Edward Willett

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First Willett-edited edition of Fine Lifestyles Regina now online

Wondering what is this Fine Lifestyles Regina magazine of which I speak, for which I have written and which I am now editing? Wonder no more! The first Edward Willett-edited issue is now available for viewing, in its entirety, here.

Posted by Edward Willett at 12:14, October 29th, 2009 under Blog | Comment now »

First issue of Fine Lifestyles Regina edited by me!

I know, I know, I've got a million things to blog about and I will get to them (Banff, PureSpec, the state of Magebane, First Sentences I Wrote Today, etc.). But for now, this will have to do: it's the cover for the first issue of Fine Lifestyles Regina that I edited. I just saw it in print today. I also wrote the cover story, an interview with Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall that I'll probably post on here after the magazine has been out for a while. Already working toward the next one...and still looking for writers. ...

Posted by Edward Willett at 15:39, October 6th, 2009 under Blog | Comment now »

I’m the new editor of Fine Lifestyles Regina

Right after yesterday's morning writing session at Atlantis Coffee, I met with the publishers of Fine Lifestyles Regina, a thick, glossy, free-circulation, advertising-packed magazine that has now published two issues, each of which contained a story by me--the first about chef Rob Fuller, and the second about artist Victor Cicansky. They've had a different editor for each issue so far, and were looking for someone new for the next one. I expressed interest, and as of yesterday, I've got the job. (I hope I'll be around more than one issue!) I'm going to draw up some formal submission guidelines in the near future, but basically, here's what I'm looking for: upbeat, success-focused articles about interesting and innovative Regina people, businesses ...

Posted by Edward Willett at 10:14, July 17th, 2009 under Blog | 4 Comments »

Best of Popular Science’s “What’s New,” 1999

In 1899, Charles H. Duell, commissioner of the U.S. patent office, proclaimed, "Everything that can be invented has been invented." He was wrong, as Popular Science's recent awards for "the best of what's new" from 1999 reveals. These inventions and breakthroughs give us a glimpse of what's in store for us in the 21st century, now just a little over a year away. (Really, 2000 is the last year of the 20th century and the millennium, not the first year of the 21st century and the new millennium. You knew that, didn't you?). Popular Science honored around 100 inventions: I've picked out just a few that caught my fancy. As a long-time glasses wearer, Micro-Optical's Integrated ...

Posted by Edward Willett at 20:45, November 19th, 1999 under Blog, Columns, Science Columns | Comment now »

Nature’s first issue

One hundred twenty-two years isn't a very long time, really; certainly not on a geological scale (so, did dinosaurs live 150 million years ago, or 150,000,122 years ago?) and not even on the scale of human history, at least not for the most part. (Can you name the important advances made between 1100 and 1222?) But the last 122 years have been special. At a pace that is absolutely astounding, the world has undergone a transformation--and the driving force behind that transformation has been science. That's why a publication I recently received is so fascinating. (To me, at least, and I hope to you as well, otherwise this column is a real waste of time.) It's ...

Posted by Edward Willett at 17:14, September 22nd, 1991 under Blog, Columns, Science Columns | Comment now »