Tuesday/ on the bus

A big coach bus takes us to work and back every day from Da Mei Sha.   This a snap shot of a road side scene in Da Peng, which is some 40 minutes to the east by road.   Da Peng is the community just outside the Daya Bay nuclear power plant.   The street vendors are selling a type of lychee native to South China, as well as a kind of flat bread.   In the background, a building has been demolished to make way for a new one.  (Yes, there is not a lot of space between the bus and the pedestrians !  We are definitely used to much wider vehicle-vehicle and vehicle-people berths in the USA! ) 

Monday/ cafeteria lunch

We’re going to a different cafeteria for lunch here at work.  A welcome break it is, from sitting in meetings or staring at an SAP screen.     So you get your tray and run a series of counters with oh, 20 some items, served up in little bowls, and make your selections.   My choices for the day, clockwise : herbal tea, chicken nuggets, tofu with garlic and green peppers*, shredded potato and red pepper, green beans and pork.    Very nice!  *the tofu was great, but the green peppers were just too hot for me.

Sunday/ does it (anti-)matter?

The Sunday edition of the South China Morning Post reported today on a research project that has been going on, right here where I have worked on Daya Bay Nuclear Power station’s information systems project (picture from the newspaper’s website).   A global team of scientists  study the neutrinos generated by the nuclear reactors here, in an effort to understand antimatter better.

What is antimatter?  Well, we all know electrons.  They have equivalent anti-particles called positrons.   Neutrons have antineutrons, and protons have antiprotons.   So it is entirely possible for a hydrogen atom made up of a proton and an electron, to instead be an ‘anti-hydrogen’ atom made up of an anti-proton and a positron.   How cool is that?

From Wikipedia’s antimatter entry : There is considerable speculation as to why the observable universe is apparently composed almost entirely of matter (as opposed to a mixture of matter and antimatter), whether there exist other places that are almost entirely composed of antimatter instead, and what sorts of technology might be possible if antimatter could be harnessed.  At this time, the apparent asymmetry of matter and antimatter in the visible universe is one of the greatest unsolved problems in physics.

 

Saturday/ Causeway Bay

These pictures are from Saturday night.   The first picture is at dusk; I’m sitting upstairs in a street car (tram) from the hotel to the Sheung Wan station.    The nearest metro station is too far to walk to from the hotel.   All the other pictures were taken around the Sogo department store at Causeway Bay metro station, four stops east from Sheung Wan.

Friday/ to Hong Kong

I took a bus from bus operator China Transportation Services to Hong Kong.   We changed from a 16 seater minibus into a full-size coach bus at the newly renovated (for the Universiade Games) Huanggang border crossing.   I was a little annoyed by this sticker – stuck on my shirt when we left by the ticket lady without my permission – but believe me, it certainly saved me from being stranded at the border crossing (there are no trains, and no taxis).   I was waiting for the minibus for 30 mins+ outside in sweltering heat when a little guy ran up to me and shooed me onto the big bus.     And here I am in the Marriott Courtyard, my comfy and customary hotel on Hong Kong island (view from the room I have on the 25th floor on Sat morning).

Thursday/ Two Oceans wine

I spotted this South African wine at the bar in the hotel where we had a beer Thu night.  The Two Oceans are the Indian Ocean and the Atlantic Ocean and that’s the Cape Point peninsula on the label.    It’s definitely not a top-rated wine (it has a screw top), but as someone said ‘ a good value makes a wine taste better’.  Or do expensive wines taste better -because they ‘have’ to?

Wednesday/ SAP for the iPhone

I discovered today that there is an app for that as well : accessing SAP on one’s iPhone and iPad*.   The screen shot is from Apple’s app store – the same SAP Easy Access menu I see here at work every day, except it’s in German ..  Büro is Office and Anwendingsübergeifende Komponenten would be Cross-Application Components!    SAP was founded in 1972 but the ‘SAP Easy Access’ menu only came about in 1999.   At the time SAP launched a project called ‘Enjoy SAP’ to improve the user interface and usabililty.   Part of this initiative was due to the large number of American companies complaining about SAP’s ease of use.   In SAP’s hallways this was referred to as ‘the American problem’.  

* Not that I’m loading it on my phone!  But it shows that companies running on SAP needing field workers to obtain or submit information to SAP could deploy it to iPhones and iPads.

 

Tuesday/ closing ceremony of the Universade 2011

The 2011 University Games is over (website http://www.sz2011.org/Universiade/), so soon, it seems.   Tuesday night saw the closing ceremony, fittingly held at the Windows of the World theme park in Shenzhen, where just about every country in the world is represented with an iconic building or scene.    The first picture is from the website, the other two are screen shots from the TV broadcast.  The flowery floor is a giant LED screen.   Must be something to get used to, to dance on one!

China hauled in the most medals (145), followed by Russia (132) and Korea(79).  The USA got 50.  But of course the event was great for public relations and for athletes to meet their peers from other countries.

Monday/ HP’s un-touch-able Pad

I agree with observers of the tech industry that Hewlett-Packard’s announcement last week that it is getting out of the PC business, is shocking.    Even the new Touchpad tablet – barely two months off the production lines – is getting the chop.   I loved the TV commercials for it, though.  One featured Lea Michele singing ‘Let me entertain you’, and another Manny Pacquiao, a Filipino professional boxer and politician (singing Dan Hill’s ‘Sometimes When We Touch’ !  Wow).    So first nobody would touch the Pad – eschewing it for that other Pad – and then there was a run on the TouchPads when HP started giving the 16Gb one away for $100 and the 32Gb one for $150.   HP’s website does not take orders anymore since they are temporarily out of inventory.    We love you HP! .. too little, and too late?

Sunday/ 2011 Summer Universiade Shenzhen

The 2011 Summer Universiade (World University Games) here in Shenzhen is in full swing.  Congratulations to the South African Mens Team that won the gold in the 4x100m relay! Go team!   My mission for Sunday was to go check out the brand new athletics stadium.     Alas, I made it there on the Longgang Line but it was just too far from the Universiade station to walk out there.    It was sweltering outside with the sun just beating down!

The first picture with the gigantic LED screen (can you name the artist and the title of the artwork?*) is at Mix-C mall in Shenzhen where I started out on the train.  All the other pictures were taken from the Longgang Line, elevated high above street level for most of the route, but sometimes going underground as well.    Check out the JAC motors dealership (Jianghuai Automobile Co Ltd was founded in 1964 and sold 460,000 vehicles with a sales revenue of  US$5.2 billion in 2010).

The second to last picture is of the athletic village, and the final picture shows the pointy panels of the outside of the stadium that I wanted to go check out.

*Van Gogh’s Sunflowers.   Japanese insurance magnate Yasuo Goto paid the equivalent of US $39,921,750 in 1987 for it – at the time a record-setting amount for a work of art.

Saturday/ just resting up

I used Saturday to get over my jet lag.   The pictures were both taken from my hotel’s balcony (the hotel is A on the map).  The first view is toward Da Mei Sha beach, and that’s the Sheraton Hotel in the left of the second picture.   There is a marina hidden from view with a dozen or so yachts, in the second picture as well.  Yan Tian shipping port is only a few miles down the coast, so there is always a few container ships to be seen out at sea from here.

Friday/ hooray! (and doh!)

So here it is .. today is really my big birthday.   Hip-hip-hooray! (and something such as Homer Simpson’s doh! as well! ).  As astronaut John Glenn said : ‘for all the advances in medicine, there is still no cure for the common birthday’.    So celebrate it! – celebrate life – and don’t look back too much !   But looking back today, I am very grateful for what life has given me, and I look forward to a whole lot more.  Thanks to everyone for the heartfelt wishes I have gotten so far*, in person and by e-mail!   love and hugs, Willem.

*I’m in China, so ahead of just about everyone I know, time-zone wise.

Thursday/ arrived in Dameisha

My transpacific trek is over and I’m in the hotel  in Dameisha.   Our route to Seoul took us north of the Kamchatka peninsula and north of Japan, and then the pilot had to approach Incheon airport from the west because of strong winds. The mascot picture is from the Korean newspaper, for the 2011 International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) championships that starts at the end of the month in Daegu, Korea.     It was 7 pm local time as we arrived into Seoul.

 

 

Wednesday/ at Seatac airport

I’m at Seatac airport for my flight out to Hong Kong with a stop in Seoul.   The Asiana Airlines sign offers good guidance as far as what NOT to pack in one’s checked luggage.   Stuff in there get broken (and stolen!).  And airlines are still leery of lithium ion batteries ever since Dell and Apple Computer announced large recalls of laptop batteries in the summer of 2006, followed by Toshiba and Lenovo.   They are a fire hazard !

Local news of yesterday’s voting is that the Alaska Way Viaduct’s tunnel replacement is to proceed.  (I voted for it.  Yes, it will cost money but the viaduct replacement has been debated for 10 years! Move on!).

Tuesday/ adding Rosenstolz songs ..

.. to my iPhone from their CD called ‘Zucker’.  Rosenstolz is a very popular German music band from Berlin consisting of AnNa* R. and Peter Plate.   *not sure why the N is in upper case.  Their music combines several styles including rock, pop and ballads.  My favorite song on this CD is Das Ende Meiner Karriere (Eng. The End of My Career).   I smiled when I read on a website from a fan ‘Das lied ist der absolute hammer‘ (translating into ‘This song is ‘da bomb’?).

