Friday 15 December 2006

Dubai, here we are!

It’s always a thrill to move. At least, to me. But that’s probably cos I’m so used to it, having moved around a fair bit in my life. I grew up moving practically every three years, uprooting myself and getting into a new school, adjusting to a new place, and making new friends. A large part of my temperament and personality has been affected by this background. And I’m not afraid to leave my family “behind”. I was in boarding school from nine to twelve years of age, so I’ve adjusted to that before.

This move will be harder on Nany though. When she went to Penang for a year to do her teacher training stint, it was the furthest she’d been from her family. So this is a big move for her, coming all the way to Dubai.

So, here we are. At least it’s a Muslim country, so food isn’t going to be an issue. We still have to adapt to the local customs (Friday prayers are done slightly differently here), and the local shops. Language isn’t too much of an issue, since English is widely used here. I don’t foresee us having any problems on that front.

The “apartment” unit we’ve been assigned by the company isn’t large, but at least it’s just us. We don’t have to share accommodations, unlike some of my other colleagues. It’s also the first place to call “ours”, so there’s an excitement to that too.

Big changes, and an exciting time ahead.

Saturday 21 October 2006

A’isyah’s 1st birthday

This is a big occasion! It’s the point when we stop describing her age in months, and start using years. :-) No longer “x months old”, but now, “a year plus”. To celebrate, A’isyah decided to start walking.

And we had a family dinner at KGPA. It’s becoming something of a favourite for my family; we even had a buka puasa there recently. The buffet spread’s certainly not bad.

We had planned on adjourning to Damansara after dinner, but the weather didn’t cooperate. When we exited the dining hall we noticed that it had started raining heavily while we were eating inside. Since we had the cake and the main presents with us anyway, we decided to just do our thing right there at the external dining area. So we commandeered a round table and took pictures. A’isyah sat down on the table and started playing with her new gifts straight away.

I think she had the best time of all. Which is a good thing. :-)

Wednesday 16 August 2006

Dell recalls laptop batteries

Heard this bit on the news this morning on my drive to work. They mentioned the largest safety recall in the history of consumer electronics, for Dell batteries manufactured by Sony.

I remember coming across some articles about spontaneously combusting Dell laptops. This was after I purchased one myself of course.

Then while getting my daily dose of Slate I found their Hot Document on the issue. I am a bit surprised that Dell tried to keep it on the quiet. Still, can't blame them. Wouldn't want to scare off potential customers with a huge warning plastered on their front page, would they?

Anyway, for anyone else with a (recently bought) Dell laptop, check out Dell's battery replacement page for info on whether you're affected.

Just for the record, the serial numbers affected are:


Luckily, we're not affected.

Sunday 6 August 2006

Battlestar Gallactica 2

Malaysia's getting the second season of the new Battlestar Gallactica! Cool!

We finally got the reworked BG last year. Finally an update of the 70's show. I remember watching some of those episodes when I was a kid. Mostly I remember the Cylons with their eyes like Kit from Knight Rider, and that line, "By your command", and of course the Vipers. I was some baffled when they never finished the story. I mean, we never got to find out if the ragtag band of ships managed to find Earth.

The update took the same main story, at least in broad strokes. With some rather interesting changes to the characters and other elements. The best change, of course, was to the Cylons. The new version gives them a proper backstory, and at least some kind of motive. Of course, we're kept guessing, but that's good. Still, some "fans" felt it wasn't proper calling it BG, since it was so different from the original BG. But what's the point of doing a rework of it's gonna be exactly the same?

Anyway, the first season ended with quite a cliffhanger. So this second season's gonna get off to an interesting start.

Time to switch the channel! :-)

Wednesday 12 July 2006

The Real Story of the 2006 World Cup Final

Yes, Italy won the World Cup for the fourth time.

But let's move past
1) that Italy beat France (yay!), and
2) that they did it on penalties.

