Eclipse Jet arrives at Hanscom (review of interior comfort)

Linear Air accepted their first Eclipse Jet, which arrived yesterday at Hanscom, creating quite a crowd despite its location on the East Ramp inside the Air Force Base.

The pilots reported achieving a 700 n.m. range at high-speed cruise with a standard IFR reserve and a clearance to 27,000′. They described the interior noise level as extremely quiet (measurements to follow; I have lent one of them a sound level meter). As far as I could tell, there are no provisions for noise-canceling headsets. The plane has only the standard headset jacks, not a LEMO connector for Bose nor, as far as I could tell from skimming the documentation, tip-power for a Sennheiser.

Linear Air was kind enough to let me sit in the aircraft. The front seat is very comfortable for me (6′ tall), with pretty good visibility. The one really off note in the front seats is a backup attitude indicator that has been stuck on top of the pilot’s side glare shield, partly blocking the view. Supposedly, this will be removed as the avionics suite gets additional certifications.

There are four seats in the back, plus a small baggage area behind the last two rooms. With one back seat moved all the way forward and the far back seat moved all the way back, I was able to sit in the far back seat with my knees brushing the magazine holder of the seat in front. If I owned the airplane, I would remove two of the seats and say “Here is my four-seat 700 n.m. very quiet very capable airplane”.

Fit and finish is excellent throughout.

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Macarthur “Genius” Fellowships should be restricted to low-cost real estate regions?

I walked by the house of a Macarthur “Genius” Fellowship recipient the other day. The idea of the fellowship is that by giving $500,000 to a creative person, the person will do additional creative things. This particular recipient hadn’t, as far as I knew, changed anything that he was doing or planned to do. In the ten years since his Macarthur award, he had upgraded his housing situation, however. The current house, in a comfortable West Cambridge neighborhood, is probably worth at least $3 million and the MacArthur’s $500,000 is about what his neighbors are spending on a kitchen/bathroom renovation.

It occurred to me that the foundation might be making a mistake in giving any awards to people who live in Boston, New York, or California. A person who lives in an area where a comfortable house may be obtained for minimal $$ is likely to spend a $500,000 windfall on something interesting. A person who lives in an area where a house that would be considered “nice” by Midwestern standards starts at $2+ million is going to turn the money into real estate. As noted in “where to live for early retirees”, home ownership makes people boring and, probably, owning a fancier house with a $500,000 kitchen/bathroom renovation makes an already boring homeowner even more boring.

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More iPhone experience

Richard’s 74-year-old mother came over for an iced tea today. She was kind enough to let me play with her iPhone. Here are some impressions…

This might be a better iPod than an iPod. Unlike the iPod, the iPhone has a dedicated volume control on the left. Unlike the iPod, you can’t get stuck in a mode where you have no control over the volume.

The contacts list syncs street addresses as well as phone numbers, vaulting the iPhone over 95+ percent of phones sold in the U.S.

Downloading Web pages via the AT&T data connection is excruciatingly slow. It took about 2 minutes to bring in http://philip.greenspun.com with both photos. Turning on WiFi solves this problem, but it is not easy to turn WiFi on (for relief from AT&T’s sluggish network) or off (so you don’t drain the battery). You’d expect there to be another switch on the side or a shortcut, but there isn’t. You wade down into some menus and look at a list of available networks. It is at least as complex as turning on WiFi on a standard Windows XP machine, but you’re using your thumbs instead of mouse.

According to a Web forum, the iPhone will not work with the Gmail mobile Java client. Either you need to use the Web browser or access Gmail via POP in the standard iPhone email client (taking us back to the 1960s, before conversations were grouped).

Typing did not work very well for me.

The owner thought that the speakerphone quality was so bad that she was intending to return the phone and try another. She was satisfied with the sound/voice quality when holding the phone to her ear.

Typing on the touch screen wasn’t quite as difficult as I thought it would be, but it was still much more difficult than using a thumb keyboard as on a Treo or Blackberry. You cannot touch type, but must look at the screen constantly to see what letters the iPhone is guessing your fat thumbs are over.

Verdict: A nice device and maybe better than the Windows-based phones, but probably not as functional as the original Treo 180 (flip phone introduced early in 2002; thumb keyboard; PalmOS).

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Revised my article on bicycles; anyone have anything to add on recumbents?

