Too Many Tabs Tuesday – E-Books Edition

A Few #Rider Related Thoughts on The Occasion of the #BanjoBowl

Bobby Jurasin Documentary (Featuring pre-fame Brett Butt)
I was flipping through YouTube and came across a profile of my all-time favourite Rider, #71 Bobby Jurasin (which features a few cameos by a pre-“Corner Gas” Brent Butt starting around the 11:45 mark!)

I got to meet Mr. Jurasin when a few of us who played with the Indian Head Broncs in high school came in to a football clinic put on by the Riders.  Then I met him again when I went to the good old Long Branch Saloon while in undergrad but for some reason, he didn’t remember me (just kidding – I was *way* too intimidated to talk to him!)

Brad Wall’s Banjo Bowl Clip Cements a Third Mandate? 
I hate to say it but clips like the one below continues to reinforce Premier Brad Wall’s “every man” image and could be part of the reason the Sask Party becomes the first non-NDP party in Saskatchewan to win three consecutive mandates since the earliest years of the province.  I’m *fascinated* by the idea of “the low information voter” and by extension, politicians who are skilled at reaching these people via clips like this as well as regular calls in to sports radio programs, even during the work day!  Even though, as a friend posted on Facebook, “Don’t think of it as politics, think of it as everything that impacts your life” I’d say there are a lot more low-information voters than political junkies.

[Edit: Well, the Riders lost so, as someone pointed out on Twitter, unless your “every man” humour suddenly looks *really* cocky in retrospect and perhaps reveals a bit more about your own cockiness than you’d like!] 😉 

Digital Coffee Row
Distinct from the low information voter is the highly opinionated (if not necessarily any more informed) one.  One of my favourite places to “take the pulse” of what people are talking about – not just in terms of politics but on everything from news to local happenings to all kinds of other randomness is the Off-Topic forum at RiderFans.com.

Saturday Snap – Drums and Thumbs: A Couple Pics of the Kids

Pace loved a friend’s drum set…

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Well, more toes than thumbs…

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Friday Fun Link – “Terms and Conditions May Apply” Documentary

Shea and I are watching a great documentary as I type this – you should too!  (Er, it’s on NetFlix and they’ll track that you watched it of course.)

A Couple Reasons I Really Like Doug Stanhope

Doug Stanhope is a fucking awesome comedian who is cool with people torrenting his stuff…

 

And “his stuff” includes brilliant material like this…

And this…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KcO24WljvPM

“The Spot Where You’re Sitting Is Now Its Own Internet Kingdom”

Wired magazine tells the story of a British entrepreneur who has designed a system that can designate every three metre space on earth using a three word code.

What3Words.com is a system that’s much more accurate and memorable than current GPS, postal codes, street addresses and other similar techniques to designate addresses.  

For example, I live at “Firmer Parade Geology” and work at “Runways Juror Bootleg“.

Plus this system can pinpoint *any* location on earth, including those that don’t even have a traditional address of any kind.

So why is he an entrepreneur?  The site also offers a feature called “OneWord” where you can shorten the three words to a single word for a buck and a half a year – something that could be useful to hotels, restaurants and other businesses if (big if!) OneWords became as ubiquitous as say, Twitter handles.

Pace’s and My First Days

Grade one for him…

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New Regent Place Branch Head for me…

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Music Monday – “I was tired of being put right down/By myself for not being what you thought/You had found pulled hard in two directions”

Happy Labour Day!

This year’s Labour Day is especially relevant as our current provincial government has proposed sweeping new legislation to “modernize” Saskatchewan’s labour laws by combining twelve existing pieces of Legislation into a single omnibus bill, a move which will “likely have many unintended consequences and costs.  Unions aren’t taking these changes laying down and are finding various ways to fight back against the increasingly hostile climate for labour.

