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2008 Jan 9, 12:12am   30,050 views  315 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (58)   💰tip   ignore  

missing

From patrick.net reader M.K.

Last time I visited Stockton (4415 Abruzzi Circle, Stockton, CA), I saw an entire row of houses for sale. But only one home was listed in mlslistings.com. I discussed this with a broker, she told me only 1 in 27 homes are listed in mlslistings.com. If you want to get the full list, you need to go to RE Max, Prudential Realtors, their web sites. The realtors play this game to avoid public panic.

Real Estate market in US is really corrupt, because of these realtors. Its heading for big time correction after 15 year run.

Every time i meet a realtor, just for fun, I ask one question, is this best time to buy a house? Many realtors say this is excellent time to buy. Many times just I cannot control my laugh for their answers (but I ask every realtor that question) . Next time I will send you video clips. I thought of asking when is the terrible time to buy a house? But my friend said, you should not ask such questions, it shows you are not interested in buying.

#housing

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222   Peter P   2008 Jan 11, 10:24am  

If it comes to that Niccolo, try to be number 3.

Perhaps that shinny yellow metal will help.

223   PermaRenter   2008 Jan 11, 10:25am  

SAN CARLOS, Calif. — More than a dozen employees, including several senior-level executives, have been cut by Tesla Motors, which is struggling to bring its oft-delayed $100,000 Roadster to market.

On his new Web site late Thursday, Tesla's deposed co-founder, Martin Eberhard lists more than a dozen people who have left the company in the past few days. "Watch to see more fall in the coming weeks," Eberhard writes. "Maybe this explains why I got the boot first." Eberhard's blog posting was titled "Stealth Bloodbath."

"This is about accountability," Darryl Siry, Tesla's vice president of sales, marketing and services told the San Jose Mercury News. "If you don't get the job done, there are consequences."

The first production Tesla Roadster was originally slated for delivery in early 2007. But the launch of the two-seater has been stalled, largely due to the high-tech transmission. In late December, the company said it will install an "interim" transmission in the first production models and replace it later with an upgraded transmission.

"Obviously, transitions are always difficult, even with careful planning," said Eberhard. "But axing nearly the entire executive staff, letting the world's foremost EV motor engineer go, trimming down the service organization before the job of opening the first service center is done, ripping through the firmware team — and doing it by random firings on a daily basis — are all hard to explain."

224   Peter P   2008 Jan 11, 10:27am  

Perhaps "Tesla" really means all work and no pay.

Poor Nikola.

225   Malcolm   2008 Jan 11, 10:28am  

"nurse practitioners and physician’s assistants"

Can they prescribe medications?

226   Peter P   2008 Jan 11, 10:28am  

Technology is overrated. People is what matters.

No amount of science or research can alter human nature.

227   Peter P   2008 Jan 11, 10:30am  

Who Killed the Electric Car?

Reality.

228   Malcolm   2008 Jan 11, 10:31am  

I thought the Tesla concept was interesting, I was surprised no one really commented on the Aptera. www.aptera.com

229   Malcolm   2008 Jan 11, 10:32am  

OK, Peter P is not allowed to comment on my purchase decision.

Kidding of course.

230   Peter P   2008 Jan 11, 10:34am  

If you don’t get the job done, there are consequences.

Oh really? Just blame the society.

231   PermaRenter   2008 Jan 11, 10:39am  

>> Technology is overrated. People is what matters.

In Silly Con Valley saying this is like saying gambling is bad in Las Vegas ... here people do not matter technology matters. As I said, Bay Area is like a large hotel full of travelers and gamblers. There is no there there ....

232   Eliza   2008 Jan 11, 10:41am  

Not expert on this. But, yeah, Nurse Practitioners and Physician's Assistants can prescribe, though the rules vary state by state. In Cali, they have to have a "collaborating physician"--which could mean that they work for a doc who trusts them a lot or that they work for a doc who looks over their shoulders all the time. Esp in rural areas, I have heard of NP's "collaborating" with docs who live in far away cities and are essentially just available for questions.

In some places, they need to have a doc sign for scheduled drugs. In Cali, that can vary from practice to practice. Seems like NP's may be able to prescribe in more places than PA's. More info here:

http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/440315

http://www.aapa.org/gandp/rxchart.html

233   HeadSet   2008 Jan 11, 10:47am  

I don’t know what counseling or refinancing will accomplish to someone who owes more on their house than it is worth.

