Alkahest my heroes have always died at the end

May 6, 2008

E-book blogging

Filed under: Personal,Technical — cec @ 8:49 pm

I’ve had the Sony Reader now for about a week.  In that time, I’ve taken it on a plane trip, read three full books, multiple days worth of the NY Times and I’m in the middle of two books right now.  Observations so far:

  • The electronic paper is very readable.  On my plane trip, I must have read for several hours straight with no more eye strain than if I had been reading a paper book.  The legibility is good regardless of font size.  You might still want to increase the font size if your eyes are tired, but otherwise, there is no need.
  • The menus and button layouts are pretty reasonable.  You can page forward or back.  There’s a up-down-left-right cursor that is used to move around on a page.  Using the number buttons on the right, you can jump to an arbitrary page in the book.  These buttons double as a quick jump to a menu item on the Reader’s standard menus.  One gripe, you can only move to different links using up/down on the cursor, left/right don’t do anything.  At GB, paideka mentioned that it would be interesting to see what Apple did with the layout and look and feel of a reader.  Agreed
  • Battery life appears to be as advertised: 7,500 page turns per charge.  Keep in mind that a page on the reader contains only about half the content of a standard paper back (depending on page layout and font size).  Still, around 3,500 pages of paper back text is still pretty good.
  • Updating the screen is slow.  It takes about .5 – .75 seconds to update the screen.  A few ramifications:  1) this is almost un-noticeable while reading text; and 2) using the cursor keys is painful, you deal with the update time for each cursor pressed – where ever possible I use the numeric shortcuts.
  • A third ramification of the slow update time is that the Reader, and almost certainly any other reader using this generation of e-paper, is unusable as a reference book.  When I use a reference book, I flip around quite a bit.  Forward to the index, back to the text, forward many pages to the next topic, etc.  I suppose if the reference book had a really good index, it might be better, but for the most part, this is still not a good tool for referencing which is a real shame.
  • The bookmarking system is good.  Each book keeps your place in the book.  The top level of the reader keeps up with the last book you’ve read and your place in that book.  You can set any number of bookmarks in each book and then access the bookmarks on a global or a per book basis.  It would be nice if the reader also kept a list of most recently read, rather than just the single most recently read book; but that’s a small issue.  Typically, I’ll just set a bookmark when I pause in reading, then delete it when I pick the book back up.
  • PDF conversion still leaves something to be desired.  I’ve looked into this a bit.  The converter I’m using converts PDF -> HTML -> LRF.  The PDF -> HTML conversion uses pdftohtml (surprised?) which is good in some ways, but still leaves off certain things (like images!), at least as used by the reader’s converter.  Part of this is due to conceptual differences between PDF and HTML.  HTML marks up text, flagging paragraphs, noting images, etc.  Ideally, all of this is passed to the browser which handles the layout.  PDF will have none of that.  PDF consists of a set of primitives that indicate what text (in which font and size) should go in which location on the page.  There is no markup of paragraphs, instead, each line of text is described individually.  There is no easy way to reconstruct paragraphs from a PDF file (as a research note, I wonder if you could use a partially observable markov decision process?). That said, minus the missing images, the LRF result is definitely readable.

So overall, I’m pretty happy with the reader.  The biggest issue is the refresh time on the electronic paper and I hope that will improve over the next couple of years.

p.s. If you’re curious, so far I’ve read: Free for All (a history of open source),  The Authoritarians (a sociologist’s take on a personality type and how it affects politics) and 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (which I haven’t read in over 20 years).  I’m currently reading Nietzsche’s The Anti-Christ and Bruce Sterling’s Hacker Crackdown. 

May 5, 2008

If you love something, set it free . . .

Filed under: Gallery,Personal,Photography,Wildlife Rehab — cec @ 9:58 pm

About a year and a half ago (November 2006), the wildlife clinic K volunteers with transfered a water turtle (yellow bellied slider) to her. A cute little guy, just over 7 grams and about the size of a quarter. Yesterday, weighing in at 125 g and with a shell about 4 inches long, we released her into the nearby lake. It’s easy to fall for a lot of the animals K rehabs. Their cute and tiny or just plain helpless and on the mend, but the turtles are particularly hard because K keeps them for so long. The following are a handful of the pictures we’ve taken of the turtle:

  • the first 6 pictures were taken in August 2007 when she was about 16 grams
  • the second 9 were taken in January 2008 when she was 25g and we were trying to tempt her into eating by giving her meal worms
  • the next 6 were taken yesterday before the release – 125g and big enough to defend herself
  • the last 3 were taken at the release in Jordan Lake

Good luck little turtle

April 29, 2008

Book lover + nerd = ebook

Filed under: Personal,Technical — cec @ 9:45 am

Yesterday, I bought a Sony Reader – the electronic book reader that uses E Ink’s electronic paper.  The electronic paper display on the reader is very nice.  It uses encapsulated white and black pigments that can be brought to the surface of the page.  The only power consumption involved happens when you make a change.  Once the change is made, it requires no power to keep the image.  The upshot is that you’ve got a very long battery life, a decent contrast ration and a display that can be read in any light – in fact, the more the better since it’s reflective (like paper) rather than backlit (like a monitor).  Moreover, because it’s not backlit, it’s easier on the eyes when reading for a long time.  I read for a couple of hours last night and it was no different than reading a paper book.

The Sony Reader hasn’t gotten quite the notoriety of Amazon’s Kindle, even though they both have the same display and the Sony came out a month earlier.  I suspect that’s because Amazon hyped the Kindle and after all, it was tied to the largest (or is it second largest?) book seller in the world.

So, why did I go with the Sony and not the Kindle?  A handful of reasons:

  • Price – the Sony is $100 cheaper.  I’m hoping that this isn’t the last version of electronic paper to come out and that things will continue to improve.  That being the case, why should I spend the extra money.
  • Linux use – okay, technically, the Kindle doesn’t require any computer to use it, but I suspect that I would want to attach it to a computer anyway.  If for no other reason than to save the transfer cost for anything I send to the device that isn’t purchased from Amazon.  Beyond that, libprs500 is very nice software.  It handles file conversions, can download RSS feeds and convert them to the reader’s format, etc.
  • Books – I almost certainly won’t buy electronic books for the reader.  Not that it’s not a good device for reading, but I’ve got two concerns:  1) I don’t want the books I buy (or music for that matter) to be locked up by DRM software, things change quickly and I want my books to follow; and 2) the price point for electronic books isn’t right.  Why would I pay the paperback price for an electronic version that has essentially 0 duplication and distribution costs?  Instead, I’ll probably start piping the newspaper to the reader and will catch up on a lot of the content of Project Gutenberg that I’ve been meaning to read.

Last night, I added about 100 books and short stories to the reader.  I think that’ll be enough to keep me for a while.  🙂

Happy reading

April 12, 2008

tracks 1.5

Filed under: Personal,Technical — cec @ 9:46 pm

Thanks to Luis, I find out last week that Tracks 1.5 has been released.  Tracks is the implementation of the  “getting things done” methodology which I prefer.  1.5 is pretty nice.  In particular, I look forward to hiding actions until a particular date.  In the past, I’ve wanted to track a todo some six months in the future.  I put it on the list and had to watch it for 180+ days.

The only trouble I had with the upgrade is that there’s some new SQL instructions in the code of the form “SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT foo)…”  That syntax was bombing on my ISP which was causing the AJAX updates to not happen properly.  It turned out that the sqlite3 driver uses this syntax and the sqlite2 driver has a fallback syntax since count-distinct isn’t supported.  Unfortunately, Dreamhost’s sqlite3 is about three years old and also doesn’t support count-distinct.  The solution was easy enough – copy the sqlite2 driver’s syntax into the sqlite3 driver.  Once that was done, everything worked great.

I suppose a better solution would be to get Dreamhost to upgrade sqlite, but somehow that seems like more effort.

The problem of evil

Filed under: Personal,Religion — cec @ 9:18 pm

One advantage of being in IT is that you often at least hear of cool things before other people do. You may or may not choose to adopt them, but at least you’ve got a choice. Thanks to Mr. Icon, I got an early gmail account, firstname.lastname@gmail.com. Great, unfortunately, I don’t have an uncommon name. Starting about a year ago, I began receiving email for a moderately important newsman. Last week, for a pastor in Michigan. In both cases, people apparently know the person has a gmail account, but they can’t remember the permutation of the person’s name. I always let the sender know that they’ve got the wrong person, but now I’m starting to think that either: a) I need to create a disambiguation auto-response that goes out if I’ve never seen your email address before; or b) we should just give up and form our own knockoff of the Village People. We’ve got an engineer, a newsman and a minister. Now we just need a fireman and a cowboy. Any volunteers?

So far, the email to the pastor is from just one person. A woman, about my age who seems to work at the church. Even though I’ve let her know that she’s got the wrong person, I’m still getting emails from her. They aren’t personal, they seem to be generic inspirational messages, perhaps sent out one email at a time to a distribution list. The one I received Friday took me back to junior high church youth groups with it’s pop religious sentiment and included the following story:

A man went to a barbershop to have his hair cut and his beard trimmed.

As the barber began to work, they began to have a good conversation.

They talked about so many things and various subjects.

When they eventually touched on the subject of God, the barber said:

“I don’t believe that God exists.”

“Why do you say that?” asked the customer.

“Well, you just have to go out in the street to realize that God doesn’t exist. Well me, if God exists, would there be so many sick people? Would there be abandoned children?

If God existed, there would be neither suffering nor pain. I can’t imagine a loving God who would allow all of these things.”

The customer thought for a moment, but didn’t respond because he didn’t want to start an argument.

The barber finished his job and the customer left the shop.

Just after he left the barbershop, he saw a man in the street with long, stringy, dirty hair and an untrimmed beard.

He looked dirty and unkept. The customer turned back and entered the barber shop again and he said to the barber:

“You know what? Barbers do not exist.”

“How can you say that?” asked the surprised barber. “I am here, and I am a barber. And I just worked on you!”

“No!” the customer exclaimed. “Barbers don’t exist because if they did, there would be no people with dirty long hair and untrimmed beards, like that man outside.”

“Ah, but barbers DO exist! That’s what happens when people do not come to me.”

“Exactly!” affirmed the customer. “That’s the point! God, too, DOES exist! That’s what happens when people do not go to Him and don’t look to Him for help.

That’s why there’s so much pain and suffering in the world.”

Now, I don’t want to tar everyone with the same brush, but this is just silly. It’s the kind of argument that you would fool a 5 year old with. Normally, I would just ignore it, but it hits a bit of a nerve for me. The first part is the problem of evil, inelegantly expressed.

The problem of evil has interested me for about 20 years now. In fact, it has interested me since before I even knew what it was called. The typical formulation is how can an all knowing, all powerful and all good god allow evil to exist in the world (or more harshly, how could evil exist without having been created by god)? The fact that there is evil is proof that either god does not exist or that he is not all knowing, all powerful and all good – which essentially amounts to non-existence. There are several standard answers to the problem of evil, none of which are particularly convincing.

One answer is to suggest that the evil we perceive is not really evil at all, but is in fact a good that we can not perceive. This strikes me as a giant cop-out. It asks us to deny the evidence of our own minds as to the evil of some acts. Moreover, a plain reading of the Book of Job suggests that god did allow the devil to torment Job as a test. Job’s family and children were killed for no other reason than to see if Job would be true to god. That sounds more like some sort of bad, co-dependent relationship than a good deed in disguise.

The second answer is to suggest that a world without evil is impossible, even for an omnipotent god. This is also a cop-out in that it sets limits on the power of a being defined by his omnipotence.

Another answer was put forth by the Jesuits: evil is exists because of a) original sin; and b) free will. This is clever and at least has the advantage of not trying to suggest that there is no evil. There are some problems. Original sin is the sin committed by the first man and woman and pass on to all of their descendants. This bothers me in part because Adam and Eve are clearly allegorical and were not actual people. So in essence, eating the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil and falling from grace is a metaphor for giving up the innocence of being an unthinking animal and becoming consciously aware of the world, our place in it and how we have a choice over our behaviors. As an allegory, it’s a good one. But it also means that original sin was not the sin of Adam and Eve as passed on to their descendants, but that original sin is a term given to the basic nature of mankind. As such, you can easily ask why did god create mankind with a sinful nature. The answer to that is typically free will. But that’s really no answer at all. Leave aside that I don’t think that free will can be proved to exist (another topic for another time), giving free will to a creature with a sinful nature ensures evil. Free will to a creature without a sinful nature would not guarantee evil.

I could go on a lot more here, but suffice to say that the problem of evil is a rather interesting theological and philosophical question, so seeing it expressed in the first half of the email above interested me. And then I read the second half which is flat out demeaning to the brain god (or evolution) gave people. In particular:

First, christians should be offended by the statement that there is pain and suffering in the world because people don’t go to god and look to him for help. There is an implication, but not a direct statement, that christians do not have pain and suffering and that if you went to god, nothing evil would happen to you. This is dangerously close to the doctrine of prosperity, which would be considered a heresy if christians concerned themselves with such things any more. Nowhere in the bible does it say that god materially helps people who believe in him. He may help them with acceptance, but then I suspect that belief in anything helps with acceptance so that’s not proof of god’s existance.

Second, the problem of evil is a theological problem because the postulated god is: a) all knowing, b) all powerful, c) all good, and d) the creator of everything. That evil exists is a direct challenge to the union of these attributes. In contrast, the author does not postulate the same attributes in her barber. I suppose you could do that. I suppose you could say that barbers are: a) all knowing, b) all powerful, c) entirely anal retentive when it comes to hair, and d) response for the grooming of creation. That being the case, an unkempt hippy (like myself?) would be a challenge to the existence of our super barber. So the author’s analogies are inexact and when corrected to allow for an omnipotent, anal-retentive barber, really don’t seem to help the god argument that much.

Finally, the author of our story is making an argument by analogy which is bad logic. Don’t get me wrong, I love me some analogies. I tend to think in analogy. But it’s a bad practice to argue from analogy. In essence, the argument boils down to: you say that object A with attributes A1..An does not exist because of the evidence of X. But what if we said that object B with attributes B1..Bn does not exist because of the evidence of Y. We can see that object B exists. We can’t see object A, but because B exists, then A must exist. Nope. Logic doesn’t work that way.

It’s this kind of fuzzy thinking that used to drive me crazy when I was in those junior high church groups. I guess it still drives me a bit crazy or I wouldn’t have just spilled so many electrons over it. I don’t mean to suggest that everyone involved in religion is a muddled thinker. In fact, I know that is not the case. My one small request is that churches limit the sending of emails to those that can think logically. Probably too much to ask. Maybe I’ll just adjust my spam filters.

April 10, 2008

The foolish man seeks happiness in the distance; the wise grows it under his feet.

Filed under: Personal — cec @ 10:37 am

For as long as I can remember, any time I spent more than an hour or so walking (or hiking), my legs and feet have felt sore and tired.  Never having been very athletic, I assumed that I was out of shape or needed to exercise more.  But even with as much exercise as I’ve been getting recently, I’ve still have still had the same problem.  I’ve tried various inserts and shoes for people who over pronate, but not much seemed to help.  So finally, I went to see the podiatrist.

I’m not certain whether or not I should be relieved.  It seems that it’s not all in my head, these aren’t normal pains, I don’t need to lose weight (well, at least not because of my feet), and I’m not just out of shape.  My feet really are screwed up.

At first the doctor wasn’t quite certain if the root cause was developmental or genetic, but essentially, I’ve got weak feet (arches, foot muscles, etc.) and an exceptionally strong calf muscles.  The weak feet cause me to walk in a way that builds up the strength of my calves and the strong calves pull the foot in such a way as to keep it from building up it’s own strength.   He asked if I’m a fast runner.  Not that I run much any more, but when I did, I was more of a sprinter.  Even as a non-athlete, I was still the second fastest person in junior high.

After looking at the x-rays, the doctor found that apparently the bones in my ankle are part of the original problem.  They don’t let the foot tilt up enough at the ankle and so the foot has to splay out.  Before he saw that, he was thinking that surgery might solve the problem – essentially cut the tendons in the ankle so that they lengthened and were weakened.  But seeing the x-ray made him realize that this would not work unless he also reshaped the bone.  I’m just as happy not to be a good surgical candidate.  A year to completely heal was a bit much.

The best solution may be to have some orthotics made that will hold the foot in the proper position and to buy shoes with an extra half to a whole inch of heel.  The extra heel allows the calf to rest in its shorter position even while walking so that it won’t get tired so quickly.  The doctor suggested cowboy boots.  I’m not certain if I’m up for that, but we’ll find something that’ll work.  Hey, now I have an excuse to wear lifts in my shoes and look taller! 🙂

An interesting conclusion to the day was when I spoke to my mother who said that my father seems to have the exact same problems.  His feet splay out.  Moreover, he used to run track in school.  Not long distance – his feet/calves got too tired for that.  Instead he ran sprints.  Finally, my father has been wearing cowboy boots pretty exclusively for the past few years.  My mother says that this is because he finds them more comfortable than other shoes, including what people traditionally think of as comfort shoes: sandals.  I guess the morale is that if you already have your father’s physical build, don’t be surprised if you inherited his feet too.

Now hopefully, I’ll be able to get some proper orthotics made before our next hiking trip!

April 8, 2008

New roof

Filed under: Personal — cec @ 8:30 am

The roofers finally finished our new roof last week.  They started on February 28th and finished on April 2nd – five weeks.  I’m pretty certain they only expected it to take about three weeks, but between the rain and the level of detail on the roof, it didn’t quite work out that way.  Everything seemed to take longer than expected.  On the bright side, all of you in central North Carolina owe us for the rain.  I’m convinced that March would not have been so rainy except for our roof.  For example, the first major rains came right after they pulled off the old shingles; and the rains last Monday and Tuesday postponed the completion.  Coincidence?  I don’t think so.  You might say I’m falling victim to the logical fallacy, post hoc, ergo propter hoc.  I say, screw that, I’m still taking credit for the rain.

The roof itself looks great.  They did a wonderful job.  The hardest thing to adjust to is the color.  We wanted something green.  Dark green would have been better.  But as we started looking at the options in metal roofing, we realized that the lighter colors were more energy efficient.  The only color (as opposed to shades of white) that was both energy star and NC-LEED rated was the “aged copper.”  It’s a bit brighter than I would have preferred, but that extra reflectance should make the upstairs more comfortable and easier to cool.

Pictures:

dsc_2421.jpg    dsc_2420.jpg

March 4, 2008

Lessons learned

Filed under: Personal — cec @ 3:13 pm

For the most part, the old roof has been ripped off and we’re looking to start laying down the new roofing on Thursday.

Several lessons learned so far in getting the roof replaced:

  • all contractors have different prices, shop around
  • drought is bad for roofers (and for that matter gravel driveway repair folks)
  • having your roof torn off is LOUD. Between the guys tearing shingles off to the dogs barking like crazy, I had a splitting headache when I stayed home
  • metal ridge vent covers from 20 years ago suck
  • the leak we had in the den actually had its own pool of standing water under the ridge vent cover

Looks like it’s going to rain tonight.  Hopefully we won’t be learning the lesson about the maximum wind speed that roofing underlayment can take before blowing off.

February 28, 2008

Roof replacement

Filed under: Personal — cec @ 10:42 pm

We moved into our current house a little over four years ago (already?!). Over the past few years, we’ve found that the people who built it made some interesting choices. Some things were done very nicely and they cheaped out on other things. One of the places they cheaped out was the roof. It wasn’t bad enough to force them to replace it when we moved in, but we did have to get them to do some minor work. Since then I’ve had to go up there a few times a year and add some roofing tar or replace a vent boot. We’ve known that we’ll have to replace it some day for a couple of years now.

Well, some day is finally here. I guess we could patch it for another few years, but with my vacation payout from the last job and our tax refund, we had the money to do the replacement now. Looking at the different options, we were really hoping to go with a standing seam metal roof. It’s much more energy efficient and will probably not need replacing for quite some time.

We got some quotes and found that the roofers in the area are struggling due to the drought and one was willing to give us a great price (~22% below their normal cost and almost 40% below their competitor’s). I told them on Tuesday that we accepted their bid. Their started tear off today. So far, so good. Hopefully, by late next week, they’ll be done and we’ll have an Energy Star compliant metal roof in “aged copper.” (note: I think the color is less blue and more green than what that link seems to indicate)

I’ll post pictures later.

February 19, 2008

Power companies

Filed under: Personal,Social — cec @ 9:08 pm

When K and I got home today, we had not one, but two different offers from the local power company (Progress Energy) to enroll in their equal payment plan program. The first was a generic flier touting the benefits of having a consistent power bill. You sign up and based on your past two years of power consumption, they compute your monthly bill and that’s what you’ll pay all year long. They’ll recompute a new amount 12 months later. We had something like that with Duke Power in Durham. They computed your recent average. You paid that for 11 months and then settled up on the 12th month, paying less or more depending on actual use.

We had liked the Duke Power plan. It equalized payments. You could track whether you were on target to have a higher or lower 12th month bill. And you only paid for what you used because in that 12th month you settled up . With that experience we looked into the Progress Energy version. That second mailer from Progress contained our actual numbers if we wanted to sign up. Unfortunately, it told us that our average monthly usage was $X and that they proposed to enroll us in the equal payment plan program at (something like) 120% of X per month. The claim of course is that if our use increases by more than 20%, we’ll be insulated from the increases of yearly fluctuations, etc. Of course, there are no refunds if you use less. So essentially, we have no incentive to conserve power and we’re likely to lose money. Wow, where can I sign!

Of course, it’s not all shiny green conservation at Duke power either. I was flipping through the N&O today and ran across an interesting Point-of-View letter from Jim Rogers (president and CEO of Duke Power). The POV letter was promoting their Save-a-Watt program as a cheaper, better alternative to renewable power sources – a program to promote power conservation. If you read the letter, you should quickly note that it’s missing one thing: details on the actual program.

Fortunately, the details aren’t hard to dig up. The proposed program would add $15 per year to every customer’s power bill. This fee would be used to promote energy conservation and provide discounts on energy efficient appliances. Interesting. It does have the down side that those too poor to afford new appliances are subsidizing those who can afford it, but I’ve heard of worse ideas. That said, it seems a bit counter intuitive that a power company would want to cut into their profits by encouraging conservation. Silly me. I haven’t described the other half of the plan. The company would then take the projected conservation amounts and would increase rates to cover 90% of what it would have cost to produce the amount of conserved energy. Their claim is that consumers are now saving 10%! Everyone’s happy, we don’t have to produce power from renewable sources and we can still claim that we are green!

Huh?!

It’s a shell game. It’s the old riddle of “where’s the missing dollar?” It only sounds reasonable if someone’s throwing out numbers fast enough that you don’t add up what they mean.

What Duke Power is proposing to do is to make a projection for energy consumption over the next N years without the program. Essentially, it’s a table that says in each year, the area will consume so much energy. Then each year thereafter, they look at how much energy was actually used. For every kilowatt-hour that isn’t used, their rates will increase so that they earn 90% of that missing kilowatt-hour. Save 100 kwhs – pay Duke Power for 90 kwhs.

Hrm, perhaps a more specific example is in order. Let’s assume that I run a small power company for my house. K is currently using 1 kw of power I produced through a RAIHW: redundant array of inexpensive hamster wheels. To produce my 1 kw of power, I’ve got 100 hamster wheels connected in a serial and parallel configuration. Assume that each hamster costs me $10 plus another $5 for food each year. So my infrastructure costs are $1000 in hamsters, plus another $500 in food each year. If we used 1 kw in 2007, I’m going to predict 10% year over year growth: 1.1 kw in 2008, 1.21 kw in 2009, 1.33 kw in 2010, etc.

Assume that on top of the amortized infrastructure costs plus the operational costs plus profit (call it $800 per year), I charge K a $10 fee (I’ll use the money to encourage her to change out an incandescent for a florescent bulb). According to my projections, I need to increase capacity by 10% in 2008 – or 10 new hamsters. Assuming the infrastructure costs are amortized, we might expect our power costs to go up 10% ($80) to $880 per year.

But what if my projections are wrong? K only uses 1 kw in 2008. Well, as a producer, I’m happy. I don’t have to buy 10 new hamsters (saving $100) and I don’t have to feed any new hamsters (saving $50). But wait! I’m missing out. I’m not getting the profit on that 0.1 kw of power. Under the Duke plan, I’ll still get 90% of that money. Even though I have no additional expenses, K’s power bill will be $872 per year. I get $72 free and clear; and K “saves” $8 per year because without my charging a $10 fee, she never would have replaced that incandescent bulb, so she would have used 1.1 kw. See, we’re conserving hamsters, K’s power bills increased less than I projected they would have, even though she used no more power. Everyone should be happy.

Duke Power claims that this is their incentive to increase conservation through education and programs to help purchase more energy efficient appliances. Of course, it’s also an incentive to game the system and make unreasonably large growth projections. Even if you assume that doesn’t happen, it’s a great deal for Duke Power. The program is funded by a fee. You earn enormous profit margins off of energy that you aren’t producing. You get to claim that you are a supporter of energy conservation. And you get to tell the environmentalists that want you to build renewable (or in some cases nuclear) power plants to go to hell, while building CO2-intensive coal fired plants when needed.

What’s not to love?

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