Thursday, January 26, 2006

Amazon.com: Information: The New Language of Science, Hans Christian von Baeyer
IT World Canada predicts the way ahead
By: IT World Canada Staff
IT World Canada (10 Jan 2006)

As technology professionals, we move in unpredictable spheres of innovation. But early this year, the editors and staff of IT World Canada gathered around, blew the dust off the old crystal ball and took a murky peek inside. Here are seven meaningful insights into what we believe will matter IT-wise in 2006.

Getting IT means understanding technology's purpose in business. And it's safe to say that in 2006, IT and business will work far more collaboratively.Text

Outsourcing at the fringe of new future

The practice of handing off a range of IT infrastructure and IT-enabled processes to third-party service companies is poised to move significantly down market to smaller business customers. This is the new frontier for outsourced IT services in 2006.

However, that service delivery will need to come through a range of new and unique types of service offerings and approaches. Companies like IBM Corp. and Sun Microsystems Inc. have been among those championing the concept of IT infrastructure delivered as a sort of computing "utility" service, similar to providing electricity.

Late in December, Hewlett-Packard Co. joined the crowd, announcing infrastructure- and application-provisioning services for businesses that need the use of servers and applications to handle temporary surges in computing demand. It's the rise of the utility types of IT infrastructure and business services - an evolution of outsourcing, away from long-term engagements to "pay as you go" computing.

Expect traditional IT service providers, communication service companies and potentially a new breed of IT utility service provider to push hard on a concept that's been much discussed but marginally executed.

A fraction less of IT-business friction

Getting IT means understanding technology's purpose in business. And it's safe to say that in 2006, IT and business will work far more collaboratively. Business Intelligence - scorecards, metrics and performance management applications used to make more intelligent business decisions - has been experiencing a consolidation trend as vendors pull their disparate BI applications into one platform.Text

With competition in almost every sector growing increasingly fierce, and the number of players dwindling, this cross-fertilization between IT and business has become a prerequisite for survival.

Companies able to collect and act on data in real-time, for example, are the big winners. Real-time analytics is one area that demonstrates the opportunities inherent in IT-business alignment, and the dangers when that alliance is absent. This is clearly a space where business and IT must work together, where the CIO and CEO must join forces.

The stats indicate that folk on both sides of the divide are getting this message loud and clear. Last year, 75 per cent of CIOs surveyed by CIO Connect said they were the source of new ideas for business products. Likewise, two-thirds of business managers asserted that their knowledge of IT was improving.

BI ripe for consolidation

Business Intelligence - scorecards, metrics and performance management applications used to make more intelligent business decisions - has been experiencing a consolidation trend as vendors pull their disparate BI applications into one platform.

Users want to standardize their BI tools with one vendor across the board and SAS Institute and MicroStrategy could look to expand their offerings in 2006, as more companies are jumping into the space to challenge the incumbents.

As spending on intelligence increases, look for one of the IT heavyweights new to this market to gain an immediate foothold through the acquisition of or merger with one of the incumbent, pure BI players in 2006.

Enterprise vendor SAP is moving into the space, as is Oracle, which adopted a clear growth-through-acquisition strategy in 2005. Both IBM and Microsoft are also expected to move more boldly into BI.

Smarter tools for mobile workers

Enterprise mobility has redefined the way businesses operate and drive productivity among employees. Technology that can transform the handheld into a virtual mobile workspace will be the direction for enterprise mobility in 2006.

Mobile technology has evolved from a telephone system into a converged communications tool, offering much more than e-mail and Internet access.

Field service agents are plagued with forms and reports to be submitted to head office for invoicing and database updating. The handheld devices of 2006 enable mobile workers to accomplish all these tasks wirelessly.

Late last year, Rogers and HP announced mForms, an iPaq-based mobile tool that transforms paperwork into electronic forms. Expect more telecom companies to partner other vendors such as RIM and Palm.

Mobile technology will be focused on transforming enterprise mobility into measurable productivity tools. Wireless broadband networks like cellular 3G and Wi-Max are pushing the pace of the mobile evolution.

Faster data on the fly

The wireless market - with two emerging high-speed technologies set to take off in 2006 - holds promises of innovation and invention over the next 12 months.

