Geek points.
Feb. 10th, 2009 06:54 pmEliz IMd me midway through the day and then wasn't responding, so I figured I'd give her a call. The phone was busy. An hour later, the phone was still busy.
When it was ten minutes until I was planning to leave work and I still couldn't get through, I got creative.
"Ping! Ping! Ping!"
When it was ten minutes until I was planning to leave work and I still couldn't get through, I got creative.
- I ssh'd to my desktop at home.
- I set the volume high.
- I installed the Festival speech synthesizer.
- I figured out how to work it.
- I got an error because it couldn't find the sound interface it liked.
- I googled for a solution and found it (a config file that plays through an external program).
- I had the machine say "Dan is trying to call you but the phone is busy" three times.
- Eliz IMd me and asked me to turn the volume down.
"Ping! Ping! Ping!"
But what is the current value?
Date: 2009-02-11 03:09 pm (UTC)The problem is that, at present, there are so few houses selling that it's hard to estimate a current value.
A simpler approach would be to reset all variable rate mortgages to whatever the mortgage's initial rate was. That'd give a fair chance to people who were tricked into getting a mortgage they wouldn't be able to afford later on. I'm not sure the courts would go for it, though; it might be considered a taking, meaning the government would have to compensate the mortgage holders.
Definitely. Also, specify that financial companies can't be publicly traded; that seems to have been one of the big sources of instability over the past 25 years.
Re: But what is the current value?
Date: 2009-02-11 03:23 pm (UTC)The problem with public markets in ownership is pretty much the same as their appeal: they provide a layer of indirection and that can be used as an abstraction. Radical notion: perhaps we should vastly expand the bond market and close down the stock market?