Saturday, October 29, 2011

I signed up Facebook years ago. Then I've stayed out of circulation in that sphere since. Facebook is just not my cup of tea yet.

I used to haunt coffee shops.

It's been bruited about that the eventual actual procurement cost for F-35 jet fighters, which are a seemingly important sort of 5th-generation jet fighter made by Lockheed Martin, has soared to an estimated US$156 million each, from the earliest projection of US$50.2 million each.

See the 3rd paragraph of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F-35_Lightning_II
and
http://www.reuters.com/article/2010/03/12/lockheed-fighter-idUSN1123180820100312 .

I guess Canada will beef up its mettle and buy those F-35 air fighters anyway, largely due to its escalating concerns over the northern territory.

It looks probable that there will be a sea change in worldwide attitudes towards studying in a university in the U.S, whose cost has been soaring and soaring in the past decade or so and can hardly be justified for its intrinsic value in terms of education.

For one thing, see this: Should College Grads Get a Break on Their Loans? - Room for Debate - NYTimes.com .

Marriage is a work. I've worked hand in glove with my wife for the development of our life and family.

I'm happy that the internet technologies have broken the monopoly of the dissemination of knowledge by universities and publishing companies.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

The diaper leaked on our toddler daughter. That made a bit of inconvenience for me.

How many little and large bits of inconvenience parents have to go through to bring up a child.

One thing I've held against Google is that I'd been using the Google Notebook for years, and then poof, the maintenance of it got discontinued by Google.

And then I scrambled to find alternatives by other service providers, whose integration with other Google services always is not as good as that of my parted Google Notebook.

Monday, October 17, 2011

Presumption of innocence in the metro/subway

If you are a man, probably you've had this commonplace little experience in life. When you take the metro/subway and you're waiting for the train on a passenger platform, you absentmindedly or unawarely move a little too close to a woman and stand there. The woman subtly adjusts the position of her handbag on her shoulder and makes sure that it's safe from your possible fetching or something.

See, the woman can have Reasonable Doubt that you would possibly steal her purse or something, yet you have the presumed innocence as stated in the legal principle of Presumption of Innocence. So the train finally arrives, and you two step onto it and then you move away from the woman which possessed a pinch of Reasonable Doubt about your behavior a moment ago. And this episode of Presumption of Innocence finishes.

You see, this whole notion of Presumption of Innocence intrigues me. There's a catch though. If "the burden of proof rests on who asserts, not on who denies" (see the first paragraph of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Presumption_of_innocence ), why do some defendants in some legal cases have to provide alibis to the courts which they are judged in?

The fall is drizzling and raining away.

There naturally exists a bubble of conceit for everyone.

It seems that only through interactions with the outside world, accompanied by introspection, one can shed that bubble of conceit.

It seems that in the English-speaking world, The Economist is the most laudable news magazine, be it in the U.K. or U.S.A.

Music video - Andre Rieu - La vie est belle




Whatever the criticism has been for André Rieu, a popular Dutch violinist (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andr%C3%A9_Rieu#Reception), it must be lauded that he performs his music with class.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

When one begins to have one or even more children, his willingness to take risks in life normally decreases, more or less.

Now I have a toddler. However, my willingness to take risks may have not been blunted at all. One important reason is that I'm somewhat well prepared. For one thing, with a somewhat remote background of being a linguistically disadvantaged immigrant in Canada from China, I had already invested an enormous amount of time and effort into elevating my English proficiency, in order to preempt the case in which an insufficient English level would hamper my competing in the market, before my baby was born.

I like the crispy fizzling sounds once I put green vegetables into the heated oil in the frying pan.

I don't know much about the Western laws at all. But it seems that there are two sorts of trespasses, one is criminal trespasses, and the other normal ones.

It seems that some divorced women don't respect their ex-husband's visitation rights.

Life must be overly complex and unsatisfactory for those ex-husbands.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

The Montreal Gazette is a news enclosure which is generally not deep enough.

Software development is usually composed with too many layers of imperfect abstractions.