The new Bell, Telus and Rogers 3G cellular networks, offering peak speeds of 2.4Mbps (average rates of 400Kpbs-700Kbps), will give mobile workers broadband access to more data on the go, as well as videoconferencing over cell phones and other handheld devices.

In the fixed wireless market, Wi-Max is delivering high-speed Internet connectivity to rural communities that don't currently have access to DSL or cable broadband. Eventually equipment providers will offer devices that can roam between Wi-Fi, Wi-Max and 3G networks, giving business users wireless services in almost any given geographic area.

Umbrellas for spit storms

The one constant about security threats is the perpetrators will always move on to new means of creating havoc once the victims begin to catch on to their current methods.

IT environments in 2006 will need broader umbrellas for a safer shelter. Viruses have typically wreaked havoc to desktop PCs and laptops - now cell phones and PDAs are also being targeted. As mobile workforces and business agility push the WLAN to an ever-widening network, we expect an outbreak this year of the mobile virus, commonly referred to as a "spit storm."

Another developing threat is that of the router worm, which can be embedded in the routers residing on networks and cause considerable damage to traffic even before it reaches an end-user's system. As hackers and virus writers begin to exhaust their traditional avenues of attack, they will increasingly turn towards these relatively untapped points of entry.

And the usual worms, viruses and large-scale spam attacks aren't going away in 2006.

Government adopts Three-P partnerships

Public-private partnerships (P3s) will give a distinctly competitive edge to government IT contracts in 2006. P3s are arrangements between government and the private sector to provide public infrastructure, community facilities and related IT services.

P3s are characterized by the sharing of investment, risk, responsibility and reward between the partners.

Government enters into a P3 when it lacks a specific capacity, when that IT function is not a core government business or when it can be outsourced. For example, IBM is working with aboriginal communities to create opportunities in IT skills development, investment, youth mentoring and fuller economic participation by aboriginal businesses.

These 2006 technology trends and predictions were compiled by the editorial team of IT World Canada Inc., publisher of ComputerWorld Canada, Network World Canada, CIO Canada, CIO Government Review and IT Focus.

Copyright © 2005
ITworldcanada.com

Tuesday, January 24, 2006

ECL: Semantic Observations

English as a Computer Language = XML + WEB 2.0
Visual credit: MS Clip Art Gallery

Computer Autism

I have asked my friend with a distinct flavor of autism how she manages to survive the intricacies of the ESL and she answered: “Just imagine what the computers feel!”


The Ultimate Puzzle

How to get across the lifetime of the government having in one boat Tories (the wolf), Liberals (the cabbage a.k.a cash) and NDP (the goat)?

2 More

Why this chicken crossed the Conservative Road?

Beautiful and poisonous people…

articles:

What Is Web 2.0
Design Patterns and Business Models for the Next Generation of Software
by Tim O'Reilly
09/30/2005
O'Reilly Media, Inc.

Note:
A French translation of this article is available at web2rules.blogspot.com/2006/01/what-is-web-20-par-tim-oreilly-version.html.
A Korean translation - [Tim O’Reilly] Web2.0 posted in Trend by comgot http://blog.nobleness.net/comgot/archives/30


Semantic Web, Here We Come
A consortium of blogging startups wants to give deeper meaning to the Internet by giving people tools to categorize web pages.
December 16, 2005
Red Herring, Inc.

Web 2.0 for Designers
In: Columns > Web 2.0 Design: Bootstrapping the Social Web
By Richard MacManus & Joshua Porter
Published on May 4, 2005
Digital Web Magazine

Web 2.0 для дизайнеров
перевод Сергей Яценко
Агентство интернет-маркетинга ASDK

archeology of the future
археология будущего


Web 3.0
To you who feel like failures because you spent last year honing your web skills and serving clients, or running a business, or perhaps publishing content, you are special and lovely, so hold that pretty head high, and never let them see the tears.
As for me, I’m cutting out the middleman and jumping right to Web 3.0. Why wait?

by Jeffrey Zeldman
January 16, 2006
A List Apart Magazine


Supr.c.ilio.us: The Blog


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Monday, January 09, 2006

Support the Third World: Nominate it for the Weblog Awards™

Sixth Annual Weblog Awards: The 2006 Bloggies

The 2006 Bloggies are now in progress! Visit the site to vote for your favorites.

Millions of blogs.
Thousands of nominees.
151 finalists.
Thirty winners


At the start of each year, Nikolai Nolan runs the Weblog Awards™, where the public votes on the best weblogs in thirty categories.

From now until 10:00 PM Eastern Standard Time (GMT-5) on Tuesday, January 10, 2005, anyone can nominate their favorite weblogs.

The Bloggies are open for their 6th year of awards for the Best Blogs, and you, our readers and fans, determine who the winners will be by nominating your favorite blogs.

1. Best Web Application for Weblogs
2. Best Australian or New Zealand Weblog
3. Best Asian Weblog
4. Best African or Middle Eastern Weblog
5. Best European Weblog
6. Best British or Irish Weblog
7. Best Latin American Weblog
8. Best Canadian Weblog
9. Best American Weblog
10.Best Tagline of a Weblog
11.Best Podcast of a Weblog
12.Best Photography of a Weblog
13.Best Craft Weblog
14. Best Food Weblog
15.Best Entertainment Weblog
16.Best Weblog About Politics
17.Best Web Development Weblog
18.Best Computers or Technology Weblog
19.Best Topical Weblog
20.Best GLBT Weblog
21.Best Teen Weblog
22.Most Humorous Weblog
23.Best Writing of a Weblog
24.Best Group Weblog
25.Best Community Weblog
26.Best-Designed Weblog
27.Best-Kept-Secret Weblog
28.Best New Weblog
29.Lifetime Achievement
30.Weblog of the Year

Nominations fall into the following categories, and according to their rules - you can nominate a blog for more than one category (and each category has up to three or four slots, so you can nominate more than one per category as well)!

You can support The Third World by nominating it in the 2006 Bloggies. Your vote is important.

To do so, go to 2006.bloggies.com and enter us in “Best New Webblog” or/and “Best Canadian Webblog” or/and "Best Community Weblog" or/and whatever...

Please check this interesting initiative, meet Nikolai Nolan and nominate your favourite blogs!

Nominee
The Third World
URL
http://itceremony.blogspot.com

Nominee
The Arts Junction
URL
http://artjunction.blogspot.com

Nominee
The Society of Internet Professionals' Blog
URL
http://sipgroup.blogspot.com

It just takes 60 seconds: highlight, copy, paste, and ... click the button
"Submit your nominations!"

Thanks a lot for your support!

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Sunday, January 08, 2006

MEME: Links & Tags Make BlogBusters

Top 100 Blogs meme

Bold those you’ve linked.
Italicize those you would like to link.
Underline those you own.
Add at least 2 blogs to the list at the bottom you link and own.

Technorati Top 100 Blogs List

The biggest blogs in the blogosphere, as measured by unique links in the last six months.

