Queensway drivers talking on the phone
Time for a bit of a rant about drivers on the Queensway. I haven’t grumbled about them (in my blog anyway) since March 11th of last year, so it’s probably time.
Time for a bit of a rant about drivers on the Queensway. I haven’t grumbled about them (in my blog anyway) since March 11th of last year, so it’s probably time.
Well, we’re done with February and winter in Ottawa has broken, Monday’s weather notwithstanding. The forecast for the next couple of days is calling for sunshine and warm weather (for Ottawa in the winter).
Sounds like March is coming in like a lamb. If the old adage “in like a lion, out like a lamb” holds true, then the weather at the end of March is going to be spectacularly sucky. (Personally, I’m hoping this doesn’t come true!)
My prediction is that the end of March is going to be damp with maybe one annoying dump of wet snow to remind us that it can snow in the Spring, too. It would be really nice to have a repeat of last year, which saw me golfing on April 2nd, but I’m not going to be so bold as to suggest that will happen two years in a row.
What’s your prediction for the weather at the end of March and why?
The Franktown weather radar is quite colourful this morning. This “colour” has led to the cancellation of school buses and snow covered roads, so far, and the prospect of freezing rain and pellets later today, according to the aviation forecast: |
TAF CYOW 281155Z 2812/0112 06012KT 5SM -FZRA -PL BR OVC030 TEMPO
2812/2815 2SM -SNPL OVC020
FM281500 08012KT 1/2SM SN VV004 TEMPO 2815/2821 2SM -SN OVC020
PROB40 2815/2816 3SM -FZRA BR
FM282100 33012G22KT P6SM BKN020
FM282300 31015G25KT P6SM BKN040
FM010300 31015G25KT P6SM SCT040
FM010900 31010KT P6SM SKC
RMK NXT FCST BY 281500Z=
Fun stuff, eh?
Have a safe commute to work this morning! |
I’ve got writer’s block. There are things I want to blog about, but I’m finding it hard to write them. And it’s starting to frustrate me.
My blog doesn’t have a particular theme — I write about whatever grabs my attention. There are some themes that have emerged over the years, such as photography, climbing and geocaching, and there have been “current affairs” type posts about things like the transit strike a couple of years ago, but I really can’t point at my blog and say “it’s about x” because it’s not. (At the first Ottawa bloggers’ brunch I went to a couple of years ago someone asked me what my blog was about and I couldn’t really answer the question.)
For much of 2008, I was averaging at least twenty posts a month. At the time, I was still a newly-minted research analyst at work and was trying to get into the habit of writing in preparation for some a research article and a report that I was going to have to write. I hadn’t had to do any significant writing since graduating from university about ten years earlier, so blogging several times a week was a great way to get the creative juices flowing at the time.
Lately, I’ve found it hard to get started, but it’s not for lack of topics or opportunities. Over the last few weeks, I’ve thought of half a dozen things that made me think “that would make a good blog entry”, and recently I was approached to contribute some articles to another blog (actually, that might be the incentive I need), but I seem to have stalled. I suspect a large part of it is because I’ve been the last six months or so working on a survey report at work, which has involved a lot of writing, and I’m getting tired of writing. I’m not sure how real authors handle this — I should ask my cousin about it.
The report I’ve been writing for the last few months is being released in a couple of weeks and then I’m taking a short vacation for some sunshine and saltwater (and golfing) about a week later. Hopefully that will recharge my creative batteries.
As you’ve probably heard, there was a fairly significant earthquake in Christchurch, New Zealand. It hit in the middle of the day, so there were a lot more people out and about. Some buildings have collapsed and some deaths have been reported.
There’s a Google App called Person Finder who are either looking for people in Christchurch or have information about people in Christchurch available at http://christchurch-2011.person-finder.appspot.com.
I hope that anyone you know who is in Christchurch is safe and sound.
I went to the UK last summer and meant to write about a couple of tips and tricks I learned for travelling with your BlackBerry. Well, better late than never as they say…
If you’re a Canadian with a BlackBerry or some other smartphone, like me, then you are probably painfully aware of how expensive wireless data is in Canada compared to most of the rest of the civilized world. We’ve started to see the cost of wireless data come down in the last year or two, particularly with the arrival of iPhones and Android devices, but it’s still more expensive, generally speaking, that other countries like the US or the UK. Most of the major carriers in Canada offer some sort of international data plans to allow you to use your smartphone outside of Canada without taking out a second mortgage, but they’re still quite expensive and if you should use your phone to call someone, even what would otherwise be a local call where you are travelling, you could be looking at several dollars per minute.
But there are some something you can do to make using your smartphone while travelling a little more affordable. I have a BlackBerry 9700, but some of these tips are probably equally applicable to other devices like iPhones and Android.
It appears that the telephone spammers at Metroland Media are up to their old tricks again. I had an automated call a couple of days ago from 613-221-6247 saying that Metroland Media are looking for carriers to deliver their spam community newspapers.
They first came on to my radar in September when their automated system called me several times saying they were looking for carriers. At the time, I informed them that I was on the National Do Not Call List and that because they were not soliciting subscriptions they were not exempt. The person I spoke to, Matt, told me that in his opinion they were allowed to call because they were a) a newspaper and b) not trying to sell anything – which is wrong on both counts: newspapers are only exempt from the NDNCL if they are soliciting subscriptions and then only if the person they’re calling isn’t on their own do not call list. He assured me that I would be put on their do not call list.
And the calls stopped. At least for a couple of months.
Well, apparently that assurance was worth exactly what I paid for it because I had an automated phone call from them a couple of days ago, though this time they called themselves Metroland Media rather than Ottawa This Week. I’ve left a voice mail for the regional manager of Metroland Media asking him to call me, so we’ll see what he has to say about this.
And it doesn’t appear that I’m the only person to receive one of these automated calls because I can tell by my blog statistics that a lot of people are googling their phone number (613-221-6247) and ending up with my previous entry about them.