/// Frank Hagen: Professional Web Developer, C# User, Reformed Über-geek RSS 2.0
# Monday, April 30, 2007

The Civil War is an interesting topic, here in the States.  There is an great deal of confusion and hypocrisy surrounding it and the events and politics around it, foremost being slavery.  Harry Turtledove is the master of alternate history fiction, and crafts the conflict into what is considered his best book.  I have read others of his, but always intended to read this one.

The Guns of the Southis told from the point of view of two very different personalities.  One is Nate Caudell, a 1st Sergeant of the Confederacy, and the other the infamous Robert E Lee.  As it becomes apparent that the war is lost for the South, a mysterious group of men introduce a new type of rifle to General Lee they call the AK-47.  Armed with the assault rifles and the ammunition to use them, the war quickly turns, as expected.  Without giving too much away, the first half of the book concerns the war and its conclusion very well, and the second half, the events after the war which prove even more complex than imagined.

Turtledove is an excellent author who has a great ability to show the surrounding issues equally well as the primary.  He attacks the idea that the Civil War was simply about slavery swiftly and competently, casts Lee in the light of the reluctant hero, and shows Lincoln as a man of integrity desperate to save the United States.  One of the review quotes on the reverse of the paperback edition suggests that every one studying Civil War history should read this book.  I think that should be expanded to everyone, except the people in the area of Virginia that I live in who think the Confederate Battle Flag is about "heritage":  they should read it twice.

Monday, April 30, 2007 12:13:22 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0] -
Books
# Wednesday, April 25, 2007

I guess today is Administrative Assistants Day.  Thank God, I know Iwouldn't be able to do my job everyday without them!  Who would... um... ah... Wait, I don't have one.  But it's a good thing they have their own special day.

You know, I think the guy who sweeps up the floors at the slaughterhouse needs a holiday too.   How about Offal Removal Specialist Day?

Here's a link!  link

Wednesday, April 25, 2007 8:49:26 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1] -
Rant
# Friday, April 20, 2007

1st issue:  The last post I made stripped out the syntax highlighting from Visual Studio.  Minor, but annoying.  I use the CopySourceAsHtml plugin for VS2005, but what's the point if its going to remove the coloring?

Strike 1.

Friday, April 20, 2007 10:32:33 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0] -
Blog
One best practice I insist on is codefile headers, especially since VSS makes this stupid easy.  Below is the format I currently use for C#.NET:

 

#region Version Header
/// <remarks>
/// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
///   Application: XXXXXXXXXXXXX
///     $Workfile: Default.aspx.cs $
///   Description: Start page for XXXXXXXXXXX.
///        Author: Frank Hagen
///       Created: 11/22/2006
///     Copyright: © 2007 XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX.
/// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
///      $Modtime:  $
///     $Revision:  $
///   Mod $Author: XXXXXXXXXX $
///  VSS $Archive: /XXXXX/XXXXX/XXXXX/Default.aspx.cs $
/// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
/// </remarks>
#endregion
Friday, April 20, 2007 10:22:45 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1] -
.NET | Programming
It's been a slow effort to get this back online.  I had to hand edit my old feed to get it imported to WordPress.  Somebody could stand to get some good press writing a converter, although it'd probably never be more than a one-off.  Anyway, the old posts are in, I just need to go through and clean up every one of them.  So backfill will happen in reverse in order to minimize impact to the actual feed.
Friday, April 20, 2007 8:56:01 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0] -
Blog
# Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Well I finally moved my blog to a public site.  I chose Wordpress for a few reasons, not least of which is its flexibility and category tags.  I just now need to figure out how to import all of my old posts from DasBlog.  Any ideas?

Tuesday, April 17, 2007 6:11:37 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0] -
Blog
# Monday, April 16, 2007

Well, I'm moving this blog to WordPress.  It just doesn't make sense to run it at home using an alternate port.  And I just can't bring myself to paying for hosting or extended service from my ISP.  So this will be my last post here on DasBlog.  Look for my new site at:  http://fwhagen.wordpress.com/

The updated feed is http://fwhagen.wordpress.com/feed/ although I will eventually update feedburner as well.

It really annoys me to not host this myself.  I am, was, a webmaster after all.  I guess I can be content that I did DIY it for awhile.

Monday, April 16, 2007 8:18:08 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0] -
Blog
# Wednesday, April 11, 2007

I was watching an interesting show this evening about geopolitics in the early '90s.  They mentioned, admittedly in passing, the collapse of the Soviet Union as an economic and human rights victory.  I got me thinking.  I was in my twenties then and remember the state of the world as we were led to believe it, and I don't really think that was completely accurate.

You see, in the '80s, we were scared of the Red Menace.  Reagan was elected much because of his stance against the "Evil Empire".  We were in an arms race that looked like there was no end, not that it didn't give us some nice things like computers, cell phones, medicines, etc.  We were told that the Soviets were essentially ahead of us on all fronts.  And don't forget, it was less than 20 years since a humiliating defeat in Southeast Asia, Viet Nam specifically.

Then some dipshit dictator in the Middle East decided he needed even more oil.  Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990.  The US and UN went into diplomatic overdrive for several months to no avail.  President George Bush gave Hussein an ultimatum to get out of the Kuwait, and the whole world laughed.  At home, everybody was afraid of Viet Nam II.  Even my mom was afraid that I was going to get drafted, which was naive since I was in college and working a DOD contract.  In January 1991, true to his word, Bush let Iraq have it.

So why did the Soviet Union fall?  In my opinion, there are 3 reasons: 

The first was the F-117 Stealth Fighter.  We kept it a secret for over 10 years and it was more effective than anyone predicted in the Gulf War.  1200 sorties with 0 losses.  It rendered the entire Soviet Defense Network obsolete overnight.  That was going to be very expensive system for them to upgrade or replace in order to counter the Wobbly Goblin.

The second was the F-15 Eagle.  It made it's mark in the Israeli Air Force as the only air combat aircraft to never sustain a loss.  I believe it still holds that distinction.  And the E model proved to be an incredibly effective ground attack bomber during the Gulf War.  The Soviets had just spent an incredible amount of effort and cost in developing what was considered in 1991 to be the 2 best combat fighters ever, the MiG-29 Fulcrum and Su27 Flanker.  Granted Iraqi pilots are inferior to super-power pilots, but the F-15s made short work of them.  And the Soviets had nothing in the works.  Quick build a newer, better plane fast!

The Gulf War really rocked the Soviet Union.  We fought that conflict as hard as we did for that very reason.  But then the first B-2 Spirit Stealth Bomber was delivered to the USAF in 1993 and very public demonstrated to be even more effective than the F-117.  In my opinion, that's when the Politburo finally gave up.  They had spent themselves into a really bad situation, tried to fix that by invading Afghanistan in the '80s unsuccessfully, and then we go and completely decimate the world's 4th largest army in a matter of weeks.  On top of that, we had an enormous economic and technical boom on our hands because of it.  They were left with no choice, their people seized the opportunity and the USSR is a historical failure.

Are 3 planes the only reasons for the collapse of the USSR?  No, of course not.  Without the incredible American Naval Forces, the success of the M1A1 and M2A1, among other systems, all the air power in the world is useless.  And the technology and market forces during that time, much of which was directly related to military spending, played an enormous role.  But the Red Army was the primary focus of Soviet spending at the end of the Cold War.  The Gulf War and the deployment of the B-2 bomber proved that their economic gamble was a bust.

Thanks to FAS.org for the awesome images.  Visit them for more information on all US Weapon Systems and other very interesting geopolitics.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007 7:30:17 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0] -
History | Military | Politics
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