1. hatena.ne.jp: 295,369 links from 51,252 sites.
2. Boing Boing: A Directory of Wonderful Things: 69,096 links from 18,944 sites.
3. blog.yam.com: 67,257 links from 18,747 sites.
4. Engadget: 62,497 links from 14,231 sites.
5. PostSecret: PostSecret is an ongoing community art project where people mail in their secrets anonymously on one side of a homemade postcard. By frank warren: 22,661 links from 13,283 sites.
6. Daily Kos: State of the Nation: 53,972 links from 10,860 sites.
7. The Huffington Post: 44,581 links from 8,131 sites.
8. Gizmodo, The Gadget Blog: 19,237 links from 7,075 sites.
9. Instapundit.com: 32,351 links from 6,682 sites.
10. Michelle Malkin By Michelle Malkin: 37,206 links from 5,847 sites.
11. Crooks and Liars By John Amato: 23,120 links from 5,803 sites.
12. spaces.msn.com/members/samzhu: 16,440 links from 5,705 sites.
13. dooce: 10,680 links from 5,677 sites.
14. Blog di Beppe Grillo: Grillo's gags have tackled financial scandals and political corruption By Beppe Grillo: 16,052 links from 5,397 sites.
15. Thought Mechanics By Theron Parlin and Matthew Good: 7,103 links from 5,384 sites.
16. Lifehacker, the Productivity and Software Guide: 13,406 links from 5,006 sites.
17. spaces.msn.com/members/locker2man By locker2man: 13,636 links from 4,910 sites.
18. Herramientas para Blogs Herramientas para spaces. Un blog sobre personalización de los spaces By Marcelino Madrigal: 13,534 links from 4,852 sites.
19. Think Progress By Judd Legum: 23,530 links from 4,849 sites.
20. Official Google Blog: 11,510 links from 4,793 sites.
21. Drew Curtis' FARK.com: 7,895 links from 4,689 sites.
22. Open Palm! Youth means limitless possibilities. By Open- Palm ! ™: 20,773 links from 4,533 sites.
23. Gawker, Manhattan Media News and Gossip: 12,967 links from 4,509 sites.
24. kottke.org : home of fine hypertext products: 11,238 links from 4,407 sites.
25. Talking Points Memo: by Joshua Micah Marshall: 18,369 links from 4,392 sites.
26. Wonkette, Politics for People with Dirty Minds By editor wonkette: 12,484 links from 4,320 sites.
27. spaces.msn.com/members/chattie555: 14,064 links from 4,236 sites.
28. Easy Start To The Day: 13,301 links from 4,142 sites.
29. manabekawori.cocolog nifty.com/blog: 9,937 links from 4,131 sites.
30. A List Apart: For People Who Make Websits: 9,013 links from 4,130 sites.
31. The Space Craft: The Official MSN Spaces Team Blog: 11,654 links from 4,042 sites.
32. spaces.msn.com/members/MSN SA: Tag your space in our huge family, which is the home for MSN spacers from all over the world. By Anki Wang: 11,323 links from 4,031 sites.
33. spaces.msn.com/members/huangmj By huang mj: 13,536 links from 4,003 sites.
34. shiraishi.seesaa.net: 5,880 links from 3,993 sites.
35. Power Line: 20,599 links from 3,972 sites.
36. spaces.msn.com/members/lwhanz1981530: 8,693 links from 3,875 sites.
37. Weebls Stuff News: 11,957 links from 3,850 sites.
38. Eschaton: 19,853 links from 3,768 sites.
39. Xiaxue.blogspot.com Everyone's reading it. Have you ever seen the blog of a goddess? By Xiaxue: 7,000 links from 3,664 sites.
40. spaces.msn.com/members/princesscecicastle: 10,538 links from 3,583 sites.
41. spaces.msn.com/members/atiger: 9,643 links from 3,541 sites.
42. Joystiq: 17,247 links from 3,478 sites.
43. lgf: this is true internet dictatorship By Charles Johnson: 16,536 links from 3,432 sites.
44. blogs.yahoo.co.jp/nosz50j: 7,750 links from 3,394 sites.
45. www.AndrewSullivan.com Daily Dish: 11,274 links from 3,393 sites.
46. The Best Page In The Universe. By maddox: 5,496 links from 3,378 sites.
47. Metafilter | Community Weblog By Matt Haughey: 14,468 links from 3,285 sites.
48. Joel on Software: 6,990 links from 3,282 sites.
49. AMERICAblog: Because a great nation deserves the truth: Liberal US politics blog with a particular focus on activism and news about the Bush administration, the religious right, and gay civil rights. By John Aravosis: 16,450 links from 3,211 sites.
50. The Superficial | Because You're Ugly: 8,270 links from 3,204 sites.
51. Something Awful The Internet Makes You Stupid: 5,850 links from 3,165 sites.
52. Overheard in New York: The Voice of the City: 6,705 links from 3,117 sites.
