The Silhouette - September 19, 2013

Page 1

The

Silhouette

REVIEW

PASSION PIT

C4

McMASTER UNIVERSITY’S STUDENT NEWSPAPER

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2013 VOL. 84 NO. 6

Senate nominations now open

WHY IS

MAC

Planning Committee elections in session

$300, 000, 000

Jemma Wolfe Executive Editor After the springtime primary election period left vacancies on the Senate and University Planning Committee, a secondary round of elections is now underway. Up for representation are the undergraduate and graduate Social Sciences Senate positions, a graduate DeGroote School of Business Senate seat, and an undergraduate student (any faculty) seat for UPC. McMaster’s Senate, Board of Governors and University Planning Committee are governing bodies that make critical decisions for the academic and financial future of the institution. They are largely comprised of faculty members but all have student seats – seats that are arguably too-frequently left unoccupied given their importance. “Senate is where all the decisions are ultimately made about your education,” Tamara Bates of the University Secretariat’s office (which facilitates these bodies) said. “That’s where the decisions about new academic programs, changes to academic programs, what is approved and where all the policies are upheld. Senate also approves whether you graduate or not,” she continued. While Senate actions have the most obvious impact on students, the BoG is critical for its complete trust of McMaster’s finances, while UPC works as a joint Senate-BoG committee for significant long-term big-picture planning. Despite only one undergraduate and one graduate representative per faculty, electoral rounds are not always successful at getting students in seats. “Going back in the records, there will be one or two years where some faculties aren’t represented because no one steps forward,” Bates said. The spring of 2011 was one particularly bad example: four of the eight open seats remained vacant post-election, and two of the seats that were actually filled were won by acclamation (there was only one eligible candidate). Student interest in elections “seems to go up and down,” said Bates, despite the Secretariat’s outreach. The call for nominations is advertised in The Silhouette, in the Daily News, on the Secretariat’s website, as a banner on Avenue to Learn, and as a mass email notice to students. Bates partly attributes student disinterest to the electronic advertising and election processes. “The fact that things can go by email and electronically is great but there’s so much that comes into your inbox that it’s also more easily forgotten about or dismissed,” she said. “There used to be polling stations in the student centre and all across campus. So as much as electronic balloting and voting are a lot more convenient… they’re not as in your face as they could be.” Nominations opened on Monday, Sept. 16 and will close at noon on Wednesday, Oct. 2. Interest from candidates – and voters – remains to be seen. @jemma_wolfe

PAGE A7

IN THE

RED? GRAPHIC BY BEN BARRETT-FORREST/ MULTIMEDIA EDITOR

Student tech innovation The story of one Mac student’s path to changing the face of electronic communication Tyler Welch Assistant News Editor How does a man get from forgoing education and crossing the country to care for his father, to becoming the founder and CEO of his own, successful tech start-up? Ask Ethan Do. Do’s company, Over Air Proximity Technologies ltd., is a year-old, growing operation that has made its name as the creative and inventive face of near field communication. NFC is a technology that allows users to transfer data between two devices. An NFC tag, sticker or wristband contains a small microchip that is able to send data to a smartphone simply by bringing the phone into close proximity. The most well-known and publicized use for NFC has been mobile payment systems— purchasing goods by simply waving your phone over VISA or Debit payment pad, for example. Over Air seeks to diversify the NFC market and offers its clients solutions that go beyond the tradition payments arena. They now offer client solutions ranging from restaurants to marketing, from retail to industrial. Ethan Do grew up in Montreal and always had a fondness for technology and computers. He graduated high school at 18, with

a 95% average—affording him the generate automatic responses. opportunity to attend almost any “It was accurate about 90% Canadian university. of the time…that caught the At the same time, his father attention of eBay, and I got my first had a stroke and was half-paralysed promotion,” said Do. as a result. Do decided to move to Do found himself climbing Vancouver and take care of him. the ladder again. Even without a With needs to meet and bills degree, he was offered a position to be paid, Do got a job at a FedEx working in business intelligence— Kinkos store in Vancouver. He crunching numbers, analyzing worked hard and was able to climb customer activity and working in the ladder of his branch over the fraud prevention. course of five years. Do’s life was shaken up, “I went though, during from being a 2008 and 2009. photocopy boy In a six-month on the night period, his shift, doing half-brother, hand staples for and then his I went from being a ten hours, to father, both being the senior passed away. photocopy boy on the manager of their night shift, doing staples Meanwhile, most profitable eBay for ten hours, to being store in Canada” announced that he said. they would be the senior manager of Do soon shutting down their most profitable became wary their Vancouver of the retail life centre and store in Canada. and was looking outsourcing. for a change. Do was going Ethan Do, CEO, Over Air After calling up to be laid-off. Proximity Technologies a FedEx client Of that - eBay Canada time in his - Do started life, Do said “I working there, once again starting didn’t know exactly what to do, but at the bottom, as a customer service my father always encouraged us to email response agent. go back [to school].” When he was unable to keep “I decided to drive across up with the email response quota Canada…and reflect,” he said. at work, he designed a filter that Knowing that Ontario had the would sort customer emails and most universities of any province,

KEY TO LOCKE ST QUEBEC CHARTER CONTROVERSY

PAGE A6

PAGE B7

THE TIFF THREE PAGE B1

SOCCER TAMES LIONS

PAGE C8

he determined that he would stand a better chance applying there. After gaining more high school credits through an adult secondary school, he eventually enrolled at McMaster as a mature student. Do was still hurting from his eBay job being outsourced, and decided to study Kinesiology. He said that his rationale was “I’ll be a doctor, they can’t outsource me.” He loved studying the body and its inner workings, but couldn’t give up his love of technology. Knowing this, he transferred into McMaster’s business informatics program, where he could learn coding and business principles together. “I’ve learned a lot, and I am very thankful for that. It really opened a lot of doors,” he said. A game-changing moment came in the fall of 2012. After buying a new smartphone, Do was exploring the settings and features of the device. When he saw something about near field communication, he was intrigued and researched the technology. His curiosity encouraged him to order a few NFC tags and a tag writer. He wanted to try them out. Then, an epiphany: “I programmed my first one, I took my phone, touched the tag, and my LinkedIn profile came up.” STUDENT CEO, A3


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.