Author Archive: bfwebster

Webster is Principal and Founder at Bruce F. Webster & Associates, as well as an Adjunct Professor of Computer Science at Brigham Young University. He works with organizations to help them with troubled or failed information technology (IT) projects. He has also worked in several dozen legal cases as a consultant and as a testifying expert, both in the United States and Japan. He can be reached at bwebster@bfwa.com, or you can follow him on Twitter as @bfwebster.

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“Battle Los Angeles”: a brief review (w/spoilers)

“Battle Los Angeles”: a brief review (w/spoilers)

| March 11, 2011 | Reply

My sweet wife Sandra is not a particular fan of SF films (though she’ll certainly watch or go see them with me), nor of war movies. Yet after we saw this movie today, she talked about how engrossed she was during the entire film. (I’ll note that she went with me to see “Skyline” last […]

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The Left: reinventing fascism [updated][again]

The Left: reinventing fascism [updated][again]

| March 10, 2011 | Reply

What Hitler is currently being quoted as saying: “We must close union offices, confiscate their money and put their leaders in prison. We must reduce workers salaries and take away their right to strike” – Adolf Hitler, May 2, 1933 Problem is, as far as anyone can tell, Hitler never said that. On the other […]

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Memes in collision

Memes in collision

| March 8, 2011 | Reply

Just watch. ..bruce w..

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The Coming Dark Age

The Coming Dark Age

| March 7, 2011 | Reply

Robert Vacca wrote his work The Coming Dark Age back  in the eco-70s. His basic premise was that our technological and logistical infrastructure was becoming so complex and inter-dependent that a major failure somewhere would trigger a domino effect, causing civilization to grind to a halt. Vacca underestimated the ability of complex systems — particularly […]

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The Myth of the Defense Deficit

The Myth of the Defense Deficit

| March 3, 2011 | Reply

Honestly: our defense spending is high. We’re still embroiled in both Iraq and Afghanistan, and while we’re withdrawing from Iraq, it really is unclear (President Obama’s various pronouncements notwithstanding) when and under what circumstances we’ll actually leave. So, yes, if we weren’t spending the money we’re spending on defense, we’d have a lower deficit. Maybe. […]

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USA, Inc.: some solutions

USA, Inc.: some solutions

| March 2, 2011 | Reply

The Kleiner-Perkins “USA, Inc.” report offers possible solutions to the financial nightmare that the US Federal Government — and all of us taxpayers — are facing. I don’t agree with some of these — I think the empty results of the “Stimulus” pretty much negate the first item in #4 — but it’s telling how […]

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Why Democrats have lost and will continue to lose state races

Why Democrats have lost and will continue to lose state races

| March 1, 2011 | Reply

Governor Dannel P. Malloy (D-CT) has a brilliant idea to help fix his state’s budget shortfall: Got a coupon for 30% a Blu-Ray player? If the Connecticut governor gets his way, you’d still be paying sales tax on that player’s full price. Governor Dannel P. Malloy isn’t earning many fans with his proposal, one of […]

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US Federal spending vs. GDP (“USA, Inc.”)

US Federal spending vs. GDP (“USA, Inc.”)

| February 28, 2011 | 1 Reply

I’m going to continue to post graphs and slides from Kleiner Perkin’s “USA, Inc.” report for some time. Here’s some of their text that accompanies this graph: Take a step back, and imagine what the founding fathers would think if they saw how our country’s finances have changed. From 1790 to 1930, government spending on […]

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Would you invest in this enterprise?

Would you invest in this enterprise?

| February 24, 2011 | Reply

Most anyone in the IT industry for any length of time knows about Kleiner Perkins, one of the most successful venture capital firms in modern times. Well, as it turns out, Kleiner Perkins put its own people to work analyzing the US Federal Government as if it were a business, one that Kleiner Perkins might […]

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Heads in the sand

Heads in the sand

| February 23, 2011 | Reply

Despite occasional efforts by progressives to assure us that the deficit doesn’t matter, or doesn’t matter that much, it does. Our country is bankrupt. It’s not bankrupt in 30 years or five years. It’s bankrupt today. Want proof? Look at President Barack Obama’s 2010 budget. It showed a massive fiscal gap over the next 75 […]

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