53. spaces.msn.com/members/gouy2k: msn space technic, modification By hot wind: 10,517 links from 3,048 sites.
54. Blogcritics.org: Superior Bloggers on Music, Politics, TV, Film, ...: 10,101 links from 2,941 sites.
55. Hugh Hewitt: 12,094 links from 2,921 sites.
56. MAKE: Blog: 8,463 links from 2,872 sites.
57. BuzzMachine By Jeff Jarvis: 11,247 links from 2,855 sites.
58. Captain's Quarters By Ed Morrissey: 18,275 links from 2,849 sites.
59. The Web Standards Project: 4,471 links from 2,824 sites.
60. spaces.msn.com/members/king19120 this is my world By Mr. Lonely: 9,377 links from 2,810 sites.
61. Defamer, the L.A. Gossip Rag: 6,730 links from 2,799 sites.
62. Mark's Sysinternals Blog: 5,470 links from 2,797 sites.
63. TechCrunch By Michael Arrington: 7,662 links from 2,758 sites.
64. The Volokh Conspiracy: 12,872 links from 2,711 sites.
65. The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW): 32,928 links from 2,697 sites.
66. Scobleizer: Microsoft Geek Blogger: Microsoft geek blog. Writes about the technology industry. By Robert Scoble: 7,875 links from 2,658 sites.
67. Stuff On My Cat: 4,710 links from 2,655 sites.
68. Micro Persuasion: Steve Rubel explores how new technologies are transforming marketing, media and public relations. By Steve Rubel: 9,771 links from 2,632 sites.
69. Google Blogoscoped: 10,253 links from 2,617 sites.
70. WRETCH Album and Blog: 5,547 links from 2,578 sites.
71. spaces.msn.com/members/slim By slim: 7,608 links from 2,570 sites.
72. Pink Is The New Blog | Fingers Firmly On The Pulse By Trent Vanegas: 4,767 links from 2,511 sites.
73. A design and usability blog: Signal vs. Noise (by 37signals): 5,612 links from 2,500 sites.
74. The Corner on National Review Online: 14,336 links from 2,497 sites.
75. spaces.msn.com/members/hcy521: 7,643 links from 2,472 sites.
76. Seth's Blog: 5,862 links from 2,459 sites.
77. Informed Comment: Middle East, foreign affairs, religion, Islam and history are discussed by a professional historian. By Juan Cole: 10,013 links from 2,456 sites.
78. TPMCafe || The Coffee House: 7,284 links from 2,441 sites.
79. blog.livedoor.jp/aki09041: 7,505 links from 2,441 sites.
80. Om Malik on Broadband : On Broadband, VoIP & The Next Generation By om malik: 9,658 links from 2,421 sites.
81. The Doc Searls Weblog : Friday, January 6, 2006 By Doc Searls: 5,351 links from 2,416 sites.
82. Michael Yon : Online Magazine: 8,255 links from 2,410 sites.
83. Microsiervos: 8,902 links from 2,386 sites.
84. The Lair of the Crab of Ineffable Wisdom a load of stuff by Joe...:5,403 links from 2,363 sites.
85. Gothamist: 7,357 links from 2,314 sites.
86. BILDblog "Notizen über eine große deutsche Boulevardzeitung." Watchblog for the German tabloid "Bild" Zeitung By BILDblog: 6,670 links from 2,309 sites.
87. Techdirt. Easily Digestible Tech News & Analysis By Mike Masnick: 7,357 links from 2,289 sites.
88. toothpaste for dinner daily drew drawings: 4,838 links from 2,275 sites.
89. blog.so net.ne.jp/atsuya furuta: 5,436 links from 2,262 sites.
90. WIL WHEATON DOT NET By Wil Wheaton: 4,863 links from 2,258 sites.
91. VG Cats Updated Mondays: 4,074 links from 2,244 sites.
92. Dog Blog: 2,347 links from 2,234 sites.
93. John Battelle's Searchblog By John Battelle: 6,764 links from 2,231 sites.
94. blog.livedoor.jp/insidears: 6,749 links from 2,218 sites.
95. MilkandCookies Sorry, We're Open By Jaxon Brooks: 5,087 links from 2,207 sites.
96. RedState.org: A conservative collaborative weblog focusing on politics, news, and activism. By Mike Krempasky: 8,866 links from 2,180 sites.
97. Scripting News: 1/6/2006 By Dave Winer: 5,621 links from 2,170 sites.
98. Scott's "SiteExperts" Place: Web developers, Web developers, Web developers! MSN Client architect who shares his thoughts on DHTML, AJAX, Client Frameworks, etc., and how we are engineering MSN properties. By Scott Isaacs: 5,928 links from 2,169 sites.
99. Wizbang Full Feed With Comments: Explosively Unique...By Kevin Aylward: 13,080 links from 2,163 sites.
100. Autoblog: 34,158 links from 2,158 sites.
101. The Third World by itceremony links from 4 sites.
102. The Arts Junction by itceremony links from 1 site.


