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Net Neutrality Article – Bandwidth Hogs

Read here.

Here’s an interesting note about internet traffic and what is the leading cause of the Internet Service Providers (ISPs) buckling down and putting speed limits on us. I always assumed the majority of the bandwidth was being used by those vermin out there that downloaded TV shows through Torrents all day long to the point where they have more TV shows than they actually have time to watch.

But no, it turns out that it’s the people who watch YouTube videos all day long that suck up the bandwidth. Boy, am I glad that I’m not one of those fools.

Here’s another message written by Michael Geist who is a professor at University of Ottawa and is the guy to go to for this stuff.  Read here for some surprising talk about how Peer-to-Peer (P2P) applications are NOT the bandwidth hogs we all thought they were.

The war is on.

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Gatineau Homes in Danger

Read here.

I am feeling horrible for these home-owners out in Gatineau.  Turns out that the amount of snow this year has eroded part of this hill in behind their places to the point where they will need to evacuate the area as it is a public risk.

However, these houses they own are around the $250K mark and so far the Province has coughed up $100,000 and the city of Gatineau is offering $70,000 with the condition that the home-owners never come back for more.

That’s still $80,000 left to cover if they haven’t already paid off that part of the mortgage.  I would hate to be in their situation and I hope that somehow they get reimbursed the full value of their houses.

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Goodby

I have a question concerning the changing of the English language.

I recently read Isaac Asimov’s I, Robot and noticed that they wrote the word goodbye as good-by.

Now, I thought that this was an interesting way of writing it but thought it was a one time deal but I recently started reading The Catcher in the Rye and noticed they used the same spelling.

I was originally going to send this question to Nanny to ask her about it considering she wrote for the newspaper years ago and has most likely read a few million books in her time so perhaps she can answer why there was a change from good-by to goodbye?

There are other examples (I just can’t think of any right now) where I notice the English language has changed.  Is it out of laziness?  Or is there a stronger reasoning for changing the spelling of the word?

Anyone know?

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New Media Center (Xbox)

With the coming of the Spring and my theory on power fluctuations, my Xbox bit the big one.  At first, I couldn’t be bothered because I was studying for a final exam.  The TV didn’t get much use for those couple of weeks as Mike moved his ass downstairs to watch his episodes of Alias and any time I wanted to watch an episode of something, it would hiccup along the network and I could never really watch it in peace (that is another problem I should investigate in the future).

I got fed up from this on Sunday afternoon and decided to buy another Xbox.  Luck had it that I found one on usedottawa.com for $60.  I was conversing with this gentleman throughout the day yesterday to arrange for pickup.  I had arranged to pick it up at the University but then I started wondering if I would be scammed.  How was I supposed to know if this thing would work?  It’s not like there was a television around to plug it into.  All I had was this person’s email address.  In the end I decided to get his license plate number if I entered a worst case scenario.

The transaction went smoothly, I felt like a drug dealer in some back parking lot exchanging money for goods and I was off on the bus.  I couldn’t get the thought of holding an Xbox frame with peanuts inside for parts so I ended up skipping out on the gym to rush home and plug the thing in.

The moment of truth came and went and I had a sigh of relief.  The thing worked!

Eric was gracious enough to come over and help me modify it so I could install the Xbox Media Center onto it.  Years ago when I first modified the Xbox I chose the hardware type mod-chip but I can’t even remember why I did opt for that route.  The thing took me all weekend to install and was a pain in the ass.  I believe I had spoken to Matt and Duncan about modding the Xbox and they both had the chip so maybe that’s what convinced me to do so.

But a few months ago Eric had been doing some research on ‘soft-modding’ the Xbox which involved modifying it without any mod chip installation.  It dealt with overwriting the operating system with Linux.  I was skeptical but he wasn’t and lo and behold, he had a lot less trouble with his installation.  I opted for this one last night and as I packed up Philippe in the back seat and headed over to my place, anticipation grew.  In the span of ten minutes I had a modified Xbox back in the house.

Having a media center hooked up to the television is an amazing thing.  I wouldn’t go without it ever again.  In fact, 99% of my television usage is with the media center.  I could easily go without having basic cable with all the other TV that I watch.  If you don’t have a media center and want a demonstration, drop on by!

Anyhow, a happy camper I am now.  Now I can start studying for my Great Philosophers final exam.  This morning I was reading some Nietzsche whom I’ve heard about over the years but never been introduced to.  He is…interesting?  I don’t know what to make of him yet as he deconstructs all of the readings we have done so far.  I have realized now that philosophy is a point of view…you either agree or disagree with a philosophers views and it’s up to you to decide which you believe.

On another note, 80% final exam on Quantitative.  Awww yeah.

