Quote:
Brevity is the soul of wit.
(Translation: don't waste my time!)
At last, you can now comment in the forum.new!
3 Mbps is around 375 kB/s. It may sound very slow, but it is a pretty decent rate. (In contrast, local network speed is ~5 MB/s and HD is ~20 MB/s.)
It is fast enough to play YouTube's 480p videos in real-time. (But not the 720p videos, though.)
A 7 GB 720p video can be downloaded in ~5.5 hours. However, I can't hit >350 kB/s all the time. Even 200 kB/s is a decent rate. It translates to 11 MB/min. A 7 GB file can be gotten in 10 hours (or overnight).
This is why I have opted for the 3 Mbps data plan for the past few years. It is one of the cheapest plans and it is good enough.
It reminds me of Windows GUI programming in early 90s before GUI RAD tools, such as Visual Basic and Delphi. There is a ton of boilerplate and glue code.
(And also X Windows and later Java Swing/AWT. History repeats itself every 10 years.)
The good news: App Inventor for Android is going to be released by Google, and that is apparently a drag-n-drop GUI app builder.
No one should need to create a GUI app using code.
A Singaporean by the name of Kelvin Leong has set up a Facebook to boycott the Youth Olympic Games hosted by the PAP regime. It has attracted more than 100 members so far.
According to Kelvin, it was founded to protest against the PAP's splurging of public monies on the YOG:
"We are Singaporeans who are disgusted with the YOG. The government initially allocated a budget of $120 million but it somehow shot to $387 million. At the same time, the government is not bothered at all to spend a single cent to fight the raging flood problems that has caused untold hardships on the people."
The PAP has spared no expenses in ensuring the success of the YOG including launching a public campaign to publicize the event in the HDB heartlands and designating YOG lanes to facilitate the travel of YOG delegates.
In contrast, it is unable or unwilling to do anything to prevent the spate of recent flooding which have inconvenienced ordinary Singaporeans.
PAP strongman Lee Kuan Yew even proclaimed that the floods were an "act of God" and no amount of engineering can prevent them. However, the YOG Committee is quick to draft up a contingency plan to ensure that the event is not disrupted by a flash flood, much to the chagrin of Singaporeans.
Despite the media frenzy, the response from Singaporeans on the ground has been lukewarm so far, prompting a panicky Minister of Community, Youth and Sports Dr Vivian Balakrishnan to urge Singaporeans to "rally" around it.
Many Singaporeans view the event as another vain attempt by the PAP to burnish its international image and want nothing to do with it, but are unable to express their sentiment explicitly out of fear of being "fixed' by the repressive regime.
Summer Olympic, Winter Olympic, Special Olympic. Now Youth Olympic?
To tell the truth, I've never heard of the Youth Olympic, so I googled it. It turned out this is the first ever Youth Olympic.
Will Youth Olympic work? I am skeptical.
Timing is everything, even in love. And when you are not ready to commit, you could end up regretting it
SOMETIMES, timing rather than love decides who we end up being with - or without.
Only some lucky people marry the loves of their lives. The rest marry the most suitable person who comes along when they are ready to settle down.
A friend in his 20s came to this conclusion after confiding in me that he had recently met a woman who is more attractive than his wife, and so occupies his thoughts more often than his wife does.
'If only I had met her before I got married,' he said wistfully.
But I think even if the love of one's life appears when one is single, one may not be in the right frame of mind to recognise him or her as such.
And then love passes by.
Life is littered with near misses and lost opportunities.
I attended my ex-boyfriend's wedding last month, which triggered many memories.
We met five years ago when I was 23 and he 31. It was love at first sight.
He had an established career, was down-to-earth and steadfastly religious.
I was then working as an air stewardess and my head was - literally and metaphorically - in the clouds.
I was also - well, let's put it this way - not religious.
Despite our differences, we were soulmates. We had the same quirky sense of humour and shared long, intense overnight conversations.
But human nature is perverse. When someone is excessively nice to us, we start taking things for granted, instead of appreciating them even more.
My ex sent me to the airport, fixed my PC, reminded me to take health supplements - and go to church.
He had everything I could want in a husband - except that I was not looking for one. A boyfriend was all I could cope with then.
I loved fast cars, danced wildly at Zouk and took off on shopping holidays at a whim. My life revolved around I, me and myself.
In the six months that we were together, he popped the question several times and talked ad nauseam about having children. He wanted us to enrol for a Christian marriage preparation course.
Yes, I did often fantasise about a Vera Wang wedding gown, but I was at that stage of my life when I was more interested in Guess than Baby Guess.
And where - dare I admit it? - I still wanted to meet other men.
So I was a 23-year-old with the emotional maturity of a 13-year-old. Responsibility? Wasn't that for adults?
In short, I met Mr Right at the wrong time.
The more he talked about marriage and religion, the more I felt pressured and the more pressured I felt, the more irritable I became.
I was too impatient to compromise. Every trivial matter blew up as a big deal. My mood obliterated the good in our relationship and reached a point where I just wanted out.
He was heartbroken; I was sad but relieved. He still called me regularly, beseeching me to change my mind.
The calls stopped finally after a year. Now and then, we say 'Hi' via e-mail.
I had a few painful relationships after that. Served me right, as those rude wake-up calls were necessary for me to realise the meaninglessness of my hedonistic high life.
I missed the tenderness of my ex and began having second thoughts.
Perhaps I also felt more urgency to find someone marriageable before my biological clock reached zero hour. It dawned on me that I am not a pixie like Peter Pan who can flit around forever. One day, I'd wake up sick and alone when my fair weather friends flit away.
But I was too proud and too unsure of my ex's reaction to call him until last year.
The first thing he told me excitedly was that he had found The One. My heart tumbled to my feet. So, that's Fate.
If only I could turn back time. If only I had met him later. If only... what feeble words.
These days, I am more circumspect. I have come to terms with my loss. There is nothing I can do about timing, but I can do everything about my choices.
Sometimes, when the nights get lonely, I toy with the idea of marrying a platonic friend of mine, who often assures me earnestly that, if the worst comes to the worst, he'd be willing to marry me.
But I always dismiss that. I have already made one mistake. I should not make another by settling for second best merely for the sake of getting hitched - only to regret it soon after, as the guy who confided in me did.
Hopefully, the best is not over but yet to be.
How many times has Mr/Ms Right come into your life, but at the wrong time?
Janice Wong (the article author) regretted her decision. However, I think she didn't make the wrong decision — it is hardpressed to ask someone to settle down at 23.
It was her misfortune not to meet anyone of the same calibre since...
But, she was just 28 when she wrote the article (5 years ago). That was not old enough to say she'll never meet a new Mr Right again.
Anyway, her article intrigued me enough to borrow her book, Single Picky Girl. (I was too cheap to buy her book for $15 :-P.)
Her articles work well enough as a newspaper column, but lack depth in a book.
The 2nd July COE bidding ended with Cat A at $36,162.
$36,162, what does it mean?
Per year: $3,616.20. Per day: $9.90.
Almost $10 a day to own the car, even before you use it.