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Friday, January 06, 2006

Enter the Devosphere

Enter the Devosphere: Artem Kaznatcheev, Saskatoon, Saskatchevan, Canada

"Welcome to what I call the Devosphere. A web log dedicated to my musings. Expect to see politics, technology, reviews and everything in-between on this site. I am not a newspaper; however I will never post something as fact unless I am assured it is true. If something I say is incorrect mention it to me. I am tolerant of everyone’s opinions, so voice them in your comments. If you want me to get back to you about your comment then please include your email address and I will try to reply."

Some Posts

* Canada vs. Russia
* Book Review: The Da Vinci Code
* Google PC
* Authoritarian Russia
* Microsoft's Lack of Innovation
* Broke and Happy vs. Rich... and Happier?
* Rotting Our Analytical Minds
* Mortality
* Why We Hate IE6 Part 2
* Microsoft Live Battalion

Artem, thank you. Let's keep in touch.

Wednesday, January 04, 2006

Celebration 2006: Uphill Blue Mountain & Upscale Oliver Bonacini


Reflections and Anticipations in New Year Eve of 2006

We decided to celebrate the 2006 New Year Eve at Blue Mountain Resort in a way that is called kind of “read-only”: not to stay for a night but drive, ski, go for dinner and join the crowd of strangers at midnight, countdown, enjoy fireworks and come back.
So, we did and we have no regrets.
Sorry, our dear friends, but this year 2005 was so brutal that I personally wanted to be an anonymous in the midst of a joyful party.
But first, we drove to the top of the mountain, to the Nordic center near the scenic caves. The center was closed but it was so beautiful around, quiet and all pine trees in frost were magical.
And just in 10 meters from this silent kingdom were a lot of skiers and snowboardists going down with noise and enthusiasm under the fog and artificial lights.
After reviewing all the Village tourist attractions around 9 pm we took a chance to dine at the Oliver & Bonacini café•grill at the New Westin Trillium House hotel, which still has some marks of construction.
Everything at the Peter Oliver and Michael Bonacini’s enterprise was great: service, style, and presentation and on top of it their greatest point: quality and freshness of ingredients. Nobody even winced when we dropped in wearing our (almost) sport clothing amid people with substantially bigger bank accounts and evening outfits.
Au contraire: a manager took pains to find an excellent spot for us.
Alors, we had simple food:
[V] spiritual Julienne (called Melting Mushroom & Goat Cheese Spread with assorted pitas, organic corn chips & crisps),
[V] Seafood Fettuccini with a Tiger Shrimp & a Giant Scallop & Calamari,
[V] incredible Southern Barbequed Back Ribs with polenta & a smoky tomato glaze,
[V] excellent Canadian vines (especially Riesling from Vineland, ON)
[V] tasteful dessert.

We got home at 2 AM and felt that time was well wasted.

Happy New Year!

We are looking for continuation of our Blue Mountain’s winter adventures: cross country skiing, dog sledding, ice fishing, snowshoeing…

LINKS:

Scenic Caves Nature Adventures
Experience Scenic Caves in Winter!
winter coupon cross country ski trails

The Westin Trillium House,Blue Mountain


OliverBonacini Restaurants

ARTICLES:

foof network: MICHAEL BONACINI: Recipe Collection Show Descriptions
by foodtv.ca

A taste for success, with a side order of risk
Oliver and Bonacini stomach inhospitabilities of the hospitality industry
William Hanley, Financial Post
Published: Saturday, October 29, 2005

ON SITE: BLUE MOUNTAIN: CONDOMINIUMS
Final resort suites going on the market
By SYDNIA YU
Friday, December 9, 2005 Page G5Key
Special to The Globe and Mail

BLOG:

fellow friendly friends,
anyone gonna be free from January 27 - February 9, 2006?
cause...it's....WINTERLICIOUS!!!
27 Dec 2005 by Sam Hsieh

time for a huge blog that's a day overdue! hehehe

well, i had a fabulous time for on tuesday...just proves that if things are meant to be.. then everything would turn out alright..
it was a challenge planning this ski trip to blue mountain.. so many obstables to overcome and some that seemed impossible. But, it was a successful trip and honestly the highlight of my so far miserable holiday season. seriously, it has been nothing but stressful and prison like. whatever..
29 Dec 2005 by aivoz
Thursday, December 29, 2005

High Park Ski Club News
New Member Information Night

Posted January 4, 2006 by Sheryl Graham

Do you know someone who is interested in learning more about the club? HPSC hosts information nights for potential members to find out information about the club and to meet and mingle with all members.
Date: Jan. 12, 2006
Time: 7:30 p.m.
Where: Lithuanian Hall, 1573 Bloor St. W.

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