Introducing the Summer Ollie Hunt

Back in January, Val and I introduced Ollies to iHub Here. Get a full week of checkins and you’d get a random pentapus of varying rarity. Collect ’em all and you’d get a shout-out on the Instagram.

Three Ollies.

Ollies.

It was a pretty simple idea, and it proved to be incredibly popular with you all. Every Friday at 12:10, I’d hear cries of dismay or shouts of triumph as each student got their well-deserved Ollie for the week. In the end, only Alan Turner and Patrick Townsend managed to collect every single one, but quite a lot of other students got really close.

iHub Here with the side-panel open and all the Ollies collected.

All the Ollies.

Back when we introduced Ollies, I also added Snapchat-style streaks for students who remembered to check in for at least three consecutive attendances. Early on, Patrick settled in with an impressive lead, and after the first couple weeks, no one else ever got first billing on the streak leader board.

Sometime before Spring Break, I happened to be chatting with Patrick about his lead, and he suggested that I create an iHub Check-In Simulator for former iHub students recovering from the addiction to streaks and Ollies, and perhaps even for students over the summer as well. I mentioned the idea to Anika a couple months later and she suggested it be a scavenger hunt as well: There’d be Ollies hidden all over the Tri-Cities, and you’d collect them by checking in.


So… Over the summer, you can check in. Twice a day, five days a week. Since a lot of you sleep in, the check-in periods have been moved. The first attendance of the day now goes from 8:00am until noon, while the second goes from 4:00 until 8:00pm. If you want to keep your streak up, you’ll have to check in during both.

Yes, you can get streaks by just sitting around and checking in, but can you still get Ollies that way? Alas, no longer! Now you have to work to catch them.

There are dozens of different types of Ollies hidden all throughout the Tri-Cities, and over the next two or so months, I’ll be adding more and more. From coffee shops to rec centres to elementary schools, there are Ollies everywhere.

Some are pretty common. Check out this sweet new Weekend Ollie, courtesy of Sterling:

Weekend Ollie

Weekend Ollie

Even though that little guy only seems to come out on weekends, he’s still pretty easy to catch, and I expect you’ll have quite a few of him by the time things are done. But then, he’s a common Ollie. Common Ollies are common.

Rare ones are what you’re looking for.

Rare Ollies only inhabit particular areas. For example, you might find a bookier Ollie near a library, or an Ollie sipping coffee near a coffee shop. But they’re also harder to catch! You may have to try a few different check-ins before you get one!

That raises the question… How does when catch an Ollie? Well, let me tell you.

Over the next two or so months, I’ll be releasing little riddles here and there. Some of them will be on iHub Here; some of them may be passed on to some of you individually. Some may be on my Instagram, and some may even appear on this blog. Each riddle will point to one or two locations in the Lower Mainland with public wifi.

Once you’ve got a place you want to check, go to it and connect to the wifi. In some cases, that might be the public wifi set up by a local organisation (like Starbucks’s free wifi). In the cases of places near schools, that would be the SD43 network. In a couple of rare cases, it’ll be free wifi provided by a local business, but the wifi will have a password on it; In those cases, you will have to kindly ask for the wifi password.

After connecting to the wifi, go to the URL you’ve come to know and love — here.inquiryhub.org — and check in. Your phone will capture the Ollie for you, and add it to the new, completely redesigned Ollie page!

After the first time you check in at a location, you can check in there again, but only during scheduled attendance times. The more times you check in, the more likely you’ll be made the place’s champion, which will add a nice little Ollie-with-a-crown to your collection.

Oh, and if you’re the first one to check in at a place, you’ll get your name permanently affixed to the homepage for that place. Quite the honour!

Well… what are you waiting for? Go to here.inquiryhub.org and start hunting!

Well, I suppose you may want an Ollie since you took the time to read through this… Once you’re logged into Here, click here to get one. But don’t tell anyone where you got it. It’ll be our secret.

Good luck and have a great summer!

Goodbye

I want to paint a picture for you. Imagine it’s the morning, just before the first attendance of the day. The Commons, empty just a few minutes before, is now bustling. But there’s one sound I want to draw your attention to.

It’s the sound of two small wheels moving quickly across the floor. Every few seconds, they skip as the case they carry rolls over another bump. Finally, round the corner comes the person pulling the case, long brown hair pulled back. She sets the case down, plugs in a blue-and-white crock-pot, and sits at one of the tables.

