Archive for July 16th, 2016
Military coup in Turkey: Objectives and potential consequences
Posted by: adonis49 on: July 16, 2016
Military coup in Turkey: Objectives and potential consequences
The military coup in Turkey was a textbook operational success and no military units came out to confront it for 8 hours. The Turkish air force could Not have engage unless the US air-force in Injerlik base gave its green light.
NATO idea was to strike at least two birds in one shot and decided to call off the operations:
1. NATO wanted to remind Erdogan that he should not sign deals with Russia and Iran without prior agreements and negotiation with the USA and Europe
2. Preserve a shaky “Democratic” image of Turkey and force Erdogan Not to slide faster into a Theocratic system of Moslem Brotherhood control of all the institutions
My conjecture is that this tactics (of shooting more than one essential birds) will fail in the medium-term:
1.Erdogan will Not cancel his agreements with Russia or Iran: The NATO will pressure Erdogan to reduce these agreement into a skin-deep understanding
2. The democratic processes will enhance the power of the Moslem Brotherhood in election and erase whatever objective NATO wanted of a secular Turkey
The benefits of this military coup:
As after each coup, whether successful or Not, Turkey will need a couple of months to regain a semblance of internal control.
This period will witness the withdrawal of Turkish troops outside its borders (read Baashoka in northern Iraq or within northern Syria) and demanding foreign troops inside Turkey (airfields) to reduce their activities.
The consequences for this necessary isolation will give a breathing period for the neighbouring States such as Syria, Iraq, the Armenians in Nagorno-Karabach enclave of Azerbaijan. The benefits are:
1. Reduction of military activities against the Turkish, Syrian and Iraqi Kurdish movement
2. Syria will finally get the green light to recapture all of Aleppo and its surrounding towns, since No Turkish supplies in arms and jihadists will flow inside Syria in the foreseeable future
3. Iraq will complete surrounding greater Mosul by taking the Turkish positions in Ba3shouka.
4. Syria and Iraq will launch a joint operation to take the border city of Abu Kamal, thus denying daesh any logistical routes to Mosul and Rakka.
5. Syria will have to retake Deir el Zour in these joint military operations
6. A serious negotiation for a political settlement in Syria
Note 1: Erdogan called the Turkish army “The Army of prophet Muhammad” in order to oppose any secular positioning of the army.
This “failed” coup was the ideal pretext for Erdogan to fire 2750 judges from their posts who bothered him in his attempts to quell freedom of expression and human rights excesses…. The list was already prepared before the coup, on the ground that they constitute the “deep structure in the institutions” of the Fathallah Gulan movement, and the Sufi culture in Turkey.
Note 2: I watched a documentary on ARTE that shows the southern regions of Turkey, by the Syrian borders, to support Daesh and Al nousra. They are the Turks who vote for Erdogan. Thousands of these Turks left their families and joined the extremist movements in Syria and Iraq.
Note 3: Erdogan claimed that the followers of Fathallah Gulan (residing in Pennsylvania) are behind this coup d’etat: what is this original Turkish Moslem Brotherhood movement?
https://adonis49.wordpress.com/2010/05/14/a-turkish-cultural-movement-fathallah-gulan/
Do you know which Appliance Is Sucking All Your Power? Use Sense Appliance
Posted by: adonis49 on: July 16, 2016
Find Out Which Appliance Is Sucking All Your Power
Sense’s $299 gadget identifies individual devices in the home and exactly how much electricity they are using.
By David Talbot. July 13, 2016
Is your garage door opening right now? Is your washing machine running? A growing number of products attempt to give consumers data on the sources of their household energy use—crucial data for home efficiency efforts and utility peak-hour conservation programs.
But Sense, a startup in Cambridge, Massachusetts, is the first to offer a consumer product that reads incoming household power levels a million times per second—enough to tease out telltale clues to which specific appliances, even low-wattage ones, are operating in real time.
“It’s at the cutting edge of what I have seen people attempting in this area,” says Michael Baker, a vice president at SBW, an energy efficiency consultancy in Seattle.
The company says it can accurately disaggregate 80% of home energy use;
it can do things like detect a microwave oven through its very specific startup and operating power “signature,” or sense a washing machine thanks in part to subtly increasing demand on the motor as the drum fills with water.
As it identifies garage door openers, toasters, microwave ovens, washing machines, heaters, and refrigerators, it displays them on an app as a newsfeed and a series of labeled bubbles.
