Looking across the Straight to Vancouver Island |
Canada 57 Flying a chute heading to English Bay |
No Fun in West Van |
Click a picture for a larger version.
More from today on my Flickr page.
Looking across the Straight to Vancouver Island |
Canada 57 Flying a chute heading to English Bay |
No Fun in West Van |
Click a picture for a larger version.
More from today on my Flickr page.
Oh No.
I’m so ordinary.
At least according to the latest research from Ipsos.
nearly four-in-ten Internet-enabled adults in Canada (37%) have visited an online social network or online social community and three-in-ten (29%) have placed a profile on at least one such site.
But it gets worse. I’m not even a ‘cool old guy’. There are cool old guys and gals everywhere…
…three-in-ten 35 to 54 year olds (29%) have visited such a site and one-in-five (21%) have placed a personal profile on one. One-in-five Canadians aged 55 and older (20%) have visited an online social network or community and one-in-ten (9%) have placed a personal profile on one.
OMG. This is the equivalent to wearing penny loafers in the 70’s, isn’t it ?
Read more, and weep, on the Ispsos site.
I can barely keep track of my own browsing history, but soon I’ll be able to track all my friends’ with FriendFeed…
FriendFeed allows users to see what their friends are reading, listening to or viewing on the Web as a continuous stream of notifications. This stream can appear on a personal Web page or in a module on the user’s customized page on Facebook or Google. The system does not require the installation of software, but it does require the friends to choose to participate.
An invite only beta starts on Monday. Someone invite me, k ?
In interesting story for anyone using someone else’s images for publication:
A Texan family is now suing Virgin Mobile for using a photo of their daughter, Alison Chang, in an ad campaign – the catch is, it was released by the photographer on Flickr under the Creative Commons Attribution license, and that’s where Virgin Mobile got the photo from. The problem is, the girl featured in the photo had no idea her photo was being used – or that it was released under the Creative Commons license.
Sometimes a yacht just isn’t enough.
Yacht sales have increased 10 percent to 15 percent a year in the last few years, and this year was no exception. Since everyone who is anyone has to have a yacht, and increasingly does, what buyers want most now, naturally, are accessories: minisubmarines and helicopters.
Read the whole story at the International Herald Tribune, with some awesome photos.
Pictured above is the U-BoatWorx Submersible, photo courtesy U-BoatWorx
Vistek is taking pre-orders. The price for the body is 2099.00 Canadian.
Rugged magnesium-alloy construction, advanced dust and moisture protection and a durable shutter mechanism tested to 150,000 cycles make the D300 a perfect choice for photographers who demand high performance and handling agility
Let’s see, I’ve got a birthday coming in December along with Christmas….hmmm….
I got a note from Craig Strong at Oakwood Broadcast today. With the state of the US dollar, the time’s never been better to buy certain US made audio gear. If you’ve got some podcast or other audio gear on your wish list, now’s the time.
One of the folks I met while on my solo sailing trip in the Gulf Islands.
photo by violet blue
San Francisco based columnist and blogger Violet Blue is sharing her recent experience as an “expert guest” on the Tyra Banks TV show.
It’s a pitch perfect picture of what’s wrong with old-media, starting with their insisting VB cover her tattoos.
When I was about to go onstage in front of the studio audience, a staff member presented me with a list of pre-planned questions they’d had all along.
The answers to all of those questions — my answers — were also included. The staff member who had me review them confessed to having cut and pasted the responses from my Oprah article. I said, “I know. I can recognize my own writing.”
Read Violet Blue’s full post with pics and vid here.
If you’re thinking this is an anomaly, don’t.
The City of Vancouver is going back to the table with striking workers. But the real question of the day – Did CUPE use non-union puppeteers ? I think so…
At Library Square, CUPE put on a puppet show, featuring a fantasy tale about a farmer named Sam and how he learned to negotiate. Sporting hand puppets, union members like Marya Gadison, put on a funny play based on the children’s book “Click-clack-moo” (via News 1130)
I think CUPE should brace itself for a call from Union Internationale de la Marionnette.
