply *and* demand sides, plus all the downstream products--and in other countries--too. Unintended consequences: 1. Al Gore sounds alarm 2. biofuel craze 3. farmers grow feedstock for cars instead of people Results: 4. Human misery increased a. inflation, locally b. food becomes unaffordable in Mexico and Haiti c. people starve 5. Environment not improved a. replacement food grown, appallingly inefficiently b. net CO2 emissions increase I don't see 5b being true. The food plants is are replaced from carbon already in the environment. If this achieves any reduction in consumption in fossil fuels, then it achieves a decrease in transfer of carbon from the lithosphere to the atmosphere, biosphere and hydrosphere. - Don Klipstein ) |
#10
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On Feb 27, 3:10 pm, (Don Klipstein) wrote:
In , James Arthur wrote: on food price inflation You can thank the biofuel craze for that. Planting for burning drives up food from supply *and* demand sides, plus all the downstream products--and in other countries--too. Unintended consequences: 1. Al Gore sounds alarm 2. biofuel craze 3. farmers grow feedstock for cars instead of people Results: 4. Human misery increased a. inflation, locally b. food becomes unaffordable in Mexico and Haiti c. people starve 5. Environment not improved a. replacement food grown, appallingly inefficiently b. net CO2 emissions increase I don't see 5b being true. The food plants is are replaced from carbon already in the environment. If this achieves any reduction in consumption in fossil fuels, then it achieves a decrease in transfer of carbon from the lithosphere to the atmosphere, biosphere and hydrosphere. - Don Klipstein ) There was a paper out recently on that. The problem not previously considered is that any food not grown here has to be replaced. That means it has to be grown somewhere else, generally under more primitive conditions (e.g. slash & burn (shudder) or just otherwise less efficiently). Since the planting-for-biofuel barely yields more than it consumes in tractor fuel, etc., to start with, any overall loss in efficiency results in net increased emissions. So say the paper's authors, anyhow. Cheers, James Arthur |
#11
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On Feb 27, 3:25 pm, James Arthur wrote:
On Feb 27, 3:10 pm, (Don Klipstein) wrote: In , James Arthur wrote: on food price inflation You can thank the biofuel craze for that. Planting for burning drives up food from supply *and* demand sides, plus all the downstream products--and in other countries--too. Unintended consequences: 1. Al Gore sounds alarm 2. biofuel craze 3. farmers grow feedstock for cars instead of people Results: 4. Human misery increased a. inflation, locally b. food becomes unaffordable in Mexico and Haiti c. people starve 5. Environment not improved a. replacement food grown, appallingly inefficiently b. net CO2 emissions increase I don't see 5b being true. The food plants is are replaced from carbon already in the environment. If this achieves any reduction in consumption in fossil fuels, then it achieves a decrease in transfer of carbon from the lithosphere to the atmosphere, biosphere and hydrosphere. - Don Klipstein ) There was a paper out recently on that. The problem not previously considered is that any food not grown here has to be replaced. That means it has to be grown somewhere else, generally under more primitive conditions (e.g. slash & burn (shudder) or just otherwise less efficiently). Since the planting-for-biofuel barely yields more than it consumes in tractor fuel, etc., to start with, any overall loss in efficiency results in net increased emissions. So say the paper's authors, anyhow. Summary he http://www.npr.org/templates/story/s...oryId=18784732 --James |
#12
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On Feb 27, 3:25*pm, James Arthur wrote:
On Feb 27, 3:10 pm, (Don Klipstein) wrote: In , James Arthur wrote: on food price inflation You can thank the biofuel craze for that. *Planting for burning drives up food from supply *and* demand sides, plus all the downstream products--and in other countries--too. Unintended consequences: 1. Al Gore sounds alarm 2. biofuel craze 3. farmers grow feedstock for cars instead of people Results: 4. Human misery increased * a. inflation, locally * b. food becomes unaffordable in Mexico and Haiti * c. people starve 5. Environment not improved * a. replacement food grown, appallingly inefficiently * b. net CO2 emissions increase * I don't see 5b being true. *The food plants is are replaced from carbon already in the environment. *If this achieves any reduction in consumption in fossil fuels, then it achieves a decrease in transfer of carbon from the lithosphere to the atmosphere, biosphere and hydrosphere. *- Don Klipstein ) There was a paper out recently on that. The problem not previously considered is that any food not grown here has to be replaced. *That means it has to be grown somewhere else, generally under more primitive conditions (e.g. slash & burn (shudder) or just otherwise less efficiently). Since the planting-for-biofuel barely yields more than it consumes in tractor fuel, etc., to start with, any overall loss in efficiency results in net increased emissions. *So say the paper's authors, anyhow. Cheers, James Arthur- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - What about using kelp (seaweed) for bio-fuel? The ocean is cheap real estate and you don't have irrigation problems, mostly just transport problems. All you have to do is harvest the kelp and turn it into methane gas. -Bill |
#13