Instead of a newsfeed of what your friends have been up to, this device provides a newsfeed of what your electronics have been up to all day.

Sense—founded by speech-recognition veterans whose technology ended up in Samsung’s S-Voice and Apple’s Siri—consists of a box about the size of an eyeglasses case installed inside or next to an electrical service panel.
Two inductive current sensors sense current, and two cables power the box and sense voltage. The box does some onboard processing, and then uses Wi-Fi to send data to the cloud for further analysis and aggregation with data from other users to improve its accuracy.
While Sense’s initial business model is based on selling the hardware for $299, the long-term play is in the data: Sense will retain rights to the data and expects to eventually serve personalized recommendations.
It also hopes to sell anonymized data and insights to companies like utilities or insurance companies.
Green Mountain Power, an electric utility serving 260,000 customers in Vermont, is planning to pilot the technology in customer homes in the town of Panton. The goal: to get homeowners interested in monitoring home energy usage—the necessary first step toward getting them to do things like shut off equipment at critical peak times or better align their household usage with household solar power generation (another data point Sense can track).
The utility already has so-called “smart meters” that collect data at eight- to 12-second intervals and plot it for customers in an app, but “we found that data at this resolution isn’t all that interesting,” says Todd LaMothe, a software development manager at the utility.
“We were pleasantly surprised by the quality of the appliance disaggregation and data visualization in the Sense app. Your home is interacting with you—it’s telling you what it’s doing. That’s the next generation we are looking for.” (Sense requires no smart meters or other advanced technology in the home, other than a Wi-Fi connection.)
A number of consumer systems for monitoring home energy exist—but are generally of low resolution and look only at entire-household energy use.
Navetas allows you to track electricity consumption in real time, analyze trends, and set goals, but does not disaggregate what is causing the load.
Bidgely services utilities that have installed smart meters. By sampling meter data every few seconds, it can spot trends or major anomalous events, like a big overnight load that suggests an appliance such as an electric oven was accidentally left on. Another startup,
Neurio, is developing a similar system but is only able to see high-wattage devices.
As more consumer appliances become Internet-controlled, Sense can govern interactions with them. “Intelligence in the home starts with good data about what is going on, so that’s our focus right now—developing that data,” says Sense CEO and cofounder Michael Phillips, who a decade ago cofounded Vlingo, a voice-recognition startup that developed speech recognition for mobile phones and virtual assistants.
“Until now nobody has been able to make this work, because the real world is more challenging than expected.”
It can take a month of “observing” the home before the technology will fully identify what’s doing what. I tested it at my house over the past week. So far it has detected my fridge, washing machine, and dryer. I was surprised to see a big spike in demand at certain times when my dishwasher was running. That’s how I learned that it takes 1,200 watts just to heat water within dishwashers. I also saw that my house never consumes less than 64 watts, due to “always on” things like routers.
I found myself switching things on and off to see what they consumed. I quickly realized that my decades-old attic fan—out of sight, out of mind—was consuming 500 watts. So I’m already planning to get rid of it and install a gable vent instead, and let convection do the same job.
If you hate reading
Posted by: adonis49 on: July 16, 2016
Keeps Me Sane (part 2) October 16, 2008
How can your best friend empathies with you if he hates reading?
How can someone who cannot know himself
Empathies with your many selves?
The odds that a one-life man could empathies with someone
With a thousand lives is almost nil.
You earned the rights to be richer, more complex, and more different.
You ought to feel proud on this discriminating dimension.
My everlasting appreciation to my heroes
The writers who bared their souls,
Who endured the ultimate hardship
To make it possible for me to endure myself.
The Immigrant Spirit? Same spirit everywhere?
Posted by: adonis49 on: July 16, 2016
The Immigrant Spirit is the American Spirit!
What do Google, PayPal, eBay, WhatsApp, Tesla, SpaceX and Uber have in common?
They are all American companies founded by immigrants.
In fact, more than one fourth of all US businesses and 40% of Fortune 500 companies are now being started by immigrants or the children of immigrants.
Immigration is such a divisive issue — but it shouldn’t be. This COUNTRY was founded by immigrants.
Over and over and over again. Our history is a continuous wave of foreigners coming to America — by choice or circumstance — for the prospect of a better life. (Obama said: We are all immigrants, except the native Indians)
As long as the United States actually continues to be a land of freedom and opportunity, we will continue to attract the best and brightest from all over the world. Migrants who believe in the American dream. Who come to this country with a strong work ethic, courage, hope & grit. (I doubt this is the case anymore: the covariance among desires, opportunities and capacities are No longer that strong)
That Immigrant Spirit defines the American Spirit!
