Monday, February 9, 2009

"stand firmly with those soldiers who say the hell with this war"!!

posted by L-girl at we move to canada - 4 hours ago
Three war resister stories, all worth reading. From the *Nanaimo Daily News*: U.S. war resister Cliff Cornell was arrested on Wednesday after crossing the border from Canada into Washington State. Last...

Sunday, February 8, 2009

The Hotmail Team finally catches up

So, the following will be a critical in not unflattering analysis of the "new" features of Windows Live Hotmail.
  • Storage: Oh, thank you Microsoft, I now have 5 GB of storage. Whoopee! What took you so long? In comparison, Yahoo mail has unlimited storage, Google Mail / Gmail has over 7 GB of storage. Couldn't splurge for an extra 2 GB? Also, 5 GB have been available for a few years now so don't act like it's new.
  • POP3 access for USA & Brazil: Again, I am clapping my hands. It only took them how may years to add it to free accounts? Note of comparison, Gmail has had POP3 access since it was brought online in 2004. Hotmail has Yahoo mail beat in this regard as Yahoo has yet to make POP3 available for free. On a related note, Google offers IMAP support. To date, neither Hotmail or Yahoo offer this.
  • Advertisements less intrusive: For the most part, when the Quick Add window (more on that later) is open, there is no advertising to the right side of the reading pane. However when Quick Add is closed, advertising will appear which makes it about the same as before only in a different location. What's the point?
  • Quick Add: An now, the much exalted new feature. It's a small little window that will appear on the right side of the email window. This is to enable you to quickly look up addresses and directions to restaurants, hotels, travel reviews and other information which can to be inserted directly into your email by clicking a button. When open, it can squish the email window. The border between email and Quick Add does not seem well defined. In comparison, the nearest with a similar feature, namely Google, has the ability to recognize that that is a restaurant name or physical location you have mentioned in your message and if possible, recommend a mapping location and/or other related information that you can send along. It isn't as integrated and sometimes doesn't get the right country but most of the time it does. The advantage to Google's system is that it doesn't take up window space in email.
  • What's New feed: Microsoft has added this feed to Hotmail. You better hope that the feed servers are having a good day or it will increase the loading time when you are just trying to log in. As well, updates automatically appear which will increase the loading time. A way this might work better is the method that Yahoo uses. Yahoo will tell you there are feed updates and you can choose to see them or not thereby cutting down on loading time. Gmail doesn't have a direct feed of this type. I don't have a problem with this because I just want to check my email and not manage my entire social life.
  • Email signature in HTML: Wow! You can add HTML to your email signature? Oh, how original. To a certain degree, everyone who develops email applications, has this ability. Some allow you to be more creative then others, but they all do it. This is not exactly breaking news just Microsoft getting with the times, sort of.
  • Windows Live Web Messenger: So, Messenger will finally be integrated into Hotmail. Well I hate to break it to Microsoft but you are a couple years late with this marriage. Yahoo mail integrated Yahoo Messenger into their email years ago. All of the main power features of Yahoo Messenger have been fully integrated so you can either chat to a person on Yahoo Messenger through you Yahoo mail page and they can chat back to you and it will end up on your mail page so you don't even have to load messenger if you don't want to. On the other hand, Google also allows you to chat from inside your mail page. It also allows you to use video and audio chat through the mail inbox page which is better than just being able to chat through the page. Video and audio quality is extremely good. Google implemented these 2 features late last year so Microsoft is extraordinarily behind the integration curve. It's a bit pathetic it took them this long but at least they showed up at the party but they could be stuck with the cheque.
If you are still awake, this concludes the analysis and comparison of Windows Live Hotmail to it's competitors. For the purposes of full disclosure, I was a beta tested 2 versions back for Hotmail and I do not work for the aforementioned competitors although I wouldn't mind working for them. msdogfood@hotmail.com

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Microsoft rolls out major Windows Live Hotmail updates oh wow NOT!

Microsoft rolls out major Windows Live Hotmail updates

Sean Bradford 6 hours ago · 24 comments & 2620 views

Advertisement (Why?)
A few days ago we announced that Microsoft was finishing up Wave 3 of Windows Live. The Windows Live Hotmail team has announced that it is officially rolling out the last of the Wave 3 updates to all Hotmail customers. So what's being shipped with these updates?