How about this counseling:

Since you cannot sell the house or make the payments, you had best just let the home go. Your credit rating will be ruined and you will be a renter for a few years. Use that time wisely by renting a home priced low enough to allow you to save for a downpayment for any future home purchase. When you do buy again, understand that "liberated equity" is a myth. That term really refers to a loan, which must be paid back with interest. Liberated equity differs from any other loan only in that you can lose your house if the loan is not paid. Remember, consumer debt is a burden and liability, but savings and paid off real estate are true assets.

234   Eliza   2008 Jan 11, 10:51am  

Not expert on this. But, yeah, Nurse Practitioners and Physician’s Assistants can prescribe, though the rules vary state by state. In Cali, they have to have a “collaborating physician”–which could mean that they work for a doc who trusts them a lot or that they work for a doc who looks over their shoulders all the time. Esp in rural areas, I have heard of NP’s “collaborating” with docs who live in far away cities and are essentially just available for questions.

In some places, they need to have a doc sign for scheduled drugs. In Cali, that can vary from practice to practice. Seems like NP’s may be able to prescribe in more places than PA’s. More info here:

w ww.medscape.com/viewarticle/440315

w ww.aapa.org/gandp/rxchart.html

235   Malcolm   2008 Jan 11, 10:52am  

Exactly, we're going to use tax dollars to tell people to do what they were going to do anyway. I kind of sense some sarcasm but that's what's going to happen, and when you break it down, each of the 2 million foreclosures will translate to $15,000 a piece to the tax payer for "counseling."

236   Malcolm   2008 Jan 11, 10:54am  

taxpayer

237   HelloKitty   2008 Jan 11, 11:03am  

@patrick, thanks for considering the idea.

I'm so happy to be a self employed contract programmer. Less work, more money, pay less taxes. Its makes the 'free money for everyone' easier to take.

Anyway whoever is in power most taxpayers never see much of thier money back. Id rather burn my money than give it to the govt - it would reduce money supply and fight inflation. My new religioin is taking advantage of every tax loophole strategy that exists (its called judaism...haha kidding)

238   anonymous   2008 Jan 11, 11:13am  

Hellokitty you're not a parasite are you?

You seem too human and commonsense....

Itz coming.......

239   anonymous   2008 Jan 11, 11:21am  

PermaRenter good post on Silly Con valley.

I get a wonderful magazine.... Test & Measurement World. They have not figured out yet that I am consuming 1/10th what I did, and earning nothing right now. I love to read the thing, and drool over all the neat instrumentation, but the fact remains, other than for war, what does anyone need any of this crap for? I for one could be very happy in a 1930s world (Wait, I'm living in one!) with AM radio, moviehouses for video, books to read, etc. There's no need for all this electronic crap, at all. Computers are used to play games (although game consoles are better for that) or to access the Net and its neverending torrent of talk and porn. When this computer dies I'm not paying more than $50 for another one, and frankly I kinda wish it would, since messing around on it keeps me from doing real-world stuff.

All this shit from at least the last 30 years, is just not necessary and doesn't make people any happier, it just makes them more miserable. Working longer hours to afford that bigscreen because the Joneses next door have one, so you have to get one but now the kids are growing up not even knowing you.

High tech was my religion. I really believed in inventing things, discovering things, making newer and better things, but it's all a big crock'o'shit.

Hence the name, Silly-Con valley.

240   PermaRenter   2008 Jan 11, 12:06pm  

Top Ten Cities for Jobs
Rank City State
1 Salt Lake City Utah
2 Wichita Kansas
3 Austin Texas
4 Atlanta Georgia
5 Fort Worth Texas

241   HelloKitty   2008 Jan 11, 12:19pm  

How does utilizing legal tax laws passed by government that are meant to 'stimulate the economy' make me a parasite? I totally pay tax, dont work for cash under table, and I can pass an audit.

Anyway - the anti technology rant is hilarious.

I think the term is luddite - some guy name Ludd led a movement to destroy 'the automated factory system' which was taking jobs away from honest people who were weaving cloth in their own homes for a living. Evil factory owners destroying the price of linen with thier wicked machines!

anyway i constantly feel like all this new tech is incredibly awsome, as if the future from star trek is *almost* here. My parents and many friends I know can barely send email and struggle to surf the net. Its as if they are retarded in todays world, but the are just average. The number of people I know who do not even understand how to 'get to thier C: drive' is amazing and yet they can function and keep jobs, probably most people under 20 wont have these issues at all. This explains CD sales going down FAAAST since teenagers are the main buyers of stupid pop music and they all share with p2p or with each other some other way...

242   Malcolm   2008 Jan 11, 12:29pm  

Funny, as I read ex-sunnyvale's post I'm watching the Menanite farmers in Belize on the fully paid for big screen. They live like the Amish. Apart from my love of horses I don't see anything that would make me want to live that way. They don't seem any happier than anyone else.

243   Malcolm   2008 Jan 11, 12:32pm  

If memory serves Ludd was hanged. In a philosophy class there was an article about the Luddites called "The Machine Breakers."

244   Malcolm   2008 Jan 11, 12:46pm  

It is funny how leaders who want to go back to a simpler time have to enforce their ideology. Ludd was a terrorist. The Muslims who hate us want a nice organized primitive society. Pol Pot killed a million or so people. N Korea kills people just for saying the West isn't evil. Even these farmers I was just watching have the no contraception, no TV, no this, and no that laws. Of course they also prohibit gun ownership, very interesting.

245   PermaRenter   2008 Jan 11, 12:48pm  

>> They don’t seem any happier than anyone else.

You simply do not have the feel for happiness in leading simple life. For example buying a sexy HD TV does not bring entertainment ... the content that is played in that HD TV bring entertainment. Now to be happy you need few basic ingedients:

1. SPACE

2. TIME

3. CONNECTION

In Silly Con Valley all three are missing for general public. Space is rare, time is rare and connection (community) is rare as well.

246   Malcolm   2008 Jan 11, 1:04pm  

I think that's the main reason I would not be happy up there. Just visiting SF gave me claustrophobia, and I agree that when people fill emotional voids by buying stuff they won't be happy, just in debt and even more stressed than if they kept things simple. BUT, why not enjoy what the world has to offer? I probably won't climb Mt Everest but when you see something like that in HD it really is an amazing persepective.

I hate waste and gluttony but I think technology has the potential to solve mankind's problems. Just look at what the Internet has done for us. It is amazing to me that it is possible for the two of us seperated by such a great distance to even be able to exchange ideas. Wouldn't you get tired of talking to the same villagers day in and day out?

247   monkframe   2008 Jan 11, 1:44pm  

"The statement “no amount of X is safe” is vapid and pointless. Everything involves a certain degree of risk because nothing is deterministic.

Try this: “no amount of air is safe”. After all, a single bubble of it well placed in your bloodstream can turn you into Schrodinger’s pet much faster than a couple millirads."

It's vapid and pointless unless you're health is impaired by it. (radiation)

And while we're at it, the newest tech-stupid fascination, WiMax, will be a long-term experiment in blanketing communities with much larger amounts of radiation.

Don't worry, believe industry.

248   justme   2008 Jan 11, 2:11pm  

Monkframe and Randy,

I think the statement "no amount of radiation is safe" has the following meaning:

Every event that involves the release of a quantum of ionizing radiation has some nonzero probability of causing DNA damage and therefore a mutation of a cell.

That's all it means. I think problems start when the exact meaning gets transcribed or extrapolated into something else, using words such as "safe".

Nice to have you back, Randy. And welcome to Monkframe (I thought I'd seen your name before, but just in case, welcome!)

249   Malcolm   2008 Jan 11, 3:40pm  

I've been playing around with some numbers. This will illustrate the difference between sinking costs into maintaining a problem verses investing in the future.

Hillary's $30 billion with a B plan for counseling homeowners and patrolling empty neighborhoods. If the government grew a pair of testicles and stepped up to the plate we could do this instead:

At $3 per watt we could buy 10 billion watts of solar panels. (Forget the efficiency STC ratings, assume 1 watt bought is 1 watt of actual capacity) So 10 billion watts = 10,000 megawatts = 10,000,000 kilowatts
Most normal sized homes use about 2 kilowatts at peak power, therefore we could supply 5 million homes peak power potentially. Instead of it just being a government giveaway you make it a real initiative and have private homeowners like me pay for half, now you have doubled that providing power for 10 million homes. Say average household is 4 people and 300 million people in the country equals 75 million homes.

