Saturday, December 12, 2009

Impressions of Tokyo 01

Arrived on Wednesday evening.

Lesson #1 : Try to plan to arrive during the day - evening traffic is terrible, on top of the distance.  By the time check-in is done - nothing else to do except to go to sleep, unless you're the pub crawling type.

Lesson #2 : Next time, fly into Haneda instead of Narita - it's closer to town.

Lesson #3 : Even 5 star hotels are located in places that are dead at night.  But hotels smack in train stations of Ginza and Shinjuku cost a bomb.

Lesson #4 : If a twin/double room in the same hotel cost differently - they're probably in different wings - the cheaper is the older and smaller.

Lesson #5 : Free internet may means using LAN cable, not Wifi - thankfully they provide it.

Lesson #6 : Many people still smoke in most eateries.

Day 2 was spent visiting Tsukiji fish market, Ginza and Akihabara

Lesson #7 : Be early when visiting the fish market.  Avoid wearing new clothes and shoes.

Lesson #8 : Queues form early at the eateries around the fish market - others have fair quality too.

Lesson #9 : If you can't read the language and price seems low, it may be for take-outs.

Lesson #10 : Knowing Chinese scripts help a lot if you can't read Japanese.

Lesson #11 : Mitsukoshi @ Ginza got nothing for kids, normal kids that is.  Fine if you're loaded, something in their limited selection might catch your fancy.

Lesson #12 : Starbucks is a life-saver - at least you know what to expect.

Lesson #13 : Uniqluo is cheaper in Japan than Singapore.

Lesson #14 : Electric City in Akihabara is surprisingly small.  Even the neighbouring blocks got bigger mart.

Lesson #15 : A geek can use the smallest excuse, such as the rest of the party buying the next day's breakfast from a confectionary, to disappear into the electronic mart for thrice the time it takes to buy the breakfast.

Lesson #16 : Starbucks and MacDonald's are necessities when travelling with young ones - when they need to nap, they nap.

Lesson #17 : Day-tour companies insist on credit card reservation for larger parties - and their offices open after most tourists left the hotels early to take advantage of the daylight.  Hotel staff who assist to make bookings do not know the quorum before credit card is required.

Day 3 was a rainy day.

Lesson #18 : There is not much else to do on a rainy Tokyo day if some in the party do not want to visit museums.

Lesson #19 : Simply laundry can take the whole morning - especially when drying jeans are involved.

Lesson #20 : Do not use a guidebook printed more than a couple of years or so - things change fast here.

Lesson #21 : MacDonald's in Japan serve pork - can't wait to see their Burger King.

Lesson #22 : Tempting as it might be to get that Net Walker, I don't really want a keyboard printed with Japanese characters.

Lesson #23 : Shibuya is an interesting place to visit, especially the small lanes, if the party doesn't include children.

Lesson #24 : Singaporeans are everywhere and recognizable almost immediately, at least to to other Singaporeans.

Lesson #25 : Not all Tokyo people may know if there is no need to go out into the rain to get from a Metro station to the JR station.

Lesson #26 : Taking west exit and south exit of a station, despite following signs to the same place, can mean going a very different way.  If you hope to get to somewhere you did just before the listed destination, don't count on using different routes to the same listed final destination.

Lesson #27 : Tokyo underground is a maze of parallel tunnels which are intersected without the signs indicating they are intersected.

Lesson #28 : Ground level beneath the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Office is an unofficial sleeping area for the homeless.

Day 4 was spent on Mt. Fuji and Hakone tour

Lesson #29 : English speaking guide are not always fluent in English - but they can deserve 'A' for effort.

Lesson #30 : Sunshades would have been useful - including when taking photos.

Lesson #31 : The cablecar may be part of sight-seeing, but it may not show much when they pack the gondola like they're packing the subway trains.

Lesson #32 : Entire row of seats on Shinkansen can be turned around so that you can sit face to face with your party - that's cool.

Lesson #33 : The Japanese tour guide had no reservation pointing out the building that once serving as residence to Prince Euimin, narrating its history, including Japanese annexation of Korea and the poisoning of the young prince Yi Jin, citing both Korean and Japanese version.

Saturday, December 5, 2009

听说 Hear Me Movie Trailer




Taiwanese film of a love between a deaf swimmer and a hearing guy

Decline in quality of second hand bookshops

I only seriously started buying from 2nd hand bookshops after I got a job.

I used to track down some of the best sites in Singapore, mostly in Bras Basah and Far East. Salvation Army also had great collections.

That was before the children came along.

A few years back, I was carrying the wee Snowylass at Far East when I browsed another outlet I had never visited, and I was pleasantly surprised at their selection.  Unfortunately, at that time, Snowylass had to go - she was being toilet trained.

Snowylad soon came along and I didn't have a chance to revisit Far East until today.

Sadly, most of them are gone.  Well, ANA is still there, but it's closed until 18th Dec!

Earlier in May this year, a vendor came from India to do a project in my office.  He's also into books, but of a different kind.  I had wanted to bring him around, but in the end, I only managed to have lunch with him before he left in October.

Sometimes, having kids make time seem to stop still.  But the world doesn't.

Play Zoo at Facebook

Okay, I know how facebook addicts feel now.

Been receiving so many animals that I decided to try out play zoo in facebook for a while - that's on Thursday.

Got so engrossed, but I thought I got in fully under control.

Besides, it was challenging, and in the absence of a manual, guidebook or tips, I unwittingly chose a strategy that seemed suitable for the long-term, rising fast to level 12 by today.

Until the application went into maintenance mode and told us to try again in half an hour.

That was more than 5 hours ago ...

Monday, November 30, 2009

Lack of self-esteem and low level of personal expectations

Said my beloved about myself.

My whole life, I had never challenged myself to high expectations.

This bombshell came after nearly four decades of existence, but I have to admit it's true.

Maybe I do know something about my own lack of achievements, lack of discipline and perseverance, and hence, I put a lot of hope into my children.

Especially on one who seemed to take after me.

I hope it's not too late, for myself too.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Don't lie to me ... or if you do ... please do it forever ...

不要骗我。要骗,就要骗一辈子。

I still remember the above corny line from some HK script ... said by a woman who would opt that the man she loves be with her forever, even if he lies to her.

That very much parallels the feelings expressed by Marilla Brown (acted by the gorgeous Lauren Bacall)  when her husband Mike Hagen (acted by Gregory Peck) came up with one outrageous lie after another to hide the fact that the pin-up model Lori Shannon (Dolores Gray) was an ex-girlfriend of his, in the movie "Designing Woman".

Lauren Bacall was cast in the role of an "uptown girl" fashion designer who, of course, got to meet the ex during a photoshoot of her designs, recognising Lori Shannon from her legs, which she had seen once from a torn scrap of photo found in Mike's apartment.

Didn't take the 2 women long to discover their relationship via a mutual man ...

Marilla (Bacall) was upset that Mike lied, but Lori sagely told her to leave it alone, and that she (Marilla) will find it pleasing (a doozy) seeing all the antics Mike kept trying to come up with to hide his past just to avoid the possibility of upsetting his new wife.

And at the end of the show, just when we thought Mike would confess, he came up with yet another wild story and Bacall ended the film with a voice-over narration, admitting that she found it a doozy ...

Since these 2 shows, I've always wondered ... are women willing to have their men lie to them ... as long as the men do it with the intention to keep the relationship?

Friday, November 20, 2009

Obsession of some Singaporeans with dual citizenship ...

It's not new, but it seems more nowadays are asking to allow dual citizenship with some reasonings which are totally untenable when put to scrutiny.

First - an answer to brain drain of Singaporeans migrating overseas, as per last Friday's Straits Times report by economist Professor Hui.

I wrote to the newspaper a rebuttal but it didn't seem to be selected for publication.

First and foremost - allowing these Singaporean "talents" dual citizenship won't do Singapore any good.  Most of the time, these Singaporean talents are already working overseas for years - so offering them dual citizenship wouldn't bring them back to Singapore.

Second, many of them found working and living environment overseas most condusive to fulfilling their potentials - bringing them back only underutilise their talents since Singapore cannot offer the same thing here.

Third, if they want to return in the future, it'd be because of friends and families here, not because they still retain nominal citizenship here.

So what's the point of getting more "phantom citizens" who aren't contributing here in the first place?

 

Prime Reason number 2- attract foreign talents to sink roots here without giving up their native citizenship.

Hey, if they got good reasons to be here, they'll be here, citizenship or not.  And if they got no good reasons to be here or better reasons to go elsewhere, they'll leave and renouce Singaporean citizenship even if they had taken it.

 

Prime Reason number 3- to allow children of mixed nationality parentage a fair choice.

Heck, when children grow up, it is their own personal decision what citizenship to take up.  It can be the father's, the mother's, or something else altogether.

Citizenship is not a requirement for children to inherit cultural legacies from their parents.

I'll teach my kids to be good citizens, but I won't tell them they cannot change their citizenship.

Certain countries can afford some of their citizens to give priority for national duty to another country - Singapore is not one of them.

Rote learning wrong? Yes. Bilingual policy wrong? No.

http://news.sg.msn.com/commented/article.aspx?cp-documentid=3709347

Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew admits Singapore's billingual policy started on the wrong footing in the 60s because as the system's chief architect, he was led to believe it was possible to master two languages equally well.

As a result, Chinese lessons were pitched at too difficult a level and this "turned students off completely," he recalled, adding that he now wants Chinese language teachers to make learning the mother tongue fun for children.

