Thumbs up for snow?

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Calgary, Alberta, Canada

One of the quick snaps I took yesterday after Calgary got walloped by a record-breaking snow storm, with the official record showing almost 33 cm accumulated on Tuesday. Some neighbourhoods got closer to 40 or 50 cm. Tuesday’s snowfall made it Calgary’s snowiest day since 1981 and snowiest Oct. 2 in the weather record books.

Secluded

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Calgary, Alberta, Canada

From my wander through Edworthy Park a week ago — a beautiful, sunny autumn afternoon with temperatures reaching into the mid-teens Celsius. (The weather is quite a bit chillier and snowier today.)

Screen Shot 2018-10-02 at 1.59.17 PM

Circular

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Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Some visually neat piers under a pedestrian bridge in Calgary’s Edworthy Park, as seen last week.

Calling prospective cadets!

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Calgary, Alberta, Canada

The Mewata Armoury is, to me, one of the signature buildings on the west side of Calgary’s city centre. There’s nothing else quite like it. (Also, what a hoot to see signage in French! The English message was on the other side.)

Water unfit for drinking

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Calgary, Alberta, Canada

There was a corroded tank of some kind sitting uphill from this location along one of the streams in Calgary’s Edworthy Park, so I’m going to go out on a limb and say this is very good advice.

Silky clouds

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Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Hoping for a couple more days like Tuesday before the cold weather settles in. This is from the Point McKay side of Edworthy Park.

Christmas Tree Trail

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Calgary, Alberta, Canada

From a wander in Edworthy Park, on the south side of the Bow River.

Handle with care

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Calgary Comic and Entertainment Expo

Good advice from a vendor at the Calgary Comic and Entertainment Expo back in April. (Don’t mind the typo, however …)

The Future Starts Here at London’s V&A Museum

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Victoria and Albert Museum, London, England, U.K.

The word sandbox can mean different things to different people.

For some, it might evoke a play area inhabited with children and their toys, fuelling young imaginations as they shape and reshape the sand to create an evolving imaginary world.

For other, it’s simply a technical term to describe a virtual place for safe technological experimentation.

The V&A Museum in London melds those concepts with an exhibition called The Future Starts Here, which runs until Nov. 4.

The multi- and inter-disciplinary installation, which I visited as part of a personal vacation this spring, is best described as a quick survey course on futurism, with an emphasis on humans’ role in fashioning the world of tomorrow and how we all might fit in such a place — should we fit in at all.

Victoria and Albert Museum, London, England, U.K.

As visitors descend into a vast space in the bowels of the museum, they are greeted by a laundry robot (photo above) — the first of a chain of thought-provoking displays tackling our present and the future in relation to science and technology, climate change and environment, politics and philosophy, urbanism and more.

The introductory focus on home automation and other types of high-tech convenience quickly gives way to weightier subjects, including the effect of technology on care for seniors. A sign next to a cuddly robotic therapy seal (photo below) asks viewers to evaluate if such devices are simply helpful tools or if they are the first step in the outsourcing of companionship.

Victoria and Albert Museum, London, England, U.K.

Victoria and Albert Museum, London, England, U.K.

Farther along, visitors get to peer into the mind of a teenaged aspiring architect (photo above) as he conjures up an ideal for his home city, war-ravaged Aleppo, Syria. His Aleppo, according to the card describing the display, would have integrated public green spaces, top-notch public transportation and buildings fuelled by sunlight — and when he grows up, he wants to help bring such a city to life.

What if humans truly mess up and permanently wreck this fragile blue marble suspended in space we call home? That’s where the sandbox (first photo in this post) comes in, asking us to participate in a virtual terraforming exercise. Dig deep and create a vast sea; pile up the sand and watch snow caps form. If only things were so simple in real life.

A few steps away is a prototype showing an artificial leaf capable of photosynthesis, just like its natural counterpart, offered as a possible aid to slow climate change. And around the corner from this is a brief examination of space exploration and the ongoing hunt for a new galactic foothold for Homo sapiens.

As visitors wend their way through the displays, they are also asked to consider the impact of technology on democracy, energy consumption/extraction and the accumulation/dissemination of knowledge.

The myriad questions posed by the presentations are left to linger as you leave — and how to answer them is, of course, left to you.

Victoria and Albert Museum, London, England, U.K.

Spirits of the Land

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Calgary, Alberta, Canada

An art piece installed in Calgary’s network of Plus 15 pedestrian walkways.