As you know, I periodically reflect on the latest notable news , both in my life and in the world, and gather links to the stories I found the most interesting during that time (as a kind of press review). My latest entry on that subject was in January of last year. I’ve skipped the notable news for 2019 (I was a little busy — but I’ll come back to that later) but here they are for the first third of 2020 — I can’t believe we are already in 2020. This will be another decade of disappointment and unfulfilled promises. Where are the cyberspace and the body implants we were promised?!
There is not much to say about what happened on the domestic front. It has been quite busy (and exhausting) at work but I think I dealt pretty well with it. The library was undertaking renovation works to install a sorting “robot” for the returns and completely redo our working area and the counter. Preparing for those renovations and organizing a temporary set-up in order to stay functional and open to the public during the works was quite an ordeal. However, we did well and survived. And then we closed because of the epidemic…
The winter was relatively mild, and spring was early but cold. On the subject of health, I was plagued by a litany of problems: first, with all the hard work at the library, I literally broke my back (getting a serious sciatica), then got a bad flu/cold and finally was deeply pained by a kidney stone (I get one about every ten years). However, I am much better now as the calculus has recently passed. Funnily, despite doing lots of physical work around the house and regularly walking around the parc, I still managed to gain a couple of kilos. You know you have attained a certain age when idle conversations tend to focus more on your ailments than on the weather!
I have also been doing satisfactorily well in my reading and writing. I find it quite extraordinary when, after finishing a book in the previous night, I wake up in the morning with almost the entire reading comment in my head! Doing both reading and writing on a regular basis is a good training for the mind and it seems to get easier and easier with time.
The news on the world stage were dominated by the American election (mostly the democrats’ primaries and the stupid antics of the president — nothing really new there) and the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. At first, like everybody, I wasn’t too concerned. It was just something happening in China. Then, when it became clear that it was spreading easily with cases in Korea, California and Iran, I voiced my concerns to my boss, asking her what was the plan in such circumstances (it was late February or early March). I was told that they weren’t told of any plan. There was not even a sanitizer distributor in the entrance of the workplace — which should have been mandatory. When the government started telling people to stay home and we closed to the public (March 13th), I started really worrying because we were still working and using public transportation. I was afraid to bring the virus home (since one of my family members is immunosuppressed and I am myself at risk because of hypertension). I was just about to tell my boss that I couldn’t continue to work when they decided to send us home (March 19th).
Not being sure how long this forced vacation (with pay!) would last, I decided to make the best of it and catch up on my reading/writing. Although, after a few days of this coronavirus self-isolation, I realized I hadn’t done much. I wanted initially to read a book or watch a movie each day but I didn’t (maybe it was too ambitious?). I did a few things around the house and wrote a couple of blog entries about the current situation and offered suggestions of stuff to do. But I should be doing more. If not I was afraid to wake up at the end of this “staycation” having done nothing. And there was so much to do. I am happy to say that, so far, I am doing well.
With the pandemic in full swing it is hard to think back about other events that marked the beginning of 2020. In January, beside the usual fires and floods or the conflicts in the Middle-East, we can find noteworthy the American airstrike on the Baghdad Airport to assassinate Qasem Soleimani, Prince Harry and Meghan leave the British Royal family, as more cases are reported the Chinese authorities start investigating this unknown pneumonia outbreak that will become the coronavirus pandemic, and the impeachment trial of Trump moves into the Senate.
In February, we see the first deaths of coronavirus outside China (first in the Philippines, then in Hong Kong, Japan, France, Iran, South Korea, Italy, USA, etc.), the Iowa Democratic Party caucuses are a disaster, Trump is acquitted on both articles of impeachment by the Senate, Harvey Weinstein is found guilty, the Dow Jones starts dropping, and there’s a first possible case of communal transmission of the coronavirus in California.
In March, Pete Buttigieg, Amy Klobuchar and Michael Bloomberg drop their presidential candidacy and endorse Joe Biden, Elizabeth Warren also suspends her campaign (without endorsing Biden yet), the coronavirus outbreak is getting bigger and we see the first death in Canada, following an oil-price war between Russia and Saudi Arabia the Dow Jones drop even further, WHO officially declares the Coronavirus outbreak as a pandemic (3/11) prompting some countries or states to follow China’s example in implementing a lockdown (Italy, Spain, California, Canada, New York, India) and several major events (sport, concert, convention, etc) are getting cancelled. WHO announces that there are at least 20 vaccines candidates in development for COVID-19. Meanwhile, Wuhan (capital of the Hubei province) ends its lockdown and starts reopening.
In April, Bernie Sanders suspends his presidential campaign and endorses Biden, the number of confirmed coronavirus cases passes two million worldwide (4/16) as the pandemic keep growing. The mitigation measures are working and so far the hospitals, if very busy and despite the shortage of PPE, are not overwhelmed as it was first feared. Most countries have put financial measures to help their citizens live through the lockdown and are now planning to slowly ease their containment mesures. The main problem remains the insufficient testing and, in the USA, the absence of Federal coordination. Trump, in his self-absorbed usual incompetence, is definitely not up to the task (I just can’t understand why this guy is still in power). If you would rather burn down the country than admit you’re wrong, you’re not only a bad person, you are also pure evil. Anyway, the month is not over yet, so I’ll keep an eye on the current events, however depressing it might be.
Finally, as usual and through all this, I tried to stay acquainted with the affairs of the world and gathered a few notable news & links — which I now share with you (in both french or english, slightly categorized, but in no particular order — note that, to save on coding time, the links will NOT open in a new window), after the jump.
[ Traduire ]
Apple Stuff
- How to Group FaceTime (Thrillist)
- How to have Zoom meetings like a pro from your iPad (CNET)
- Here are a few essential tricks for Group FaceTime video chats (Mashable)
- Apple TV+ Plus Guide: Here’s all the Apple TV shows and movies available now (9 to 5 Mac)
- Look at this cool Apple anime commercial (input mag, Youtube)
- Apple’s ‘Instant Notes’ Is a Must-Have on Your iPhone or iPad (Life Hacker)
- Yes, you can watch live TV on your Apple TV — here’s a guide to the best apps for watching live television (Business Insider)
- Book Track Review: A Modern, iOS-Friendly Library Manager (MacStories)
- FiLMiC’s multi-camera video tech comes to the iPhone 11 (Engadget)
Books, Culture & Library
- L’engagement des bibliothèques canadiennes face à la crise du coronavirus #COVID19 (Bibliomancienne)
- Où trouver de la BD sans mettre le nez dehors? (La Presse)
- Digital Comics Museum (link)
- Bibliothèques en (temps de) crise : 15 services de base pour votre succursale en ligne ici et maintenant (Bibliomancienne)
- R.I.P. Juan Gimenez (ICv2)
- Humanoids Execs, Talent Eulogize Juan Gimenez (ICv2)
- Book Track is an app that lets you organize your entire book collection in one place (9to5Mac)
- 1927-2020: Uderzo, ou quand le menhir tombe (Le Devoir)
- R.I.P. Asterix Co-Creator Albert Uderzo (ICv2)
- Une bibliothèque nouveau genre au temps du coronavirus (Journal de Lévis)
- Une personne infectée par la COVID-19 à la bibliothèque (TVA Nouvelles)
- Négocier contre la violence au travail dans le secteur des bibliothèques (SCFP)
- L’écrivain chilien Luis Sepúlveda décède de la COVID-19 (Les Libraires)