Monday/ getting ready for my next project

I was scheduled to travel to Hong Kong on Monday, but it has been pushed out to Wednesday.   I will work on a follow-on project to the one that we completed at Daya Bay.   I will make several trips to Hong Kong again, and stay in the area for about three weeks at a time.    This first itinerary to Hong Kong is one I have done a few times before : on Asiana Airlines with a stop at Incheon airport in Seoul.    Looking at it on a globe, one can see that Seattle, Seoul and Hong Kong lie almost in a ‘straight line’ (a straight line in terms of great circle navigation on the surface of the earth).

Sunday/ a walk in Seattle downtown

On Sunday I took the bus downtown to Pike Place market.  (Yes, the sellers still throw the dead fish to each other at the fish market, PETA)*.   At the little park to the north, I had to do the obligatory peek over the edge onto our infamous Alaska Way Viaduct.  It’s no longer deemed safe, and especially vulnerable to earthquakes.  And just this Tuesday there is yet another referendum to gauge support for its replacement with a tunnel – for which construction has already started (tunnel nay-sayers want a new viaduct).   Also check out the Google street view picture.

*In 2009, PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) heard that the American Veterinary Medical Association asked some Pike Place Market fish throwers to be the opening act for their convention at the Seattle convention center, and sent them a protest letter.

Next, I made my way down to Pioneer Square and discovered the Hartford Building, an excellent example of Art Deco style, built in 1929.   And I only discovered after I got home that Smith Tower has an observation deck!  Aw.  Now I’ll have to go back.   It opened in 1914, was the fourth tallest building in the world in its heyday, and remained the tallest building west of the Mississippi River for almost 50 years.   The black Columbia Tower looming behind it is now the tallest building in the city.

Saturday/ PBS’s ‘Fixing the Future’

I got to watch PBS’s documentary program ‘Fixing the Future’ at friends on Saturday.  It profiles communities that are trying to come to grips with the scarcity of jobs (and household income) in the US economy.   For example, Bellingham, Washington, has ‘Sustainable Connections’ which is a network of local businesses that band together to promote the local economy.   In Portland, Maine, there is the ‘Portland Hour Exchange’ : a ‘time’ bank where you ‘deposit’ work hours by performing services such as home repairs or even legal or medical services.  And then you can withdraw hours for services you might need.   (Yes, it’s great that this addresses some needs but does it not raises other issues such as work being done outside agency oversight and potentially not generating any local, state and federal tax revenues?).

The program also pointed out that economic output and economic growth are measured in monetary terms only.  But there are other parameters involved in economic activity that we should start to measure as well.   It used the example of someone bicycling to the store to buy locally grown apples, as opposed to driving there and buying Kiwis shipped in from New Zealand. Which ‘contributes’ more to the economy?  The second example, of course.   But which economies, and where does the money go?  Some of it goes to the oil company (that got its oil from – Saudi Arabia?), and to New Zealand (not that I have anything against New Zealand!).    And should we not measure the health benefits and non-impact to the environment of the first example when we compare the two?  (Yes, we should, but it’s not an easy measurement to make!).

The documentary struck a positive and hopeful note in me, but still left me feeling that there are really big issues out there that need to be addressed that are well out of reach of local communities.

Friday/ it’s my birthday (almost)

What to do if you have a BIG birthday coming up, and almost everyone (including me!) will be away from Seattle on that day?   Why, you jump at it and celebrate it early, which is what a few friends and I did Friday night.   Check out the wild king salmon with fresh dill and lemon, just off from the grill – and the birthday cake.   The cake was from Borrachini’s, a historic Italian bakery on Rainier Avenue –  chocolate with raspberry filling and white Bavarian icing.  Very, very good.   The picture is made out of rice paper and food coloring, so you simply you gobble it up with the cake !

Thursday/ stock market madness

(This is a late post; it is Friday already).  It was quite a whipsaw week in the stock market.  And on Thursday Walt Zimmerman from ICAP Information Services opined that by 2013 the S&P 500 index will be at 570.  (Pictures from CNBC’s broadcast Thursday).  570! Say what?  The index closed at 1178 on Friday.   The market is following the same ‘5 wave pattern’  that it did from 2007 to 2009, Walt says.   Hey, I’m not an expert or a stock market guru (and who is? is anyone anymore?).   But the consensus is that there are not enough similarities when comparing the US economy in 2008 vs 2011, or the world economy in 2008 vs 2011, to justify this gloomy prediction.  We can only hope the consensus opinion has it right.