I’ll be camping for the next little while. So the posting rate will stay the same.
Archive for Meta
xkcd – Dangers
12.January.2008 at 23:13 UTC · Filed under Intertube, Links, Meta, Web Comics
Died in a blogging accident. Because I am nothing if not a meme-whore.
Letter to the Honourable Jim Prentice, Minister.
9.December.2007 at 03:11 UTC · Filed under Canuckistan, Commentary, Culture Wars, IP, Law, Law & Politics, Legal Commentary, Meta, Personal Commentary, Politech, Political/Social Commentary, Politics, Tech Commentary
Subject: Canadian Copyright Bill AKA CDMCA
Dear Minister Prentice
It is believed that on Tuesday, the 11th of December 2007 you are expected to introduce new copyright legislation without public consultation. I would like to inform you of my sadness that you are letting a great opportunity to lead the Canadian people fall by the wayside. In my work as a scientific researcher I am intimately associated with the use and creation of copyrighted works and patented ideas so I consider myself to be both knowledgeable in the area and directly affected on a daily basis by any new law. The obfuscated process used to create our new copyright law is of great concern to me. It is also a disservice to your stature as a senior politician, to the people of the Calgary riding whom you represent, to Canadians at large, and to Canadian industry – cultural, technical, or otherwise. The anticipated contents of the bill lead me to believe that the benefits of international copyright cartels were considered to the exclusion of many Canadian copyright content generators and Canadian copyright users.
If, as the public suspects, you are intending to introduce, among other things, a Canadian version of the DMCA, you would do well to consider the fate of the original American DMCA: Bruce Lehman, it’s architect, has stated publicly that the results of that have not been those that the crafters of the legislation wished. In addition, 2 of the 4 major international music labels are beginning to abandon the DRM technologies that the DMCA was created to protect.
Does Canada really want to follow in failed footsteps or do we want to follow the lead as described in recent Canadian Supreme Court rulings that speaks to the necessity of balance in any copyright policy? Does Canada really want to create a law designed to aid local talent where this talent has explicitly and vociferously rejected such aid?
Prime Minister Harper in his recent throne speech included copyright reform as being one of the priorities of the Canadian government in the coming year but no public consultation has been carried out on digital technology – the area most likely to be addressed by new legislation – for more than 5 years.
Ordinary Canadians such as myself have many issues that we would like addressed in such legislation. I wonder if fair-use, time-shifting, device-shifting, personal and public archiving, free and open educational use, unhindered academic research, notice-and-notice safe harbour provisions, parody, satire, criticism and library access will be addressed with the care, fairness, and balance that they deserve.
You stated on the 6th of December that you would hold consultation and review of the law after it has passed. How can this be logical or sensible? Given the speed with which mature consideration of such complex issues is undertaken we cannot expect any revisions or changes to the law for many years. Canada and Canadians deserve forethought from their government – this new law puts that at risk.
I would therefore hope that you would respond to the recent outcry over this bill by referring it to a committee where its content and merits will be debated in an open and transparent process so as to benefit all Canadians.
Sincerely
Christopher Beck
Senior Bioinformatician
Genome Quebec and Montreal Heart Institute Pharmacogenomics Centre
CC: The Right Honourable Stephen Harper, Josee Verner, James Rajotte, Thierry St-Cyr
College entrance standards are way down.
17.November.2007 at 23:24 UTC · Filed under Amuse Me!, Education, Intertube, Meta
Teh environments needz your help!
16.October.2007 at 22:31 UTC · Filed under Meta, Wildlife and Conservation
Umm, apparently I was supposed to talk about this yesterday. I blame (irony alert!) a power outage.
Saving Energy
27.July.2007 at 23:42 UTC · Filed under Energy, Meta
Earlier I posted in a del.icio.us link that Blackle was now my new home page. Turns out that this would have made sense in 1995, but now that I am completely LCDelcicously displaying my stuff it is no longer relevant. nOnoscience has the details.
Back to igoogle then.
How can I remember something for next year when I have already forgotten what I did yesterday?
20.May.2007 at 04:48 UTC · Filed under Links, Media, Meta, Software
Chris Roberson’s Celestial Empire stories promise to amuse me – but they will not be available for some time and have no entry in Amazon’s catalogue so I can’t add them to my various wish lists. I keep a text file on my desktop to note down songs that I hear on galaxie or the odd internet radio station but I am not convinced that this is a generalizable solution – if I see a piece of fabric that I would like to tag as an appropriate colour for drapes, perhaps, or a trinket that would make someone a nice birthday present or a review of a wine I would like to try. I want an add-on for Firefox that interacts with a multimedia database in which I can store references and tag them. Thing is, I don’t want to tag this particular blog page of Chris Roberson. If I like the one book that is available (The Voyage of Night Shining White) I might add it to my list o’ feeds. What I want is to extract the author name and the book titles and add them to my list, along with a tentative date of Q1 2008 to revisit their availability. Certainly this post will be tagged and categorized but a blog, and a public one at that, is not the place for it.
How do you all externalize your failing memories?
This is being posted via the Firefox “Deepest Sender” add-on and as a primarily LJ-oriented product it wants me to tell you what I am listening to as I write this. Strangely enough, 2 Front Line Assembly songs: Victim of a Criminal and The Blade. I say strangely because my current song list is 156 songs long and on random shuffle. And I am not using an antiquated copy of Winamp whose concept of random was less than perfect. I am using Quodlibet on Ubuntu Feisty. It has 2 flaws: an inability to sort songs by the file creation/modification date and an obscure preference for Union of Knives – 11 songs of 156 that are played far more often than 7% of the time.
OK, it probably is 7%, but I have the whole *album* in the list and frankly albums contain much more weak music than strong. It’s the whole white-van-on-the-corner thing. Fine. Fine. I will remove everything except “Evil Has Never” and “I Decline”. Happy now? Sheesh.
Chatty today aren’t I?
Umm, where did my categories go?
30.January.2007 at 08:38 UTC · Filed under Meta
It seems that in my absence wordpress has seen fit to modify their service in a manner that removed a whack of categories from the list that I can choose from. Including, amusingly enough, the default. I must look into this.
W00t! My first comment spam here at wordpress. I feel like a grown up woman now.
15.July.2006 at 23:33 UTC · Filed under Meta
Sometime back in 2002 I linked to CrazyMacRumors [sp.]. I used the link text “Welcome Nude Readers” – probably because I got the link from GMSV and that was what they used and it was (a) apropos and (b) amusing. I imagine that it was the choice of words that resulted in that buried post being targeted. But, but, I just used the n-word again. Oh nos!
[update] – Huh, it turns out that I have recieved 4(four) comment spams since migrating but 3 were automagically detected and removed by Akismet. Take that spammers! *flexes*
[son of update] – Damn, that CMR site is funny. Check it out. No, seriously, check it out.

Publisher scrubs U.S. prices from Canadian magazine covers
15.December.2007 at 22:27 UTC · Filed under Canuckistan, Economics, Media, Meta, Personal Commentary, Popular Culture, Shopping
Publisher scrubs U.S. prices from Canadian magazine covers
I would like to see this supposed “request of Canadian wholesalers.” but I can certainly believe that they asked for it the cowardly dogs. In any case, until they are named and shamed, I am no longer buying Cosmopolitan, Seventeen, or The Oprah Magazine!
Thus is the power of my purchasing dollar maintained.
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