Recent Updates Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Kate 17:28 on 2025-07-12 Permalink | Reply  

    The lighthouse pier in Lachine has been relooked and named Quai 34 because it’s effectively an extension of 34th Avenue.

     
    • Kate 17:12 on 2025-07-12 Permalink | Reply  

      The city is responding to U.S. tariff menaces by reducing its contracts with U.S. firms. In 2024 only 1% of its business was done with the U.S., mostly software.

       
      • Kate 11:28 on 2025-07-12 Permalink | Reply  

        Notre-Dame-des-Neiges, the city’s most massive cemetery, has announced a new online mapping tool, but this isn’t quite as new as they’re claiming. It used to be possible to enter names and find grave numbers and get a PDF list of who else was buried there, but that was discontinued awhile back. Useful data if you’re doing genealogy. But the current tool’s better than nothing.

        As a footnote, I don’t believe Mount Royal cemetery has anything comparable, although the Repos St‑François‑d’Assise does. I’ve never researched in the Jewish cemeteries so I don’t know whether they put any archival data online.

         
        • Kate 08:55 on 2025-07-12 Permalink | Reply  

          The city wants to get a handle on the chaos of delivery vehicles, which this piece deems currently to be a Far West.

           
          • Blork 11:53 on 2025-07-12 Permalink

            I think they mean a “wild west.”

          • jeather 11:54 on 2025-07-12 Permalink

            “Quant aux livraisons de biens de type Amazon, Montréal veut multiplier la présence de « points de dépôt », comme des comptoirs de collecte dans les commerces ou des casiers à colis.”

            There was a really nice one near me but it closed — I never understood how it was financially sustainable. Canada Post dropped off there, which was convenient — I occasionally sent Amazon packages there but for some reason it would always take several days longer that way.

          • Kate 12:31 on 2025-07-12 Permalink

            Blork, yes, in English we would say “Wild West” but in French it’s deeply implanted that the expression is Far West. It even has a page on the French Wikipedia where it says, somewhat inaccurately, that it’s “une expression anglaise” which I don’t think it ever was.

            I mean, the words are English but it isn’t a natural term in English, not in the sense of meaning the cowboy days of the American West.

            There are some interesting links in the Wikipédia for “Far West” – two American westerns (1928 and 1942) which were titled “Far West” for French distribution, and two natively French productions using the phrase as a title. No movie made in English was ever titled “Far West”.

          • John B 13:47 on 2025-07-12 Permalink

            Far West was an outdoor clothing brand based in Vernon, BC, that was big in Goretex coats in the 90s and early 2000s, but went bankrupt and the brand was bought by Mark’s.

          • Robert H 16:23 on 2025-07-12 Permalink

            The term “far west” as it’s used en français is forever fixed in my mind with a certain 90s classic by franco-rap god MC Solaar: https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=1R2etg__x1Y

          • ottawaowl 00:39 on 2025-07-13 Permalink

            Fixed in my mind from 1963: Hold-up au Far West. Love the cowboy! Ce court métrage canadien d’animation emprunte avec humour les symboles classiques des westerns américains. https://www.nfb.ca/film/hold_up_au_far_west/

        • Kate 08:42 on 2025-07-12 Permalink | Reply  

          24heures says that St‑Denis in the Plateau is becoming a hot spot for friperies, so that the street is “en train de renaitre de ses cendres.”

          I know the area was hit hard by the Covid downturn and urban churn, but I would not quite have said ashes. Also, while second‑hand clothing is a respectable trade, and it’s good that clothes are being repurposed rather than trashed, it’s rather more a St‑Hubert Plaza kind of business. That section of St‑Denis used to almost have a Laurier West vibe, but not so much any more.

           
          • DeWolf 11:48 on 2025-07-12 Permalink

            These are trendy vintage friperies with a curated selection of clothes, not Renaissance or Salvation Army type shops. If you go to Saint-Denis on the weekend these days it’s a real scene. It’s basically the biggest fashion destination for teenagers and 20-somethings now.

          • Kate 12:36 on 2025-07-12 Permalink

            Some people can make the most of Renaissance, Salvation Army and Village des Valeurs. I’ve known a couple of women who could walk out of those places with fabulous items in perfect condition. Somehow when I go in, I only see worn‑out rubbish. It’s a talent.

          • jeather 13:02 on 2025-07-12 Permalink

            Many of those people who are good at it then go on and sell the Renaissance etc items in their trendy vintage friperies, to bring this all full circle.

          • DeWolf 14:48 on 2025-07-12 Permalink

            Yes, exactly! A lot of the stuff at the Saint-Denis places was probably found at Renaissance for a few dollars and is now being resold for ten times that (to help pay for the weekend DJ sets).

          • Ian 16:52 on 2025-07-12 Permalink

            Rents and locations aside, the difference between used and vintage or even better, antque, is a picker with a good eye.

