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Na Ceardan - Life in northern Saskatchewan for a couple of wandering, adventurous Islanders. One, a hard working individual & the other, a laid-back artist on wheels ... new
(Added: 16-Nov-2008 Hits: 0 Rating: 0 Votes: 0) Rate It

  • Wed., November 19th, More snow ?
    “The only difference between reality and fiction is that fiction has to be credible.    - Mark Twain” Well it’s another day of snow here in LA and it’s Invacare Arrow Plow to the rescue …   We’ve been quite a getting a bit of snow lately. Not big dumps of snow but enough to require cleanup. I’m told [...]
  • Tue., November 18th, Far from home ?
    “The only difference between reality and fiction is that fiction has to be credible.    - Mark Twain” As i was saying in the last post the hardest thing about being so far from home is missing family & friends. But family does have the priority … -=-=-=-=-=-=  Slàinte mhor gu lèir là dhuit. Great health to you all day. -=-=-=-=-=-=        [...]
  • Sat., November 15th, Enjoying life in LA ?
    “Eucoir nas miosa na leabhraichean a losgadh - gun a bhith gan leughadh” - Joseph Brodsky {There are worse crimes than burning books. One of them is not reading them.} Last weekend we drove down to PA {Prince Albert} to take the dogs in for their quarterly check-up & such, to get some shopping done & [...]
  • Mon., November 10th, ?Let the bells ring out & the banners fly!
    “Let the bells ring out & the banners fly! Feast your eyes; it’s too good to be true, but it’s done, it’s done!” Yup! The lift is installed ….. finally!! The Inaugural Ride happened this morning at 10AM CT … And now I’m able to glide up & down from the basement in comfort. Last Sunday my [...]
  • Sun., November 2nd, Halloween in LA
    “Asking a working writer what he thinks about critics is like asking a lamp-post how it feels about dogs.”  Normally I don’t put costumes or clothing on my gal other than what’s required to keep her warm & dry when out for walks & such but had this lying around so decided to try it. As [...]

A good beer blog - Alan MacLeod (genx40.com) has started a blog about beer pop
(Added: 9-Nov-2004 Hits: 672 Rating: 9.00 Votes: 1) Rate It

  • Yuck! That Yeast Is Flocculating Itself Again!!!

    When I was a home brewer - as opposed to a person who has home brewing supplies and equipment in the house but never does anything with it all - I used to be concerned about flocculation. Flocculation is the word that describes the capacity of a yeast (or other stuff for all I know) to clump. It is a fancy pants word for clumpiness - but is more about the propensity to clump as opposed to the clump itself. I think. If a yeast strain floucculated too much it could cause precipitation leading to poor attenuation due to separation of yeast and wort. Yet if the yeast was under flocculating there would be difficulty in settling out and creating a bright beer. I think.

    So, it is comforting to know that all my half baked understanding of yeast clump-a-bility is actually related to a massively important scientific moment:

    A team of scientists at Harvard University reported last week that they isolated the single gene that allows yeast to stick together. That gene allows the normally solitary yeast cells to shield themselves from toxins in their environment by banding together in protective balls. Since one of those toxins is the ethanol that the yeast themselves produce, grouping together allows the yeast to survive in the alcohol-rich environment that results from brewing. What's more, the gene has a built in social value system that prevents yeast cells without the gene from taking advantage of the yeast flock's protective sphere. That social control mechanism is an example of how single cells can regulate function in larger units.

    Excellent! I knew that something about beer was out there promoting social values...or is it promoting socialism!?!?¹

    The point? As Kevin Verstrepen, one of the eggheads in white lab coats² - a Haavaad man no less - notes: "You can look at it as a model of how single-cellular organisms can cooperate, taking a small step toward multicellular life." A-ha! No, not the Norwegian 80's band...I mean "a-ha" as in light-klicky-on, as in "EUREKA!!!" So not only was the creation of civilization dependent on beer but the core zymurgystic fact of beer is also the same core fact of complex life as we know it. See? Without the making of alcohol, we are all single cell amoeba... amoebae... amoebas. I think. Which leads me to my amoeba joke: "two amoeba leave a bar and look up at a bright light. One says to the other 'is that the sun or the moon?' to which the other replies 'I dunno. I don't live around here.'" Get it? That is what we would have to put up with were it not for the flocculating powers of yeast. And nobody wants that.

    ¹Cue the theremin music!
    ²...and let's not have a repeat of the whole "sensitive yeast scientist" thing this time, ok?

  • Beer History Master Classes As Found On Beer Blogs

    You know, there was a time when I wrote posts about the history of beer. Then I got in a bit of a dust up with Ron Pattinson which then became quite civil when I said something like "if you are so clever about all this history stuff you should write a blog" which, we all know, he then did and now we are like two houses on fire. Without, you know, the skin grafts and reading of the life insurance policies.

    The other great reason to not pretend that I need to or even can write about the history of beer is the fact that Martyn Cornell exists. He has this very day posted two massive halves of one long essay on the origins of the term "India pale ale" - including this interesting passage on the response to his research by some beer gits:

    If saying ?the generally accepted story about the birth of IPA is almost entirely wrong? is nit-picking, that?s a bloody big nit. Someone else complained that...

    ?this guy is just going out of his way to poke holes in the common story about the ipa style ? The point is that Hodgson was the first to brew ?india pale ale? (from everything i?ve read) and therefore brewed the first of the style?

    which is entirely not grasping my own point, or points. The first is that the ?common story? already has huge holes in it, and I?m not poking them, I?m just holding them up and saying: ?Look ? big holes!?.

    Wow - real research and analysis presented without bias or the compromise of populism. What I think is most interesting is that the two focus on different sources. Martyn seeks his information from primary sources like beer ads, books of an age and other contemporary writings. Ron seeks his wisdom mainly through review of brewery archives and the actual brewing logs kept by those who made the beer at the time. When the power of their combined research is read side by side it is quite impressive - not to mention detailed and not to mention authoritative.

    It boggles my mind that each of these gents are not subsidized to the full extent of the necessaries of their lives by brewers associations of one sort or another. Boggles my mind.

  • Photo Contest Day 3: Great Beer Prizes Keep Coming In!

