Monday, January 05, 2015

Waiting for a new life.

For the start of 2015, I'm taking on many new changes.
  1. A new baby 
  2. New business ventures
  3. Taking up taxi driving 
Not sure if things will turn out well but YOLO right? Moving forward, never looking back.

Now I'm waiting at NUH for my wife to deliver the baby. The doctors say the contractions are pretty ok but it will be a long wait. Looks like we will be staying overnight. Should have bought my PS3 along. :/

I find it interesting that the delivery ward is so far away from their maternity ward. 15 mins.

The wait continues. 

Labels:

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Dogville

Was reading a review on Antichrist when i somehow wandered to the Wikipedia page on Dogville, which was by the same director. It was supposed to be a USA - Land of Opportunities trilogy of sorts but only got as far as the second installment "Manderlay"

Dogville seems like an interesting flim, althought the Antichrist got lambasted. Not sure about Manderlay though, as i never heard of it.

I particularly like this statement from the director:

According to von Trier, the point of the film is that "evil can arise anywhere, as long as the situation is right."

Hmm... Sounds about right. So what are the situations that Evil can arise easily?


  1. Enforcing your own beliefs on others

  2. Enforcing your own opinions without understanding the whole picture

  3. Blind obedience

  4. Protecting self interest
  5. Emotions like vengeance, jealousy, anger, etc
  6. anymore?

Labels:

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

No man is an island

NYT reported that "What Are Friends for? A Longer Life" on 21st April 2009.

Treasure your friends and hopefully they do too.

Labels:

Wednesday, April 08, 2009

How dark is Dubai ?

The Independent published a commentary "The Dark Side of Dubai".

Most of it is true although i had never experience it second hand. Maybe a bit sensationalised i guess.

UAE was a young country with mininal natural resources and cultural/historical roots then. Also with a heavy religious culture setting, their society are tightly close knitted and quite impermeable. Since the discovery of the black gold, the country was thrusted into modernisation on turbo drive. While they may be a bunch of shrewd people, you can feel that they are just begining to learn to adapt to globalisation. Their society still remains guardedly close to the many foreigners running about on their pavements. Majority of the Emeratis keep to themselves, except for those who had stepped out to experience the global village.

There are of course subtle changes being brought about by globalisationa and the foreign culture that are invading their land. These can be mainly observed by contrasting their younger female generation, particularly their teens and young adults, against their blackly-claded elders. Hot pants maybe frowned upon by the elders, but fashion is still fashion for their younger counterparts.

With regards to their treatment of the environment, I agree that UAE is in urgent need to re-assess their strategy on the environment. Seriously.

The ecological damage inflicted on the war with the desert and the environment should be looked at by the administration. This is not the first time that the sea at Dubai was observed to be dirty. There was even a news article some time back reporting on this issue. At the very same beach area.

The modern history of UAE began with the black gold. Will it outlast its supply? Only time will tell.

Labels:

Monday, April 06, 2009

Your morals will be controlled some days

Saw this article that the Brain's moral centre or wisdom centre is located.

Image the day that we can control our own or other's behaviour with medicine or chemicals.

You want to be a bad boy, pop the red pill.


You want to be a SNAG, pop the pink pill.

You want to kill some one day, pop the black pill.


This day is not that far off.

Labels:

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

The comeback of the loincloth. For women.

Loincloths hot among Japan woman

Mar 30 - The latest in "women's liberation" is a product making a comeback in Japan that makers claim allows women to ditch tight-fit underwear -- loincloths.

A Japanese lingerie maker (Wacoal) calls female loincloth underwear the "ultimate liberation item" for women. Toshi Maeda reports.

*Cool. But probabaly not a good idea during that time of the month bah. The VPL may also be a concern.

**Think it would cool to hang one up in the living room or where and tell your guest that its for wiping hands before telling them some bullshit about it being the loincloth of some dead guy from Japan. hee.

Labels:

A satellite call Jim

Reuters reports "NASA in Colbert conundrum over Space Station".

Stephen Colbert aims to name the space station after himself through a NASA naming competition.

I just aim for something smaller. Who knows right? Just probably have to get richer than USA. ha.

After note : Only a treadmil was named after Colbert in the space station.

Labels:

Women, Shopping and Uncle Ben.

BBC reported Shopping sprees linked to periods.

It could be true as the human body is affected by chemicals/hormones. I.e. treatment for depressions and some mental illness.

But then Uncle Ben put it the best :

"This guy, Flash Thompson, he probably deserved what happened. But just because you can beat him up, doesn't give you the right to. Remember: with great power comes great responsibility. "

Labels:

Monday, March 30, 2009

Do your part, switch off your PC

Leaving PCs on overnight costs companies $2.8B a year By Jon Swartz, USA TODAY

SAN FRANCISCO — Even during an economic meltdown, when companies are scrambling to cut costs, businesses are wasting billions of dollars by leaving their PCs on at night.

U.S. organizations squander $2.8 billion a year to power unused machines, emitting about 20 million tons of carbon dioxide — roughly the equivalent of 4 million cars — according to a report to be released Wednesday.

About half of 108 million office PCs in the USA are not properly shut down at night, says the 2009 PC Energy Report, produced by 1E, an energy-management software company, and the non-profit Alliance to Save Energy. The report analyzed workplace PC power consumption in the USA, United Kingdom and Germany.

Wastefulness does not just affect a company's bottom line, it creates environmental concerns, the report says. If the world's 1 billion PCs were powered down just one night, it would save enough energy to light the Empire State Building — inside and out — for over 30 years, it says.

"Workers do not feel responsible for electricity bills at work, and some companies insist PCs remain on at night so they can be patched with software updates," says 1E CEO Sumir Karayi. He says 63% of employees surveyed said their companies should take more steps to save PC power.

"It is scary how much energy is wasted," says Michael Murphy, senior manager of global environmental affairs at Dell, a business partner and customer of 1E. It has used 1E software to efficiently manage its 50,000 PCs globally, saving about $1.8 million a year.

Simply shutting down PCs at night can save a company with 10,000 PCs over $260,000 a year and 1,871 tons of carbon dioxide emissions, the report says.

"PCs can be a tremendous drain on electricity," says Doug Washburn, an analyst at Forrester Research. "During a nine-hour workday, it isn't always in use because of lunch, meetings and other things."

Labels: