jfleck at inkstain

A few thoughts from John Fleck, a writer of journalism and other things, living in New Mexico

Stuff I Wrote Elsewhere: Armageddon Edition

On the horrifying simplicity of the H-bomb, and the possible unmasking of “Perseus”: Reed and Stillman suggest that the Soviets, desperate to solve the riddle of the H-bomb, returned to Perseus for one last favor in 1954. However they got the idea, by late 1955 the Soviets had built and tested their own H-bomb. h/t [...]

Who Is Eli Rabbett?

Today’s Inkstain Search of the Day: who is Eli Rabbett (sic) I’m happy to note that I’m in good company in misspelling the good Dr.’s “name”. But I’m hoping that with this post I’ll claim the number one Google ranking.

The Predictability of Oil Prices

Economist James Hamilton, in his recent NBER paper, argues for economists’ inherent inability to predict oil prices. Luckily, we have Ana Anaya: “Gas prices will definitely go up, I have to tell you,” she said. “I’m sorry to say.” (ht Somegye)

What I Learned Before the Sun Came Up This Morning

My Christmas toy is a Kill A Watt, a cool little goober that you plug into an outlet to see how much electricity something uses. Today’s calculation: the desktop computer, despite being off, is responsible for about 2 percent of my average household electricity consumption. Die, vampire! With my power strip that has an off [...]

Gasoline Consumption Still Down

I remain amazed at this graph from EIA: Consumption for the third week of December (the most recent available) jumped over the previous week, but it’s still 6 percent below the same week a year ago. Look at the right-hand tail on that graph! The price, meanwhile, is $1.44 per gallon below last year at [...]

The Energy Costs of Desalination

From my colleague Sean Olson, in today’s Albuquerque Journal (ad gated): While desalinating water could become a valuable tool to support a growing New Mexico, residents will have to be ready to bite the bullet when it comes to the huge energy cost associated with the technique. Experts say that cost comes in two forms: [...]

Feral Pigeons: Notes From a Blog Post I Never Got Around to Writing

Went bicycling looking for killdeer. Found one, but in the process also saw more than a hundred pigeons. (I counted. Somewhere I wrote down the number. It was something like 167, but when the subject is counting pigeons, you shouldn’t trust three-digit accuracy.) There’s a great book about feral pigeons, called Feral Pigeons. Google books [...]

Food Prices Rise

Has the global food price slide finally stopped? The Economist food price index is up 10 percent over last week.

Deflation

I’ve never lived through deflation, and don’t much understand its implications, so I’m reading Ben Bernanke’s Essays on the Great Depression. That got me wondering about the current numbers, which the St. Louis FRED site (“Better than Boing Boing!”) helpfully graphs for us: Blue includes energy, red is without. Click through to see it bigger.

Elephant Diaries: The Overhead of Print

Jeff Jarvis, who has (for better or worse) become something of a new media guru stalking the land of the old, caused a bit of a stir in my world when he posted last Saturday on the amazing success of the LA Times news web operation: David Westphal reports an important and historic crossing of [...]

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