And our unwavering commitment to welcome diversity sets us apart from the rest of the world. Most countries primarily identify by ethnicity, race, religion, or a common culture.
The United States of America was intentionally designed to be more inclusive, dynamic and adaptable — founded on ideals and values — like freedom and personal liberty. Our country’s motto, displayed prominently on the seal of the United States, is E Pluribus Unum: “Out of many, one.” This approach has proven, over the test of time, to be an asset.
That is why the current narrative of fear is so alarming. The United States — and the world, it seems — is increasingly polarized around the issue of migration. Instead of engaging in an informed debate about the role and efficacy of government and financial systems — and even our immigration laws — people are quick to blame migrants and refugees for draining resources and taking jobs — an assumption finds no basis in fact.
We cannot let fear distort reality. That doesn’t serve our best interests. The fact that 25% of all US businesses are started by immigrants is especially significant when you consider that immigrants account for only about 13% of the US population. Immigrants create more jobs than they take. They’re a value added, not just to our economy, but to our culture.
People don’t come here to be lazy.
They come here for freedom and opportunity — for refuge — to work hard and achieve the American dream — so that their kids may achieve even more.
And this is not a new phenomenon. We just forget. Because — by design — previous waves of foreigners become woven into the very fabric of our society.
Did you know that 1 million migrants fled Ireland to come to the US in 1846 during the Irish Potato Famine? One of those migrants was the father of Henry Ford, who founded Ford Motor Company. A very American company. Incidentally, Henry’s mother was the child of Belgian immigrants. Most Irish immigrants were Catholic, and it is no coincidence that prejudice against Catholics and other immigrants reached a peak in the 1850s, with the rise of the “American” political party and the “Know Nothing” movement to “purify” American politics.
100 years later, John F. Kennedy was elected as this country’s first Catholic president. That was over 50 years ago.
In my personal experience, for the past 18 years, as an immigration lawyer,
I have had the privilege to work directly with immigrants to the US. My clients come from all different countries and cultures. They practice different religions, speak different languages, and have varying levels of education and income.
The one consistent common characteristic across the full range of these unique individuals is the desire to be better, to work hard, to seize opportunity and to make the best of the situation no matter how challenging. My clients inspire me every day!
Of course there are exceptions to every rule but, generally, immigrants embody the ideals we value as “American”.
My experience illustrates something else that is important — the value of civic discourse, face to face conversation.
When you sit for hours talking with people — about goals and dreams, challenges and fears — about the details of daily life — superficial labels that divide us start to fall away. Fear transforms into understanding, empathy, and compassion.
If you don’t believe me, try it!
Before you hate on migrants and refugees — before you attach group stereotypes onto individuals you never met — before you blame “those people” for taking jobs and using public benefits that WE pay for — try talking with “those people” to better understand.
They probably work hard and pay income tax. They certainly pay property and sales tax.
If they don’t speak English, they are probably trying to learn, and I’ll bet their kids speak English as well as my dad — a first generation American child of a Russian refugee — my grandfather — who lived in a mostly immigrant neighborhood in New York City and spoke Yiddish.
We know this story. We have lived this story over and over again.
This is the epic story of America.
The biggest threat to our culture does not come from the outside. It never has.
We should not only welcome immigrants, we should strive to be like immigrants, to embody in ourselves the Immigrant Spirit. That would be truly American.
My Note:
High rates of dynamic social mobility reduce social norms, class consciousness and class conflicts. The plight of racism in the USA toward the Blacks and Latinos is that these minorities (soon to become majority) do Not enjoy the same job and financial opportunities wherever they decide to settle down in different cities. Hence, their dynamic mobility rate is very low
[I delivered this piece as a TED Talk on Tuesday night in New York to set the foundation for a more informed national conversation about immigration and its role in the creation and continuing evolution of this great nation.
In August, I am embarking on a journey, driving around the United States to engage local communities around immigration and related issues (identity & belonging, inclusion & exclusion, otherness, courage, hope and fear).
Friends and colleagues who live in the communities where I’ll stop are helping to organize public forums and town hall type events — where people who do not ordinarily have the opportunity to interact can share stories, concerns, hopes, and fears — and hopefully listen to each other’s voices to better understand. From there, we can seek to build a better tomorrow, valuing all members of the community.]