Google Launching E-Book Service to Compete With Apple, Amazon

Google is apparently preparing to launch an e-book service by Christmas with the big unique feature being that the books you purchase will be linked to your Google account so you can access them from pretty much any kind of device rather than having the book downloaded to one or a few proprietary devices.

In related news, it’s not official yet but Google’s all but confirmed to be buying social coupon site, Groupon for $5-6 billion.  In related news, the service recently launched in Regina and today, I just made my first purchase – a 50% off groupon/coupon for one of Regina’s best restaurants.

Wisdom Wednesday – “Be It Resolved, Religion Is A Force For Good in the World”

In my ongoing quest to completely compartmentalize this blog, I’ve decided to add yet another themed day to go along with Music Mondays, Friday Fun Links, Saturday Snaps and the occasional Sappy Sunday.

Wisdom Wednesday is going to be a place where I’ll try to either write something that has a bit deeper analysis or thought to it then many of my posts or, more likely, I’ll try to get away with a single lazy link but at least make it to some article or site that will challenge you and provide you with some interesting information.

For my first week of this new feature, I’ve got a good one – a transcript of a debate held recently in Toronto between author Christopher Hitchens and former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair on the subject of “Be It Resolved, Religion Is A Force For Good in the World“.

(via MetaFilter)

Magic Santa

Write a virtual letter to Santa and get a customized reply.  Can’t wait to show this to Pace tomorrow!

Music Monday – “You can’t stop the rain/It’s gonna fall on every roof/I’ve got the proof/And only you can make it happen”

Next Year Country

Like so many Saskatchewan kids, I grew up watching the Riders. And much like the people of Saskatchewan, with the land embedded in our souls, the fortunes of the Riders over the past three decades I’ve followed the team have come to symbolize a population long accustomed to accepting whatever fates beyond our control may bring.

Our team didn’t make the playoffs; there was a grasshopper infestation. A 9-9 season was considered a success; the price for a bushel of wheat went up a few pennies. And on coffee row, everyone said there was always next year.

In the last decade, something’s changed in the psyche of Saskatchewan – we’re richer and more confident, less reliant on the agricultural sector and seeing more diversity in both our industries and our demographics.

You see this change in the Riders too. No longer are losing seasons an acceptable option. The atmosphere, the mentality has shifted. As Riders CEO Jim Hopson has said (and I may be paraphrasing slightly), “We want to earn your support for us, we don’t want to feel entitled to your support just because you were born here.”

Last year’s Grey Cup, with that last minute “too many men” penalty defined irony – Rider fans proudly proclaimed themselves the 13th man and the 13th man was our downfall. But still, those old feelings run deep and “there’s always next year” was heard on coffee row once again.

The difference is that this time around, people really believed it.

And against some heavy odds – tough loses to bottom-dwelling teams throughout the season, losing our field goal kicker in mid-season, a four game losing skid at the end of the year, come-from-behind playoff victories against both a resurgent BC Lions team and a league dominating (but overly arrogant) Calgary Stampeders team – the Riders did indeed manage to once again make it to the big game.

And it felt like this was the year the harvest was destined to be a good one.

Instead, like an early frost just as the combines are ready to roll, it wasn’t meant to be. The Riders lost another tough one tonight and even though it wasn’t lost on the last play like last year, this one feels tougher to take. That’s what happens when someone in Saskatchewan starts believing in destiny.

This one also felt easier to take. That’s what happens when you remember how the Riders seem to always find a way to disappoint – whether it was letting the opposition score three touchdowns in the fourth quarter to lose a meaningless mid-season game sometime in the early 1990’s or when they hold the CFL record for futility when the big game’s on the line.

Unlike last year, I was resigned to the loss early tonight when the Als pulled off that fake punt in the third (?) quarter. I know games aren’t lost and won on one play. But one play can shift momentum in a way that a team can never recover.