Down the hallway outside the Commons, two more figures are walking quickly, gesturing animatedly to each other. One of the figures, dressed all in black, is quite tall, while the other figure, clothes featuring more vibrant colours, is, in comparison, fairly short. Between the two of them, the shorter figure’s gestures are sharper, more aggressive, while the taller figure’s are defensive, exasperated. Only a few words of their conversation filter through the din of the Commons: “Wiggling”, “Manjerine”, and “Homestuck” are three of them.

Yet another character has appeared, and she, like the previous one, appeared so silently not many people immediately noticed. She has long, straight black hair. By now, she’s begun a clapping game with one of the previously-mentioned characters, the somewhat taller one. Another figure, smiling nervously, giggles and offers some dark assessment of the situation. Her comment complete, she turns back to a sketchbook in which she’s drawing.

From the other end of the hallway comes a new figure. He’s blond and skinny, and, though he’s been at school for a while now this morning, has only elected to come into the Commons now. In one hand, he carries both his laptop and his mouse, the cord swinging beneath. He looks around the hallway and the rooms adjoining it with alternating thoughtfulness and mirth, and, when he sees one of the figures mentioned earlier, immediately approaches them, places his hands on their shoulders, nods, and says one single word his eyes alight with meaning.

Have we picked the day it is yet? No, I suppose we haven’t. Imagine it’s a Tuesday. Tuesday means one of our characters isn’t here yet. A dark-haired, somewhat more muscular man, one with a slight smile permanently fixed on his face and a habit of talking slowly and with such a voice that one finds it difficult to believe him, no matter what he’s saying. He will arrive later, but only as his first class of the day is just finishing up. When he does, he will write in the attendance book as reason for his lateness the same word he’s written the last fifty or so times… “Bus”.

Another tall figure has appeared in the Commons. When and where from, no one knows. He pulls out his phone to check in, sighs, then sits down limply. Upon his head he used to wear a fedora; now he goes hatless, a shirt emblazoned with the words “got tin?” his only brand. He pulls out a gigantic book titled “Accounting”, sighs once again, and places it back.

I’m going to miss them.

I’m sure we all are.

It was wonderful to have known you, Twelves of the Round Table.

An Introduction to Enwyr Byd

A map of Enwyr Byd

A map of Enwyr Byd

 

When I was first asked to write an introduction to this great land of ours, I couldn’t quite understand what had just been said. “Introduce Enwyr Byd?” I said. How? Why? It’s where we live, isn’t it? How do you introduce the air you breathe, or the idea of sight, or what a home is? You can write about each, describe them in detail or in general, but no matter what you do, you’ll always find yourself telling people what they already know.

That was the challenge I was given; to tell people what they already know, in hope I might also give them a thing or two they didn’t. And so, like you do with any challenge, I rose to it. Perhaps unsuccessfully, perhaps with less than the desired amount of grace, but I tried all the same. I suppose that’s the one positive characteristic that really defines those of us from Cariadus, other than peacefulness and kindness. But then that really goes for everyone else too, doesn’t it?

The continent

So what is Enwyr Byd? What is the land where we all live?

I suppose it’s a sort of an island, but an island so big that pretty much anywhere you are on it, even on the coast, you think it goes on forever in all the other directions. It’s so big that, if you were suddenly picked up, tossed around, and set down on the east side, you’d see a desert, but if you were then picked up and set down in the west, you’d see forests and giant cliffs and be convinced you were in a completely different world. And then, if you were picked up again and moved just a few miles to the east, you’d see mountains so high and frightening and cruel that you’d wish you were back in that desert, even with its lack of water and shade.

Her mountains

Perhaps I should describe the island a bit more than saying it’s big. There are three main mountain ranges, each characterised in their own way. In the west, cutting the island in two, is a range of steep peaks, full of dry, dark caves with rumours of trolls and dwarves (though I’ve never met either). Eibhir mines these mountains for gems, and they seem to get quite a lot, at least if their treasury is any indication.

Go south and a little west of here, and you’ll find another range: The Brynig Mountains. It serves once again to separate two kingdoms, but this time, there’s still a significant amount of land where the border is still level and easily passable (and not even really noticeable). One kingdom, the one to the north and west, is the wealthy and powerful Galánta, while the other is the peace-loving Cariadus. These mountains are lower, and easier to climb, but they’re also considerably less wealthy, and without the trolls (which, in my opinion, is quite a good thing).

