Wednesday, June 29, 2005

Sloppy seconds...

Mea culpa...

Upon further review of my post and the Google Earth site, I realized I was sloppy in contradicting myself about the program.

It IS NOT web-based. It IS a downloaded program that streams in the data from any part of the Internet (and Google's servers, I'd imagine) as you need it. Its interface DEFINITELY resembles a GIS program. ESRI SHOULD be concerned if Google can eventually allow users to download any type of data and integrate it for their personal use, especially if the Pro version is only $400 US versus thousands of dollars for a program like ArcGIS 9...

I'm just waitin' on the Mac version now.

Drive-by Blogging

Interesting tidbits about the day's events:

1) House of Commons passes C-38, the bill allowing for civil marriages between homosexual couples 158-133. You guys can link to the various bloggers on the blogroll to read reactions. I'm sure they've more interesting things to say than me. I'm frankly glad this thing finally passed. Now we just have to wait for the royal assent and any legal challenges by conservatives to try to strike it down...

2) (via Metafilter): I should've seen this coming and made this prediction before it comes out, but Google has now released Google Earth, consisting of worldwide satellite images and maps from Google Maps (Keyhole) combined with geographic information that can be gathered through a basic Google search. In essence, a first-crack at the world's most comprehensive GIS ever devised. Currently only available for Windows and not all data can be assimilated into your map, but it's only a matter of time. Imagine, a webGIS whose underlying engine/database is the Internet itself, coupled with maps and images that have pretty good resolution. If it could embed any type of information into any chosen geographic location and be able to perform spatial analysis, this will definitely make GIS-designers like ESRI take notice. Google is seriously trying to take over the computing industry, one function at a time...

3) (Also via Metafilter): Amazon.com is offering every book published by the Penguin Classics Library division. That's 1,082 titles ranging from Flatland by Edwin A. Abbott to Nana by Emile Zola all for the low, low price of $7989.99, a savings of $5324.75 (40%)!!!. And there's free shipping (as that extra little incentive)! If I had that kind of disposable income, I'd buy it for two reasons: to see all the trucks needed to bring it to my door (and the delivery people to move it all in) and just to fill my room with ALL these books...what, you thought I wanted to buy all these books to READ them? Preposterous!

Wednesday, June 22, 2005

Impossible?! Nay, says Britney Gallivan

Britney Gallivan has solved what was thought to be impossible- folding a piece of paper in half more than 8 times. Using mathematical techniques, she has not only solved what was the crux of the problem but has performed the supposed impossible task and folded a sheet in half 12 times, a world record! The explantion for it is HERE.

I tip my hat to thee, Britney.

Nature at its best and worst

Some pictures captured of the crazy storms that occurred in Alberta here.

Thursday, June 16, 2005

Tag or be tagged

I've been reading with great interest as the book-tagging meme goes around the blogosphere and seeing which pieces of writing have impacted various bloggers. I've since been tagged by Matt, so it's time to step up:

Number of books that I own:

Including my textbooks, I wouldn't be surprised if they number between 150-200 (if not more) without a straight count. I've also given many away since I no longer read them and I DEFINITELY have not read all the books I own as I continue to buy more...

Last book I bought:

Building Suburbia by Dolores Hayden. Having grown up in the suburbs and slowly making my way to a career in urban planning, I figured I should start reading more urban planning books. It gives a very interesting look at the history of the suburb and its various phases within American planning history and how the planning was given away carte blanche to the developers through their lobbyists. Very thorough but a rather bland ending, it gave me a good idea of where the suburb came from and where it needs to go.

Last book I read:

I just finished The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell. I've been meaning to read it for a while and I finally was able to borrow it from my friend Wesley. I really enjoyed it and am eager to see how I could apply his theories in urban planning strategies. As well, it seems mildly appropriate that I was reading this book while this meme was going about. Declan here makes an attempt to trace the origin, with some degree of success. Now, the question is, which blogger out there's the Connector?