- Le chanteur Christophe est mort (Le Monde)
- Les bibliothèques de Montréal donnent accès à 37 129 livres numériques à dévorer gratuitement (Silo 57)
- “The Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy” turns 42 (The Economist)
- ‘Pyke notte thy nostrellys’: 15th-century guide on children’s manners digitised for first time (The Guardian)
- Claire Bretécher, pionnière de la BD et créatrice d’« Agrippine » et des « Frustrés », est morte (Le Monde)
- L’écrivaine Mary Higgins Clark, « reine du suspense », est morte à l’âge de 92 ans (Le Monde)
- Le Roman policier en Amérique française 2019 (Alibis)
- Christopher Tolkien, Architect of J.R.R. Tolkien’s Middle-earth, 1924-2020 (TOR)
- JRR Tolkien’s son Christopher dies aged 95 (The Guardian)
- The New York Public Library Has Calculated Its Most Checked-Out Books Of All Time (NPR)
- ‘Dune’ Gets Graphic Novel Treatment by Abrams ComicArts (ICv2)
- Inauguration du Centre des livres rares et collections spéciales à l’UQAM (UQAM)
- Brownstein: Atwater Library celebrating a century at current location (Montreal Gazette)
- Librarian Easily Distracted By Books And Cats (Teeavan)
- These self-published authors are actually making a living. Here’s how. (Mashable)
- Festival d’Angoulême 2020 : “Yoshiharu Tsuge est à la BD japonaise ce que Godard a été au cinéma français” (France TV Info)
- Emmanuel Guibert Awarded Grand Prix 2020 (ICv2)
- William Gibson on writing sci-fi as the world takes a dystopian dive (Wired)
- A new Gibson: Agency (Barnes & Noble)
- Missouri Republican pushes bill that could jail librarians for handing out ‘inappropriate’ books (DeadState)
- Une maison d’édition jeunesse réhabilite les écrivaines « plumées » par le patriarcat (Le Monde)
COVID-19
- What to do when you’re stuck at home because of the COVID-19 social distancing mesures (link)
- COVID-19 coverage (BBC)
- COVID-19 coverage (CNN)
- COVID-19 coverage (Google)
- COVID-19 coverage (The Guardian)
- COVID-19 coverage (Montreal Gazette)
- COVID-19 coverage (NYT)
- COVID-19 : tout sur la pandémie (Radio Canada)
- COVID0-19 coverage (The Washington Post)
- COVID-19 Québec dashboard (Université Laval)
- COVID-19 dashboard (John Hopkins University)
- COVID-19 Tracker (London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine)
- Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) Situation Dashboard (WHO)
- Topos COVID-19 Project (link)
- COVID-19 Projections (Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation)
- Coronavirus Deaths by U.S. State and Country Over Time: Daily Tracker (NYT)
- Projected hospital resource use in the U.S. (University of Washington)
- The missing six weeks: how Trump failed the biggest test of his life (The Guardian)
- Your guide to COVID-19 and its impact on life in Canada (CBC)
- Montreal’s latest COVID-19 news (Montreal City)
- Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Québec (Quebec government)
- Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Canada (Canadian government)
- COVID-19 – Information aux employés (Montreal Intra/extranet)
- Studies show N.Y. outbreak originated in Europe (NYT)
- Coronavirus tracked: the latest figures as the pandemic spreads (Financial Times)
- The covid-19 pandemic in two animated charts (MIT Tech Review)
- Is It Safe to Go to the Grocery Store Amid Coronavirus? (Time)
- Can Smart Thermometers Track the Spread of the Coronavirus? (The New York Times)
- US Health Weather Map (Kinsa)
Entertainments & pop culture
- 13 Virtual Train Rides From Around the World That You Can Experience Right Now (Travel + Leisure)
- Dune: Director Explains Why His Adaptation Will Be Split Across Two Movies (IGN)
- Behold Dune: An Exclusive Look at Timothée Chalamet, Zendaya, Oscar Isaac, and More (Vanity Fair)
