Categories
Geek Music

Tucows Ready to Rock With .eu Domains [Updated]

The MP3 included with this entry is no longer available.

EURid, the European registry of

internet domain names, has accredited Tucows to sell .eu (as in

“Europe”) domain names. The countdown has started: we’ll be offering it

later this year.

I suppose I will be expected to learn how to play Europe’s rock anthem, The Final Countdown on accordion. Or maybe on that old Korg Poly 800 synth that Steph gave to me for my birthday.

I’m gonna have to draw the line at growing ’80’s metal hair, though.

Categories
It Happened to Me

Elliot’s Photo

In the comments to this entry, faithful Accordion Guy reader and my boss’ boss, Elliot Noss writes:

ok, the way you cropped the photo of me the slide looks like it says

“always need capital” on the bottom. that was NOT what it said!

the fact that I look like I am kind of praying doesn’t help either. 🙂

It may not have been what the slide said, but I think that “Always need

capital” is true, regardless of how much you have. This is accordance

with…

Joey’s Three Principles of Money

(stolen from John Henson, who stole it from some suit)

  1. More money is better than less money.
  2. Money today is better than money tomorrow.
  3. Real money is better than fake money.

My friend Eldon has slightly doctored the Elliot photo. See if you can

spot the Photoshoppery. If you need to see a larger version, click the

photo!

Photo: Subtly altered photo of Tucows CEO Elliot Noss making a presentation.

Click the photo to see it at full size.

Categories
It Happened to Me Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

Interviewed by BlogTO

In today’s BlogTO, one of the blogs that covers happenings in Accordion City, there’s an interview featuring Yours Truly. An exceprt:

Choose someone, living or dead, to write your biography. Why did you make that choice?


Michael Chabon, because nobody captures romance and geekdom in the same

breath like he can. It would be a graphic novel, and illustrated by

Chris “Achewood” Onstad, Jeffery “Wigu” Rowland, Jeph “Questionable

Content” Jacques, John “Scary Go Round” Allison and Mike “Death to the

Extremist” Zole.

Zole would illustrate the love scenes.

Categories
Accordion, Instrument of the Gods It Happened to Me Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

One Busy Thursday (Preview)

I’m too tired to do a writeup now, but I have some photos of what

Thursday looked like. There are some previews below, but I suggest you

check out the larger photos in the photo album or as a slideshow. Full details to follow.

7:30 a.m.: Nathan Phillips Square

Photo: Team Tucows on their bikes just before the

  Ride for Kids.

Click the photo to see the slideshow.

Photo: Tucows 'squishy cow' in Liam's bike bag.

Click the photo to see the slideshow.

9:00 a.m.: Watching the CEO’s presentation

Photo: Elliot Noss talking at the Tucows all-hands strategic

  planning meeting.

Click the photo to see the slideshow.

3:15 p.m.: PH34R MY M4D D3V-R3L4710NS 5K1LLZ

Photo: Joey deVilla works at his desk at Tucows.

Click the photo to see the slideshow.

7:30 p.m.: Shooting a “bumper” segment for G4 Tech TV with Amber and Leo

Photo: Amber MacArthur, Leo Laporte and Joey deVilla filming a

  bumper promo for the G4 TechTV show 'Call for Help'.
Click the photo to see the slideshow.

Photo: Amber MacArthur, Leo Laporte and

  Joey deVilla filming a bumper promo for the G4 TechTV show 'Call for

  Help'.

Click the photo to see the slideshow.

Categories
It Happened to Me Music

Busybusybusy / Music for You!

They’ve got me doing a lot of computer-y stuff on the internets today…

Photo: Computer programming, as depicted in 'Space: 1999'.

…but that doesn’t mean you’re going to leave this site empty-handed.

I give you Hayseed Dixie (the band known for doing AC/DC covers in a

bluegrass style) doing their special countrified version of The

Darkness’ I Believe in a Thing Called Love! [4.7MB MP3]

Categories
Accordion, Instrument of the Gods It Happened to Me Music

Because This Blog’s Been a Little Lacking in Shameless Self-Promotion Lately

Photo: Joey deVilla plays accordion at the OPML meetup on Tuesday,

  August 2, 2005.

Click the picture to see the video (26MB,

QuickTime)

Brian McKechnie pointed me to this video [26MB,

QuickTime] that he shot of my Baby One More Time performance at the end of

last week’s OPML

meetup.

Thanks, Brian!

The accordion and I will be at Thursday’s TechTV

Meetup, which takes place at No Regrets, deep in “the dingy alleys of Toronto’s Porn

District”, Liberty Village

Categories
Uncategorized

African Bits Per Capita [Updated]

(Attention Ethan Zuckerman! You might might have seen the map below, but just in case, I thought I’d call it to your attention.)

Update: Ethan wrote back — see the end of the post!

Yesterday, I found out about a map produced in 2002 by

Canada’s International Development Research Centre (IDRC).

It’s titled The Internet: Out of Africa and shows a relatively new

metric of internet use: bits per capita. A smaller version is shown below; click it to see it at full size.

African bits per capita. Click the map to see it at full size.

The IDRC page introducing the map reads:

The size of the Internet in a country indicates an element of its

progress towards an information-based economy. International Internet

bandwidth provides a measure of Internet activity because many people

share accounts, or use corporate and academic networks along with cyber

cafes and business centers. Outgoing bandwidth also takes better

account of the wide range of possible use, from those who write a few

emails each week, to users who spend many hours a day on the net

browsing, transacting, streaming, and downloading. Because of this, the

often used ‘Number of Internet Users’ indicator may have less relevance

in the developing world than in other places.

There’s

a circle for each country; the size of the circle is proportional to

the outgoing bandwidth for that country. Each circle is a pie chart

showing the proportion of bandwidth destinations. For example, Seychelles

(the teeny island on the eastern end of the map) has way more outgoing

internet traffic than anywhere else in Africa, 50% of which is bound

for North America and the other 50% bound for Asia. Chad, among whose neighbours are the fun bunch of Niger, Libya and Sudan, has the least bits per capita.

Countries are colour-coded by GDP per capita. Clearly, I’m not up on Africa, as I would’ve guessed that Egypt’s (US$4,200 per capita in 2004) would’ve been higher than that of Libya (US$6,700 per capita in 2004) or Gabon

(US$5,900 per capita in 2004). I think the map is wrong when it comes

to South Africa; I’d have bet that even in 2002, its GDP per capita

would be the highest, as it was in 2004: US$11,000 per capita.

For comparison’s sake, Canada’s GDP per capita for 2004 was US$31,500, the United Kingdom’s was US$29,600 and the United States’ was US$41,000, about 10 times that of Egypt.


Update (Tuesday, August 9, 2005 — 2 p.m. EDT):

Ethan writes:

Thanks, Joey. It’s a very famous map, and

has been in almost everyone’s slide deck for ICT4D presentations for

the past couple of years. It’s wildly out of date, though, and more

than a little bit deceptive. It’s got a very strong bias for

fiber-based internet access and against satellite, which may be a

technically sound bias, but doesn’t reflect commercial reality on the

ground… It also doesn’t visualize Internet Exchange Points, either

countrywide or regional, which are a critical part of the Africa

connectivity picture. Still, it’s a very useful image for folks trying

to explain some of the challenges of connectivity on the continent. And

it’s interesting to see that a good map still gets circulated almost

four years after its creation…

Thanks for the info, Ethan!