5 books that mean a lot to me:

  • The Lord of the Rings by JRR Tolkien. No matter how many times I re-read these six books, I never tire of the adventures of the hobbits and their fellowship.
  • A Prayer for Owen Meany by John Irving. It's one of my favourite if not the favourite novels that I've ever read. There isn't a part of the book that I didn't enjoy or provoke contemplation. It also helped that we dissected in English class a year after Matt recommended it to me (I finished the book in 5 or 6 days, often staying up til 3 AM...and that was when I was still in high school and we had 8:05 AM starts...or something to that effect)
  • Animal Farm by George Orwell. I really liked 1984 and its complexity, but Animal Farm was clear and to the point about its message. And all in 112 pages.
  • A Time for Judas by Morley Callaghan. It's not a well-known book, but I read this in school and it was the first book to suggest a different interpretation of Jesus' story while remaining plausible. It definitely made me question my perspectives then.
  • A Short History of Canada by Desmond Morton. As its title implies, it gives a comprehensive but brief look into our nation's history. A lot of interesting events happened that most people never know about and this book is a delicious appetizer to anyone who may not be interested in the main course just yet. It's one of several books that's kept my interest in wanting to travel across Canada.
Tag, You're It!

Now, I have no idea who's still reading this blog, so I'm going to just have to tag those who still have active (or quasi-active) blogs in the hopes that they'll keep this meme going from this end: Chris (here's your chance to start blogging again!), Megan (good to have you back), Wesley, Angela, and Elaine...You're It!

Update- June 17, 2005 6:01 PM

It would seem that my friend Danna was so very interested in the book tag phenomenon that she just decided to right one up to restart her blog. Good on her!. Therefore, I gotta offically tag her...so Danna, you've been tagged!

Tuesday, June 14, 2005

Further proof that humanity can't get it's act together

Courtesy of tonight's Daily Show (I'll post the link if they become available):

1) an MSNBC piece on McDonald's healthy choice menu and the shift in the types of food offered is fine and all, but when one of the invited guest you bring onto the show to comment on it is an actor playing Ronald McDonald (with the title "Chief Happiness Officer"), that's just pathetic. Hard-hitting journalism on MSNBC, brought to you by the people who interview fictional corporate mascots as legitimate commentators...

2) There are commercials in China selling machines that offer to stretch a person's spine in order to gain a few inches in height (in the hopes, of I don't know, beating the US Dream Team in basketball?!). Yeah, I don't think those are new. I think we had a word for it....oh, right, THE RACK!

3) If you don't like the new and improved the "Rack 3000," there are surgical procedures in China where they basically saw off off your leg mid-calf and extend your legs with an iron rod and attach it to both ends of your legs with pins...Wow, it's like the 6 million dollar man...except for 20 bucks...

Seriously, I'm quitting this species.

Saturday, June 11, 2005

Stop...hurting...Canada...

Paul Wells posted this. Seriously. This is how you guys work? Can the people of Canada fire the whole lot of you up there on Parliament Hill and start fresh?

This is what I do...

Yeah, I'm up Fri night/Sat morning at 2 AM for no particular reason. I can't explain it either

But my friend Angela did point my way towards doing 100 days of...something. Ha! I can barely get myself in one spot to do an hour's worth of work.

But, she did direct me to OneWord, which was kind of fun. The true test is, how long will I go to that site before I lose interest?

Thursday, June 09, 2005

My bias keeps showing... (Part 1)

So, my beloved right-wing think tank the Fraser Institute put out a research paper accusing the CBC of being 'anti-American.' I'm a big fan of their work so I decided to see how they came up with this conclusion.

The first sentence of the executive summary reads:

There are many sources of anti-Americanism in Canada, from specific and conflicting interests over trade to symbolic issues such as health care. The former we call “rational” criticism; the latter, “emotional.”


