Metropolis (Toronto development) - Factbites
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Topic: Metropolis (Toronto development)


    Note: these results are not from the primary (high quality) database.


  
 Participatory Design Conference - 2004
The conference will be held on the main campus of the University of Toronto, in the heart of Canada’s principal metropolis.
The Participatory Design Conferences, held every two years since 1990, have brought together a multidisciplinary and international group of software developers, researchers, social scientists, designers, activists, practitioners, users, citizens, cultural workers and managers who adopt distinctively participatory approaches in the development of information and communication artifacts, systems, services and technologies.
Toronto has a well-deserved reputation as a diverse, thriving, cultural centre.
archive.cpsr.net /conferences/pdc2004   (412 words)

  
 Metropolis Web Site
Bob holds a bachelor's degree in engineering from Cornell University and master's degrees in regional planning and economics from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the University of Toronto, respectively.
Bob Crow is Vice President Policy at the Information Technology Association of Canada and a management consultant specializing in institutional positioning, marketing, and development.
Bob's career includes significant service at Ryerson Polytechnic University in Toronto where he was a professor and senior administrator from 1975 to 1998.
www.international.metropolis.net /events/vancouver/bio/BIO_CROW.html   (259 words)

  
 Early Toronto Newspapers
In the old Toronto newspapers, we can see the development of the city from its humble eighteenth century beginnings to a large, thriving metropolis.
The first foreign newspaper in Toronto was the Beobachter, started in 1856.
Papers of the period included the Albion, the Canadian Correspondent, the Royal Standard, the Constitution, the British Colonist and the Examiner.
www.edunetconnect.com /cat/oldnewspap   (478 words)

  
 AM Only Online
Toronto's EYE Weekly praised these "dreamy, female-fronted electro-popsters with a sound all their own." Metropolis Records released The Birthday Massacre's new album VIOLET on August 9.
An adventurous audio/visual project that has been in development since 1999, The Birthday Massacre's sights and sounds branch into a wide range of creative themes and blend together a colorful palette of imagery, sound, fashion and performance.
The Birthday Massacre has a knack for mixing themes of horror and tragedy with fun and satire to create a unique and versatile sound.
www.amonly.com /press_room.php?id=116   (531 words)

  
 T.I.K. - Toronto Industrial Kollective
Mexico's Hocico have now broken into the North American market, with their signing to Metropolis Records, a move that will be sure to increase their popularity as accessibility to their music grows.
To me, it shows no relevant development in their sound, and I wonder to some extent, what the point is. I also wonder about their subject matter, which seems empty and meaningless in its hostility.
Hocico, 10 years after their inception, offer us this 5 track EP of anger and hostility, but musically and lyrically little else.
www.industrialkollective.org /reviews/hocico   (487 words)

  
 Bow. James Bow.: Oh, Dear God.
The proposed north wall of Dundas Square, also known as the Metropolis development, is an assault on the senses.
This image, displayed at the Urban Toronto forum, seems to take that suggestion a little too literally.
It would certainly drive me away and keep me from staying in Dundas Square for any length of time, and if my reaction is typical, then it would render Dundas Square a failure in meeting its stated ambition of being a people place.
www.bowjamesbow.ca /2006/02/08/oh_dear_god.shtml   (1200 words)

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