Shouldn't all subjects be made to be fun for students to learn?

In 1979, I first came to Singapore as a student when I was 9 years old - and that was the time I started learning Mandarin.  Until then, my only knowledge of the language were common terms such as to eat and to sleep.

It took me several years to learn the language through school, through conversing with schoolmates, through reading, through watching television series.

Subsequently, I learned it well enough to score A's for Mandarin as a second language in the PSLE, GCE 'O' and GCE 'AO' level examinations.

I do not think there was anything wrong with the methods used in teaching Mandarin.

Upon reflection, I believe learning any language is a matter of opportunity, motivation and choices.

Opportunity is created by the environment so use the language at home, in school and among friends.

Motivation depend on whether there is anything that would interest the student in using the language - I was keen to read comics of Doraemon, Journey to the West, as well as watching kungfu television series and movies, and when I was older, to read wuxia novels and Romance of the Three Kingdoms.

Choices is about the decision by the individual.  We all have 24 hours a day, and we need to decide what to do with our time - be it to go gallivanting with friends, reading, playing sports or something else.

Teaching style is only one of the factor in a student's grasp of a language.

As a student, it never occurred to me that it was an option NOT to learn Mandarin, anymore than it was not to learn English, Mathematics or Science.

I went through the education system in Singapore through the 1980s and almost all my Mandarin teachers were Chinese-educated.

I believe parents should ask themselves what part have they played towards their children's learning of Mandarin.  No change to the teaching style would make any difference if the parents send a message to their children that Mandarin is not something that their children must learn, especially by not using the language at home at all.

While I believe there will always be areas for improvement in teaching styles, that observation is not unique to Mandarin but applicable to all subjects.

Someone posted:

Thursday, November 19, 2009 2:43:35 PM
Thanks for this opportunity to share here. I was studying in Australia from 1994 to 1995 and this nice Aussie English Man walked up to us a group of Singaporean Chinese and asked me why are we not communicating using mandarin and instead using their english.
Well, first of all, we speak in English too because we are Singaporeans, not Chinese nationals.

While I am comfortable in using either Mandarin or English, we should not let others decide what language we Singaporeans should converse in based on our physical appearance and ethnic background.

Second, the Australians could harldy claim to monopolise the English language, so I would have replied I was not speaking "their English" but "our English".

Thursday, November 19, 2009 2:43:35 PM
He commented that we spoke horribly with other languages included (ie. Singlish).
The British might have thought Aussie-English was horrible, but so what?

Thursday, November 19, 2009 2:43:35 PM
In-addition, he was curious too that some of us uses name like John, Albert, Ann instead of our own given names.
And what's his own name?  If he's descended from British migrants, then he'd probably be of Celtic or Gaelic etc., origin, but he didn't continue using Celtic or Gaelic names, did he?

We are Singaporeans, not Chinese (nationals).  There is nothing wrong with Singaporeans adopting and evolving, just like how the Canadians, (US) Americans or Australians did.

Thursday, November 19, 2009 2:43:35 PM
So there was some exchanges and understanding with my Aussie classmate. I have been always reminding myself and kids to speak proper language and we should not mix them.

This part I can agree with.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Anyone knows what is urang-aring in English?

It's a plant whose extract is used for a popular hair lotion in Indonesia.

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Anyone with able to write down the Chinese for the 7 Habits of highly effective Ah Bengs - original Hokkien version?

I wonder how they sound in Cantonese, anyone?

http://www.talkingcock.com/html/sections.php?op=viewarticle&artid=6

Steven Covey's famous 7 habits for successful people are nothing more than a free adaptation of Hokkien phrases.

So why pay thousands of dollars to listen to ang-mors like him when your parents, wives, husbands, and even the auntie-auntie who sweeps the floor, can give you that kind of advice every day?

Habit No 1: Be Pro-Active
Kin Ka Kin Chiew (fast leg, fast hand) - 快脚快手


Habit No 2: Begin with the End In Mind
Ooh Tao Ooh Buay (have head, have tail) - 有头有尾

Habit No 3: First Things First
Chik Hung Chik Hung Lai - Ban Ban Lai  - ????来, 稳稳来?
(One thing at a time, slow and steady); or
Cho Tow Seng (do first) - 做头先

Habit No 4: Think Win-Win
Long Chong Ai Yarh (want to win in everything) - ????

Habit No 5: Seek To Understand Rather Than To Be Understood
Cho Lang Ai Eh Beng Pek (you must be understanding) - 做人要??明白?


Habit No 6: Synergize
Tai Kay Ai Hup Chop (all must co-perate) - 大家要合作

 

Habit No 7: Sharpen the Saw
Toh Bua Lai Lai - 刀磨利利

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

I'm such a social slug ...

Departmental lunch still in progress ... At Changi hotel's cafe. I'd finished mine long ago and waiting in agony for it to end. The rest are still chatting ... Can't sit, read, work, or anything I like.

海鸥 - 翁倩玉




From the 1973 movie 《爱的天地》(Love Begins Here)
海鸥

歌曲:海鸥
歌手:翁倩玉
制作:
作词:孙仪 作曲:刘家昌

海鸥 飞在蓝蓝海上
不怕 狂风巨浪
挥着翅膀 看着前方
不会 迷失方向
飞的越高 看的越远
它在找寻理想
我愿像 海鸥一样
那么 勇敢坚强

海鸥 飞在蓝蓝海上
不怕 狂风巨浪
挥着翅膀 看着前方
不会 迷失方向
飞的越高 看的越远
它在找寻理想
我愿像 海鸥一样
那么 勇敢坚强

Saturday, October 17, 2009

I hate 4e ... for AD&D that is ... on its impact on FR actually

%#$@#$@#$%@#$%@#$^$@%@#$5

Unwanted upgrades ... that's what it is, trying to squeeze more $$$$$$ from the consumers.

Couldn't they have just revamp another world instead?

I haven't even forgiven them for what they did to Dragonlance, and now they're doing the same thing to Forgotten Realms ...

 

Monday, September 21, 2009

To save or not to save ...

My poor desktop clunked out again.

Refusing to start most of the time, like one of its capacitors is gone.

The old lady had been around for 5 years or so, so I'm not really surprised ... they don't build parts like they used to.

Still, I can't quite decide whether to replace the motherboard or get a new computer.

Any advice from friends out there?

I use it mainly to surf and watch videos, and I don't play any latest games.

Just thinking though that I don't want to end up with the "Ship of Theseus" ...

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Another project for MCYS?

One of the most prominent feature of the Singapore Botanic Gardens is the "Swan Lake", a pond where Snowylad fell in once.  Now, can't have a swan lake without the swan, so the NPB imported the swans in pairs, male and female.

There're now 3 pairs, 2 whites at the Swan Lake, and a black pair at the Bukit Timah core's pond.  Since I was young, there had always been 2 of them at the swan lake, the other 2 pairs relatively recent additions.

Recent MYCS Baby Bonus talks got me wondering why is it that we never saw the swans having cygnets ... after all, they had been well provided with accomodation and food.

I sent off a letter to NPB asking them about it, and the almost sheepish answer came back a couple of days ago, admitting that probably due to the fact that these birds aren't used to tropical climate, they aren't reproducing.  They hope the swans will reproduce after getting used to the climate here.

Well, as I mentioned before, the park have been having swans for decades now, and obviously, if they really want cygnets around, they got to do more than hope, especially if they know these birds are from temperate climates.

I'm sure there's a lesson here somewhere for MCYS too ... about why Baby Bonus is not getting them the results they want.

Monday, August 17, 2009

Broken toe over a pack of milk ... what a way to hurt the ego

Yup, jumping up to try to get the milk carton packs from the highest shelf of the kitchen cabinet, landed wrong and broke a toe ... swelling like a balloon now ...

Could have saved the trouble by using a chair to step but no .... for some reason, I could never seem to accept that I am just as tall as I am, and I am no barefoot high jumper ...

Sunday, August 16, 2009

The difference in my command of English versus Mandarin

It's not secret to myself that my Mandarin is inferior to my English.

That is why I would hesitate doing an English-to-Mandarin translation.

One thing I just realised signifies the difference between my command of English versus Mandarin is that I can quite comfortably apply the art of understatement when using English, but it'd take me close to an eternity to do the same when using Mandarin.

Understatement is an artform that is not unknown in the Chinese language, but as far as my own knowledge, while it shares common ground with the English language when it comes to the characteristic of "excruciating politeness", I have not witnessed the versatility in Mandarin as demonstrated in English by writers such as Oscar Wilde, PG Wodehouse, or even by the American Mark Twain.

I confess my own reading exposure in Mandarin is largely limited to historical subjects or wuxia novels by Jin Yong, and to stretch it a bit, a couple of books by Ni Kuang.  I have yet to delve in to writings of literary giants like Lao She, Ba Jin and Lu Xun, but I did browse through some of San Mao's memoirs.

Yet at the back of my mind, I am already thinking perhaps in history lies the difference why the art of understatement in the Chinese language never quite flowered the way it did for English.

For the English language, it is an art that I am thinking was really developed in expressing anti-establishment thoughts by writers such as Wilde at a time when their society seemed to be at the pinnacle of success, with starting as sarcasms in satires.

Historical China though was less forgiving or accomodating of criticisms, and greater freedom of expression was only possible with the demise of imperial China at a time of unbridled foreign interventions.  Anti-establishment expressions then were riddled with bitterness rather than wittiness.

