Spragualicious

Andrew Sprague at New Year's Levy, Charlottetown I made the mistake of listening to Island Morning on CBC Radio this morning from 8:25 to 8:30 a.m. and heard plenty of banter between host Karen Mair and news presenter Andrew Sprague related to some sort of “road trip” that Andrew is about to take. But I missed the back story, so it was all very confusing.

I made a quick call up to the station just now, and found that Andrew is about to head off across the country to parts unknown.

I’ll miss Andrew’s dulcet tones every morning on the air, and I’ll especially miss him at the New Year’s Levies come January.

Rock on a travel well, Andrew. We’ll be waiting for your triumphant return.

Update: Andrew himself just called: he’ll be back for Christmas, and the Levies; no worries.

Honest Tea Comes to PEI

Honest Tea BottleEven if you’re not a regular customer of Shoppers Drug Mart, if you have any interest in the future of retail design you should really pay a visit to the new location on University Avenue in Charlottetown: it is truly a sight to behold. The design makes every other drugstore in the city look like a relic from the 1970s: the store is bold, bright, airy, and dramatic.

Whether or not we should be making our pharmapurchase decisions based on retail design is another issue entirely (certainly The Friendly Pharmacy, which went in an entirely different direction, emphasizing service over design, would have us not).

For me what’s important about the new store, though, is that they sell my absolute favourite iced tea, that being the product of the Honest Tea company of Bethesda, Maryland. This bottled iced tea is almost perfect: not too sweet, not too tart, and in a good range of natural flavours (my favourite is the Peach Oo-la-long). There are five bottles sitting in the fridge here at the office, waiting to fuel my trips into “the zone.”

You can find the Honest Tea in the new Shoppers in the “natural foods” section, right at the back of the store on the right in the cooler. Enjoy.

James Dean and Gene Autry

One of the features of NetNewsWire is that it can show you the changes that have been made to a post if the author makes edits after originally posting. For the Old Farmer’s Almanac feeds, which get completely regenerated each day, this is somewhat less useful, but also occasionally interesting. Witness:

James Dean, Gene Autry

What a day in history!

Hey, what happened to this website?

ruk logoIf you’re a regular reader of these virtual pages, you’ll notice that there’s been a rather dramatic re-branding here.

After a little more than five years writing under the Reinvented corporate banner, I’ve relocated my writing under a non-corporate banner that you can variously call ruk or ruk.ca.

How come?

Back in 1999 when this weblog sprang to life, Reinvented was just me. In recent years I’ve been joined by others: my brother Johnny is a fulltime programmer, and my partner Catherine is a part-time jack of all trades. Who knows: someday there might be others!

So where it used to be true that “Reinvented = Peter,” this is no longer the case. And it didn’t seem fair to be making broad pronouncements about important issues (or irrelevant blather, as the case may be) using a “royal we” that is no longer just me.

There’s a slightly more verbose explanation for the move on the About page. You’ll also find a neat little visual trip through website history there.

Some important things to note:

  • The old trifurcated “Reinvented,” “Reinvented Labs” and “Reinvented World” blogs are gone, the posts from each aggregated under this new site. The “Labs” and “World” sub-blogs were drafty places that never got the attention they deserved.
  • I’ve ditched the Google AdSense ads. While I was deriving some income from these — about $140US a month — I decided that I could no longer conscience having random ads, not under my control, appear associated with my writing. If I run ads in future, they’ll be for products and services I would use myself.
  • There’s a somewhat more minimalist design to this site. I’m sure things will get more cluttered with time. Type and headlines are also larger; I’m getting older and feeling bolder. Thanks to Steven for some tricky CSS debugging help with the new design.
  • Links to posts on the old blog should get auto-redirected here. There’s some chance that quirky links and images might be missing or mis-directed; I’d appreciate a note if you notice anything awry.
  • The URLs for the RSS feeds have changed: read posts via RSS at ruk.ca/rss/index.xml and read comments at ruk.ca/rss/discuss.xml. The old RSS addresses will redirect (if your reader follows redirects), but please update addresses as required.
  • The “Search” feature has disappeared for a bit; it will return. Same thing for the “audio comments” feature.
  • I’ve succumbed to conventional usage, and that formerly known as “Discussion” is now known as “Comments.” I still think of it as discussion though and welcome you to do likewise.

I’m sure the design and features of the new site will evolve over time, much as they did at the old home. The Reinvented.net website will [eventually] become a “who is Reinvented and what do they do site” but for now it’s serving mostly as a redirector to this site.

Some welcome to the new place. Make yourself at home.

Filing Myself To Death

Somewhere about October 2003, I stopped filing. Every month I’d pay my bills, and I’d pile the paid bills along with invoices, tax receipts, and the other leftovers of everyday business life in a big “to be filed” pile on my desk.

But the “to be filed” day never came.

The business was audited by Revenue Canada. I went to San Francisco. Then Boston. Then Montreal. Then Boston again. Did a lot of work. Created a lot of web pages. Even went to the beach once.

But the filing never happened.

Eventually the “to be filed” pile grew into two, then three “to be filed” piles. On the floor. Hidden in the closet.

Finally the potential energy of the growing piles grew overwhelming: something had to be done.

So today I fueled up with an Iced Cowpuccino from COWS, gritted my teeth, and went on a file-a-thon.

As I type this, it’s 10:50 p.m. on Sunday night. And the piles are gone.

Wow.

National Writers’ Symposium 2004

From Wayne Thibodeau at The Guardian, via my friend Ann, comes a pointer to the National Writers’ Symposium 2004, being held in Charlottetown on Oct. 23 and 24.

There’s an impressive roster of speakers, including the following name writers you’ll probably recognize:

  • Scott Taylor
  • Linden MacIntyre
  • Scott Russell
  • Ira Basen
  • David Weale

Wayne says “The three-day event is designed specifically for journalists but is open to anyone interested in devoting some time to the magical skill at the heart of all effective communications, the craft of writing.”

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