Already, both types are considered anti-American? Is there any criticism that isn't then? But that's not the issue, right? Ok, let's read on. They discuss Northrop Frye and his 'garrison mentality' concept as a way to explain the Canadian myth as identity and how part of it's about being anti-American blah blah blah and how that's a hegemonic identity from the Laurentian region (i.e. Ontario and Quebec) and not representative of the rest of the country blah blah blah...anti-American Lite...blah blah blah...Oh, and we get to this wonderful sentence:

it is also why Easterners speak of “Western alienation,” although few westerners consider themselves alien or alienated. The use of the term, thus, is by intention deprecatory.

Is it just me, or isn't talk of 'western alienation' only coming from people like Stephen Harper and the CA/Reform/CPC or anyone who feels that Ottawa's not 'listening to them'? If they don't feel alienated, then where did the whole 'Alberta should build a firewall, separating them from the rest of the country' premise come from? But I digress, because there's no place for regionalism here, right? Moving onto the thesis statement:

We would like to determine whether, at the beginning of the twenty-first century, views critical of the United States reflect chiefly a rational criticism of America based on reasonable differences in interests with respect to policy questions or whether they are more a reflection of the emotional anxieties of the garrison mentality.

But according to them, both are anti-American anyways, so why categorize them differently? Ignore the contradiction, you say? Ok.

To gauge the anti-American sentiment in Canadian media, we examine one year’s coverage of the CBC’s flagship news program, The National.

Already, it's assumed that the Canadian media is anti-American by default and we're only analysing the level. Otherwise, shouldn't the question be, "Is there anti-American sentiment in Canadian media?" Anyways, two independent researchers looked through a year's (2002) worth and performed a qualitative analysis on the view of America in every news story.

They found that over 225 stories and 2283 statements, 49.1% were neutral, 34% were negative, 15.4% were positive and 1.6% were ambiguous. We'll ignore the fact that their percentages add up to 100.1%. I'm not that petty...

BUT the best part is that their results don't even relate to their thesis statement. At no point in their discussion of percentages did they differentiate between 'rational' and 'emotional' criticism. Both were viewed as 'negative' and hence anti-American. So they try to misdirect the reader and pretend to distinguish and categorize between genuine criticism and inflammatory ones when they had no intention in the first place. If you just read the newspiece, you'd think that they would put the 'rational' criticisms in the neutral categories...but no, they don't. But then, I guess I could've summed this whole piece in one word:

BULLSHIT.

Anyways, if you want to read some point-by-point critiques, read below...

My bias keeps showing... (Part 2)

So let's see how the CBC was "anti-American." Here's the first example:

As David Halton reported at the time, conservative American commentator Pat Buchanan said,

...One magazine this week talks about Canadian wimps spending too much on social programs and not enough on the military. The article castigates Canada’s absurd socialist politics and its neurotic anti-Americanism. (The National, 2002: November 22)

That one sector in the American media seemed to reciprocate Canadian anti-Americanism then became a source of Canadian news. The image of “Canadian wimps” squandering money on social programs instead of defending themselves was clearly designed to provoke Canadians to adopt a hostile attitude towards the United States.

My question is, if Pat Buchanan's remarks about us being wimps is the story, how is that anti-American. Wouldn't that make us more anti-Pat Buchanan than anything? I mean, how do we report what he said without reporting what he said? Here's their interpretation of Jean Chretien's remarks right after 9/11:

You know, you cannot exercise your powers to the point that, of humiliation for the others. And that is what the western world, not only the Americans, the western world has to realize, that the western world is getting too rich in relation to the poor world and necessarily, you know, we’re looked upon as being arrogant, self-satisfied, greedy, and with no limits. And the eleventh of September is an occasion for me to realize it even more. (The National, 2002: September 11)

Clearly these two instances are more an “emotional” anti-Americanism than a reasonable disagreement with US policy based upon the defence of intelligible Canadian national interests.