Or perhaps the art of understatement of the Chinese language is unrecognizable because it is a different totally song from the English language.

Scholarships : priority for less well-off?

While discussing Mr Li ShengWu's topping his PPE class at Oxford, Snowylady mentioned he didn't go on government scholarship, and I said that's good since presumably, his parents could afford to sponsor him, and that leaves the slot available for others to compete for.

"So, you think priority for scholarship should be given to poorer students" asked Snowylady?

"No, I don't.", I said. "It's solely on the discretion of the students from wealthier families whether to apply for scholarship to sponsor their studies if their families could afford it."

"But when it comes to awarding it, it should strictly be by merits."

"Even a student from a rich family can benefit from scholarship - because it gives him independence."

Independence - that's something very real to a young person.

Having a scholarship will provide the sense of independence that is no less meaningful to someone from a rich family than to someone from a poor family..

One of the last thing I'd want from a public funded scholar to return to serve the public without learning independence himself.

There're still strings attached of course - the scholar has to account for his academic performance to the scholarship sponsor.  I can't imagine papa or mama terminating the sponsorship just because junior is only getting Bs and Cs.

Coming to awarding scholarship - on the assumption it is to recruit talent for the country or the company, we'd want to take the best there is, not second best.

When we send out these folks on a task in the future, like winning a contract for the country, the contract awarder will not say "Hmm, both Singapore and USA offer the best deals, but I'll award to Singapore because their economy needs the contract more than USA."

The onus then is to ensure if I award the scholarship, I better get the selection criteria done properly - not judging on current and past achievements, but also whose potential in the future will better serve the company.

Also significant are fortitude, resilience etc., of the candidates rather than their CVs.

It's just terminology, but if priority is for less well-off, I don't consider it as scholarship but as a bursary.

Snowylady and I then talked about financial assistance in government schools, how families misused it, but that's another story, for maybe another day.

Food Opera @ ION - Shaky tables, shaky start to dining experience

http://www.tnp.sg/printfriendly/0,4139,209412,00.html

"SPECIALLY-commissioned animal sculptures worth hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Gothic European chandeliers.
Philippe Stark-inspired chairs.
Bone china crockery."

Tried the place on Friday, August 7, in the afternoon.

Crowd was there.

Food itself was so-so.

The animal sculptures I'm afraid, wouldn't contribute to recouping their costs.

The chandeliers were so densely spaced together they make the place look like lighting shops along Balestier Road.

No comments about the chairs, but some of the modern design tables were more wobbly than the tummy of Mr. Greedy.

What really turned me off though were a couple of things related to SERVICE.

First, some of the food vendors had dining quarters located behind their stalls, which they apparently reserved for exclusive use of their customers, which mean those sitting there couldn't have food from other stalls.  I don't know if they do pay for these areas, but even if they do, it should have been decorated differently like how it was done at the food court in Jurong Point - each private dining area decked with branding theme of the stall, instead of looking exactly like the common eating area.  The sign "No Outside Food Allowed" are everywhere, including both private and public dining areas.

Second, when I ordered my noodles, the staff asked me to sit in their stall's private dining area, but I didn't want to because Snowylady wasn't eating food from that stall.  The staff then asked if I could bring back the crockery after use, and one even asked if I could get it as a take-away with disposal containers and utensils, for just another 20 cents more.  Out of sheer magnamity, I returned their crockery, but I'll never patronise them again.

Saturday, August 1, 2009

10% pay cut for the next 3 months at least ...

Having suffered S$307M loss for the 1st financial quarter, my whole Monthly Variable Component (MVS) will be gone for the next 3 months, as per the agreement with the unions.

What happens after that will depend on the performance of each quarter.

*sigh* pay cut and the anomaly of peak HDB prices at a time when I'm looking for a HDB is not a good combination.

A friend SMS'ed me to ask if I need any help, and I just ask him to help pray we'll find a flat that we can afford in the area we're looking for - not far from where we're currently staying so that it's not far from the primary school for Snowylass next year.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

To go or not to go ...

Snowylady's on course, and part of the course requires an overseas observation trip for a week.  Luck of the draw, she drew Vietnam.

The major decision now is whether the family will go with her too.

My consideration are 2-fold: it coincides with production cutover of the project I've been working on since December.

Then there's the kids, who never went to bed until mummy's home ...

Personally though, I know very little of Vietnam and know no one there, so I have no idea what to do with the kids while Snowylady's at work.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Snowylass P1 Registration

Oh, the agony of decisions, decisions, decisions.

What school to choose?  No time to volunteer, how?

Strategise by distance?

Finally, we decided on the nearest church affiliated school, more than 2 km away, co-ed (the main reason for agony - we plan to enroll the 2 kids in the same school so that I don't need to do a double act).

Well, seems like she got in just like that - fewer applicants in this phase than vacancies.

Not fair - she grew up so fast.

Thursday, July 9, 2009

It's not always the dirty minds of viewers to blame ...

When I first saw this Burger King ad at its Holland Village Outlet, the sexual innuendo already struck me, but not my wife who was with me.

After all, what woman would look at the picture of another woman, right

My surprise, that they'd run the ad, disappeared when it was published that the ad was only run in Singapore.

It didn't spare the BK HQ in the US from the barrage of criticisms though.

http://www.examiner.com/x-14984-San-Diego-Fast-Food-Examiner~y2009m7d1-Burger-King-Oral-Sex-Ad

After all, hey, this is Singapore, right?  If it's in public, it must have been approved by MDA or MITA or whatever, right?

 

Didn't the ad on the left featuring the "Caldecott Queen" ran a few years back, eliciting some men to comment how lucky Philip Chion must be?"

It led to complaints of course, but not before the ad achieve its aim - to make an impression.

 

 

 

So I saw this one in today's TODAY, and I am just wondering if it will be next ...

I mean, I appreciate something witty without being crass ... tried it myself sometimes, e.g., some of my posts in CHF's DGI RPG thread.

The common defence by the advertisers or the advertised company is that they got no control over what's in the mind of the viewers.

Bull.

While that is true up to a point, they should not be denying that the innuendo was precisely what they intended in the first place - and that should not distract from whether it was appropriate advertising material.

But admitting mistakes is hard to do.

Even my own co. refused to admit mistake when they ran an ad promoting a Swiss destination but featuring Italian cheese ...

I mean, maybe the management just don't appreciate how seriously the Europeans take their cheese ...

After all, Singaporeans would know how ridiculously it would be for a Cantonese eatery to feature bak-chor-mee as their main ad, right?  Uhm, at least, I think it should be ridiculous, right?

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Going to watch the finals of "The Chinese Challenge" ... hopefully ...

I had to sit on the upper block, quite far from the stage.  No powerful zoom in my camera-phone.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The big screen to my left, the lady in the screen is China's ambassador to Singapore.

 

 

I got the invitation for the recording session of the finals of "The Chinese Challenge" this coming Thursday, but as we're supposed to arrive by 7pm and the session is scheduled to end at 10:30pm, Snowylady is having 2nd thoughts about going with me ...

Main issue, as usual, is what to do with the Snowypups.

It's kinda late to leave them at my in-laws until 11pm, or a neighbour's.

Also, I hoped to be able to pick them up from pre-school, shower and feed them before going off.  Snowylady thought it was too much of a hassle.  It has been quite a hectic week for her - she's in charge of temperature screening point at school and has to be in school by 6:30 am daily.

Just told me to go without her and get another friend - felt like I've just been stood up for a date.

Hope I can work something out and persuade her to go ... even if we might have to leave early.

http://www.thechinesechallenge.sg

Interesting 12 set of quizzes there ...

 

 

Monday, June 29, 2009

Tripped up at work ... a lapse, an oversight

An oversight of mine 3 months ago caught up now.  I messed up big at work.

The only mitigation is that the relevant contract annexes I drew up was done properly and when reviewed by the other party, no issues were brought up.

Not a good thing, but I'm actually glad it surfaced now 'cos it can then finally be dealt with properly, involving my bosses.  Been trying to work with vendor for weeks now to find an alternative solution that is compliant with my company's strict, very strict (translated kiasu, kiasi, ai-chee, ai-pi), technical standards, but to no avail.

My supe has not been watching this too closely because he's swamped with his own work, not because he chose to trust me as he claimed.  He's not too bad a fellow, but can't totally depend on him sometimes - he cracks when the screws are turned on.  The only good thing here is that he (should) know he can't scapegoat his subordinate alone, unlike how things are done in some other companies.

Friday, June 26, 2009

RIP, Jacko ... you're a part of my past even if I never liked you personally ...

The first time I saw you was was official Thriller poster ... I didn't know who you were and couldn't tell whether you were a girl or a boy ...

I was in Sec 1 and I wasn't into pop music then ...

The next time was when my Sec 1 Literature teacher gave us an assignment to write lyrics of a pop music.

15 minutes before the bell, I was furiously copying the words from "Beat It", still not knowing how it sounded like, much less who it came from.

But it was impossible for me to be ignorant about you forever when my world began to expand in my teenage years.  Even the Mad magazine parodied you, your glove and the A-team ...

By the time I was in JC, I was in a choir that performed a very wide repertoire, and "Bad" just came out ...

Our most talented male singer badly wanted us to do "Smooth Criminal" but gave up in despair when he was the only one who could come close to mimicking your dance steps.

