The harmonized sales tax begins to be collected in BC tomorrow. It has shaken up the politics of this province. My thoughts:
The government deserves to be punished for making a major policy change two months after campaigning with a different position. I don't believe for a minute Colin Hansen's timeline. Clearly the BC government had considered this change before the election. Check Hansen's laughable answer on a Globe and Mail Q&A session several weeks back. However, the reaction to this tax could be worse than the actual policy. Be careful what you wish for progressives: especially when Bill Vander Zalm is involved.
With tax, I see two questions: Is it better to tax consumption or income; and , is it fairer to tax businesses or individuals?
Start with an assumption that tax expenditures will stay relatively stable in order to maintain our current standard of public services. The population is getting older. With the proportion of retirees increasing there will be less income tax revenue to support this standard.
We need consumption taxes. Yes, they are regressive, but choosing which items are of benefit to society (hence no tax) seems arbitrary. Provide a relief to lower income tax brackets and leave it simple. It's complicated enough dealing with food
More and more people follow paths where they are both employees and contractors. Nothing drives nuts me more than paying a tax as a contractor but not being able to claim the cost of it toward the revenue I've earned.
The debate over the proportion of taxes paid by individuals or corporations / private businesses is tougher. Not going to try to cover it here - obviously the strength of the anti-HST argument from the left.
The benefits of this tax are there: one level of government will collect and run the tax. Imagine for a second that we had two income tax forms to fill out as individuals?
And the Feds are paying BC to do this... No wonder BC took the money. Close the PST office and turn out the lights. Fundamentally, there is one less administrative task removed from all levels of government. Woohoo!
The Recall Campaigns
Unhinging the Vancouver elite from power may be a good thing, but we will get a re-calibrated right-wing party that loses its urban influence, at least temporarily. It's a good thing to clean the attic for any jurisdiction, party, etc.... Yes, but the risks to social values that many hold dear in this city (Vancouver) would be large.
Bill Vander Zalm. Blatant crookedness that would make the mythical Chicago ward chief smile. I mean: read the Fantasy Garden and Expo land Hughes report. These are dealt with in the public record. He has fundamentalist views that contradict established scientific knowledge. He does not support access to abortion at a level that many see as a fundamental right (including me).
I feel for restaurants in the East Kootenay and along the Alberta border that are going to get hammered by the HST. I predict the petition will pass. It's the recall campaigns that are going to be scarier...
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Wednesday, June 02, 2010
iPad Thoughts and Apps I Want
ReadWriteWeb is reporting on Steve Jobs talk at the D8 conference: "Tablets will Usher in Post-PC Era. I've had an iPad in my mits for fifteen minutes, at most. No real basis for comment... Just some thoughts.
Many people bitched about the hardware/design at the announcement (over-sized iPhone, bezel size, lack of ports). I don't see major issues with this:
It is an over-sized iPhone. I read lots of the web on my iPhone - simply a bigger a screen would greatly improve the experience.
Bezel size: I would find it hard to bet against Apple's user experience people here. I think they figured that this machine will be grasped rather than laid flat.
You know that Apple will add some ports in future versions. In any case, the Apple and third party docks will handle card readers, usb, etc... for the interim. Simple clean design for the masses wins here.
If you can believe Apple, they didn't want to build the tablet, but responded to consumer demand and the closing of the eBook opportunity. This meant that they didn't have a huge amount of time to totally revamp the OS. That'll wait to the fifth generation iPhone/iPad OS next year.
This product is about extending the iTunes franchise. Apple has figured out most people don't want to screw around with computers when adding applications. They are happy to have Apple be their Walmart, controlling what is appropriate for them to buy. Here is a selection of apps where the tablet screen size would perfect. Only one exists now:
Many people bitched about the hardware/design at the announcement (over-sized iPhone, bezel size, lack of ports). I don't see major issues with this:
If you can believe Apple, they didn't want to build the tablet, but responded to consumer demand and the closing of the eBook opportunity. This meant that they didn't have a huge amount of time to totally revamp the OS. That'll wait to the fifth generation iPhone/iPad OS next year.
This product is about extending the iTunes franchise. Apple has figured out most people don't want to screw around with computers when adding applications. They are happy to have Apple be their Walmart, controlling what is appropriate for them to buy. Here is a selection of apps where the tablet screen size would perfect. Only one exists now:
- Epicurious- I have four folders of recipes, most printed from Epicurious. Boy, would it be nice to stop printing and have the recipe display full screen behind a splashguard. I have the iPhone app, but it isn't big enough.
- Rebirth - I loved this synthesizer simulator when it came out for PC back in 1997. They have re-released it for iPhone, but the screen size is too small and it looks like it requires lots of finicky scrolling. Release this for iPad.
- iBird Explorer - I love this app on the iPhone. I have used it in the field to identify birds, but rarely go back to it when sitting at home. Put it on a bigger screen and it will replace the Sibley.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)