Archive for January, 2004

more competitive, more fluid = better result?

January 31st, 2004

I talked with Ryan Chen-Wing today about Feds. Eventually, I complained about having to choose between Muneeba Omar and Jeff Henry for VP Education. I compared the choice to choosing between Liam McHugh-Russell and Aaron Lee-Wudrick last year: both are competent pairs of candidates and their differences are mostly philosophical. I'd rather two competent executives with differing philosophies than one competent one and one schmuck.

So how could we get away from the problem of one winner for one position? If we keep the number of positions fixed (which we don't have to do), then we need to destroy the one-to-one mapping of a winner to one and only one position.

An example may illustrate the point most clearly.

There are 4 positions and 9 candidates. If candidates are not candidates for a particular position but only for a position, then electors choose both the candidate and the position on their ballots. In the current election, this would mean the following:

  • I could assign Hamilton to President, Omar to Education, Henry to VPAF and Ma to VP Internal.
  • I would only be able to assign as one candidate to one position. Essentially, this alternative system allows electors to decide who should do what.

There may be a few problems with this alternative system. A modification of this alternative would allow electors to choose the best 4 executives (using a ranked ballot) and have the winning candidates choose their positions amongst themselves. A further modification would do away with fixed positions altogether and create a prime minister and three ministers (we could continue to use the federal terms of president and vice-president), whose portfolios would be decided and divided up by the winning candidates, or by council.

Something to think about, anyway.

Comments on candidate performance in media forum

January 31st, 2004

So I just listened to the Feds executive candidates media forum. The recording is fairly good -- kudos to those who arranged the sound recording. Hopefully, students will listen to the forum.

Here's my rundown on the performances:

VP Internal. Advantage: Taylor. He had a better plan for defusing tensions after the Finkelstein talk. His idea to get in students' faces, in person, is good. I like Anderson's enthusiasm for weblogs but that's all I remember about his talk.

President. Advantage: Hamilton. Wroe has decent ideas and she scores points with me for saying that she needs to think about something before she can give an answer. Ma has okay ideas, too, but they are a little pie-in-the-sky. Specifically, Feds should stay out of housing. They should build a great web site that handles housing in the area and interfaces with other housing sites (for co-op). Hamilton was the best of the three. He handled questions fairly well and proposed some interesting ideas. I like the idea of moving the Feds offices to Fed Hall but putting a grocery store in Aussie's is a bad idea. The space should be used by the bookstore for storage, and, during peak periods, for consignment and book look up only.

VP Admin & Finance. Advantage: Afzaal. Clelland loses because he thinks that providing jobs to students is a good service. There are thousands of jobs in Waterloo region and hundreds of jobs on campus. Feds is not an employment service. Too, Afzaal seemed like a reasonable guy.

VP Education. Advantage: Henry. Too bad Omar didn't make the forum. I think she's pretty damn good. But Henry is good too. I think he would work well with non-ticketmates. Plus it's good to have an engineer in the mix.

I'm currently voting for:

  • Will Hamilton
  • Raveel Afzaal
  • Jeff Henry
  • Brent Taylor

Travelling to Ottawa, day two

January 28th, 2004

I finished one book and am close to finishing a second book. Solitude certainly encourages me to read.

I gathered my stuff and checked out around 8:20 a.m. A copy of the Globe and Mail was on my doorstep (nich touch!). But the continental breakfast provided by the Bostonian left something to be desired, namely, food. I had two glasses of orange juice, a bowl of raisin bran cereal, one cup of coffee, one piece of toast and two raisin bran muffins. Of course it's the first time I've eaten breakfast in a while.

The day of training was fine. The customer lent me its customer shuttle, a 1994 Ford Aerostar.

Around 4:45 p.m., I checked into the Carleton Heritage Inn, located in downtown Carleton Place, population 9100 hardy souls. The inn is very quaint. My room, 306, is called the Ernest Womson room. The room recalls the late Victorian estates that were mimicked in Canada. The inn appears to be quite old. No wireless internet access here :( .

Tonight, it's dinner at Le Metro, a restaurant that my boss raved about. I'm looking forward to it.

UW blogger get together

January 28th, 2004

So Matt Goyer is trying to organize a UW blogger get together. I think it should be at the Grad House but he's suggesting McMullan's or Weaver's. I can't go to McMullan's or Weaver's cause McMullan banned RC-W from Weaver's for no good reason.

Travelling to Ottawa, day one

January 28th, 2004

One of my clients, Peartree Software,
asked me to travel to Ottawa to train a customer on their RV
dealership management software. I was scheduled to fly out of the href="http://hamiltonairport.com">Hamilton International Airport, on
West Jet flight 634, on 27 January 2004.

With all the talk about the biggest storm to hit Canada since last week, I needed to find transportation to the airport from Kitchener. I ended up taking a taxi from Waterloo Taxi because Budget and Hertz, although they have outlets in the
Hamilton terminal, were dumb about renting me a car.

Allow me to explain the dumbness. Since I've rented from Hertz before, I called them first. I was informed by the Victoria office to call the 1-800 number.
The lady I spoke to on the phone told me that the rental would be $56.00 plus a $75 drop off fee. I said nuts to that and bid her good-day. Inconcievably, Budget was worse. They told me that they don't rent cars one-way from Kitchener to Hamilton airport. Here I was, thinking that Budget rented cars. Ha. I guess they showed me.

The flat rate for the taxi was $80.50. Far, far better than renting a car. But maybe more expensive
than the Airporter.

My flight on a West Jet Boeing 737 was delayed by about 20 minutes. The West Jet staff were very friendly. The plane was clean and the flight was uneventful. Of course, it only took 41 minutes to fly from Hamilton to Ottawa, at a cruising altitude of 37,000 feet. We must have had a tailwind.

I'm posting this entry from the Bostonian on Maclaren Street in downtown Ottawa. The hotel is good: it has open wireless throughout the building, a full kitchen in each room, and comfortable beds. It even has Nintendo 64 games, if you want to play them. The President of Peartree and I spent most of the night playing pool at Maclaren's on Elgin, an upscale sports bar. It was fairly nice.

remember John Swan?

January 24th, 2004

I wonder where that guy is. He's funny.

good sentence alert!

January 18th, 2004

It's almost a groaner: "the 47 minutes of CV make a great addition to steve’s résumé." I often forget how well Paul writes.

masters and moderns at the Grad House

January 17th, 2004

If you like rock music and you are in the KW area, you should check out the Masters and Moderns show at the Grad House on 4 March 2004.

uws meeting and social

January 17th, 2004

If you read uws, you should come to the uws term meeting and social today at 3:00 p.m. at 379 Erb Street W, Unit 2. The meeting should only last 30 minutes or so.

a blogging strategy for UW

January 15th, 2004

Matt Goyer is an effective blogger and his proposal for blogging at UW is good. He should submit it as an op-ed to Imprint.