Janet Evaline Moore, founder of L'Arche Cape Breton, died peacefully last night at her home in Orangedale, two days before her 63rd birthday. [caption id="attachment_5983" align="alignleft" width="250" caption="Tom and Ann Gunn and Janet Moore"][/caption] Tom and Ann Gunn invited Janet to live with their family in 1983, marking the start of an intentional community that is now home to some 25 Core Members and a varied group of assistants from Cape Breton and around the world. Janet Moore was a gentle, funny, loving woman, with an out-sized capacity to move and inspire people around her. She and her long-time...

Soldiers herd sheep off the apron of the air force base at El Alto, Bolivia, so the BAe 146 military transport jet in the background can take off....

The European Space Agency's Rosetta spacecraft flew within 3162 kilometers (1965 miles) of the asteroid Lutetia Saturday, snapping photos as it zipped by at 15 kilometers per second (33,500 miles per hour). Here's a video simulation compiled from the snapshots: Very cool. The ancient asteroid lies in the Asteroid Belt between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. It's roughly 130 kilometers (81 miles) long in its longest dimension. More here, here, and here....

Alexis Madrigal, Atlantic's new tech blogger, poses the question this way: You hop onto a parent's computer to check your email or do a little work. But, to your dismay, the only browser available is Internet Explorer and (for whatever reason) you don't like Internet Explorer. You download Firefox (or Chrome), then install and launch it. Firefox (or Chrome) then asks whether you want to make it your (Mom's) default browser. Of course you do! But should you really make this decision for Mom? Yes, says Madrigal, quoting a mashup of Tweeted responses: "It's our responsibility to help our parents figure out technology"...

In an interview with CBC Radio's Jim Brown, Ivan Fellegi, who served as Canada's Chief Statistician from 1985 to 2008, set forth five ill-effects of the Harper Government's surprise decision to make a crucial part of the 2011 census voluntary. The results will be biased because aboriginals, new immigrants, the poor, those with low educational attainment, and the very well off are less likely to respond. This will deprive Canada of important information about social trends such as income polarization. It will eliminate our best source of information about aboriginal Canadians, immigrants, and minority language groups. Municipalities and provinces will lose...

Nicole McNeil enjoys a watermelon wedge at Piper's Cove beach in Cape Breton last Friday while Lady looks on with interest. Photo by Vicky McNeil, edited by Nicole McNeil....

Cape Bretoners are accustomed to coincidental connections because their homeland offers such fertile ground for them. The combination of summer residents, occasional visitors, and the vast Caper diaspora has seeded the planet with people eager to rekindle their connection to the island. The late Whitney Pier ship chandler Newman Dubinsky made a point of wearing a Cape Breton tartan ball cap on his frequent travels overseas, because of the conversations it was sure to spark. For different reasons, blogging can have the same effect. My ex-sister-in-law, Myra Barss, is in New York, clearing out her parents' house. She emailed a dealer...

A friend who became a citizen Friday after living in Canada for 30 years sends this email: Almost 24 hours as a Canadian, and this has what's been happening: Dreamed last night that cricket was being played with a puck, eh! Have a craving this morning for a Double, Double, eh! I keep slowing down for pedestrians, eh! My first practice swing for golf this morning was left-handed, eh! When I received my usual list of orders last night from the "trouble and strife," I actually thought about complying, eh! What's going on????...

Best Buy has apparently relented on its threat to fire smartphone salesman Brian Maupin, 25, for his parody of an Apple fangirl rebuffing a salesman's efforts to sell her an HTC Evo instead of the out-of-stock iPhone G4. Warning: major profanity alert. Neither the original animated film, nor Maupin's rebuttal parody, in which an Evo-owner tries to get his phone fixed at an Apple store, so much as mentions Best Buy — but they do have nearly four million views between them, which may have persuaded the giant retail chain to reconsider the PR wisdom of humour-challenged personnel management. Hat tip: Leo Laporte....

Peter Barss, at yesterday's opening of his rescued Images of Lunenburg County at the Anderson Gallery:
As you look at these pictures and read the text panels from the book I imagine you’ll be asking yourselves the same question that has perplexed me for years: how did these men survive... without Wal-Mart? Images-Barss-040Right after Myra and I were married we spent a few nights in the West Ironbound lighthouse with our friends Ingram and Lynn Wolf, the light keepers on the island. One evening Ingram set out to rake up some grass but couldn’t find his rake. So he made one. Drilled some holes in a narrow board, whittled wooden pegs for the teeth, and walked into the woods to cut a sapling for a handle. Ingram had the grass raked up before the sun set. That memory has remained with me as emblematic of the self-sufficiency and resourcefulness of the people represented in this exhibit, If I had needed a rake it would never have occurred to me that I could make one. I would have headed directly to the hardware store. These men could fix anything that went wrong with the engines in their boats with nothing more than a screw driver and a pair of pliers, they navigated through fog as thick as pea soup, and they could tell you what the weather would be in coming days more accurately than the forecasters of today who seem to believe that staring at computer screens will give them more information than stepping outside and learning what nature has to tell them. These men lived at a time when communities were relatively isolated, families were closer and people had more time for each other. Neighbors depended on neighbors in good times and bad times. There were community dances and parties and when men were lost at sea --which happened all too frequently--the entire village grieved with the family. They were not rich men and they didn’t own a lot of stuff. But they were only poor in an economic sense. One man told me “I remember back... there was nice feelings in them times. We had nothin’... but you was a millionaire.” It’s easy to romanticize the era this exhibit portrays. No one wants to go back to those days... but maybe we should look back and think about what we have lost.
The show is up until August 4. After the jump, Peter describes the work a Halifax design shop put in restoring the images, the negatives for which had been lost in a house fire a quarter century ago: