• Ev Williams and the future of online publishing

    Great piece on Ev Williams and the open web.

    Yet his run near the top has been remarkably consistent. While other CEOs in his early-web cohort have left the industry, or have become writers or consultants, Williams has stuck around, leading companies. His startups have nearly all specialized in the same abstract medium: text boxes.

    Ev Williams is The Forrest Gump of The Internet


  • The Story of Alkaline Trio’s Goddamnit

    The Story of Alkaline Trio’s Goddamnit

    Chicago’s Alkaline Trio is one of the most influential bands from the turn of the century “emo” era.

    I came across the Original Sin documentary from 2008, about their first full-length release Goddamnit. It’s a great watch! Check it out.

    Part 1

    Part 2

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pm1LhObR3F4

    Part 3

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AzjLoPEeMyU

    Part 4

    Is missing 🙁


  • Freelancing: Paying for Dental Care in Canada

    Freelancing: Paying for Dental Care in Canada

    I have once again found myself in a situation without medical insurance coverage. Fortunately for Canadians really only means that I am without dental ((and optical and some prescription drugs)) coverage. For whatever reason, our utopian government funded health system does not cover dentistry.

    So I once again started the futile process of searching for decent dental insurance plans and have once again come up empty handed (( To be honest, I didn’t look that hard. Most of the providers do not readily offer rates or quotes online. I can’t be bothered to call anyone, it’s 2016!)).

    There are two main problems with the state of dental insurance. First, you can’t just get dental insurance, all of the providers want to bundle in other coverage, like accidental death & dismemberment, ambulance coverage, etc. While I’m sure having those types of insurance might not be a bad idea, bundling them limits my choice as a consumer and certainly affects the monthly price.

    Which leads me to my second point, the price is insane! The lowest price I could find for my family of 4 was in the neighbourhood of $350/month ((Remember, this includes a bundles of services I just don’t care about)) or $4200/year. Even if the insurance covered 100% of the dental bill, I would be hard-pressed to spend that much money on dentistry in one year! It’s totally insane.

    I would much rather pay my dentist $100 – $200 per month to cover 100% of my family’s dental needs, than pay an insurance company some enormous amount of money to maybe possibly cover 60% of some procedures, but only on the third Tuesday during a full moon.

    With traditional-post-WWII-American-dream style careers few and far between, it’s time for insurance providers to modernize.

    Or better yet, add dental to our provincial health care coverage.