How does chastising all western developed nations become an anti-American statement? I'm confused. But as you read more and more, it's more or less the same thing. The CBC interviewed, for example, pollster Allan Gregg for a comment and whether you interpret that as anti-American or not is one issue, but the main one is even a quote from the CBC is considered a 'negative' take just becuase the interviewee gave their view (whatever it may be).

A lot of times, they accuse the CBC of not providing context, but they too do a poor job of doing the same. For example,

For Arsenault it was evidently more important to have access to health care...than it was to have timely but expensive care. There was no effort to undertake any meaningful cost-benefit or risk analysis. It was simply a given that Canadian health care delivery was preferable, even at the cost of Canadian lives.

The quote they gave of Arsenault made one mention of Canada, "US researchers say for every thousand heart attacks, five more lives are saved here than in Canada." That's it. I don't know how they interpreted Arsenault's intention as they did.

But they're strange logic finally comes out in this quote:

One person interviewed on CBC connected all the dots: “These war-mongering Americans are taking everything that they can and they’re just slapping us in the face with this 29% duty. We should not even sell our softwood lumber to those people” (The National, 2002: March 25).

These examples were coded as instances of “rational” anti-Americanism because they were direct responses to actual disagreements and conflicts in interests
rather than expressions of emotional or symbolic positions. Even so, the last quotation connecting tariff disputes with “war-mongering” could safely be placed in the “emotional” category.

So I was right. Any criticism, regardless of its validity, is anti-American. So, even 'rational' arguments are invalid and negative in their eyes. Interesting. And they call the CBC biased?

A few more and then we're done. First,

Ben Chin reported, To Afghanistan now, and what may be the deadliest attack on civilians since the war began. At least 40 people were killed and 120 were wounded when US war planes bombed a village in central Afghanistan. Some reports put the toll much higher. Afghan officials say villagers were celebrating a wedding when the bombs began to fly and that the attack lasted for two hours. (The National, 2002: July 1)

With this story, there was no attempt to indicate any context: the number of sorties flown by American warplanes, for example, nor what, if anything, caused the mistake.

Did I miss something? What context could be given to give a positive spin on that? Accidentally or not, US planes killed civilians. And even if they did report it as a sortie gone awry, would they have noted that in the 'neutral' column or would the mere reporting of the story be seen as anti-American?

Their beef against Rex Murphy is hilarious. Rex has this big editorial about the "Enron, etc." scandals. He says,

“The war on terror, which is with others, occurs at time of the greatest scandal and mischief, a wave of corporate greed and fraud of such excess and scope that it rocks America’s
self-confidence...No enemy has delivered a blow to American capitalism equal to the blow just delivered by some American capitalists...The New York skyline is one of the wonders of the world. It is awesome. The capacity and power for good or ill, that American commerce has built and maintains. These scandals, the Enrons and WorldComs and Inclones are an arrow to the heart of those who believe in that system for the heart of American self-confidence and, yes, American idealism.

Their response:

Instead of praising American capitalism for exposing fraud and thus strengthening market economics, Murphy saw only corruption and the ambivalent power of a “capacity and power for good or ill.” In context, only “ill” seemed to matter.

Wait...how do you praise American capitalism for exposing it? It did no such thing. A couple of employees got the ball rolling with Enron and regulators had to play catch-up. The system didn't work. THAT WAS THE POINT. Some people within these companies lied and cheated through the capitalist system (and hence, the people within it) to hide away millions of dollars. The government and the public did all the work. And yes, only the 'ill' mattered because it ruined HOW MANY PEOPLE'S LIVES? Did they experience something entirely different from the rest of us about these corruption cases?

Sigh. the only justification for reading that poorly researched piece was to post this. And even now, I'm not sure if it was worth it. Anyways, I don't know how many of you made it this far, but I'd like to see some comments.

Wednesday, June 08, 2005