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In ,
James Arthur wrote: On Feb 27, 3:10 pm, (Don Klipstein) wrote: In , James Arthur wrote: on food price inflation You can thank the biofuel craze for that. Planting for burning drives up food from supply *and* demand sides, plus all the downstream products--and in other countries--too. Unintended consequences: 1. Al Gore sounds alarm 2. biofuel craze 3. farmers grow feedstock for cars instead of people Results: 4. Human misery increased a. inflation, locally b. food becomes unaffordable in Mexico and Haiti c. people starve 5. Environment not improved a. replacement food grown, appallingly inefficiently b. net CO2 emissions increase I don't see 5b being true. The food plants is are replaced from carbon already in the environment. If this achieves any reduction in consumption in fossil fuels, then it achieves a decrease in transfer of carbon from the lithosphere to the atmosphere, biosphere and hydrosphere. - Don Klipstein ) There was a paper out recently on that. The problem not previously considered is that any food not grown here has to be replaced. That means it has to be grown somewhere else, generally under more primitive conditions (e.g. slash & burn (shudder) or just otherwise less efficiently). Since the planting-for-biofuel barely yields more than it consumes in tractor fuel, etc., to start with, any overall loss in efficiency results in net increased emissions. So say the paper's authors, anyhow. The way I hear it, a Cornell study made calculations assuming all ethanol comes from corn grown on fields requiring irrigation, which is only 15% of all American corn. It appears to me that the valid points against biofuels are mainly on bidding food prices higher. - Don Klipstein ) |
#14
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Don Klipstein wrote:
In , James Arthur wrote: on food price inflation You can thank the biofuel craze for that. Planting for burning drives up food from supply *and* demand sides, plus all the downstream products--and in other countries--too. Unintended consequences: 1. Al Gore sounds alarm 2. biofuel craze 3. farmers grow feedstock for cars instead of people Results: 4. Human misery increased a. inflation, locally b. food becomes unaffordable in Mexico and Haiti c. people starve 5. Environment not improved a. replacement food grown, appallingly inefficiently b. net CO2 emissions increase I don't see 5b being true. The food plants is are replaced from carbon already in the environment. If this achieves any reduction in consumption in fossil fuels, then it achieves a decrease in transfer of carbon from the lithosphere to the atmosphere, biosphere and hydrosphere. - Don Klipstein ) Check out whether leaving the non-product parts of the plants just lying there versus plowing it under has the best carbon sequestration result. |
#15
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In message , Don Klipstein
writes In , James Arthur wrote: on food price inflation You can thank the biofuel craze for that. Planting for burning drives up food from supply *and* demand sides, plus all the downstream products--and in other countries--too. Unintended consequences: 1. Al Gore sounds alarm 2. biofuel craze 3. farmers grow feedstock for cars instead of people Results: 4. Human misery increased a. inflation, locally b. food becomes unaffordable in Mexico and Haiti c. people starve 5. Environment not improved a. replacement food grown, appallingly inefficiently b. net CO2 emissions increase I don't see 5b being true. The food plants is are replaced from carbon already in the environment. If this achieves any reduction in consumption in fossil fuels, then it achieves a decrease in transfer of carbon from the lithosphere to the atmosphere, biosphere and hydrosphere. Only if you don't slash and burn pristine rain forest to grow your new fuel and food which is what is happening in many places at present. You lose on both sides of the equation, burning the forest and no longer having it there to do photosynthesis. By comparison the crops don't fix as much CO2 and the poor soil quickly degrades without the forest canopy. The economics of biofuel are questionable at best - some schemes actually use more energy from fossil fuel to cultivate and process the crop it than is yielded by the final product. You might as well not bother. When we can turn straw and wood waste into alcohol for fuel then we will have something useful, but turning grain into fuel is certifiable. Regards. -- Martin Brown -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#16
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In article , Martin Brown wrote:
In message , Don Klipstein writes In , James Arthur wrote: on food price inflation You can thank the biofuel craze for that. Planting for burning drives up food from supply *and* demand sides, plus all the downstream products--and in other countries--too. Unintended consequences: 1. Al Gore sounds alarm 2. biofuel craze 3. farmers grow feedstock for cars instead of people Results: 4. Human misery increased a. inflation, locally b. food becomes unaffordable in Mexico and Haiti c. people starve 5. Environment not improved a. replacement food grown, appallingly inefficiently b. net CO2 emissions increase I don't see 5b being true. The food plants is are replaced from carbon already in the environment. If this achieves any reduction in consumption in fossil fuels, then it achieves a decrease in transfer of carbon from the lithosphere to the atmosphere, biosphere and hydrosphere. Only if you don't slash and burn pristine rain forest to grow your new fuel