But if you’re looking for dangerous mountains, you’ve been waiting for this last one: The Mountains Draag. The Draag are a bit east and far to the north of the Brynig Mountains, separating Galánta from the eastern-most kingdom, the strong and warlike Maleisus. These mountains, while not as tall as the Miniog, are so many and so densely packed that to attempt to cross them is folly. Dotted throughout are many large and small lakes, but what really characterises the Draag is its legends.

For as long as the Draag’s been called the Draag, it’s been feared. Stories exist of the mountains exploding in fire and rage, as if a thousand dragons had suddenly risen from the lakes and the caves and went on conquest. Yet no one really knows when this was, or whether it’s happened many times, or just once, or not at all. If you were to ask people in Galánta or Cariadus or Maleisus what they thought, half would probably insist their grandparents had seen it, while the other half would argue that it’s all a bunch of fairy tales and dragons don’t exist anyways, but then glance up, over their shoulders to look, just in case.

Her rivers and lakes

While Enwyr Byd’s many rivers and lakes are too numerous to count, her most prominent two are worth mentioning.

From north to south nearly across the entire island runs the River Afon. It flows from Brynig in the south, joins with two additional rivers flowing from Cariadus, then continues on down, down to the coast and the Bay of Galánta in the north, right between the Miniog and the Draag. It serves to divide the kingdoms of Cariadus and Galánta.

Another major river divides two more kingdoms, and its divide is perhaps the most important one we’ll discuss: The River Gyferbyn flows from the Draag south east, dividing the Kingdom of Cariadus from the Republic of Maleisus, eventually down to the coast and the Sea of Gwydor.

The kingdoms and their rulers

I’ve mentioned several of the kingdoms of Enwyr Byd so far, but I suppose it’s necessary to list them fully and explain them too. From west to east, the kingdoms are Eibhir, Galánta, Cariadus, and Maleisus, with Gwydor on an island in the south east.

Eibhir

Strong and proud, Eibhir is the second wealthiest, and correspondingly the second most powerful, kingdom of Enwyr Byd. With mountains rich with precious gems in the east, and great expanses of forests and fertile land, Eibhir is pretty well set.

Eibhir has always had a close relationship with the kingdom of Galánta to its east (right over those mountains); They’re perhaps each other’s closest trading partners, and their border tends to be softer than most. In recent months we’ve seen the culmination of that, something I’ll get into shortly.

Eibhir’s current ruler is the youngest of all the kings, queens, presidents, and councilmen in Enwyr Byd: The eighteen-year-old Senn. Senn’s father, the previous king and ruler of Eibhir, Dominik (insert last name later), disappeared nearly 6 years ago after he set out by water to explore the islands to the west of Enwyr Byd, never to return. Senn has ruled the kingdom for the years since with the guidance and wisdom of Olivia, her advisor and regent who has been around since the time of her father, though has become increasingly powerful as time went on.

A competing view of Eibhir’s future is led by Adam, the founder and head of a somewhat more radical sect of Eibhir’s ancient and ever-thriving religion of “rock-worship”, as it has unfortunately been termed by the public of Cariadus. Adam’s followers believe that Eibhir’s destiny is to rule all of Enwyr Byd, and that this destiny is imparted to them as a right from the very stone and gems of the mountains themselves. Adam has also cultivated a great amount of influence with the young queen, bringing him evermore into contention with her differently opinionated advisor. For the moment, Adam and Olivia’s views for the immediate future of Eibhir align, but some worry that sometime soon, they very much won’t.

Galánta

If it were stated to me that Eibhir owned a third of all the wealth in Enwyr Byd, I would immediately assume Galánta owned the rest. Galánta is wealthy, a product of their own hard work and determination, their fertile lands and large forests, their general goodwill with kingdoms in far-off lands, and perhaps just the sheer immensity of their possessions.

Accordingly, Galánta is also a powerful kingdom. Its many riches allow it to finance a large army, and the size of its population allows it to staff it. While Cariadus is often seen as the most peace-loving of all the kingdoms, Galánta has always been the kingdom to put force behind those beliefs.

Galánta has an excellent relationship with its neighbouring kingdoms, Eibhir and Galánta, and a cordial relationship with Gwydor; Yet for over five decades, it has been in a state of only temporarily paused war with the physically largest kingdom of the island, Maleisus. While troupes from Maleisus and forces from Galánta have never crossed each other’s borders, they have fought many battles in Cariadus, stuck directly between the two.

