I got my fresh-off-the-press copy of the new book A Good Summer this afternoon from my friend Ann.

The book features the photographs of Island photographer Anna Karpinski accompanied by text from 16 Island writers. I’m honoured to be one of the 16: I wrote a paragraph about my brother Steve’s official reprimand for not attending the Gold Cup and Saucer Parade one summer.

The design of the book, by Mathew MacKay, is wonderful: he’s come up with a design that would have worked well in 1966, looked dated in the interim, but suddenly feels exactly right for this moment.

The book is being formally launched on Wednesday, July 30, 2008 from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. in an event — open to the public, meaning you — being held at The whY. There will be readings, signings and refreshments.

You can buy the book online from Nimbus or ask your local bookseller to order ISBN 9781894838320.

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First, it’s cotton boll, not cotton ball. And the boll weevil feeds on same. Also, a weevil is not a rat-sized gopher-like mammal but rather a small beetle.

Second, if you’re Cornish you’re from Cornwall. I’d never made that connection before.

Oh, and there’s a Margate in England too (we have our very own Margate here on PEI). The things you can learn from Relocation, Relocation.

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Ask Eygló is a regular column on the Iceland Review site that invites readers to submit questions about Iceland that are “neither rude, thick, nor difficult to answer.”

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Here’s the construction site at the University of PEI for the new Canada Games track and field facility:

New Track and Field Facility at UPEI - Share on Ovi

Here’s the attempt to mitigate the effects of having a giant pile of red dirt flowing into the tiny creek that’s right beside the construction site:

Attempts to Prevent Silt from Flowing into Creek - Share on Ovi

Here’s how well it worked, taken yesterday morning after a small amount of rain fell on Charlottetown:

Creek Filled with Silt - Share on Ovi
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A few years ago, basking in the afterglow of the first Zap Your PRAM conference, the lads from upstairs and I were having lunch and pondering what to do for a follow-up act. Someone — it might have been me, but I can’t recall — suggested that we launch an “Artist in Residence” program here at 84 Fitzroy Street. In the way that pompous ideas are often greeted around our lunch table — we’re not programmers, we’re artists! — this one was warmly received, and we set off in search of our first candidates.

Our first candidates fell through — the lure of Hollywood — and the idea sort of collapsed around them.

Until last summer when I suggested to my Swanish friends Olle and Luisa that they be the first candidates. The idea percolated in their heads for a year, and this year they accepted the appointment, and on September 30, 2008 they’ll begin their 3-week residency here.

I’ll leave it to Olle and Luisa to flesh out their own artistry — suffice to say they probably won’t be painting still life portraits of Beaconsfield. They’ve just lauched Hello PEI as the blog of their project, and if nothing else this promises to be a goldmine of “seeing the Island through strangers’ eyes” flow.

If you’d like to sign on as a co-conspirator or sponsor, or otherwise be involved, please let if be known.

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Noting for the record that .mobi, which is in theory the domain for “the mobile web,” is not numeric-keypad-typing friendly (the m and the o are both on the 6 key, which means you must pause between keying them in). On a similar note, Nokia’s ovi brand name is mobile-friendly — 666-888-444 will type it for you. Of course “mtg” (key “684”) would be even friendlier, but it’s not as strong a brand name…

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The Dryden Municipal Telephone System is “a full-service public utility telephone company owned by the City of Dryden.” It suggests here that they are also poised to become third GSM carrier in Canada, albeit, presumably, for a limited area (Dryden is a “city” of 9,000 people in north-western Ontario).

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Fully MWS Compatible PAMP. Neato. Accusations of acronym and initialism overuse are warranted.

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Let me briefly sing the praises of the amazing bit open source of code that is Zebra Barcode Reader. Using the zebraimg application that’s included with the source code, I can take a JPEG image of a UPC code on the back of a and get the book’s ISBN returned to me as text.

I’ve managed to assemble the pieces of a puzzle that lets me take a photo of a book’s UPC code, email it to my server, and receive back, a few seconds later, the best Amazon.com prices for new and used copies of the book. It all seems, well, rather magical when it works. And the barcode decoding part of the process seems to work very, very well — 100% so far, in fact.

This was all induced by this 43 Folders blog post about iPhone applications that don’t exist — I reasoned that, as the Nokia N95 has an excellent macro mode for taking close-ups with its 5MP camera, it would also be very good at taking barcode photos with enough resolution to easily decode. And it does.

Here’s how the process works. First, I take a photo with the N95’s camera, using the macro mode and holding the camera about 6 inches above the UPC code:

07172008016 - Share on Ovi

Next, I email the photo, using the N95’s built in mail application and its wifi connection, to a special email address I’ve set up on my server. There’s a script on the server that intercepts the incoming email, pulls the JPEG image’s MIME attachment out of the message, runs the image through zebraimg to get the UPC code, and then uses the Amazon.com API ItemLookup operation to find the title, author and prices for the book. These are then simply emailed back to the sending address:

Results of my Email an UPC Script
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If you have a new Prince Edward Island driver license — the crazy all-digital ones with the tiny numbers beside each field — flip it over and you’ll see a barcode. Thanks to The SWIPE Toolkit it’s easy to find out what information is encoded in that barcode. For me, the “processed” version of the results came out like this:

Address=100 PRINCE ST
City=CHARLOTTETOWN
State=PE
Zipcode=C1A 4R4
Driver License Number=XXXXXX
License Expiration Date=MM/DD/YYYY
License Issued Date=MM/DD/YYYY
Date of Birth=MM/DD/YYYY
Sex=MALE
Address2=
Height=1'85"
Address Line 2=

There’s actually more information in there, which you only see if you look at the “raw bytes” tab in the Toolkit application; this Pennsylvania document can be of assistance in understanding what the fields mean. In there I see information like my name and eye colour that the Toolkit doesn’t parse.

The PDF417 format for the barcode used in Prince Edward Island is used many other places too, so if you live elsewhere you may be able to do this just as easily. It took me about 5 minutes from scan to decode, and worked on a Mac (it’s a Java application). Be sure to save your scanned image as a JPEG (I tried TIFF and it didn’t work).

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About This Blog

Photo of Peter RukavinaI am . I am a writer, letterpress printer, and a curious person.

To learn more about me, read my /nowlook at my bio, listen to audio I’ve posted, read presentations and speeches I’ve written, or get in touch (peter@rukavina.net is the quickest way). 

I have been writing here since May 1999: you can explore the 25+ years of blog posts in the archive.

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