The Gen X Timebomb

The Timebomb Awaiting Gen

As a member of Generation X – Americans born between 1961 and 1981 – I’ve grown up with warnings that Medicare and Social Security won’t be there for us.  Sadly those warnings appear to be all too true as I enter middle age.  Take a look at the bar chart from the General Accounting Office.

It shows how the cost of entitlements will exceed revenues sometime between 2030 and 2040, which is precisely when I will be retiring.  Traditionally we think of 65 as retirement age – that’s 2031 for me.  But under current law I won’t qualify for full social security benefits until I’m 67 years old in 2033.  And I’ll bet they’ll jack that up even more over the next two decades.

Compounding the worry is that my Oklahoma Teacher Retirement is also fiscally unsound.  The state’s pension system is woefully underfunded – its assets won’t even cover half of its liabilities.  And the trends are poor – in the past decade the ratio of active members to annuitants has fallen from 2.5 to 1.9.  And as of 2009 the number of years before the system would become fully funded rose from over 50 years to…wait for it…infinity. That’s from the 2009 Actuarial Report on the system’s website, directly acknowledging that under existing legislation the system will never have enough funds to cover its liabilities.

We know these projections are unreliable – legislation will change things over the coming decades.  But it is inevitable that those changes will be to my generation’s detriment.  The nation will have no choice but to cut our benefits to avoid bankruptcy.  It appears likely that while for years I’ve witnessed older generations receiving far more in Social Security benefits than they ever paid into the system, Gen Xers like me could receive less than we put in over our careers.

And given the disturbing political climate in Oklahoma, I wouldn’t be surprised to see the Teacher Retirement System eventually changed from defined benefits to defined contributions.  That means while generations of teachers before me retired with guaranteed levels of income, I might be ending my career with only a state-managed investment fund – one which could be catastrophically reduced by a market downturn.  And given the fiscal crises we’ll face in the 2030s I reckon the market will be down…if not in freefall.

I can’t control the Ponzi schemes our federal and state governments have set up.  And as a bachelor I have no offspring to care for me in my old age if I don’t plan for the worst.  So I’d better pay close attention to the received wisdom that one should put aside ten to twenty percent of salary for retirement.  For some time, via automatic paycheck deductions and generous parents, I’ve been able to keep my IRA and 403(b) contributions (the latter is the public-sector version of a 401(k) but of course the school doesn’t provide any sort of employer match!) up at the high end of that range.

But, given the ticking timebombs in the federal and state retirement systems, perhaps I need to set aside even more.  Doing that and still saving enough money for the car and home will be a challenge given how I dislike cooking yet love consumer electronics.  Looks like my summer vacations need to involve driving to a campsite or budget motel, not flying out to the coast.  Thankfully my favorite leisure activity of day hikes can be done on the cheap!

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MyPad?

iPad

Apple's iPad

Apple has announced the iPad, which I’ve been speculating about for months.  My initial reaction was one of disappointment, in that it is essentially an enlarged iPod Touch and, like Apple’s computers, rather expen$ive.  But I’m sure I’ll still buy one.  The joke about this is that Apple ought to rename the iPod Touch as the iPad Nano.

A New Niche

The iPad is meant to occupy a new niche between smart phones/e-readers on the low end of functionality and netbooks/laptops on the high end of functionality.  (The iPad, of course, will occupy the stratosphere on price!)  This sort of ‘tweener device appeals to the technorati and those with plenty of disposable income, but I don’t expect it to have the broad appeal of the iPhone.  After all, a netbook is cheaper and offers greater, if far less elegant, functionality.  I, for one, have long desired a cheap tablet for web browsing around the house and when dining out, but a $200 tablet like the mythical Crunchpad was illusory, morphing into the disappointing and more expensive JooJoo.

My New E-Reader?

I adored my Kindle 1 and use my Kindle 2 almost daily, but with the death of print I frequently find myself using the iPhone when dining out, even though its screen is painfully small for reading.  The Kindle’s interface and web experience pale in comparison to the multitouch interface and web browser on the iPhone.  So I know I’d love having an iPad propped up in its case in such situations.  I would hope to use the Kindle App on the iPad, however, rather than Apple’s iBooks, which I expect to be more costly and less accessible across platforms.

Couch Surfing

The other major use for an iPad would be web surfing on the couch and in the bedroom.  Here the competition is my netbook, which is certainly more practical for content creation like this blog post than the iPad with its virtual keyboard.  And my netbook happily plays Adobe Flash videos, which are a web standard yet won’t work on Apple’s iPhones nor the iPad.

For web browsing, however, the iPad would be far handier to pick up and put immediately to use.  I know I’d prefer its multitouch interface over the annoying touchpad on my netbook.  And while my Apple TV is great for watching podcasts and renting shows on my HDTV, browsing the web via the aTV Flash hack is even worse than surfing with the Kindle.  Finally, while the Kindle is allowed in bed with me for a relaxing read at the end of the day, the netbook is not allowed in the bedroom at all.  I think the iPad would be provided in-bed privileges.

Vacations

I like to snap photos and post daily blog posts with slideshows when I’m off on extended day hike trips.  I think the iPad’s separate keyboard/charger and card reader dongle would be annoying when compared to those built-in functions on my netbook.  Then again, if Apple invested as much effort into porting iLife apps to the iPad as it has on porting the iWork applications, that might let me edit my photos and create simple videos about as easily as I now do using ThumbsPlus and Windows Live Movie Maker on my netbook.

Which Model to Get?

The low-end $499 iPad has only 16 GB of memory and no cellular connection.  Oklahoma doesn’t have the kind of WiFi coverage one finds in the coastal metropolises, I can’t tether the iPad to my iPhone, and I’m not about to carry around a MiFi when I can instead pay $30/month only as needed (no contract required!) for iPad cellular service.  So my preference would be to wait until May for the WiFi+3G version of the iPad.

As for memory, I wouldn’t load up an iPad with music or video since I’d still have my iPhone for travel and my Apple TV at home.  But one can’t tell what sorts of wild new applications might arise for the iPad, and the rule of thumb is to always max out the memory to be safe.

So let’s see…a 64 GB iPad with WiFi+3G is $829, the keyboard dock is $70, the case is $40, and the SD card kit is $30…that adds up to $969.  JEEPERS!  Have I mentioned how much I already like my Kindle 2, iPhone 3G, and Asus Eee PC netbook?  Maybe I’ll just bind them together with some duct tape and call them MyPad!

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A Finale to Remember

Wow!  Every time I see it, I am stunned by the virtuosity of the performers in the grand 10 minute finale to 1943’s Stormy Weather.  Talent drips from the stage with Bill “Bojangles” Robinson, Lena Horne, Cab Calloway, and the incredible Nicholas Brothers.  It is unsurpassed!

Special thanks to Stephen Worth, who posted this as Adventure in Music #15 on boingboing.net

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Mad for an iPad

Here’s MAD TV’s risqué version of the forthcoming Apple tablet.

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Science Autotuned

John Boswell’s Symphony of Science project takes excerpts from famous science videos and converts them into song via Autotune.

The Unbroken Thread features Carl Sagan, David Attenborough, and Jane Goodall:

A Glorious Dawn features Carl Sagan’s Cosmos and Stephen Hawking’s Universe:

I thoroughly enjoyed this entertaining reminder of some of the memorable parts of Sagan’s great work, which influenced my junior high self when it aired back in 1980.  And the next year I watched all of Attenborough’s Life on Earth series in my high school sophomore Biology class.  That reminds me…I really need a bigger HDTV to fully appreciate Attenborough’s spectacular Planet Earth series…

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