Three blog entries in one day. Stuff I meant to write about and never got around to. :)
A friend of mine, John Chaput, is an author. (He earns his living this way so he can claim title to the title.) Recently he wrote a very interesting book about the 2005 CFL season called the CFL Buzz Book.
What makes the book interesting is its statistical analysis of the season. I have seen similar books about other leagues, particularly Major League Baseball, but to see such a book about the CFL is quite new.
John writes with a very dry sense of humour that geeks like me particularly appreciate. If you take your sports seriously but still have a sense of humour about it, you will love John's writing style. I'm quite certain that some of John's remarks passed inches over my head (perhaps even feet), but I certainly caught a lot of them. They were quite entertaining.
It's hard to imagine a book of statistics that you will actually have trouble putting down, but here is such a book. I've already told John to reserve me a copy of the 2006 season version.
Celestia is the coolest program ever.
Basically, it's a universe simulator of sorts. You start in the solar system. You can surf around, looking at objects in the solar system from all angles. Lock on this object, follow that, and you can have some really neat views.
For example, hit enter and type "Iapetus". Hit C to centre. Hit G to go. There's Iapetus. No big deal. Use your mouse scroll wheel to make Iapetus smaller. Click on Iapetus and drag it to the lower right corner of your screen. Right click and drag on Iapetus until you see Saturn in the image. (It takes a bit of looking. Saturn isn't huge from Iapetus, but it's definitely visible.) If you can't find Saturn, hit enter and type "Saturn" and then c to centre. Find Iapetus again, click on it, then right click-drag as above until Saturn is in the frame. I like to put Saturn at the top left. Once you have them positioned pleasingly, click on Saturn and select "follow". Click on Iapetus and select "sync orbit". Then speed up time (L if memory serves; K slows it down; J reverses it). Cool huh?
The Windows version is excellent. The Linux version seems good too, although Ubuntu and Debian package an old version. I compiled the current 1.4.1 version from source and after some mucking about, got it to work. I also had to install a new video driver on my desktop to get good performance. You need 3D video to work. Unfortunately I can't get 3D video to work on my notebook.
Very fun... and free. There are also expansions available. I installed the two million star package, plus Eta Carinae, which is quite likely the next star in our stellar neighbourhood to go supernova. (It's far enough away that it probably already has gone supernova, but it takes 10,000 years for light to reach us from this system.
Anyway, download and try this great program.
So I got Access Communications' new Digital Voice service installed on Friday. So far I must say that it's working extremely well.
The quality seems to be very similar to SaskTel's landline service. Of course, because of its greater dependence on local power, it may be somewhat more unreliable during very long power failures, but I suspect that it will be quite usable. Let's be honest; almost everyone has cell phones these days (and I have more than a few of those :) )...
So here is what I like, and what I don't like, so far:
- sound quality is very good
- 10-digit dialling works - e.g. you can dial 757-7111 for time of day, or you can dial 306-757-7111 and it still works. For local people this is not of huge consequence, but when your friend from Toronto uses your phone to dial a local number, it is a nice feature. Torontonians (and many other people) have to dial an area code on every call, local or long distance, and dialling with 10 digits is a habit for them. SaskTel does not support this feature on their landlines (at least not as of a few weeks ago), although both SaskTel Mobility and Rogers allow it on their cell phones. (Rogers requires it when you are out of your local area code, in fact.)
- modems work! I don't know if the Internet would ever be down and phone service would still be up, but if it happens, you can use Digital voice to place a modem call. I got 49,333 bps yesterday with a USR V.Everything modem (admittedly one of the best modems ever made, probably the best, but also a modem that tends to connect on the slow side because of its conservative design). Latency was quite reasonable.
- You can't use dial-around long distance providers, which is slightly annoying but not surprising - Primus doesn't allow it either. (I've been using Primus TalkBroadband for more than a year, and still have it connected for the time being.) The thing that makes it slightly annoying is that Access uses Allstream as its long distance provider, and its proposed North American toll rate of 7 cents per minute is rather high. (Yak charges 5 cents as a dial-around service and 3.5 cents if you make it your long distance provider.) On the other hand, Allstream's toll rate to the UK is only 4 cents, which is exceptionally good. (UK mobiles are 29 cents, which is reasonable.) Solution: get a number at Grand Central, add your contacts to your GrandCentral phonebook, and call them using the web portal; GrandCentral will call you at the number you specify and then connect your call. This will cost you nothing at all within North America, at least while the GrandCentral testing period persists, and apparently the thought is that you will still get 500 minutes per month for free afterward. (Quality seems very reliable by the way; I've been using GrandCentral for a few weeks. I have a 213 Los Angeles number.)
- Access has decided not to include Visual Call Waiting with the service, even though it includes both Call Display and Call Waiting. This is pretty stupid. Unless Access is planning a large package of additional calling features for a low flat fee (similar to SaskTel's Residential Calling Features Package), I can't imagine anyone would want to pay four or five dollars a month just to get Call Display when they are already on a call. Access, please include this for free - you don't want to seem cheap when people are comparing you to SaskTel, and it seems like a nickel-and-dime feature to not include, because its being missing will be a surprise to everybody until they actually get the service. People will expect it to be included. I suspect it will generate a lot of complaints, and Access should be concentrating on creating a lot of goodwill right now.
Anyway, so far, I'm reasonably happy. There are certainly some things that need to be fixed (why isn't call forwarding included? ... why are the long distance rates so high? ... why isn't there an unlimited long distance package available at a reasonable price, similar to what SaskTel and Primus offer? ...) but it's a new product and it will surely evolve.