Saturday, December 29, 2012

Microsoft ... Microcrap





As a writer I spend at least eight hours per day on the computer, and a good portion of that is wasted on wrestling with MS Word. Annoyances like:
  • chasing the pointer as it jumps around the page;
  • deleting and retyping the misplaced copy that results;
  • undoing the blocking of copy that mysteriously appears on its own, and is then deleted with my next key stroke;
  • struggling to undo the alternate characters (the blue ones on the keypad) that arbitrarily appear.
Before I cancelled the automatic updates, Windows would suddenly reboot without warning (wiping out whatever I hadn't saved), and to add insult to injury it would then send a pop-up to say that, "Windows has just updated your computer." No kidding!

A while back I purchased an update from Word 2007 to 2010 ($160), thinking it had remedied the above-listed glitches, but to my utter chagrin it hadn't. Moreover, when I saved my unfinished manuscript to 2010 it deleted the spaces between words on over 200 pages - (130,000 words)!

So why don't I complain? Believe me I would if I could, but unless you are writing to tell Microcrap how good it is, there is no "contact us" feature anywhere on their website.

In short, Microcrap is the best advertisement for Macintosh there is, and I'm sold on switching with my next computer purchase.




Thursday, December 13, 2012

The last bastard offspring in the great everlasting, never-ending genealogy of Liberal scandals, boondoggles and screw-ups.





[A repost of Christina Blizzard's column "Presto! Another Ontario Liberal screw-up." See the complete story at: http://www.sunnewsnetwork.ca/sunnews/straighttalk/archives/2012/12/20121213-182727.html]

Provincial auditor general Jim McCarter produced a scathing report on Presto Wednesday (December 12, 2012), saying when all the costs are factored in, Presto stands to be among the highest-cost fare cards in the world.

And you wonder why it is that this province continues to re-invent the wheel when it comes to big IT projects.
They're invariably fraught with cost overruns and come in late and over budget -- if they ever get completed at all.

Which reminds me: Where are our electronic health records?


Thursday, December 6, 2012

Canadian history made boring...


I had reason to go looking for a Canadian web site similar to Legends Of America, an excellent history resource with some real ‘meat’ to it—meaning, it is history made interesting. It also features some Canadian characters who have played a significant role in American history, i.e. Pearl Hart, Bat Masterson, etc., for which there is hardly a mention in Canadian-based histories.

A veritable wasteland

What I found was a depressing collection of thumbnail sketches, afterthoughts  to American frontier history, a roll call of stodgy Canadian/British statesmen (John A. Macdonald, etc.), and lesson plans so dry you could strike a match on them.

For example, here is one lesson directed toward grade 3 students:

The earliest settlers who made their homes in the wilderness were known as pioneers.
Many pioneers of Upper Canada came from France, England, Scotland, Italy, Germany and other countries in Europe.  Some settlers went to other parts of North America and later moved into Upper Canada. 
They came to Upper Canada for many reasons.  Some came so they could freely practice their religion.  Some did not like the way their home countries were being run.  Some just hoped they could have a better life in a new country.

Interesting Facts about the Early Settlers
bullet
in 1800, only 10% of the population lived in towns or cities - most lived on farms
bullet
in 1800, the population of Upper Canada was 35 000
bullet
before 1800, most immigrants came from America
bullet
after 1815, large numbers of  immigrants started to come from the British Isles (England, Ireland, Scotland)
bullet
between 1825 and the 1830's more people came from the British Isles than from America

(see the full lesson plan at: Pioneer Life in Upper Canada)

Is it any wonder kids find history “boring” and “irrelevant?”—That is if they study any Canadian history at all.

There is better (more interesting) history available

Admittedly, it wouldn’t be hard to find a more interesting perspective, but even here there is very little effort to promote it. With very few exceptions the major Canadian media are more interested in politics and scandal—oh, and Kate’s pregnancy—than promoting  Canadian heritage. Mind you, if they got their history from the above lesson, it is perhaps understandable.

There are interesting examples of Canadian history

On my own blog, Gerry B’s Book Reviews, I have reviewed several excellent histories that are in-depth as well as interesting. Some of these include:


In the near future, I will be launching a web site dedicated to finding interesting examples of Canadian history. Until then, I leave you with this vignette:

John A. Macdonald, first prime minister of Canada, trained all the Parliamentary Pages to serve him gin in the House of Commons, because it looked more like water than whiskey.