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Regular Posts (and the Advent Calendar) Resume Later Today

As you can see, I’ve been busy…

…but regular posting, as well as all the back-posts to the Advent Calendar, will resume later today.

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Accordion Guy Advent Calendar, Day Eighteen: The Spirit of Christmas

Has it already been ten years?!


Ten

years ago, Trey Parker and Matt Stone, two film students from the

University of Colorado, were commissioned to make an animated short

that would be used as a video Christmas card to be sent to various

Hollywood types. Parker and Stone used contruction paper and

stop-motion animation techniques to create the now-legendary The Spirit of Christmas [6.8MB, QuickTime – lots of swearing, and offence-a-licious] featuring the kids who’d eventually get their own show, South Park, Jesus and Santa fighting over Christmas and Brian Boitano, who saves the day.

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Accordion Guy Advent Calendar, Day Seventeen: Some Ghosts from Christmases Past

For today’s Advent Calendar goodie, I thought I’d dip into the vault and dig up some of my favourite entries from Christmases past. They are:

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Accordion Guy Advent Calendar, Day Sixteen: Fast Food

Perhaps you’ve already heard this little bit of trivia, but in case you haven’t, let me the one to tell you: many people in Japan associate Christmas with things that we’d expect, such as decorations and gifts, but also with things that we wouldn’t expect, such as romantic getaways to love hotels and a Kentucky Fried Chicken dinner.

Joi Ito has written that he knows the origin of the Japanese Christmas/KFC tradition: it’s all due to his friend, Shin Okawara. Shin was responsible for bringing KFC to Japan, and during its introduction, spun what I like to call “the dirty bird” or “greasy buzzard” as the sort of food eaten by rich people in America, in a manner similar to the way those old Grey Poupon ads made it seem like the mustard of the upper classes. He ran an ad campaign that showed wealthy American

families all eating KFC for their yuletide feast. The Japanese, being led to believe that “dirty bird” was an American Christmas tradition, simply adopted it.

Lest you think that I am poking fun at our Japanese friends for adopting a Christmas tradition learned from TV, I will now make a confession — we deVillas have done it as well. In an episode of the late 1970s television series Eight is Enough, the Bradford family had a tradition of drinking orange juice before opening their presents. Dad thought this was a good idea, and borrowed this tradition. Almost thirty years later, it’s still OJ first, then the presents. And it’s all Dick van Patten’s fault.

I’d love to give you a KFC-related downloadable as today’s Advent Calendar goodie, but I don’t have any. However, I’ve got the next best thing: McDonald’s-related downloadable goodies. These are ads from 1962 that feature early appearances of McDonald’s then-new mascot, Ronald McDonald, who was played by Willard Scott, long before he was a fixture on the Today show.

Ronald’s costume was a much rougher version of the Ronald we know today. Note the use of a McDonald’s cup for a nose and tray with burger, fries and shake for a hat. Also notable is the quaint 1960’s “Ronald McDonald” theme music.

Those of you who have a bit of clown phobia may not want to watch these videos — many people I know find the old Ronald much creepier than thew current one.

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Accordion Guy Advent Calendar, Day Fifteen: A Christmas Carol

Picture: Scrooge McDuckFor

a long time, adapting Charles Dickens’ classic tale A Christmas Carol

was a tried-true cliche for television shows. The setup was always the

same: some character who was behaving badly (it wasn’t necessarily

greed) would get visited by three ghosts who would show him the error

of his or her ways. I remember some of the more successful attempts

such as Blackadder’s Christmas Carol and the WKRP in Cincinatti

episode in which Mr. Carlson doesn’t hand out Christmas bonuses, eats

one of Johnny’s brownies and has a dream in which he gets visited by

the ghosts (the Marley in this case being Bob

Marley).

I also remember sillier adaptations, such as the Six Million

Dollar Man episode title A Bionic Christmas Carol, which is

summarized as follows:

Oscar

makes Steve give up his Christmas holiday to investigate a major systems supplier

for the space projects.  Oscar fears that sabotage in the life support systems

may affect a Mars landing.  Horton Budge is a cynical industrialist and is

so tight that his nephew, Bob Crandall, who is employed at Budge’s plant,

isn’t paid enough to support his family.  The sabotage that Oscar fears is

the result of the low morale at the plant caused by Budge’s miserly ways. 

