Wednesday, December 31, 2008

NYE plans

I enjoyed this...
...and this.

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

1101 hours before christmas: A robot tells a christmas story

'Twas 1101 hours before christmas, when all through the human dwelling (fragile humans, with their need for protection from the elements)
not a peripheral was stirring, not even the mouse
bags shaped like human feet were affixed to the wall above the firehole
with the foolish hope (emotions? what's up with that) that a seriously obese man would appear (odds of happening 1e67:1)
Children were stuffed in sleeping sacs
thinking of some kind of sweetened confection
And assembly unit 1-A in her casing, and I with my head unit attached
prepared for stand-by mode
Out on the lawn: noises
I exited sleep mode to seek input
To the window I traversed at .35 m/s
dislodged the shutters from their flimsy hinges and smashed the sash
Light from the sun reflecting off the moon lit the frozen water on the ground
made them appear to be lit with a color temperature approximating 6700K
When, what to my optical perception units should appear
but a minnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn..... ERROR!
#*@!ACESS VIOLATION MEMORY SECTOR 21A:356C:242H:220 (#*#@$%)
**********************************************************************
******************SYSTEM RESTART INITIATED
#>
#>
#>
REBOOT
#>
#>
FILE NOT FOUND.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

My thoughts as I drive past the Creation Museum in Northern Kentucky on my way home from working in Indiana.

Hey.  What if the creation museum was "created" to be an ironic statement on the absurdity of teaching literal interpretations of religious text as science.  Wouldn't that be great?  If the guy who built it just came out one day and said, "hey guys, just kidding!"  Man, I think that would be a great joke.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Possible alternative uses for Toyota's unfinished Mississippi plant.

Facing a continuously imploding US auto market, TOYOTA today announced it would postpone plans to build the Prius hybrid in Mississippi. Construction of Toyota Motor Manufacturing Mississippi (TMMMMMMMMMMS) is already underway, and will still be completed. However, no equipment will be purchased or installed, and plans to launch the Prius will be on hold until the economy brightens up. What will Toyota do with the empty building? Here are some suggestions:

1) Free housing for laid-off employees of Ford, GM, and Chrysler

2) Free housing for laid-off executives of Ford, GM, and Chrysler

3) Hold super-trendy industrial raves at $50 a head (thanks leigh). Invite robots to serve drinks and shower partiers in extremly dangrous sparks.

4) Lease it to the Obama administration, which will then use it to hold our Nation's Strategic Hope Reserves.

5) Use it to store the giant mattress holding Toyota's $40B in cash.

6) Staging area for inevitable robot invasion force/orchestra.

7) Give Toyota's girlfriend the space to set up that art studio she's always wanted.

8) Convert it to a factory that builds smaller factories.

9) Build a new country inside it--preferably one with an economy that doesn't suck.

10) Place for Toyota's friend Subaru to crash... but just until he can get back on his feet. Then he'll totally move out into his own place.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

I single-handedly save the american auto industry: an open letter to GM CEO Rick Wagoner.

Rick,
Can I call you Rick? Good.  You and me, we go way back.  You're CEO and Chairman of General Motors--and presumably have been working in the auto industry for quite some time--and I'm a low level engineer with one of your major competitors.  Clearly we're cut from the same stuff. 

I've been watching you (and your buddies Al and Bob) go before Congress on hands and knees asking for money.  Now, it seems like you might just get some $15B in walkin' around money.  Not bad.  So, now that you've been saved from bankruptcy (which, from your testimony I have to assume would result in the destruction of everything we hold dear), I bet you're beside yourself trying to figure out what to do with the money.  Here are some ideas on how you and your fellow execs can pull yourself out of this nasty mess.

1: EVERY BODY GETS A CAR!
Oprah did it.  I don't exactly know how this would help... but I'm not one to second-guess Oprah.

2: Get 'em hooked, then make 'em come back for more.
It works for drug dealers, it should work for you.  Listen, you can't just give them your goods upfront.  Give them a taste... maybe a wheel or a catalytic converter as a teaser.  Then ratchet things up with the heavier stuff... I'm talking engine and transmission, maybe laced with some fuel lines.  Trust me... they'll be back.

Also, you could just put a kilo of cocaine in every glove box.

3: Oh, sorry, that's extra.
If you want to get people into your showrooms, you're going to have to either lure them in with product or deals.  How does a $1200 Cadillac sound?  Pretty enticing eh?  Here let me draw up the papers... Okay, you want paint? That's a $10,000 extra.  Headlamps? 4 grand.  Steering wheel? $950.  See... See how easy it is?

4: Make less cars.
So... people aren't buying cars right now?  Maybe you should stop making them for a little while.  Or... at least stop making more than you can sell.  Who actually thought making a bunch of cars people don't want to buy was a good idea?  Really.  You overproduce, force the extra inventory on your dealers, discount the crap out of the cars so they'll sell... and then complain that you're not making money.  Stop that.

Oh, and while you're at it... how about cutting some dealers.  Maybe having a bunch of dealers competing against each other for a shrinking market share isn't a good idea.  You really don't need a Chevy dealer on every block.  

Oh, and while you're at it... cut some brands, too.  You don't really need Hummer (to gassy), Saab (too sweedish, too not Volvo), GMC (they make trucks, right?), Buick (I mean, no one's going to buy one now that Tiger Woods is no longer in your ads), and Pontiac.  Keep Saturn (youth brand), Chevrolet (every-man brand), and Cadillac (luxury brand).  Hmm... 3 brands like that... sounds like another automaker I know. . .

Wait... Pontiac.. you should probably keep the Pontiac Vibe... I mean, that's really just a Toyota Matrix... Toyota is good people (in my completely unbiased opinion).

5: Keep blaming the Union... it's easier than admitting your own faults.
Everyone is blaming the UAW for your problems, why shouldn't you?  Get rid of the unions.  No.. wait.. go one step further: get rid of ALL your workers.  You're always talking about how your labor costs are making your cars cost too much (which is CLEARLY why people are buying)... I cannot think of a better way to avoid that mass unemployment that would come from a failure of one of the (not so) Big Three than laying off your entire work force.  

6: File for bankrupt---er-- I mean...
Listen: Bankruptcy would actually force you to do the restructuring you actually need to do... The only downside: no one will buy cars from a bankrupt automaker.  The solution: don't call it bankruptcy.  Call it... "Cheeseburger Happy Fun"  Everyone wants to buy a car from a "Cheeseburger happy fun" automaker.  See... problem fixed.

Welp... there you have it, Rick.  6 steps you can take to lead you to a brighter future.  Try it.  It'll work, I promise.....

Kisses:
Decker

PS: Have you seen that new Toyota Venza? Man... what a nice looking vehicle.  You really should buy one.