Weekly Photo Challenge: Self Portrait

Maybe I should have saved this one in case there is a photo challenge for ‘scary’ but it’ll have to do for the ‘self-portrait’ photo challenge…as seen in the date in to top corner, this dates back to 1999…when I had started out on the series of exercises in Betty Edwards most excellent Drawing On The Right Side Of The Brain (ISBN 0006381146)…one of these days, I must get around to finishing the entire series…

 

Magic

Just a lil graphical magic to keep small minds occupied while I slip into the lab and reverse the polariser on the Lava Gun (TM) again…

Don Paul BySouth Snr’Grandma’s Laughs & Tid Bits. Notice that even though this is not a .gif, the part of the image on the peripherals of wherever you are focusing seem to move. You can prove this to yourself by focusing past the image. Once you do so, the image stops moving. Optical illusions are failures of your brain software. Your brain has 3D models of textures and shapes that describe your immediate reality. When certain patterns confuse this software, it seems to baffle us…..Still cool though…

Weekly Photo Challenge: Family

This week’s pic for the weekly challenge is a family get-together for my grandparents’ 50th wedding anniversary – you can probably tell from the hair styles and clothes that this was in the mid-80s…I’m not there so must have been either in the field, or overseas or both…

Peter Zorn’s Ford Trimotor

Zorn Trimotor cover Teaser_4_sm

I’ve been sitting on this one for a while…just hadn’t got round to posting it which is sad because this is an artistic achievement worth noting…Peter Zorn is a designer and publisher of paper models. In the early 80s, he designed and released his original large scale model of the iconic (even if you only ever saw it in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom!) Ford Trimotor.

In 1980/1981, when I started the design of the Ford Trimotor 5-AT, Steve Jobs was about 25 years old. Needless to say, “No computers were harmed while designing this model.”

For at least the last decade or so, it has been a hard-to-find collector’s item….cut forward to late 2010, as Peter Zorn tells it…

…one man (Ron40) sends another (Deckape) a 30-year-old book to build a paper model of an 80-year-old aeroplane. Then a dozen or so others chime in on the build thread, expressing interest in building one of their own.

After the build was complete, I chimed in with congratulations and kudos. It seemed that there was enough interest in scanning and making the original book available, so I gave permission. Another country heard from (Billy Leliveld) volunteers to do the scans and when he is finished there is more interest in having the model available in a working mode so individuals can color their own choice of liveries and… Yet another country heard from as (Rubén Andrés Martínez) takes on the monumental task of re-drawing the entire model and, as we are no longer bound by publishing signatures and can have as many pages as we care to print, has included almost all of the existing early liveries.

The nicknames refer to  the identities of members of the Papermodelers.com forum, where the restoration and modern development took place…unfortunately Ron40 died just before the completion of the project that he had set in motion…

The final work of art is some 300+ pages (including a history of the model and the actual aircraft, detailed notes on each version and detailed instructions – each version only requires 30-40 pages to be printed) and includes liveries for eleven different aircraft including the aforementioned Trimotor from the early parts of Temple of Doom…plus full interiors for each version…

One of the things that constantly amazes me about the paper modelling community is its willingness to share its works and so, the restored Zorn Ford Trimotor 5-AT will cost you nothing but a little time to register at papermodelers.com, make one post in the forum; and then the bandwidth to download it – it’s only about 30Mb i.e. less than your average movie trailer…After that you need a printer, some paper/cardstock, and some time to dedicate to building something not often seen these days…

Something a bit different as I try to get back into two or more ‘non-challenge’ posts a week…enjoy…

Cool

Dubai

No theme or commentary today – work is very busy at the moment…but I do have this very cool photo, graciously shared with me by a friend who works for an airline and who recently snapped this great view of Dubai on a recent flight…the sort of image that begs for a story to be written around it…I half expect to see an airship moored at one of the buildings every time I look at it…

Avast, me hearties…

With effect yesterday, a new law comes into effect here that introduces penalties for people detected downloading copyrighted material off the internet…

Driving home from Wellington last night, I was listening to Radio Live as I do until I find the headphones for my MP3 so I can go back to my Audible books – still bracing myself to carry on listening to the current one with George Friedman prattling on about how Turkey, Mexico and Poland are the next generation of regional powers…Anyway, of course, this new law – which is no surprise as it was well socialised before becoming law – was the hot topic of discussion, as it was on breakfast TV yesterday morning…

It amazes me how InternetNZ and TUANZ can blatantly bleat about how unfair it all is that current international copyright law does not allow free downloading of copyrighted content and how copyright is all just one big conspiracy by US interests (ho-hum…yawn) to maintain the current outdated copyright system that expects that users might actually have to pay for copyrighted product…

Disinformation was rampant from both InternetNZ and TUANZ but the simple bottom line is that both need to ante up and accept that illegal access to copyrighted material, even under the pseudo-glamour of piracy, is nothing more than plain and simple, black and white THEFT!!! Just the same as hopping a fence and helping themselves to stock and produce just because there is no big sign written in geek that says ‘Private Property’; or bowling into someone’s house because they left the front door open and again just helping themselves…

The reason that they are all worried is because the Government has introduced some quick hefty penalties – in fairness, with a graduated system of warnings – for offending account holders…up to $15,000 per offence – don’t want a $15k fine? Then DON’T STEAL, you THIEVING geeks…!!!!