For the past twenty or so years, Galánta has been ruled by Kassandra, a wise and well-liked queen in her kingdom. She is unmarried, a not uncommon circumstance with the opening up of succession rules of late, and for a while, it was thought that that would remain unchanged.

But then, little less than a year ago, Kassandra and Senn announced their intention to wed this June. I suppose this should have been of little surprise, considering the two kingdom’s closeness, both physically and diplomatically, but I was a little stunned all the same. Inter-kingdom marriages have been quite rare over the last two hundred years, since the marrying of a commoner came to be no longer frowned upon, and succession outside of marriage became allowed.

As for the wedding, it is expected to be a wonderous event. Representatives from all five kingdoms have been invited, and festivities are planned to last a whole five days with the actual wedding planned for the fourth. The minstrels and poets have been singing of the event non-stop for the past eight months, and the subjects of not just the two kingdoms, but Cariadus as well, are beyond excited.

Cariadus

Now we get to the kingdom I’m from: Cariadus. It is wedged between the Kingdom of Galánta on one side and the Republic of Maleisus on the other, with the Draag in the north and the Sea of Gwydor to the south. Cariadus is not as wealthy as its cousins to the west, nor as technologically advanced as its friends to the south, and it’s certainly not as warlike or as massive as the republic to the east, but it’s still honestly quite comfortably well-off.

Cariadus is a peaceful kingdom. Perhaps this comes of being so close to a country like Maleisus, or perhaps it comes from Cariadus’s historical dependence on Galánta for some staple crops until those were successfully introduced to the southern regions almost a century ago. Whatever the cause, Cariadus is perhaps the most liberal and pacifist of all the kingdoms, seeking mostly just happiness for themselves and those near them.

Just over fifty years ago, armed forces from Maleisus crossed over the border dividing them from Cariadus and began marching north-west. Their goal was to enter and take forcefully the kingdom of Galánta. Cariadus, not having a particularly strong military even then scrambled to pull together a militia and, with the aid of forces from Galánta, managed to push Maleisus back enough to negotiate a ceasefire agreement for the cessation of hostilities.

For almost twenty-two years, Cariadus has been governed by Laef. Laef is liberal, even for his kingdom, and has spent the past two decades pushing Cariadus more and more towards open borders, schools for commoners, and even talked of government chosen by its subjects, a concept which most people today are quite rightly wary of. His enacted policies have been popular, however, and he’s maintained good relations with all of Enwyr Byd’s kingdoms, a somewhat impressive feat.

Laef’s trusted long-time advisor and second-in-command is Tiffany. While Laef hails from the capital of the kingdom, like his mother before him, Tiffany was born and grew up in the east. The easterners are, understandably, quite skiddish and worried about the security of the border, especially after a recent influx of refugees coming from Maleisus, and some have even advocated forming a stronger military to protect the kingdom, but with Tiffany’s help, the central government has slowly worked at calming fears and hostilities.

Gwydor

Gwydor’s a bit on the unusual side of kingdoms in Enwyr Byd. Far smaller than all the rest, it occupies the entirety of a large island off the coast of Cariadus. Ruled by the Council of Nine, an allegedly immortal group of nine, highly accomplished philosophers, Gwydor prides itself in its thirst for knowledge and technological development. It does an excellent trade in weaponry it designs and develops itself and uses the returns to purchase resources that don’t exist on the island and fund further experimentation.

It’s unfortunate to say, but I don’t think the other kingdoms like Gwydor very much. Not that many of the other kingdoms like their other neighbours too much either, but there’s a special bit of distrust those in Galánta and Eibhir, and, sadly, in Cariadus as well, have for an island that is often referred to as the “Hermit Kingdom”. Perhaps it’s just as well that Gwydor seems to desire to keep to itself, engaging in contact usually only with the intention to buy resources or sell weaponry.

Maleisus

Nearly a century ago, the subjects Maleisus, the largest kingdom on Enwyr Byd occupying a full half of the island, from northern sea to eastern sea to southern sea, opted to rise up and overthrow their king, then install a government selected by themselves. Many say that’s when their troubles started.

Less than a decade later, Maleisus was now ruled by a military junta which had assumed control after the collapse of the revolutionary government. While this brought stability back to the newly reconfigured republic, it also began a warlike nature in the land that has been typical of Maleisus for decades since.