Conclusion:

We could invest that money and provide the energy needs for 13% of the households in the country. Putting aside some very good arguments from the pure free market types and the technology guys like Randy who have legitimate different visions it should be understandable why people like me get so frustrated with the system. We spend spend spend studying problems, and to me energy is one issue unlike many other social issues that can be taken care of by writing a one time really big check.

250   PermaRenter   2008 Jan 12, 1:20am  

From another board:

I earn a six figure salary, and, as I live on the beach in LA, must have a roommate. My roommate is a female. Her boyfriend purchased 3 homes in Palm Springs during the RE boom. Both of them have not really worked for a couple of years, yet they have afforded themselves lavish vacations and fine automobiles and personal expenditures. His RE value is now turning on its head and he wants out (because he is now starting to lose money). Problem is, what does he now do for money? He has no skills other that a general handyman around homes, etc. He now feels "guilty" for owning so many homes where a couple of months ago, he was touting his financial "successes".

I think he should be bankrupt and not allowed to compete with the rest of us for years ( hell, for the rest of his life for all I care) I want these 20 something, non-working folk to hit a deep depresion to at least earn some character, 'cause life aint taught them no character yet.

I can't wait for the entire system to collapse and these worthless individuals find themselves...er, um, worthless : )

==============

Hilary Clinton (basically Democrats) wants to bail these kind of folks ...

251   anonymous   2008 Jan 12, 2:36am  

PermaRenter - right on. I'm one of the down-and-out, and I feel that if one's overspent (as I did, building my small biz, I should have gone to work at McDonald's or something) then one should be willing to "drink the cup of bitterness" for a bit, BK should bee used when it's the ONLY option, etc.

It does a soul good to live under REALLY strict financial constraints, it may not feel good but it does.

Ideally it'd result in a large enough part of the population taking on the values our ancestors did in the last Great Depression, never a borrower nor a lender be, and very distrustful of banks and userers. This results in the ultimate kick in the teeth being taken by the banksters, while we little guys have cried in our oatmeal a bit, picked ourselves up, and carried on - learned to barter, trade, grow some stuff ourselves, raise chickens, etc.

252   HelloKitty   2008 Jan 12, 2:37am  

Anyone read Ray Kurzweil's books? hes a futurist who says among other things if you can live to year 2060 you can become immortal because we can 'copy your brain to a hardrive' by then. He goes into great detail how it WILL be you and not a copy of you etc. Friggin awsome stuff, just sci-fi for now though.....but when you think about blogging,WOW, 2nd life etc- lots of people could live quite happily being a brain in a hard drive and it would free up more time for leveling in WOW - no more wasted time sleeping, eating, etc. And if your a programmer you can still keep your day job!

253   Randy H   2008 Jan 12, 4:53am  

I won't live to 2060, so it's all just musings to me, but I highly doubt they'll be able to "copy" your brain's state and function into a purely digital form by then. I doubt such will be possible by 2160 or 2260 either. Moore's "law" doesn't apply because of the barrier that's approaching, which means we have to first go through an entire development curve on quantum computers or some such advancement first, then we'll get around to tackling the complexities of modeling the human neural net/connection machine.

Any copy of you would be a copy, not you. You can prove this to yourself with a thought experiment:

You enter a quantum state replicator -- let's say a Star Trek transporter device. Normally this device creates an exact copy of you down to the quantum state, and instantaneously destroys the original. Theoretically, that copy becomes you. But maybe not. What happens when there's a malfunction, and the original is not destroyed? The original is you, and the copy, from the first interval of Planck time forward, diverges in quantum state and becomes a uniquesomeone else who just happens to share everything in common with you up to that moment.

So given the choice of surrendering so a copy can live out his/her own life in a body that looks like yours with your memories, or simply extending your *own* life, most people would chose the latter. And in the case of those Star Trek transporters -- every time you "beam" somewhere, all that's happening is a copy of you is being fooled into thinking it's still you, while you get killed. After 10,000 or so permutations of that algorithm who knows what unintended effects will arise.

And Second Life? That's just a good old fashioned cult. Those people don't need to wait until 2060. They'll end up accomplishing the same by putting on some Nike's and drinking the magic punch.