    Let's see, we announced on Sunday and this is Tuesday so, yup, this is day three of the Christmas 2008 Beer Blog Photo Contest and so far, in addition to the six prize givers announced at the launch, we are now able to announce that we have added the following prizes to the swag bag:

    • Ron Jefferies of Jolly Pumpkin of Dexter, Michigan USA - named one of that nation's top ten brewer's by Beer Advocate is adding a t-shirt. You will all know by now that I have a crush on Jolly Pumpkin so agreeing to joining in the photo contest is a great treat. I think that is going to be a global prize.
    • Andrew Mason, brewer at Flossmoor Station Brewing, named best small brewpub in the USA at the 2006 Great American Beer Festival, has written an email and says "I'll make it a growler and a sampler when they come in". Andrew has also added an entry which makes him the only person to play both sides of the fence so far. That prize will have to go to someone local to the Illinois area.
    • Widmer Brothers, makers of that new fine winter ale called Brrr has gone all over the top and has pledged SIX prizes of a t-shirt and a pair of glasses each which, I think, will be going to anywhere the planetary postal system can send them. Six! That is great.
    • Last but not at all least, Jeff Cunningham of the Cracked Kettle beer store in Amsterdam has announced in the comments that they will provide a Cracked Kettle t-shirt and a bottle of Westvleteren 12 for one lucky winner. Famously named best beer in the world in 2005, that sounds like one very impressive offer of some "collectible glassware" that will be most welcome anywhere.

    It's prize giving pandemonium these days! On my count that adds nine more individual prizes added to the ten separate prizes offered by six fine beery sources at the launch. We are well on our way to living the dream of a prize for every participant. If you want, send your precious jpegs to both me at beerblog@gmail.com and also Jeff at stonchblog@gmail.com before Sunday 14 December 2008 at 4:00:00 pm eastern Lake Ontario, North America time.

    That is all it takes. Mike Stich of Toronto, Ontario did last year and sent the great shot above in. It is all so amazingly fulfilling.

  • BrewDog And Skull Splitter Face Humourless Tribunal

    Following up on a story we discussed last May, tomorrow's edition of The Independent tells the sad tale of how both BrewDog and the Orkney Brewery, makers of Skull Splitter, have had a ruling made against them by the shadowy Portman Group - described by The Independent as a self-regulating industry body. Which sounds a lot like another way of saying their competition. Their larger duller competition.

    It decided Rip Tide's description as a "twisted merciless stout" would be associated with antisocial behaviour, while the claim that Hop Rocker was a "nourishing foodstuff" and that "magic is still there to be extracted" implied that it would enhance physical and mental capabilities.

    The wisdom did not stop there. Apparently, Orkney's Skull Splitter "was associated with violence and also could be a reference to its effect on the drinker's head." However silly, these macro-saft makers with gavels actually have the power of persuasion and can use that power to affect the marketplace they and their powerless competition work within. Can you see a problem with that? Orkney has issued a press release that says this turn of fate may lead to the brand being pulled even though it is a former Champion Winter Ale of Britain. The BBC has more on the Skull Splitter story.

    BrewDog is taking the even higher moral ground by calling for the shadowy Portman Group to be scrapped, according to this story. James Watt, managing director of BrewDog is quoted as saying '"[i]t is alarming that an unelected, unrepresentative industry cartel can simply crush the foundations on which our democracy is built." Can I have an amen? I believe reference to the Declaration of Arbroath is of comfort to we Scots in moments like this.

    Full disclosure: James Watt writes me emails once in a while, is named after my Dad's hometown's favorite son and is giving prizes for the photo contest. And I like him and his company more than the shadowy Portman Group.

  • The 2008 Yule Beer Blog Photo Contest Is Launched!

    Hear Ye Hear Ye! Oyez Oyez!!! Ladies and Gentlemen and children of all ages! May we have drum rrrrrrrollllllllll if you please!!! Can I get a witness??? Bang the Gong, Get it On!!!

    Once again this year, I am happy to declare the beer blog Christmas photo contest is on. Real on. Real on right now and it's the third annual. And for the second straight year, we are sharing oversight duties for the Christmas beer blog photo contest with our pal and co-master of ceremonies Jeff from Stonch's Beer Blog based in London England. Here is Jeff's post on the start of the contest. And that's last year's grand winner up there, from John Lewington. Called "Two Pints of Bitter" it's a candid photo John took of two old boys enjoying their Sunday afternoon ale in a 17th century pub in Aldbrough, Suffolk. Gorgeous. Here are all the entries from last year - Jeff's are available through a link at the bottom of the page. We are going to try to be more unified and centralized this year.

    And the range of prizes gathered so far for the 2008 version of the contest are, I have to admit, already simply stunning. As in the past, remember the rules of beer are so weird that you can only get it shipped to certain places (where you are) from certain other places (where the people of the beer are) so you may not qualify for each of these but here is what we have so far:

    • Roland + Russell, importers of fine beer into Canada, is offering gift basket with a variety of treats. This will be for a lucky winner in Ontario.
    • Church-key Brewing of Campbellford, Ontario has provided lunch at their Stinking Rose pub as well as a VIP tour and tasting for four at the brewery. That should be a blast and will be provided to a winner who can get to the prize.
    • BrewDog Beer of Scotland is offering a couple of cases of beer as well as some other goodies including a signed t-shirt. The beer will be a UK only prize due to shipping restrictions while the other goodies will go absolutely global.
    • Flying Dog Brewery of Maryland USA wrote us a note and asked "how does a Barrel-aged Gonzo, Humphrey the Humper dog, Gonzo Poster and Gonzo T-shirt sound?" Sounds good to me. That one may end up as a USA only prize due to the gods of the border control unit.
    • Beau's All-Natural Brewing of Vankleek Hill, Ontario has offered us a hat and t-shirt which will be forwarded to a lucky winner anywhere on the entire planet.
    • Shipyard Brewing of Portland, Maine are back again this year with a new prize...or rather three separate prizes of a Shipyard travel coffee mug and a Shipyard aluminum water bottle. Fantastic. And a fantastically planetarily acceptable prize.

    Fabulousness incarnate! What generosity and - be warned - we are on the hunt for more prizes and hope to have more announcements soon. Have no fear. I have every intention of wringing as much happiness out of this contest for each and every contestant so as to make your Yule (...and your Yule, too) as fantastic as possible. Jeff and I get nothing our of this but the warm glow of a good deed well done and a way to thank you all, our readers, as well as to thank the great brewers out there who do so much for all of us.

