Archive for the 'Travel' Category

Lifeslice #1 - Leaping off buildings, Porter, Pandora

So this is a new category created with attention-deficit types (you) and time-challenged bloggers (me) in mind. It’s a quick(er) brain-dump format. Which means that I might actually post more often. We’ll see.

Please hold, I have to leap off a building

- [Ring-ring]

- Hello?

- Hey Tom, it’s Duncan. Got a minute?

- I’m about to jump off a 7-story building. Can I call you back tonight?

Hopping aboard Porter

I’m heading to Toronto for a meeting this week and we’re flying Porter. I’m curious to check it out. Especially since they are billing themselves as “North America’s premium short-haul carrier.” Incidentally, the Porter branding was done by Winkreative, which is headed by Wallpaper magazine founder Tyler Brûlé. I wonder if Porter is innovative enough to include carbon offsets in their ticket price…

Closing Pandora’s box

I got an email from Pandora today, the online music discovery service created by the Music Genome Project. Citing international licensing constraints, they’re forced to restrict streaming audio from Pandora for most countries outside of the U.S. So, as of May 16th, Pandora will be blocked to listeners from Canada. Why? Mostly because, as founder Tim Westergren stated in the email, “there is no global licensing organization to enable any webcaster to legitimately offer its service around the world.”

What I’ve been up to

For those who are wondering if I’m still in the land of the living, this entry is for you.

There’s been a lot going on lately, and my blogging appears to have suffered for it. It’s all been good, of course. Let’s see, where do I begin?

I’ve spent a lot of time so far this year out West, mostly in and around San Francisco. What started off as an unlimited flight pass for a couple of months has turned into a life-changing series of events. The first leg of my pass took me to San Francisco for a visit to Macworld, motivated purely by curiosity. Neither the tech-heads I met there nor the ever-humourless US customs and immigration officers were buying any of it: they all thought I was down there looking for work. (Ha! Truth is, I’ve had more work that I can handle lately and I really love Montreal.) While in California, I agreed to collaborate on an early-stage startup project based there. I had heard that there was a tech startup conference happening a couple of weeks later in Quebec City, so I went to check it out.

At the conference in Quebec City, I discovered after looking through the bios of attendees that one of my clients, François Lane from Mastodonte Communications, was also there. Since we had never met in person, I sat down beside him at lunch and introduced myself. One thing led to another, and a few days later we were meeting in Montreal to discuss how we could work more closely together. Since then, I have been actively collaborating with François on a weekly basis. A long-time entrepreneur in the Quebec market, he has recently decided to go international–where English, for better or worse, is often the common language. The first fruit of that effort is a white label email marketing application that we have christened Cake. François is sponsoring the One Degree website this month, so we’ve got a little teaser campaign going.

But life is not all work and no play. Oh, no–far from it! I spent Easter doing the tourist thing in San Francisco with a couple other Montrealers who’ve been bit by the wanderlust bug. It was my third time in the Bay Area in as many months, but this was the first occasion I had to really do any sightseeing. I’ve been to BC a couple of times so far this year too, spending time in Vancouver with friends, in Nelson visiting my folks, and in Victoria visting my sister, nieces, nephew, and a couple old friends from high school. I also tagged along with the Mutek crew to their gig in Washington, DC in February, which was great fun and a truly amazing evening of stellar performances. I stayed with a friend I had met at the Mutek festival a few years back, as a matter of fact.

So given that all of this has been going on in addition to my usual freelance workload, you will pardon me if I have been slow to return emails, phone messages and the like. There doesn’t seem to be enough time in the day…

On a collision course with the Big One?

Hello from Terminal 1 at Pearson airport in Toronto. I’m heading west to BC. First stop, Nelson.

I was somewhat alarmed to read on the front page of the Globe and Mail this a.m. that there is a distinct risk of a major earthquake near Victoria in the next week. We’re talking 9 on the Richter scale… The timing did not surprise me: I have a knack for picking destinations at unusually unfavorable times. I was en route to NYC on September 11, 2001. The day I arrived in London in July 2005, the entire city was shut down because of a second (failed, thankfully) terrorist bombing attempt.