Despite your increasingly bizarre behaviour, I have to admit you're a talented entertainer and musician.  You gave the world many songs that are unforgettable, from "I'll be there" to "Bad", I hum your songs according to the many ups and downs I experienced in life.

Thanks for those gifts.  The most valuable lesson from you is fame and fortune are not guarantees of happiness.

What you did with your face.
How you tried to hold back your youths.
How you tried to return to your childhood.

I understand all these sentiments too well, and it's just fortunate I didn't have your resources to have done what you did.

Requiescat in pace ...

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Computer Game addictions - Spider Solitaire and Miniature Golf

It had to happen, both games have been sitting in my computer and mobile phone all these time and I never tried playing them until recently.

Spider Solitaire - a challenging game, I've learned to handle 2 suits fairly well but have yet to succeed with 4 suits.  Usually, games which may not be solvable tend to turn me off, but this one is a little different - for one thing, I also got to learn to read ahead and decide whether it is playable or just keep restarting until something promising turns up.

Mini Golf - it's back to geometry and some estimation, but it's cool.  Just before last Christmas, I started playing Fotofish and now the kids want to learn too.  I'm sure though I won't be going into the tennis game.

Sounds kind of dull with all the MMORPG around, but it's about the only kind of computer game I got time for nowadays.

 

4th time winning screenshot of Spider Solitaire

Saturday, June 6, 2009

No history forum to satisfy my cravings

There's hardly anything interesting at AllEmpires and SMQ anymore.

Just the other day, I received a note from Yun about the talk on why Buddhism and not Hinduism.  Wouldn't mind attending if I could, but schedulewise it's out of question.

Quite sometime back, I initiated a discussion in CHF on why Buddhism got exported from China but not Daoism.  Among the reasons, I think some would be in common with reasons why Buddhism and not Hinduism were exported to a significant degree outside India.

*sigh* and no one to kick the ideas around with.

Somehow, after the unpleasantness after the hacking, CHF just don't feel the same again.

Times like this, it does get to me that there ain't a history forum that seems right for me anymore.

Did the bosses play me out?

Project at work is at a sensitive stage.

One contract had been signed and another one pending.  However, there is a possibility that we had not chosen the right product, or at least, took some technical issues seriously enough to highlight them to the big bosses before proceeding.

On the Project Management side, I had just cleared with my supervisor and my manager that I do not need to submit a separate weekly report and submit only email updates or through the MRC, when on Friday, I received an email from the manager doing an about turn due to Business Unit's request/complaint.

If I'm gonna strike lottery BIG TIME, I really wish it will be soon.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Life choice updates 2009 May 30

Hrrrrmmmppphhh, things aren't going as well as I would like.

First, my project at work is taking a lot of time and I am unable to do a lot of other important things - house hunting, lowering my mortgage rates, decide on Snowylass' Primary School, continue my writings, etc.

Second, work also hit on my time to exercise, I fell sick, sinustitis came back and haunt me after the fever broke.

Third, work itself not going well, time pressure, technical constraints, project management expectations, legal contract wranglings.  Issues have surfaced after some contracts signed.

Sadly, I had wanted to do something special for Snowylass' birthday with her pre-school this year, since it's her last year there, with all the friends she made since she was 2 years old.

But just didn't have the time.

On the plus side, I did discover some of 1980s Disney cartoons on the web, like Gummi Bears, Talespin, and Ducktales ...

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

YouTube - crystal da doo ron ron ron ron ron




And here's the original performance of the piece by the Crystals ...

Monday, May 4, 2009

Shaun Cassidy - That's Rock 'n' Roll sung in a Hardy Boys' episode




Lyrics

Well I was sixteen and sick of school
I didn't know what I wanted to do
I bought a guitar
I got the fever
That's rock'n' roll

I played at parties
played in bars
I spent my money buyin' new guitars
I screamed my heart out but how I loved it
That's rock'n' roll

Well come on everybody. Get down and get with it

Come on everybody. Get down and get with it

Come on everybody. Get down
that's rock'n' roll

It's when smokin' and the heat
Have got your heart pounding right with the beat
Don't try to fight it just get excited
That's rock'n' roll

Well it's the roadies and the crowd
It's when the band's playin' way too loud
Your hips are shakin' ain't no mistakin'
That's rock'n' roll

Now don't you worry 'bout bein' a star
It doesn't matter who or what you are
Just get the rhythm and let it fill ya
That's rock'n' roll

And if you feel it clap your hands
Let's see some sweat for the boys in the band
Now lemme hear ya
lemme hear ya
That's rock'n' roll

YouTube - Goldie Hawn & Shaun Cassidy Duet




Wow! That's all I can say.

YouTube - Shaun Cassidy Da Doo Run Run Run




I was watching Murder, She Wrote on DVD, a "bookend episode" titled Murder in a Minor Key when I came across a darn cute actor playing the role of Chad Singer, a law student investigating a murder to clear the main suspect, his friend, a music student.

The irony was, I discovered, the actor for Chad was Shaun Cassidy, a singer and musician, and also incidentally, the actor for Joe Hardy in the Hardy Boys TV series.

I also learned that he sang a version of Da Doo Ron Ron, a song which I had been trying to learn the name and lyrics for years.

Darn cute, looks like a much cuter Mark Hamill, his tussled hair, his big eyes and his nose.

Lyrics
I met her on a monday and my heart stood still
Da doo ron ron ron da doo ron ron
Somebody told me that her name was Jill
Da doo ron ron ron da doo ron ron

Yes
my heart stood still
Yes
her name was Jill
And when I walked her home
Da doo ron ron ron da doo ron ron
I knew what she was thinking when she caught my eye
Da doo ron ron ron da doo ron ron
She looked so quiet but my oh my
Da doo ron ron ron da doo ron ron
Yes
she caught my eye
Yes
my oh my `
And when I walked her home
Da doo ron ron ron cla doo ron ron
Well
I picked her up at seven and she looked so fine
Da doo ron ron ron da doo ron ron
Someday soon I'm gonna make her mine
Da doo ron ron ron da doo ron ron
Yes
she looked so fine
Yes
I'm gonna make her mine
And when I walked her home
Da doo ron ron ron da doo ron ron
Da doo ron ron ron da doo ron ron
Da doo ron ron ron da doo ron ron

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

New Life Resolution

Do, or do not, there is no try.

My new resolution for my new life is to get serious about writing.

I resolve to write at least 1 short story or 1 chapter a week, devoting either Tuesday or Thursday lunch time to do it.

I had so much ideas in the past, I never got to work on any properly.  I have no idea what I should do ... Chinese history translation ... Chinese historical detective fiction ... modern thriller set in Asia ... children's story ... biographies of significant women in China's history ... or even a humour piece.

I don't know what I will do well in, but I resolve it doesn't matter.

I am certain I have no aim to rise high to management or senior management in any company.  My interests have always been in thinking, subjects that challenges the intellect.  I love to write, to debate, to argue, to formulate ideas, counter them, build them up, tear them down.

I think my passion in life is to write.

And I resolve to write.

A chapter a week.  I will write whatever I fancy each week.  I will see which topic or subject develops, and let it be.

I'm not going to sit down and plan meticulously a whole book now ... I might do that when I'm a professional, but not now.

I will experimenting, feel my way.  I may start half a dozen different writings in half a dozen week, but it doesn't matter.

They may never be completed, nor published even if completed, but it doesn't matter.

I will do it, because it is my passion.

I have dithered enough, I have procrastinated enough.

New Life begins  ...  NOW.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Work gripes: translating requirements and compliance into contractual clauses

Darn it, if I'm supposed to be writing legal contracts, my bosses should have sent me to Law school.

As PM, I did all that's needed to produce business requirements, technical requirements, delivery schedules, acceptance requirements, project management requirements, information security requirements etc.

But now it seemed I am also in charge of converting them into contractual terms that can be legally interpreted, and if not, they'd have to be dropped.

^#!@$%^&#$$^*&^^$%Y&@$%#%#^$@%^$%^$%!!!!!!

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Maybe Wednesday will be pizza nights ...

Good news that Snowylady is able to join a regular aqua-aerobics class, and able to attend all sessions since it started 4 weeks ago.

The last time she was able to do that was during her first pregnancy with Snowylass, and to be supportive of her, especially during the later stage of pregnancy, I spent the time swimming in the same pool.  Occassionally, I watched the group from the sideline, and tried to follow ...

I've done aerobics before, I've managed to job regularly and go to the gym.  But if invited, I'll say "No, thank you." to aqua aerobics ... it's no exercise, it's bloody murder.

Anyway, her Wednesday evening classes now gave the rest of the family a reason not to go to grandma's for dinner - we'd have our own dinner, I'd quickly shower and change the kids and we'd fetch tired mummy from the pool and bring her home for dinner.  If we go to grandma's, the kids will never be ready on time.

It also means it's up to me to get dinner ready - cooking is out of the question, so it's takeaways, but what kind?

It was by coincidence that I got pizza the first time - and saw how the kids loved it.  Coincidentally too, there's a couple of interesting places to get pizza nearby, Oishi and Casa Verde, both having promotions for takeaways.

Looks like Wednesday will be pizza nights for the kids - who'd imagine a 5 year old girl and a 3 year old boy can finish off a 10'-11' pizza all by themselves.  Fine by me, it just means I'll settle my dinner with a double-cheeseburger from MacD's instead, which I hope is less fattening than having pizza.