What everyone's talking about, and what the 2006 World Cup Final will most probably be remembered for, is Zidane's headbutt. What a coincidence that the incident happened to involve the only two goal scorers in that game's regulation time; Zidane scoring with an early penalty, and Materazzi equalizing with a high header from a corner kick. And at the penalty stage, France could have used another Zidane penalty kick. I'm sure there are France supporters out there agonizing over Zidane's red card.

Anyway, this headbutt thing was quite serious. There was immediate speculation on what set off Zidane. One side said this. The other side said, "No, I don't even know what that means." They even got lip readers to watch the tapes and decipher what was said. Still, despite being sent off from the Final, Zidane got the Golden Ball. That's a tribute to a great ballplayer!

So, the 2006 World Cup was the Zidane Headbutt World Cup! :-)

And this brings my football-following days to an end. At least for another 4 years or so. I don't really follow any sport that closely, but I do enjoy watching the big games.

I vaguely remember the 1986 World Cup, mainly cos of Maradona's Hand of God. I somehow remember people talking about that. That was when I was in boarding school in Penang. The next World Cup for me was the 1994 World Cup. (Lin, remember watching that in Stockholm?) I didn't really follow the 1998 World Cup, mainly cos I was a uni student in Canada with no cable. And somehow, I didn't much follow the 2002 World Cup, but that was a busy year for me.

Until the next big game attracts my attention, that's it from me for sports.

Saturday 8 July 2006

A forgone conclusion for third place at 2006 World Cup?

Well, seems my outlandish predictions were only half outlandish. ;-) Loved those two late Italian goals! Well deserved, and quite a gamble. I mean, seriously, four strikers on the field!

So now we're down to the last two games of the 2006 World Cup.

And I wonder, is the third place game really a foregone conclusion? Most peeps I talked to seemed to think that Germany was sure to win their match-up with Portugal. But they do seem to have run out of steam in the last couple of games. In the run-up to the quarters, they were quite impressive, with their string of early goals to give them the psychological edge. Then they kinda faltered and met with some good fortune in the Argentina game. And in the Italy game they looked like they were fine with taking it to penalties again.

Sidebar: They're letting Kahn in for their last game! Hehe.

This is the third place game, and they're on home ground. They'll be playing for pride in front of their home fans. I'm sure the crowd will be pushing for them to win against Portugal.

Do Portugal have some magic up their sleeves they can pull out for their last game? Look around the field... Doubt it...

Sunday 2 July 2006

World Cup 2006 Semi Finals

So it's a European Cup.

Surprises galore for me. Crushed dreams. Countered with raised spirits for some.

Let's make some outlandish predictions then shall we?

In the Germany-Italy game, Odonkor gets a red card for getting in the face of an Italian. Lehmann lets an early goal in, so he gets switched for Kahn (finally!), who quickly concedes two goals. Ballack manages to limp pass all the Italian defenders for a late consolation, but the game goes to Italy after they crush the German defense 3-1.

Portugal-France goes to Portugal. Score is 1-1 after 120 mins, and Portugal wins on penalty shootout after Zidane kicks too high.

Yeah, right.

What is it about fans and their predictions? Let's just hope for a beautiful game. I wish I saw more of that from Brazil. :-( Seriously, I didn't see Ronaldinho really shine this World Cup.

Saturday 1 July 2006

Germany-Argentina result

Oh woe, oh woe!

I knew as soon as they went to penalty shootout Germany were through.

Did anyone else feel the ref was biased against Argentina?

It was a good and entertaining game though. Just felt that the ref made too many calls in Germany's favour, and waved off incidents against the Argentinians.

Looks like Germany might make it to the finals then.

Friday 30 June 2006

World Cup 2006 Quarterfinals

So we're at the quarterfinals already. Quite a few surprises on the way, and Brazil's taking me on a rollercoaster ride. Gotta see how they perform this weekend.

