My old friend Leah is producing Read-TV, “an innovative series on video and DVD that engages and educates beginner readers.”

Our copy arrived today, and Oliver is captivated. Oscar. Makes. Muffins. If you have a child of pre-school to grade one age, you should take a look; full story, and online ordering on the Read-TV website.

Back last September when this weblog got all personal, I let our corporate website wither on the vine.

I’ve started to water and feed it this week, and because we’re starting to use it to make a lot of client websites, I’m using Drupal to do it. Consider it a work in progress, and as much an experimental sandbox as a piece of business propaganda. Look there for news more “corporate” than personal, including notes about important updates to our client websites, interesting projects, and the like.

You can find it all at the new Reinvented.net. There’s an RSS feed over there too.

From my friend John comes a pointer to Radio Free Peterborough, founded to answer the question “I wonder how much Peterborough music you could put together in one place on shuffle?”

My erstwhile alma mater Trent University is the subject of a news weblog that purports to “advocate for accountability and transparency in university governance.” Things were so much simplet back in the 1980s when the issues of the day were things like renaming the “Bata” library the “Biko” library.

Actual quote from the CBC website:

Radio 3 regularly airs on CBC Radio Two.

Oh, and in 1995 ten years later, www.gov.pe.ca came online.

It has been twenty years since 1985. During that year, I:

  • Bought my first PC.
  • Borrowed a carbon monoxide tester from the Ontario Ministry of Environment.
  • Graduated from high school.
  • Went on my first real date.
  • Turned 19 years old.
  • Decided not to become an aerospace engineer.
  • Decided to go to Trent University.
  • Worked the summer at the Royal Ontario Museum and for John Traill at Athenians.
  • Took a course in beginner’s Greek at the University of Toronto.
  • Ate lunch almost every summer day at Bogey’s Sandwich Shop on Bloor St.
  • Ate a lot of ice cream from Greg’s, next door to Bogey’s.
  • Could ride the TTC for 35 cents with my student card.
  • Had a two-month long argument with my dad.
  • Moved out of my parents house and went to Trent University.
  • Made my first radio programme.
  • Was published in a newspaper for the first time (a review of Ernie’s Barber Shop in Arthur)
  • Met my friends Lisa Howard, John Muir, Stephen Badhwar and Patrick Gracey, all of whom I’m in touch with to this day (I’d already known my friend Oliver — wee’s namesake — for a year).
  • Took a reading course from newly-minted professor Stephen Regoczei in “Natural Language Understanding by Computers.” I don’t believe we actually talked about that at all. Stephen is still a good friend.
  • Watched a lot of Hill Street Blues on television.
  • Still hadn’t ever taken a drink or kissed a girl (although Nancy Robinson did hug me during a thunder storm, but that was in 1975).

In the intervening twenty years, I’ve had half a dozen ill-fated relationships and one very good one (it’s still going strong).

Among other things, I’ve worked in a motorhome factory as a computer operator, as a au pair in El Paso, in a Minute Maid orange juice factory as a data entry clerk, and in a daily newspaper composing room. I’ve written hundreds of thousands of lines of computer code, and designed hundreds of posters and brochures.

I acquired and then gave up a beautiful, spirited lab-spaniel cross named Penny. I’ve traveled to every Canadian province and to South Korea, Germany, the Czech Republic, Japan, Thailand, Spain, England, Slovenia, Croatia, Italy and, innumerable times, the USA. I lived in Ontario, Quebec, Texas and finally here in Prince Edward Island.

One friend was murdered, two overdosed on heroin. All four of my grandparents died.

I was interogated once by the police, committed one act of civil disobedience, and sat in on one cabinet meeting.

I was stopped by the police for illegally kissing Catherine in a car on the side of the highway.

I began eating yogurt and sushi.

And had a son.

In twenty years I’ll be on the cusp of 60.

My friend Oliver points out that Jerry Brown has a blog.

Advice for Hon. Jamie Ballem, PEI’s Minister of Environment, Energy and Forestry: next time you drive into town on a day when a major international climate change accord is announced, leave the big honkin’ SUV at home. Here’s the evidence from CBC Canada Now:

Take a taxi. Rent a Prius. Carpool.

The Hockey Night in Canada theme song has its own website. Interesting fact: the same composer, Dolores Claman, wrote the “Ontario-ari-ari-o” song (“A place to stand, a place to grow…”).

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). 

You can subscribe to an RSS feed of posts, an RSS feed of comments, or a podcast RSS feed that just contains audio posts. You can also receive a daily digests of posts by email.

Search