and food which is what is happening in many places at present. Forest destruction is a one-time event for a given area. Having the land replace petroleum consumption with biomass burning will be replacement of ongoing carbon desequestration with neutral carbon impact. You lose on both sides of the equation, burning the forest and no longer having it there to do photosynthesis. By comparison the crops don't fix as much CO2 Where do you get that? A steady-state forest has zero carbon impact both locally and globally - the biomass content in a natural forest is not steadily increasing long term, but constant on a long term. Cropland sequesters carbon locally and if the crop is eaten, burned, decomposed or any combination of these, has zero carbon impact globally. and the poor soil quickly degrades without the forest canopy. That is a separate problem, to be solved by growing sustainable crops or growing crops where they can be sustained. The USA has a fair amount of farmland that could not be sustained until crop rotation including legumes was implemented. The economics of biofuel are questionable at best - some schemes actually use more energy from fossil fuel to cultivate and process the crop it than is yielded by the final product. You might as well not bother. What about the schemes that produce more energy than consumed? They do exist and are used! When we can turn straw and wood waste into alcohol for fuel then we will have something useful, but turning grain into fuel is certifiable. Impact on food prices is a remaining argument to consider. Meanwhile, corn is now $5.21-$5.28 a bushel, 9.3 to 9.4 cents per pound. With petroleum costing about 30 cents per pound and having much more energy per unit weight than corn probably by a factor of more than 3.2 or so, I would go along with arguments against government mandates to get corn to get used that way unless there is a benefit, such a likelihood that biofuel ethanol will be cheaper (even per unit energy) than petroleum in the foreseeable future. - Don Klipstein ) |
#17
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On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 12:12:47 -0800 (PST), James Arthur
wrote: On Feb 27, 9:35 am, "Frithiof Andreas Jensen" k wrote: "Jim Thompson" skrev i en ... http://www.marke****ch.com/news/stor...7B40D68525%2DB... Feb. 26, 2008 .................................................. ................................................ As the broader market began to regain lost ground, crude prices for April delivery gained 2.3% to a new high of $101.11 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, surpassing crude's last record of $100.65 hit last week. ...Jim Thompson What people *should* be watching is the price of Wheat, Soy Beans e.t.c. because that is where trouble will come from. In the middle east, India and Pakistan people are going from being middle class to having to choose between heating and eating! China has enacted price controls - *ensuring* a shortage (maybe they will shoot some farmers to get the point across that it is well to produce at a loss) You can thank the biofuel craze for that. Planting for burning drives up food from supply *and* demand sides, plus all the downstream products--and in other countries--too. Unintended consequences: 1. Al Gore sounds alarm 2. biofuel craze 3. farmers grow feedstock for cars instead of people Results: 4. Human misery increased a. inflation, locally b. food becomes unaffordable in Mexico and Haiti c. people starve 5. Environment not improved a. replacement food grown, appallingly inefficiently b. net CO2 emissions increase Best wishes, James Arthur So they gave the Nobel Peace Prize to a mass murderer. John |
#18
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On Feb 27, 6:43 pm, John Larkin wrote:
On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 12:12:47 -0800 (PST), James Arthur wrote: On Feb 27, 9:35 am, "Frithiof Andreas Jensen" wrote: [...] What people *should* be watching is the price of Wheat, Soy Beans e.t.c. because that is where trouble will come from. In the middle east, India and Pakistan people are going from being middle class to having to choose between heating and eating! China has enacted price controls - *ensuring* a shortage (maybe they will shoot some farmers to get the point across that it is well to produce at a loss) You can thank the biofuel craze for that. Planting for burning drives up food from supply *and* demand sides, plus all the downstream products--and in other countries--too. Unintended consequences: 1. Al Gore sounds alarm 2. biofuel craze 3. farmers grow feedstock for cars instead of people Results: 4. Human misery increased a. inflation, locally b. food becomes unaffordable in Mexico and Haiti c. people starve 5. Environment not improved a. replacement food grown, appallingly inefficiently b. net CO2 emissions increase Best wishes, James Arthur So they gave the Nobel Peace Prize to a mass murderer. John http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22902512/ Intentions are fine, but one has to consider one's actions carefully. "Activists" sometimes fall a little short in this department. Cheers, James Arthur |
#19
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On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 22:21:53 -0800 (PST), James Arthur