Steve utilizes his bionics to bring some cheer and a change of heart to Budge

and his family

I was nine years old when the episode was aired (December 1976), and for some reason, it’s permanently burned into my memory.

There’ve also been many movie adaptations that have modernized the

tale, from the excellent Scrooged,

starring Bill Murray as a cynical

and selfish TV producer (and Bobcat Goldthwait playing the

Cratchit-like character) to the rather painful Skinflint: A Country

Christmas Carol, which was a made-for-TV musical that I think starred a

lot of the cast from Hee Haw.

I’m not as big a TV watcher as I used to be in my childhood and teen

years, so I don’t know if A Christmas Carol is still inspiring

television show plots. I thought that in the spirit of the cliche, I’d

present the original version in eBook form [412K, PDF] as

today’s Advent Calendar goodie.

Recommended Reading

Here’s a web page that covers a number of television and movie adaptations of A Christmas Carol.

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Tucows to Acquire Critical Path’s Hosted Messaging Infrastructure and Customer Base

Big changes are afoot at the company where I work (and hold the longest title) in

the coming year. One of them is an agreement with Critical Path, which

we announced minutes ago. I’ll let the press release do the talking…

TORONTO, CANADA (December 14, 2005) – Tucows Inc. (AMEX:TCX, TSX:TC) today

announced that it has signed a definitive agreement with Critical Path,

Inc. to acquire substantially all of Critical Path’s hosted messaging

assets, including the customer base, hosted messaging communications

infrastructure, and other related assets, such as goodwill and a

software license for Memova™ Messaging, for up to US $8.0 million in

cash plus the assumption of some related contractual liabilities.

Tucows will maintain the hosted messaging data centers in Denver,

Colorado and London, England. Tucows will also offer employment to the

majority of Critical Path’s hosted messaging operations and support

teams located in Toronto, Ontario.

“With this acquisition, Tucows becomes a leader in hosted

email, especially hosted email for Internet service providers and web

hosting companies,” said Elliot Noss, President and CEO, Tucows Inc.

“It is consistent with our strategy to be a leading provider of

Internet services to service providers. It will deepen our

relationships with existing customers, add a number of new service

provider customers and further diversify our revenue streams.”

“We believe our plan will result in a seamless transition for our new

customers” said David Woroch, Vice President of Sales & Marketing,

Tucows Inc. “We intend to grow the hosted email business by providing a

greater customer experience through our focus on the needs of our

service provider customers and leveraging the features of the Memova

Messaging software.”

“We are excited about the relationship with Tucows,” said Mark

Ferrer, CEO and Chairman, Critical Path. “It gives Critical Path the

ability to continue to offer multiple delivery options for our

software, while allowing us to focus on our core strength – software

development.”

The acquisition will be accounted for as a purchase transaction and has

been approved by both companies’ boards of directors. The acquisition

is anticipated to close January 3, 2006, and is subject to standard

closing provisions and conditions.

From

my point of view as the developer relations guy, this is exciting —

not only does this bode well for the company, but there’s also Critical

Path’s email infrastructure and technology that I’ll get to look at,

document and promote. You can’t give a techie a better Christmas

present than new tech (and new techies to hang out with, too).

If

you’d like to know more, check out the Hosted Email FAQ on the Tucows site, which includes the answers to questions such as:

Here’s our CEO, Elliot Noss (on the balcony), making the announcement to

the Tucows staff. Note the space: we can easily accomodate a few extra

dozen coworkers.

If you’d like something a little more up-close-and-personal, you can hear CEO Elliot Noss talk about it himself in

this podcast

(it’ll first take you to a disclaimer page — read and understand the

disclaimer and then click the “I read and understood it” button, after

which you’ll be taken to a page with the podcast). In the podcast, he

answers these questions:

  1. Why is Tucows acquiring Critical Path?
  2. What are the financial implications of this transaction?
  3. Tell us more about the email and broader messaging space.
  4. Was this a good deal for Tucows?
  5. Why did you choose to do this as a podcast?

You get three guesses as to whom the very smooth and professional-sounding interviewer in the podcast is.

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It Happened to Me

Freudian Slippage

Click the comic to see it on its own page.

I keep accidentally referring to the movie as “Bareback Mountain”.