Category Archives: Media

Work Life Balance – A Discussion

I’ll be part of a group discussion Thursday in Vancouver at VFS- presented by New Media BC and mod7:

Join us for a round-table discussion with top-notch service professionals from Vancouver as we dive into what “balance” means, share personal experiences, and explore the many sides of this issue. Whether you’re a design student, an employee struggling to balance a career and a family, or a seasoned pro, this is a critical issue for all new media professionals working within today’s highly competitive market.

Registration is at 4:30, with the discussion running from 5-7pm. Details here. Thanks to Wil at mod7 for the invite and organizing this one.

Eat Their Young

Exit with class.  From the Globe & Mail:

In another change in CBC Television’s senior management, the regional director for CBC-TV in British Columbia, Rae Hull, is leaving the broadcaster.  Speaking to staff Wednesday, Hull said, “sometimes you pick the moment, sometimes the moment picks you.”

 

A Fitting Tribute

There was a wonderful article about my friend and mentor Susan in the Globe on Wednesday:

On the journey from producer to senior management, Ms. Englebert touched people profoundly and possessed a gift for spotting and nurturing new talent that changed the course of many lives. She was that rare thing: a manager respected and loved in equal measure.

Local Boarding Starts This Week

Cypress opens on Thursday !!!!

The Downhill Area will be open on November 16, 2006 from 9 am to 4 pm, with the Easy Rider Quad Chair and the High Speed Eagle Express Quad Chair in operation. We will continue to open more terrain as the snow accumulates. Our Cross Country Area will also be open from 9 am to 4 pm.

I’ll be wearing my pass full-time starting now…

Katy Hutchinson podcast for Raincoast Books

We’ve just posted the latest Raincoast Books podcast with author Katy Hutchinson.

Katy’s book is called Walking After Midnight: One Woman’s Journey through Murder, Justice and Forgiveness.

This is one of the most inspiring stories I’ve read in a long time, and getting to meet and talk with Katy has been a highlight of the season. 

You can get the podcast from the Raincoast Books RSS feed.   Or if you prefer, here’s the direct iTunes link.

For more information on Katy visit her web site.

User Generated Lego

My two kids have been going nuts creating Lego sets for themselves with the Lego Digital Designer.

leog

It’s a great idea. They use the software to design their dream Lego creation, just be clicking and dragging pieces onto the stage. They can even rotate around like any good design software.

Then when they’re done, Lego calculates a price, boxes it, and sends it out complete with assembly instructions.

Totally user-generated made-to-order, and great use of the web.

CBC.CA Finally Finds the Perfect Design ?

Ok. Fess up. Who broke CBC.CA ? Huh ? Huh ?

NOTE: CBC.ca is experiencing technical difficulties, and we’re currently working to restore the site to normal. Until that happens, in an effort to offer a basic level of service, we are providing this scaled-back version of the site, featuring today’s top news stories. We’re sorry for any inconvenience, and we hope to have the site back to normal soon.

Actually, the ‘scaled back’ version of CBC.CA is delightfully easier to use than the real thing.

I say if this is broken, don’t fix it !

cbc ca, this is broken?

The Oggmonster – taller than your average Brit

If you’re a fan, like me, of the original UK show The Office, and you loyally listened to the Ricky Gervais podcasts, you know who Stephen Merchant is. You’ll love this article in the Observer.

Obsessed with comedy from a young age, one person Merchant admired was John Cleese, also tall, and from nearby Weston-Super-Mare. It was because of Cleese that Merchant wanted to go to Cambridge and join Footlights. However, in retrospect, he feels ‘lucky’ that Footlights didn’t work out. ‘I would probably have tried to be something I wasn’t – arch, erudite, wordy, pretentious, in a way I’m not.’

Fish, What Fish?

Standing at the pot-luck-food-table at a house party last night, the guy next to me pointed to a tuna dish and said “better get it now before it all disappears”.

He was more right than he knew…

In an analysis of scientific data going back to the 1960s and historical records over a thousand years, the researchers found that marine biodiversity — the variety of ocean fish, shellfish, birds, plants and micro-organisms — has declined dramatically, with 29 percent of species already in collapse.

Extending this pattern into the future, the scientists calculated that by 2048 all species would be in collapse, which the researchers defined as having catches decline 90 percent from the maximum catch.

Full story here.

BBC Adds up the Ads

The British Broadcasting Corporation figures there’s some serious money to be made adding adverts to their web site.

The corporation estimates that it could earn between £48m and £105m annually in advertising revenues, depending on how aggressively the advertising were to be placed.

BBC executives must be rubbing their hands together at the prospect of so much extra income. However, they will have to balance the advertising revenue against the huge protests its UK rivals will undoubtedly make, and against internal opposition.

(full story here)

Here in Canada, CBC.CA had gone for years with no advertising on it’s news pages. That all changed 2 years ago with an aggressive sell of banners above the title and on the right side bar.

Lately those ‘above title’ banners have only occasionally been sold, mostly the inventory is promotional for the fall TV season or CBC’s uninspired 1995-era kids web site.

Crazy Ass Tourists Take A Dip

I was taking some pics in English Bay today when I caught these two in for a dip.

Maybe they’re locals, but in any event, odds are at least one of them is originally from Manitoba.  Given that it was cold and windy today (despite the sunshine) I figured they deserved the paparazzi treatment. 

They had a photographer with them (on shore) but I couldn’t read the sign from my angle.

tourists

Giant Replica of Balsa Wood Airplane

Now this is my idea of a perfectly acceptable way to waste some time. Excerpt from the University of Westminster web site.

The exhibition LEARN TO FLY, by Mark Clews, featured a precise full-scale version of the balsa wood rubber band powered airplane of his childhood.

Fifty metres of rubber was wound up and let go at Dunsfold Aerodrome in Surrey on a runway over 6,000 feet long. Like model planes, this art work can be flat-packed and reassembled anywhere in under an hour, ready for flight.

Telus Wins

After over a year with a Vonage line for business, I’ve given up putting up with the unpredictable service.

After fixing the mess Shaw Digital Phones made of my professionally installed phone jacks, I’ve gone back to a Telus line.

My clients are happier with the phone quality (“hey, you aren’t calling from the other side of the country”) and I’m not frustrated at the seemingly random quality of the connections.

If It Looks Like a Duck

When posted about Neal Mueller’s article slamming the iPod, I meantioned it read like a commercial for Creative Labs. Turns out I wasn’t far off according to Mac Daily News

It seems that under the list of sponsor companies that have provided him with gear on his climbs, you’ll find Creative Labs… If you click on the link to Creative on Mueller’s sponsor page, it take you to the product page for the MuVo, meaning, I presume, that the player was given to him by Creative.