    How does one enter? You may well be asking this very question as you read this. Just email photos to both me at beerblog@gmail.com and also Jeff at stonchblog@gmail.com. The announcements should start flying with your entries and hopefully even more great prizes. The deadline is Sunday 14 December 2008 at 4:00:00 pm eastern Lake Ontario, North America time. Well be figuring out a means for posting them on the web, maybe at Flickr and maybe even ClusterShot so that your work may itself give you something back. And remember - if you are a brewer, pub, author or purveyor of any other beer related stuff, join us by emailing your idea for more prize for the winners. It's all about giving...and taking photos...and beer...and, ok, having a happy happy Yule!

AngstyBlog - Recently-married Rob Fletcher is working on his M.Sc. in Computer Science at Queens in Kingston where he is doing research into the architecture of multiplayer networked video games. pop
(Added: 12-Jul-2004 Hits: 807 Rating: 8.25 Votes: 4) Rate It

  • Mon., November 17th, Who made this?!
    I’m clomping around in the Space Fortress code right now, and let me tell you, I have no idea who coded it. Maybe I’m just disoriented, gazing up at the epic hulk of code to which I was so devoted. Maybe it’s because using the SVN Eclipse integration makes it hard to skim through my classes quickly. I [...]
  • Sun., November 16th, Week 2 Reflection
    It has been Terraflubb’s second week, and it is time to reflect. I will talk about a few issues I’ve noticed relating to the ‘Flubb which will affect its future. Then I will present you with a honking list of what I will do this week. First thing I realized is that it’s easier to make [...]
  • Sat., November 15th, SF: Blowing off the Dust, GUI tools
    So, having discussed the stunted development of Space Fortress, I realized that maybe I should give it another go. I dug up the old code, and I realized a few other little things that frustrated my progress. The first was the GUI. Space Fortress is full of elements which are more conveniently displayed as text in [...]
  • Tue., November 11th, Post-mortem: Space Fortress
    In no particular order, I’m going to start with Space Fortress. This one I got really excited about, because I decided I would do it properly! I was high on usability engineering, figured I wouldn’t code anything without thinking it through first. I drew all kinds of sketches in my delightful chubby notebook. It failed [...]
  • Fri., November 7th, Week 1 Progress
    This week I: Set up the Terraflubb blog Got two projects pages up (Space Fortress and Tinyroidvania) Totally got a comment (Ian FTW!) Next up: Frank post-mortem for Space Fortress Find a better word than ‘post-mortem’, something like ‘post-stasis’ because they aren’t dead, just sleepy Add doodle gallery Add Horror Mansion project page

Blinklet Comics - Brian Linkletter (blink) lives in Ottawa and uses his Mac to write comics. pop
(Added: 24-Oct-2004 Hits: 666 Rating: 0 Votes: 0) Rate It

  • American Election
    Interesting e-mail discussion with my buddies about the election results. Made me want to move forward with finalizing this "group blog" idea we came up with last month. Dave posted a few points on his blog on the election topic. Personally, I would've voted for Kerry. If I was American. But, I'm not. Maybe I'll shut up now. But, I'm Canadian. So, I won't.
  • Astounding Space Thrills
    I just re-visited a webcomic I hadn't seen in years! Astounding Space Thrills is an imaginative and well-crafted strip. I can't tell if it's been updated since I stopped reading it about four years ago but there's still tons of material in the web site's archives.
  • Sev Wide Web
    Another excellent webcomic I've found is Sev Wide Web. This is a good example of how to create a community around your webcomic. Another good example of a webcomic with a stong community is Sluggy Freelance. Sluggy won't make my list of links, however, because it's Dungeons and Dragons slant and the artist's Japanese-Manga-wannabe drawing style are both elements that I feel are far too common
  • Webcomic research
    Here's a few of webcomics that I browsed recently. I especially enjoyed these two cool, quirky and very imaginative strips featuring cats: Simon and Jack and Cat and Girl.
  • Just for fun
    Which OS are You?

canadiancomment - Our opinions of and advice to the world. Updated whenever we get around to it. Run by former Islander Dana Dennis. pop
(Added: 2-Dec-2004 Hits: 682 Rating: 7.00 Votes: 1) Rate It

  • The Stink Over Undercover Cops
    The story of the undercover cops during the recent North American summit has caused quite a stink over at The Western Standard.

    First off, I haven't watched the video or followed the story much at all but it seems that some folks are in a stink for the simple reason that undercover cops were embedded within the protesters to begin with.

    There are a lot of good reasons to embed police within a protest and none of them have anything to do with spying or other such nonsense.

    The two primary reasons officers are usually embedded with a protest are:

    - To 'lead' the protest on it's route/march. The crowd will simply follow the people in the lead so by doing this the police can have a group of marchers walk around in circles for hours (and stay out of trouble) and no one is any the wiser.

    - Similar to the first item, a crowd will not come into close contact with the police (in most cases anyways) unless those in the lead do so first. If the lead protesters stay back from the police so will the crowd.
  • On Chinese Goods
    As most of you are aware Chinese companies have been having some quality control problems as of late. The fact that some products they are manufacturing have quality issues really isn't terribly surprising on many levels.

    What bothers me are the excuses put forward by government officials. China for all intents and purposes is one massive cartel, controlled by a few for the benefit of a few.

    Regardless, anyone with common sense knows that a government that doesn't care about it's own people is not going to have a lot of concern to the well-being of foreigners. That being the case, any company that slaps it's name on a product is ultimately responsible for the quality of that product.

    And let's be honest with ourselves, it is just as easy to produce crap in Canada as it is in China.
  • Tweaking The Template
    So I'm sitting here tweaking the Blogger template with the thought I might start blogging a little bit after a very long hiatus. Sweet suffering Google has changed Blogger a lot since I last poked around. The pages are now dynamically generated which creates some opportunities to add a few neat features to the blog. Then again, that would take time which I'm not exactly sure I have much of these days.

    Regardless, I'll be updating the right sidebar, removing any dead links and making a few minor adjustments to the template. Nothing major.

