I am in Seattle ! The first picture is a night time satellite photo of North and South Korea I got from Yahoo News a day or two ago, showing the striking difference in economic activity between the two Koreas. We made our stop at Incheon airport, as always a bare 35 miles from the North Korean border (see my Google Latitude picture). The South Korean newspapers are full of speculation about the consequences for the region in the wake of ‘Dear Leader’ Kim Jung-Il’s unexpected death. The question is whether his son the 29 year old ‘Great Successor’ (these titles bestowed by the state media machinery) will have the support of his father’s peers. It probably does NOT help that he was promoted some years ago to a 4 star general without a day’s military service! Anyway. After a quick check of the Samsung monitors (a rice-based dessert shown), we took off and our flight path took us over Tokyo and nine hours of flying over the Pacific.
Wednesday/ at Hong Kong airport
The beautiful poinsettias are from the elevator lobby in the hotel when I left this morning. The intriguing east-meets-west billboard (for JP Morgan Investment Bank) is from Hong Kong airport where I’m waiting at the gate. That’s the Empire State Building and Big Ben, of course – but I don’t recognize the buildings from Asia. I will have to deploy the latest version of Google Goggles and do a picture search when I have more time. Got to go! A short stop-over at Seoul and then on to Seattle.
Tuesday/ cloud nine dreams
Could nine pillows on one’s bed be a few too many? (From my Marriott Hong Kong Sky City hotel room bed. I’m making my way back to Seattle on Wednesday morning). I guess all these afford the sleeper a lot of choice between softer and firmer and bigger and smaller pillows. Or maybe it could make one dream of being on cloud nine (a state of total euphoria) ?
Monday/ Godiva makes it snow
Never mind that is does not snow in Hong Kong. One can always shake up a snow globe like I did on Sunday in a Godiva chocolate store (the one in the picture). The ‘Belgium 1926’ is a reference to Godiva’s founding country and date. Legend has it that the Anglo-Saxon woman Lady Godiva (1002 – 1066) , rode naked through the streets of Coventry in order to protest high taxation imposed by her husband on his tenants.
And how long have snow globes been around? Seems the first ones appeared at the Paris Universal Expo of 1878, featuring a little Eiffel Tower inside.
Sunday/ pictures from Kowloon
I hopped into the van that took a colleague to Hong Kong airport for his trip back to the USA. From there it was just 15 minutes on the Airport Express train south east to Kowloon station, site of this apartment building. There must be a lot of feng shui in play with its large gap! The street scene picture is in Tsim Tsa Tsui just off Nathan Road. The Ferrero Rocher Christmas tree (Italian hazelnut cream chocolates wrapped in foil) is close by as well. Junks were used as sea-going vessels as early as the 2nd century but in the year 2011 this one has a diesel engine and tools around Victoria harbor with tourists. And then it was time for me to call it quits and head back up to the Hong Kong-mainland China border with the East Rail Line that starts at Hung Hom station. I love the station’s wavy roof : a beautiful industrial design that is functional as well, since it lets in lots of natural light.
Saturday/ quick trip to Shenzhen
I took the 20 min taxi ride for a quick trip in to Shenzhen tonight. The pictures are all from in and around the Mix-C shopping mall. I actually went to check out the Kingkey Finance Tower with its 100 floors at night. It can run gigantic banner advertisements on its curved sides, make flowers drift down on it, or even display bursting fireworks. (The third picture is an aerial perspective drawing that I found on-line). Speaking of flowers, the movie ‘The Flowers of War’ has just started showing here in theaters. It features Hollywood actor Christian Bale as a Westerner that finds refuge with a group of women in a church during Japan’s brutal invasion of Nanking in 1937 and tries to lead them to safety. The beautiful big dog was on the outside patio at Starbucks and generated a little stir among the other patrons. His master is the guy with the big notebook computer.
Friday/ a camel in Japan
It’s Friday! This is from the Japanese TV channel NHK World in my hotel room. Bactrian camels (two humps; dromedary camels have one) are native to the steppes of central Asia. There are 2 million of them, all domesticated. Wikipedia says that some 800 were remaining in the wild in northwest China and Mongolia as of 2002 and were classified as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. This camel seems to be well taken care of – in a zoo in Japan from what I can tell. The reporter admires the beast’s furry coat and then shows off its lunch : giant carrots filled with olives. Hmm. A yummy treat for a camel, I suppose?
Thursday/ adios Audi
I gauge the day’s temperature by walking out on my balcony in the morning before I go downstairs for breakfast. This was the beautiful sunrise Thursday morning at 7.15am. We’re back to light jacket weather, and the humidity is low so the air is cool and crisp.
Late Thursday night I caught the Audi R8 in the lobby bidding a handful of admirers good-bye : I guess it was time to go back to the showroom. Or maybe it found a driver to rev its engine? And check out the blue LED Christmas tree in the background.
Wednesday/ Christmas time in Coco Park
We had a project team dinner at the Coco Park complex in Futian district in Shenzhen last night. (Coco Park is Expat Central in the way that the Lan Kwai Fong area is in Hong Kong). The dinner was at an Italian restaurant with a red interior and with bronze buddhas and water lilies filling out the decor! But the thin-crust pizza (as appetizer) was very authentic, done in a wood-fired oven. I love the crazy diamond-patterned skyscrapers but did not have my proper camera with me. I will go back and take some better pictures at another time.
Tuesday/ the dragon has a long tail
This post is late! That is because our project here in China is approaching a major milestone : the completion of the development work. So we are fighting many dragons. Along with the development effort, there are test scripts, training materials, data clean-up and data conversions, security settings and system backups to keep synched up. We have the big items in place, but the list of smaller ones is a long one, a long tail*.