Of course, it's necessary for me to ensure the kids have a well-balanced meal.  Snowylass is okay, she'd follow instructions.  Snowylad is more difficult, I had to resort to making him eat slices of apples after he finished a slice a pizza and before he gets the next pizza slice.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Men should steer clear of catfights ...

Imagine a battle royale cat fight in tiny Singapore ... no one could have imagined it.

Any talk of cat fights here had always been limited to Caldecott Hill, tai-tai's functions and behind the catwalks.

Now no less than AWARE seems headed for one.  My only suggestion to malefolk affiliated to AWARE is to keep a low profile.

Was it a coup d'etat?  By no means, though the term had been bandied around freely.

But a coup is an *unconstitutional* means of takeover, and the election was not.

When it turned out the chairwoman who resigned was herself only a year-old member of AWARE, it speaks a lot about the membership of AWARE.

I've been in a Church where comm members remained the same for years, and that's not a healthy thing.

Most of the time though, it's because there's shortage of fresh blood willing to step up, like the AAS (Automobile Assoc of Singapore),

In AWARE's case, what's the whole point of the EOGM if it's gonna be a contest to see which side can recruit the most members in time for the EOGM? What do these new members really know about AWARE except being roped in by their friends to take sides?

And I thought the REDS and YELLOWS in Thailand were messy.

Still, it's about the only thing that might galvanise otherwise laidback complacent Singaporeans into activism.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Hard for a family man to keep fit ...

Progress Update: my exercise schedule had been seriously interrupted twice in the last 6 months - first during my annual year-end leave, second during very intense phase of my project in the month of March when I left user site as late as 10pm ...

It was a real drag regaining the momentum and the stamina after that ...

But can't complain about work 'cos I'm being told I'm lucky to have a job with lots of work to do ...

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Easter tale ...

Snowylass learned about the story of Easter from her school and church.  I hope she'll ask questions about it someday 'cos it's not simply Jesus died on Good Friday and resurrected on Easter Sunday.

Perhaps she'll ask about the hot cross bun too ... I better do some research.

I've already explained Santa Claus to her.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Recession + SERS = another business gone

Today, the 2 old ladies working in the laundramat at block 15 Holland Drive informed me this is their last month of operation.

Their block had been designated for SERS, and theirs is the last business to continue even after NTUC Fairprice had closed shop in Jan.

I've been their regular since I moved to my present location nearly 5 years ago, but a drop off laundry service that charges by weight like theirs is hard to find in Singapore - very hard to find.

I just have to find another way now to do the weekly bedsheets and towels ...  We have less time now that the kids are growing.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

No Boys Allowed - will this perpetuate gender differences or diminish gender inequality?

http://newpaper.asia1.com.sg/printfriendly/0,4139,197240,00.html?

The Electric New Paper :

NO BOYS ALLOWED

Students set out for Nepal base camp to meet S'pore's first all-women Everest team

INSPIRED by Singapore's first women's Everest team, a group of six secondary schoolgirls have set off on an adventure of their own - to the Everest Base Camp.


By Tay Shi'an
 
29 March 2009


INSPIRED by Singapore's first women's Everest team, a group of six secondary schoolgirls have set off on an adventure of their own - to the Everest Base Camp.

The girls from Christ Church Secondary School, who are between 15 to 17 years old, flew off yesterday to Nepal.

They will start trekking today from Lukla (2,800m above sea level), and hope to reach their destination at Kala Pattar (5,545m) in about 10 days.

There, they will meet up with their heroes - the six-member women's team, who are currently in Nepal on their own attempt to reach the Everest peak (8,848m).

Said Tan Wen Ting, 16: 'This is something very cool, a very rare chance. The guys in our school wanted to go, but it's an all-girls thing.'

They are accompanied by three female teachers and a female team leader from YMCA Singapore, which was engaged to organise the trip. They have been training hard for six months for this trip.

Twice a week - for up to three hours on Wednesdays and five hours on Saturdays - they trekked, climbed stairs, ran and cycled.

Ng Xin Fang, 17, said: 'Some parts were quite tough, but we managed to endure it.'

For example, climbing to the top of a 25-storey HDB block.

But the girls are no strangers to tough training.

Five of the six girls - Xin Fang, Wen Ting, Cherry Tan, Cheryl Koh, all 15, and Noriyuki Abdullah, 16 - are actively involved in sports CCAs.

The sixth, Priscilla Yau, 15, comes from a family of active hikers, and has already been on two other Nepal treks with her parents and siblings.

The girls also had to juggle school, CCA, exams, family and friends.

Three of them are in Seconday 4 and will be taking their O-level examinations this year.

Said Xin Fang: 'At the start, it was quite difficult to balance all the activities. But when I plotted out my own timetable, I still had time for studies.'

Blog

To encourage and motivate each other, they set up a blog at ebcgirls.blogspot.com.

As it's term time now, the girls will also be missing classes during the 18-day trip. They are set to return on 13 Apr.

To help them, intensive remedial programmes and makeup lessons during the June holidays have been arranged to ensure they catch up.

They will also be taking some worksheets to do during the trip.

Teacher Puah Mui Kiang, 40, said the school was inspired to organise this trip after the Singapore women's team went to the school in January last year to give a talk.

Christ Church, a centre of excellence in outdoor education, has been conducting regular expeditions over the last few years, including trips like the Australian Bushwalk, Beijing Ice Climb, Annapurna Base Camp in Nepal and Mount Kinabalu.

They decided to make this an all-girls team to coincide with the Singapore women's team's Everest climb, so it would be more meaningful.

Ms Puah said the selection process included physical training, an aptitude test, teachers' recommendation, interviews, and assessment of the girls' commitment towards training and working as a team.

The school also met with the girls' parents in January, and said they were very supportive about the trip, even if their children had to miss school.

Parent Mr Yau Mun Loong, 45, a sales manager, said: 'Two weeks is nothing. This is part of learning also - it's not necessary to learn only from textbooks.'

The trip costs about $3,000 per student, which is partly sponsored by the Ministry of Education. The students used cash or Edusave to pay for the remaining amount.

Ms Puah said that after all their physical and mental preparation, the biggest challenge will be adapting their bodies to the harsh climate and high altitude.

They have taken along blood pressure monitoring devices to keep an eye on the girls.

Because of their young age, the team has hired one porter for every two girls to help carry their 19kg worth of gear and other belongings.

They will also be staying in lodges along the route, rather than camp out.

Marathon runners

The four women accompanying the girls are also in good shape to take care of them.

The three teachers - Ms Puah and Ms Tay Hoon Lay, 29, and Ms Lim Lee Hoon, 31, are all marathon runners, while YMCA's Ms Melissa Mak, 28, runs triathlons.

But the girls are not fazed by the difficulty of their route.

Cherry said: 'It's not about reaching the base camp. It's about realising the potential in me. I must learn to push myself.'

Said Ms Mak: 'It's a joy working with such inspired young women... whether they make it to the highest point of their trek or not, they are still champs in their own right to me.'
 

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Saturday, March 28, 2009

It never pours but it rains ... in this episode: wayward domestic employees

When term reopened for the Snowypups, Snowylass told us one of her classmate had his "aunt" ran away with his piggy bank while his family was in Australia.  It's such a curious coincidence that less than a week later, the same thing happened to my mother-in-law.

Since work became hectic, I was not able to pick up the kids as early as usual.  On Friday, also thanks to very heavy traffic along PIE, Stevens Road and Bt Timah Rd, it was after half-past six when I got to their childcare.  By the time we got to their grandma's place for dinner, it was almost seven, and we got there the same time as my sister-in-law who returned home.

My mother-in-law told us that when she was showering, the maid left without locking the front gate, and the day before, had said something about wanting to go out to buy some stuff.  We thought she was skiving, and only realised something was seriously wrong when not only did she take my mother-in-law's mobile phone, but my sister-in-law also found her ring missing.

I called the mobile phone but only heard background sounds when connected ... first time it was "Chinese Garden", second time "Boon Lay".  We still didn't feel too worried until my brother-in-law came back and could not find her passport too.

This was about the 4th maid my in-law had, but the 1st from Myanmar and 1st who could speak Mandarin.  Earlier maids were from Filipino and Indonesia and displayed such surly attitudes taking care of my father-in-law who had dementia and stroke that my in-laws tried for a while without maid.

My mother-in-law told me this Myanmarese maid has a brother working in JB and thought that's where she'd head for.  Leaving my kids with her, I drove with my brother-in-law to Boon Lay, to see if we can spot her among some of the pick-ups for coaches going to Malaysia, and then we headed to Tuas 2nd link ourselves.  Along the way, he called the police, but the police IO apparently didn't know the proper procedures.  Another pal told my brother-in-law that Myanmar passports need visa to get into Malaysia, so it was a little bit of assurance that even if she passed through Singapore's immigration, she should be refused entry at the Malaysian end.

We got to the 2nd Link, but not knowing the place, I had no choice but to join the queue of cars going to Malaysia while my brother-in-law went down to the ICA office to speak to the officers.  Eventually, my turn came and I explained to the immigration officer in the booth that I'm not there to go to Malaysia but to make a report to the ICA.  (I didn't even have my passport).

Probably not the first time it happened for them, the ICA officers took our ICs, instructed me to park the car at the side, and then explained to that they can only put the maid's passport number on their blacklist if the police HQ made a request to ICA HQ.