- 100+ Fun Things to Do at Home During Coronavirus Quarantine (Travel + Leisure)
- Tabletop RPGs 101: How to play Dungeons & Dragons and other games, online or offline (Vox)
- The best websites to stream free movies online (Android Authority)
- Free entertainment to help you survive coronavirus social distancing (CNET)
- Confinement : où et comment trouver des films légalement sur internet ? (France TV Info)
- Google Earth Launches Virtual Tours of America’s National Parks (Country Living)
- Amazon Prime Is Now Streaming So Many Movies That Were Supposed to Be in Theaters (Glamour)
- Lots Of Fun Things That Weren’t Free Before Coronavirus Suddenly Are (NPR)
- Les films de Tarkovsky en ligne – à portée de tous (Russie.fr)
- L’acteur franco-suédois Max von Sydow, interprète du « Septième Sceau », est mort (Le Monde)
- Kirk Douglas, Hollywood legend, dies at 103 (BBC)
- Terry Jones, Life of Brian director and Monty Python founder, dies aged 77 (The Guardian)
- Your Barbie Can Now Slay in a Suit of Medieval Armor (Time)
- Disney+ Sets Premieres for New Marvel Shows and The Mandalorian Season 2 (Digital Trends)
- Behind the Scenes at Rotten Tomatoes (Wired)
- De la difficulté d’adapter H.P. Lovecraft au cinéma (Le Devoir)
- ‘Cyberpunk 2077’ Delayed (ICv2)
- The battle of Middle Earth: how Christopher Tolkien fought Peter Jackson over The Lord of the Rings (The Telegraph)
- Disney Plus is quietly dropping titles from its streaming catalog (The Next Web)
- From Devs to Westworld: The 21 sci-fi shows we’re most excited to see in 2020 (syFy)
Health & Environment
- Cat poop, but make it manageable (The Concordian)
- Un test rapide et portatif de dépistage de la COVID-19 approuvé par Santé Canada (Le Devoir)
- British bakers reintroduce World War II bread in coronavirus fight (NBC)
- 7 trainer-approved ways to get the most out of your daily walking workout (Well+Good)
- Il faut boire quand on a des coliques néphrétiques (Doctissimo)
History & Sciences
- MA-Shops – Numismatic marketplace (link)
- Mediterranean shipwrecks reveal ‘birth of globalisation’ in trade (The Guardian)
- The Right Chemistry: Intermittent fasting is hard. But does it work? (Montreal Gazette)
- Romulus mystery: Experts divided on ‘tomb of Rome’s founding father’ (BBC)
- Chernobyl shocker as fungi that eats radiation found inside nuclear reactor (Fox News)
- This is the highest-resolution photo of the sun ever taken (MIT Technology Review)
- The Silurian Hypothesis (The Paris Review)
- 14000 Years Old Bisons Sculpture Found in Le d’Audoubert Cave, Ariege, France (Archaeology World)
- La palissade de 1693 ne serait ni une palissade, ni datée de 1693 (Radio-Canada)
Humour
- Dogs working from home during coronavirus crisis? There’s an Instagram account for that (The Guardian)
- Corona beer (IMGUR)
- Library card (Peanuts)
- Pearls Before Swine (August 28, 2019)
- Bizarro (September 30, 2019)
- Pearls Before Swine (October 10, 2019)
- The other coast (November 4, 2019)
- Rhymes with orange (November 4, 2019)
- Dilbert (November 28, 2019)
- Non Sequitur (December 6, 2019)
- Non Sequitur (January 6, 2020)
- Rhymes with orange (January 16, 2019)
- Rhymes with orange (February 8, 2019)
- Rhymes with Orange (March 05, 2020)
Japan & Japanese popular culture
- Keirin School: Inside the strict and secret world of bicycle racing in Japan (BBC)
- Votre AnimeLand change de format à partir du numéro 230 ! (AnimeLand)
- Isabella Bird in Wonderland Manga Gets Bilingual Edition in Japan (Anime News Network)
- Frederik L. Schodt, The Man Who Introduced Manga To America, Shoot Interview! (YouTube)
- Ghost in the Shell- SAC_2045 Anime Reveals Trailer, New Cast, April 23 Debut (Anime News Network)
- Gundam- Hathaway Anime Film Teased With New Visual (Anime News Network)
- Moto Hagio’s Latest The Poe Clan Manga Resumes in June (Anime News Network)
- Jiro Taniguchi’s The Walking Man Manga Gets Live-Action Series (Anime News Network)
- Digital Media Rights’ RetroCrush Anime Streaming Service Launches With Classic Anime Titles (Anime News Network)
- New Gundam Video Debuts by Life-Size Unicorn Gundam Statue (ANN)
- Kodansha USA Announces Codename: Sailor V Eternal Edition, Ghost in the Shell: The Human Algorithm, Orient, More Manga for Print (ANN)
- Mari Yamazaki: Olympia Kyklos Clay Anime Premieres on April 20 (ANN)
- Live-Action Yowamushi Pedal Film Unveils Teaser, New Visual (ANN)
- Weathering With You Wins Japan Academy Prizes’ Animation Award (ANN)
- Mamoru Oshii’s Vladlove Anime Unveils Key Visual, Character Visuals (ANN)
- Netflix Partners With CLAMP & Kindaichi, Gundam Thunderbolt, Goth, Mardock Scramble, Thermae Romae Creators for New Anime (ANN / Animeland)
- Alita: Battle Angel Fans Fly Airplane Banner Over Oscars Requesting Sequel (ANN / Animeland)
- Japan asked the international media to change how we write their names. No one listened (CNN)
- Kodansha, Vertical, Stone Bridge Press Announce New Titles (ICv2)
- La chaîne japonaise NHK met en ligne gratuitement quatre documentaires sur Hayao Miyazaki (Soir Mag)
- ‘Just Cancel it!’ trending hard as coronavirus gets Olympic push from ’88 anime ‘Akira’ (Japan Times)
- L’après-guerre japonais en manga : “Sengo” de Sansuke Yamada (France Culture)
- Les trésors d’animation du studio Ghibli de Hayao Miyazaki bientôt disponibles sur Netflix (France TV Info) [sauf aux Canada, USA, Japon et Chine !]
- Netflix Invites CLAMP, Other Japanese Creators to Develop Originals (ICv2)
- The Art of Kakeibo: This Japanese Budgeting System Could Change Your Financial Life (Shondaland)
- Sharing a House with the Never-Ending Man: 15 Years at Studio Ghibli (Stone Bridge Press)
- Whisper of the Heart Manga Gets Live-Action Film Sequel After Inspiring Ghibli Anime (Anime News Network)
- The Best Anime of the 2010s (Thrillist)
- Anime Nerds, Studio Ghibli Is Releasing Two New Films In 2020 (Mashable)
Local News
- Le gouvernement instaure la Prestation canadienne d’urgence pour venir en aide aux travailleurs et aux entreprises (Canada.ca)
- Soutien aux particuliers (Canada.ca)
- Montréal annule ses festivals et évènements sportifs jusqu’au 2 juillet (La Presse)
- 603 personnes infectées à Montréal, 42 % des cas dans le Centre-Ouest (Radio-Canada)
- Montréal retourne à la maison tous les employés non essentiels (La Presse)
- Un cas de COVID-19 a été en contact avec des élèves (La Presse)
- Obligés de se rendre au travail (La Presse)
- Coronavirus: Montréal appelée à faire plus pour ses cols blancs (Journal Métro)
- STM: les usagers embarqueront «à l’arrière du bus» pour protéger les chauffeurs (Journal Métro)
- COVID-19: Une crise qui va “durer des mois” (La Presse+)
- De nombreux établissements montréalais fermés jusqu’à nouvel ordre (Le Devoir)
- Une nouvelle école qui fait rêver petits et grands (Le Devoir)
- Montreal axes plan to build animal shelter amid delays, cost-overruns (Montreal Gazette)
- Montréal abandonne la création d’un vaste centre animalier (Radio-Canada)
- Students, staff at St. Dorothy Elementary come together to cope with EMSB school closures (Global)
Photo / videography
- Here’s how iPhones might do interchangeable lenses (Cult of Mac)
- Fact-checking: Comment vérifier une photo ? (Observers)
Politics, Economy & Society
- The Lost 110 Words of Our Constitution (Politico)
- The Senate is committing a high crime of its own (The Washington Post)
- Iowa Caucus Results 2020 (The New York Times)
Technology & Gadgets
- Robot dog to replace human at Montreal construction site (Montreal Gazette)