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Geek Drift
Four years ago, Facebook was a site with simple and useful features. Today, Facebook is bloated with tons of applications, a complex user interface and simply strange features (even I don’t know…
Posted on July 21, 2010
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I want to take this opportunity to comment on a technical statistical issue which has become the subject of media discussion. This relates to the question of whether a voluntary survey can become a substitute for a mandatory census. It can not.
Posted on July 21, 2010
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Music That Moves You - Literally - in Fort St John
Here’s a cool event from “northern BC’s music capital” (not sure when they got that designation, but events like this certainly help make the case). Essentially, in order to encourage people to try out bus routes they offer free transit that includes local musicians playing on the bus. Would love to see that here in Prince George. Via fortstjohn.ca:
Music that Moves You”. On June 16, July 21, and August 18, 2010, from 7:00 - 9:00 pm, you can hop on a transit bus and enjoy live music as the bus travels around the city. This is also a great way to try out the transit system! Each event will feature a different bus route - so you can try out all three throughout the summer. And the best part - the event is free! Support local musicians and try out transit for no cost.
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For each event, you can either start at the Cultural Centre or you can join the bus at any stop along the chosen route. And of course, you can get off at any stop you like.
Posted on July 20, 2010 with 1 note
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Jean-Louis Gassée’s Customer Service Kung-Fu
Jean-Louis Gassée on customer service:
A customer complaint dialogue is structured around a two-position toggle: a) it’s terrible, b) it’s nothing. The first one to grab a position forces the…
Posted on July 19, 2010
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Posted on July 19, 2010
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The Personal Relationships of Radio

I went to going-away shindig for a coworker earlier this week. That’s not altogether unusual. What is unusual is the number of people outside of my workplace who are aware of and care about the fact that this going-away is happening. You see, it was for none other than Daybreak North host Chris Walker who, after three years manning the microphone here in in PG, is heading off to a news position in Kelowna. The response in the form of emails and such from people saying they’ll miss him and wishing good luck has reminded me of the unusual nature of my current job, which is that people outside of my workplace have daily access to what I’m doing.
In most jobs, your interactions are limited to those in your workplace, be they co-workers or customers. You certainly have an effect on the world beyond your office walls, but that doesn’t necessarily mean the rest of the world is aware of it, and it definitely doesn’t mean they feel like they’re on a first-name basis with you. It’s different in radio.
I’m saying this as someone who until recently interacted with radio as an audience member, and who still feels more of an ‘outsider’ than an ‘insider’ when it comes to the experience of being on-the-air. When you work in radio, your job is part of hundreds of people’s daily routines. When I’m at the CBC researching stories and pre-interviewing guests, I’m helping put together the program that people throughout northern BC use to find out what’s going on both around the world and around the corner. And when you listen to a local show, you feel a lot more connected to it. It’s in your community, on-the-air guests are literally your neighbours. I have family in Dawson Creek and friends in Smithers who hear the show and know who “Chris Walker” and “Robert Doane” are, even if they’ve never met them.
I’m impressed with these people who go on the air for two and half hours a day, five days a week, in every community north of Williams Lake up to the Yukon border. In so doing, you’re inviting anyone with an radio dial or an internet connection to hear you, while you work, and form on opinion on how you’re performing. I’m still getting used to the experience of people I know saying “I heard you on the radio the other day”, and all I do is read the weather and community notes once in a while. I’m even more surprised when I speak to my grandma and she mentions hearing me, because she lives a day’s drive away. And, quite frankly, when I go on the air I’m not thinking “this is going out across the province, and people are listening.” I did at first, and it threw me off too much. But over the last little while, I’ve taken myself so far out of it that I completely forget I’m going on the air. I’m just doing my job.
At some point, I’ll have to reconcile the two. I haven’t been at it long enough for people I’ve never met to recognize my name when I meet them somewhere, but I suppose it could happen eventually. I know that my first days of work at the CBC were some of the most surreal I’ve had simply because I was meeting people I sort of already knew— or at least their voices and their names. Even more surreal was the experience of speaking to the hosts in Prince Rupert because they are still bodiless voices, but they’re addressing you, directly, through headphones or the telephone— it felt like one of those Twilight Zone-style deals where the TV starts talking to you. Now it’s becoming surreal in the other sense— I’m addressing people who I’m not sure are there. I know people are listening, but I never know exactly who they or what they’ll think of how I do it. And over time, they’ll start to form an opinion of me, and maybe even feel like they know me.
I don’t know what I think about that, really, but I do know one thing: there’s something very unique about the relationships people have with their favourite radio shows, one that isn’t replicated in their relationships with celebrities, or tv, or even blogs. I think it’s the voice aspect of it— in print, whether online or off, there’s a degree of separation, editing, and a time-lapse. On TV, it’s either fictional characters or celebrities so famous or so far removed that they may as well be fictional. And audio is the one thing you can have wake you up and continue to be engaged with while eating breakfast, making lunch, and driving to work. That builds the relationship over time. Plus there’s the voice coming live, directly across the air into your house or headphones or car. And sometimes it’s talking to someone else, but often enough it’s talking directly to you, telling you the weather or asking you for your song requests. And that builds, too.That is why people who have never met Chris Walker care that he is leaving. He’s built up this relationship with people over the last few years that feels more direct than most one-to-many relationships out there. And even though I just have a small part in this, and have only had any role to play in it for less than half a year it’s a good reminder: this is one cool job.
Posted on July 18, 2010 with 1 note
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Posted on July 17, 2010
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Posted on July 17, 2010 with 1 note
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A Rare Sighting of the 1up Mushroom in Northern BC

they don’t usually grow past the lower part of Washington State, I understand
Posted on July 16, 2010
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“Here is a Canadian lottery ticket called Moustache Match. Apparently the goal is to get 3 similar mustaches in a row. As a kid, my pa used to tell me that the lottery was a “stupid people tax”. If that’s true, I imagine Moustache Match is very popular among lottery players.
Via the great DocPop.”
Posted on July 16, 2010
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It’s Thinking?
Posted on July 15, 2010
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Somebody’s 60….
Posted on July 15, 2010
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Ferrets on the Radio

In my bio, it says that I have “way too many pets.” Of course, I enjoy having those pets and it’s worth mentioning once in a while that the reason we have so many is both myself and my partner are suckers the sort of people that stray animals sort of come to and we have the inability to turn them away. Case in point: we got two of our cats and our dog while living in China and couldn’t bear to leave them to fend for themselves, and our third cat was left in our current home by its previous owners (declawed). The rest of our pets? Ferrets. A large portion of which we have because my better half runs a ferret rescue.
Anyways, it’s been going for about a year now and today there was an interview about ferrets and the rescue on one of the few local radio stations I’m not employed at (haha! just kidding– sort of). It’s a show called Kathi’s Creature Corner on CFIS, a good, community-run station.
So, if you’re curious about ferrets you can have a listen to the interview here, and of course visit the rescue’s blog at blog.ferretsnorth.org for more information.
Posted on July 15, 2010
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Get Ready to Overdose on Your Daily Cute Quotient

Posted on July 13, 2010
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I had an idea to do a t-shirt blog, but full credit to this guy for actually doing it— and letting a crowd of anonymous strangers decide what of your wardrobe you keep and what you get rid of.
T-Shirt Project day 24. Get Il, a homophone with hip hop phrase “Get Ill,” pic of N Korean leader Kim Jong Il. Keep or Toss?
Posted on July 13, 2010 via The Tee-Shirt Project with 547 notes









