January 10th, 2007 by xformed
Recevied via email from one of the Navy Valour-IT Team Members. He is asking the word get passed around the military community to consider signing a new appeal for redress….:
I don’t do self-promotion, and this really isn’t about that. I hope you’ll read this post – and then direct any active duty members that you know to the petition. My goal is to offset the negative effect of the liberals’ Appeal for Redress, which will be widely touted by the media, with this alternate Appeal for Redress, which asks Congress to respect our military.
[email protected] – http://www.antimedia.us/
Dedicated to exposing the media’s many lies
Antimedia’s post has a link for active duty members to sign up, but I’ll put it here.
Pass the word…time to make an appeal to the higher ups.
Category: Leadership, Military, Political, Supporting the Troops |
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January 8th, 2007 by xformed
Press release from CENTCOM 1/5/2007:
NEWS RELEASE
HEADQUARTERS UNITED STATES CENTRAL COMMAND
7115 South Boundary Boulevard
MacDill AFB, Fla. 33621-5101
Phone: (813) 827-5894; FAX: (813) 827-2211; DSN 651-5894
U.S. Central Command Launches NEW Podcast on Website
TAMPA, Florida -Today, U.S. Central Command (USCENTCOM) launched a new podcast on their website. The weekly podcast will feature stories from around Central Command’s area of responsibility. The weekly episodes will provide visitors to the CENTCOM website a readymade means of accessing information about events in the Middle East, Southwest Asia and the Horn of Africa, as well as RSS feeds with up to the minute news.
The Central Command podcast is available at http://www.centcom.mil to download as an MP3 audio file, or via subscription to the podcast RSS syndication feed.
CENTCOM’s unique access to the region will take you to the Iranian border in Iraq and hear from coalition members working with the Iraqi Border Patrol to the villages of Somalia to features about post-earthquake Pakistan.
The inception of this medium to the website accommodates a diverse audience and provides them with another method of acquiring news and information about Central Command and the units on the ground.
“We are really excited about the addition of podcasting to the CENTCOM web site. This brings a whole new dimension to our capabilities and allows our users to access information that is not available anywhere else” said Central Command Public Affairs Director Colonel Jerry Renne.
Podcasting technology enables users of personal audio players to receive broadcasts of audio media via an Internet feed to which users can subscribe.
These feeds deliver audio broadcasts to your desktop. You can listen to these files on your computer or load them on to your MP3 player and take them with you. The word “podcasting” combines the words “broadcasting” and “iPod.” The term can be misleading since neither podcasting nor listening to podcasts requires an iPod or any portable music player.
The content of the weekly podcasts include a look at coalition forces fighting the Global War on Terror within the region, an opportunity to hear from Central Command’s top leaders, interviews with troops on the front lines in Iraq, Afghanistan, and the Horn of Africa and specials from the 27 countries within the command.
USCENTCOM is one of the five geographically defined unified commands within the Department of Defense. The command is responsible for planning and conducting United States military activity in a region consisting of 27 countries that make up the CENTCOM AOR.
We also want to encourage you to subscribe to our latest news and press release feeds delivered directly to your email inbox via FeedBurner.
Subscribe to US CENTCOM News by Email
Subscribe to US CENTCOM Press Releases by Email
Or, if you use a feed reader, you can subscribe directly by clicking here.
Category: Army, Jointness, Military |
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January 8th, 2007 by xformed
Good ideas come and they go and other ideas seem to just keep recycling themselves.
From Popular Mechanics comes this “Tech Notes” on “Project ISIS.”
“Project ISIS” has the ring of a James Bond movie, but it actually comes from an acronym (albeit a clumsy one) for a new curved radar array being developed by Raytheon and DARPA, the Pentagon’s research arm. The Integrated Sensor Is Structure concept calls for such arrays running along the wings, tail and underbelly of military or commercial aircraft. Eventually, it could replace the flat-panel radar antennas typically found in a plane’s nose, providing improved surveillance capabilities and better 360-degree threat detection. ISIS technology is set to debut in 2009 as part of a colossal unmanned airship parked at more than 65,000 ft. over combat zones.
I wonder what the staff at DARPA has been smoking on their spare time…

Frank Luke with his Spad XIII (Credit: Wikipedia)
Hmmmm….I began reading a little about flight history when I was but a young guy. Tales of the top aces of WWI were pretty exciting, but I do recall the daring do of a man named Frank Luke. He liked balloons, but not to fly them, to “bust” them. His exceptional skills at downing enemy observation balloons earned this young man from Phoenix, AZ the Congressional Medal of Honor.

