I’ve got a new little netbook to travel with. And the littel bastard just keeps running out of memory.
I’m already running Firefox without downloading images. And that seems to take 250 MB or so of the 1GB RAM available.
As far as I can tell cache is set to 4096. I really shouldn’t be having Firefox repeatedly crashing as out of memory.
However, poking around and looking at system resources etc I seem to have something which is demanding 600-700 MB just as normal usage. I am running the Vodafone internet acess through a pen app. But that shouldn’t take up that much. And, looking in the apps running window of Task Manager, that is all I’m running, windoes and the Vodafone app.
So, err, where’s all the memory gone? And why isn’t some of it going to cache etc?
In short, how do I get a system that doesn’t keep falling over for being out of memory?
So, update. Looking at task manager as this thing is right now.
Firefox, 120 MB.
Mobile broadband, 39 MB
Exploer 15, Plugin Container 12 and nothing else over 5 MB.
And yet something is using 800 MB and change altogether.
1013 Physical Memory, 150 cached, 214 available and 71 free.
814 MB in use according to resource manager.
And I’m beginning to get an inkling of an idea: l;ast time it fell over I had a look there and there was 300 MB or so “modified” rather than in use or free.
So what’s doing that “modified” bit then?
For what does happen is that it’s fine from a cold start and then a few hours later it falls over (it makes Firefox fall over that is) until I cold start it again. So is there some process filling up memory?
Oh, and using AVG not Norton and AVG is pretty light itself isn’t it?
Tags: The Blogger Himself
January 27th, 2012 · 1 Comment
Tags: Our Eoin
But Labour will adopt one good policy. They will bring back rent controls.
Facepalm.
Second only to aerial bombing in a major war as a successful method of reducing the available housing stock.
Doesn’t anyone actually remember? The 70s, early 80s? When it was near impossible to find rental property anywhere in the country?
Who has proposed this and tell me, are they really this stupid?
Update
I’ve found out from Polly. Liam Byrne is about to propose it.
Tags: Economics
January 27th, 2012 · 7 Comments
Under UK tax rules, any non-resident athlete performing in Britain is subject to income tax on both their appearance fee and any associated worldwide endorsement payments. However, Danny Alexander, chief secretary to the Treasury, said the Government has decided to waive the rule to attract the best talent to the Games.
It is not the first time the tax break has been granted. Competitors at this year’s Olympics have been exempted, as were the footballers at last year’s Champion’s League final at Wembley.
The levy has proved a deterrent to athletes in the past. In 2010, Mr Bolt, the Olympic 100 metres and 200 metres champion and world record holder, missed a Diamond League meeting in London because of the rules. Tennis players and golfers are also believed to have stayed away from smaller UK tournaments due to the tax. They are still taxed on the income in their home country.
See? It’s entirely a lie that people will change their behaviour as a result of tax rates or rules.
Entirely possible to fleece the population without any changes in behaviour at all.
Tags: Tax
January 27th, 2012 · 3 Comments
So is Tidjane Thiam right about minimum wage rules? The chief executive of the Prudential was outspoken in his criticism of minimum wage legislation at a high profile debate at the World Economic Forum in Davos.
10 Comments
Tags: Economics
Undercover and uniformed officers have been monitoring three lay-bys off the A165 after residents of Skirlaugh and Coniston, East Yorks, repeatedly complained about the misbehaviour, known as dogging.
Despite 18 people being stopped in less than a month, none were found to be committing an offence and were given a leaflet with guidance on public sex.
No one arrested because no laws being broken! This isn’t good enough for one politician of course:
Matthew Grove, an East Riding councillor, said: “These public areas have been stolen from the community by individuals who are using them in a way they were never intended. These are not courting couples, these are large groups of people engaging in behaviour which is simply not acceptable.
Not acceptable to you perhaps but obviously acceptable to those engaging in the activity. Agreed that this all getting very close to breaching the not frightening the horses clause of liberalism but that’s just the way freedom and liberty pan out. Some people will do things that other people think they shouldn’t do.
To which the correct response is “tough titty mate”. Which at this time of year is probably what everyone is in fact getting.
Tags: Sex
January 27th, 2012 · 8 Comments
“Tax provides the funding to run the country: hospitals, schools and everything else,” he says. “Every time someone pays cash in order not to pay VAT, the nation gets diddled.”
The nation is not the government, the nation is not the government finances.
The nation contains within it the government, of course, contains the government finances as a subsidiary part of said nation.