It was certainly a novel experience having an ICA officer running (literally) ahead of the car to show us the way out of the 2nd Link.

I drove my brother-in-law to Central Police Divisional HQ to join his wife who was making the report.  Later, we learned since the maid didn't take the FIN, she won't be allowed to pass Singapore immigration anyway even if she had her passport and the passport was not blacklisted.

Which means she either had to go to Myanmar embassy to get some alternative way of exit, or smuggle out or use fake documents.

My wife was upset and wondered how the maid thought she could get away with it, and how it could be worth becoming a fugitive.

I don't know much about the Myanmarese, but I do know a few years back before Snowylad was born, a neighbour of ours caught their Filipino maid red-handed pilfering their money.  The maid was deported but somehow managed to come back to Singapore.

Taking care of my bed-ridden father-in-law who can't speak is not easy, and my mother-in-law is exacting in requiring the maid to follow instructions.  But she was not abused or deprived.  Yes, she wanted to quit, but there are proper procedures for it and she was required to fulfil a minimum period of service, which she didn't want to.

At first, we were glad that there was a maid who could speak Mandarin to my mother-in-law.  In the end ...

My brother-in-law went to the maid agency today and they are going to get another maid from Indonesia ... in 2 weeks' time.

For them, they'll have to take more precautions.

For me, I'll just have to bring my kids to my in-laws less so to trouble them less.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Business downturn measures by my company

It was announced to us that subjecting to agreement signed with the unions, staff would be required to take 1 day's leave every month from May 2009.  Such monthly leaves cannot be taken on consecutive days across the months.  I.e., if I take 31 May leave for month of May, there must be a break for my June's leave.  If I also take June 1, it is not considered as June's monthly leave.  For those whose annual leave is insufficient, they will be required to go on no-pay leave monthly.

The rational is not really explained all that well.

The main reasoning is that it is the "cover story" presented to the Board that since our business volume is down, we need measures to deal with surplus manpower company wide, and this is one way to do it without pay-cuts.

By chipping away our leaves, one possible result is get staff to take no-pay leave if they want to take long-holidays.  Another target is to prevent staff accumulating leaves for long absences from work, now and in the future.

While I appreciate the move to avoid pay-cut, the problem is that the concept of "surplus manpower" is not really company wide.  For my division, we're busier than ever, with as one of our regular vendors put it, an astonishing number of RFPs continued to be published in recent weeks, given the business climate and all.

My work as PM (Project Manager, not Prime Minister) has been so hectic that it affected not only my exercise programme, but also made me late to fetch the kids from childcare.  A fortnight ago, I couldn't even fetch them.  Fortunately, Snowylady was on course and could get off at more regular hours to fetch them, though for one particular day, she couldn't do it and the childcare was gracious enough to have one of the teachers send Snowylass and Snowylad to my in-laws in a taxi, and declined to accept any reimbursement (we felt obliged, so we took care of the school's pet terrapin for a week during their term break).

Monday, March 16, 2009

March 15, 2008, Sunday, 5:30pm GMT+7 : Passing of a generation

Surely it means something when the last of one's living grandparents passed away.

Her husband, my maternal grandfather, passed away more than three decades ago from illness, when I was too young to know what was happening, and somehow, excluded from the funeral even though I was there.  Strange, I thought later when I grew up.  All traditions I know of dictated a role for the oldest grandchild, be it a maternal grandchild or paternal grandchild, yet nothing was told to us, and nothing was asked of us.  Perhaps arrangements were simplified - my youngest aunt was going to get married, and some things had to be facilitated.

About a decade later, 1987, my paternal grandfather passed away.  This time, I was across the sea, doing my O-levels prelims.  It was my maternal grandmother flew in to mind us brothers.

And almost a decade later, it was my paternal grandmother who passed on.  Again, I did not go back for the funeral, having received the news when I was in the midst of assisting in a wedding where I was the best man.

My maternal grandmother was the only grandparent who saw me get married and had my first child.

But irreconciable differences severed relations between my and my parents, and she became a casualty.  Mindful that she was dependant on her children, and their attitudes towards me and my wife, and their nosiness, it was a difficult decision yet one I had to take forsaking regrets to keep her at an arm's length.

My cousins cannot understand, though they tried to intervene.

When my last grandmother became very ill in recent months, I was urged to give her a call - yet it slipped my mind in the midst of the busiest time at work I ever had in my career.

When I got a message on Saturday that she had been hospitalised again and those of us in Singapore who wants to had better take the next available flight, I knew it was too late.  I could only beg God to tell her that I wish her to be at peace.

With her passing on Sunday marks the end of a generation to me.

All of my grandparents passed away and I was not present, and will not, be present at the funeral at any one of them.  The first three are circumstancial, but not the fourth.  I chose not to be there because I do not want to meet any relatives there, especially my parents and one particular aunt.

And I will not be there either when my own parents go, such is the state of things between us.

I had learned before through attending wakes that funerals are less for the dead and more for the living to come to terms with the passing of someone close.

I turned to my wife and told her I am depending on her to relate to our children her experiences at her grandmother's funeral, and when the time comes, at her parents', both who are still here.

Do I not have feelings?  Yes.  But things are such that I am choosing not to partake in the normal human experiences when their grandparents or parents pass away.

A freak.  An abnormal person.  I can only console myself that almost nothing in my whole life have ever been normal, normal like the normal life my neighbours or classmates had known.

Even now, I am struggling, and my wife struggling along with me, to bring about normalcy to our children's lives.

My tears finally came out last evening, but they were tears of anger at those who are responsible for the state of things.

Having been informed of her deterioration, I only wanted for my grandmother to be at peace ...

Sunday, March 1, 2009

ST 2009-03-01 Grad trips still a must, but on a smaller budget?

Hhhmmmmpppphhh - this reminded me of my own final undergrad year.  Among some of us who were mugging away, there were many who were also booking for the post-exam holiday tours, some as long as 5 weeks in Europe.

I could only look on enviously as I did not have such means.  And not all my friends who did it were sponsored by parents - some had been saving for such a trip for years, from giving tuition, piano lessons and working during the holidays.  It's just that at that time, as a foreigner on student pass, I was not allowed to work.  The last semblance of an income I had was during my internship, and that was just enough for my transport and meals, and printing my FYP reports.

Incidentally, I also never knew there was such a thing as "grad trip" until the tour companies came round conducting fairs on campus.

Anyway, the day after my last paper, I had an entry test with a prospective employer, whose applicaiton form I filled in hurriedly the night before after coming home late from celebrating at a school friend's house.  I hadn't even gotten anyone to be my refereee, so I put "N/A" in those columns.  The week after was an interview with the company, and then almost four weeks of no news from them while I was busily scouring Classified Ads and sending out application letters by the dozens, blissfully unaware that the then recent postal rate revision meant many of my mails had insufficient postage.

As it happened, that first company must have had their acceptance of some candidates rejected, and they offered me, a second choice candidate, an opening to report for work on 27 May 1993.  (Serve them right too, the company rejected all applicants during the first round of recruitment drive in December, and that round had the best students applying!)   It gave me just about a week to make a quick visit to my grandmothers in Indonesia before starting work.

Well, finally, I thought, I would have the opportunity I'd always dreamed of to travel around the world.  My first job turns out to be with an airline with staff travel benefits/privileges.  At least, it gave me some consolation and something to look forward to when my pals who went on holidays came back with stories and photos of their trips.  This was in 1993 - before there was blogging, and internet was primarily in textual UI and only available through university computers or MNCs, even before there were cybercafes.

Well, as it turned out, not so fast, buster.

First, I also signed up to do postgrad courses which consumes almost all my annual leave.

Second, I also learned that the air-ticket is just a small part of the whole travel budget, especially for a novice traveller like me who did not want to join tour groups.

Third, my pals just weren't too keen to join me to jaunt off to distant destinations after we all started work - for those who had already gone, it's "been there, done that."  For the rest, they didn't have the advantage of working in an airline, needed more time to save for it or weren't ready to splurge.

Of course it would never be the same kind of fun as going with a big bunch of fellow schoolmates, but I'd still like to take that trip someday and travel around countryside of Europe.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Wifi wrongly connected could have cost man US$27,000

http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner/post/Man-gets-27-000-phone-bill-after-watching-Bears?urn=nfl,144070

Wed Feb 25, 2009 6:29 pm EST

Man gets $27,000 phone bill after watching Bears game on web

Apparently, AT&T had charged Brudick the international rate for the access. At two cents per kilobyte, the total charge was $27,788.93 for the time spent watching the game, which breaks down to about $6,500 per Rex Grossman interception.

Burdick pled his case to AT&T, saying he was still at the port and not in roaming territory. After speaking with nearly a half-dozen people at the company, he managed to get the bill down to $6,000, even though he provided documentation that he was still technically in Miami at the time he used his wireless card.

Eventually, the whole matter was settled after Burdick contacted Team Fixer at the Chicago Sun-Times and they contacted the phone company. AT&T acknowledged its mistake, saying that Burdick's device was picking up a signal it shouldn't have been.

At least Burdick's efforts were worth it. The Bears beat the Lions that afternoon, 27-23.

(Thanks to The Gadget Hound via Engadget HD for the tip.)

Monday, February 16, 2009

Pet peeves: unended comic story arcs

Darn it, yet another story arc unended.

The last time, it was Way of the Rat from Crossgen.  I managed to use some of the drawings inside for the CHF RPG back then, but the story itself was alas unfinished, and there was only volume #1 of the TPB available from NLB.