Since the beginning of the military junta, Maleisus has kept building again and again for war. With their invasion of and eventual loss in Cariadus, and the resulting ceasefire agreement, their forces have been mandated to stay few in number, and all evidence has suggested that they’ve stayed true to this. Yet with years of prioritising military improvement over food and infrastructure, thousands of its subjects are hungry and homeless. Many have left and crossed the border into Cariadus in the hope of finding a better home there.

The peace talks

At the beginning of June, with the gathering of the five kingdoms for the wedding of Kassandra and Senn, the leaders of Cariadus are scheduled to run a four-day series of peace talks for the entire island. While their chief desire is to finally negotiate a peace between Galánta, Maleisus, and Cariadus, they are also speaking for the first time of bringing Cariadus’s educational reform and equality of the masses to all of Enwyr Byd. There is also talk of reducing the militaries of Galánta, as well as the two kingdoms not originally included in the ceasefire and strengthening the limits of the ceasefire. Gwydor is looking to get permission to do research in the Draag, Adam wants to convert new followers to Eibhir’s religion, and Galánta and Eibhir are looking to potentially merge, creating the largest kingdom on the island.

How it all goes is yet to be seen.

The Cease-Fire

From the humble negotiators, representatives, and ambassadors of the Republic of Maleisus, the Kingdom of Galánta, and the Kingdom of Cariadus, to the President of the Republic of Maleisus, the Queen of the Kingdom of Galánta, and the Queen of the Kingdom of Cariadus, under the terms and in attempt of the goals issued by each of those latter mentioned at the initiation of these talks, greeting.

As it may please the parties for which it is intended, this letter shall constitute an agreement between the Republic of Maleisus and the Kingdoms of Galánta and Cariadus, considered to have come into effect on the date written below. The contents of this letter shall constitute the terms of this agreement in full, and this agreement shall be considered the determiner in all conflicts of law related to it.

For the purposes of this agreement and all considerations related to it or its subject, the borders of the Republic of Maleisus and the Kingdom of Cariadus shall be considered thus: the lands subject to the Kingdom of Cariadus are bounded in the north by the southern hills of the Mountains Draig and in the south by the Sea of Cariadus and the Sea of Gwydor, with their eastern border being the River Gyferbyn. Likewise, the lands governed by the Republic of Maleisus are bounded by its various seas and oceans in the north, east, and south, and bordered in the west by the Mountains Draig and the River Gyferbyn.

Within thirty (30) days of the date written below, all forces loyal to or paid for by the Republic of Maleisus or the Kingdom of Cariadus shall return to their respective lands. Likewise, all forces loyal to or paid for by the Kingdom of Galánta shall return to lands subject of the Kingdoms of Galánta or Cariadus.

After sixty (60) days of the date written below, forces loyal to or paid for by the Kingdom of Galánta extant within the borders of the Kingdom of Cariadus shall be limited to five thousand (5,000) persons.

All land within five hundred (500) metres of either bank of the River Gyferbyn shall be considered part of a demilitarised area. Within sixty (60) days of the date written below, all forces shall be removed from this area, and within fifty (50) days, all permanent structures taller than twenty (20) metres, or with an area greater than fifty (50) square metres, shall be destroyed.

Within sixty (60) days, the Republic of Maleisus shall destroy all ships it has intended for war, as well as all ships with a length greater than eighteen (18) metres. In the future, it also shall not build or obtain such ships.

Upon reception of this letter by the President of the Republic of Maleisus, the Queen of the Kingdom of Galánta, or the Queen of the Kingdom of Cariadus, and its subsequent and much hoped-for approval and agreement, it shall be additionally signed or sealed by the receiving party and returned to the talks as promptly as possible.

On this, the ninety-seventh day of the third year since forces possessed by the Republic of Maleisus openly crossed onto the western bank of the River Gyferbyn, this letter is signed:

The Plan

Last time we talked, I related my dream. Now it’s time for me to, belatedly, explain how I plan to achieve it.

For the last two or so years, I’ve worked hard to help promote iHub, and nowadays I run iHub’s social media and website. My goal with these has always been to talk more about students and their projects, but I’ve never had the time to pull together the materials I need. In fact, sitting around on my tablet are more than a dozen photos that I took, meaning to post them, then didn’t get the chance.

Clearly, I need a better strategy.

A couple months ago, I worked with a team of students and staff to pull together iHub’s largest ever open house. During one of our brainstorming sessions Mr. Sarte suggested that, instead of a session where students stood up and presented about their projects and the school, we could have one where a couple of students interviewed a few of their peers in the style of a talk show. He thought it would be interesting to have my fellow grade 11 Olivia, and me conduct it.