So it is true to say that tax evasion diddles the government, diddles the government finances, but not that it diddles the nation. For tax evaded gets used or spent somewhere else in said nation, by another part of said nation. Yes a builder having a bevvy off a non-taxed transaction is indeed still part of the nation. It isn’t lost to the nation at all: only to the government finances.
Which, as above, is not the same thing as the nation at all.
Tags: Tax
At the ASI.
CSR increases profits: which is why profit maximising companies do some of it. Just perhaps not quite as much as the campaigners think they should, for that level of it isn’t profit maximising.
Tags: Timmy Elsewhere
Is we all supposed to be equal or not?
Like most gender differences in outcomes, there only ever seems to be concern when women are under-represented in fields like politics, and never any concern when men are under-represented for outcomes like bachelor’s degrees, master’s degrees, doctor’s degrees, graduate school enrollment, biology degrees, veterinary degrees, optometry degrees, pharmacy degrees, etc. The only exceptions are when the outcomes are negative like prison populations, learning disabilities, occupational injuries and fatalities, motorcycle injuries and fatalities, suicides and drug addiction and then there is no concern about female under-representation.
Tags: Feminism
My, this is interesting.
Essentially, we don’t have a girt big national debt because we can just ignore 20-30% of it.
However, it should be noted that the government has done something else at least as significant. Through the quantitative easing programme the Bank of England has repurchased or will be soon repurchasing near enough £275 billion of that debt (I’ve shown the last £75 billion as happening in Q3 of 2011 as that’s near enough when it was authorised).
Now the Bank of England is owned by the UK government so if, in accounting terms, a consolidated set of accounts were to be prepared the £275bn owed by the Treasury to the Bank of England would simply be crossed out, or ignored. The actual debt would only be £725 billion.
In static terms we could look at it this way, yes. BoE has printed money to buy gilts, that is what QE is. However, static ain’t quite the way to look at it, dynamic is.
It’s all a matter of getting the story right and on this occasion it takes an accountant to do that.
That’s where the problem is, yes. The national debt isn’t quite as amenable to an accountant’s take on it as the accountant thinks.
Nor is there any hint now of this QE causing inflation, all of which can safely be said to have had other causes, not least because as Government accounts also show, the M3 measure of money supply has fallen steadily since 2009, meaning there is no prospect of inflation in the future either as a consequence of this process.
It’s here that we start to get into those problems. QE doesn’t impact directly upon M3. Only indirectly. Now I get as lost as everyone else in these Ms, M0, M3 etc.
But roughly speaking the relationship is that M0 is what the BoE has been creating to buy the gilts. This is money if you like, printing the stuff (or calling it into existence on a computer). M3 is what the money supply is after we’ve gone through the mulitplying effect of fractional reserve banking. You know, all that “banks create credit for nothing” stuff.
Which gives us something of a problem. Imagine, if you will, that the banking system starts to lend again. You know, like all of those plans that Ritchie has to make them lend again? So, that multiplier between M0 and M3 goes back to something like historic levels. At which time we do get inflation, because we’ve got a lot more M0 to be multiplied into M3.
Which means, of course, that the BoE now needs to sell those gilts and cancel the money creation so as to reduce M0 and thus not have inflation.
Just to reiterate, it’s true that M3 ain’t surging: but as soon as the banking system is sorted out it will which is why we need to reverse QE when the banking system is sorted out.
So, we can indeed look at it in the static terms that Ritchie uses but we shouldn’t. For the whole thing must be looked at in dynamic terms, not static.
This is the mistake he makes about Green QE as well: he misses that the whole point of QE is monetary and also needs to be reversible. Getting the BoE to print up £200 billion to go spend on real things doesn’t have the same effect at all: we end up increasing M3 by whatever is the, currently low agreed, multiplier to M3.
As I said above, I can, like most, get lost in those M0 and M3 things. But even if I’ve got the precise definitions of the monetary aggregates wrong the basic argument is still true. QE creates base money, base money is multiplied by the banking system. That mulitplier is currently low as a result of the credit crunch (low multiplier equals credit crunch in fact) and when the multiplier returns to normal we have to reverse the base money creation thing.
So while the BoE does currently own said debt it won’t forever.
And then this, which is simply quite lovely:
And in this case that would be absolutely the right point of view. There is no hope at all that this debt will ever be sold back into the markets: there’s enough new debt to sell to meet all market demand for UK debt without ever re-selling this stuff.