    Sleep tight.
  • If I Posted...
    ... would anybody notice?
  • On Automobiles
    Mark Steyn is fisking Michael Adams over at Macleans. Here are two quotes that particularly stick out. The first is a quote from an American about the differences between Canada and the US:
    The difference between America and Canada is that Americans don't care what the difference between America and Canada is.
    The second concerns a point that Adams is trying to make:
    Adams' method was established in Fire and Ice: he notes at one point that in the U.S. SUVs outsell minivans by two-to-one, whereas in Canada it's vice versa. That's a fact. The fancy is in the meaning he appends to it. "This is a stark difference," he writes, "whose roots can be traced directly to the differing values of our two countries." This assertion seems to have no basis other than a casual assumption that Canadians are more environmentally responsible and thus more concerned with "excessive gasoline consumption, pollution and safety violations."

    Isn't there a more obvious correlation? Minivans are cheaper than SUVs, and Canadians have less disposable income than Americans. It's easy to be "socially responsible" if you've got no choice in the matter. On the Continent they're driving around in things the size of Arnold Schwarzenegger's cup holder, so presumably they're more "socially responsible" still. In Canada those who can afford SUVs buy them, it's just that their numbers are smaller. Remember Herb Dhaliwal? Well, no, you probably don't. But a couple of years back M. Chrétien made him minister of natural resources, and he certainly got through a lot of them. He drove around like a Hamas warlord in a three-ton Cadillac Escalade. That's bigger than my SUV and I'm in favour of global warming. The difference is that the high living of a Liberal cabinet minister is confined, north of the border, mainly to Liberal cabinet ministers while down south it's more widely available.
    Dhaliwal as a Hamas warlord in a three-ton Cadillac Escalade. Mint.

Delta Tango Bravo - SilverOrange partner and digg lead designer Daniel Burka is now living in San Francisco. pop
(Added: 9-Jul-2004 Hits: 781 Rating: 7.25 Votes: 4) Rate It

  • Dangerous Time

    I don't often cross post on Pownce and here on my blog, but this is worth an exception I think. A few minutes ago, a friend reminded me of the Barenaked Ladies' cover of Lovers in a Dangerous Time. I hadn't heard it in years and I'd never seen the video. The song is as good or better than I remembered. I don't care what you think of what the band's done since the famous (at least in Canada) and elusive Yellow Tape, this cover stands on its own.

  • Metis Marker
     

    The fantastic Canadian Design Resource has an article today about the historical flag of Canada's Metis people. I've made several posts in the past about flags and the Metis flag fits well with the other standouts I've mentioned previously. According the description, the Metis flag "represents the coming together of two distinct and vibrant cultures, European and indigenous, to produce a distinctly new culture, the Metis... the infinity symbol suggests that the Metis people will exist forever."

  • Cafe Dues?

    I've been spending many of my recent weekend days working from cafes near my apartment in San Francisco. There's a new one called On the Corner on Divisidero about two blocks from where I live and it gives me a nice break from my small apartment to go down there to write email and work on Pownce stuff — plus their coffee is very drinkable.

    However, I'm sure I'm not the only one who feels guilty throwing down a couple of bucks for a coffee and then mooching wifi, power, and a comfy chair for a few hours. I try to get up every once in a while and grab a snack or a coffee refill. I hardly need the extra caffeine and I especially could handle eating fewer pastries, but I feel obliged to support the cafe.

    In many ways, cafes serve a very similar purpose as co-working space. Many people come much more often than I do and stay longer, essentially using the cafe as temporary office. For co-working space, like the Queen Street Commons, people pay a decent sum for the convenience.

    I'm curious if anyone out there has seen cafes experimenting with alternative payment schemes? I could imagine either a subscription scheme or something as simple as special tip jar clearly indicated as a 'thanks-for-the-wifi-comfy-chair-music-bathroom' donation. I know I'd be willing to pay — and my body would thank me for the reduced consumption of guilty pastries and extra cups of coffee.

  • MeshU 2008

    I'm currently in Toronto at the Mesh conference taking place at the MaRS centre on College Street. Today was the MeshU day of workshops, including great presentations by John Lax, Leah Culver, Ryan Carson, John Resig, and a bunch of others. I presented in the morning and promised that I'd stick my slides online, so here they are. If audio is available later, I'll try to add it on, but I promised to get them up there at least in a basic way. Thanks to anyone/everyone who came out!

  • Digg Comments Redux (again)

    As I've talked about at a few conferences recently, one of the exciting/difficult things about working in-house, on a project with the scope of something like Digg, is the luxury/challenge to adapt your own work. The comments system on Digg is a perfect example. Just this past week, we rolled out the latest iteration of the comments system, which is the fourth major adaption of the system since the site launched over four years ago. It's a project that's been a long time coming and has been under development for a fairly long period. What a relief to finally see it out in the wild.

    In his blog post about the release, Micah described several of the important changes that we made from both a design and performance standpoint. From the design side, we've made the comments visually lighter, reduced the metadata around each comment, improved the visual flow down the comment threads, added subtler functionality, and significantly improved the interaction design. When I say we improved the interaction design, I mean that as you interact with the comments (e.g. digg a comment, write a comment, edit your comments, etc) all of the pieces fit together more naturally.

    The next step will be to iterate on the comments system once we've seen how people use, abuse, and break the one we just built. We certainly plan on doing more small adaptations over the next months as opposed to waiting to perform a large revision. As always with Digg projects, it's pretty exciting to watch a few million people use a feature that, up until launch, had only been seen or used by a few people... it'll be interesting to see what they do.

Gen X at 40 - Alan McLeod was a PEI lawyer who has now moved to Kingston ON. pop
(Added: 9-Jul-2004 Hits: 788 Rating: 6.40 Votes: 5) Rate It

  • Rally 'Round The Pirate War!!!

    I don't know about you but isn't going after pirates like going after Nazis? Isn't it something we can all agree upon? I mean, is there not a child on this planet who did not clap their hands with glee at the new of India taking out a mother ship this week? Who isn't thrilling to the determination of UK PM Gordon Brown:

    A spokesman for Prime Minister Gordon Brown said: "We have ensured that the Navy has the means and the authority to deter and disrupt acts of piracy and we are introducing legislation to strengthen powers for the armed forces to detain ships and arrest suspects."

    It's all very Master and Commander all of a sudden. Look to Mr. Taylor for good coverage on this one.

    The question of the day is simple: what is Canada's position on the war on pirates?

  • The New Gmail Themes Rekindled My Inner Child

    Gmail is the best thing ever. Remember when you had to pay for email? That sucked. Gmail changed that and most of you know that the dumb stuff you email back and forth really gives rise to no privacy issues even if Google turned out to be like the bad guys in The Matrix like you all thought it would. But fear not. Fear not and put on your pre-"Tonight's The Night" Rod Stewart lps because Google has reminded me of 1974: shag carpets, Mopar cars and that Houston Astros uniform.

  • Just Say No To A.J. Burnett

    Up in the middle of the night, I caught Chris Carlin on WFAN 660 going off his rocker at 5:00 am over the idea that the Yankees and Red Sox going after A.J. Burnett. Why? Look to his stats:

    • He has never won even 13 games in his career. Other than last year.
    • He is a perpetual disabled list player.
    • He is his 2007 Jays season: "Burnett was the only pitcher to make all his starts through the first two months of the season. In that period, Burnett posted a 3.98 ERA, throwing 71.0 innings. Unfortunately, Burnett missed 48 games during two stints on the disabled list, finishing the season 10-8 with an ERA of 3.75."
    • His stats as a Jays pitcher peak against the Yankees and the Sox meaning that if the Yanks take him his estimated ERA based on past performance should go up almost half a run.
    • Otherwise high ERA compared to wins.
    I would add he sucks. That is entirely subjective, of course, but - by that I mean he is no iron man. Not the man to pass the ball to. The never-won-a-big-game pitcher. Not only does he suck, I think he is a suck, a sook and also sucky and perhaps sookey - all quite different characteristics. In a way, he is the utterly complete Jays player: skilled, not committed, looking past the job, a specialist in underachieving and, you know, sucktastic. Happy to be proven wrong. If he is a Sox and plays well like Julian Tavarez did once, I will eat my words.

    But I hope the Sox are just winding up the Yankees and inflating the price that might be paid by pretending they are in the market. I wouldn't mind a return of Derek Lowe, however. That would be interesting.

  • Group Project: When Is Industry Regulation Actually Anti-Competition?

    An interesting quandry from the world of beer labeling over at A Good Beer Blog. It appears the makers of all the crappiest beers in the UK have gotten together to create a "good taste" arbitration panel that just happens to focus on their smaller smarter competition. What do you think? Sounds like an reason for invoking anti-combines law to me but apparently acceptable in Britain.

  • At What Point Should We Not Care Anymore?

    There was a point a couple of songs after "Maggie's Farm" when I got the sense that seeing Dylan was not going to be what I had hoped. Don't get me wrong. I had no idea that he did that twisty left leg thing, like slower Elvis. And when he pulled out the Guild guitar and played the break it was good. But at times it was like watching someone make fun of Dylan except it was Dylan. The same thing stuck me when I read the news today...and did not say "oh boy":

    McCartney says he wants to release Carnival of Light, a 14-minute experimental track the Fab Four recorded in 1967 but never released. The band played the recording for an audience just once, at an electronic music festival in London. It reportedly includes distorted guitar, organ sounds, gargling and shouts of "Barcelona!" and "Are you all right?" from McCartney and John Lennon.

    When is it enough? Is there an end to boomer rock that is this side of the grave? At least Robert Plant has some dignity about his career, hanging out with Alison Krauss more than his friends from his teens.

Lana Stewart - Islander Lana Stewart lives in Ottawa, and started blogging in 2000 with her Place and Thyme photoblog. Over the last year, she returned to school to improve her graphic design, marketing and communications skills. This website is designed to showcase everything that she learned and as a motivator to keep on creating. pop
(Added: 10-Jul-2004 Hits: 825 Rating: 8.21 Votes: 14) Rate It

  • Mon., November 17th, Alden?s iPod playlist
    Most afternoons, I pop Alden down on his playmat and turn up the volume on his iTunes playlist.  We have a few playlists on the go: one for sleeping, one for sing-alongs and one for “music this kid should learn to like” . First up, our afternoon sing-along playlist.  It’s not super complete - I did [...]
  • Sat., October 25th, Four weeks old
    Four weeks old is a good age.  We both seem to be a little more in tune and not totally frazzled.  We go for walks, we take the bus, we hang out at cafes during the day and we’re getting some fairly good shut-eye at night.  Things are  good. This week we splurged on the M [...]
  • Fri., October 17th, Three weeks and a day
    We’re starting to get used to this new little person. Introducing Alden Granville Harrison. Born on September 25 at 11:13pm. He tipped the scales at 9lbs 7oz (4184g) and 57cm long. A big big boy. He was 11 days overdue and needed to be evicted. I was induced [...]
  • Wed., September 17th, Offline
    I’m taking a little break from the Internet - I’ll update if there is any news.  So far.. no news.
  • Tue., September 16th, Overdue?day 2
    Plans for today: Walk to bookshop on Elgin for another book Stop at yarn store and make cutlery cozies  Stop at Hartmans and buy a big bag of flour and lug it home… or if all else fails, build sod house.  (It worked in that Heritage Minute)

Melda's Weblog - Melda L. Gibson, a really good blog writer, is now living in Toronto. pop
(Added: 11-Jul-2004 Hits: 790 Rating: 7.71 Votes: 22) Rate It

  • the unfinished books sitting on my bedside table

    1. The Genius in the Design: Bernini, Borromini and the Rivalry that Transformed Rome - Jake Morrisey
    2. Experience - Martin Amis
    3. Nirvana: the biography - Everett True
    4. The Refrigerator Memory (poems) - Shannon Bramer
    5. Grandes Horizontales: The Lives and Legends of Four Nineteenth-Century Courtesans - Virginia Rounding
    6. Ways of Seeing - John Berger
    7. Interviews with American Artists - David Sylvester
  • everyone say it with me...

    Thanks Nick!
    Turns out that I'm just like all my clients who call because they've forgotten their password. Just goes to show that I never should have left you.
    You're still out there, right?
  • incense(d)

    I just tried lighting some incense that I got today (cone shaped with a coconut scent, if you must know), but I don't think I'm doing it right. It is really smoking and doesn't seem to smell like anything other than something burning.

    I did try to Ask Jeeves for his advise but according to the interweb I'm doing everything right. Dang it.

    Suggestions?
  • thank goodness for Sundays

    I know that Toronto never closes, and that Sundays don't mean the same thing here as they did at home in the Maritimes, but some days it still acts as a necessary day of rest for me.

    Sundays are for tidying up, cleaning, relaxing, writing a letter (i'm trying to get back to letter writing and not just letter receiving), napping, organizing, sudoku, listening to music, reading, catching up, and preparing for the coming week.

    I guess that's why they don't put anything good on tv before 10pm.
  • I just wanted to say...

    ... that I knew about the Cold War Kids first (before Daniel). That's all.

A Canadian in... (Dublin Ireland) - "Casper" lives in Dublin, Ireland.
(Added: 12-Nov-2005 Hits: 321 Rating: 0 Votes: 0) Rate It


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A Change of View - This the story of my life as it happens. Travel and music tend to be the main topics, but there is always a little bit of everything mixed in. - Nick Howard
(Added: 24-Mar-2006 Hits: 277 Rating: 8.00 Votes: 1) Rate It

  • Thu., December 28th, Have you heard? 
    Alison Goodwin; Center Road whispers whispers whistle stir the fertile rows, one seed is planted a whole forest grows misty ripples spread. like ghosts in rank unborn thoughts push back, deep and dank. silent light filters resting gently on the soft moss floor, there is the chance for dawn. Pat Metheny - Have You Heard? The Road to You Acov is back online after a very extended break. Call it [...]
  • Sun., December 24th, ?Tis the Season (for changes?)
    Merry Christmas everyone!
  • Sat., September 2nd, Happiness is Here
    Faster than anger there is no longer here; Red blindness asked to leave the hatred cast aside. Here was not invited but saw the door was open; Untrammeled by a full mind of there, I see. Happiness is here. Funny how people are most happy when thoughts are seldom. These big brains of ours could really use a rest, [...]
  • Fri., September 1st, The Fall of Autumn
    [...]
  • Sat., August 5th, A visit from Marc
    A friend, is coming to visit me. Is that not a great thing? I mean it takes a great friend to come and visit any other friend anywhere. By going to visit someone, one removes themselves completely out of their own comfort zone and into the unknown. Plus one is giving of one’s time and [...]

A Day in the Life... - Paulette Dalton's blog. A runner, attending school in Toronto.
(Added: 9-Sep-2004 Hits: 450 Rating: 0 Votes: 0) Rate It

  • (no subject)
    SING LIKE CREEK...RUN LIKE WHITFIELD? Between working 8 hours at the Nike Women's 1/2 Marathon for Lymphoma and a delicious gluten free flavanoid bursting bowl of pasta from Magic Oven with my cutie, I took some time to hang out with my good buddy and prep for my 9th marathon. Thanks for the pep talk today Simon :)
  • (no subject)
    67 THINGS YOU DIDNT KNOW ABOUT ME UNTIL YOU READ THIS: 1, what color is your toothbrush? Blue 2, name one person that made you smile today? My friends from SATC 3, what were you doing at 8 am this morning? sleeping 4, what were you doing 45 minutes ago? Talking to T-Rex 5, what is your favorite candy ? Jujubes 6, have you ever been to a strip club? No 7, what is the last thing you said
  • (no subject)
    I'M HAVING TOO MUCH FUN. I REALIZED IT LAST NIGHT. Tomorrow morning I am writing the Canadian Registered Nurse Exam, along with all the other newbie nurse wannabes. As much fun is this is going to be...I might even be a little bit sad to be finished. I like exam week. Up before sunrise, early morning workout and giving myself permission to indulge in as many scones and soy chai lates and
  • (no subject)
    "10 YEARS FROM NOW YOU WON'T REMEMBER THE GRADE YOU GOT ON THAT TEST...BUT YOU WILL REMEMBER THE EXPERIENCE OF BEING AN ACADIA VARSITY X-COUNTRY RUNNER" Can you believe it has been 6 years since my Dad dropped me off at Cutten House, in my large double room, all girls, 24 hour quiet, alcohol free section... Last night we had a mini Toronto Acadia reunion pub night. Fantastic time catching up
  • (no subject)
    DRUGS, ROCK AN' ROLL, BAD ASS, VEGAS HOES... lil t-rex turned 30 this past week, so when i wasn't busy writing essays, studying for the CNRE, working my two jobs, biking, running and swimmin...we got all snazzed up and let t-rex choose a restaurant... and despite the unsure face, i actually found some yummilicious foods chez le Keg Mansion! Saturday was Linnsmore's Ludicrously Luscious Liquid

AmberMac: Technology junkie feeding my addiction - Former Islander Amber MacArthur is am a new media journalist and web strategist.
(Added: 3-Jan-2005 Hits: 411 Rating: 0 Votes: 0) Rate It

Another Version of The Truth - My thoughts, feelings, and daily adventures. - Jeff Burns in Cape Breton
(Added: 6-Apr-2007 Hits: 168 Rating: 0 Votes: 0) Rate It

  • Back In The Saddle
    It's good to be back!

    Since I haven't updated this in months, you might not have heard I moved back to Charlottetown. I've been back for three months now, and so far, so good.

    So how did I end up back here? Well, a quick word on why I left. It wasn't any one thing, really. It was a combination of things. After spending a couple of weeks at home at the end of the summer last year, I missed it. My friends were home, and it was a lot of fun to spend time with them again. I wasn't exactly loving life in Cape Breton before I moved to Charlottetown in 2005, and it was just a nice, refreshing, somewhat new experience to be having a blast with my old friends in my home town. I'd quit school already and knew I wasn't really going to be doing anything productive here, and then the whole, ummm, we'll say personal issue happened and it just told me to get the fuck out of here. Everything just added up and I had to get out of here before I lost my mind. So, I went home.

    I missed being here when I was away, but it's hard to say leaving was the wrong decision. When I left here, I said I had to fix myself, and, I think I did. For the most part. I'm closer to "fixed" now than I was a year ago, so hopefully the progress continues. I spent the first couple of months in Cape Breton just drinking my face off and trying to forget something that was hurting me at the time, but sooner or later I started to snap out of it, got my head clear, starting working out, started to feel good about myself, spent a rockin last few months with my friends before we all left Cape Breton again, got to spend time with my family...etc, etc. I would've rathered not have to move back to Cape Breton, but it really was what I needed. It was refreshing. A nice time out.

    But eventually I got the itch to come back here. I never really forgot Charlottetown. I thought about here, and my friends here pretty much every day. And in my mind I always figured I'd be back sooner or later. When I didn't come back in May as planned, I started to wonder if I was going to. I got comfortable at home, but then Morley moved, then Blackie moved, and Chris pretty much has his own life to worry about, and I started to realize that the party is pretty much over and I'm the last one there. I needed to go out on my own and do something with my life, and it wasn't going to happen in Cape Breton. And I was on my way to doing that here before I left.

    So, long story short, I got my shit together and came back here. I'm happy to be back. I don't know if I'm going to spend the rest of my life here, but for now, this is where I want to be. Time will have to tell if Round 2 in Charlottetown can compare to Round 1, but, for now at least, I'm happy and content.

    We'll see what happens.

    JB
  • The Warning
    Lazy afternoon.

    Going out with Chris and Morley tonight. It's not often the three of us all get to go out at the same time. Could be trouble. Last time we drank together we didn't even leave the house and still managed to cause trouble by setting Jarrod's pants on fire. Current plan is to hit the hockey game, then Steel City to catch UFC. Should be interesting, to say the least.

    It's snowing. In April. Gotta love this Cape Breton weather.

    I'm out,
    JB
  • God Given
    Year Zero leaked onto the internet the other day, two weeks before it's release. It's time like this I love/hate the internet. I love it because I've been rocking out to new Nine Inch Nails music two weeks ahead of schedual, and I hate it because I "ruined" it on myself. I would've been nice to pop YZ in my CD player in the 17th and listen to something completely new. If you're not familiar with NIN music, well, the albums are very detailed, and they tell a story from start to finish. Listening to the songs in random order as you happen to find them kind of takes away from the experience. But it's still an amazing album, probably the best since The Downward Spiral. I'll probably try my hand are writting a review for it when it's officially released and I have time after exams.

    I finish exams the 18th, which makes my next Charlottetown visit the 19th. I'll probably hang out there for a week, test the waters to see I'll actually go back. It's like I've said before, the thought that my days there are really over doesn't seem right to me, but at the same time I don't know if I can see myself actually picking up and moving back there again. I've gotten kind of comfortable back home, which probably isn't a good thing. I don't think I can stay here. Well, I can, but I shouldn't. There really isn't anything here for me aside from family and friends. I don't think I was ever cut out to be one of those "Cape Breton for life" guys.

    Strange, I was in the middle of thinking what I was going to type next and I started to feel tired...very tired. I guess not being hyped up on coffee and energy drinks for the first time in three weeks will do that to you.

    So we'll end it here.

    Rock n'Roll
    JB
  • If we never find the truth...
    Slow night. Well, I guess anytime I'm blogging, it being a slow night goes without saying.

    I was supposed to go to Charlottetown this weekend, but it doesn't look like I'm going to make it. I put money aside last time I was there so I could go back this weekend, but lastweekend my "going to PEI" money turned into "getting drunk and passing out in a tub" money. I didn't even want to go out last weekend, but the combination of Morley's insistance and the bars being open until 4:30am was too much to overcome. Aside from falling asleep in a bathtub there really wasn't anything special about the night. Could I be tired of Cape Breton bars already? It's looking that way. I find every weekend I go out, and for the most part, it's all the same. Same place, same people, same routine. It's fun, but repeatitive, and every morning I wake up wondering why I bothered going out in the first place. But I live in a place where there's nothing else to do. It's either go to the movies, or get drunk. That's it.

    But yea, I won't be making it to Charlottetown this weekend, which is disappointing. I was looking forward to it, to see everyone that I wasn't able to see last time I was there...or who didn't bother to see me when I was there. Next week is Easter, so I won't get there then, but hopefully I make it the next weekend. I kind of miss Charlottetown. I really enjoyed living there, and had things not have gotten as shitty as they did around the end, I very likely wouldn't have left. Comming home was definitely the right move. I needed it. It got me away from things I had to get away from, helped me clear my head. It's been great hanging out with my old friends again, and I've actually been having fun in Cape Breton, which isn't something I'd been doing much of before I moved in 2005. The only negitive is that the long I stay here, the move at home I feel. I didn't plan on staying here for good, but the longer I'm here the more I feel that's the direction I'm heading in.

    Should I go back to Charlottetown? That was the original plan. I didn't want to leave, I just felt I had to at the time. When I left, I didn't feel like I was moving, I felt like I was going away for awhile. There's something about not going back that doesn't really feel right. But what am I going back for? I had some great friends there, and I miss them a lot, but is that enough to move to another province for? I'd go to school there, but I can do the same thing here. I don't know. I do know that I think about Charlottetown and everyone there a lot. Pretty much everyday. I liked it there, and I miss it. But if I go back, will it be the same? Last summer was probably the best I've ever had. It was just non-stop fun, and I was happy. But can I repeat it? I don't know. There's a couple of people who were big parts of my life last summer who either arn't there anymore, or are simply out of my life. I'm not sure if that place will be the same without them.

    That's not to take anything away from the friends I do still have there, who I miss a lot. But a year ago, we seemed to have a large, tight group, and over the past few months that seems to have fractured a bit.

    If I go back, that's it. I move there, I settle in, I get a job, I go to school, and try to make my life there. Is it the right move? I don't know. I have a lot to think about.

    I think the plan right now is to go there for a week or two after exams. Just hang out, see what jobs are available, and just see if it's still the place for me it used to be. Maybe it is, maybe it isn't, I'm really not sure. I don't know if it's a place I want to live, or a place I just want to go back to visit from time to time. I just don't know.

    Alberta is still an option, although talk of that seems to have died down a bit recently. Even so, Alberta would be a summer option, nothing longterm. Halifax is there, but if I move to Halifax, I'm moving just for the sake of moving. Right now, I think it comes down to either staying here or moving back to Charlottetown, with a possible trip to Alberta in the meantime.