On another note, the Smashing Pumpkins have finished their world tour supporting their Zeitgeit album.  It’s been almost a year since they’ve hit the road and now they’ll be returning to studio and there are plans for them to do album based touring…that would be interesting.

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Trips

Brockville Bound

Instead of sleeping in on Saturday morning, I hit the ground running. Awake at 7:30, I called up the crew and we got ready to hit up the Lansdowne Park garage sale!

After some logistics to work through, we ended up over at Rob and Janice’s place to pile into their van to head out to the garage sale. After a pickup of Vero and Carrie, as well as stop-offs at Tim Horton’s and McDonald’s, we finally ended up at the garage sale around 10AM which was about an hour later than expected. Trish had already been there scoping out the goods and found an ancient book which dealt with how to have fun times at parties. It looked quite interesting.

My main goal of the day was to scope out vinyl records. Literally five minutes into the sale, I noticed a guy paying for an LP. I veered into this booth and saw a box of vinyl records on the floor. The woman said she would make me a deal if I bought the entire box. I had literally just stumbled upon it and noticed an Alice Cooper and Chicago record amongst 30+ records and a slew of singles. I asked her how much and she started counting all the records in there. She said $18, I said $15 and I became an owner of 30+ records for $15. I hadn’t even properly looked at them until the following day. I got doubles of an Alice Cooper album, Chicago, The Guess Who, a Transformers record (what the heck?), ABBA, Bee Gees, Best of Cat Stevens, Best of Simon and Garfunkel and a whole bunch of others I can’t remember right now. I must admit I feel that I scored big with the deal.

With my box of vinyl in hand after five minutes into the sale, I walked up to another booth which was solely selling vinyl records and found Mike and Vero there. Mike had already found a bunch that he was going to buy at a buck a piece. I was in vinyl heaven. I put my box down and Frank The Record Man (the gentleman who owned the booth) asked if he could take a look through it. Not a problem! In the end, he actually pulled out a single by a band called Eric’s Trip and asked if I could make a deal and I really was in a rush so I said if I had time I would come back later. Being the avid collector I was tipped off that this may be some rare vinyl item and I should do some research on the Internet before selling it off. I didn’t bother buying any vinyl from this gentleman as I figured I should look at the entire garage sale before settling on some other items. I had already spent $20 (I found some CDs at another booth when I came in – Best of Elton John, Forrest Gump soundtrack and a Verve Pipe album) and there was plenty of territory to cover. Rob had already bought a toy chest for $10 and everyone was in good shopping spirits considering we had literally been in the place for ten minutes and it was paying off in spades.

I rounded the corner into another section and saw Mike who has a comic book subscription business that I subscribe to. I chatted with him for awhile and found out that to rent a booth for the weekend it costs $100 and he didn’t even know if he would make that back but was hopeful. He was there with a few comic books to sell as well as trying to get a few more subscribers to his subscription service. I had met Mike last year at a comic convention at Lansdowne Park and decided to sign up then. I figured I still had a lot of ground to cover so I said goodbye and headed on out. At this point I had lost track of everyone but found Carrie looking at a Hanson CD (which happened to reappear at every other booth in the place…clearly people can’t get rid of this album!) and then I stumbled upon the mother lode of booths. Here was a guy which a bunch of comic books for sale.

I noticed that he was selling them at a buck a piece and thought it wouldn’t hurt to peruse his wares. It paid off in spades, diamonds, clubs and the whole kit and caboodle! I found a bunch of Vertigo and Wildstorm comics in mint condition. I ended up picking up most of the Wildcats V3.0 series that I was missing from years ago. I was quite excited as I made my way through the boxes on the table as he had some fairly new stuff selling at a $1 a piece. I chatted with him for awhile and it turns out that he simply buys them and then buys the trade paperback and when he gets to have too many, he just sells them off. He also is a writer in here in Ottawa and spends most of his time either reading/reviewing books or writing. He also passed me a flyer for an upcoming book sale he has that he said was quite popular in the city and usually has a lineup of people in the morning.

I kept looking through the boxes as they weren’t in any particular order and I didn’t want to pass up anything good. I was definitely spending a lot of time there and people kept showing up and showing off the goods…Carrie found a Twister board game for a buck, Vero found a bunch of buttons that she’ll create something with, Rob found a bun warmer (!!!)…I must have been at this booth for a good hour. I would have to say the greatest find of the day was when I stumbled upon the box with pretty well the entire Fables series in it. I couldn’t believe it. It took me awhile to fish out all the issues I needed but it paid off well. I walked out of there with pretty well the entire series. I believe I may be missing about 14 issues now. I was very happy with my purchases at the garage sale. I didn’t even get to see the rest of the garage sale…I probably covered 1/4 of the area but I didn’t care. Everyone was ready to hit the road and I had spent enough money as it was.