wrote: On Feb 27, 6:43 pm, John Larkin wrote: On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 12:12:47 -0800 (PST), James Arthur wrote: On Feb 27, 9:35 am, "Frithiof Andreas Jensen" wrote: [...] What people *should* be watching is the price of Wheat, Soy Beans e.t.c. because that is where trouble will come from. In the middle east, India and Pakistan people are going from being middle class to having to choose between heating and eating! China has enacted price controls - *ensuring* a shortage (maybe they will shoot some farmers to get the point across that it is well to produce at a loss) You can thank the biofuel craze for that. Planting for burning drives up food from supply *and* demand sides, plus all the downstream products--and in other countries--too. Unintended consequences: 1. Al Gore sounds alarm 2. biofuel craze 3. farmers grow feedstock for cars instead of people Results: 4. Human misery increased a. inflation, locally b. food becomes unaffordable in Mexico and Haiti c. people starve 5. Environment not improved a. replacement food grown, appallingly inefficiently b. net CO2 emissions increase Best wishes, James Arthur So they gave the Nobel Peace Prize to a mass murderer. John http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22902512/ Intentions are fine, but one has to consider one's actions carefully. "Activists" sometimes fall a little short in this department. Cheers, James Arthur "At the market in the La Saline slum, two cups of rice now sell for 60 cents, up 10 cents from December and 50 percent from a year ago." That's tragic. At the upscale Safeway down the street, I can get premium-quality jasmine rice for about 40 cents a pound. John |
#20
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On Feb 27, 10:21*pm, James Arthur wrote:
On Feb 27, 6:43 pm, John Larkin wrote: On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 12:12:47 -0800 (PST), James Arthur *wrote: On Feb 27, 9:35 am, "Frithiof Andreas Jensen" wrote: [...] What people *should* be watching is the price of Wheat, Soy Beans e.t..c. because that is where trouble will come from. In the middle east, India and Pakistan people are going from being middle class to having to choose between heating and eating! China has enacted price controls - *ensuring* a shortage (maybe they will shoot some farmers to get the point across that it is well to produce at a loss) You can thank the biofuel craze for that. *Planting for burning drives up food from supply *and* demand sides, plus all the downstream products--and in other countries--too. Unintended consequences: 1. Al Gore sounds alarm 2. biofuel craze 3. farmers grow feedstock for cars instead of people Results: 4. Human misery increased * a. inflation, locally * b. food becomes unaffordable in Mexico and Haiti * c. people starve 5. Environment not improved * a. replacement food grown, appallingly inefficiently * b. net CO2 emissions increase Best wishes, James Arthur So they gave the Nobel Peace Prize to a mass murderer. John http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22902512/ Intentions are fine, but one has to consider one's actions carefully. "Activists" sometimes fall a little short in this department. I don't know who actually said it, and that means we give it to Ben Franklin: "The road to hell is paved with good intentions." -- BF "Of all tyrannies a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It may be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for own good will torment us without end, for they do so with the approval of their own conscience." - C.S. Lewis, God in the Dock |
#21
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![]() "John Larkin" skrev i en meddelelse ... So they gave the Nobel Peace Prize to a mass murderer. John The Peace Price lost all credibility when they gave it to Yassir Arafat! |
#22
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#23
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On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 18:35:22 +0100, in sci.electronics.design
"Frithiof Andreas Jensen" wrote: "Jim Thompson" skrev i en meddelelse ... http://www.marke****ch.com/news/stor...%7D&siteid=rss Feb. 26, 2008 .................................................. ................................................ As the broader market began to regain lost ground, crude prices for April delivery gained 2.3% to a new high of $101.11 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, surpassing crude's last record of $100.65 hit last week. ...Jim Thompson What people *should* be watching is the price of Wheat, Soy Beans e.t.c. because that is where trouble will come from. In the middle east, India and Pakistan people are going from being middle class to having to choose between heating and eating! China has enacted price controls - *ensuring* a shortage (maybe they will shoot some farmers to get the point across that it is well to produce at a loss) PS: And welcome to the brand new regime of Ressource limited growth replacing Finance limited growth. South Africa's mines are running below capacity due to lack of electricity. This sort of sums it up http://business.timesonline.co.uk/to...cle3423734.ece and http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/...,3838970.story with links to the UN docs martin |
#24
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On Feb 27, 12:27 pm, Martin Griffith wrote:
