Saturday Snap – Superman & Spider-man Team Up!

If you think “The Avengers” made a lot of money, can you imagine what a cross-company, joint DC-Marvel film with Superman and Spider-man teaming up to battle Dr. Doom and The Parasite with guest appearances from The Hulk and Wonder Woman would be like?

Well, it’s already happened in comic book form as this gem I discovered while cleaning out the garage will attest.

I still remember how I got it one day when I was sick as a kid, way back in 1981 (I didn’t even need a sick note!).

Mom took me to the pharmacy to get some medicine and said I could buy one comic.  Most of the regular comics were probably about $0.40 back then so picked this over-sized special edition which was cover-priced for the ungodly amount of $2.50!  (But a good investment – EBay now has copies listed at $25.)

But man, what a comic.  If they made it into a movie, I’d probably go and see it about ten times in the first weekend.  Seriously – are you listening Hollywood?

 

Friday Fun Link – What Would You Take If Your House Was Burning Down? (Photos)

An interesting question – people are asked to take a photo of what they’d take from their house if it was burning down.  I mean, obviously, the right answer is “nothing” and “get the hell out as fast as possible.” Also, “make sure my family is out” is an acceptable answer.

From the stuff photographed, I think it’s being interpreted along the lines of “What’s so valuable/sentimental to you, that you couldn’t stand to lose it (or it would be irreplaceable?)”

In that case, it’d probably be:
– my MacBook & iPhone (okay, and why not, our iPad too!)
– I keep something I call a Memory Box where I throw odd trinkets – letters (how rare those are anymore), newspaper clippings (or whole newspapers on significant days like 9/11 or the day Pace was born), some concert tickets, etc. so I’d probably keep that.  Pace has one too so I’d grab his as well.
– various older photos/photo albums which aren’t digitized onto my laptop
– wallet/passport

I’m sure there’s probably a few obvious things I’m missing (car keys? Birth certificate?) but that’s the things that come to mind.

Apple TV/Airplay Combo as an Undiscovered Reading Boon to Handicapped and Visually Impaired

An article about how the various iDevices, used in conjunction with Airplay and Apple TV, can act as a natural magnifier and allow single-handed operation for allowing the reading of web content and e-books on a big screen.

As I increasingly get familiar with my temporary new role of Outreach Librarian at Regina Public Library, I’m constantly amazed at the ability of technology to give visually-impaired people an experience that’s comparable to what fully sighted people experience.

Facebook & Google: Pictures & Vision

This is a great article which explains that the difference between Facebook and Google is the difference between pictures and vision – both in terms of what drives each company’s culture and how they may evolve in the future.

Calgary Reconsidered

Another great piece in The Walrus by Chris Turner looking at Calgary’s history, mythology and current culture.

It touches on many of the things Shea and I experienced when we lived in Calgary – from the youthful energy that pervades the city to the embracing of the redneck stereotype (both ironically and otherwise) by Cowtown’s citizens to the unique joys of everything from floating down the Bow with a beer cooler tied to your raft to the wonder of a winter Chinook.

It’s been a LONG time since I did a list so let’s go…

FIVE THINGS I MISS MOST ABOUT CALGARY
1. Falafel King.
The irony is that the first time I tried this downtown institution, I mis-read their sign and thought it was a Burger King!  But I got so hooked on their chicken schwarmas – the messiest, spiciest, drippingest ones I’ve ever had that I went there nearly every Friday for lunch after I discovered them!

2. Calgary Flames Games
I couldn’t afford to go often and mostly went through the generosity of various other family members who also lived in Calgary.  But I always loved the whole experience of going to an NHL game, something that I only got to experience twice in my life before moving to Calgary – once in Winnipeg and one pre-season exhibition game in Regina as a kid.

3. The Skyline
Because Calgary’s downtown is built in a low area around the river and there are numerous hills nearby that the city spreads outwards towards and over, I always loved how you could be walking or driving, come over a rise, and see the city laid out before you – whether driving down Elbow Drive, 17th Ave from the west, Scotsman’s Hill or so on.

4. The Arts Community
Having worked for the Writers Guild of Alberta, I’m biased.  But my biggest shock upon moving to Calgary was the strong-beating artistic heart that lie just beneath the city’s conservative, pro-business surface.  And the pro-environment folks.  And the highly educated folks.  And the strong tech folks.  And that’s why Calgary surprised the world by electing Canada’s (and North America’s?) first Muslim mayor of a major city.

5. Hop In Brew Pub
The single best pub I’ve ever been to in my life – yes, better than Bushwakkers!  (Okay, maybe not quite that good.  Let’s not get blasphemous here!)

Music Monday – “I still look for you in crowds/In train stations and bus stops, on sidewalks/In the middle of the night”

As the person who uploaded this video observes, it’s amazing how Fred Eaglesmith can go from hilarious to heart-ripping in a second.  This is one of my favourite songs of his…

Sappy Sunday – Lip Dub Wedding Proposal

This one’s pretty sweet…

Saturday Snap – Customer Service

Often times, working in libraries means you’re getting abused – by patrons who are mad that you won’t waive their hundreds of dollars in fines or pissed that you won’t give them unlimited guest passes on the Internet or that you don’t know the name of that book that they want to read “that’s blue”.  Or by co-workers who want you to read their mind or drop a major project on you Friday at 3:55pm or who don’t respond to e-mails until you prompt them half a dozen times.

But then sometimes, after you make a small gesture of going above & beyond what is expected in the regular course of your daily work, you receive a surprise gift in the mail like this.  And it’s all worthwhile…

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Friday Fun Link – Library CKI/CKO Simulator

This simulator doesn’t work quite as well as you’d hope but it’s a library check-in/check-out simulator that’s intended to help you figure out how long you have to wait until a book you have on hold comes in.

I found this simulator on a MetaFilter thread where a patron was asking exactly that question – if there was an easy formula to predict how long until a book you have on hold comes in.

Turns out there’s also a known mathematical formula known as Kleinrock’s Queuing Theory that helps you predict how long until your book comes in.  But that formula was originally created as part of one computer scientist’s work around the queuing of network packets on the Internet – who knew?

ReadLists

ReadLists is a new site which allows people to combine and share collections of web pages – articles, reviews, recipes, course materials, etc. – in a single package that you can easily download to your smart phone.  I’m not necessarily endorsing this site but just sharing a cool find.  Feel free to read the original MetaFilter thread where I found this for a more full discussion of copyright implications, moral rights, the impact of format-shifting for digital technologies and so on.

(via MetaFilter)