*[From Wikipedia]The term ‘long tail’ has gained popularity in recent times as describing the retailing strategy of selling a large number of unique items with relatively small quantities sold of each – usually in addition to selling fewer popular items in large quantities. The Long Tail was popularized by Chris Anderson in an October 2004 Wired magazine article, in which he mentioned Amazon.com and Netflix as examples of businesses applying this strategy. Anderson elaborated the concept in his book The Long Tail: Why the Future of Business Is Selling Less of More.
Monday/ No No! cries the cat
Sunday/ blustery and ‘cold’
Below is the view early Sunday morning from the hotel balcony. That is the Hong Kong territories in the distance. It was 16 C (61 F) but felt quite a bit colder because there was a strong wind. I looked for lunar eclipse pictures from Saturday night and liked the one of a goddess playing with the moon on-line. I’m not sure where this was taken. (A total eclipse was visible from China, but I was otherwise occupied with the Saturday night barbecue!).
Saturday/ chocolat blanc et langue de chat
We worked on Saturday but ended the day right with a lively and enjoyable barbecue at two of our colleagues’ apartment here in Dameisha .. complete with beef steak and salmon brought over from the USA! One of our Chinese colleagues brought these cookies made by Japanese company Shiroi Koibito for dessert.
Even I could figure out the chocolat blanc (white chocolate) but did not know that langue de chat is a classic French cookie (translation : the tongue of the cat .. which explains the cat depiction on the golden open-and-close sticker!). (Yes of course the cookies melt in one’s mouth). The cookie factory is on Hokkaido island (see the map -the big northern-most island in Japan). That is also where Mount Rishiri (picture on the box) is located.
Friday/ rousing send-off for an enlistee
I snapped these pictures from the bus as we drove by a government building in the town of Da Peng on the way to work. What’s going on? The Chinese firecrackers and ‘dragons’ are part of a rousing send-off for an enlistee into the People’s Liberation Army (the PLA , not to be confused with the Palestine Liberation Army).
From Wikipedia : The People’s Liberation Army is the unified military organization of all land, sea, strategic missile and air forces of the People’s Republic of China. It is the world’s largest military force, with approximately 3 million members. It has the world’s largest (active) standing army, with approximately 2.25 million members.
Military service is compulsory, in theory, for all men who attain the age of 18; women may register for duty in the medical, veterinary, and other technical services at ages as young as 14. A draft in China has never been enforced due to large numbers of volunteers from China’s huge population. The star below is the emblem of the People’s Liberation Army.
Thursday/ here is the news
Wednesday/ the Western cutlery Put place
This sign is from our lunch cafeteria here at work. There are two service windows that accept used lunch trays and cutlery, and this one is the put place for knives and forks (I love the direct translation!). Since I am part of the majority of lunch-goers that use chop sticks and soup bowl spoons to eat their lunch, my ‘put place’ is on the opposite side of the room.
Tuesday/ last night’s party was a pip
These little mandarins make one feel like the giant in Jack and the Beanstalk. The peel comes off easily and then you pop the whole mandarin in your mouth. Most of them don’t even have seeds* to deal with. Very nice!
*when eating an orange or a mandarin outside of the USA (in say, South Africa or Great Britain), say pips and not seeds. Just for fun I looked up ‘pip’ on dictionary.com and found another meaning for it. Check out the explanation for ‘last night’s party was a pip’ !
pip
noun
1. a small seed, especially of a fleshy fruit, as an apple or orange.
2. Also called pipperoo. Informal . Someone or something wonderful: Last night’s party was a pip.
Origin: 1590–1600; 1910–15 for def. 2; short for pippin
Monday/ Sunday drive Supercar Crash
This white Audi R8 V10 Coupé is parked in the hotel lobby for a promotion. Asked what it costs, the attendant said ‘more than ¥2m (US$314,000)’. I think it can be bought for under $200k in the USA, though.
(The other pictures are from searches I did on-line). NHK World TV from Japan reported here that Chugoku Expressway in Shimonoseki, Japan was the scene of a very costly crash on Sunday which reduced eight Ferraris, one Lamborghini and three Mercedes-Benz to wrecks (no serious injuries to the 10 drivers and passengers, though). It was a gathering of luxury sportscar owners going for a Sunday afternoon drive toward Hiroshima. The front driver struck a median while crossing lanes and set off a chain reaction of crashes which was all over in less than a minute. Eyewitnesses say the cars were going at a fair clip, some 140-160 km/h (up to 100mph), and driving too close together. It is not clear if the little Prius was caught up in the tangle as well, or if it was parked on the side of the road.
Sunday/ arrived in Dameisha
Our flight path took us over the Sea of Ochotsk, just over the northern tip of Sakhalin island, Russia’s largest island at about 1/4 the size of Japan. There’s the Asiana plane bound for Hong Kong parked at Gate 32 at Incheon airport in Seoul (see me in the reflection?). And there are a lot of Samsung LED TVs in the airport (it would be sacrilege to have Sonys, right?); this one had a Chevy Malibu commercial on. Now it’s time to snooze for a few hours before Monday morning is upon me.
Saturday/ Asiana Airlines to Seoul and Hong Kong
I’m at Seattle-Tacoma airport at the South Terminal gates waiting for the Asiana Airlines flight (it’s a regular Airbus A330) to Seoul. Then on to Hong Kong for a late Sunday night arrival. A Starbucks at the Hong Kong terminal our agreed-on meeting point for finding the driver for arriving Americans. The pictures are all from the Asiana Airlines website.






























