254   PermaRenter   2008 Jan 12, 5:17am  

Cupertino day care provider found guilty of abusing children
By Brandon Bailey
Mercury News
Article Launched: 01/07/2008 03:31:35 PM PST

A Cupertino day care operator is facing a sentence ranging from probation to 10 years in prison after a jury convicted her on two felony counts of abusing children in her care.
Giti Karimpour, 47, was found guilty Friday on one charge of causing great bodily injury to a 9-month-old boy who suffered a fractured femur, and another charge of conduct likely to cause injury to a 21-month-old who was stabbed with a fork in the back of his throat during feeding.

In her defense, several longtime customers of Giti's Family Day Care testified during the trial that Karimpour had been reliable and treated their children well. But Deputy District Attorney Matt Braker argued that Karimpour may have been overwhelmed by her workload.

"Frustration, exhaustion and fatigue were the motivators here," Braker said.

While there were no witnesses when the 9-month-old was injured, Braker said evidence showed Karimpour was the only adult present when the boy suffered a spiral fracture, which requires significant twisting force to occur.

Defense attorney Kenneth Robinson had argued the evidence didn't prove his client injured the 9-month-old. Robinson also said his client admitted feeding the 21-month-old, but he argued the boy was moving his head and was injured by accident.

Jurors deliberated for less than a day before returning guilty verdicts. Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Edward Lee ordered Karimpour held without bail until she is sentenced on Feb.

http://www.gitisfamilydaycare.com/#

255   PermaRenter   2008 Jan 12, 5:20am  

How should the US deal with Illegal Immigration?
created by: Topix Pollster

Deportation 34663 69%
Path to citizenship 6167 12%
Guest worker program 5038 10%
Amnesty 2218 4%
Other (leave a comment) 1734 3%

Current Total 49820

256   DennisN   2008 Jan 12, 6:12am  

How about "catch, geld, and release"?

257   anonymous   2008 Jan 12, 7:01am  

HelloKitty - I used to be really big on robotics and AI and all that, and well.... the term "batshit crazy" comes to mind when Kurzweil is mentioned.

Even if we had the energy it'd take to create this George Jetson future, would anyone who's not batshit crazy want to live in it?

I mean, come on!

258   HelloKitty   2008 Jan 12, 7:02am  

@Randy
Yes the 'its not really you' is a common argument, however you would have to agree that to OTHER people it would effectively be you. Soooo now imagine how cool it would be to have a copy of Abraham Lincoln around right now? I bet he might be very opininated about politics....would he support Obama(he did set 'them people' free) Anyway its fun stuff....mostly fodder for fiction and the awsome Futurama cartoon -best episode ever:"I'm dating a robot" where Fry downloads a copy of Lucy Lui from Napster and makes a copy from a blank robot body and dates her....plus the celebrity heads in jar. Don't tell me my head cant live in a jar on life support by 2060, thats totally reasonable right?

Anyway things change fast... in 10 years we went from 'only dorks use computers' to 'only dorks DONT use computers in high school'. My dad asked me a few years ago 'what IS the internet'....hilarious question so I answered with the funny 1994 internet decription 'a way to screw the phone company out of long distance charges when calling a bbs out of your local calling zone'.

259   HelloKitty   2008 Jan 12, 7:12am  

@ex-sunnyvale-renter
Kurzweil isnt any crazier than people who believe in heaven and Jesus. He is just describing a techno version of 'the afterlife' dream. Its sells books. Look at the best selling book ever - the bible. People belelive thier own BS when thier living depends on it. Look at James Kunstlser - struggling fiction writer who rights a book about life after oil -which sells very well - now he makes a great living giving speechs and peak oil/environmental conferences and hes books sell better now. People want to hear that bs, true or not. Kunslter predicted disasters from Y2K! haha he'll never live that down.

260   DennisN   2008 Jan 12, 8:00am  

Anybody here find this funny about UBS?

I found in my statement a slip which reads in pertinent part:
"please be advised that our Firm will request an extension from the IRS to delay the mailing of 2007 Forms 1099 for targetted accounts until late February or early March."

I've never heard of any company - let alone a BANK - asking the IRS for relief from filing timely 1099s. Is UBS about to file BK or something? My sister, who's an accountant, said she has NEVER heard of anyone asking for 1099 relief.

261   Different Sean   2008 Jan 12, 9:36am  

Randy H Says:
Let the fun begin, boys and girls. We’re off to the races to see which cynical, boomer politician can promise more of the country’s treasure to swing voters the fastest.

negative treasure, you mean. how many holes does it take to fill the albert hall?

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