The other day, I watched a video clip in which a medical researcher cut across a whole brain matter which had been taken out of a dead person and boxed and then delivered to the Brain Bank at Boston University.

Ah, that's ghastly. I skipped the scientific scene.

The U.S., Russia, Japan, China, India, et al. have all begun to develop the 5th-generation jet fighters long ago.

See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fifth_generation_jet_fighter#Aircraft .

Will that set a precedent for future arm races among the militarily powerful countries? After all, this world has become no less unstable.

One thing I've noticed in the above web link is that no country in South America has joined the race to develop 5th-gen jet fighters. That intrigues me.

It's nearly apparent that cut-rate retailers will embrace prosperity in the forthcoming years.

'Cost' must have become a more charged word among consumers.

Pics - Retro






Tuesday, October 11, 2011

"Hover between abstraction and representation"

Here goes a well-written sentence from NYT:
"The artists chosen by Ross Bleckner, a painter known for canvases that hover between abstraction and representation, display an ethereal quality similar to his own, except in photographs rather than paint."
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/25/nyregion/artists-choose-artists-at-the-parrish-art-museum-review.html

Some Chinese peasants used to build outside toilet rooms and sties side by side. I wonder if that still is the omnipresent case nowadays and if the sanitation has improved.

On a different note, as more and more Chinese peasants have been bought out of 'their' lands and put into apartment-like buildings in more concentrated areas due to the frenzy real estate construction boom, will those areas soaked with ex-peasants become rundown slums further down the road, given that many ex-peasants and their children don't have sufficient education under their belts to prosper away from land?

It seems that more and more influential figures in the U.S. publicly hold opinions that Wall Street deserves being inveighed against and being occupied.

Wall Street is not a synonym of 'glamour' any more.

The tincts of failures reside deeply in my memory. They serve as beacons, as life lessons.

I became better after they had happened.

And on a related note, I think it's a pity for one if he goes through his life unchallenged or not challenged often enough.

Monday, October 10, 2011

D is a tall black woman who came to Canada from the Caribbeans when she was young. Now she lives in Montreal with her husband.

The other day, when I saw her grizzled hair roots, which outgrew the dyed dark look of her hair, something that time produces touched me somehow.


(Picture 'Grizzled' by bogdog Dan / http://www.flickr.com/photos/25689440@N06/2455312427/ / CC)





(Pic 'grace lutheran church' by lynnmanhart / http://www.flickr.com/photos/your_friend_flicka/2293276303/ / CC)

In life, we want to avoid certain things. Poverty is an example.

But one thing which many people overlook is that we should largely eschew the flicks and other 'cultural' products which manipulatively pander to our basest innate desires and emotions.

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Entrepreneurs have to be cross-silo.

I've seen technical and non-technical people without mindsets of sales, HR, etc. And the biz which they started look to be doomed.

Friday, October 7, 2011

This seems to be an innate illness of capitalism finance.

The problem with Wall Street and other financial firms is that they want to be paid princely to provide the liquidity of financial capital, which is very essential to capitalism, but they want to wash their hands of keeping that liquidity going all the time, that means, in bad times. But that liquidity must be kept going ALL THE TIME.

Apparently, European cities possess more embellishments than their North American counterparts. A long history matters.

Let's hope Wall Street will eventually be invaded and occupied by regulations and laws which are better than the current ones.

Also see Confronting the Malefactors by Dr. Paul Krugman.

It seems kind middle-aged matrons possess some shared distinct flairs, be they Chinese or Canadian.

In a tablet market in which iPads have dominated and Android, as well as Windows Phone 7, devices have been slowly climbing in market shares, the rebellious Kindle Fire by Amazon, which is of 7" form factor, will possibly quickly rise up.

See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kindle_Fire .

Interestingly, the preposition 'like' sometimes serves in similes, sometimes not.

'He runs like the wind' is a simile. And 'he looks like his mom' is just a resemblance.

Freedom is a deep concept. Creative freedom too.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

I've just heard of Dr. Samantha Nutt, who is actually still young. I highly respect her efforts.

See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samantha_Nutt .

Canada is usually kinetically engaged in the NATO-related military operations overseas.

