Sunday, September 30, 2007

More casualties in Burma


Source: The Irrawaddy

The Irrawaddy is an online news source about political happenings in Burma. It's maintained, presumably, by people who are pro-democracy & freedom. The website was disabled by a Trojan-type virus over the past 2 days. I wonder who'd do that?

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Saturday, September 29, 2007

Fighting Peacock

Shot in cold blood

Video footage on the website Democratic Voice of Burma appears to show the Japanese journalist, Kenji Nagai, being shot deliberately at close range by soldiers of the Burmese military.
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Friday, September 28, 2007

Another martyr for journalism


Source: Reuters

A Japanese photojournalist for APF was shot dead by the Burmese military while covering a portion of the current nation-wide protest.

When will this nonsense end?

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Tense situation in Burma


Source: dathana.blogspot.com

We are all hoping the current situation in Burma would not be a repeat of 1988. Dictatorship and oppression must go. The Burmese people have been under an iron hand for too long. I'm looking forward to the day when people there would be free to sit in front of their own homes, to see their children play in the yard.

This blog has news & photos of the unfolding events as well as links to other blogs monitoring the situation in Rangoon and other cities across the country. Please help spread the news online so that more people become aware of this. If possible, please provide anonymous proxy links to these courageous bloggers because the military junta has blocked access to sites like Blogspot from within Burma.

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Thursday, September 20, 2007

The beginning and end of summer


Source: The Internet Encyclopedia of Science


The Sun crosses the Equator in a few days' time on its southward journey. September 23rd to be precise. Actually, to be strictly correct, the Sun doesn't cross the Equator. It's more like the Earth reaching a portion of her orbit around the Sun such that parts of the Earth's surface around the Equatorial region would face the Sun directly at noon on September 23rd. Those who spoke Latin named this day Equinox, from aequus (equal), nox (night), meaning there would be equal number of day and night hours in a single day.

In another three months the Chinese will be celebrating the end of another year. They call that winter solstice in the northern hemisphere. Longer nights ahead.

Of course, things are reversed in the southern hemisphere.

On a more practical side, it also means that the sun will no longer shine directly into my living room. Cooler daytime temperatures are definitely welcomed.

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Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Secularism

What does it mean to live in a secular environment?

1. Where people do not tell you what you can or cannot believe or do?

or

2. Where people frown upon the practise of any form of belief system?

So, what does it mean to live in a "secular" environment?

Sunday, September 16, 2007

gagging them early


Source: Google imagine search

So this overworked person in my company wrote to the press, complaining about tough conditions in the industry. Unfortunately the local propaganda rag does not publish anonymous letters.

The resulting manhunt and inquisition was a phenomenon to behold, with the deputy CEO and department heads going berserk.

So much for encouraging independent thought...

Sunday, September 02, 2007

icon of the last century


Source: amitp

at least it is to me.

I was up til early this morning, enjoying an extended period of holiday from work. And hunching over the computer through the night always brings back memories of my boyhood, when I hunched over my first personal computer (similar to the one pictured above), trying desperately to beat that level of Load Runner or solve part of the dungeon in Ultima IV.

Staying up late reminds me of my age.

Gotta sleep early...


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Saturday, September 01, 2007

887


Source: Wikipedia

A very Royston Tan-esque situation happened at the annual company function yesterday. Yes, this company that I sell 8 hours per day of my soul to is slightly different, prefering to avoid the year-end to hold its annual dinner.

Anyway, I arrived very fashionably late, stumbling into the ballroom midway through the boss' speech. As luck would have it, the main entrance (where I made mine) was on stage left.

So, I signed my attendance and dutifully took the door gift and lucky draw number, which was one shy of the triple-8 combination. The first prize this year consisted of:

1. $500 voucher for IT products
2. The new GPS-enabled Nokia phone
3. A bottle of premier wine with a 3-figure price tag

Guess which number was drawn for the first prize?

Guess which joker with the winning number lost his ticket stub?