Training my children to aspire to industrial park design.
Home Awake
Being the only one in the house not sick or three, I am the only one awake this afternoon. I find myself listening to Acts of Volition Radio show #6, watching the sunny melty day outside moving on, wondering whether it would be so wrong downloading Counterstrike for moments like this, surrounded by the snoring, communicating only with headphones and screen.
[Four gerunds and a gerundive in one sentence…wow.]
Call Centres At Risk
With all the other news last week, one that may affect the Maritimes as much as the US ban on beef imports is the proposed effective ban on US firms using call centres located in other countries. In the heady 90’s many politicians in the East lunched out on the concept that call centres were IT jobs…something akin to pumping gas being part of either the oil or auto parts industry sector.
Still, a job is a job and export dolalrs are better than local ones if you want economic growth. Ruk had a great thread about the issues surrounding these employers a few weeks ago. Here is a list of the Nova Scotian call centres. How many depend on the profit margin from US work to stay open?
Martello Towers
Martello towers guard the mouth of the Rideau. There are actually three in the picture, the third hidden by the trees to the left. It stands out in the mist better here. Built in the 1840s to protect the then high-tech canal technology of the Rideau accessed between the nearest two towers, the theory was similar to Halifax Harbour’s defences – a killing zone of miles deterring any thought of attack. One gun in the red roofed tower to the left had a range of 7 miles. Greater detail and a harbour map can be found here.
Pigeons
Oh Please, Oh Pleeeeeese…
How is this not the plea of someone driven to be a backroom boy on his own terms? And is being an A-list blogger like being the greatest tidly-winker in Manitoba?
Not Hot Law
Having a boo at the Jan/Feb issue of Canadian Bar Association’s magazine National it was very interesting to read at page 40 the list of areas of law considered “not hot”, not the “areas where finding work is currently fruitful”. Number one? Technology. The rest of the duds:
- Securities
- Mergers and Acquisitions
- Corporate/Commercial
- Public Sector
Looks like the 90’s are now truly over. Good thing I finished that LLM in IT back in ’02.
Less Ice, More Water
The St. Lawrence from the Thousand Islands Bridge
In the good news section, winter is over because I could see water in the St. Lawrence. Remember, you read it on a blog so it must be true.
Futurist Nut Bars
So why is Tod Maffin so smart? I was driving along on Saturday afternoon not really listening to DNTO and – WHAMMO – Sook Yin Lee says Tod’s going to tell us that blogs are dead already. Here is the promo for the piece:
And Tod Maffin dives into the world of blogging. Like everything on the web, what began as a grassroots movement it’s suddenly become corporate. Is this the end for web diaries as we know it?
Isn’t there a rule that anyone who calls himself a futurist isn’t? Or at least goes somewhat nuts. But then today there is Dave3, also a smartie pants, saying, to get the news, he is going to give up reading everything but blogs. [Maybe he’s on an all rice crispy diet.]
I am confused. In the days before the future, when I was a kid, the characteristics of the future where unlike today – food would be in tubes, we’d use personal jet packs and clothes would be all silvery. I sure as hell didn’t expect that I would have to rely on self-appointed wackos with bandwidth for the news any more than I thought 13 factories would supply all the meat for the vast majority of prople in the USA [a frightful fact I heard on talk radio last night] or that most food in the store would rely on killer transfats. It is starting to look like eating real food and relying on good new sources are the kinds of things that will make you an outcast in the new next future.
I tire of this. Why don’t futurists tell stories like
around 2012 people will get sick and tired of self-appointed gurus consulting to government on untendered contracts [supported by 25% finder fees] advising upon which leaders and stakeholders needed input…and will kick the bums out.
Though its unlikely as 98% of cheques to futurists are sign by the bums, that’s a future I’d like to see. Then, again, now that I think of it…maybe it’s happening now in Ottawa in 2004. The wheels may be coming off of one guy’s particular future as we watch right now.