More Storage
Customers now start out with 5GB of storage, but what if you need more? Your storage capacity will automatically increase as you need it. The team hasn't announced what the maximum capacity will be.

More markets get POP3 access
Customers in the United States and Brazil will shortly be given access to their e-mail via POP3. All other Windows Live Hotmail customers will be receiving POP3 access in the coming weeks. Click here for more information on Windows Live Hotmail POP3 access.

Advertisements are less intrusive
After month of beta testers and customers complaining that the advertisement on the top of the reading pane, the advertisement has been moved to the right side of the reading pane.

QuickAdd


Another new feature that is rolling out is "Quick Add". During Steve Ballmer's keynote, there was a short demo showing this new feature. So in case you missed the live stream, here we go.

Lets say that you're on vacation or a business trip and you just arrived to your destination. Your friends and family want to meet up later that night for dinner, but not everyone is familiar with the city. So you open Windows Live Hotmail and start preparing your e-mail with the time and place of your dinner affair, but you want to include the address and a link for directions. So you open up Quick Add while creating a new message.

Now you start your search for some nice restaurants for your affair. Once you've found your destination, you can either click "Insert" or "More Info". When you click "More Info" , you are brought to a Windows Live Search page. Once you've entered that page you will see a mapped location and some reviews if anyone has posted them. So now that you've picked your destination, you're ready to insert it into your e-mail by simply clicking "Insert".

So now you have the name, address, and more information ready for your friends and family. That is only one scenario that this new feature will be able to do. Consumers will also be able to search for business listings, videos, and images. The beauty of QuickAdd is that it's automatically loaded when you open a New Message, located on the right side of the message pane.

Other updates
If you've ever used Windows Live Homepage, you have probably became addicted to the "Whats New" feed. The "What's New" feed lists updates from your contacts that use social networks like Twitter, personal status messages, blog posts, shared favorites, and much more. So incase you're not a fan of the Windows Live Homepage but like the "What's New" feed, the Hotmail team has integrated it into the "Windows Live Hotmail Today" splash page when you login to your inbox.

There are 4 (that I can see) new themes for your Windows Live Hotmail inbox. The team has also updated existing themes to better suite its customers.

The last "officially" announced update is that you can now add a signature to your e-mails in HTML.

Now for the good stuff, which wasn't "officially" announced. Last week we covered a preview of Windows Live Web Messenger, which thousands of us have been waiting for for over a year now. Surprisingly it seems as if the official announcement left out Windows Live Web Messenger, but then again I recently spoke to a Microsoft employee who works on the Windows Live Help website who tells me:

"About the Integrated Web Messenger (add on) feature of Hotmail accounts, we can't give you a specific date as to when all hotmail accounts will be updated. I can tell you this though, right now, updates are being done as we speak (or in this case write, no pun intended). It won't be long now and all hotmail accounts would have been upgraded."

So if your account has access to Windows Live Web Messenger, let us know with some screenshots. Microsoft has noted that the updates mentioned above will be rolling out to all Windows Live Hotmail customers over the next few weeks, so if you're account doesn't have them you're not out of luck!

Friday, February 6, 2009

Thursday, February 5, 2009

posted by L-girl at we move to canada - 1 day ago
AP, emphasis mine. Stressed by war and long overseas tours, U.S. soldiers killed themselves last year at the highest rate on record, the toll rising for a fourth straight year and even surpassing the suic...

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Not good!

Hospital to cut 16 employees

$1.7 million deficit for Bluewater Health

Posted By Heather Wright

Posted 5 hours ago


Bluewater Health officials say 16 people may lose their jobs as a way to balance the hospital's budget.

Like many Ontario hospitals, Sarnia's health care provider has been trying to find ways to deal with a ballooning deficit. By-law, hospitals are not allowed to run deficits. At Bluewater Health, there is a $1.7 million shortfall in the current fiscal year and officials anticipated by the end of the 2009-2010 fiscal year the deficit could be as high as $5 million.