This podcast was originally created for Capers Community Markets and hosted on their website. After their purchase by Whole Foods, the local Capers site was taken offline, the podcasts with them.
We’re happy to make the podcast available to you here:
We’ve just posted the latest Capers Community Markets podcast.
This one features Cassis Bistro owner and creator of Étuvé foods, Chef Ben Cote.
All I can say is – – – YUM.
Unlikely I’ll be getting one of these soon, but if anyone’s looking for a b.day.gift, I’ll take it.
Vistek.ca is taking pre-orders for (maybe) October delivery.
The GardenWise web site launched today – it’s another project we’ve been working on and built in Drupal. It joins BCBusiness and TVWeek as the latest online offerings from Canada Wide Media in Burnaby.
I woke up to one of those calls you rather not get. It was from American Express and it was about my latest bill.
I should explain that I’ve had an Amex card since 1980 and have always had great service, primarily because it’s not a credit card, so it gets paid every month and I like the reporting they provide. There are still lots of places that don’t take the card, but since I use it exclusively for business purposes, its not a problem, and I’ve been super happy with the card.
However, I can’t say I feel the same today. About 8 weeks ago I took Amex up on an offer for a new business card, one that provides a slight rebate. It’s their Amex Business card. Great I figured. The card showed up and I started using it instead of my classic green Amex.
This morning, the voice on the phone from Amex was calling to ask why I hadn’t paid my last invoice. Huh ? I explained that I haven’t yet received an invoice from the new card.
“Ah”, says the voice, “we sent you an invoice 3 weeks ago”. But when the voice told me the address, it was clear why I hadn’t received it.
Amex sent the invoice to the wrong address.
Oddly, they got the card to me to the right address, but somewhere between issuing the card and sending the bill, they screwed up my address.
“So”, I say, “just send me the bill and I’ll be happy to pay it. Like I have my regular amex bill every month for the last 27 years ! ”
“Oh”, says the voice, “that’s fine, but until we receive payment, the card will be suspended, and there are some interest charges. Total due on the card with interest is $ 104.00”.
“What?”, says I, “Just send me the bill and I’ll clear the charges, but do remove the interest charge and do remove the suspension, since I haven’t done anything wrong here – you guys sent the bill to the wrong address”.
Long story short: after 30 minutes on the phone and 2 different Amex reps, they refused to reinstate the card until they’d received my $104.00. Even when they looked up my 27 years of payment history, they still were , um, un-moved.
So, because Amex screwed up, I was now being inconvenienced. What amazed me was that there was no-one at American Express who seemed at all concerned about losing a long time customer over their mistake, and over 104 dollar at that.
Needless to say, I’ll not be keeping the new American Express Business card, since this kind of business help I do not need. Nor does any small business person. If you’re thinking about getting one of these cards, think again unless you want to really be blue.
I’m really liking VM Ware’s Fusion. I got the download from the Apple web site and despite having to re-authenticate Windows by talking to a MicroSoft computer for a few minutes, this really really rocks. I’d been running Windows on the iMac using BootCamp, but now we no longer have to reboot, and Fusion seems pretty solid so far. Click the thumbnail for a larger shot.
The installation was painless. What I really liked was that I could use my existing BootCamp partition – though you can install Windows clean if you want.
Nice job VMWare. This really makes my next desktop purchase a no brainer. I’ve been hanging on to a PC desktop because there are a couple of apps I depend upon that only run on windows, and a couple of B to B sites that only run on IE. Now, I can buy that new Mac I’ve been thinking about for my next desktop machine and still be able to access what I need on the Windows side, without having to reboot. I realize this is also possible with Parellels but I’d opted for the BootCamp route originally.
I was in for a big surprise when I checked the RSS feed for sailboats for sale in the Vancouver online Buy & Sell.