On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 18:35:22 +0100, in sci.electronics.design "Frithiof Andreas Jensen" wrote: "Jim Thompson" skrev i en ... http://www.marke****ch.com/news/stor...7B40D68525%2DB... Feb. 26, 2008 .................................................. ................................................ As the broader market began to regain lost ground, crude prices for April delivery gained 2.3% to a new high of $101.11 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, surpassing crude's last record of $100.65 hit last week. ...Jim Thompson What people *should* be watching is the price of Wheat, Soy Beans e.t.c. because that is where trouble will come from. In the middle east, India and Pakistan people are going from being middle class to having to choose between heating and eating! China has enacted price controls - *ensuring* a shortage (maybe they will shoot some farmers to get the point across that it is well to produce at a loss) PS: And welcome to the brand new regime of Ressource limited growth replacing Finance limited growth. South Africa's mines are running below capacity due to lack of electricity. This sort of sums it uphttp://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/natur... andhttp://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-ed-food26feb26,0,3838970.story Not fair--Mr. Bush responds wholeheartedly (if ill-advisedly)--with Congress in tow--to their (Greens in general, and the LA Times in particular) criticism about not supporting alternative fuels, then they lambaste him when he does. That's not helpful. We need less advocacy & more sensible discussion. But I suppose it's outrage that sells. Cheers, James Arthur |
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![]() "James Arthur" wrote in message ... On Feb 27, 12:27 pm, Martin Griffith wrote: On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 18:35:22 +0100, in sci.electronics.design "Frithiof Andreas Jensen" wrote: "Jim Thompson" skrev i en ... http://www.marke****ch.com/news/stor...7B40D68525%2DB... Feb. 26, 2008 .................................................. ................................................ As the broader market began to regain lost ground, crude prices for April delivery gained 2.3% to a new high of $101.11 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, surpassing crude's last record of $100.65 hit last week. ...Jim Thompson What people *should* be watching is the price of Wheat, Soy Beans e.t.c. because that is where trouble will come from. In the middle east, India and Pakistan people are going from being middle class to having to choose between heating and eating! China has enacted price controls - *ensuring* a shortage (maybe they will shoot some farmers to get the point across that it is well to produce at a loss) PS: And welcome to the brand new regime of Ressource limited growth replacing Finance limited growth. South Africa's mines are running below capacity due to lack of electricity. This sort of sums it uphttp://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/natur... andhttp://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-ed-food26feb26,0,3838970.story Not fair--Mr. Bush responds wholeheartedly (if ill-advisedly)--with Congress in tow--to their (Greens in general, and the LA Times in particular) criticism about not supporting alternative fuels, then they lambaste him when he does. That's not helpful. We need less advocacy & more sensible discussion. But I suppose it's outrage that sells. Cheers, James Arthur It is more than fair. I'll tell you why, when it comes to do the right thing, Bush did everything too late. And when it comes to do the wrong thing, he did it foolishly and very quickly. I'm sorry, I just can't see how you're going to succeed in convincing people. Did you see his rating down to 19% now? What are you smoking? ...Jim Thompson -- | James E.Thompson, P.E. | mens | | Analog Innovations, Inc. | et | | Analog/Mixed-Signal ASICK's and Discrete Systems | manus | | Phoenix, Arizona Voice ![]() | E-mail Address at Website Fax ![]() | http://www.analog-innovations.com | 1962 | America: Land of the Freedom Abusers, Because of the *******s. |
#26
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On Feb 27, 1:15 pm, "Jim Thompson" To-Email-Use-The-Envelope-I...@My-
Web-Site.com wrote: "James Arthur" wrote in message ... On Feb 27, 12:27 pm, Martin Griffith wrote: On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 18:35:22 +0100, in sci.electronics.design "Frithiof Andreas Jensen" wrote: "Jim Thompson" skrev i en ... http://www.marke****ch.com/news/stor...7B40D68525%2DB... Feb. 26, 2008 .................................................. ................................................ As the broader market began to regain lost ground, crude prices for April delivery gained 2.3% to a new high of $101.11 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, surpassing crude's last record of $100.65 hit last week. ...Jim Thompson What people *should* be watching is the price of Wheat, Soy Beans e.t.c. because that is where trouble will come from. In the middle east, India and Pakistan people are going from being middle class to having to choose between heating and eating! China has enacted price controls - *ensuring* a shortage (maybe they will shoot some farmers to get the point across that it is well to produce at a loss) PS: And welcome to the brand new regime of Ressource limited growth replacing Finance limited growth. South Africa's mines are running below capacity due to lack of electricity. This sort of sums it uphttp://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/natur... andhttp://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-ed-food26feb26,0,3838970.story Not fair--Mr. Bush responds wholeheartedly (if ill-advisedly)--with Congress in tow--to their (Greens in general, and the LA Times in particular) criticism about not supporting alternative fuels, then they lambaste him when he does. That's not helpful. We need less advocacy & more sensible discussion. But I suppose it's outrage that sells. Cheers, James Arthur It is more than fair. I mean it's not fair for these same guys to criticize the man for doing the very thing they demanded he do. I'll tell you why, when it comes to do the right thing, Bush did everything too late. And when it comes to do the wrong thing, he did it foolishly and very quickly. Mostly no quarrel there, and I agree that biofuel's a bad idea. Greenies and other conspiracy-types think there's some easy, suppressed solution. There isn't. Everyone wants magic, wants it free, and don't bother us with the details. Government, in the business of pleasing people, is more than happy to oblige...politicians of both parties *love* to spend money on their constituents, no matter what the cause. Cheers, James Arthur |