Sue Denomy is the president and CEO of Bluewater Health. She says the board of the hospital this week approved the $157 million balanced budget. It includes the reduction of 25 positions, some of which are not currently filled. Denomy says as many as 16 jobs in different departments across the hospital will be eliminated. Denomy hopes most of the jobs will be downsized through early retirements.

"Our plan is to continue to work through the collective agreements and work with the union leadership to minimize the actual involuntary job loss at the end of the day," says Denomy. "There are some options available within the collective agreements to consider potential retirements."

The hospital is also changing the way laboratory work is done. In the past, doctors in Sarnia would send their blood work to the local hospital to be analysed. Bluewater Health spent $250,000 on that work. Denomy says Sarnia doctors will be asked to send their samples to private labs instead. It won't cost patients money since the Ontario Health Insurance Program will still foot the bill.

Denomy says the hospital is also looking at ways of sharing services with other regional hospitals, especially in management areas.

"We already share some management positions and when those become available we look at whether it is an opportunity to share with (other hospitals) - Chatham is the closest."

The plan also calls for hospital workers to make "more conscientious use and reduction of supplies" and the use of group purchasing to cut medication costs, as well as "maximizing opportunities for revenue generation, including where applicable through OHIP guidelines, patient services and procedures."

Sunday, February 1, 2009

108th

Body of Canadian soldier killed in Afghanistan begins journey home

Last Updated: Sunday, February 1, 2009 | 12:24 PM ET

More than 2,000 soldiers attended a ramp ceremony Sunday on the tarmac of Kandahar Airfield to honour the 108th Canadian solider to be killed in Afghanistan since Canada's mission began in 2002.

Sapper Sean David Greenfield, pictured in this undated photo, was killed Saturday when his armoured vehicle struck a roadside bomb in the volatile Zhari district west of Kandahar city.Sapper Sean David Greenfield, pictured in this undated photo, was killed Saturday when his armoured vehicle struck a roadside bomb in the volatile Zhari district west of Kandahar city. (DND)

Sapper Sean Greenfield, 25, died Saturday after his armoured vehicle hit a roadside bomb about 40 kilometres west of Kandahar City in Zhari district.

He was a member of 24 Field Engineer Squadron, 2 Combat Engineer Regiment based out of Petawawa, Ont., serving with the 3rd Battalion of the Royal Canadian Regiment battle group.

Before comrades placed his flag-draped casket aboard a military aircraft for the final journey home, Padre Roy Laudenorio described Greenfield as a dependable combat engineer and diver.

"He was passionate in his love of music, playing the guitar and singing. His friendliness, his generous big smile, and his contagious positive disposition towards work will be greatly missed by his friends and section members," the padre said. Greenfield was killed during an operation to find the same kind of improvised explosive device that took his life, said Brig.-Gen. Denis Thompson, commander of Canadian and NATO forces in Kandahar.

Thompson said the multinational operation is necessary to help make the countryside safer for Canadian and international troops.

The general described Greenfield as an exceptionally fit soldier who recently completed a combat diver's course and aspired to join Canada's elite JTF2 special forces team.

Gov. Gen. Michaëlle Jean said she and her husband, Jean-Daniel Lafond, were overwhelmed when they heard that another Canadian Forces soldier had been killed.

"Attacks like these are ongoing and violence continues to rage in Afghanistan. The bravery and determination with which Canadian soldiers conduct their work and face terror on a daily basis is truly astounding," she said.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper issued a statement offering his condolences.

"The Canadian mission in Afghanistan is a difficult one, but the Canadian forces are making a difference in the lives of the Afghan people by maintaining security and stability that will allow the country to rebuild and look to the future," Harper said.

Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff said he wanted to extend his "deepest sympathies to the loved ones of Sapper Greenfield and to the entire armed forces family."

"Canadians owe a tremendous debt to the men and women of our Canadian Forces for their courage and sacrifice for our country," Ignatieff said. "Our thoughts are with them on this difficult day."

Eleven Canadian soldiers have been killed since December by roadside bombs in Afghanistan. Greenfield was the second Canadian soldier to be killed in an explosion this year.