Daniel
Many thanks for taking your time
to give us feedback on the typography, presentation and bibliography styles of
our reports.
I shall share your comments, which
you have made in good faith, with my colleagues at the Commission with a view
to ensuring continual improvement.
Best regards
From: Daniel Waweru
[mailto:daniel.waweru@gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2013 2:26 AM
To: Wambua, Christopher
Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions
Subject: Re: [kictanet] Digital migration and mass ignorance
Hi Christopher,
Thanks for the report.
Why are your reports set in
standard-issue government style? The typography is awful: sans font, 12pt or
larger, which makes continuous reading quite difficult, especially online; the
tables with vertical lines; inconsistent bibliography styles; and so on. Almost
every serious rule of effective communication in print is violated here.
It's one thing to find this
sort of thing from the Central Bank (or some other equally staid part of
government) but one would expect you guys to put out reports that have a
passing acquaintance with the canons of effective communication in print: with
Tufte (http://www.edwardtufte.com/tufte/books_vdqi) or Bringhurst (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Elements_of_Typographic_Style) or Butterick (http://www.typographyforlawyers.com/?page_id=1300)
or, indeed, with the sort of thing
you can pick up by reading a LATEX manual.
For excellent recent
government typography, the reports of New Zealand's Waitangi tribunal stand
out, and I've attached one of them to this email. I'm sorry to pick on you
--- and I have a spare copy of Bringhurst, if you'd like one -- but I read the
report; my eyes bled; and it occurred to me that there was no real reason for
you not to do better than this.
Regards,
Daniel Waweru,
26 Hai Phen,
Bodoni,
Caissa Superiore,
Republic of San Serriffe
On 11 January 2013 16:33, Wambua, Christopher <Wambua@cck.go.ke> wrote:
Grace/Listers,
Unless
I am wrong, the report that you are referring to is available on our
website at http://www.cck.go.ke/about/downloads/Transition_2007.pdf
Initially,
the simulcast period was envisaged to end in June 2012. However due to delays
in the deployment of signal distribution infrastructure and unavailability of
set top boxes in adequate quantities in the local market, the simulcast period
was extended to December 31st, 2012.
Best
regards,
Christopher
Wambua
Manager/Communications
Consumer and
Public Affairs Division
Communications
Commission of Kenya
P.O. Box 14448,
NAIROBI 00800
KENYA
From: kictanet [mailto:kictanet-bounces+wambua=cck.go.ke@lists.kictanet.or.ke]
On Behalf Of Grace Githaiga
Sent: Friday, January 11, 2013 3:17 PM
To: Wambua, Christopher
Cc: kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke
Subject: Re: [kictanet] Digital migration and mass ignorance
Henry
No, I do not have
the plan. However, I remember reading about the end of the simulcast
period either in the first report done by the committee appointed to look into
the matter, or there must have been some information in the press advertised by
the digital migration secretariat. Further, the report had talked of how the
frequencies would be handled. There was clearly a plan in place. Maybe CCK
could share it.
Rgds
GG
> From: henry@article19.org
> To: ggithaiga@hotmail.com
> CC: kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke
> Subject: RE: [kictanet] Digital migration and mass ignorance
> Date: Fri, 11 Jan 2013 12:07:57 +0000
>
> Grace
>
> Thanks. Do you have a copy of the plan. Does it make clear which
frequencies are going to be set aside for TV and radio (public, private and
community), security, aviation? Please share.
>
> HENRY O. MAINA
> DIRECTOR
> ARTICLE 19 KENYA/EASTERN AFRICA
> P O BOX 2653,00100
> NAIROBI
> TEL:+254 (20) 3862230/2
> FAX:+254 (20)
3862231
> EMAIL: henry@article19.org
>
> ________________________________________
> From: Grace Githaiga [ggithaiga@hotmail.com]
> Sent: 11 January 2013 02:53 PM
> To: Henry Maina
> Cc: kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke
> Subject: RE: [kictanet] Digital migration and mass ignorance
>
> Thanks Henry.
>
> I thought the simulcast period is over? Cant quite remember but there was
a plan that had been released and CCK may have been following it considering
the switch off was meant to happen last year.
>
> Rgds
> GG
>
> From: henry@article19.org
> Date: Fri, 11 Jan 2013 10:26:16 +0000
> Subject: Re: [kictanet] Digital migration and mass ignorance
> CC: kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke
> To: ggithaiga@hotmail.com
>
>
> D
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