We loaded up the van with all our purchases and hit the road to Bayshore to pick up Duncan and then we headed to Brockville for Joe and Danielle’s housewarming party. It was a beautiful hot day, the tunes were going strong (except for Carrie’s craptacular purchase of an old C+C Music Factory album) and we made it to Brockville in decent time. Sure, we were later arriving than we said but the garage sale was better than we had expected it to be.

We dropped into Wal-Mart to scope out potential house warming gifts and found a great bench for their backyard. Little assembly required…that’s always the key to a good gift! We then arrived at their house around 2PM while passing by some…interesting women sunbathing out in their front lawn. Someone thought one of them was pregnant while Rob thought they had just drank a few too many beer along their lifeline.

There were already a group of people at Joe’s pad and we a van load of friends arriving from Ottawa, the party went into high gear. They brought out some excellent grub and we had a few beer and enjoyed the sun. Duncan and I assembled the bench and tried it out and it didn’t fall apart. Clearly we did something right!

The afternoon waned away and it was so beautiful out that we had a hard time leaving. But alas, the time came that we needed to head back into town to see Vero’s final showing of Lavaléeville. I managed to snag an amazing bowl of chili before we left. I would have to say that Joe makes the best chili around. It has just the right amount of spice in it.

Thanks to Joe and Danielle for putting on a most amazing housewarming party. I’m sure they both had a great time as another batch of people showed up as soon as we were leaving. I’m hoping the party went to the wee hours of the night!

On our way back, a few of us played a hand of euchre in the van and hilarity ensued for the majority of the trip. However, we hit a snag when the van was having engine problems and it looked like it wasn’t shifting into a higher gear. Uh oh. I managed to get a hold of Trish to let her know that she should pick up her own tickets for the play (as we were originally going to pick them all up first and distribute them). We did manage to make it to the play in time but with only a few minutes to spare. I’m not sure what is wrong with the van and it didn’t fix itself after sitting in the parking lot for a few hours.

There were thirteen of us there to see the play and we all managed to find seats relatively close to one another. Phil had showed up with his father who was from Kapuskasing so we chatted a bit about that. I was right next to exit stage left but it was fine as it’s such a small production that they actually have the seats up on the stage so we were very close.

I was really worried about Vero and how she would do because she had fallen ill a few days before and she actually lost her voice Saturday morning! I felt awful about it and I didn’t really have any words of comfort to offer in this particular case. I can only imagine how one must feel when they lose their voice and they are in a play.

In the end, it turned out alright. When she spoke normally to us, it was a whisper, but when she was on stage, she managed to transcend the barrier and we could all hear her fine. She needed some backup help on the singing parts but so be it.

It was a great ending to three weeks of the play being in production. They play has been getting rave reviews and there are rumours that La Nouvelle Scene was thinking of having them come back sometime. I guess that is considered ‘a big deal’ when a theatre house wants the play to expand.

Considering the play was in French, I didn’t know if some guests would enjoy it but they said that even if they couldn’t understand it, the characters were very animated and it didn’t make for a boring play to watch (even though they couldn’t understand a word). This reminds me of any foreign language music. “I can’t understand a word, but it sure rocks!”

We congratulated Vero after the play, headed back home and grabbed the car to come back into town to go to the after-party. Mike, Duncan and I hit up the after-party which was a good time. They had a campfire in the backyard which was a welcome addition and the rest of the night widdled away until Vero, Vero and I headed home around 4AM.

Clearly, our Saturday was packed with activities to do but it was definitely worth it. On Sunday I awoke and puttered around a bit at Vero’s and when I went home I started washing the walls in part of the spring cleanup activity which will probably take me the next month to accomplish with another final exam coming up as well as a few other trips planned in the month of May. Question for all those who have spring cleaned in the past: I was trying to get out some scuff marks on the wall. The water and vinegar didn’t really work out. Mike then went to the store and they said Mr. Clean should be able to help and not take the paint off the wall. It didn’t really work out. Is my final resort to paint over the affected sections? If I paint over the section, will the newly painted area dry well and blend or will it look like a patch of new paint? Mike and I really don’t know so we’re hoping that it will simply blend in as long as we lightly roll it in and not lather a big glob over the scuff mark with a paint brush. Any advice at all would help!

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New York – Color with B&W

New York – Color with B&W, originally uploaded by palm0014.

I was playing around with Photoshop tonight to implement the idea of making some photos from New York into Black and White shots. Krista thought it would be cool if we could keep the cabs yellow. I surfed the Net and found out how to do it in 10 minutes.

I think it came out pretty cool. I am going to print out a few others in black and white and hang them on the wall.

***update***Well the project came out to be pretty slick looking.  I ended up putting four pictures into a frame which costs me $15 and the prints cost me $3.  A nice looking picture for under $20 is what the Doctor ordered.  I think I will play around with other Photoshop techniques in the future and I recommend you do too!

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Reviews

Review: I, Robot

tzun340l.jpgI love Isaac Asimov.  Eric got me hooked on this writings.  I enjoy the flow and the subject matter he portrays in his science fiction writings.  I ended up reading I, Robot which explored the creation of robots in our society and what the outcomes of that would be for us.  It was a collection of short stories which had some characters overlapping into others.

Essentially, the novel is based on scenarios that involve the Three Laws of Robotics which are:

  1. A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
  2. A robot must obey orders given to it by human beings, except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
  3. A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.

The short stories deal with the consequences of these laws in how they can be interpreted by a robot.  They were very interesting reads as no one really thinks about all the different interpretations or scenarios that robots can be put into.

If you’re a science fiction buff, this is a great read.  You can even see a lot of the material talked about in this novel which has trickled down into our modern thinking of robots in general.  Two robotic appendages up.

iplaying: Where The River Goes – Stone Temple Pilots (Core)

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Reviews

Review: Run of The Town

runotthetown200.gifI finished up Run of the Town (Terrence West) which was a collection of short stories which took place in Hearst, Ontario.  Fiction but based on non-fiction elements…stories of POW Camps and construction of hockey arenas and use of real names made this an entertaining read considering I am from the North also.  The story takes place through the 50s – Present time and focuses mainly on a child named R.J. Martin and the book progresses through pinpoints of his life.

I found the book entertaining to read and I marveled at some of the story locations as I felt like I knew what they were talking about.  For example, they have a part where they talk about Kapuskasing and driving by the airport at night with the beacon of white light turning every so often.  I’m sure if I knew more of Hearst I would enjoy the book even more as he makes constant references to landmarks and influential people in town.

But this book is great for those not from the North either.  It is a snapshot of time…stories of a child who grows up in a small town and finds things to do.  He grows up and moves out of town to get some education.  He returns to town only to realize that he is destined for something else.  And in a very thought provoking final story, he talks about working in the government and going on a road trip with old buddies from back home and realizing that while there are so many differences between them now, there’s still something that has created a solid foundation; growing up together in a small town.  I really reflected on my own life after reading this final chapter as it reflected much of my own life up until this point.

I really enjoyed the characters and the nostalgic feeling of the book even though it took part in a different time period than I.  But it’s all the same in the end…while they sang church hymns in the backseat of the car because of a lack of radio, I sang along to Dire Straits knowing only the word “Microwave Oven” on the album.

Highly recommended reading.  Makes for a light entertaining read that you can pick up whenever you wish as they are short stories.

iplaying: Crackerman – Stone Temple Pilots (Core)

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Rant

Capitalism at Its Best?

Here’s my rant du jour.  Let’s talk about the online community and local shops.  Clearly there is a vast difference in pricing available online vs. buying from a local shop.  Local shops have quite the overhead to think about (building costs, etc.) whereas an online business can get by with just having room for all their storage and perhaps some staff members (or a lot of them if you are Amazon).

While I try to buy stuff at the local shops, I can’t bring myself to doing it in some cases.  If an items is a few bucks more, no worries.  But when you see a vast increase on the price, you have to wonder how you can justify spending it.

Let’s talk about comic books for a moment.  I was taking a look at some back issues of X-Men in the store yesterday and I was finding prices ranging from $3-$5.  Now, I (like every other collector) would love to sell my comics at prices like these but in reality, with Ebay, it just can’t happen usually.  I managed to snag a big lot of X-Men comics back near Christmas which came out to around $1 an issue.  So really, what would entice me to spend upwards of $2-$4 extra on a comic book?  I understand the concept of supporting a local business but I’m wondering if there is something they can change in their operations to match what online competitors can offer.

In the end, I think retail will be vastly changing in the future (if it hasn’t already).  I know that if I lived up North still, I wouldn’t even bother with big trips down South.  I would just order everything on-line and take advantage of any free shipping deals I could find.

So unfortunately, while I would like to support the local community, I realize that there is a limit to my generosity and paying upwards of 30% extra for an item is nowhere near my limit.

How do others feel about this?  I think it partly comes down to fiscal ability (how much money do you actually have to spend?) vs. community support (would you rather see a local shop rather than a giant conglomerate come into town?) but at what point do you feel that you can’t justify NOT going to the big name retailers or online to purchase things?

iplaying: Burning Wheels – The Trews – No Time For Later

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Save Me The Money!

I may actually look into some of these amazing savings tips (buying a quarter of a cow!  Nice!).  It was a decent article on extreme ways of saving money.  Article here.

On the note of the Freecycle program within the article, you can take a look at the Ottawa chapter of it here:
http://ca.groups.yahoo.com/group/OttawaON-Freecycle/