Gary Powers (Credit: Wikipedia)
I also recall a story about a man named Gary Powers about a day in May 1960. The 1st, to be exact…

SA-2 Guideline/ missile on Transporter (Credit: Wikipedia)
It seems we thought flying “high” over enemy territory made us invulnerable, yet, a missile named by NATO the “SA-2 Guideline,” fielded in 1957 for the purposes of engaging our B-52 Stratofortresses, had an operational capability between the altitudes between 1500 and 82K ft. Gary Powers found out the hard way, and I believe our intelligence agencies had a lot of egg on their faces in the aftermath of the Powers shoot down. Call it an intelligence failure, for that’s what it was.
Oh, and yes, the SA-2 Guideline is still in service with countries around the world. It was used very effectively by the North Vietnamese to do what it was designed for: Shoot our B-52’s out of the sky, much to the dismay of my fellow Air Force vets.
Some basic issues, that even a Black Shoe like me can understand: If you have an active radar system to find things, sensors on the other end of the search can find the radar. back in the Vietnam War days, we had developed and deployed missiles that could be told to find a signal and home in on it, then, upon arrival at the source of the signal, to detonate (and thereby destroy the radar). Those are called “anti-radiation missiles.” The technology has generally been used to go from an air platform to a surface (slow/not moving) target. In the case of an airborne platforms making the emissions, if the target is not moving very fast, it doesn’t take a whole lot of calculations to get a weapon to the target…
So…my point? All you need is a dedicated pilot in an aircraft that can get to 65K ft, or a Surface to Air Missile with the same altitude capability to sort of ruin our day. Of course, of you have Klingon type cloaking systems in development to pair up with ISIS, I may have to change my tune on the topic…

Credit: Ace Pilots
Category: Air Force, Army, History, Military, Scout Sniping, Technology |
1 Comment »
January 7th, 2007 by xformed
I get a certain degree of amusement from the bumperstickers I see.
Bumper Quotes was “found” the other day.
I reckon it just might shut me down in my quest to bring a few smiles to us all…
Category: Bumper Stickerisms, Public Service |
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January 6th, 2007 by xformed
Scanning the new mags while drinking coffee located this item of interest:
Phish Tank.
Wondering what “phishing” is? Details here.
What is PhishTank?
PhishTank is a collaborative clearing house for data and information about phishing on the Internet. Also, PhishTank provides an open API for developers and researchers to integrate anti-phishing data into their applications at no charge.
So, a central clearing house, where you can check out if the email you’re looking at is legit, or an effort to undo you financially….You can even send in your items to help the greater good!
Think of it like a Snopes like site for checking out what’s true and what’s not…
Category: Public Service |
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January 6th, 2007 by xformed
I discussed the binary nature of people, as made very clear to me while sitting in a crowd of about 15K fans last week.
I got thinking about that more about that last night and think I’ll call the spectators “Zeros” and the people on the field of competition “Ones.”
Anyhow, I’m stretched out on the couch two nights ago, watching the Lightning/Wild game in HD, and during the second intermission, which I’m not intently watching, there’s some discussion of the Wild’s inception, and a quote and a picture were tossed up on the picture tube. I didn’t recognize the person, but I assume it maybe was one of the Wild’s first coaches. The quote was about how he had looked for people who thought the name on the front of the jersey was more important that the name on the back of it….
Yep, echoed by the sentiment of Coach Wooden, when I heard him a few year back on the radio. He turned away great players who thought the team was there to support them and not the other way around. I’d say his track record says he was right to do that.
“A player who makes a team great is more valuable than a great player. Losing yourself in the group, for the good of the group, that’s teamwork.” – John Wooden
Good philosophy, for the coaches, but equally important for the people wearing the jerseys to live up to.
Category: History, Leadership |
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January 4th, 2007 by xformed
I got an email a few weeks back and it said the Florida DMV site allowed you to attach two names/phone numbers to your driver’s license, so law enforcement can get a hold of someone for you in an emergency. Being a little bit skeptical, I surfed over there and sure enough, there’s a way to do that….
Here is the link, if you don’t believe me (or need to use it)
So, like putting a contact named “ICE” (In Case of Emergency) in your cell phone directory, it might be helpful to get your Next of Kin set up in the local driver’s license listing for a really, really bad day.
Hopefully, you’ll never have to be grateful for this database.
Category: Public Service |
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January 3rd, 2007 by xformed
A wee bit late for the sun passing over the yardarm, but here nonetheless….post your good stuff!
My sea story? In a word….Seabats. I know, you think I’m pulling your legs, but…RADM Bernsen has seen ’em….and so has this guy. Today is your day to tell me how you can connect the dots.
And when you have that assignment completed, tell me about your seabat experiences….
Category: "Sea Stories", Army, History, Jointness, Military, Navy, Open Trackbacks |
8 Comments »
January 2nd, 2007 by xformed
The last few days have led to some introspection on the nature of my blogging. Sure, I have opinions, and thoughts, but what I know best, and no longer being plugged into current operations, I know the history of the Navy I served in. In addition, the Navy’s role, while important for the global support capabilities, in, until the rise of the Chinese Navy, rather secondary, necessarily so, to the front line Marines and Grunts who are the only ones who can take it directly to the enemy in the way all wars are eventually won. The support of the Navy to those ends, such as close air support, and the manpower to let the trained trigger pullers stay in the field certainly is of more importance right now.
Anyhow, I think for a while, I’ll spend some time catching up history. I went to the Wikipedia entires for three ships, two that I served on, and edited some history that I personally was around for.
So, for today, for all of you who have served, take a few minutes and see what isn’t told in a forum where you can directly add to the storage of actual events, and add some of what you know…..
Maybe one day when my professional background fits the current events better, I’ll add more to the multitude of commentaries.
Category: History, Military, Navy |
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