            It’s like anything used, yeah, you can go to the flea markets and yard sales and junk shops and bin sales and auctions and scour online shops for deals … or just walk over to the record store.

            I remember when Mont Royal was just strings of junk shops where the frips re now, and the slightly higehr priced “vintage” shops were on St Denis. The rents are way to high for that kind of arrangement anymore.

          • Robert H 17:26 on 2025-07-12 Permalink

            I remember those times decades ago when Saint-Denis did indeed have that Laurier Ouest vibe. It could still return, as the street has been on the come-up post-covid. As things are going, it could be on the way to Queen Street West, version Montréal. It’s fascinating but baffling how urban locales cycle in and out of fashion shifting from the-place-to-be to the-place-nobody-goes-anymore, and back again! If I understood the process, I could make some bank in real estate investment. Could Sherbrooke Street downtown be next up?

            What’s even better than knowing where it’s at is knowing how to get it cheap. When I lived in Boston, one of my roommates had a friend who knew how to track down pricey designer-label clothing in mint condition. This fellow just had a knack like some kind of sartorial bloodhound on the prowl. He would give me tips about the best spots to find the best stuff, and he was nice enough to pass a few items on to me gratis, that I still wear today. Unfortunately, when I left Boston, I left all that insider knowledge behind and I’ve yet to replace it with le savoir-faire Montréalais.

          • Kate 19:43 on 2025-07-12 Permalink

            I miss Arthur Quentin, Giraffe and Kaliyana on that stretch of St‑Denis. It was interesting in those days because the classy places were not necessarily overly expensive. I still have some kitchen utensils from Arthur Quentin as well as wooden spoons from Giraffe, which had all kinds of things from different parts of Africa. I wish I could source spoons like that now, but I don’t even know which country they came from.

            There was a time when the fries place on the corner of Duluth (the Bien Bon) was flourishing at the same time as the earliest version of Toqué a half block away. It was a great mix.

        • Kate 20:32 on 2025-07-11 Permalink | Reply  

          A woman is in critical condition after a driver plunged her SUV into a St‑Léonard strip mall business on Friday afternoon, and she was in the way.

           
          • Kate 14:33 on 2025-07-11 Permalink | Reply  

            A man accused of having procured young women for Robert Miller’s sexual use has been arrested and will face charges connected with his alleged activities for Miller.

            The Court of Appeal has also ruled that a woman can proceed with her case against the billionaire, after it was tossed out last year. Miller’s claim of being too sick to stand trial isn’t going to protect him from all possible consequences.

             
            • bob 09:28 on 2025-07-12 Permalink

              The Grim Reaper will probably handle that.

          • Kate 14:29 on 2025-07-11 Permalink | Reply  

            The mother of the three-year-old abandoned last month will remain in custody and undergo psychiatric assessment, although I’d have expected something like that to have already begun.

             
            • Kate 11:57 on 2025-07-11 Permalink | Reply  

              The landlord of two buildings where nine people have died in fires is facing a $3,300 fine for obstructing exits in another building he owns. I’m sure the financial burden is keeping him up at night.

              What else does this mfer have to do to disqualify himself permanently from owning rental properties?

               
              • Meezly 15:15 on 2025-07-11 Permalink

                Or to get charged with criminal negligence causing multiple deaths?

              • Blork 15:25 on 2025-07-11 Permalink

                This is where we come up against the limitations of the court, I think. Whatever arm of the law is levying this fine likely doesn’t have the authority to do any more, and that’s probably the maximum fine for the offence of obstructing exits. I’m not aware of any authority by the court to ban someone from owning a rental property.

                But surely there’s a criminal angle, as Meezly says. Let’s compare this to dangerous driving, for example. If you are caught driving dangerously there is a certain level of punishment, which is put upon you primarily as a deterrence. But if your dangerous driving causes deaths, a different charge is laid, and if convicted, the punishment is greater.

              • Robert H 18:34 on 2025-07-12 Permalink

                I don’t understand how someone with Benamor’s disgusting record is allowed to own property in Montreal or anywhere. Why can’t the city seize his buildings? How difficult could it be to establish culpability for criminal negligence? How does he sleep? One hopes for some justice in this world, but I’m afraid this shitheel is going to game the system and play for time. Meanwhile he lies low, staying out of the spotlight and counting on an over-burdened legal system, toothless laws, and short attention spans. I’m hopeful the media at least will continue with follow-up reporting in this vein.

            • Kate 09:12 on 2025-07-11 Permalink | Reply  

              Reading that generous funding is being poured into Quebec AI projects makes me wonder how much help AI actually needs, and why we’re rushing to make workers obsolete.

              (Why do I even ask? The answer is, as always, profit.)

              In tangential news, it’s been noticed that the astronauts pictured in AI illustrations at the Planetarium only have four digits

               
              • PatrickC 09:30 on 2025-07-11 Permalink

                The article says the problem is that not enough photos of people show all the fingers, but I would argue AI is just reproducing what is found in cartoons, where characters like Mickey M. all have four digits.

              • Kate 09:39 on 2025-07-11 Permalink

                Or the Simpsons, yes.

              • Kevin 10:33 on 2025-07-11 Permalink

                AI is this moment’s NFT, metaverse, blockchain, virtual reality, internet of things, etc…

                The only reason it’s being talked about is because there are hundreds of billions of dollars being gambled on (sorry, “venture capitalists are investing in”) the technology, and those gamblers, along with the executives whose major recompense is in stock options, really need share prices to go up.

                Those billions are dioing the same thing VC money always does: artificially deflating the price of a service (If they were physical goods, we’d call it dumping) in the hopes that enough people will adopt it as an essential need that those customers will accept astounding price increases when the VC money dries up.

                There are signs that investors are running out of cash, OpenAI’s major lender SoftBank is reportedly scrambling to find enough money to finance its current year’s promises, Google and Microsoft have each cancelled multiple data centre projects in the past year because of a lack of demand, and the only reason any company can claim it’s got any consistent users for their AI is because they’ve altered the code on their search engines to make the AI summary the default top hit in response to a query.

              • Blork 11:23 on 2025-07-11 Permalink

                The thing about AI is that there are many very legitimate and good uses for it, such as in medical research and imaging, where AI can parse through enormous amounts of data very quickly, and find things in scans that humans might miss.

                There are many other good uses too, such as in design and engineering and even criminal investigations. The main thing is its ability to slog through enormous amounts of data and to summarize it or find new insights and to report on it coherently. Basically, doing the grunt work. We can advance science and engineering tremendously with such applications, and it does not cost jobs; if anything it opens up opportunities for more scientists and engineers and medical researchers to be employed in order to do something with this knowledge and the insights that are gained through AI.

                But most of what we hear about in discussions of AI is generative AI (ChatGTP, Midjourney, etc.). I am not a fan of those. Not only do they make a lot of valuable human work obsolete, they retard younger peoples’ learning of those basic language and creation skills. (It’s one thing for people like us who know how to write to enjoy the convenience of ChatGTP, but it’s another thing for a 12-year-old to realize they never have to bother to learn how to write because their phone will do it all for them.)

                Even worse (I think) is that generative AI de-values human skills and talent. That’s a whole conversation in itself so I won’t even go there right now.

              • Jim 12:08 on 2025-07-11 Permalink

                Blork’s third paragraph really hits the pain point. It’s a common consequence of many technological advances. It’s not unlike the introduction of personal calculators in schools back in the eighties.

                A decade after, when PCs became common, we expected a new generation of computer wizards. In my own work environment, I often see that younger generations lack even basic PC skills mainly because they’ve grown up doing everything through automated website scripts or mobile apps, relying on organizations, companies, or service providers to handle the complex stuff. Not everyone of course otherwise we wouldn’t even have AI.

                That said, it’s here, it’s impressive and in my opinion best to get familiar with it and make the most of what it offers. It can be a lot of fun, too.

              • EmilyG 12:09 on 2025-07-11 Permalink

                Generative AI is also really bad for the environment.

              • Blork 13:36 on 2025-07-11 Permalink

                Following up on Jim’s comment… We’re in a very different place now than we were 20-30 years ago, when the joke was always that you needed a 15-year-old kid to do your computer setups and configurations. As Jim says, now it’s the opposite. Most kids are completely helpless with that stuff. It’s the older people (Gen-Xers in particular) who understand how computery things work and how to configure them.

                My spouse taught a class at UQAM a few years ago and she was amazed at the level of tech ignorance among the students. They all knew how to use their phones and social media, but many didn’t even know what a URL was or where to enter it in a browser. All they knew how to do was click a link or use Google.

              • bob 14:27 on 2025-07-11 Permalink

                And most drivers don’t have the slightest clue as to what makes their car go.

                As to skills, in classical Greek antiquity there were people saying that the advent of notepads would destroy peoples’ ability to remember anything. Nostalgia notwithstanding, technology that gets adopted is usually better than what came before, which is why we adopt it. There’s a great little film that captures this – “Farewell etaoin shrdlu” — https://vimeo.com/127605643 . Irony – daily news on paper is becoming a buggy whip.

                AI is 95% hype. Much of what is being touted as AI is not AI because it lacks the I – fraudulent. And AI without the I, i.e., machine learning and cybernetics, has been around for decades, only no one called the products “intelligent” because they aren’t. Also because marketing departments and tech bro capital vampires hadn’t gotten hold of the concept.

                The popular concept type AI is bilge. It’s a carnival show. Companies that think they can replace people with AI will fail. Companies that train their people how to use AI are going to thrive. But the huge gains made by anything approaching real “AI” are in machine learning, which is an instantiation of some cybernetic principles established by eggheads in the 50’s, which themselves were partly based on an analysis of machines that use their output as input. A simple thermostat qualifies as such. The huge gains to human knowledge that have been the result of machine learning algorithms are in areas like astronomy, genetics, protein folding, material simulations, etc.

                The AI that steals jobs from coders is simply cutting Google and Stack Overflow out of the loop (if you code, you know exactly what I mean). If you use AI to get information, keep in mind that the product is at the level of asking some random twit on the internet to Google it for you.

                Artificial General Intelligence is just pure science fiction.

              • Kevin 23:32 on 2025-07-11 Permalink

                While I don’t code I know exactly what *bob* means.
                The issue is that executives who don’t code think they can replace coders with AI at its currently discounted price, not realizing that very soon that price of less than a dollar per query is going to be more than $200, and the answer is going to be garbage that doesn’t function.

                Modern economics is based on dumping.

              • Mozai 16:46 on 2025-07-12 Permalink

                “Once, men turned their thinking over to machines in the hopes this would set them free, but that only permitted other men with machines to enslave them.” — Reverend Mother Gaius Helen Mohiam (“Dune” by Frank Herbert)

              • Kate 17:31 on 2025-07-12 Permalink

                A writer called Joanna Maciejewska said on X: “I want AI to do my laundry and dishes so that I can do art and writing, not for AI to do my art and writing so that I can do my laundry and dishes.”

            • Kate 09:03 on 2025-07-11 Permalink | Reply  

              LaSalle College is being fined $30 million for having too many English-speaking students.

              Later it’s reported that the college plans to fight the fine, which would probably put it out of business – probably the CAQ’s ultimate intention.

               
              • Heathcliff 09:30 on 2025-07-11 Permalink

                This is a private vocational college with about 15,000 students/year, not a multinational corporation. How is this not front-page news? To financially kneecap an educational institution for the crime of… attracting students. It’s absurd, it’s punitive, and the silence around it is just as disturbing.

              • Ian 10:17 on 2025-07-11 Permalink

                CAQ hates people getting jobs. The wrong kind of people, anyhow. It all fits within their punitive narrative of replacement theory.

            • Kate 08:59 on 2025-07-11 Permalink | Reply  

              Weekend notes from La Presse, CTV, CityCrunch, CultMTL.

              Warnings for drivers.

              Heat and humidity are in the weekend forecast.

               
              • Kate 22:05 on 2025-07-10 Permalink | Reply  

                A worker at Bordeaux Jail has been charged with manslaughter in the 2022 death of Nicous d’Andre Spring, an incident that sticks in the memory because the young man should have been released, but was still in the jail because of some bureaucratic sloppiness blamed on the Christmas break.

                 
                • Kate 20:44 on 2025-07-10 Permalink | Reply  

                  Brendan Kelly trolls the Gazette readership with a view that the Beatles weren’t all that, sparked by the announcement that Paul McCartney will play two concerts here in November.

                   
                  • Kevin 22:48 on 2025-07-10 Permalink

                    Music without the Beatles is like a fish without water. You don’t wear Beatles t-shirts for the same reason you think certain people don’t have a unique culture. They were and remain ubiquitous

                    Whether they were original or merely populist ripoffs, they were the zeitgeist and the catalyst of the era.

                    More than their influence on other musicians, they changed the aural expectations of the audience, and that is how their impact should be measured.

                    So help me Laurence Welk.

                  • Joey 07:35 on 2025-07-11 Permalink

                    “The band was great but no greater than say… Wilco.”

                  • Mr.Chinaski 08:07 on 2025-07-11 Permalink

                    “The best band will never get signed” Wilco

                • Kate 19:23 on 2025-07-10 Permalink | Reply  

                  The Office de consultation publique de Montréal (OCPM) has put out a report suggesting the city should refrain from dismantling homeless camps until it has something better to offer. It also suggests setting up basic facilities – drinking water, toilets, waste collection and electricity – but I can already feel the resistance here, because doing that is to essentially admit the camps are a permanent feature of the city. We’re not supposed to have bidonvilles.

                  The city says it will not stop dismantling, despite the report.

                  The camp on Notre-Dame East has been spared till July 21, as if the city could come up with a better option in the meantime.

                  I wonder whether people have moved into the temporary modular housing being put up in various spots around town.

                   
                  c
                  Compose new post
                  j
                  Next post/Next comment
                  k
                  Previous post/Previous comment
                  r
                  Reply
                  e
                  Edit
                  o
                  Show/Hide comments
                  t
                  Go to top
                  l
                  Go to login
                  h
                  Show/Hide help
                  shift + esc
                  Cancel