First of, there were an unusually high number of new items in the feeds, considering I usually see only 2 or 3 a day
so seeing 300 new ones was a bit of a shocker. Even more interesting were the feed items themselves:
Those are some interesting boats they’ve got listed in their 23 to 31 foot sailboats RSS feed.
That’s one way to boost your feed circulation – I guess.
I see there are some issues with the Canadian government’s program aimed at improving safety on the water.
Critics say the pleasure-craft operator card is being hawked by providers who charge $40 to $60 to take a multiple-choice exam of dubious worth, under a system with so few controls that stories of cheating are as common as ducks on a dock. Full story here
As a former professional sailing instructor, I’ve seen pretty much everything out on the water, and anything that helps improve safety is a welcome.
The biggest issue really is this: providing an operator’s card without ever being required to prove yourself on the water is a bit of a joke. You certainly can teach the theory in a classroom or on the internet, but putting that theory to practice in a real-life situation on the water is completely different.
The problem is compounded by the amazing array of pleasure craft out there, and they’re faster than ever before. Powerboats sporting 60’s era muscle-car engines are common, as are sailboats weighing several tons.
Every time we go out sailing – EVERY TIME – boaters either ignore or don’t seem to know the simplest rules of the road. When I was teaching CYA certified courses, I told my students to assume ‘the other guy’ didn’t know the rules of the road – since most of the time that’s the way they behave. It may be cool to clip across someone’s bow doing 30 knots in a jet boat, but it certainly isn’t the right thing to do, and it certainly isn’t safe.
Now, add in a little booze, and no operator’s card in the world is going to make a hoot of difference. In my experience, the concept of designated driver doesn’t seem to have taken off in the boating world. Nor has the notion of actually wearing the PFD you’re legally required to have on board.
For the uninitiated, in Canada while you’re legally required to have a PFD for everyone on board, you aren’t required to actually be wearing it. So, the vast majority of boaters don’t. As you might surmise, they do little good to you in the locker on the boat after you’ve fallen overboard.
The thing is, the government was reluctant to institute a licensing system. So they did a half-assed job and come up with the operator’s card, and then farmed out provisioning to the private sector where every card issued means revenue. I’ve seen the ‘take the boating test’ tents set up in the parking lot at Canadian Tire, and the goal certainly doesn’t seem to be education – it’s about getting you a card as quickly and easily as possible.
I fully support the idea of licensing boaters – but only boats of a certain size or power. Its ridiculous, for instance, that my 13 year old can’t operate our 6 ft. long Zodiac tender because it has a 2-hp. motor on it.
The whole idea here is that people go out and have a fun time and a safe time on the water. Knowing that someone driving a boat heading towards me has actually taken a course and passed a license would make me feel a lot better. As it stands now, I assume they know very little about the rules of the road of safety at sea.
Operators should be required to take a course offered by an organization like the CYA or The Canada Power and Sail Squadron, and testing should be similar to a drivers’ test. Until that happens (and it probably never will) no amount of ‘clamping down’ on the way operator’s cards are issued is going to make much of a difference to safety on the water.
They probably did this ages ago, but I use RSS so extensively that I often never see the front page of news web sites.
In any event, I love the way the Globe and Mail is using black & white for their left-hand-side thumbnails.
Most news sites, in fact almost all news sites, have become horrible to look at. Part of the problem is that no matter how the site gets designed, as soon as you add all those ads, colour schemes and balance go out the window (no pun intended).
Using the monochrome images really eases the busy-ness of the site, and I think it’s a great move.
Not that I’m thinking of applying.
But.
I was reading the requirements for the job of President of the CBC.
That’s the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation we’re talking about.
One of the requirements:
Experience in the broadcasting industry or other cultural industries would be an asset.
An asset ? Novel idea.
Can you imagine any other billion dollar corporation suggesting that knowing something about the industry it’s engaged in would be an asset.
I actually know something about broadcasting. Probably rules me out.
Not that I was thinking of applying.
If you are, they’re still taking applications via a head hunter.