Dodgers’ Secret Weapon

Lots of ink’s been spilt over the Dodgers’ aquisition of Moneyball genius Paul DePodesta, but their secret weapon is William Hung: LOS ANGELES — He might not be an American Idol, but William Hung has quickly become a folk legend in the Dodgers clubhouse and might be the club’s answer to Anaheim’s Rally Monkey. Shawn … Continue reading “Dodgers’ Secret Weapon”

Lots of ink’s been spilt over the Dodgers’ aquisition of Moneyball genius Paul DePodesta, but their secret weapon is William Hung:

LOS ANGELES — He might not be an American Idol, but William Hung has quickly become a folk legend in the Dodgers clubhouse and might be the club’s answer to Anaheim’s Rally Monkey.

Shawn Green brought in a CD by the “American Idol” reject the second day of the season and played it in the clubhouse during pregame stretching. The painfully comical songs had the players rolling on the floor in laughter.

I’d take Hung over the monkey any day.

Setting me straight

Lessig wags his finger and puts me in my place on his blog comments today. It’s such a fine example of argument by personal attack and obfuscation that I have to capture it here for posterity. As you read this, remember Lessig’s sneer at “Free Culture” critic Stephen Manes: “I love it when non-lawyers talk … Continue reading “Setting me straight”

Lessig wags his finger and puts me in my place on his blog comments today. It’s such a fine example of argument by personal attack and obfuscation that I have to capture it here for posterity. As you read this, remember Lessig’s sneer at “Free Culture” critic Stephen Manes: “I love it when non-lawyers talk about the wonderful virtues of “fair use.”

I’m a network engineer, and I love it when non-engineers talk about the wonderful virtues of TCP/IP. Lessig can dish out this kind of arrogance, but he can’t take it:

There are few things in my life more depressing that finding this kind of argument in this space. Indeed, I find myself unable to come back to my own blog when I know this Bennett stuff rages. I love argument, and honest disagreement. I loved reading ?three blind mice.? But Mr. Bennett?s bullshit is too much for me.

When Bennett first posted his wonderfully titled, ?The Future of Mediocrity,? I had an email exchange with him. I told him that the ?review? was filled with simple mistakes, and that however interesting it might be to argue about points fundamental, it was a waste of time if he was going to be so sloppy about basic points.
Continue reading “Setting me straight”

Insourcing vs. Outsourcing

The Sacramento Bee has an interesting article today on the outsourcing/insourcing controversy, prompted by some grand-standing legislation: The Golden State ranks first nationally for the most jobs – 713,500 – supported by the U.S. operations of foreign-based companies, according to the Organization for International Investment in Washington, D.C… On average, U.S. subsidiaries of foreign companies … Continue reading “Insourcing vs. Outsourcing”

The Sacramento Bee has an interesting article today on the outsourcing/insourcing controversy, prompted by some grand-standing legislation:

The Golden State ranks first nationally for the most jobs – 713,500 – supported by the U.S. operations of foreign-based companies, according to the Organization for International Investment in Washington, D.C…

On average, U.S. subsidiaries of foreign companies pay their workers 16.5 percent more than domestic companies, the trade group reports…

State Sen. Liz Figueroa, D-Sunol, who’s introduced legislation aimed at outsourcing, said she’s seen no evidence in her district, which includes much of the Silicon Valley, that insourcing is balancing out the negative impact of outsourcing.

“Insourcing is in the debate, but it doesn’t help the thousands of individuals in my district (who) currently don’t have a job,” Figueroa said. “In my district it’s the higher-paying jobs we’re losing – the computer programming and engineering jobs.”

Before I left California to do an in-sourcing job, I lived one district over from former head-hunter Figueroa, who’s generally regarded as a legislative lightweight, for good reason, and who sent her daughter to Smith College to learn radical feminism.

Perhaps the shoddy education California delivers to its higher-ed students accounts for its loss of high-tech jobs:

IT DOESN’T REFLECT well on San Francisco State University that President Robert Corrigan has announced that he is considering axing the School of Engineering to close a budget gap. The university has no shortage of gut courses that appear short on academics and long on liberal brainwashing —

you know, courses in majors that prepare students for careers as low-paid malcontent activists. Yet Corrigan wants to kill a program that enables poor and minority Bay Area students to learn in-demand, high-level skills with which they can make good money.

Just a thought.

Fake e-mail from Ebay

I got this fake e-mail today: The Ebay has an email address for reporting fake emails: [email protected]. (I knew it was fake because: a) it’s a gif and not a regular text message; and b) Ebay doesn’t cut off your buying privileges out of the blue.)

I got this fake e-mail today:

fakemail.gif

The Ebay has an email address for reporting fake emails: [email protected].