But of the four games this weekend, the one I've really got my eye on is the Germany-Argentina game tonight. Should be quite a match! I'll skip staying up for the Italy-Ukraine match and hope I don't wake up to a shocker in the morning. Hehe.

Incidently, I'm now actually rooting for Argentina to win it this time around. Yes, I'm hoping to see a Argentina-Brazil final.

Sunday 11 June 2006

A few thoughts on the new car

Our new Myvi

First off, it was actually less than two months. :-)

I've had a chance to drive the new car a bit. It's quite a feisty car. Smooth acceleration, and no problems on any hills so far. Seems to handle the hills nicely, compared to my old Wira. By hills, I'm only talking Bangsar and Damansara Heights, but I can still notice the difference. Only thing is, you gotta watch the turns. It sits higher, compared to the Wira.

We're both pleased with the car. Features and specs of the car are pretty good, especially considering the price range. Seriously.

Only thing is, we've got to get rid of the new car smell, cos it's giving Nany a headache. But she doesn't want to spray any air fresheners in there either.

More thoughts after the first service.

Thursday 8 June 2006

Our new transport

We just took delivery of our new Ozzy Orange Premium Auto Myvi today, after waiting two months.

Wait, let me repeat that.

Two months.

Don't be jealous! :-) People I know had to wait upwards of six months to get their Myvi's. We got a little lucky.

So anyway, when school opens next week, Nany will be driving a new car.

Sunday 28 May 2006

Did I just jinx MyTeam?

Just saw Malaysia score one on MyTeam, putting them one up.

So the pressure's now on MyTeam. I won't hold it against them if this is the final score. They made some good plays.

Maybe I shouldn't be blogging while supposedly watching TV. ;-)

MyTeam v. Malaysia at half-time

MyTeam is up 1 over Malaysia. Hehe.

Why am I not too surprised? Sigh.

Mixed feelings here.

Oh wait. Malaysia's already equalized. Ok then.

Sorry, Nany's watching the AF prelude concert.

Saturday 27 May 2006

First movie in year (at the cinema) - X-Men: The Last Stand

Yup, went to the cinema for the first time since last year's Batman Begins. A few changes, such as, the ticket line, the ticket price (up RM2!), the seats. (GSC MidValley, of course, as both Nany and I still think that's the most convenient place to go.)

We'd been planning to go on opening weekend since I heard when it was being released. So we made it. No problems getting the tickets on Thursday night. Entered the theater this morning and it wasn't full. Not just the front rows, but generally everywhere. Don't know if this is a trend with movie-going, bad word-of-mouth for the movie, or the school holidays that just started this weekend. Whatever.

We enjoyed ourselves, and enjoyed the movie too. Won't go into a review of the movie, except to say that, yes, it's not strictly true to the comics. But, get real! There have to be some concessions when making the conversion to movie format. I can see where they're coming from, and as long as they make a good enough movie that stays true to the spirit of the comics, then I'm ok with it.

My verdict: this was a good way to end the "trilogy".

The only thing is, I didn't know there was an extra scene after the end credits! I should have guessed when I noticed a bunch of people not moving from their seats when the credits started to roll. I would have totally missed out, if I didn't start reading posts on the net about the movie. (Policy of mine not to read too much on the net about a movie I'm going to see, before I see the movie.)

Imagine my frustration. It's not like we're going to get another chance to go watch it at the cinema again. And no, I'm not going to go out and get the pirated VCD.

Anyway, it didn't take much to find out what I missed. (See bottom of this post for the spoiler.)

I'd still recommend this movie, even to fans, although I'd tell the die-hards to chill, man.

*** SPOILER ALERT! ***

*** Don't read further if you don't want to know anything about the movie! ***

*** I'm serious! There's a spoiler here! ***

Info on that extra scene follows this...

Wipe away those tears. You know, the ones that slipped out in that scene at the Grey residence. The one where... yeah, that one. Anyway, remember the ethics lesson Prof. X was giving towards the beginning of the movie? Remember in the video, Dr. Moira McTaggert was talking about a guy in a coma that had no higher brain function (the guy in the hospital bed in the background)? Guess who wakes up in the extra scene and calls out, "Moira"? And how does she respond? With a surprised, "Charles?"...

Tuesday 16 May 2006

Happy Teachers' Day!

To all the teachers in Malaysia, including and especially to my wife, Happy Teachers' Day! :-) Nany's busy receiving messages from her students now...

Hello World

unknownVisitor = StatusCheckCookieCrumbs()

IF unknownVisitor
    Display("Hello World!")
ELSE
    Display("Hi! Just announcing myself on Project Petaling Street")
END IF

Sunday 30 April 2006

The Malaysian blogosphere

Wow. There're quite a few Malaysian blogs out there.

When I started this blog I wondered how many other Malaysians were into this blogging thing. While browsing around, I actually came across a few Malaysian blogs. Of course, the next thing I wondered was whether there was a list of Malaysian blogs out there.

Just recently, I stumbled into the Petaling Street Project, a Malaysian blog-tal. Probably the Malaysian blog-tal. I haven't really explored much for others like it.

So, the Malaysian blogosphere is larger than I thought, and there's a wide range of voices out there. Definitely something for everyone.

I'll probably list myself there sometime.

Thursday 13 April 2006

Troubleshooting the "Local policy on this machine does not permit you to logon interactively" error

This one was a pickle, and even after solving it we don't know what caused it in the first place. One moment we were fine, logged in as admin, fiddling with the firewall. Then after a restart we get the logon error message. Can't logon to domain, can't logon to local account.

Go all around and finally found three articles of use.


  1. Microsoft KB276590 article

    This one was the first to point in the right direction.

  2. Microsoft KB279664 article

    This one gave info on syntax for NTRights.


  3. Unfortunately, I was getting an Open Policy error when I tried to use NTRights.
  4. Forum posting on the subject

    This one gave a hint to what was keeping the above from working. Tried to establish a link to the pc, but kept getting "Network path not found". Finally clued in and booted up in Safe Mode to disable the firewall, and voila! NTRights works and we can log in again! What a relief!



So, finally got it stable, but now have to get all the components working again. Hope to be up and operational by end of day tomorrow.

And all this with little to no experience as any kind of admin (sys or network), and with zilch training. Damn Comp Sci degree! Everyone thinks I'm supposed to know all about computers... ;-)

Friday 31 March 2006

Starting classes

Tomorrow I try my hand at being a tuition teacher. Some of Nany's students have asked for some help at Prinsip Perakaunan, and she volunteered me.

It's not like I don't have experience with teaching. Well, the informal kind. I've headed study groups before, and coached my fellow students as well. I even help Nany prepare for her classes.

But I've never been in a teacher-student situation before. The people I've helped before have always been my contemparories. So this will be something new for me. And I'm going to be "teaching" Accounting Principles. I took a couple of accounting courses at Acadia, and before that we covered it in IB Business at Kungsholmens in Sweden. So I'm familiar with the material. Just have to get used to the BM terms.

I hope my students tomorrow are comfortable with English. We'll see how this goes.

Sunday 26 March 2006

X-Men 3!!!

Woohoo! X-Men 3 movie (X-Men: The Last Stand) is coming out end of May! Pretty sure Malaysia will get an early release, so we won't have to wait a few weeks before the movie gets released here.

I so want to watch this movie at the cinema. The last movie I watched at the cinema was Batman Begins, so it's been a while. Good thing Nany's interested in watching X-Men at the cinema too. :-) We'll have to plan this properly and get someone to watch A'isyah for a few hours.

Saturday 25 March 2006

Losing a little bit of history to development

Well, it's happening everywhere, and not too surprising in a developing country.

Penang's about to lose a little bit more of it's heritage.

The International School of Penang, or as it's better know, Uplands School, has long occupied some heritage buildings along a historic part of the island. I just read in yesterday's NST that part of the campus along Jalan Gurney has been earmarked for some development.

I still remember moving to that building. I went to Uplands from 1985 to 1988. We moved the classes to there early in my stay at Uplands. The boarders were going to move there too (across the field from the school building), right after I left Uplands.

Lots of memories from my years there...

I've seen some pics of the new campus that was purpose-built for Uplands. Looks nice, modern. Won't be long before a part of my history disappears.

For that, I'm a bit sad.

Friday 3 March 2006

[Pics] Some older pics

Putting up some pics from earlier. A'isyah's between one and a half and two and a half months old in these pics.

The family at A'isyah's majlis cukur
This is us at A'isyah's majlis cukur, which we did right on the last day of Nany's confinement. We didn't shave A'isyah's head; just some clippings, since her hair was already very thick.

A'isyah in her babyseat
This is A'isyah in her babyseat in the car.

A'isyah in her pram
And here we took A'isyah out to the shopping mall. She was very curious, looking all around her, taking in all the new sights.


Link to previous pic post: Baby pics - 25/1/2006

Tuesday 28 February 2006

A primer on appendicitis

So, I've been doing a little research on my little surgery last week.

First, some good links on the topic, for anyone interested in learning more about it.


In a nutshell, this is how it happens:
The appendix is this small appendage connected to the beginning of the large intestine. Now, the opening that connects to the intestine can get blocked, most commonly by fecal matter. Bacterial or viral infections can also cause an inflammation which leads to the opening of the appendix getting blocked. When the appendix gets blocked, there will be a buildup of bacteria inside the appendix, causing it to swell, and eventually rupture.

Some extra information that I've gathered:

  1. Anyone can get appendicitis, but it's most common between the ages of 10 and 30.

  2. Recovery time varies from person to person, but is usually between 10 and 28 days. And doctors will usually recommend limited strenous activity (no heavy lifting) for 4 to 6 weeks after the surgery. No wonder my surgeon gave me MC for 3 weeks!

  3. Rupture of the appendix is a serious complication, which can lead to peritonitis and abscess, which, in some cases, can cause organ failure and even death.



Ok, so I guess any surgery is serious. I should rest.

The one thing I really don't like is not being able to carry my daughter. Even not going to work is not getting to me too much, though I sometimes feel like I'm being a little less responsible. But what really bites is that I can hold A'isyah, but I can't lift her. So I can't take her on our little walks. :-(

Sunday 26 February 2006

The story of my appendix

Well, it's not a complete story, cos I can't really say when the beginning was. The short history, however, is known.

Two Fridays ago, the day after I came back from an overseas trip, I felt some stomache discomfort. Thought it was my stomache re-adjusting to the food here, after all that...um...different food there. That disappeared by the next day, so thought everything was ok.

On Tuesday, the discomfort came back, but with a slightly different pain. Thought it was gastric pains. On Wednesday morning, the pain was too much. Even after popping Actal, I was still doubled over in discomfort. Went to a clinic, thinking I'd get some strong medication, get MC, stop by the office for a couple of minutes, and head back home to rest.

Got to the clinic and was shown straight to the doctor, so apparent was my discomfort. The doctor checked me, examining my stomache, and when she touched a particular spot I just jumped. The pain was excrutiating. She checked again and told me it was my appendix. Gave me a referral letter and told me to go to the Emergency ward of a hospital of my choice and ask to see a surgeon. Yikes! Nany had actually expected this when driving me to the clinic.

Got to the hospital, the emergency doc checked me out to rule out other possibilities (incl. gallstones), did a urine test and a blood test. Then told me they were warding me and that it was an 80% chance it was my appendix, but the surgeon would confirm this when she checked me out.

