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March 4, 2003

Computers in the classroom

A month or two ago, La Presse, a French-language broadsheet daily here in Montreal, reported on the difficulties that professors at HEC were experiencing in teaching with computers in the classroom. At HEC, all students are required to have a computer - at least MBA students. La Presse reported that this complicated their teaching efforts. Students were busy surfing the net instead of listening to the professor.

At the John Molson School of Business where I am doing my MBA, the situation is the mirror opposite. Laptops in the classroom for the regular MBA are the exception and not the norm. In fact, to pull a laptop out during class is often greeted with surprise by colleagues and with some suspicion by professors, who are not used to seeing this.

Continue reading "Computers in the classroom" »

March 28, 2003

More instructions in case of an emergency

While not the Chinese equivalent of Ready.gov, the site developed by the US Department of Homeland Security, the purpose is probably the same. Here are some instructions on what to do in case the Taiwanese or other usurpers or imperialists decide to get uppity. :) Our US friends had similar things on their mind in the Atomic Age.

The rest of the site has some great propaganda posters as well, though much more serious than those found at Whitehouse.org.

As the Illustrious Leader of the HHD Society, I should look into developing a similar line of products for my comrades.

March 29, 2003

Perceptions of religion in Canada and the US

The New York Times has an interesting article (free registration) about how Canadians differ from Americans in their perception of religion and its role in daily and public life. (Clifford Kraus, who wrote the article has contributed to Maclean's magazine on occasion, though reactionary Canadians tend to nail him in their letters to the editor more often than not.)

Just one more reason why Bush's invocation of God and other forms of manifest destiny in the current conflict with Iraq raises the hair on my neck. Dubya pretty much says anything under the sun that brings a clash of civilizations to mind.

The curious Canada watcher / navel gazer might also want to look at this book by Seymour Martin Lipsett, a somewhat reknowned watcher of all things Canadian and American.

April 11, 2003

The Black Dahlia Solved?

The LA Times has an article about a former police officer who has come forward to accuse his father of being the killer of the infamous Black Dahlia, a murder that shocked LA in the late 1940s. The murder of the Black Dahlia was the subject of a book by the great James Ellroy of LA Confidential fame. This site has more info as well.

April 12, 2003

Going nowhere fast

The New York Times Sunday Magazine has an interesting article on how many folks with advanced degrees and lots of industry experience are finding it difficult to find gainful employment. The main example is a 50 year old former Exec VP who now works at the Gap.

These are interesting times indeed. War in Iraq, possible war with North Korea, the economy in and out of recession, the continuing risk of deflation as well as consumers running out of room on their credit cards... What to do?

As I write this I am watching a movie where an alley cat practices mind control on passersby convincing them to slaughter homeless drifters with a pitch fork. Only on a Saturday morning you say ?! Thank God for cable !

Things to do at home: Tupperware, raves, oh my.

The LA Times reports on a new trend whereby people are moving raves into their homes. This is in response to police crackdowns and the risk of accidents like those that caused multiple deaths in Rhode Island and Chicago recently...

PS: The cat turned the guy into the cops and is now preparing to mind control him to death in the cell... as I write this, the cat made off with his head...)

April 13, 2003

More propaganda please.

In a continuing series on propaganda posters, I have found the following two cool sites. The Poster Prop Page offers propaganda from countries involved in World War II. On the opposite vein, The Propaganda Remix Project offers parodies of posters, many related to the current conflict in Iraq, as well as the US Department of Homeland Security. Though funny, they are also depressing in that society seems to be heading that way.

May 5, 2003

Technology and society

Written in 1945 by Vannevar Bush and entitled "As we may think", it is considered a classic in the field of computer science and one of the seeds of the Internet.

A second thought-provoking article is "The computers of tomorrow" by Martin Greenberger, which appeared in 1964 in The Atlantic. It discusses future uses of computers.

Bill Joy, a prominent computer engineer with Sun Microsystems, wrote a provoking article "Why the future doesn't need us" a few years back in Wired. I didn't finish reading it then, though I probably should. Maybe I'll do that this week.

Lastly, News.com talks about computers are entering a new phase in life.

May 17, 2003

Woe be to thee who bloggeth

The New York Times reports on the potential perils of blogging with respect to one's friends, family and job. I can personally attest to the difficulty in knowing where to draw the line and have had numerous people ask me just where that line is. I think the line tends to move over time.

July 5, 2003

Editorial: What future for our cities?

One of my favorite subjects is the city. I love to visit cities and learn about their development. I grew up in the city and have a definite penchant for cities. I have read a number of books by Jane Jacobs as well as books regarding the development of Los Angeles, the development of suburbs and edge cities and the decline of cities like St–Louis and others. I am a firm believer in the roles of cities, not the countryside, as the main engines of economic development—as does Jacobs as well.