Do you see what he’s said there? We’re already going to be issuing all the debt the market wants. On current plans. Which means that the borrow to do stimulus to get out of recession plan won’t work, will it? Because that would mean issuing more debt: more debt which, as Ritchie says, would be more debt than the market wants. Which would mean that if that more debt (to do the stimulus which Ritchie says we should do) were issued then the price of the debt would fall, yields rise and we’d find any nascent recovery being chocked off by higher interest rates.
Isn’t that lovely? Part of Ritchie’s proof that we’re not in as much debt as we thought is the proof that we cannot issue any more debt than we already are?
Snigger.
Might be why we have bankers not accountants running Central Banks really.
Tags: Ragging on Ritchie
Coalition plans to raise the income tax allowance to £10,000 should be accelerated to tackle the growing economic crisis, Nick Clegg will say.
Actually, you need to be even braver than this. And steal a real political march on those to the left of you.
Annouce that the minimum wage, full time, full year, is to be the new personal allowance. One changes, both change.
This is just and right: if it is immoral that someone earns less than x then it is immoral that someone earning less than x is taxed.
It also entirely kills the living wage argument. For the difference between the minimum wage and the living wage, post tax, is almost entirely the tax and NI that people pay on the minimum wage.
And then there’s still an aspiration to go for: raising the NI limit to being the same as the income tax personal allowance.
To pay for this? Lower the qualifying income for the 40% tax bracket.
Without doing the calculations I would expect that you could do this leaving post tax incomes at that current 40% limit equal to today’s, higher taxes for those over it, lower for those under it.
Even if you cannot, yes, I do think making the top 10% to 15% of income earners (heck I’d support the top 50% paying more so that people working part time on min wage pay no tax) pay more tax so that the poor pay no tax is a good idea.
Tags: Tax
January 25th, 2012 · 1 Comment
“He conceives that the business of the magistrate is not merely to see that the persons and property of the people are secure from attack, but that he ought to be a jack-of-all-trades, architect, engineer, schoolmaster, merchant, theologian, a Lady Bountiful in every parish, a Paul Pry in every house, spying, eavesdropping, relieving, admonishing, spending our money for us. His principle is, if we understand it rightly, that no man can do anything so well for himself as his rulers, be they who they may, can do it for him, and that a government approaches nearer and nearer to perfection in proportion as it interferes more and more with the habits and notions of individuals.”*
Tags: Ragging on Ritchie
January 25th, 2012 · 7 Comments
What sort of confidence can anybody have in somebody who even the EU fired for incompetence?
Nigel Farage
Tags: European Union
So here I am in Freiberg, getting stuff sorted out. Rent a flat, buy a bed, get lamps in, all this sort of stuff. Yesterday, went and bought desk, kitchen table, shelves.
Well, I say desk and kitchen table. Two cheap doors on four trestles, no point in wasting the shareholders’ money.
So I’d wandered up the hill (3, 4 clicks away), bought them for delivery. They give me the noon to 6pm delivery slot.
It is now exactly noon at pixel time. And the man turned up 20 minutes ago, unloaded, said thanks and I’ve already got the desk up and running.
There’s something terribly wrong with this picture isn’t there? Delivery early, but early enough to be really on time?
Or yesterday, I had to register in Germany (and no, I won’t be here more than 183 days a year!) So off to the Rathaus (yes, that and Ratskeller do still make me laugh) and the Tuesday afternoon possibility for you to register. And we have no common language. My German extends to “Wo ist” sort of stuff, where you speak English but with a heavy accent, no more. Their English was at a similar level and we weren’t going to get anywhere with schoolboy French or supermarket Portuguese, not in this corner of Europe. My Russian’s very rusty and I have a feeling that it’s still impolitic to use it around here.
But still, we got the registration done with a minimum of fuss and a maximum of embarassed smiles as we stumbled through various mistakes (no, you can’t put down my citizenship as Irish, that all rather changed around 1920 or so whatever g-grandpops thought about it). 15 minutes all told. Then round to the bank, with the registration, to open an account.
Only person there who spoke English (other than a very cute and pneumatic girl who backed out saying she was still studying English and therefore didn’t feel up to it) was the branch manager so he opened the account.
He made me a cup of coffee and by the time I had drunk it we were done: card and PIN on the way.
How the hell did any country ever end up with bureaucracy that works?
