Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Apparently, Quebec celebrates equality in some or many ways.

Speech impediments include stammer, lisp, and so on.

Yes, when I see that word "lisp", I always am curious about whether it has something to do with the Lisp programming language, though I always knew that's highly unlikely. :-)

In Canada's political system, the position of the Leader of the Official Opposition is marvelous, I think.

See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leader_of_the_Official_Opposition_(Canada).
Quote:

The Leader of the Opposition is entitled to the same levels of pay and protection as a Cabinet minister. He or she is entitled to reside at the official residence of Stornoway and ranks fourteenth on the Order of Precedence, after Cabinet ministers and before lieutenant governors of the provinces.

What a figure David Ogilvy is! And how he looks like an old-era English gentleman.

See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Ogilvy_(businessman).

By the way, Mr. Ogilvy (pronunciation: /'oɡəlvi/) is not to be confused with the Ogilvy's department store in Montreal. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ogilvy_(department_store).

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Typing on the computer keyboard gives my daily computing a tactile quality.

The notion of "rogue state" is interesting.

Quote:
Rogue state is a controversial term applied by some international theorists to states they consider threatening to the world's peace. This means meeting certain criteria, such as being ruled by authoritarian regimes that severely restrict human rights, sponsor terrorism, and seek to proliferate weapons of mass destruction. The term is used most by the United States, though it has been applied by other countries. 
... 
A common presumption applied to rogue states is that they do not necessarily behave rationally or in their own best interests. In political theory it is generally believed that a stable nation, ruled by a leadership that is subject to broad scrutiny (though not necessarily democratic scrutiny), will tend to act in its own best interests and will not take actions that are directly contrary to its own interests, particularly not to its own survival. Rogue states, however, may not be subject to this assumption and, as such, relations with them may be more complicated and unpredictable. 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rogue_state

We are all groping or fishing for opportunities in the sea of information.

Once upon a time, Microsoft far exceeded Apple. Nowadays, it's the opposite.

The inversion of their relative competitive positions makes me astonished by showing what time can change.

Monday, April 23, 2012

E. X. is cranky. Anyways.

The new generation of websites usually have simple web page layout, but not all instances of it are pleasant.

To a certain degree, many free websites supported by ads are in the experience business, I think.

For instance, when I look up the definition of "bilbo" at dictionary.com on my Android phone, the website presents several ads of cruise trips in front of me, alongside the word's definition. So by injecting semantically relevant ads into my browsing experience in which I look up a word, it remakes and tries to maneuver my online experience and tries to automatically generate sales leads for advertisers.

In this world, many business negotiations are greatly encumbered by the lack of trust and creditability. One option is to just let them go.

I'm completely untrained in music. But I'm curious about why a galopp (the German word for "galop") is a Polka.

I found that while googling about the Chineser Galopp by Johann Strauss I. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johann_Strauss_I#Polkas.

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Sigh. RIM may have very well missed another opportunity to save itself. It was a huge mistake. The company's end will present itself anon.

Here goes an essay over egalitarianism which is difficult to read for my completely untrained eyes.

See EQUALITY -- WHAT IT IS, by Prof. Ted Honderich who had worked at and had been educated at UCL. The essay tries to explain the core of the ideology of the Left, I suppose. The drift must be he's with the Left, I guess?

The HTML5 localStorage and sessionStorage thing is interesting.

Many Chinese immigrants in Canada are hindered, by their inadequate or outright limited English, when they face career choices. That's a moment of truth.

They lack the required cultural capital and it's likely no one had told them that before they boarded on an airplane and flew out of the Chinese border. The thing is, not only they lack it, but also they don't have time or aren't willing to remedy it.

Thursday, April 12, 2012

For every entrepreneur at the beginning, it's natural for him to be doubtful.

But after having chased and researched about the market and potential customers, it's then natural for him to be more confident and productive.

The spinach I used to eat in China is quite different than the one I see in local commonplace grocery stores in Montreal such as IGA.

To cook the spinach available over here, frying with oil doesn't do well. Instead, sautéing the spinach with butter produces a smoothly delicious green veggie dish.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Memory from that era

I was greatly influenced by the traumatization of Xia Gang (see https://www.google.ca/search?ix=aca&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=xia+gang) upon individual Chinese workers which took place massively in the 1990s and 2000s. I'm not saying that fate fell onto me personally, but that great phenomenon in China had ever since altered many things in my mentality, greatly.

Monday, April 2, 2012

I've seen a few people slightly vent spleen against the richest people in their regions.

Well, "many honours I want not, nor great treasures: they excite the spleen," Nietzsche wrote in his philosophical fiction Thus Spake Zarathustra: A Book For All And None. How prudent that is. And how complicated life is.

Web typographers' tastes are very detailed and hard to understand, for my untrained eyes.

Sunday, April 1, 2012

I still can't see why Facebook has conjured so myriad people and make them waste tons of time in that labyrinth.

What's the point of mapping your offline relationships with people onto an online platform which keeps bombarding you with trivial information? For that matter, we need something deeper than the current form of Facebook.

If you just like to share and see interesting pictures on social media, maybe you would just go to http://pinterest.com/ and get visual there instead of on Facebook?

I saw a software program spit out a string "hello master", and I considered that antic and smiled.

Looking at the Incoterms (i.e. International Commercial terms, which are defined by the International Chamber of Commerce), you know, CIF, FOB, things like those, I wonder that if something similar will emerge in the web world in the future. Just some outlandish thought of mine.

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

It appears that there is more and more important emergent stuff which is not covered in the skyish Wikipedia.org. I guess people just don't bother to edit an entry over there.