With the end of the war and the development of suburbs like Levittown on Long Island, the development of our cities has fallen victim to the automobile. With the racial conflicts of the 1950s and 1960s, white flight served to only accelerate the exodus from the city center, leaving many cities with a hollow core of poverty and misery shared by minorities, while rings of prosperous—mostly white—suburbs thrived. In most cases, these suburbs were set up as separate towns in separate counties where they constituted separate tax bases that were spared from the demands of the inner city poor. Over time, these suburbs themselves fell victim to the cycle (black migration to the better areas; white flight resulting), and new suburbs were created, even further from the city centre.

While the worst cases can be found in the US, centering around cities like Atlanta, St. Louis, Phoenix and Los Angeles, the same basic problem can be found right here at home. Instead of white flight, the Montreal area got linguistic flight, with native English–speaking citizens heading for the western part of the island, where new ghettos took root, while native French speakers headed for the North and South shores, effectively abandoning residency of the largest French–speaking city in North America for fear of the "multicultural hordes".

On the Island of Montreal proper, there were incredibly prosperous cities and others that were somewhat poor, including Montreal itself, which had often mopped up other cities that had gone bankrupt in the past (Saint–Michel, Hochelaga, etc.). Wealthy cities like Westmount skimmed the cream of the crop, thriving off high property values thus enabling them to offer high–quality services to their citizens with a low tax base. Meanwhile, the core city of Montreal, working off of a weakened tax base, was asked to take care of the region's most unfortunate, leaving less funds for offering the kinds of services available in the richer cities which had no poor to take care of per se. Inequity was the by–word.

Up until a year ago, there were 28 cities on the Island of Montreal. In the greater Montreal region, there were 110 cities in all. As you can imagine coordinating activities like regional development were nigh impossible, with 110 different parties pulling the blanket in all directions. After 40 years worth of debate, the provincial government legislated the amalgamation of all of the cities on the Island of Montreal, and created a large city on the south shore. The resulting race to bulk up caused a number of other surrounding cities to merge as well, bringing the total down to 63 cities. Much better than before but still a lot of opinions and priorities to manage. In my opinion, this was the most significant thing the Parti Québecois government did during its reign, and one of the rare times I saw eye–to–eye with it. (The other is agreeing not to discuss the whole sovereignty, which is what Bouchard managed to do while in office.)

Alas, it was too good to be true. The provincial Liberal party, in one of the most illogical sops that I have ever seen, promised to allow the amalgamated cities to separate from the Mega–city. A sop because it basically bowed to the will of people who were going to vote for the party anyways. When I first began to write this article over a month ago, the government's initial plan was tantamount to a free ride whereby a minority of citizens would be able to cause amalgamated cities to be spun off. So much for the will of the majority. However in the last few weeks the Charest government appears to have some consideration the usual democratic principles which govern our city and the minority won't be given the free ride previously promised. At least that's what we have been told. Time will tell.

In the case of Montreal, it just so happens that the cities most anxious to leave are those that are the richest. And this in spite of an arrangement whereby tax levels were not harmonized across the whole city but pretty much kept at the levels they were before. (No rich cities are being over–penalized by the poor.) One of the illuminati arguing for the right to secede uses as and example the city of Boston to justify his rather self–serving arguments, pointing to the fact that there are over 100 cities in the Boston area and that Boston is doing relatively well. It would be interesting to see if the person living in Roxbury, one of the poorest cities in the greater Boston area, when comparing himself to his compatriot in Cambridge or in any given gated community, shares the opinion of our Montreal friend. I would be quite surprised if that were the case.

An example of a city that has managed to do well over the last 50 years in spite of the trend towards the suburbs is Calgary. This is because Calgary, through the cooperation of the provincial government, annexes or amalgamates any cities that grow up outside of of its borders. This means that as the city grows, Calgary's tax base not only stays intact, but grows as well, enabling the city to continue to offer services to all of its citizens, rich or poor.

This whole discussion of cities is not academic and the implications of the debate are far ranging. In fact it goes to the very core of our society: how we live together, work together, and get along; and how we share the burdens and benefits of everyday life. If we agree that some cities can be extremely rich, and others extremely poor, then we must also accept the consequences of this stratification: crime, poverty, welfare, conflict and more.

Unfortunately, most people don't understand this; they assume that they live in a vacuum where there is no cumulative impact of their actions. Nothing could be further from the truth. Indeed, the problem won't go away. (Cities in the Montreal area spent 40 years pulling the blanket in all directions, severely impacting the region's ability to deal with economic change and the challenge posed by Toronto.) We can deal with the problem now, while it is still manageable, or we can deal it with later, when it becomes intractable. While most American cities have given up on making this work, and are struggling with the consequences, Canadian cities still have a chance to set things right and the amalgamation of the cities on the Island of Montreal was a step in the right direction. 'Nuff said.

PS: The New York Times recently ran an article on this whole question; it has a major impact on the city's ability to deal with the current budget problems and additional responsibilities in light of 9–11.

January 7, 2004

News from the Case Comp front.

Employing my own little "Queer Eye for the Straight Guy" (1), I took a moment to savour the quality of the men at this year's MBA Case Competition going on this week at the Bonaventure Hilton in Montreal.

Tops on my list are the handsome players and coaches (2) of the teams from the former Bundesrepublik Deutschland, now just known as Germany. With their full–Windsor knots, double–vented jackets and close–cropped hair—with a dash of gel s'il vous plaît—they are, how do you say, ... Scrump. Delee. Icious. Ladies, start your engines!!!

Equally adorable are the fellows from the land of Ericsson, Electrolux and Mats Sundin. Dressed just as nice but with matching sets of blond hair and blue eyes, those Swedish guys do indeed set the pace. (Metrosexual just does not capture the energy I felt there. David Beckham, you stay in Madrid. These ones are mine!) While usually quick to finish my tinkle (3), I found myself abandoning myself completely to the urinals, waiting for the last little Swede (a teddy bear!) to finish before storing myself away. I didn't want to miss a thing!

Alas the Finnish side—usually a mainstay of men at their best—had a poor showing this year with only one hottie on their team. That's not to say that the women on their team were without charm, but that's beyond the scope of this column.

That's all for now. I'll report back with more of my encounters and observations as we head into the weekend. Last year only the girls got to rub my (bunny) tummy, but this year those gorgeous Germans (and their Swedish companions) go right to the front of the line! And we'll keep tabs on Lissa's performance over the week as well. (JonJon says she's a natural at everything she does!) 'Nuff said.

Notes :
(1) My training comes from working in menswear at Simons, having both ears pierced, and being a called a fag by the mullet–headed hockey players at my high school in Fredericton, that haute lieue of culture.
(2) Not to be confused with player–coach Reg Dunlop, which is an entirely different matter, though with his long fur coat, he was a 70s styler indeed.
(3) As my dear ol' Auntie Sandra would say.

November 9, 2004

OMG WTF ?

This is some f*cked up sh*t. Damn.

March 9, 2005

Navigating the waters.

Kuroshin has a toungue-in-cheek article on 'How To Get Rich & Famous By Blogging At Work':

Here are some techniques you can use to safely and effectively maintain a blog about the useless idiots (i.e. everybody except you) at your place of work without getting fired and, more importantly, gain money and fame.

March 20, 2005

Dead air.

In an article on the social impact of new technologies, The New York Times reports on how cell phones (and digital video recorders) are changing people:

"As the sociologist Erving Goffman observed in another context, there is something deeply disturbing about people who are ''out of contact'' in social situations because they are blatantly refusing to adhere to the norms of their immediate environment. Placing a cellphone call in public instantly transforms the strangers around you into unwilling listeners who must cede to your use of the public space, a decidedly undemocratic effect for so democratic a technology. Listeners don't always passively accept this situation: in recent years, people have been pepper-sprayed in movie theaters, ejected from concert halls and deliberately rammed with cars as a result of rude behavior on their cellphones."

A little later on, the article continues with,

"The cellphone, like the mirror, also offers a great deal of gratification to our egos. By making us available to anyone at any time, it serves as a ''publicization of emotional fulfillment,'' as the French sociologist Chantal de Gournay has argued. Answering the phone and entering into conversation immediately informs everyone around us that we are in demand by someone, somewhere. Like a security blanket, the cellphone and other wireless devices serve as a form of connection when we are alone -- walking down the street, standing in line -- and connection is our contemporary currency."

As usual, I am often ahead of the times both in my changes in comportment and my social critique. On this last point, I have been railing against what I call 'cell phone zombies' for a while now. These are the losers who talk loud in a store or in the Tim Horton's booth beside you, check their cell phones as soon as they come out of a movie, and talk in the library. (More than one fashionista bimbo has felt my wrath at the Concordia Library.)

(On that last point, I have also coined the term Hotmail Zombies to qualify those mindless students who, attracted like flies to shit, instantly hop on whatever free computer is around, to check their Hotmail messages. Again, there are a lot of them at Concordia.)

La Presse highlighted the cell-phone dependence with an article last weekend. My favorite anecdote is the one where the cell phone user immediately picks up his phone in a crowd, begins talking in to it, and then the phone actually rings…

As for me, for many years now, I take pleasure in actually forgetting my cell phone at home, and most of the time, can't even be bothered to actually listen to the messages on it. (Ask HCW™!) In fact, hewing to a post-modern fashion, my cell phone is used more as a watch than anything else.

The article ends with this:

"As a society, we need to approach our personal technologies with a greater awareness of how the pursuit of personal convenience can contribute to collective ills. When it comes to abortion or Social Security, we avidly debate the claims of individual freedom against other goods. Why shouldn't we do the same with our private technologies?"

'nuff said.

February 14, 2006

Away from HCW™ on Valentine's

Away from HCW™ on Valentine's Day, what better way to celebrate the day and a business trip, then Jerry Springer's Hillbilly Valentine's Day Special. Hoo-wee!!!!

About Society

This page contains an archive of all entries posted to HappyHappyDonut in the Society category. They are listed from oldest to newest.

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