Like Spirit of the West sings, “It’s all so so political…”

http://youtube.com/watch?v=DsGEPsxNaiA

“Labour Day” (Album) – Spirit of the West

This isn’t where I got the name for my Head Tale blog…

…but I kinda wish it was! 😉

Atheism and religion are like two sides of a coin..one prefers to use heads, other relies on tales

(This quote was posted to a thread on Quora about favourite atheist jokes.  The actual story of how this site got its name, which I may have told before, is that it was a pun I came up with I had a small web design side business back around 1997 or so.  “Head Tale” was a pun on “Heads or Tails?” which is the succeed or fail options I faced in starting my own business, a reference to the the fact that many of my clients were writers and publishers (eg. “Tales from People’s Heads”), a nod to my hometown of Indian Head and yes, probably also a double entendre too!) 😉

Here’s my first logo (yep, that’s all I had!)…

Head Tale Original Logo

Saturday Snap – Farewell Outreach!

After eighteen months, I had my final shift at Regina Public Library’s Outreach Unit yesterday.  (On Tuesday, I become Branch Supervisor of our Regent Place Branch.)

Although the strong emphasis on service to a marginalized community is a perfect fit for my own interests and values, I never thought this was a role I would’ve ended up filling – if only because it’s a very specialized area unlike other aspects of public librarianship – branch supervision, collections, reference, etc. – where there are more jobs and therefore more likelihood of finding work in those areas.

Here are a few random highlights of my time in the Unit…

– meeting a patron for the first time right after I started and her saying “Jason Hammond!  I’ve heard all kinds of stories about you!”  Turns out she knows a former RPL employee quite well and so he’d filled her in about me (luckily enough for me, the stories were positive – she’s a patron who won’t suffer fools!  Also a good reminder to treat everyone with kindness as much as possible – you never know when your words, actions or encounters will come back on you!) 😉

– on the other hand, one of my staff members got a phone call soon after I started.  “Please don’t let that *man* pick out any more books for me!” (My staff kindly re-assured me that they’ve all occasionally received calls from patrons who are unhappy with the items one or another of us has selected for their regular home deliveries.)

– the first time I got a dish of water for a patrons’ seeing eye dog (the dog has its own personalized water bowl in the unit!)  “Other duties as assigned” indeed!

– showing one patron a newly acquired Sara-CE machine which scans and reads pages of books, magazines, letters, etc. aloud to patrons.  He was so impressed, he started coming in every day or two to spend a few hours in the afternoon reading magazines and we even ended up getting a special subscription to his favourite magazine in the Unit as well!

– given the nature of who we serve – many elderly and/or ill patrons – it shouldn’t be a surprise.  But the reality is that it was a regular happening to get the news of a patron’s passing – maybe as often as once every month or two during my time in the unit?

– if pressed, I’d say the major accomplishment of my time in Outreach was a complete re-design of the Unit’s layout from what I like to call “traditional library”: bookshelf – aisle – bookshelf – aisle – bookshelf – to something that was a lot more open and accessible, well-lit and welcoming.  I was explaining the changes to a partially sighted patron who half-joking and half-serious said “Jason! Don’t you know that you’re never supposed to change anything on a blind person?”  I replied, “Well, if you agree to go along with this change, I promise we won’t change anything else in the Unit again for another twenty years!” 😉

– this isn’t my story so perhaps I shouldn’t share it.  But one of our patrons wanted to know if we had Braille children’s books so he could read to his grand daughter who was coming to visit.  Given our Unit’s mandate, it’s perhaps surprising that we don’t have *any* Braille items save a couple donated items.  Why?  Well, one thing I learned in this job is that very few visually impaired people actually know Braille – somewhere around 1 in 10 visually impaired people and the number is decreasing as technology improves to allow visually impaired people to access written material and really, just move through the world, in other ways.  How few?  When I checked with the local branch of the CNIB, they said they didn’t know for sure but estimated that there might be twelve people in all of Regina who know Braille.)  So anyhow, with no Braille children’s books available, one of my staff members went out and found a place to order it for the patron – and then bought it for him as a gift!  But then again, going above & beyond in the service of our patrons was a regular thing – beginning before I even started in fact.  I popped in to the Unit a couple days before my official first day, just as a staff member got a call from a patron who’d missed her delivery.  I said I’d be willing to take it to her myself and so ended up having a memorable visit with a patron in her apartment.  (Sadly, in keeping with an earlier bullet point, this patron passed away a couple months later.)

That’s only a small sampling of a few of the most memorable moments that popped into my head – I may add others in future as I think of them.

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