This time, it's Battle Chasers by Jose Madureira.  It was originally published under Wildstorm's Cliffhanger, and then Image Comics.

Now, I can't fault artists for trying to have some creative control over their stories and characters, which was why they tried starting new comics company of their own before financial and management and operational demands force them to sell to bigger companies or go into bankruptcies.  But having such release, hiatus, release, hiatus, really sucks.

Sometimes, financial viability isn't the main concern.  Even Alan Moore's League of Extraordinary Gentlemen took years to complete, and years before volume 2 came out.

Unlike large comic houses, solo ventures (not exactly solo, the writers had support of artists too) put enormous demand on creativity and imagination on the independents who worked without fallback teams.

The downside of fallback teams of course mean storylines can go way off tangent, even if solo efforts occassionally mean some internal inconsistency.

I suppose the most successful "solo ventures" (creator-owned) to date must be credited to Sergio Aragonés' Groo the Wanderer, which lasted for decades (with large gaps in between), followed by his collaborationist Stan Sakai's Usagi Yojimbo.

No doubt, one must be thankful for little blessings whenever there is actually a new release of such gems.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Great classic example of "Think on your feet" and "Public speaking"




While most of the attention were focussed on Julio, the student and part-time worker @ McD's, the real winner here is Obama demonstrating a classic example on how to "Think on your feet" while responding to questions during a public engagement.

This video has great potential to become one of the most used course materials by consultants doing corporate trainings. I've been to enough of those sessions to guess - and even if they don't, I will, the next time I get assigned to do some public speaking.

For starters, notice how he chose the person asking the question - profiling. I don't know who had asked him questions before Julio, but from appearances, Julio fits the profile of a young student who is old enough to start out working, and is aware of the impact of the economy.

If she had been there, and is a guy, my friend Jules instead of Julio might have been chosen.

Next, after listening to the question, Obama bought himself a little time to think before answering the question *directly*.

His first response was an affirmation of what the young chap did - doing work that is, implied, beneath his full potential and capability, and at a wage lower than many other jobs.

There is nothing wrong per se of course in commending Julio's willingness to work *hard* (*hard* is a term introduced by Obama, not Julio), to take on a job that is not the most ideal in terms of job satisfaction, career prospects or pay.

In fact, it is a good thing to do, and in some scenarios, that could be the best message or consolation he could give if he actually had nothing concrete to offer the person.

But there is denying the benefit the 20-25 seconds "extra time" gained by Obama before he actually tried to answer the question.

When Obama actually answered the question - there is nothing to actually confirm whether his plan would actually benefit Julio directly.

The tax break is more directed at the employers, the health care is something subjective and many weary Americans are sceptical whether it could materialise in a form that benefit student workers, and the tax rebates for education again may only be to Julio under certain circumstances.

But Obama was able to link his overall plan in 3 areas - employment, health care and education, to the answer, even though in actual implementation, Julio may not be in a position (satisfy some criteria or otherwise) to benefit from it.

Julio will have to do some homework to know for sure.

But for now, at least both sides got something out of this exchange.
Obama got to promote his plan and looked good for assuring the student.
Julio got some praises (or consolation), (vague) promises, and as it turned out, job offers from this exposure.(http://content.usatoday.com/communities/theoval/post/2009/02/62687523/1?se=yahoorefer)

Great training material!

Monday, February 9, 2009

S$100 good as lost

Darn it!!!

I only discovered my 2nd pair of running shoes missing this morning, and thinking back, I must have left it in the shower room at my company's sports club last Friday.

When I checked with them, no one had turned it in.

Darn it, it took me a long time to locate a good pair of Asics running shoes in Singapore that is on sale.

I'm sure now there's some dishonest guys around the sports club, or maybe a kleptomaniac.

Previously, through carelessness, on separate occassions, I dropped an exercise towel, and the right hand exercise glove, en route between the shower room and the carpark, and they were mysteriously gone too.  I mean, who'd want to steal an exercise towel or the right hand of a pair of exercise glove???!!!!

I hate it man - it's gonna be one of those things that's gonna gnaw at me until I either find them back (fat hope) or replace the shoes.

Almost angry enough to want to curse the fellow who nicked the shoes to trip and break his neck.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Anyone knows how an RPC utility compatible with Toshiba Portege?

Good news is : Snowylady got assigned a Toshiba Portege laptop with DVD driver - which is great because the DVD player in my desktop at home is bust.

Bad news is the RPC utility I used in the desktop is unable to reset the change counter in the Toshiba, which means I am unable to reset DVD region code once I changed it 4 times.

I don't buy DVDs, but I take quite a few on loan from National Library, which offered DVDs from regions 1, 3 and 4.

Right now, I got Murder, She Wrote Season 1, but I dared not view it until I can get hold of a RPC utility to enable me to reset the DVD regions in the Toshiba Portege at will.

Can anyone help?

DVD region codes are a pain for computers, and their legal status is actually challenged Downunder.

Thanks.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

The Star 2009-01-10 & ST 2009-01-06 : "Not the time to flaunt your riches"

Source : http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2009/1/10/focus/2975672&sec=focus

Saturday January 10, 2009

Not the time to flaunt your riches

Insight Down South
By SEAH CHIANG NEE


A high-ranking civil servant’s account about spending RM110,124 for him, his wife and son to learn fine French cooking has blown up in his face.

A GOVERNMENT elite has stirred ripples by talking of his expensive cooking lessons in France, revealing how hard times are deepening class differences in Singapore.

Inadvertently creating controversy was the permanent secretary at the Environment and Water Resources Ministry, one of the highest ranking civil servants.

Tan Yong Soon had related how he had spent S$46,000 (RM110,124) for himself, his wife and son for a five-day trip to learn fine French cooking.

In ordinary times, this leisurely – but rather insensitive – account would not have amounted to anything much but these days are, of course, far from normal.

Two factors invited criticism to flare.

First, he was seen as flaunting wealth, obtained from his high pay, at a time when Singapore is suffering one of its worst slumps in history.

Many thousands of workers are still losing jobs or suffering wage cuts.

And, secondly, government leaders are accused of being hugely overpaid, as a result of which some are no longer able to relate to the common people.

Tan was also accused of “boasting” about his elitist background when he wrote that his wife was “a senior investment counsellor at a bank” and his son, a soon-to-be student at America’s prestigious Brown University.

“Taking five weeks’ leave from work is not as difficult as one thinks,” Tan said.

“Most times, when you are at the top, you think you are indispensable. But if you are a good leader who has built up a good team, it is possible to go away for five weeks or even longer.”

Singaporeans were largely unimpressed. Some were angry. His fling at France’s prestigious Le Cordon Bleu in the face of rising poverty is the latest example of how out of tune some of Singapore’s well-paid elites are with heartland realities.

About 20% of affluent Singapore’s population lives in poverty with welfare payout to the poorest of the lot limited to a mere S$290 (RM694) a month.

When a government backbencher wanted to have it increased, a Cabinet minister refused, demanding: “How much do you want?”

Many Singaporeans were already unhappy with the multi-million dollar salaries paid to Cabinet ministers and top civil servants even in happier times.

(Despite a recent cut of up to 19%, the government here remains, by far, the highest paid in the world.)

The pay issue remains very controversial and contributes to the class division in society, a them-verses-us mentality that has apparently sharpened as a result of the economic crisis.

The whole episode has shown how the class – and social – divide is widening in high-tech Singapore.

The controversy over Tan’s trip has political implications for a government that is pondering over whether or not to call for a snap general election, which is not due until 2010-11.

In other developed countries from Britain to Japan, it would not have any impact since it involves a civil servant, not a political leader.

But the system is very different in Singapore, where the line separating the two hardly exists.

The Chinese characters “zeng fu” are used to describe the political leadership as well as the civil service.

Some questioned why Tan’s choice of spending his own wealth should be the public’s business – but not many are buying into it.

Established blogger Redbean articulated: “Tan is no ordinary, rich Singaporean. He is a senior civil servant ... and part of the governing elite.

“(He) should be seen as one who would be able to empathise with ordinary Singaporeans who are going through tough times ... (when) the Prime Minister is preparing the people for some belt-tightening and ‘bitter medicine’.”

Besides, if Tan had wished he should have spent his money at home to help the troubled economy rather than abroad, some believed.

Tan’s is by no means the only example of elitist snobbery, nor the worse.

A bigger controversy flared up four years ago when Wee Shu Min, the teenage daughter of a Member of Parliament, came across the blog of a Singaporean who wrote that he was worried about losing his job.

She called Derek Wee “one of many wretched, under-motivated, over-assuming leeches in our country.

“If you’re not good enough, life will kick you in the b***s ... Our society is, I quote, ‘far too survival of fittest’,” said Shu Min, who hailed from the elite Raffles Junior College.

“... Unless you are an arm-twisting commie bully, which, given your whiny, middle-class, under-educated penchant, I doubt,” she added before signing off with “please, get out of my elite uncaring face”.

The girl was flamed by hundreds of Singaporeans, but when her father Wee Siew Kim – an MP in Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s constituency – told a newspaper that “her basic point is reasonable”, the row moved well beyond blogosphere.

A news agency, in reporting this, said: “The episode highlighted a deep rift in Singapore society and was an embarrassment for the ruling People’s Action Party and PM Lee.”

