Profile

unixronin: Galen the technomage, from Babylon 5: Crusade (Default)
Unixronin

December 2012

S M T W T F S
      1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
3031     

Most Popular Tags

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags

December 8th, 2010

unixronin: Galen the technomage, from Babylon 5: Crusade (Default)
Wednesday, December 8th, 2010 01:54 pm

The rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer.  Cliché, sure, but it's more true than at any time since the Gilded Age.

So says Business Insider, and they show 15 graphs to support it. Granted, this is not entirely a balanced view; the two distribution-of-wealth pie charts show that almost the entirety of wealth in the US is held by the upper 50% of the population, and a third of it by the top 1%, with a similar (and unsurprising) imbalance in stocks-and-bonds ownership, but neglects to mention that the same 50% of the population also shoulders essentially the entire Federal tax burden, with the top 1% paying 25% of it.

Also follow the links to this article about how the American middle class is being systematically wiped out, a process which is only being accelerated by US Government policies that are making it an act of foolhardy stupidity for US corporations not to relocate as much as possible of their operations offshore, and this article which asserts that it really makes very little difference whether the Bush-II tax cuts are extended or not because it's already m according to the author — mathematically impossible for even the existing Federal debt to ever be paid off.

If you took every dollar out of every single wallet, out of every single mattress and out of every single U.S. bank and sent it to the government you wouldn't even make that big of a dent in the national debt.

So can't the U.S. government just go out and create more money and solve the problem?

No.

You see, under our system the creation of more money is also the creation of more debt.

You should probably follow on from there to this article about how the US monetary system really works, too.

I see only one way out of this for the United States, and that is for the people of the United States to first fire the entire present government of the United States, and then repudiate the debts of that government.  Of course, this would almost certainly precipitate a global financial crisis (yes, another one).  But, honestly, so would the other option, which is to continue on this path until the US goes bankrupt.  That course would put the crash off for a while, at the cost of it being even worse when it eventually comes.

Frankly, the entire world needs to open its eyes and see that the investment banking industry has spent at least the last thirty years building a house of cards out of imaginary cards, having agreed among themselves to pretend that the cards are real, and laughing all the way to their offshore banks with the profits.  They have turned the banking industry into a way to siphon wealth out of the global economy without putting any corresponding value back.

unixronin: Sun Ultrasparc III CPU (Ultrasparc III)
Wednesday, December 8th, 2010 05:40 pm

Friends,

I need assistance finding something very specific. Having failed so far, I'm trying to get more eyes (and more existing knowledge of what's available) to work on the problem.

What I need to be able to do is to mount two 2.5" solid-state disks into the 3.5" hard disk cage in a Thermaltake Element G case.  What I need in order to accomplish this is, of course, is two 2.5"—3.5" SSD/HDD mounting adapters.

That part is easy.  Heck, the SSDs I bought shipped with mounting adapters.  But there's a catch.

You see, the Thermaltake case uses a vibration isolation HDD mounting system that requires the use of Thermaltake's own provided mounting screws, which are shouldered screws with an integral rubber bushing.  Of course, since they're designed for mounting 3.5" hard disks, they naturally and quite reasonably have standard, relatively coarse thread #6-32 HDD mounting screws.  They wouldn't work if they didn't.

The catch is that without exception, every 2.5"—3.5" adapter I have so far found, including the ones that ship with the Mushkin SSDs, is threaded for fine-thread M3-0.5 screws.  Which means the Thermaltake HDD mounting screws won't fit.  Which means the adapters won't work in the Thermaltake case.  (See this page¹ for more information on the screw sizes. The third photo clearly illustrates the problem.)

So, here's what I need:  A pair of 2.5"—3.5" SSD/HDD adapters that mount into the case using #6-32 screws.

Can anyone point me at such a thing?


Update:

I forgot to mention above that in this case, you do not screw hard disks into the drive cage, you screw rubber vibration-isolation bushings (hence the special shouldered screws that must be used) onto the drives — or, in this case, the adapters — and slide them into rails in the drive cage.

After bouncing ideas around a little, I think I've come to the conclusion that however much I would have preferred to find some adapters that actually used the correct size and pitch threads in the first place, the best solution to this problem is going to be to drill the M3-0.5 holes in the Mushkin 3.5" adapters out to 9/64" and buy a package of #6-32 Nylok nuts.

[1]  Yes, I know that page says a 6-32 screw can be made to fit into an M3-0.5 screw hole.  And a square peg can be made to fit into a round hole, if you have a big enough hammer and the mechanical aptitude of a caveman, but neither the peg nor the hole will ever be good for much again.

Tags: