Saturday Snap – BikeCar Like An Icon?

Saw this rig on Albert St. the other day…
Bikecar Like An Icon

Friday Fun Link – What The World’s Biggest Sites Looked Like At Launch

This is pretty interesting featuring screenshots of the original version of sites such as Google, Yahoo, Amazon, etc.

For comparison’s sake, here’s what my very first web page looked like in December 1998 (this isn’t the first page I ever made but the earliest I could find in the Wayback Machine).  

 

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Crazy to think that the first version of Google and the first version of my home page were basically at the same level of web design! 😉

Also cool to think about how the name “HeadTale” has followed me around for nearly twenty years – I originally came up with it to describe a web design company I had as a pun on a few different things – Indian Head where I was from, head as in “brain/thinking”, flipping a coin which is how I saw this business venture, Tale as in telling stories/being an English major.

It’s turned out to be useful to have a single handle that I have been able to register on pretty much every site that’s come along since then, pretty much knowing that the name will be available and my online “persona” where ever I go.

I’ve even tried to get Pace to come up with something similar but I don’t know if “SpacemanHalo”, named in part after a popular current video game he likes, will be quite as timeless!  But maybe it can also be read as a philosophical medication on the meeting of science and religion?  Or something…

Throwback Thursday – Practice Makes Dishpan Hands? (July 13, 2006)

In 2006, I took the only Children’s Librarianship class that my library school offered.  I did extremely well in it and was one of only six students (out of a class of 20+) that our prof invited for a end-of-class meal and celebration for her most promising students.

One of the reasons she saw great potential for me was a Book Talk assignment which I did in the persona of the main character from the book “Stuck in Neutral” by Terry Trueman – written from the perspective of a young man with cerebral palsy who thinks his parents are plotting to kill him.

Always a multi-tasker, I practiced my book talk while doing dishes the day before I had to do my assignment in front of the class…

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Exactly one decade to the day after I did that book talk, I got to spend some time in the role of a children’s librarian once again as I hosted a local school’s summer enrichment program class visit to my branch for the second year in a row.  I toured them around the library, talked about the importance of books & reading then read them a few stories including “The Book With No Pictures” which they loved so much, they got me to read it twice in a row!

(The belly laugh of the girl in the bottom left of this collage one teacher tweeted says it all!)

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It was very rewarding to hear one of the teachers say the kids were still laughing and talking about my story time at lunch that day.

Maybe I should’ve been a children’s librarian? 😉

“When you’re born in this world, you’re given a ticket to the freak show. When you’re born in the US, you get a front row seat.”

God, I love George Carlin…

@BernieSanders Endorses @HillaryClinton. Now What?

So today, contrary to his vow to take his battle to the Democratic National Convention, Bernie Sanders finally endorsed Hillary Clinton after his team managed to help develop what is being called the “most progressive Democrat platform in history” with one notable element being a compromise on free college education for families making under $125,000 which I could see being the Clinton equivalent of “Obamacare” in terms of landmark legislation if passed.

(Some are also speculating that Sanders was holding back his endorsement waiting to hear results of FBI investigation into Clinton’s e-mail use and now that they’ve said they aren’t going to recommend charges, even with her “gross negligence and extreme carelessness”, that final long shot to gain the nomination was gone.)

As you’d expect, many Sanders supporters are disappointed by this seeming betrayal of his principles.  (Others take a wider view about how, even if Sanders didn’t gain the Presidential nomination, he may have done something more important that will make progress on many of his core issues and possibly change American politics for a generation.)

I’m a Sanders supporter and I keep oscillating – Clinton seems like such a horrible candidate for so many reasons and if I was in the States, the Green Party seems like the party closest to my own personal views that I’d likely support depending whether I lived in a safe blue state or a battleground state.

But at the same time, Trump hasn’t moderated (or really, shown any indication that he has the ability to be Presidential) *at all* and so Hillary becomes the “lesser of two evils” who would at least (probably) continue a somewhat moderate liberal approach to the Presidency like Obama has done.

Of course, hope springs eternal and there’s also the chance that Sanders continues to play fourth dimension chess and his endorsement of Clinton is equally a strategic move to ingratiate himself to Clinton supporters should further legal troubles imperil her campaign.  Or the knowledge that if the Democrats take the Senate, Sanders becomes the senior member on the budget committee which is a powerful role.  Or that this helps lay the foundation for a future run by Elizabeth Warren who combines the best of Sanders and Clinton in many ways.

So with the two major party nominees all but confirmed after both parties looked like they might face contested conventions, this continues to be the most engrossing, wacky, twisty-turny Presidential campaign in history!

Music Monday – “I feel like me and Taylor might still have sex/Why?/I made that bitch famous/Goddamn, I made that bitch famous.”

Kanye West recently released a provocative, controversial video featuring wax versions of numerous famous people who are connected to him in one way or another, all lying in a bed together naked.

The slow pans of the various naked wax figures plus the viewer’s knowledge of the various interactions West has had with each of them – from family relationships to fueling fires to famous feuds – makes the video a commentary on a wide range of topicsfame, exploitation, consent, agency, patriarchy, rape culture, power dynamics, racism, art, media, censorship and more.

Although there is nothing overtly sexual happening and the figures are all portrayed as only sleeping, the video features a huge amount of (wax) nudity with the female figures the most exposed (which may also be taken as a commentary on our culture as well.)

I can see why this video may not be for everyone and even offensive to some.  But personally I like that it’s so provocative and thought-provoking.

 

Famous” – Kanye West

“The Voter Is Always Right” vs. “Voting Against Your Best Interests”

How Can Trump Be President

Recent events (Federal Liberals sweep in Canada, Sask Party dominates in Saskatchewan, rise of Trump in States, Brexit vote in UK) have me thinking a lot about the notion of  “the voter is always right” vs. “people voting against their best interests

“The voter is always right” is something you usually hear after an election or referendum, usually spoken by someone on the losing side, as a shorthand for why their side lost (or, if they’re still angry, they’ll say “The voters have spoken” which is a less direct way of saying the same thing!) 😉

And almost inevitably, people, on the losing side will next start talking about how those on the winning side actually ended up “voting against their best interests.”

(This concern will also be raised in the lead-up to elections too of course.)

It’s a tough question – I think it’s pretty clear that, for example, a lot of Donald Trump supporters aren’t voting in their best interests when they vote for someone who is so clearly unsuited for the Presidency by most conventional measures (experience, background, temperament, command of the issues, etc.) and based on his public statements, a narcissistic racist who poses a grave threat to America.

But then, who am I to tell someone who lost their factory job in rural Alabama that the billionaire businessman who was so awesome on Celebrity Apprentice wouldn’t also be a kick ass President?  Or someone who’s excited to finally have a Presidential candidate who says what the “dumb-ocrats” won’t let him say because of political correctness? Or someone who wants to vote for him because his wife’s hot?

And there’s a certain elitism to think that yeah, just because I have a lot of education, I’m very engaged politically, and I have a certain worldview that I know better than most other people what’s best for my province/country/other countries.  (Heck, there’s a certain smug elitism in the three examples I just gave in the last paragraph when I could’ve come up with a some sincere, less cartoonish reasons people are supporting Trump.)

So elitism isn’t great and it has its own biases.  But in a world where politics is as subject to focus groups, marketing techniques and emotional appeals as any other area, isn’t it important to give some extra weight to the opinions of people who are (hopefully) able to see through many of these techniques?  (But then again, we all have our own blind spots – no matter how educated or engaged we are.  And that elitism and bias can run both ways – liberal Democrats tend to be the ones screaming about others voting against their best interests but right now, the Republicans are chiding Democrats for continuing to support Hillary Clinton even after a damning FBI report…though without any recommendation that charges be laid.)

Maybe it’s not an either/or situation?  Maybe we have to believe that the voters are always right (even if they immediately regret their decision as was the case with many after the Brexit vote) but strive to find ways to convince them to vote the way we think they should by educating people, changing their frame of reference, finding arguments that appeal to them (emotionally or logically) and so on.

(A great example of this is the recent video released by the Upstream organization where Dr. Ryan Meili points out how people frequently lament the growing cost of “health” in government budgets but the reality is that “health” – as opposed to the more conventional “healthcare” that most people think of – is actually already 100% of government budgets because everything governments do – in education, in social services, in environmental policy, in finance – impacts the health of its citizenry.)

Of course, what do I know?  I voted for Jack Layton because he had the best moustache! 😉

Saturday Snap – More From The Top of Regina

Here’s a few more shots from the TD Bank reception which we attended with my mom and dad on top of Regina’s new Hill Tower III Friday evening.

Great three piece jazz band for entertainment…

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Panoramic of the view facing south…

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Wearing Rider green to a TD Bank reception serves a double purpose!

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Friday Fun Link – The Tallest Building Between Winnipeg and Calgary

…and we were hanging out on top of it earlier tonight (though I know it’s hard to tell how high we are from the angle of this photo!)

Hill Tower Three

Mapping Police Killings in the United States

It’s beyond unfortunate that web pages like this and this and this have to exist.

But given recent high profile events, it’s also fortunate that they do.