Categories
Geek

Recently in the Tucows Blog…

Here’s a quick run-down of articles that have recently appeared in the Tucows Blog:

Categories
Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

Burlesque (and More) for a Good Cause — Tomorrow Night!

Poster for the A.J. Pack Superhero Fund

Geez, it’s been a dog’s age since I last saw my friend Meryle. You may remember her from the photos from my 36th birtday hot tub party.

(You know, I’ve never written about what happened at that party when the cops came in. It’s not truly a party until The Man gets involved. I need to write about that sometime.)

Back to Meryle: among other things, she’s a burlesque dancer and part of Toronto’s very interesting burlesque scene. I’ve had the good fortune to do some vaudeville accordion bits at these shows, but the real stars are people like Meryle and Mysterion the Mind Reader, who work hard at keeping the scene alive and entertaining.

(Come to think of it, I haven’t seen Mysterion in a dog’s age, either.)

Tomorrow, Wednesday September 27th, Meryle will be performing a burlesque number at the Cadillac Lounge (1296 Queen Street West) for the “A.J. Pack Superhero Fundraiser”. This event will raise money for the Lorraine Kimsa Theatre for Young People (formerly the Young People’s Theatre). It gives inner city youth a chance to attend classes at this theatre that they otherwise wouldn’t have.

(It’s also a refreshing alternative to the usual inner city youth programs, which often are hip-hop classes, basketball or some mix of the two. Not that they in and of themselves are bad, but they shouldn’t be the only options presented to inner city kids.)

This should be a good show. The burlesque dancers and their vaudeville supporting acts take what they do seriously. Although their work is often contemporary, they’ve done their homework and are aware of the history of burlesque and vaudeville, and they know what makes a good live show. You’ll be entertained, and your money will go to a great cause.

Also on the bill are musician/songwriter/accordion player Kevin Quain (who’s got a great Tom Waits-esque sound), comedian Nick Flanagan and Mysterion, who’ll do some of his mentalist and magic tricks.

Cover is $25.00. The doors open at 8 p.m. and the show starts very soon afterwards. If you want to catch Meryle, get there early!

Categories
Accordion, Instrument of the Gods Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

“Woke Up This Mo’nin’…”

Although High Park is the neighbourhood in which the Ginger Ninja and I prefer to live — it’s a good balance between the niceties of the near-burbs and proximity to Accordion City’s gooey nougat-y centre — our current residency in a condo building is a temporary situation. The plan is to eventually buy a house and live a genteel upper-middle-class lifestyle punctuated with bouts of accordion superstardom and as little tsuris as life’s vicissitudes will allow. Or something to that effect.

(See? Reading this blog will improve your vocabulary!)

One of the downsides of living in a condo is that it really restricts the times when I can get some accordion practice. My old pad in the Queen and Spadina neighbourhood was a big brick house with high ceilings and great sound insulative qualities. My former housemate Paul and I could practice our acoustic instruments late into the night and wail, just like this guy:

B&W photo of a man wearing only shorts playing accordion in a living room.
Click the photo to see it at full size.

I look forward to having a little basement recording studio. Someday!

Photo courtesy of spill.

Categories
Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

"I Love Toronto, Dammit!"

There’s lots to love about Accordion City, and it’s nice to see that someone singing its praises got onto Craigslist’s “Best Of” section.

Categories
Uncategorized

Big Sister is Watching You

I suppose if I ever run across this book at a yard sale, I’d pick it up for laughs:

Big Sister is Watching You

For the benefit of the search engines, I’ll quote the text from the graphic above:

Big Sister is Watching You—Hillary Clinton and the White House Feminists Who Now Control America And Tell the President What to Do:

This stunning book by former University of Texas professor and bestselling author Texe Marrs—has ignited controversy across the U.S.A. This highly documented exposé of Hillary Rodham Clinton and her gal pals has been banned and censored everywhere. Anna Quindlan, the top feminist reporter for The New York Times was furious when she read this book—she promptly wrote a national column blasting the author and demanding that the feds severely punish him! Big Sister is Watching You proves Hillary is not only a lesbian and a communist, she is a New Age occultist deep into black witchcraft and communication with the dead. Her gal pals—Janet “Butch” Reno, former stripper poet Maya Angelou, and others—are also outed for the first time. Discover the dark powers Hillary Clinton has over her husband, Bill, and what America’s most powerful woman plans to do after she herself becomes President in the year 2005.

