Some of my favourite pieces from over the years:
2011
- Aerospace firms worry about the effect export controls have on their businesses. Also, Industry Minister Christian Paradis speaks about the status of Canada’s long-term space plan. (Ottawa Business Journal)
- A Telesat satellite malfunctions for a day, throwing much of Northern Canada in the dark. (Ottawa Business Journal)
- Space and terrestrial mining for the present and future. (SpaceRef Canada)
- John Poulos, a Top 40 Under 40 winner, moves to make voting accessible to the disabled. (Globe and Mail)
- Tradition versus access: midwives in Mexico. (Research Works)
- The Ottawa Business Journal’s CEO of the Year, Jean Laurin, talks about how to create new markets when traditional ones slump.
2010
- SiGe Semiconductor targets one of the largest IPOs in Ottawa history. (CTV Ottawa)
- I watched two more shuttle launches from the press site of the Kennedy Space Center, playing out before people aware of the consequences for local workers when the program finishes. See STS-130 and STS-131. (SpaceRef)
- Canadian organic farmers fight to reconcile their own standards with regulations originally crafted for the traditional food industry — a challenge for consumers figuring out which products to buy in the grocery store. (The Globe and Mail)
- How one man’s MBA and his musical training mesh to bring new life to Canada’s most famous ballet school. (The Globe and Mail)
- Soon bereft of a Nortel pension, a retired couple is talking about selling their house — which has been in the family for several generations. (Ottawa Business Journal)
2009
- One exhilarating day in Orlando, Fla. brought me in contact with dozens of ordinary people hanging out on the NASA press site to watch a shuttle launch. NASA personally invited me to attend. This was the first launch “tweetup” the agency held. (CTV Ottawa and SpaceRef Canada)
- A Carleton University student watched people’s fascination with food morph into fear. Her research asks: How to turn the tide back to understanding? (Research Works)
- Driving school, meet Mario Kart. A new generation is used to video games, and instructors are coming to realize that’s the best way to teach today’s teens about the rules of the road. (The Globe and Mail)
- I spent a week in the Persian Gulf tracking down the Ottawa business connections there, learning about how firms bridge the cultural gap to bring in new ideas. Includes a daily blog. (Ottawa Business Journal)
- Hours after spacewalker Randy Bresnik finished several hours of work on the International Space Station, his wife gave birth — only the second time this has happened to an orbiting astronaut. (CTV Ottawa)
- After a banner year for the Canadian space program, including three spaceflights and two new astronauts, the Canadian Space Agency looks for an encore. (CTV Ottawa)
2008
- As the shuttle program winds down, so too will a special opportunity for flight controllers in Ottawa who prepare to clear the airspace in case something goes awry during launch. (The Globe and Mail)
- This cell phone reads barcodes and makes phone calls — all from a wristwatch strap. Science fiction? No, soon to be science fact. (Ottawa Citizen)
- It’s tough to get funding for a startup — but what if the payoff is in medical advances that are years in the future? Ottawa companies talk about bridging the gap for investors. (Ottawa Business Journal)
- Protecting private information is a necessity. But at the same time, it can be a barrier if banks are looking to collaborate against identity theft. How to reconcile? (Research Works)
- Astronaut Scott Parazynski talks about how his medical training helped him manage the danger while repairing a torn solar panel on the International Space Station — using only his hands, some simple tools and guidance from his crewmates. (Canadian Medical Association Journal)
2004-07
- The Canadian astronaut program hasn’t hired an astronaut in 12 years. As their astronauts age, how does this shift our expectations about older works? (Ottawa Citizen)
- Orange guck on one of Saturn’s moons may be a harbour of life — although there’s still a lot of debate about the matter. (Catalyst)
- The magnetic north pole is on the move — and it’s possible scientists won’t be able to map its location as climate change grips the north. (Capital News Online)
- Norman Mailer attended the launch leading up to the first moon landing. Was he impressed? The answer might surprise you. (The Space Review)
- On the 20th anniversary of his first spaceflight, Carleton chancellor Marc Garneau reflects upon what he learned in orbit, and where the Canadian space program will go next. (The Charlatan)