(I knew it was fake because: a) it’s a gif and not a regular text message; and b) Ebay doesn’t cut off your buying privileges out of the blue.)

On Pakistan and Clarke

Among Condoleezza Rice’s opening remarks are several mentions of Pakistan’s support of the Taliban and efforts to neutralize it: More importantly, we recognized that no counterterrorism strategy could succeed in isolation. As you know from the Pakistan and Afghanistan strategy documents that we made available to the Commission, our counterterrorism strategy was part of a … Continue reading “On Pakistan and Clarke”

Among Condoleezza Rice’s opening remarks are several mentions of Pakistan’s support of the Taliban and efforts to neutralize it:

More importantly, we recognized that no counterterrorism strategy could succeed in isolation. As you know from the Pakistan and Afghanistan strategy documents that we made available to the Commission, our counterterrorism strategy was part of a broader package of strategies that addressed the complexities of the region.

Integrating our counterterrorism and regional strategies was the most difficult and the most important aspect of the new strategy to get right. Al-Qaida was both client of and patron to the Taliban, which in turn was supported by Pakistan. Those relationships provided al-Qaida with a powerful umbrella of protection, and we had to sever them. This was not easy.

Not that we hadn’t tried. Within a month of taking office, President Bush sent a strong, private message to President Musharraf urging him to use his influence with the Taliban to bring Bin Laden to justice and to close down al-Qaida training camps. Secretary Powell actively urged the Pakistanis, including Musharraf himself, to abandon support for the Taliban. I met with Pakistan’s Foreign Minister in my office in June of 2001. I delivered a very tough message, which was met with a rote, expressionless response.

America’s al-Qaida policy wasn’t working because our Afghanistan policy wasn’t working. And our Afghanistan policy wasn’t working because our Pakistan policy wasn’t working. We recognized that America’s counterterrorism policy had to be connected to our regional strategies and to our overall foreign policy.

To address these problems, I made sure to involve key regional experts. I brought in Zalmay Khalilzad, an expert on Afghanistan who, as a senior diplomat in the 1980s, had worked closely with the Afghan Mujahedeen, helping them to turn back the Soviet invasion. I also ensured the participation of the NSC experts on South Asia, as well as the Secretary of State and his regional specialists. Together, we developed a new strategic approach to Afghanistan. Instead of the intense focus on the Northern Alliance, we emphasized the importance of the south ? the social and political heartland of the country. Our new approach to Pakistan combined the use of carrots and sticks to persuade Pakistan to drop its support for the Taliban. And we began to change our approach to India, to preserve stability on the subcontinent.

This is about as clued-in as it gets. The overall opening statement is a knock-out blow to Dick Clarke’s claims of Bush Administration laxity. I’m not convinced that Clarke was actually lying, however, as much as he was out-of-the-loop as a mid-level holdover from the Clinton Administration whose grasp of the overall terrorism plan was limited by his need to know. Clarke’s role in the White House wasn’t even as large as he thought it was, let alone as large as he wished it were. So even if Clarke’s criticisms were perfectly valid from his point of view, his knowledge of the overall plan was extremely limited.

Rice testimony

Here’s a full transcript of Condoleezza Rice’s testimony to the grandstanding 9/11 Commission. Read for yourself and draw your own conclusions.

Here’s a full transcript of Condoleezza Rice’s testimony to the grandstanding 9/11 Commission. Read for yourself and draw your own conclusions.

Revised predictions

I’m gonna have to revise my baseball predictions based on opening-day action. The Astros are pretenders and they’re not going anywhere. They have a nice baseball park and some shiny new pitchers from the Yankees cast-off collection, but it’s hard to play ball with all those wheelchairs parked all over the field and Jeff Kent’s … Continue reading “Revised predictions”

I’m gonna have to revise my baseball predictions based on opening-day action. The Astros are pretenders and they’re not going anywhere. They have a nice baseball park and some shiny new pitchers from the Yankees cast-off collection, but it’s hard to play ball with all those wheelchairs parked all over the field and Jeff Kent’s attitude stinking the place up.

The Angels are pretty darned impressive. I never knew that George Steinbrenner had a twin brother, but he does and he now owns the Angels. They could very well win the division, but if they do the A’s will take the wildcard spot and beat them in the playoffs. The A’s have taken to folding under post-season pressure the past few years, and going in as a wildcard will help to reduce it.

The Mariners play like a not-very-talented minor league team, and thanks to them the Rangers will finally climb out of the cellar.

That’s all for now.