Speaking as a person who’s not all that impressed with Ms. Clinton (between the fakety-fake pandering to American conservatives and her chumminess with Rupert Murdoch), I have to say that author Texe Marrs isn’t just disturbed, but bus station disturbed.

Be sure to check the other books on Marrs’ site. They’re full of rantings about the dark secret of New Agers, the Illuminati, and — of course — “Mark of the Beast” chips. We’re talking weapons-grade crazy here. Suitable either as a gag gift for friends or a real gift for the tinfoil-hatted special person in your life.

(Thanks to landruc for the link!)

Categories
Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

DemoCamp 9 Tonight!

DemoCamp Toronto logo

Tonight marks the return of DemoCamp — Toronto’s monthly show-and-tell for the software and web development crowd — to its regular schedule. Tonight’s DemoCamp will start 6:30 at No Regrets restaurant and lounge, located at 42 Mowat Avenue, near King and Dufferin. Since No Regrets is a restaurant — and one that makes very good food, at that — you’ll be able to enjoy dinner while seeing what the local tech community is up to.

Tonight’s demos are:

  • DictaBrain – A “rapid voice-to-text-to-blog transcription system”, which will be demonstrated by former Tucowser James Woods. (No, not the actor.)
  • InfoQ.com – Floyd Marinescu, creator of TheServerSide.com, will demonstrate InfoQueue, “independent online community focused on change and innovation in enterprise software development”.
  • ConceptShare – A new way to share and manage visual design concepts
  • The eMail company – “Build online webforms, webpolls, surveys, refer a friend forms, subscriber profile centres on the fly…and sooooo much more”
  • Pursudo – This one’s a creation of the fine people at Unspace. The motto for this application is “Put yourself out there”.

The DemoCamp rules remain in effect: each presenter has 15 minutes total for demonstration and Q&A, and no slideware is allowed. We don’t want to see the marketing presentation, we want to see your application in action!

In addition to performing a demonstration and fielding questions from the audience, each demonstrator should be prepared to answer the following 4 questions at the start:

  • Who are you?
  • What are you demoing?
  • What do you hope to get from the community?
  • What will the community/audience get out of your demo?

The demonstrations will run until around 8:30 or shortly afterwards, after which there’ll be the tradiitonal post-DemoCamp general social free-for-all. See you there!

Categories
In the News

That’s One Strange Coup You’ve Got There, Thailand

Photo Op!

Here’s a photo that’s getting some attention right now:

Kids posing for a photo in front of a tank at the Thai coup

It’s from a blog called Mai Me Arai and written by two people named Ben and Oui.

In this entry, Ben writes that although the TV stations have been shut down, people still have internet access:

Oui told me earlier that a Thai site had a story saying that while the coup was occuring, internet usage in Thailand increased more than 400%. Let it never be said that Thai’s don’t know where to find information when they really want to. Cutting off one source of information (ie television) only moves people to find another.

Here’s Ben on the Thai and world response to the coup:

[From this entry] It’s been interesting to me to read the different reactions coming from other countries. Those who outright condemn the move obviously have no idea of what the situation in Thailand has been up until yesterdays coup and come off sounding panicked that their own military might get the same idea.

[From this entry] Am I the only one who doesn’t give a shit if the US withdraw aid from Thailand? So what? Are Thai’s meant to be quaking in their boots because big powerful America threatens to withdraw aid as a result of the coup that, according to a Dusit poll*, more than 80% of Thai’s support?

Explaining the Coup in the Nerdiest Way Possible

Over at the blog Interesting Things, Ko Saipetch explains the coup in the nerdiest way possible: he likens Thailand to a computer, the ousted government to operating system that installed malware, spyware and a rootkit on his computer and the Thai Council for Democratic Reform as a friendly computer tech who reformatted the hard drive.

Like Ben, he’s amused at the notion of the US condemning the coup.

Other Perspectives

There’a group blog called 19Sep (named for the date on which the coup took place), whose authors are attempting to chronicle the events.

Blogger “Cowboy Caleb” is an editor for Tomorrow.sg (“Singapore’s answer to Boing Boing“), and just happened to be in Bangkok when the coup took place.

Keep an eye on Global Voices’ “Thailand” category, which collects a number of blog entries from Thailand.