I loved the idea.

We weren’t sure if the session would really work out, but we decided that, in iHub spirit, we’d try it out and see if it did. I feel it worked out quite well.

With the success of iHub Open filling my sails, I suggested to grade 10s Jazmine and Ailis, who are in charge of organising iHub’s first ever showcase event, iHub Spotlight, that it would be interesting to conduct a similar session at that event as well. They agreed.

So here’s the plan: At iHub Spotlight, I’ll interview five students, each for about five minutes, on their inquiry or IDS, live on stage. I’ve asked my brother, who operates sound at iHub’s live events, to record the interviews, then help me record several, longer-form, follow-up interviews with the five students, and a couple others. I’ll then piece together the interviews, and perhaps some other pieces of audio and insight, into several episodes of a podcast series, one episode for each project. They’ll then be posted to iHub’s website and social media.

I don’t know yet whether this will work out. If my experience at iHub Open taught me anything, it’s that I need to develop a lot as an interviewer. But hopefully, with the extra research I’m doing into each of the interviewees’ projects and fields of interest, and a leveller head, I’ll improve.

And perhaps this will get me one step closer to my Dream.

I’ve got a couple other parts to this plan, and a couple other plans to my IDS, which I’ll share with you in my next post. That one will be coming out in just a couple of days.

Talk with you then.

A First Draft

I’ve completed my first draft for In the Penal Colony.

I suppose I should explain. When I was younger, my father suggested I read a story by Franz Kafka titled In the Penal Colony, and lent me the short story collection he had that contained the work. I read it, foolishly late at night, and had nightmares for nearly a week.

The story, as I read it translated from the original German, tells about a Traveler who has been invited to watch the execution of a man for desertion of duty on an administratively conservative island. The Officer, who is judge, jury, and executioner, guides the Traveler through an explanation of the sentence and the apparatus used to carry it out, a medieval-reminiscent machine that painfully inscribes the Condemned Man’s sentence upon his back over the course of twelve hours, before finally killing him.

Needless to say, I loved it.

Then, this year, for a project in Directing & Scriptwriting, we were asked to take a short story and adapt it into a script of some form, be it a screenplay, stageplay, or something else. I chose In the Penal Colony, and, on my brother Alin’s suggestion, decided to write it as a radio drama, and, more particularly, in the style of a radio documentary.

Listening to radio documentaries made up a big part of my time growing up. When I was young, CBC Radio had a show called Dispatches, which, once a week, brought stories from around the world into my radio. The stories were at times dark, and other times light-hearted, and they were almost always ones that the media, wrapped up in the 24-hour news cycle, tends to ignore. Freelance and assignment journalists from every country in the world (Dispatches called them Correspondents) sent their five-to-fifteen minute documentaries in and Dispatches would play them, often following up a few months later to hear how things had changed and what had stayed the same. From war-torn countries to cross-border dentistry, it was radio that I have rarely heard since.

Alin also had been wanting to do something audio-related for his first IDS, so we decided that we would work on this radio drama together. I would write the script adaptation and voice one of the characters, and he would build the documentary, sound-by-sound, recording-by-recording.

Franz Kafka’s writing is, of course, difficult to do justice to. While adapting the story, I have to be careful not to change too much of the meaning, even while I change, or often even remove or add, lines. Parts of the original lend themselves very well to a journalistic documentary, while others don’t at all. Often times I’ve found myself having to write a line completely dissimilar to any in the original in an answer to a question posed by the Journalist, my replacement for Kafka’s Traveler. Yet I’ve done my best to make sure each of these lines comes from the character presented in the original, and is loyal to their personality and beliefs.

Like I said, I’ve finally completed the first draft, and I’ve given it to my brother to look over and make suggestions on. My second draft will likely add in a second character to be interviewed, though who that is is yet to be seen. It will probably include numerous other additions, such as directions for sound effects or speaking style, and will likely also involve the paring down of some of the longer lines.

Oh, and here’s the PDF of this first draft, in case you wanted it. 🙂

The Dream

When I was a very little child, I had this dream of being a radio host. I suppose it was because I listened to CBC religiously, and, since I had little exposure to other culture, an employee for that august corporation was one of the few professions I had to aspire to.