I’ve revised http://philip.greenspun.com/materialism/bikes in preparation to buy some more bicycles: some more compact folding bikes to fit in the back of the Cirrus; maybe a high-end recumbent; and possibly a comfort/city bike. I would appreciate suggestions from more experienced cyclists, especially if made at the bottom of the page in question. Thanks!

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Obesity, population growth, global warming, and the role of veterinarians

People are getting fatter. The human race has expanded its numbers as well as its waistlines, up to more than 6.6 billion according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Humans are literally covering a larger percentage of the Earth and absorbing more sunlight, thus contributing to global warming in the most direct manner possible. What if we were to dress everyone from head to toe in bright white clothing? Imagine if everyone dressed like the owners of Saudi Arabia, in flowing white robes. More of the sun’s light would be reflected back into space. It wouldn’t be enough to cool the Earth, but it would help stop the acceleration of global warming.

Speaking of obesity… it is becoming ever-more difficult to get an accurate appraisal of one’s health and size from a medical doctor. If you’re not diabetic and morbidly obese, you’re above average, so the doctor probably won’t come down too hard on you for carrying 10 or 20 superfluous pounds. To whom can we turn for an accurate appraisal of our bodies? Veterinarians. The average Labrador Retriever loves to exercise and is in great shape. A vet who sees fit Labs and Goldens all day is likely to be much more critical of human body weight than an American medical doctor.

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John F. Kennedy Presidential Library

Anne, Mallory, and I visited the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library on Sunday. This is a striking modern building, designed by I.M. Pei, on a low-rent section of the Boston Harborfront. Your visit starts with a film about JFK’s life up to the 1960 Presidential campaign. Despite the Kennedys’ Irish-Catholic origins, the early years of yachting and touch football in the family compound could have come straight out of the movie “Wedding Crashers” (a must-see for Christopher Walken’s definitive WASP lifestyle portrait). One is struck by how much more interesting and intelligent JFK seemed before he went into politics. With every year that he spent in political office, he was more prone to uttering sound bites and less prone to speaking out complete thoughtful ideas.

The Kennedy-Nixon debates were remarkable for how good Nixon looked and how much like Ronald Reagan he sounded. Kennedy wanted to make the entire world safe for democracy, whatever the price that might be payed by Americans. Kennedy wanted federal tax dollars flowing to alleviate every domestic problem. Nixon wanted low taxes and to ensure that the government didn’t spend “one dollar that might be better spent by the people.” Instead of expanded federal ambition, Nixon promised more jobs and higher income through economic growth spurred by lower taxes, pointing to high G.N.P. growth during the Eisenhower Administration.

There are rooms devoted to the Peace Corps (created by Kennedy), the Cuban Missile Crisis, and the dinner parties hosted by Jackie. Nerds will appreciate the room devoted to the Space Program. Kennedy asks Johnson, in a memo, “why aren’t we working 24 hours per day, with three shifts, on this?” American fears of being overtaken by the Soviets are palpable in the documents in this room.

[The room shows the economic benefits of having the right enemy. We sent our children to study Physics when we were afraid of the Russians. We sent our children to study engineering when we were afraid of the Japanese. Now we are afraid of the Muslims and we send our children to study Arabic and medieval Islamic history.]

Robert F. “Bobby” Kennedy, supposedly the brains of the Kennedy family, gets a room with a desk devoted to his impressive achievements in enforcing laws guaranteeing equal treatment of black and white Americans. Bobby’s 1968 assassination isn’t covered, but it would make for an interesting exhibit. JFK worked hard to shift American immigration policy away from giving preference to northern and western Europeans. Sirhan Sirhan, a “quiet and polite” Palestinian-American from Pasadena, California, was exactly the kind of immigrant JFK wanted to encourage. Sirhan Sirhan, safely ensconced in a California prison, seems destined to outlive all of the Kennedys.

The gifts interspersed throughout the museum demonstrate the value of befriending Third World dictators; they can have some amazing stuff made, usually out of solid gold. The pictures of officials, reporters, and dinner guests demonstrate the value of being a white male from a good WASP family in the early 1960s. There wasn’t a lot of competition for the plum jobs. There are no exhibits devoted to the Vietnam War, perhaps the most important legacy of the Kennedy Administration.

JFK’s assassination is covered in a dark hushed corridor with some television images from the time rolling on multiple small screens. You walk out from that into the enormous glass-paneled lobby overlooking the water and one of JFK’s sailboats.

Summary: A vivid evocation of an era that passed almost 50 years ago; not a thoughtful exploration of policy alternatives.

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