Worried that your neighbour will tap into your wireless and download copyrighted material? Then you are too dumb to have an internet account…

Worried that your kids will earn you a $15k fine? They will probably find a way to do this anyway – at least illegal downloads don’t involve fire, explosives or fast cars…

Worried that your employees will abuse the work account? Introduce individual accounts and police them like you should be doing anyway…

Laziness and stupidity are no excuses for THEFT.

Want to see the latest series of Castle, Justified, Thunderbirds, etc before it arrives here? Either breakaway from the box and get a life or buy it from Amazon et al – YOU LOSERS!

It sickens me that the me-me-me generation just don’t get that there are no freebies and that there is this thing called work that means to get get money to buy you things…the internet does not = Notting Hill style help yourself…I’ve been around enough activities creating intellectual property for long enough to have a healthy respect for those who create and nothing but contempt for those who steal be it with a brick through the window or a dodgy file sharer somewhere in Eastern Europe…

In other news

Happy Feet the Emperor Penguin {PDF: Penguin Happy Feet becomes a Wellington celebrity] is off home again. This was a bigger national story than a pensioner who laid dead in his flat for over a year.

The cost of the Christchurch earthquakes has almost doubled to just over $7billion – to counter this the government has invented discovered significant oil and gas under the southern ocean…

Teams for the Rugby World Cup have started to land this week – gee, I hope there is a ‘not-rugby’ channel for the next six weeks….

The Myth of Population-centric Counterinsurgency

Gentile_dl-vertical4I just sat in on a very interesting virtual presentation and Q&A session at the COIN Center at Ft Leavenworth with COL Gian Gentile…

He is a professor of military history at the United States Military Academy, West Point. COL Gentile has written and spoken extensively about the need to revise Army COIN doctrine (FM 3-24). He states “Population-centric COIN doctrine needs fundamental revision. The Army’s current fixation on COIN is a “straightjacket” that prevents thinking about alternative models of irregular conflict and, more importantly, encourages the atrophy of combined arms warfare skills.

A quick bio and summary of COL Gentile’s views can be found in Micah Zenko’s interview Ten What’s With…Col. Gian Gentile from June of this year.

This morning he discussed his belief that “…Population-centric COIN doctrine needs fundamental revision. The Army’s current fixation on COIN is a “straightjacket” that prevents thinking about alternative models of irregular conflict and, more importantly, encourages the atrophy of combined arms warfare skills…” Unfortunately, the session ended before I could copy’n’paste the insightful questions and comments out of the chat screen (hopefully I will be able to get them from someone who was a little faster than I), however here are some of the insights from COL Gentile:

“…learning and and adapting is not an output in itself – if an Army can do combined arms, then it should be all over ‘learning and adapting’…” Yes and no – it should be able to do combined arms well – no argument there – but the key enabler that may be drawn from combined arms that contributes to the irregular arena could very well be the ability to work and play well with others, not just from one’s own service, nation or even extant alliance but from those ‘strange bedfellows’ that irregular warfare seems to attract. I suppose I should also hammer the point home that combined arms is actually a joint construct, not simply all the land forces able to work and play well together.

“…the COIN ‘wave’ is perceived as the ‘new way’ of doing war which is just as wrong as the over-focus in the 80s on major conventional operations…” Agree totally with this but less with the implied statement that an Army that can do MCO well (combined arms?) can easily step into an irregular scenario. Well, it can step into one easily enough e.g. Russia in Afghanistan, the US and UK in Iraq: managing it is quite something else and I do think that one of the enduring lessons of OIF is that a force that is good, great even at MCO, can not easily step ‘down’ into an irregular environment without reroling and retraining. In 2004, when the Iraqi insurgency really went ballistic, the US Army was still clearly the last of the really great warfighting armies i.e. geared up and fully competent at major force-on-force corps- and army-level conventional warfare, the last of the big hitting sticks. Was that much use to it stepping from a general-led conflict to one focussed on corporals and captains? Not really, no  more than the UK’s belief that IT was still up there as a ‘big hitting stick’ and also a master of COIN – when it was no longer either…