By the time I was sent upstairs they had already given me a couple of injections for the pain. The surgeon examined me, and said I was very tender (no kidding!), but my appendix probably hadn't burst yet cos there was no indication of it from the blood test. So she said she wanted me to go for an operation as soon as possible. Since I hadn't eaten since 8am that morning, she scheduled me immediately. I was taken to the operating room about an hour later, and came out from the general anasthetic a couple of hours later.

The surgeon later told me that my appendix was fusing to the surroundings, and that it actually burst during removal. She cleaned me out, but there's still the chance of an infection. They started me on some really strong antibiotic, and that brought on a case of diarrhea. So I was in for slightly longer than normal.

I was discharged yesterday, given an antibiotic course, some painkillers, and some diarrhea meds. Got 3 weeks MC, but I seriously doubt I'll use that whole period. I have to rest for at least a week though, and I have a follow-up with the surgeon next week, to check for any infection. Hope there's none, cos if there were, they might have to cut me open again to clean it up.

So now, I rest.

Sunday 19 February 2006

New handphone for the missus

Yesterday I bought the hp that Nany's been eyeing for some time now (with a few hints thrown here and there to nudge me in the right direction). The Nokia 6111. Cute little thing. Mind, she's not as discerning as I am with tech things. Still, features-wise, it's not too shabby. Makes me miss using a Nokia.

My hp history:
Nokia 3310
Nokia 6510 - still think this is a pretty neat phone
Sony Ericsson K500i - won this at my company's annual dinner lucky draw

Nany's hp history:
Some old Motorola
Nokia 3310 - gave her my 3310 when I upgraded
Nokia 5210 - bought her this after her 3310 got stolen
Nokia 6610 - she bought this when the previous one died on her
Nokia 6510 - gave her my old 6510 when she passed her 6610 to her mom
Nokia 6111 - brand new, after using my old 6510 for a couple of weeks

First feeding

A'isyah turns 4 months tomorrow. We've just started A'isyah on food; had her first feeding a few minutes ago. Gerber Banana Rice. Started her slow; not a full serving yet. She was ok with it, not rejecting it. We'll see how this turns out.

Thursday 9 February 2006

My 2 cents on the Danish cartoons

It's such a prickly subject. I have an opinion, but sometimes it's hard to give voice to your opinion in an articulate manner. I could spend some time trying to organize my thoughts, but I don't really want to give this too much attention. Enough that it's been picked up by major news organizations around the world. Enough that leaders of countries have to make statements about this.

However, I'd like to point here, because it captures the essence of my own opinion.

Two quotes:

No one doubts that the press should be free to satirize. But freedom of the press cannot excuse the promotion of noxious stereotypes.

(...)

Of course, the sad irony is that the Muslims who have resorted to violence in response to this offense are merely reaffirming the stereotypes advanced by the cartoons. Likewise, the Europeans who point to the Muslim reaction as proof that, in the words of the popular Dutch blogger Mike Tidmus, "Islam probably has no place in Europe," have reaffirmed the stereotype of Europeans as aggressively anti-Islamic.

Friday 3 February 2006

Got the laptop

They delivered the laptop yesterday. My wife likes it, so it was a worthwhile purchase.

Instant installs:

  1. AVG Free ver 7 - anti-virus software

  2. Adobe Acrobat Reader 7

  3. Quicktime Player, which unfortunately, is only available bundled with iTunes - to view movies from my camera

  4. Opera 8 - a seriously cool browser; mouse gestures rule!

  5. Picasa2 - really useful for organizing tons of pics

  6. Irfanview - small, fast pic viewer; I prefer this to ACDSee

  7. OpenOffice 2 - free alternative to the MS Office suite, and definitely better than the MS Works suite



I'm probably still missing some essential software. Will add when I remember.

Wednesday 1 February 2006

Effective marketing, and just enough gullibility...

...sells laptops.

Seriously. Apparently, the Dell laptop I ordered a few days back wasn't really on special. The price was basically their standard package, albeit with some small mods. At least I managed to upgrade the CPU for free.

