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Eileen on A Christmas Story - Dec 08
Thanks Dr Mike, love this story, so true! cheers
Eil on Pike River
Thanks for intersting posting. My great grand father was william patrick butler, his son william daniel butler I believe went over to new zealand to work in the mines. I was wondering if your william
Chris on Pike River
William Maher was my Grandfather, my mum was Kath Borkin. So thanks Mike for the information and yes it certainly hit home and our thoughts are with all the people these disasters have effected
Catherine on Pike River
I found this beautiful posting while searching for info on my grandfather - William Maher. Like you in times of disasters like this Pike one you think about your own family. I worked out while reading
Jesse on Pike River
That was really moving Mike. Thank you for giving me a detailed insight into where I'm from, and even though I'm 12000 miles away I'm in the middle of coal-mining country on my mothers side.
Annmaree on Pike River
Beautiful Mike. A great friend of mine, Gary Knowles, is heading up the most recent mine disaster situation and felt the full weight of in some way playing part of the modern day role of William
Gabrielle on Pike River
Mike what a very moving recollection of our history. Beautifully written.
Steve on Pike River
Mike, thanks for providing a vehicle for long dormant feeling of identity and belonging to surface. every time i meet a new person who asks me what part of NZ are you from, I ALWAYS say - I grew up on
Bede on Pike River
...'In a concert of silence' -Lovely turn of phrase Mike. Spoke to a guy last night who stood in Midland park to observe the silence. He said it lasted 5 minutes and was very moving.
John on Pike River
thanks mike. beautifully written. Amazing to see it in black and white becuase over the years its become a part of who we are..our DNA. Coal mining has always been a dangerous occupation.

Welcome blog - Feb 08

What I've really enjoyed about getting this website up and running is the opportunity to learn about a whole new world.  I've always been interested in technology - I'm very attracted to anything that can make life more efficient.

At risk of aging myself, I was the first post-grad student in my department at University to buy and use a PC (this was the mid-80s).  That was simply because the prospect of re-typing every draft of a 300 page thesis made me very interested in technology.  Of course we can reflect on how much things have changed and how pervasive technology is, but my observation is slightly different.

When I bought the Sanyo MBC-550 it had a single 128k floppy disk drive.  It cost close to $4000 back then.  Now the PC on my desktop has thousands of times the power (though some days you wouldn't think so) for not much more than a tenth of the cost.

I used to look longingly at Fender Stratocaster guitars, which back then cost around $2500.  Today they cost around... $2500.

My wife Franceska made this point to me.  We live in a time of enormous abundance and incredibly low costs.  This will not last:

  • China's cost structure will increase as labour costs increase 
  • Costs imposed by regulatory regimes like the Kyoto protocols and other "climate change aversion" strategies start to flow through
  • The true cost of natural resources (especially water but also oil) start to soar

We will look back on this time as a golden era of growth and abundance.  Enjoy it while it lasts!



28 February 2008

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