Baseball Picks

Baseball Prospectus – Preseason Predictions are probably as good as anybody’s: BP Author World Series Winner Will Carroll Red Sox Steven Goldman Cubs Gary Huckabay Athletics Rany Jazayerli Red Sox Chris Kahrl Red Sox Jonah Keri Athletics Doug Pappas Astros Dayn Perry Yankees Joe Sheehan Red Sox Nate Silver Red Sox Ryan Wilkins Red Sox … Continue reading “Baseball Picks”

Baseball Prospectus – Preseason Predictions are probably as good as anybody’s:

BP Author       World Series Winner
Will Carroll                Red Sox
Steven Goldman                 Cubs
Gary Huckabay             Athletics
Rany Jazayerli              Red Sox
Chris Kahrl                 Red Sox
Jonah Keri                Athletics
Doug Pappas                  Astros
Dayn Perry                  Yankees
Joe Sheehan                 Red Sox
Nate Silver                 Red Sox
Ryan Wilkins                Red Sox
Derek Zumsteg             Athletics


My pick would be the Athletics, naturally.

Moneyball rules

I finally got around to reading Moneyball by Michael Lewis, the story of how the Oakland A’s consistently field one of the best teams in Major League Baseball with one of the lowest budgets. Their secret is rational use of appropriate data: Beane and DePodesta played major roles in “Moneyball: The Art of Winning an … Continue reading “Moneyball rules”

I finally got around to reading Moneyball by Michael Lewis, the story of how the Oakland A’s consistently field one of the best teams in Major League Baseball with one of the lowest budgets. Their secret is rational use of appropriate data:

Beane and DePodesta played major roles in “Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game,” Michael Lewis’ engaging and controversial best-selling book of last year that detailed how the two men used Oakland’s financial desperation to ram through organizational changes emphasizing the scientific approach and research tools developed by a thriving subculture of mostly amateur “performance analysts.”

These “stat-heads,” building from the fertile intellectual groundwork laid by the incomparable baseball writer/analyst Bill James, operated almost entirely off the radar screen of Major League Baseball until Beane and DePodesta came along.

The book’s extremely well written, with great pacing, atmosphere, and even some suspense, so I’d recommend it even to those who aren’t fortunate enough to be baseball fans.

The controversy around the book is whether it fairly assesses the role that pitching plays in the A’s success, and whether it adequately addresses their post-season problems. There’s no better group of starting pitchers in baseball than Mulder, Zito, and Hudson, and it’s not clear how general manager Billy Beane found them, even if is clear that the rest of baseball ignored them because their physiques don’t appeal to the latent homoerotic fantasy lives of traditional baseball scouts.

The playoff question is a tough one, because the A’s definitely have an extraordinary problem closing the deal even when they’ve got the opposing team on the mat like Boston was after the first two games in Oakland last year. The traditional analysis is that the A’s don’t know how to play “smallball”, the traditional combination of sacrifices, stolen bases, and trick plays that are such a central part of the received wisdom of baseball. But it’s the nature of received wisdom to be faulty, and it’s the nature of front office management not to be able to direct action on the field day-by-day, and I’m inclined to believe that the A’s post-season blowups are the fault of dugout managers Art Howe and Ken Macha who aren’t on-board with Beane’s program.

Just to check this theory, I watched a replay of Game 5 between the A’s and the Red Sox last year on ESPN Classic just after finishing the book, and there was nothing to the game that casts any doubt on Beane. Quite the contrary, the announcers went into a soupy spiel about how teams can’t win in the playoffs without playing small ball, quoting Joe Morgan’s moronic charge that Beane “just waits for the three-run homer” and how you can’t do that. This was in the top of the sixth with the score tied 1-1. About ten minutes after they tried to impress the fans with this erudition, Manny Ramirez hit a 3-run homer and put the Sox up 4-1. The idiot announcers didn’t notice, let alone explain how you close a 3-run lead by stealing bases.

In the bottom of the ninth, A’s manager Ken Macha sealed the deal for me, killing a rally with a meaningless sacrifice bunt. The score was 4-3, the A’s had men on first and second and nobody out. So Macha has his hitter lay down a sacrifice to get the runners over to second and third, on the theory that any ball hit out of the infield will score the runner from third and tie the game.

The thing is, though, that the out he gave up in this situation happened to be more harmful than the slight advantage he gained from moving the guy in scoring position to third, because the next guy walked and loaded the bases anyhow, putting a double play in order that would have ended the game and causing the A’s to lay off the low pitches. With that shrunken strike zone, the last two A’s struck out looking.

The A’s need a manager who understands the system Beane uses to build the team, and who’s smart enough to use the talents his players actually have instead of the ones he wishes they had. Art Howe wasn’t that guy, and Ken Macha isn’t either, but with all the baseball writers sucking up to him for playing traditional baseball with a non-traditional team I don’t see anything changing for the A’s.

UPDATE: See Matt Welch for a coherent explanation of Moneyball.