Oh well. Still a good buy in my books.

P.S. Their logistics haven't contacted me yet.

Saturday 28 January 2006

Got me a laptop on an impulse...

Yup, I've gone and placed an order for a Dell Inspiron 6000.

Saw an ad in the back of a newspaper pull-out. The RM3k+ price tag drew my eye. First thought was, "this has got to be one of those entry level laptops." Just curious, I checked out the specs. Good RAM, decent HD, large-ish screen, DVD writer on promo. I was a bit surprised. So I asked around for opinions, and checked out a couple of online reviews. It's a 6-mo.+ old release (US-side of course), but got good reviews.

Only had two days to decide, cos they were throwing in the DVD writer and a RM200 online rebate for CNY. Nany had talked about getting a laptop. We discussed it, then decided to go for it.

So, I placed my order yesterday. 5-7 days for delivery, but not sure if that's going to be affected by the long holiday break next week (Friday's the only work day next week here in KL).

Key Specs:
Pentium M 740, 1.73GHz, 533MHz FSB (upgraded from default 1.7, 400 at no extra cost)
2x256MB DDR-2 RAM
60GB HD
8x DVD+/-RW
15.4" Wide Screen (max res: 1280x800)
XP Home
Integrated graphics (but that's ok, cos it's mainly for my wife)

Thursday 26 January 2006

Land of the Free!...?

Just had to post a link to this Slate piece on the current state of affairs over there in the good ol' USofA.

Westerners have always been of the opinion that their civilizations are the best societies, the most free, the most socially evolved, blah blah blah. Yes, that's a generalization, but read enough history and it wouldn't be hard to come across that theme. And, sorry to say this, Americans always seem to be the most vocal about it.

"The world would be a better place if everyone else did things the way we do it."

One of the things they seem to be most proud about is their system of government. Not only is it democratic and representative, there's accountability, and separation of powers, etc.

Or at least, there used to be.

They have the three branches: the executive (the President, his Cabinet and their machinery), the legislative (Congress: the Senate and the House of Representatives), and the judicial (the Supreme Court and all the other lower Courts). Actually, looking at their Federal Constitution, I should have listed that: the legislative, the executive, and the judicial.

(Aside: Why do I, a non-American, never having lived there, know all this about their system of government? I'm not sure really, and not in the mood to start on about cultural imperialism...)

So the three branches are supposed to provide the checks and balances to the system, to keep the system "honest", and protect the people.

And now? Do you not see power pooling in one branch?

Wednesday 25 January 2006

Baby pics

Siti Nur A'isyah - 12 Nov 2005

The last time I posted pics on blogger (see November 2005 Archive) I didn't know you could have multiple images per post. ‹sheepish grin›

No worries. This post is a single pic. I'm going to slowly post more pics of my daughter. Btw, her full name's Siti Nur A'isyah bt. Meor Azmal (that's to help people find us, in case they want to - there's a story there).

Now, besides cropping this pic, I've also done a little picture editing to change the colour tone (original was too...pink - now there's a line from one of my favourite movies!). Used Picasa. :-) Nifty program that.

On to the pic. This is A'isyah in her baby hammock (is that even the right term?). It's the afternoon, and she's sorta, half asleep, half waking up. And she's wearing pink, including pink mittens, lying on a pink pillow, in her pink baby hammock. ;-)

Tuesday 3 January 2006

This goes under "Paying more attention to the local news"

It's old news by now. I'd actually heard of the accident on Sunday evening, at a friend's barbeque get-together, but I didn't get the details (like who it was).

I'm talking of the freak accident that cost Dr. Liew Boon-Horng his life. Check here and here for the story. I can't say I knew him, but I've met him, and I know one of his (new) colleagues.

Bit of a shock when something like this happens to someone you know. That's just the way things go. It's not inherently sadder than if the same thing happens to someone you don't know. It's just that the event connects with you more when it's someone you're connected to.