I’m also not like some fans who are calling the head coach a saint one week and the devil incarnate the next. But special teams were a glaring weakness all year and the failure to address this in any meaningful way is something I believe ultimately cost the Riders the game today.  (Of course, a fumbled kick return last week could’ve just as easily been the special teams play that ended their Riders season prematurely so we flatlanders tend to also take solace in what we have.)

It doesn’t make the loss easier to take but having seen that trick play deflate the Riders and the inevitable loss feeling more and more certain, that’s at least better than jumping up and down and hugging everybody thinking we’d won only to have that snatched away like last year.

There’s a couple things I take consolation in. Anthony Calvillo has been the Grey Cup eight times in eleven years and only won three times. Darian Durant is 0/2 as a starter (and 1/3 during his entire time with the Riders) so there’s still a huge amount of potential for him the next decade if they can keep the same strong team-first framework in place.

The other thing is sort of petty but I was *so* happy to see Als kicker, Damon Duval, who was trying to rewrite history this week by saying he wouldn’t have missed the last minute field goal last year on his first attempt but the thrown flags (which got him a do-over which won the game) distracted him.  In this year’s game? He missed two field goals. It’s a minor detail but it confirms for me that the Riders lost the game last year rather than the Als failing to win it – a small but important distinction.

Anyhow, I’m off to bed and with all the drinks and appetizers and the stress, I don’t feel that bad.  After he came in from starting his car, I noticed my dad had tears in his eyes. I looked at him and realised that I’ve only lived *in* next year country for most of my life. He’s lived next year country – another small but important distinction.

We’ll get them next year.  I honestly believe it.

Saturday Snap – Rider Grey Cup Shrine (of Candy)

Rider Grey Cup Shrine (of Candy), originally uploaded by headtale.

Getting ready for the big game tomorrow, we’ve got our basement rec room decorated and some candies (including thirteen army figures standing in for the football players with Pace to eat one symbolic one tomorrow right before kick-off!)

Shea and I keep going back and forth on it (and almost gave in today) but we realise we may be the only people in Saskatchewan not watching this game on a HDTV.

We bought our current TV nearly 10 years ago in Calgary and it still works fine so that’s what we’re going with.

Go Riders Go!

Friday Fun(ny) Link – Baby’s First Word

When I was born, my parents were running a bulk fuel business in my hometown.  I was basically raised in the office of that ESSO fuel station for the first few years of my life (which explains a lot of my current brain damage and any future cancers I may acquire!)

With the number of farmers who hung around waiting to place their orders, pay their bills or just generally shoot the shit, it’s not hard to believe, as my mom swears to this day, my first three “real” words were (in order): “clock”, “combine” and “fuck”.

At least that last one wouldn’t be forever known as my first word…unlike this kid:

“The librarian checking out a stack of books, may be for many of us, the equivalent of the first person we’ve told a secret to.”

As Others See Us: An Author on Why She Loves Librarians“, an article from one of my favourite book/library blogs, EarlyWord.

It’s a fun read (as any overly complimentary article about your chosen profession tends to be!)  But one thing jumped out – the concept of the secrets patrons so willingly share with library staff:

She said nothing. I suspect there might be a class in this for librarians. The essential point being: Make no comments on books being check out. Even seemingly innocent remarks like “Good luck!” with a pile of diet books or “Taking a trip?” when a patron has a stack of travelogues. She was meant to say nothing and she did that.

I still remember chatting with a librarian colleague in Calgary and commenting about how I’d taken out a potentially embarrassing book at the library (either a biography of Osama Bin Laden or the Spice Girls – I can’t remember which) and mentioning how relieved I was that the person at check-out hadn’t made any comment at all about my choice.  (I think the Spice Girls bio would’ve been more embarrassing!)

She explained that it was an unofficial policy that staff weren’t to comment on any books that a patron checked out, no matter how seemingly innocuous they might be.  (Not sure if she meant just in her branch or system-wide.)

On the other hand, I recently chatted with another libraryland colleague who commented about how much she enjoyed chatting with patrons about the books they were taking out.  As well, libraries (including RPL) are increasingly focusing on merchandising of their collections with one element of this being the retail concept of the “upsell” which encourages staff to comment on patron choices to guide them to other materials they may also like.

“Oh, I see you’ve got a Frommer’s Guide to Cuba.  Did you know we have non-fiction DVD’s as well?” which again, calls the question of how much commentary there should be at the circulation desk.

I think most patrons would like and appreciate that hypothetical upsell. But perhaps this patron just had their DVD break down after her son peed on it.  (Er, another hypothetical example – that would *never* happen in real life.)  And she can’t afford to replace it right now because she’s recently divorced (due to a husband who was making heavy use of the DVD player to watch a type of movie you can’t get at the library) and now she has to find a job because they can’t be a stay-at-home mom anymore and so she’s decided to try writing travel articles which is why she needs this book (but not a DVD) and those lawyer fees aren’t paying themselves and hey, all you wanted to help a patron and promote the full range of your collection at the same time.  But instead, a simple comment has resulted in a very negative experience for a patron.

I don’t know – that’s an extreme example and I know some people would argue that staff need to be sensitive and make a judgment call.  But everyone will have a different line and a different comfort level…on both sides of the desk.  There’s also the question of whether it’s better to avoid all circ desk chit-chat at the risk of offending the odd patron here and there when the vast majority would enjoy the interaction?

I think I still tend to lean towards that “better to say nothing” approach myself – at least in the vast majority of cases.

(via MetaFilter)

Santa Comes Early (Just Move Your Hands)

Shea’s been wanting a Wii for a long time and it was looking like we’d get one this Christmas.

But then, she came across the XBox Kinect – a motion-based gaming system where, instead of any handheld controller, your body motions are scanned by a camera/scanner combo placed somewhere near your TV and that’s how you control the games. For example, if you’re playing a sports game and want to kick a ball, you just stand in front of the TV, kick your leg and the virtual ball on screen goes in the direction you aim.

(I’d heard about this cool new system when it was first being developed but hadn’t paid too much attention – partly because I haven’t had a gaming system for years – I think a Sega Genesis was the last one I owned while for Shea, it was a slightly more modern, Super Nintendo.  I also partly ignored the news because I heard it was a Microsoft product so how good could it be? ;-))

It’s probably easier to understand what I’m talking about by watching a video…

So anyhow, the idea quickly gained hold on us.  We check out some reviews, videos, etc. online then last weekend, Shea made a quick trip to Best Buy to pick one up (they’re in pretty short supply this Christmas season but she knows somebody who knows somebody apparently!)

We get it hooked up quickly (I don’t know why it bugs me so much that gaming systems are plug and play while a new laptop takes hours to set-up – install anti-virus, clear out all the pre-installed crap, configure settings for the OS, install and configure all your favourite programs, set-up networks, etc. etc. etc.  On that note, apparently Apple is moving towards using iOS, the operating system that drives the iPhone and iPad, as their core operating system for all their devices including laptops and desktops.  Even though it’s a bit of work to set-up a new computer, I do like that you have a lot more control than you do with an iPad or an iPhone so I’m not sure if I like this news.)

So yeah, anyhow, it works as advertised and is pretty damn cool.  The games are a bit simplistic (move left, now jump, now duck) but I can imagine a couple generations down the road when the movie-quality games that you now play on consoles are available on a system like Kinect for a very immersive experience.

My all-time favourite computer game has been hockey games – from Wayne Gretzky Hockey on my old 386 to Sega Genesis NHL 94 to EA 2000 which is the last computer hockey game I played regularly – and I played that right until I got my Mac in 2007!  I can’t wait for the day that the technology of the Kinect is combined with a realistic hockey game like you apparently get with EA 2011. (Hmm, we have an XBox now too.  I wonder if Santa has an extra $70 to spare for that game too???)

Right now, we have one sports title for our Kinect and it has some fun games – I like table tennis and the track & field games so far – but as I said, they’re fairly simplistic.  (That’s not necessarily a bad thing – hell, there are probably old DOS games that I could still play for hours!)

AskReddit: What is ONE Thing You Think Everybody Should Try?

Some good answers.