#27
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On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 13:08:58 -0800 (PST), in sci.electronics.design
James Arthur wrote: On Feb 27, 12:27 pm, Martin Griffith wrote: On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 18:35:22 +0100, in sci.electronics.design "Frithiof Andreas Jensen" wrote: "Jim Thompson" skrev i en ... http://www.marke****ch.com/news/stor...7B40D68525%2DB... Feb. 26, 2008 .................................................. ................................................ As the broader market began to regain lost ground, crude prices for April delivery gained 2.3% to a new high of $101.11 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, surpassing crude's last record of $100.65 hit last week. ...Jim Thompson What people *should* be watching is the price of Wheat, Soy Beans e.t.c. because that is where trouble will come from. In the middle east, India and Pakistan people are going from being middle class to having to choose between heating and eating! China has enacted price controls - *ensuring* a shortage (maybe they will shoot some farmers to get the point across that it is well to produce at a loss) PS: And welcome to the brand new regime of Ressource limited growth replacing Finance limited growth. South Africa's mines are running below capacity due to lack of electricity. This sort of sums it uphttp://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/natur... andhttp://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-ed-food26feb26,0,3838970.story Not fair--Mr. Bush responds wholeheartedly (if ill-advisedly)--with Congress in tow--to their (Greens in general, and the LA Times in particular) criticism about not supporting alternative fuels, then they lambaste him when he does. That's not helpful. We need less advocacy & more sensible discussion. But I suppose it's outrage that sells. Cheers, James Arthur I didn't wite them, they are just 2 links that I found while waiting for the first cup of coffee to boil, this morning. When does the US wheat harvest start, I think I saw it was about 10 weeks from now? martin |
#28
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On Feb 27, 1:15 pm, Martin Griffith wrote:
On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 13:08:58 -0800 (PST), James Arthur wrote: On Feb 27, 12:27 pm, Martin Griffith wrote: [...] This sort of sums it uphttp://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/natur... andhttp://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-ed-food26feb26,0,3838970.story Not fair--Mr. Bush responds wholeheartedly (if ill-advisedly)--with Congress in tow--to their (Greens in general, and the LA Times in particular) criticism about not supporting alternative fuels, then they lambaste him when he does. That's not helpful. We need less advocacy & more sensible discussion. But I suppose it's outrage that sells. I didn't wite them, they are just 2 links that I found while waiting for the first cup of coffee to boil, this morning. No worries--I enjoyed the articles and appreciated the links. I'm glad to see the public finally wising up to what I saw as a bad idea (environmentally & economically) from the start. My frustration was with the LA Times, not with you. Best wishes, James Arthur |
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On Feb 27, 9:35*am, "Frithiof Andreas Jensen"
wrote: China has enacted price controls - *ensuring* a shortage (maybe they will shoot some farmers to get the point across that it is well to produce at a loss) Paging Bill Sloman. lol |
#30
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It is very likely, the crude oil price per barrel may get up to about
$120 to $140 by the mid or end of the summer. The reasons are many. This means that the price of fuel will most likely rise by at least another 20%. There are futures contracts out on crude oil for a price point of $200 per barrel by year 2010. The price of oil is rising faster than the normal rate of inflation. This will contribute to the cost of most everything we have. The rate of infation will be difficult to keep up with. One of the causes for all of this is from the massive out-sourcing of manufacturing in foreign countries to have lower labour cost, and from letting our society become more dependend on other countries for energy and materials. From all that is going on, North America and most of Europe will become a third world economy. We will no longer be able to afford to live at the standard of living that we are used to. It will take a very big change of attitude and the way of doing things to fix the problem. Jerry G. ====== On Feb 26, 11:59*pm, "Jim Thompson" To-Email-Use-The-Envelope-I...@My- Web-Site.com wrote: http://www.marke****ch.com/news/stor...7B40D68525%2DB... Feb. 26, 2008 .................................................. ..........................*....................... As the broader market began to regain lost ground, crude prices for April delivery gained 2.3% to a new high of $101.11 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, surpassing crude's last record of $100.65 hit last week. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ...Jim Thompson -- | *James E.Thompson, P.E. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * | mens | | *Analog Innovations, Inc. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *| et * * *| | *Analog/Mixed-Signal ASICK's and Discrete Systems *| * *manus *| | *Phoenix, Arizona * * * * * * * * * Voice ![]() | *E-mail Address at Website * * Fax ![]() | * * *http://www.analog-innovations.com* * * * * * * * * *| * *1962 * * | * * *America: Land of the Freedom Abusers, Because of the *******s. |