For the sake of my many friends and family in BC’s Lower Mainland, I trust that the Earth will remain calm. On the other hand, we all know that the Big One is coming. It’s just a question of when…

Time to travel

2007 seems destined to be a year of travel. Don’t get me wrong: I love Montreal. But I always seems to appreciate a place more when I give myself the opportunity to miss it a little.

I was already planning on heading west to see family and friends in British Columbia (where I grew up) and Seattle. So when Air Canada announced a 2-month unlimited travel flight pass in North America, I needed little convincing. I was a somewhat skeptical at first, but seat availability has not been a problem.

First stop: San Francisco and area for a week earlier this month. More on that later.

Next destination: NYC!!!

I’m off with some friends to New York city from September 7-10. It’s compensation for what will have been an insane month, work-wise.

Any cultural/nightlife/shopping/food suggestions are welcome, although I’m sure there will be no lack of things to do!

Photo from friend and blogging inspiration, MC Turgeon!

Iceland, NYC, Southern France, Berlin, Chicago, Seattle or Argentina?!?

The travel gods are smiling down on me. Heck, they are showering me with shredded plane ticket confetti!

In the space of a couple of weeks, friends have dangled all sorts of tantalizing destinations in front of my nose.

Arggh, now I have to choose…

Just a little bit longer…

Loath to leave

I decided to extend my stay out West until the end of July. A key work-related meeting in Montreal was postponed, so there’s no reason why not. Especially since I’m not sure when I’ll get back out this way. (I’d like to go south rather than west this winter.)

Postcards from the West

View from Granville Island Tower of Goodness Ginger on Granville Burrard Street Bridge Ferry Smokestack The Twin Sailing Past

Well, it’s taken me quite a while to get some more posts up, but here goes.

I’ve been so busy doing things that writing about them just hasn’t happened. But I guess that’s very much a Western trait: action instead of words.

So, many more pics to come…

Hello VanCity

Skyline reflections Transportation
Old friends Surviving together Welcoming committee Skyline reflection Yo, got salmon?! Time and civilizations

Au revoir, Montréal

Node to elsewhere Roar What were the clouds like? Between night and day Shark Are we there yet?

I’ll miss you.

Packed: Camera, PowerBook, PSP, Treo, fiction, pen and paper, sunglasses, beach hat, Maissoneuve, sandals, gifts, sense of adventure.

Forgot: My iSight. No Stars of the Web-ing for me just yet. Boo-hoo.

In-flight entertainment: François Péloquin’s latest short film, which he has asked me to subtitle; EnRoute/CBC prizewinning short stories (one of which doesn’t seem to have any periods, but commas galore and more, you like that eh, hmm I think this a bit gimmicky, it’s a style, could wear thin, I guess you might have a point there, sigh, look out the window and the clouds are pouting too, et cetera et cetera, yet it’s a funny story, you should even read it but don’t try holding your breath it might be fatal, you’re a wise guy aren’t you, stop it, no really I’ve had enough… THREE PERIODS, oh my gods that’s such a cliché, hee-hah); iTunes featuring Orchestra of Bubbles (sounds even better above the clouds), Foe Destroyer (“How I love … les filles !”), and Katerine; écouter les agents de bord tenter de parler français (hmm, je suis peut-être un peu snob là, mais pourtant c’est vrai que c’est parfois pas très fort…)

On-board menu: Yuck! Air Canada, what are you doing to your brand image? You call that food?!!? After learning the hard way the last couple of times I flew, this time I grabbed a wild mushroom and goat cheese sandwich at La boulangerie de Montréal before heading though security. Surprisingly filling.

Things that have me looking for a parachute: the crying baby in the next row (I do like kids but why are the non-stop cryers always my frequent travel partners?) and the lowered seat in front that has me so scrunched down in front of my PowerBook that I will need a massage by the time we land in VanCity (lucky I don’t have a 17” or I wouldn’t even be able to get the lid open). Maybe this blog will make me wildly rich and I’ll be able to travel in first class forever after… Yeah, right.