Jump forward to my second year of high school. By this time, I had already been on CBC twice (and on and in a few other journalistic forms of media a half dozen other times), and I had even successfully invited a producer from CBC Radio to speak at iHub Talks. But by now I had also long discarded my dream of hosting a radio programme, or going out into the field to report on stories of national importance for the evening news.

Yet every now and then, the profession would seem to come up again. Someone might comment on an essay I wrote and suggest I go into journalism. Someone would ask if I could exert my contacts in the media to get iHub in the news. I had begun to pay more attention to interviewing styles when listening to the radio, and to journalistic practices when reading the paper.

I had just spent the last few months working all-out on VoteMate, a website and app to connect voters and candidates during the provincial election. The day before election-day, I was invited to CBC’s studios in Vancouver to talk with Stephen Quinn, the host of CBC Radio’s weekday afternoon drive programme, On The Coast, about the project. Yet more fascinating to me than the interview itself was the chance I had to talk with the people who put the show together every day, just before it went to air that Monday.

I spoke for the first time in person with Lisa Christiansen, On The Coast’s traffic and music reporter (I’d talked with her over the Internet before), and chatted again with a couple people I’d met previously. Lisa Christiansen especially was inspiring, and she suggested that, if I was ever interested in journalism, I look into BCIT’s broadcast journalism programme, which partnered with the CBC for internships.

But perhaps the moment that stuck most in my mind was as I was leaving, when the man who was showing me out first complemented me on my speaking ability (I expect this is something they do to every teen or pre-teen who goes on the show, but it was nice anyways), then asked if I had ever thought of going into journalism. “You really should,” he said, when I didn’t reply.

I’d worked on VoteMate because I believed in democracy and wanted very badly to participate. By this time, I was already beginning to form a better idea of what democracy meant, beyond just voting and representation, that centred more around the necessity of the judicial and journalistic organisations. I had no hope and no interest of getting involved in the judiciary, but I decided that journalism, perhaps, might hold some potential for me.

So that’s what I’m working on this year. I plan to be blogging a lot more about my IDS this time, and, as an encouragement to do such, I’ll be separating out my ideas a bit more, each to its own post. This is the first; In my second, I hope to outline what I plan to do.

Talk with you then.

What I’ve Already Done with VoteMate

VoteMate, which is now my new IDS, is something that I had been working on for quite awhile before school started this year. Primarily, I’d set up the basic system that it would run off of, a re-purposed infrastructure and collection of code files I’d created for FindALostPet (actually, a lot of this code dates back to VoteVancouver, and even before that, to RWTweb). By now, I’ve gotten tired of copying this code and taking out the bits that make it FindALostPet, whenever I want to set up a new website, so I created something I nicknamed Foundations; It’s just a folder that I copy and rename to whatever I want my next project to be called.

I’d created a lot of the look and feel as well, and added a few features on top, though nothing that special. Here’s what it looked like at about the time I started time-tracking for the IDS:

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The homepage hasn’t changed much since, and pretty much all that has changed has been below the fold-line.

I’d also gotten a source for some of the data I would need: Ridings. Interestingly enough, it’s difficult to come across a good list of all the ridings in British Columbia, at least an up-to-date one with all the proper formatting and nicely organised so that a computer can get at the data quickly. Fortunately, I already knew about OpenNorth’s Represent API from earlier work, so this was made incredibly easy.

The great thing about Represent is that I can give it a postal code and it can return the riding that postal code is in for the next BC election (the ridings have changed since the last election). This makes the sign up process really really easy for users: All they have to do is enter their postal code and it tells them their riding, instead of having to ask them for their riding straight off the bat as I would have had to do otherwise. (I get excited about little things.)

Oh, and that’s what powers this, as seen on mobile:

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Once you’ve signed up and confirmed your riding, you’re given your first look at the home stream.

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I’m not sure if I created this before or after IDS start, but I suppose it doesn’t really matter. It’s gotten a lot better since then:

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Notice the super-fancy list of candidates in my riding. That’s thanks to a nice CBC page someone on Jelly found me: This one. It’s a constantly updated table of candidates as they’re announced, and is really useful for filling in my own data set.

(By the way, for those of you who are also obsessed with small things, I’ve found a really nice piece of software for entering data into my MySQL database quickly: It’s called HeidiSQL. I know, really exciting isn’t it.)