Tags: The Germans
An efficient tax system is:
1. Comprehensive – in other words, it is broad based;
2. Complete – with as few loopholes as possible;
3. Comprehensible – it is as certain as is reasonably possible;
4. Compassionate – it takes into account the capacity to pay;
5. Compact – it is written as straightforwardly as possible;
6. Compliant with human rights;
7. Compensatory – it is perceived as fair and redistributes income and wealth as necessary to achieve this aim;
8. Complementary to social objectives;
9. Computable – the liability can be calculated with reasonable accuracy;
All of which facilitate the chance that it will be:
10. Competently managed.
In combination these are key attributes of a good tax system.
Comprehensible, Computable…..these both mean that it must be the letter of the law, not the spirit, which is obeyed.
Well done Richard, you’ve just undermined one of your basic points.
Tags: Ragging on Ritchie
Help me out here. Isn’t it so low because he gives money to charity, the US system allowing such donations to reduce your tax bill?
Tags: Tax
Here, in all its glory, is a Telegraph editorial:
The remarkable thing about the silk cape on show at the Victoria and Albert Museum from tomorrow is not that it took 80 people five years to make, or even that it is woven from the gossamer of 1.2 million golden orb spiders, which produce undyed silk of a golden hue. No, the remarkable thing is that the spiders were let loose afterwards to skip happily through the undergrowth of their native Madagascar not a whit the worse for contributing to this work of art. Their web is deftly extracted by trained handlers.
Britain once had a silk industry, with weavers under broad windows busy making brocades, lustrings, paduasoys and suchlike rich textiles. If golden orb spiders were farmed like silkworms, the industry might thrive again, in Sunderland or Hull. To spin gold has a fairy-tale ring to it. These obliging spiders could be the Rumpelstiltskins of a start-up enterprise.
Facepalm.
Let us, for a change, get the labour theory of value the right way around. The labour which goes into the production of something cannot be paid more than that thing is valued at.
Here we have 400 man years of labour going into the production of a cape. That labour cannot be paid more per year than one four hundredth of the value of the cape.
Let’s put the cost of minimum wage labour at £20 k a year. Including overheads etc. So our cape must be valued at £8 million. Very limited marketplace for that. The occasional trophy third wife of a billionaire maybe.
To produce an industry we’d need to get that price down…..which means the wages have to come down, doesn’t it?
It’s just not something to base an industry on so what are these people talking about?
Tags: Newspaper Watch
In a speech to the Council of Europe in Strasbourg, the Prime Minister will argue that European judges have become too powerful. He will say the court should not “undermine its own reputation by going over national decisions”, just days after its judges overturned the decision of British courts to deport Abu Qatada, the radical Islamic cleric.
What the hell do you think a supranational court is for if it isn’t to over rule national ones?
The only way out of this is to leave the jurisdiction of the court, which means leaving the Council of Europe and thus the EU.
No, I don’t think that the ECHR stupidities are sufficient reason to do that, I’ve plenty of other reasons for desiring that we leave.
But to complain about a supranational court being supranational is just stupid.
Tags: European Union
Here.
To say that that is the mistake that Marx made is a mistake: for he made more than one.
Got quite a bit right too, obviously. The bits he cribbed off Smith are just fine for example.
Tags: Uncategorized
January 24th, 2012 · 4 Comments
Sorry Nick, no, this isn’t true.
That treasure trove is the $3.1tn of tax, equivalent to 5.1% of global GDP, which according to international campaign group Tax Justice Network is illegally evaded in 145 countries, covering 98.2% of the world’s population.
That’s Ritchie’s report that is.
The majority of these flows are washed through tax havens. These secrecy jurisdictions act as cover from international tax authorities. Disturbingly, the obstacles placed by the global financial system that would allow individual countries to track down and repatriate this cash are prohibitively burdensome. This is why a new age of financial transparency and accountability is required. Five key reforms would lay the foundations for this:
And no, Ritchie’s report shows no such thing.
Let us, for a moment, assume Ritchie’s report is correct (and for once I’ve no problem with his basic methodology although I do of course with the conclusions he draws).
What he’s shown is that there’s a largish grey economy in many countries. And this grey economy ain’t people fooling around in tax havens. It’s the builder doing a job for cash, VAT off. Dozen eggs at the farm, no receipt.
This grey economy that Ritchie has measured just isn’t all about offshore at all. Tax avoidance might be, the black economy of illegal activities, the drugs etc, might well be, but this grey economy that is being measured here is pretty much a domestic phenomenon in each and every country.
So, however much you want to collect this tax, however much you want to get the tax avoidace industry, I’m sorry, but you’re spouting bollocks when you use this report to call for closing down offshore.
They’re just not related.
Tags: Tax