It seems that this country's military forces are constantly trained in the field, proportional to the modesty of the nation's power.

It's impossible not to get laughed at. But what distinguishes people around you is who laughs at you and who helps you.

The houses and streets are static. You can't get many ideas by looking at them with your naked eye.

In contrast, the life in those houses and streets is dynamic. You can get lots of ideas by peering at it with your mind's eye, with the help of words and formulas.

In that afternoon, I moped about the Sherbrooke street.

The Great Mogul empire (a.k.a. Mughal Empire), which was Muslim, ruled much of India from the 16th to the 19th century.

I guess many of the descendants of its people are in Pakistan now.

(The famous Taj Mahal in India built by a Mogul emperor / http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Taj1.jpg / Public domain)

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

When a guy uses 'email missive' instead of 'email message' in a software book he writes, you know he's kind of showing off he's a learned man.

It may take more than a decade for the mind of a typical amateur English learner who is also rooted in mainland China, after his or her graduation from university, to traverse almost the entire set of commonly used English words, which every native speaker with some higher education is familiar with.

Is there a higher percentage of cancer cases among the human population nowadays than in past decades?

I've encountered personally, heard of, or read about more and more people who got invaded by various cancers.

What a bunch of cozeners Russian political leaders are! Especially Mr. Putin.

See http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/06/world/europe/putins-diving-exploit-was-a-setup-aide-says.html .

I feel that badges and coats of arms in the West are exquisite in general.

西方文化的線索,不容易釐清。

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Many people are in thrall to routine life trajectories which eventually lead to more confinement of their liberty down the road, I've observed. Routine life paths lead to routine life achievements, reasonably.

Those people are sort of afraid of thinking out of the box and then acting in accordance with that thinking.

I often see men with retro hippie looks on streets and screens in Canada. What do they think really?

I'm curious about that, against the backdrop of the current era.

I don't know. It seems that many Canadian biz tycoons are not on a par with their American counterparts.

For instance, the two Co-CEOs of RIM, which has been claimed throughout this country as the brightest tech company in Canada after the collapse of Nortel.

On the other hand, in sharp contrast, many Canadian political moguls are on a par with their American counterparts, for example, the late Jack Layton, and Stephen Harper, they shine with the grace of modesty and sound judgement in many occasions.

Just my current personal impressions.

They say providing the liquid transferring, or liquidity, of financial capital is a crucial thing.

I think that particular service of providing, which is what the banking firms do day in and day out, should be made easier for more identities, both organizations and individuals, to take part in.

But maybe I'm wrong.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

In the wake of the infamous case of Russell Williams, now one of Russell's rape victims nearby Tweed, Ontario has sued him, his wife and the Ontario Police.

One of the madam's claims is that the Police should have informed the residents nearby that some cases of breaking and entering and sexual assaults, by Russell Williams, had happened before the same fate descended on her.

I'm not sure if civilians have the right to be timely informed by the Police about all the sexual offence and murder cases in their neighborhoods. It looks to be unlikely. But if the right really exists, then the Ontario Police did infringe on the victim's rights by having failed to make her know. Otherwise, the Police just have an encroachment case at the very most.

Do you think that money managers batten on their investors, if the degree of competition in that industry is not enough?

Yorkshire, England, U.K. appears to be a significant and pretty county.

"In recent times, North Yorkshire has displaced Kent to take the title Garden of England according to The Guardian." (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yorkshire#Natural_areas )

The beauty of the moors in Yorkshire particularly struck me, thanks to the picture displayed at http://www.bugbog.com/gallery/england_pictures/yorkshire-uk.html .

Pic - Mercury

Mercury, a Roman god of commerce, trade and so on, is also a messenger of Jupiter.

Saturday, October 1, 2011

To be frank, globalization has blasted the life of average Joes and Janes in the U.S. and Canada.

Due to the competition from the labor in developing countries, their (mean?) real individual income has allegedly stayed the same since the 1980s, and their job security has become elusive. And the continuously climbing gas and house prices have been tormenting their minds.

Will African countries import the fishy and illaudable Chinese High Speed Railway technologies?