Just stumbled upon a couple of really neat apps/mashups/? new types of sites that are emerging.
Paper.li http://paper.li/ allows anyone to create a daily newspaper from a mashup of relevant twitter and RSS feeds
STICKAM http://www.stickam.com allows anyone to broadcast a live show from their web cam or camera
Wow
Sunday, July 31, 2011
Blog about Blogs
There are ever increasing awesome useful blogs. This is part of Web 2.0 that is changing society. Some blogs, like this one, are mostly personal, a diary of sorts that I don't mind if others read it, but it is mostly for me.
More and more blogs are becoming authoritative sources of information. Some are part marketing and part message. Here's some:
Michael Geist, CRC, Internet Law http://www.michaelgeist.ca
Naheed Nenshi, Mayor of Calgary http://blog.calgarymayor.ca
Cloud Computing Best Practices http://cloudbestpractices.net
Calgary City http://www.calgarycitynews.com
More and more blogs are becoming authoritative sources of information. Some are part marketing and part message. Here's some:
Michael Geist, CRC, Internet Law http://www.michaelgeist.ca
Naheed Nenshi, Mayor of Calgary http://blog.calgarymayor.ca
Cloud Computing Best Practices http://cloudbestpractices.net
Calgary City http://www.calgarycitynews.com
Friday, July 29, 2011
Web 3.0 and SaaS
The cloud model is opening up entire new ways of doing things. Web 1.0 was push/broadcast/repository. Web 1.5 was online retail and commerce. Web 2.0 was social media/crowdsourcing/co-authoring games and gaming. I think Web 3.0 is the cloud. It is an entirely new order-of-magnitude shift to a new model of information and tools.
So, I'm just going to list some interesting cloud-enabled tools for now and keep adding to the list:
General
Wikis - we use Confluence, so teams can collaborate on documents
Shared File Systems - DropBox, box.net, SugarSync, mobile.me, iCloud
Multi-function team collaboration - Huddle
Specific
Edistorm - online stickie notes http://www.edistorm.com/
Doodle - online polling for meetings
Zoomerang - online surveys
Other notable
Sharepoint - Microsoft's multi-function team sharing - not in the cloud, but sort of in a private cloud - I don't like it, but it is a "corporate standard".
iCloud - what will this be?
Citrix - is not SaaS is PaaS or IaaS but seems to be coming at cloud as a good competitor to VMware, keep watching
So, I'm just going to list some interesting cloud-enabled tools for now and keep adding to the list:
General
Wikis - we use Confluence, so teams can collaborate on documents
Shared File Systems - DropBox, box.net, SugarSync, mobile.me, iCloud
Multi-function team collaboration - Huddle
Specific
Edistorm - online stickie notes http://www.edistorm.com/
Doodle - online polling for meetings
Zoomerang - online surveys
Other notable
Sharepoint - Microsoft's multi-function team sharing - not in the cloud, but sort of in a private cloud - I don't like it, but it is a "corporate standard".
iCloud - what will this be?
Citrix - is not SaaS is PaaS or IaaS but seems to be coming at cloud as a good competitor to VMware, keep watching
Monday, May 2, 2011
Unbelievable Election Results
Shocked. Stunned. Scared.
Tonight the Conservative Party of Canada won a majority (166), New Democratic Party is official opposition (102), the Green Party got its first seat (1), and the Liberals (35) and Bloc Quebecois (4) are almost dead.
Starting backwards, good riddance BQ. They spun off of the Conservative Party about 15 years ago and only represented Quebec interests. They influenced Federal elections towards minority governments since they started. Thank you, Quebec voters. There will always be a separatist movement in Quebec, but it is getting smaller. I hope it becomes a fringe group soon and I think this is evidence. I hear soft signals about this from friends/colleagues in Quebec. Quebec needs Canada and Canada is stronger with Quebec.
Liberals are my natural/default party. I voted for them in this election. I don't always vote for them. I actually believe in the "mushy middle ground" in politics - that realizes that there is benefit - social and economic - in strong social programs, policy that shapes the future, a balance between economic development and environment stewardship, and a government that works for all people. But the Liberals have not had a strong leader in a while and they are getting weaker. Ignatieff and Dion before him did not have what it takes to inspire and lead in cutthroat politics.
Congrats to Elizabeth May, the leader of the Green Party. I saw her campaigning last summer (I think she is always campaigning - there wasn't even a hint of an election last summer :)) She just goes out an gets seen in communities all the time, building grassroots support, and saying really intelligent things. She is the most quick on her feet and articulate of the bunch!
Even more congrats to Jack Layton!!! They went from a slightly-better-than-fringe or always-third party to the official opposition. Wow. We've had provinces with NDP governments, but this is close to having a close-to-socialistic government in federal power. The people have voted. He can sell and inspire. I hope the NDP can put reigns on the Conservatives. Jack has balls.
OK, now I get a little queasy. I am just sick that the Conservatives under Stephen Harper got a majority. He is a very narrow-minded partisan. He thinks this is just a game to win, not a country to build. And I don't think that he realizes that there are real people involved who are not like him, or more likely, he doesn't care. Low taxes, free markets, lots of jails for people who can't fit in, small government, privatize as much as possible, more guns, low immigration, big defense, blame others. But, about 40% of the Canadian population voted for this. Scary. He just says things that will get him elected. I guess they are popular things.
I don't believe in the invisible hand of Adam Smith and the ultimate truths/black & white/narrow definition of success/and other Conservative Gods. I do believe in evolution.
I am very afraid. I believe that we can influence our future. We can choose between a market-free-for-all and an informed caring democracy. Stephen Harper doesn't care about this or you unless you fit his definition of a Canadian.
Tonight the Conservative Party of Canada won a majority (166), New Democratic Party is official opposition (102), the Green Party got its first seat (1), and the Liberals (35) and Bloc Quebecois (4) are almost dead.
Starting backwards, good riddance BQ. They spun off of the Conservative Party about 15 years ago and only represented Quebec interests. They influenced Federal elections towards minority governments since they started. Thank you, Quebec voters. There will always be a separatist movement in Quebec, but it is getting smaller. I hope it becomes a fringe group soon and I think this is evidence. I hear soft signals about this from friends/colleagues in Quebec. Quebec needs Canada and Canada is stronger with Quebec.
Liberals are my natural/default party. I voted for them in this election. I don't always vote for them. I actually believe in the "mushy middle ground" in politics - that realizes that there is benefit - social and economic - in strong social programs, policy that shapes the future, a balance between economic development and environment stewardship, and a government that works for all people. But the Liberals have not had a strong leader in a while and they are getting weaker. Ignatieff and Dion before him did not have what it takes to inspire and lead in cutthroat politics.
Congrats to Elizabeth May, the leader of the Green Party. I saw her campaigning last summer (I think she is always campaigning - there wasn't even a hint of an election last summer :)) She just goes out an gets seen in communities all the time, building grassroots support, and saying really intelligent things. She is the most quick on her feet and articulate of the bunch!
Even more congrats to Jack Layton!!! They went from a slightly-better-than-fringe or always-third party to the official opposition. Wow. We've had provinces with NDP governments, but this is close to having a close-to-socialistic government in federal power. The people have voted. He can sell and inspire. I hope the NDP can put reigns on the Conservatives. Jack has balls.
OK, now I get a little queasy. I am just sick that the Conservatives under Stephen Harper got a majority. He is a very narrow-minded partisan. He thinks this is just a game to win, not a country to build. And I don't think that he realizes that there are real people involved who are not like him, or more likely, he doesn't care. Low taxes, free markets, lots of jails for people who can't fit in, small government, privatize as much as possible, more guns, low immigration, big defense, blame others. But, about 40% of the Canadian population voted for this. Scary. He just says things that will get him elected. I guess they are popular things.
I don't believe in the invisible hand of Adam Smith and the ultimate truths/black & white/narrow definition of success/and other Conservative Gods. I do believe in evolution.
I am very afraid. I believe that we can influence our future. We can choose between a market-free-for-all and an informed caring democracy. Stephen Harper doesn't care about this or you unless you fit his definition of a Canadian.
Sunday, April 17, 2011
Europe 2011
Brett, Barry and I went to Europe for two weeks during Spring Break this year. It is Brett's last year in High School so we thought that we'd take one trip together because who knows when we will take another one.
We went to London for 4 days, Paris for 4 days, Venice for 3 days and Rome for 4 days. It was marathon touristing! We wanted to take in as much as we could.
Rome: Our legs burned we walked so much. Saw all the sites. Joined a tour for the Vatican and that was worth it. Best thing for me was the Sistine Chapel (no photos allowed). Good stories about the difference between Michaelangelo, Raphaeal and DaVinci all living at the same time. Wow! Also, the subway system in Rome is pretty minimal because any time they did to build more, they find more ruins.
Great weather, great company and and great trip!!!
Friday, December 24, 2010
Christmas Eve 2010

Had an interesting multi-cultural dinner tonight: Chinese (BBQ & Teriyaki pork), Italian (pasta), Thai (salad), Canadian (deer sausage). Brett has gone out to visit friends in the neighbourhood. Real tree, presents wrapped, very content. Off to Lethbridge after breakfast tomorrow. Brett will be going to the University of Lethbridge next year, studying English and Social Studies - he wants to be an English teacher. Merry Christmas!
Sunday, October 24, 2010
China and more

I certainly don't get around to posting much. It's now October and I haven't posted all summer and especially since our trip to China! So I better start there. My sister Dawn and her daughter Quinlan (6) and I traveled to China May 18 - June 4 to pick up Lindsay (2), Dawn's new daughter! What an awesome adventure! We started in Beijing and chilled for a couple of days to get over jet lag and get ready for the real fun. We went to the city of Shenzhen in Guangdog province. Dawn has a really good blog here. This is the wild handoff video. This is fun in the hotel eating noodles. And this is the best when we're back in the Beijing hotel and settled and some shots from their home in Winnipeg - watch this. The following is what I posted on Dawn's site. I'm copying it here as it is a list (I am a list-maker!) of a lot of the things we did.
Lindsay's Lucky
Often, when someone hears that you have adopted a child, they say, "Oh that child is lucky" because they are going to Canada etc. But Dawn usually responds, "No, I am the lucky one" to have two beautiful children. Well, I have to say that Quinlan and Lindsay are very very lucky to have a wonderful, intelligent, thoughtful, adventurous, and very caring mom, Dawn. I am very proud of her and thank her for her inspiration and the opportunity to share in this journey.
We all did a lot on this trip.
Of course, the absolute best thing is what a spark Lindsay is. She is happy, engaged, curious, sly, playful, cuddly, willful, left and right handed, strong, still smells and fells like a baby, and is now another great part of the Sutherland family.
Other things that we did:
- safari park in Guangzhou was a surprising highlight (50+ tigers, 10+ animated panda bears, 20+ giraffes, an elephant troupe, koalas, rhinoceros, etc.) Great drive-though savanah.
- bought a cello for Quinlan
- went to an amusement park in Beijing (slogan is "because Disneyland is too far")
- shopping at pearl market twice
- lots of travel on subway. Map here http://www.chinahighlights.com/image/city/beijing/beijing-subway-map-2010.jpg
- new shopping area south of Tian'amen square at Qianmen station, was both Champs-Élysées-like (in a China kind of way), and also had a maze of Chinese-style shopping behind the main street
- many parks, including: Beihai (ho-hi) near Forbidden City , Ditan (Temple of Earth) near Dali Lhama temple, Purple Bamboo Park near Beijing Zoo, Summer Palace is magnificent and this time we saw it in the Summer, took a Dragon boat across the lake and had many Popsicles. Beijing map here http://www.chinaodysseytours.com/maps/photo/beijing-map-overview.gif
- Dawn still didn't get to the Forbidden City. It is not stroller-friendly or kid-friendly.
- bought a Lion and a Dragon marionette
- saw an awesome acrobat show
- climbed the steep section of the Great Wall http://kinabaloo.com/juyongguan_great_wall.html
- had to use UV-umbrellas for the first few days in Beijing
- could see the mountains from our hotel room in Beijing on one day
- ate lots of noodles, pizza, bacon and egg breakfasts, dumplings, etc.
- drank quite a lot of beer since it is almost as cheap as water and tastes better than water kept slightly cool in the hotel room fridge.
- ordered ice from room-service once
- met lots of nice people
- spent 3 hours on the tarmak leaving Beijing for Vancouver as they had to replace a part on the plane
- smiled and laughed a lot
- thought about how lucky we are

Another nice thing is that in September mom visited Dawn for 2 weeks in Winnipeg and then visited us in Calgary. Mom and I took a road trip to Jasper and it was beautiful weather and very nice to spend some time together. Mom will be 78 this year and lives in Toronto. We see each other probably twice a year. She's doing fine and has Glen and Jill near her. But it's a bit hard not to be closer, so it was really nice just to live together for 2 weeks. She loved Jasper.
Finally, for this post, I am turning 50 next week! Yikes! And Brett's football team went undefeated this year and will be in the playoffs beginning next week. And Barry, Brett and I are going to Europe (London, Paris, Munich, Venice, Rome) for 2 weeks in March. Well, you'll have to wait for the next post. In the meantime, here's a photo from Brett's 16th birthday at the Calgary Tower.

Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)