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On Feb 28, 12:33 pm, "Jerry G." wrote:
It is very likely, the crude oil price per barrel may get up to about $120 to $140 by the mid or end of the summer. The reasons are many. This means that the price of fuel will most likely rise by at least another 20%. So why didn't the petrol price go up 700% since oil was $15 back in 1999? As you say, the reasons are many, but one thing is for sure, petrol prices have had very little in the way of linear correlation with oil price. Dave. |
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![]() "David L. Jones" wrote in message ... On Feb 28, 12:33 pm, "Jerry G." wrote: It is very likely, the crude oil price per barrel may get up to about $120 to $140 by the mid or end of the summer. The reasons are many. This means that the price of fuel will most likely rise by at least another 20%. So why didn't the petrol price go up 700% since oil was $15 back in 1999? As you say, the reasons are many, but one thing is for sure, petrol prices have had very little in the way of linear correlation with oil price. Dave. Hey Dave you are already right there, depending on how you look at it. ($15/b * 700%)/100 = $105/b PS. Every one of you are being affected except me and the one I have chosen to help. ...Jim Thompson -- | James E.Thompson, P.E. | mens | | Analog Innovations, Inc. | et | | Analog/Mixed-Signal ASICK's and Discrete Systems | manus | | Phoenix, Arizona Voice ![]() | | E-mail Address at Website Fax ![]() | http://www.analog-innovations.com | 1962 | America: Land of the Freedom Abusers, Because of the Rat *******s. |
#33
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Jim Thompson wrote:
"David L. Jones" wrote in message ... On Feb 28, 12:33 pm, "Jerry G." wrote: It is very likely, the crude oil price per barrel may get up to about $120 to $140 by the mid or end of the summer. The reasons are many. This means that the price of fuel will most likely rise by at least another 20%. So why didn't the petrol price go up 700% since oil was $15 back in 1999? As you say, the reasons are many, but one thing is for sure, petrol prices have had very little in the way of linear correlation with oil price. Dave. Hey Dave you are already right there, depending on how you look at it. ($15/b * 700%)/100 = $105/b PS. Every one of you are being affected except me and the one I have chosen to help. ...Jim Thompson What a blazing idiot. You are so obvious from the content of your forgeries. Who has to look at the headers any more. Go away forever. |
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On Feb 27, 5:47*pm, "David L. Jones" wrote:
On Feb 28, 12:33 pm, "Jerry G." wrote: It is very likely, the crude oil price per barrel may get up to about $120 to $140 by the mid or end of the summer. The reasons are many. This means that the price of fuel will most likely rise by at least another 20%. So why didn't the petrol price go up 700% since oil was $15 back in 1999? As you say, the reasons are many, but one thing is for sure, petrol prices have had very little in the way of linear correlation with oil price. Dave. The popular price per barrel quoted in the news is the spot market price, and ignores the oil refined within vertically-integrated companies and oil delivered under long-term, fixed-price contracts. |
#35
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Richard Henry wrote:
On Feb 27, 5:47 pm, "David L. Jones" wrote: On Feb 28, 12:33 pm, "Jerry G." wrote: It is very likely, the crude oil price per barrel may get up to about $120 to $140 by the mid or end of the summer. The reasons are many. This means that the price of fuel will most likely rise by at least another 20%. So why didn't the petrol price go up 700% since oil was $15 back in 1999? As you say, the reasons are many, but one thing is for sure, petrol prices have had very little in the way of linear correlation with oil price. Dave. The popular price per barrel quoted in the news is the spot market price, and ignores the oil refined within vertically-integrated companies and oil delivered under long-term, fixed-price contracts. But those prices are not the news with which you can manipulate the sheeple. |
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On Feb 29, 11:03 am, Richard Henry wrote:
On Feb 27, 5:47 pm, "David L. Jones" wrote: On Feb 28, 12:33 pm, "Jerry G." wrote: It is very likely, the crude oil price per barrel may get up to about $120 to $140 by the mid or end of the summer. The reasons are many. This means that the price of fuel will most likely rise by at least another 20%. So why didn't the petrol price go up 700% since oil was $15 back in 1999? As you say, the reasons are many, but one thing is for sure, petrol prices have had very little in the way of linear correlation with oil price. Dave. The popular price per barrel quoted in the news is the spot market price, and ignores the oil refined within vertically-integrated companies and oil delivered under long-term, fixed-price contracts. The oil within a vertically integrated company is worth as much as the price on the spot market because they have the option of refining it or selling it raw. The spot market is a good but nervous indicator of the price of oil. The long term contracts will all end some day and a new contract be written at the new higher price. The trend is smoothened by that effect but the average rate of increase is not reduced. |
#37
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On Mar 2, 10:03*am, MooseFET wrote:
On Feb 29, 11:03 am, Richard Henry wrote: On Feb 27, 5:47 pm, "David L. Jones" wrote: On Feb 28, 12:33 pm, "Jerry G." wrote: It is very likely, the crude oil price per barrel may get up to about $120 to $140 by the mid or end of the summer. The reasons are many. This means that the price of fuel will most likely rise by at least another 20%. So why didn't the petrol price go up 700% since oil was $15 back in 1999? As you say, the reasons are many, but one thing is for sure, petrol prices have had very little in the way of linear correlation with oil price. Dave. The popular price per barrel quoted in the *news is the spot market price, and ignores the oil refined within vertically-integrated companies and oil delivered under long-term, fixed-price contracts. The oil within a vertically integrated company is worth as much as the price on the spot market because they have the option of refining it or selling it raw. *The spot market is a good but nervous indicator of the price of oil. *The long term contracts will all end some day and a new contract be written at the new higher price. *The trend is smoothened by that effect but the average rate of increase is not reduced.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The oil within a vertically integrated company is worth what it can be sold for. Introducing large stocks into the open market will reduce the spot price. Long term contracts are set at a price point where both the buyer and seller think they will make money over the term of the contract. |
#38
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On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 17:33:08 -0800 (PST), "Jerry G."
wrote: It is very likely, the crude oil price per barrel may get up to about $120 to $140 by the mid or end of the summer. The reasons are many. This means that the price of fuel will most likely rise by at least another 20%. There are futures contracts out on crude oil for a price point of $200 per barrel by year 2010. The price of oil is rising faster than the normal rate of inflation. This will contribute to the cost of most everything we have. The rate of infation will be difficult to keep up with. One of the causes for all of this is from the massive out-sourcing of manufacturing in foreign countries to have lower labour cost, and from letting our society become more dependend on other countries for energy and materials. From all that is going on, North America and most of Europe will become a third world economy. We will no longer be able to afford to live at the standard of living that we are used to. It will take a very big change of attitude and the way of doing things to fix the problem. What we won't be able to afford is wasting energy as senselessly as we do now. The average USian could cut his energy use in half without extreme distress. The main cause of the energy shortage is the fact that the Chinese, the Indians, the Africans, and the South Americans are increasing both population and per-capita energy use. Imagine if every family in India and every family in China had central heating and a car. We have something they don't: an enormous capacity to make food. John |
#39
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John Larkin wrote:
We have something they don't: an enormous capacity to make food. A very large percentage of that capability is due to the use of nitrogenous fertilizers, manufactured from natural or petroleum gas via the Haber-Bosch process for ammonia. The Chinese make more than a quarter of the world's production, but basically - guess what - the ability to store energy in your cereal crops and in your "biofuels", comes predominantly from below the ground, not from the sun. Without fossil fertilizer, 90% of the world's production of grain would cease. The fossil fuel crisis is first and foremost a *food* crisis, the cost of fuel for transport is just the leading edge. |
#40
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On Thu, 28 Feb 2008 13:08:07 +1100, Clifford Heath
wrote: John Larkin wrote: We have something they don't: an enormous capacity to make food. A very large percentage of that capability is due to the use of nitrogenous fertilizers, manufactured from natural or petroleum gas via the Haber-Bosch process for ammonia. The Chinese make more than a quarter of the world's production, but basically - guess what - the ability to store energy in your cereal crops and in your "biofuels", comes predominantly from below the ground, not from the sun. Without fossil fertilizer, 90% of the world's production of grain would cease. The fossil fuel crisis is first and foremost a *food* crisis, the cost of fuel for transport is just the leading edge. Well, just think about the negotiation sessions: "We have food. You have oil. Wanna do business?" John |
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