“…FM 3-24 should be broken apart, delinked from the concept of pop-centricity and nation-building – too narrow an option – then consider operational methods of COIN to provide a range of options and approaches…” When all is said and done, FM 3-24 Counterinsurgency, a product of rare (at the time) cooperation between the US Army and the USMC, was the right doctrine for ‘the’ war at the time, specifically the irregular conflict that the US was ensnared in across Iraq – and it worked. Does this mean that it is inherently transferable to other irregular conflicts? Not even! One of the most vital but most ignored COIN truisms is that every campaign or potential campaign has to be assessed on its own merits. Doctrine must provide a range of options and considerations for thinking operators, not just be Checklist Warfare for Dummies

“…State-building is not a key part of COIN – maybe the military could just do interdiction and disruption of insurgent forces…” This could just be as drawn-out and open-ended – is then part of the problem that we talk about COIN when we mean something else under the IW umbrella….? This also directly contradicts his answer to the question below in regard to whole of government and comprehensive approaches.

“…Essential question of strategy…” Ergo the right tools for the job; ergo identifying the core issues and addressing those via whatever is the necessary approach, i.e. Diplomatic, Informational, Military or Economic (DIME) being the Big Four lines of operation at the strategic level, noting, of course, that the strategic level extends well outside of the military which is, as the Dead Germans clearly identified, just another instrument of national power…

“…COG is not automatic but something to be discovered…” Oh so true…centres of gravity are not always – if at all – thing that can be discovered and targeted during endless planning sessions. pre-identified COGs, like ‘the plan’, often survive barely past the first rounds going downrange post-H Hour…

I was surprised by his answer to the question “Is part of the problem that the military feels that it must fill the (perceived?) vacuum left by non-engagement by other agencies, host nation, government and non-govt?” in that the answer was no, nature of the beast is that the military must/should do this unless the nation has mobilised fully (in war v at war) a la WW2…this seems to contradict COL Gentile’s stand that we are going too far down the population-centric path – if we are going to pick up this additional role we would need an army that is much more than “…able to do combined arms well…”

While I agree totally with COL Gentile that COIN is not the new war and that ‘old wars’ will still be popular, and that FM 3-24 is not the new FM 3-0 or MCDP 1-0, I found him a little confusing this morning: on one hand, he states that the military should be, in the absence of national mobilisation, steeping in to fill OGA/NGO role i.e. the population-centric nation-building that he decries; on the other, state and nation building is not what the military should be doing a la “…maybe the military could just do interdiction and disruption of insurgent forces…”

These are discussions that we need to have as FM 3-24 commences its Army review at Ft Leavenworth and the USMC gear up to develop their own, more littorally-focussed USMC-specific version; and as we all face major budget reviews in which the voices of the COINdinistas may be heard as the more fiscally-‘do-able’…

MCDP 1-0

I mentioned this publication above – the Marines have just released a significantly updated version of this capstone document…from Small Wars

Marine Corps Doctrinal Publication (MCDP) 1-0, Marine Corps Operations, has been revised and is now posted at the Marine Corps Combat Development Command, Combat Development and Integration Division’s webpage.  The original edition, developed just prior to 9/11, reflected language and constructs prevalent within joint doctrine at that time. The revision discusses the use of smaller MAGTFs and other nonstandard formations that are increasingly employed across the range of military operations. It provides concise descriptions of the various operations Marines may conduct and it records changes to Marine Corps as determined by the 2010 Force Structure Review.

Weekly Photo Challenge: Flowers

Flowers for this week’s WordPress Weekly Photo Challenge are still a bit sparse in this part of the world at this time and they’re not really one of my more common photo subjects – although we have just had our heaviest snowfall in a few years (like, a whole three days worth!!), I noticed this morning some flowers already blooming under one of the maples…they were kinda straggly though…instead I found this much hardier flax flower up the top of the driveway…

…and it must be spring – just as I posted this I heard the first blowey for the season start droning around the light…time to get some natural pyrethrins back in the air…go, go Robo-Can…

Weekly Photo Challenge: Mountains

Mt Ruapehu from the Waiouru Officers mess dining room around 2006...

Over the shoulder shot of the other side of Mt Ruapehu, early 2010...

One of Carmen's pix - Mt Taranaki, early 2007...

This week’s WordPress Weekly Photo Challenge…Mountains…which are kinda scarce in the North Island: there is Ruapehu, referred to simply as The Mountain , with its smaller consorts Tongariro (better known in MiddleEarth circles as Mt Doom) and Ngauruhoe; the Mount in Tuaranga which is just a hill; and Mt Taranaki overlooking, funnily enough, the province of Taranaki…in the South Island, there are so many mountains they are all just lumped in under the Southern Alps, which of course, begs the question “Where are the Northern Alps?”

Weekly Photo Challenge: Broken

Uh-oh...

This week’s WordPress Weekly Photo Challenge…what happens when you get an unseasonal southerly…a little like the Big Bad Wolf: one huff and  a puff and there goes the top of the water tank imploded….