    Aside from that, I didn't hear anything about that job at the radio station I applied for. I think I'd find working in radio interesting, although I'm not sure if I'm in any way qualified to do the job I applied for. But I know someone that knows someone, so a job in radio isn't out of the question. Of course, if I got that job, I'm stuck in Cape Breton. Getting into radio could be something I do as a career, so if I find a way to get my foot in the door, I'd have to stick with it, not quit two months into it so I can move away again.

    Decisions, decisions...

    JB
  • Me, I'm not.
    I never know how to start these anymore. Years of english, writting and journalism classes have taught me that I'm either supposed to start with something that'll catch the readers attention, or open with a sentence summing up what I'm going to be talking about...but in reality I'm just yacking away about whatever pops into my head on the internet, I have no idea what I'm going to talk about, and I have no idea if I ever have any readers.

    How's that for an opening? Aw well, good enough.

    It's been a slow night. A slow day, actually. My day consisted of going to class, where I basically zoned out until it was time to leave. From there I went to Blockbuster to pick out some new DVDs, and ended up spending almost as much time there as I did in class. In case you haven't heard, DVD collecting is a bit of a hobby/obsession of mine, so it's not uncommon for me to spend an hour looking around a video store for something I need to have in my collection. A few years ago, a girl I was dating told me about this guy she knew who bought everything. He just bought every movie that came out that he saw, or might like. At the time, I had about 10 movies, all favorites, and thought the idea of having a huge DVD collection was stupid. I'm not really sure how I went from that to owning 250-something movies, but it probably had something to do with me having too much time and money on my hands and nothing else to do with it. About two years ago I thought I was about 10 DVDs away from having everything I wanted, but somehow I'm still going. But yea, long story short, I have a lot of movies.

    Speaking of movies, I'm half watching this one on TBS right now with one of the guys from Friends in it. I'm only half paying attention to it but the basic idea seems to be he had a one night stand with this woman, got her pregnant, and yadda yadda yadda, they live happily ever after. Somehow I have a feeling that's not how that situation would turn out in real life.

    I figured this entry would be another chapter in the story of how I feel and where I want to live, but I'm not really in the mood to go deep tonight, so I'll fill this with mainly pointless bullshit. I guess if I were a celebrity people would want to read about what I did all day and what music I've been listening to lately, but I'm not, so sorry if this one is a bit on the boring side. To be honest with you I'm not really sure about this whole "blogging" thing. If you check the dates on these enteries, you'll find that I pretty much only started doing this to kill time when I was new in PEI in 2005, then I lost interest once I made friends and found other things (drinking) to do. Lately I just write something when I have something on my mind and there's no one to listen to me talk about it since it's generally 3am at the time. But yea, there's something about putting your thoughts and feelings out there for anyone to see that's a bit uncomfortable. What if someone saw this that I didn't want to see it? What if that weird girl from PEI that I never hung out with but who seemed to think we were best friends stumbled accross my little blog here and read how I think she's weird and don't see how my hooking up with three of her friends makes us close? Feelings might be hurt, and God knows I wouldn't want to hurt the feelings of some psycho I've only met in passing who "misses" me eventhough I was never in her life to miss.

    Alright, that was probably a bit mean and uncalled for. True, but mean and uncalled for. Hmmmm, now that I say it, there's something about saying the word "mean" that makes me feel 10-years-old. Do adults refer to people as "mean"? I can't think of any other word to use. Maybe "rude", but then I just think of Stephanie Tanner's "how rude!". And on the subject of Full House, why isn't it on television? There's a lot of old shows floating around syndication and not many of them are capable of kicking the amount of ass that Full House kicked. Maybe I'll write a letter to CBC requesting they pick up Full House. They won't regret it, Bob Saget is ratings.

    Why are the Simpsons still on CBC anyway? I think I was about 10-years-old when they started showing them, which would make it somewhere around 14 years. Enough is enough. Maybe if they showed the new episodes once in awhile, but they've been running the same seasons over and over and over. How many times do I have to see the one where George Bush moves into the neighbourhood? The Simpsons had a good run, but I think it's time we made a clean break and just moved on. It's Full House's time to shine on CBC.

    Has anyone won anything other than a doughnut or coffee on Roll Up the Rim to Win yet? I've won a doughnut I didn't bother cashing in and five free coffees so far. That might sound impressive but I've been to Tim Hortons about 60 times. Is that a lot of coffee in three weeks?

    If Will Ferrerl made a movie that really stunk, would people admitt it stunk? Or is he at the point now where everything he does is assumed to be great even if it isn't? Like Jim Carey? Or, to use a musical example, Gwen Stefani? She's so heavily promoted it seems no one actually stops to listen to her music. The entertainment industry is so fake. It's all hype and promotion.

    Bed time.

    Rock n'roll
    JB

Appetizing Thoughts - Angie is a recently graduated graphics designer living in Moncton.
(Added: 7-May-2005 Hits: 384 Rating: 0 Votes: 0) Rate It

  • hairs
    i got my hairs cut and dyed... again. i'm addicted to new hair. and not-so-addicted to blogging anymore. sorry that i suck. here's a pic of my pretty new coif to appease you :P
  • seeing yellow
    thanks to martha i found the "make your own Simpsons avatar". check us out! notice how much of a nerd i am, and even made us matching outfits. gotta love it.
  • grade school
    totally stealing this from gill. also, seeing how moving is the main factor of my life, i added a "where did you live" section, for viewers at home to follow along. Kindergarten Where did you live: deseronto, ont What were you like: i was fiesty Who was your teacher: i don't remember her name, which is awful because she was my favoirte teacher. Who was your best friend: jonathan Who did you
  • daddy dearest
    last night was my dad's final visit of his canadian trip. he arrived in canada around the end of april, and crashed at my place on weekends throughout may. bright and early this morning he headed off to the west coast to visit his family and do his last bit of work in the country. then he'll return to germnay to my poor lonely mother. it was a teary goodbye. more for my dad and amanda, as
  • little sis
    mandy and i taking silly pics when i was visiting germany at christmas my sister moved to germany with my parents in november, when they all flew overseas. her plan was to volunteer at an orphanage in romania, then go to prauge for a TESL course. after romania, i guess she realized living in a foreign country without mamma and papa is a big step, one she isn't ready to take. so she nixed the

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