And, for the last couple of weeks, I’ve been working on creating a sign up process for candidates, so that a candidate or authorised campaign agent can sign up and modify their candidate profile. This is quite tricky, because I have to find some way to be 100% sure that the user is actually authorised to modify the profile and represent the candidate. I’ll have a post on that shortly.

Good Intentions

In a totally predictable outcome, my interest in politics and programming have won out: The focus of my first IDS will be informing the British Columbian electorate, and assisting them in the 2017 general election. This will encompass various categories, from government, to computers (for my solution, as typical, is a website and an app), to promotion. To the extent that this project fits within the planners and documents I’ve been given, I’ll try to outline it; otherwise, I’ll throw in random details that I think contribute to building a better idea of what I’m working on.

The project is called VoteMate. The smaller goals are to build a website and app that:

  • Connects users with the candidates in their various constituencies, so that they can ask them questions.
  • Lists candidate and party policies, and comparisons between such, so that users can make a more informed decision while voting.
  • Provides more information about each candidate, such as biographical information.

What resources can help me towards my goal? When it comes to programming, the answer is easy: most APIs, all programming languages, and hopefully a large amount of the bizarre and confusing concepts created by people with code minifiers, have documentation.

Sources for the data used by VoteMate will come from various APIs, such as OpenNorth’s Represent API, which lists constituencies (as well as MPs, MLAs and councilors) for a given location; CBC; ElectionsBC (although no of their data is in an easily-usable format); party websites; Wikipedia and various other Wikimedia projects; and the candidates and their campaigns themselves.

Oooh, and then there are the anticipated problems. Well, most people I know who run startups say that you should never thing about problems, because if you do, you’ll get depressed and won’t do anything amazing. I don’t buy that, so…

  1. Bizarre programming problems. Really, you can never predict these, and instead you just pray to the various gods of programming, computers and Ramen, and hope for the best.
  2. Inability to attract a user-base. This is incredibly likely.
  3. Inability to attract candidates. This is somewhat likely, but somehow, I’ve done it before with VoteVancouver. Considering that I had even less experience then, I am now armed by overconfidence.
  4. Legal issues. Interestingly, talking about political issues during a BC election is illegal, and can result in up to a year in prison. I will of course be contacting ElectionsBC, which does much of the interpretation for this law, to confirm that what I’d be doing is legal.
  5. Security. Lots of websites end in being hacked. In the end, all websites are vulnerable, but there is a fair amount that I can do to lower the likelihood.
  6. Way, way more. Really scary stuff.

How I’ll gauge my progress and when I’ll be done are coming in a later post. For now, I’m just going to keep on programming (I’ve already got the foundations of the website and some of the data ready to go).

Narrowing Down

This is the first time I’ve done an Independent Directed Study, but it’s not the first time I’ve had to narrow down the list of things I want to do. As someone who always has a lot of (probably stupid) ideas, time management is always a problem, and when offered the chance to do an inquiry or IDS, it gets even worse: I have to pick one item that I would get the chance to pass off as school work.

Yes, narrowing down the options is difficult. Fortunately, I’ve managed to go from four possibilities to six possibilities, then down to two. These two:

  • VoteMate
  • Longer piece of fiction

First off, an explanation: VoteMate is my project to connect voters with the information they need and the candidates they would choose between in British Columbia’s next general election on May 9th, 2017. I’m already working on this project and I’d be doing it anyway, even if it weren’t my IDS, but I worry that if I have an IDS, plus VoteMate, plus a whole bunch of other stuff to do, some school, some not, I won’t have enough time to do all of them to the extent I want to.

And the longer piece of fiction is sort of my way of saying “I want do write a novel, but I don’t want to say novel, because then I have to make it longer.” In the end, I want it to be longer than a short story, but still short enough that it’s manageable and doesn’t balloon out of proportion.

For some reason, I’m really torn between these two, mostly because I’ve always wanted to do the longer piece of fiction, but know that I won’t unless I force myself (eg. by making it my IDS) to do so. Yet VoteMate is a project that really needs to be done and has an obvious due date; it’s not something I can do “next year.”

But then, neither really is the longer piece of fiction. I know that every year, something like VoteMate will come up, and I’ll again push the fiction back. Before I was a programmer, I was a writer, but as I learned to make websites and get computers to do nifty things, I stopped writing to the extent that I would like to. I still do stuff, but mostly essays or just imaginary TV episodes that never see the light of the written word.

And no matter what, I know that once I’ve chosen one, I’ll keep looking back and wondering if I made the wrong choice.