Starting at noon Tuesday, dispatchers in the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo (RMWB) will begin dispatching EMS calls again.
Author Archives: Steve
Alberta is no longer using coal to generate electricity
Microsoft Needs to Get Serious About Its Windows 10 Upgrade Problem
Microsoft Needs to Get Serious About Its Windows 10 Upgrade Problem: The Windows 10-pocalypse is a short two years away. On Oct. 14, 2025,
Microsoft will stop issuing security updates for Windows 10 PCs, at
which point most of the world’s PCs—about one billion computers—will be
running a dead operating system, like Windows XP. And most of those computers can’t upgrade to Windows 11.
Microsoft Is Abandoning Most PCs on the Planet
Half of the readers of my Windows Intelligence newsletter
are still using Windows 10 on their primary PC. The one billion
estimate comes from two sources: Microsoft, which has said there are more than 1.4 billion Windows PCs, and Statcounter, which shows that the vast majority of PCs on the planet—more than 70%—run Windows 10.
Worse
yet, this isn’t like when Microsoft stopped supporting Windows 7. Those
PCs could upgrade to Windows 10, but this time around, many Windows 10
PCs don’t suport Windows 11, at least not officially. If you can’t
afford to buy a new PC, you’ll be left out in the cold after Oct. 14,
2025. From a security perspective, it’ll be as if you were using Windows
XP or Windows 7.
Will Microsoft Extend the Deadline?
“That’s the debate of our age,” Paul Thurrott, a journalist who’s spent decades covering Microsoft and owner of Thurrott.com, told me.
Thurrott
pointed out that Microsoft extended support for both Windows XP and
Windows 7, although support for Windows 7 only covered businesses that
paid extra every year. “Honestly, Windows 11 adoption is less than I’d
have thought, especially in businesses. That could cause [Microsoft] to
continue support for Windows 10,” he said.
I asked Microsoft for a
comment on its plans, and a spokesperson said the company had “nothing
further to share at this time” other than what’s on the lifecycle page.
Chinese military jet intercepts Canadian Forces plane in ‘aggressive manner’
Chinese military jet intercepts Canadian Forces plane in ‘aggressive manner’: Chinese military jet intercepted a Canadian Armed Forces Aurora aircraft in an “aggressive manner” on Monday in international waters off the coast of China.
“They became very aggressive and to a degree we would deem it unsafe and unprofessional,” Maj.-Gen. Iain Huddleston told Global News.
Global News was on board the Canadian military aircraft reporting on the mission, which is part of Operation NEON, Canada’s contribution to helping enforce sanctions against North Korea, when the aggressive intercepts took place.
“It’s a ramp-up of the aggressiveness that’s really unexpected and unnecessary in the context of the mission that we’re flying,” Huddleston said.
At least two different Chinese jets intercepted the Canadian plane consistently for multiple hours during the more than eight-hour-long mission. The Chinese jets came within about five metres of the Canadian plane.
NDP convention could see emergency resolution on pharmacare – National | Globalnews.ca
NDP convention could see emergency resolution on pharmacare – National | Globalnews.ca: A group of grassroots NDP activists is planning to push for pharmacare to be a make-or-break element of the federal party’s supply-and-confidence deal with the Liberals at a policy convention next week.
The agreement has the NDP supporting the minority Liberals on key votes in exchange for progress on shared priorities, including pharmacare.
The activists are submitting an emergency resolution to declare that the future of the deal is contingent on legislation that commits to a universal and entirely public pharmacare program, which they hope will be debated on the convention floor in Hamilton.
The group, called Stand Strong For Pharmacare, launched a website for delegates to encourage them to take a strong stance on the policy and hold the Liberals to their agreement.
“Our NDP convention resolution would make it clear that if (Prime Minister) Justin Trudeau breaks his promise for universal, comprehensive, and public pharmacare, it will have consequences,” the website states.