Raffles JC, which has produced several state leaders, had another brush with student snobbishness.

When a student found that a Raffles girl was dating a boy from a lower-achieving neighbourhood school, he hit out at him and had a message for lower-ranking students everywhere.

“Quit trying to climb the social ladder by dating students from top schools.”

There are signs the class distinction is getting into some young minds.

A reporter recounted how her friend was shaken when her young daughter came home one day and mentioned in passing that poor people were “stupid, obviously”.

And the ST article which led to the hoo-ha ... http://singaporeenquirer.sg/?p=985

Cooking up the holiday spirit

By Tan Yong Soon

For a holiday with a difference, a civil servant learns to cook at the famous Le Cordon Bleu in Paris with his family

With a mischievous twinkle in her eyes, the young Indonesian woman asked me: ‘So, are you having fun?’

It was end November, in the second week of my basic culinary course at Le Cordon Bleu Paris, the famous cooking school. During a short break between classes, I told her I was there with my wife and son for the fun of it. We were not preparing for careers as chefs or planning to open a restaurant. But my body language showed signs of fatigue and weariness, not those of someone who was having fun.

I decided to attend the culinary course in June last year. My 20-year-old son Yanqiang had discussed with my wife Cher Ling, a senior investment counsellor at a bank, what he wanted to do between early November, when he would finish National Service, and August this year, when he would begin his studies at Brown University in the United States. He wanted to spend the time meaningfully.

Cooking was always one of the activities he considered. He had been interested in patisserie, mostly in eating, but also baking occasionally.

We found out that Le Cordon Bleu Paris runs intensive courses in culinary and patisserie from mid-November to December. These are the regular three-month classes they run but compressed into five weeks, with no loss in content.

To my surprise and theirs, I told them I would sign up for the course with them. (Taking five weeks’ leave from work is not as difficult as one thinks. Most times, when you are at the top, you think you are indispensable. But if you are a good leader who has built up a good team, it is possible to go away for five weeks or even longer.)

It would be quality family time for the three of us. My daughter Yanying, 23, would join us in Paris in our last week, since she could not take such long leave because she had just started working.

My hobby is not cooking. I do not even use the oven in my kitchen. My cooking skills are limited to simple Chinese dishes, such as stir-frying vegetables and steaming fish, which I learnt as a student in England and have hardly practised since. And while I do enjoy French cuisine and wine, my favourite food is local hawker fare.

But signing up for the intensive course would get me out of my comfort zone. Little did I know how uncomfortable it would make me. This was not a lesson where you attend a demonstration, practise a little and then sample the food with some wine.

Sore body, cuts and burns

The basic culinary course comprises 30 demonstration lessons, each followed by a practical. Each lesson lasts three hours. Including theory lessons and a visit to the market, it means every day there are three lessons - two demonstration and one practical, or two practical and one demo. It means 8.30am to 6.30pm almost every day, with an hour for lunch.

At the end of my first week, my body was sore, not counting the burns and occasional cuts on my hand.

Mentally, it was also challenging. The restaurant kitchen is a very stressful place.

On the first day, a Dutch classmate told me he had read in the British papers that in July last year, a Chinese man attending Cordon Bleu London held up his class with a knife when he failed his basic culinary course.

He had used up his savings to enrol in the course and was greatly distressed that he could not graduate, and his career as a chef had been put in jeopardy.

Sceptical, I decided to Google the incident. Instead, I found a Daily Telegraph report from June last year about a trainee of French Algerian descent who had threatened to kill himself with a kitchen knife after learning he had failed the test in the intermediate course at Cordon Bleu and was denied a second chance.

So this was not going to be a piece of cake.

The French are very serious about their cuisine, to the extent of reportedly wanting it listed by Unesco as part of the world’s cultural heritage.

The chefs at Cordon Bleu, which has been teaching French cooking skills in Paris since 1895, are excellent. They teach by personally cooking the dishes and explaining the finer points as they do so. At the end of each lesson, the food is presented to the class. Students quickly photograph the dish, before it is apportioned out to them to sample.

One student asked an instructor what he could expect to do after graduating, or what return should he expect from the investment in the school fees, which are not cheap.

Brutally honest, the chef said that even graduates who had gained the diploma (that is, passed the basic, intermediate and superior courses) would have to start from the lowest rung in a restaurant kitchen and work their way up.

How far and fast they go will be up to their performance and dedication, and whether they are lucky to have a good chef to mentor them.

Hectic and strict

Who would enrol in such a course? The intensive course is not too popular as it is extremely hectic and does not allow you time to enjoy Paris.

An American architect in his 50s had signed on for the full diploma: basic, intermediate and superior, and will be in the school until June this year. He cooks in his spare time and wants to cook professionally for clients.

A 45-year-old Dutch chemist wanted a break to think about his mid-career options. A Spanish medical doctor wanted to hone her cooking skills. There were also others who aspired to become chefs.

The school was very strict about attendance and punctuality. You cannot be late for class for more than 15 minutes, whatever the reason, or you will be marked absent. If you miss the demo, you will not be allowed to do the practical. Miss more than six lessons and you are out of the course - the fees are not refundable.

And there would be no chewing of gum in the classroom and kitchen, and no smoking within the building.

Brutal stress of Michelin stars

All practical lessons are assessed. These make up 45 per cent of the final score. A written test towards the end of the course accounts for another 10 per cent and the final practical exam rounds up the remaining 45 per cent. The top five students of each course are announced at a graduation ceremony.

After the first 11 practical sessions, we were each given an assessment sheet, which listed our individual marks on various aspects, such as techniques (how we trussed the chicken, how we cut the vegetables), organisation (Were we methodical? Was our table top clean or messy?) and of course, the taste and presentation of the dish.

It also listed the grades of every student in the course. I was right at the bottom. My wife was second and the Spanish doctor was first in our section of eight students. The American architect from the other section topped the whole class.

My son was ranked in the middle of his patisserie course.

We were encouraged to eat the food that we cooked and we did, taking it home to have, usually, with a baguette and a bottle of red wine at the one-bedroom serviced apartment we stayed in. Baguettes and wine are cheap in France. A baguette costs less than 1 euro (S$2) and a decent bottle of wine less than 10 euros.

We also enjoyed the desserts baked by our son.

Occasionally, we would buy simple Chinese takeaways on the way home. A simple combination of plain rice, vegetable and meat for the three of us would cost about 20 euros, three to four times more expensive than what our hawker centres offer.

On weekends, we went out to restaurants to sample the fare. After all, we were in Paris to learn about food.

Le Cinq at the Four Seasons Hotel George V used to be a three-Michelin star place, but lost its third star in 2007. When it did not regain the lost star last year, a new chef was installed.

The food here was very good. Even better was the impeccable service. When the waiter brought us bread and poured olive oil in our saucers, I remarked casually to him that I thought that butter would be served in French restaurants with the bread, instead of olive oil. Smiling, he said, ‘No, monsieur’ but returned with not one but two plates of butter - one salted, the other with seaweed. The delightful service continued throughout the entire lunch.

Our Japanese classmate said she was often puzzled why French restaurant service was far better than Japan’s when French service in general lagged behind Japan’s - she said she could recharge her mobile phone at most shopping centres in Japan when the battery was low, but she could not do so in Paris.

I can think of one reason: the Michelin guide and the intense, sometimes brutal, competition that the public ranking engenders. One chef handed back his stars rather than have to live with the stress. And a few years ago, a chef committed suicide when rumours circulated that he was about to lose his stars.

There was not much time to visit museums during this trip to Paris, but I managed a visit to the Musee D’Orsay, a perennial favourite of mine.

My son, with his greater energy and because his patisserie course had only 20 lessons, visited many museums and sights in Paris.

When the practical exam approached, we were given a list of 10 dishes among the 30 we learnt - we could be tested on any one of them. On the day itself, it came down to two dishes and we drew lots on which dish we each had to prepare within 2� hours. An external panel of judges assessed us.

The school announced that failures would be notified immediately after the exam, presumably so that they need not turn up at the graduation ceremony.

The Spanish doctor emerged top, my wife second. The American architect was third and to my greatest surprise, and I suspect everyone else’s, I came in fifth.

The patisserie results followed. My son came in second in his class of 34.

Exciting blend of old and new

My brief Paris experience reinforces what some scholars have described as the dual nature of the French, accommodating both tradition and change.

Tradition is a strength which is treasured in France. The Cordon Bleu harks back to 1895, even though it was bought over by the Cointreau family in 1988.

One restaurant traced its history to 1784, more than 200 years ago.

The last time I came to Paris with my family six years ago, the restaurants were filled with smoke.

Since January last year, every restaurant has been smoke-free, by law. Well, most restaurants, anyway.

At a small Corsican restaurant we went to after class, the owner was very friendly, the food delicious and cheap, but we would not want to go back because of the smoke. The recalcitrant owner smoked as heavily as the few customers inside.

Yes, the French still smoke heavily. There are tabac (French for tobacco) shops everywhere, and nearly every adult in the street smokes.

Yet tradition does not prevent change. New ideas and energy are injected all the time. Paris is a beautiful city because of its conservation of old buildings and tradition and yet new buildings and new ideas sprout throughout the city.

I.M. Pei’s Pyramid at the Louvre is an outstanding example but there are many. France continues to excite because it blends the new and the old.

stlife@sph.com.sg

  • The writer is the permanent secretary of the Ministry of Environment and Water Resources.

    Source: Straits Times

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