This is a late post! Happy belated Father’s Day to every dad, especially in my family. Every one of you is a very special person.
Saturday/ the 10,000 yen note
This 10,000 yen note is worth $125. I held onto it when I changed my foreign currency at Seattle airport so that I can check it out and decide if I want to add it to my collection of foreign bank notes. The yen is the third most-traded currency after the US dollar and the Euro, and widely used as a reserve currency. Maybe I should have gotten more yen when I was in Tokyo! : )
Anyway – that is Fukuzawa Yukichi (Jan 10, 1834 – Feb 3, 1901) on the front (obverse) of the note. He is regarded as one of the founders of modern Japan due to his ideas about government and social institutions. I held up the note against a window blind to check out the watermark. And that bird on the back is not your average farm rooster! It’s a fenghuang, a mythological bird of East Asia that reigns over all other birds. The bird is a symbol of high virtue and grace, and now I know where the bird comes from that I found on a lamp post in the Ginza district in Tokyo.
Friday/ unpacking
Here are most of my trip’s little souvenirs and ‘acquisitions’ that came out of my suitcases. ‘The Great Wave off Kanagawa’-themed porcelain plate and Doraemon-the-robotic-cat coin bag are from the Japanese department store Sogo in Hong Kong. The mini-display case, bone china mug and grey rescued cotton* shirt are from Muji, another Japanese store. The white Puma t-shirts are X-L (yes – I am big and burly by Asian clothing standards! Watch out, don’t make me mad!) The books, CDs and ‘nano-block’ Tokyo Tower were bought in Tokyo. (I still have to build the tower, of course).
*also called ‘ochiwata’, it is essentially the material left over in the weaving processes that use cotton threads.
Finally, the last item was given to me by a colleague, which I was very grateful for : these were handed out at the go-live celebration, but there was not enough available to give one to each team member. It is a laser-etched glass model of Areva’s CPR-1000 Pressurized Water Reactor. These are the reactors that we built our enterprise resource planning system for.
Thursday/ San Franciso, then Seattle
I made it in at Seattle airport at 1.30pm. The United Airlines tail is from San Francisco International airport, same as the one we were in. Coming in from there to Seattle, we made a turn over downtown and headed south again. The black structure in the middle of the picture is Columbia Tower, the city’s tallest building. Everything in the foreground is ‘West Seattle’, connected to the city with the West Seattle bridge.
Thursday morning/ to the airport
Wednesday/ to the Marriott Skycity
The driver that picked me up got me to the Marriott Skycity (love that name, sounds so futuristic) hotel in just two hours, which allowed me to take the Airport Express train to the city to pick up my shirts from the tailor.
Pictures : view over Victoria harbor on the way in toward Lantau Island (where the airport is); a Qantas Airways 747 coming in for a landing; this mall is at the Tsing Yi station (should not have a shortage of shoppers with all those apartments on top of it! AND easy access with the train); oncoming Airpot Express train. The last picture is my farewell picture of Hong Kong (for now! who knows when I will be back?). This is outside Central Station. The poetry of time, says the billboard.
Tuesday/ packing up, everything this time
I’m going to Hong Kong from work on Wednesday night to fly home Thursday morning. I will not come back for a final trip as planned originally. So Tuesday night it was time to pack up everything I have out here! Well – almost. The clothing iron, pillows and a food package with Ramen noodles and soup I just left in the hotel room. I reluctantly threw away the left-over milk (it made it here to a store all the way from the state of Wisconsin in the USA) and Tropicana orange juice I had in the refrigerator.
CCTV was on in the background, warning about more torrential rain in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangzte river (and the Shanghai arae). But in the meantime Hubei Province, where Three Gorges Dam is located, is facing the worst spring drought in 50 years. (Map from Wikipedia’s entry for Yangzte River).
Monday/ Dameisha restaurants
From my walk last night : these restaurants are all in the street one block back from the Dameisha beach, behind the Air Land Hotel and the LA Waterfront Hotel. I cannot read their names, except of course the last one : The Famous Roasted Squab Sin Sui Wah Seafood restaurant. What is a squab? It’s a nestling pigeon, fully grown but still unfledged.
Sunday/ the newspaper on the train
This is the scene from my train ride back to the mainland border on Sunday. It’s always nice to have the reflection in the window to work with so you don’t have to scare strangers by taking their picture! There was an Oriental Daily Sunday newspaper on the seat next to me (known for its sensational style and often gory pictures, says Wikipedia).
So there was news of the 2011 NBA final (the Dallas Mavericks won and that is Dirk Nowitski exchanging Cantonese words with the Miami Heat players*), there’s the jockey cursing at his poor horse, and there is the 2011 Year of the Rabbit wabbit in the weather forecast. And check out the classifieds – I love the cryptic look of the classifieds page.
*I had trouble finding a translator here at work since it’s Cantonese and not Mandarin, but he’s essentially saying ‘One of me is enough for three of you’ and they are replying ‘You’re playing with fire’.
Saturday/ Lamma island
The luxurious fabric for suits or jackets is cashmere from Inner Mongolia*. I snapped a picture of it in its display case at a high-end tailor in Central District where I went with a colleague. Since I bought suits and jackets before starting on the project I felt I didn’t want to spend more money on those and ordered a few shirts instead. I will show them off when I get them back !
Then we took a ferry to Lamma Island. The fare was only HKD14.5, not even US$2 .. and what a relief the air-conditioned cabin was from the heat and humidity! On my previous outing there (blog entry of Mar 28, 2010) we stopped at Yung Shue Wan pier and walked across the narrow north-end of the island to Luk Chau Wan. This time we were lazy and just stayed put and checked in at a seafood restaurant. The fish they served us was very fresh and very good. The little structure is also in Yung Shue Wan village and looks like a temple inside with incense, but I don’t know its name. The hand-drawn posters advertising ice cream is from a shop on the main street.
*There are reports of protests by ethnic Mongolians in the Hong Kong newspapers. (China has 55 ethnic minorities and they account for only 8% of the population). A shepherd was recently killed by a coal truck driver (I think it was an accident). The Han Chinese in the area still outnumber the Mongolians by 5 to 1 in spite of a long standing exemption from the central government’s one-child-per-family policy.
Friday/ it’s weekend so to Hong Kong
It’s my last weekend before I get to go home on Thursday. This time a colleague and I took a black taxi to the Sha Tou Jiao border and then got onto a big bus that runs to the Kowloon Tong train station. The bus ticket was only US$ 7. The pictures are all from my vantage point in the front of the big bus, the first ones on the outskirts of the city and then the Lion Rock tunnel which is close to the Kowloon Tong train station which also serves as a bus terminal.
Thursday/ oatmeal ‘porridge’
I’ve run out of my made-in-South-Africa cereal ProNutro’. So this Marks & Spencer cup with just-add-water oatmeal porridge* from Hong Kong will have to do in the meantime for a hotel room breakfast. (Sultana is a raisin made from sultana grapes). *I think the reason the word ‘porridge’ is not widely used in the USA, is because there all the porridges there are made of oatmeal ! In Asia, porridges are made of rice and are called congees.
Wednesday/ it’s world IPv6 day
The implementation of the new internet protocol IPv6 (a standard for electronic communications) is underway. Google, Facebook, Yahoo!, Akamai and Limelight Networks are among some of the major organisations offer their content over IPv6 for a 24-hour “test flight”. The goal of the Test Flight Day is to create visibility and to motivate organizations across the industry – Internet service providers, hardware makers, operating system vendors and web companies – to prepare their services for IPv6 to ensure a successful transition as IPv4 addresses run out. We have to make room for the next billion internet users! I compiled this punch list of the internet’s history. I am sure the list is not complete, but it was interesting to compile it.
1973 The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) initiates a research program to investigate techniques and technologies for interlinking packet networks of various kinds.
1986 The U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) initiates the development of the NSFNET which, today, provides a major backbone communication service for the Internet.
1988 Jarkko Oikarinen invents Internet Relay Chat (IRC), a form of real-time Internet text messaging (chat) or synchronous conferencing that is widely in use today.
1988 ‘The network is the computer’ .. a phrase credited to John Gage from Sun Microsystems.
1992 The Internet Society (ISOC) is chartered to provide leadership in internet- related standards, education, and policy. The number of hosts breaks 1,000,000.
1994 Electrical engineering graduate students Jerry Yang and David Filo at Stanford University creates a website named “David and Jerry’s Guide to the World Wide Web” which later becomes Yahoo!
1995 Online dial-up service providers (Compuserve, America Online, Prodigy) begin to provide Internet access.
1996 Internet phones catch the attention of US telecommunication companies who ask the US Congress to ban the technology (which has been around for years).
1996 Google starts as a research project by Larry Page and Sergey Brin, Ph.D. students at Stanford working on the Stanford Digital Library Project (SDLP).
1998 The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) is established in Marina Del Rey, California. Before the establishment of ICANN, the Government of the United States controlled the domain name system of the internet.
1998 Netscape releases the source code for its Netscape Navigator browser to the public domain. Microsoft releases Windows 98 with its Internet Explorer browser integrated into the desktop. It showed Bill Gates’ determination to capitalize on the enormous growth of the Internet but it brought court challenges and penalties to their dominance.
1999 Did Al Gore create the Internet? Al Gore makes his famous/ infamous statement ‘During my service in the United States Congress, I took the initiative in creating the Internet’ according to a CNN transcript of an interview with Wolf Blitzer. To be fair : Gore has probably done more than any other elected official to support the growth and development of the Internet from the 1970’s to the present .
2001 The first commercial launch of a 3G (Third Generation) commercially automated cellular network is done in Japan by NTT DoCoMo on the WCDMA standard, enabling text messaging, MMS, email and Internet access.
2004 Mark Zuckerberg starts writing the code for Facebook in his Harvard dorm room. The social networking website that was at first only available to Harvard students, today has 600 million members worldwide.
2007 Apple releases its first iPhone. It would soon change the mobile handset interface paradigm from hard-ware based to software based. .
2011 The internet runs out of addresses! Internet Protocal version 4 (IPv4) allows 32 bits for an Internet Protocol address, and can therefore support 232 (4,294,967,296) addresses. The new protocol IPv6 uses 128-bit addresses, so the new address space supports 2128 (approximately 340 undecillion or 3.4×1038) addresses.
Tuesday/ be a civilized swimmer
Monday was the Dragon Boat Festival holiday, but it’s back to work today. The Luohu Port border crossing building looks very spiffy with its new coat of paint. I had to remember to turn around to take the picture as I exited from Customs downstairs.
Tuesday night the project team had a little go-live celebration at the expat village swimming pool. The pool is very nice – I just couldn’t resist taking a picture of the sign. No mention of doing that other thing in the pool, but I am sure it’s covered by the ‘civilized swimmer’ request. I recall a plaque at someone’s house a long time ago that I thought was funny. It said we don’t swim in your toilet, so please don’t pee in our pool !
Monday/ Germany’s exit from nuclear power
There was a spirited panel discussion by newspaper editors on a German TV channel in my hotel on Sunday night. (Parties in Chancellor Angela Merkel’s coalition government agreed on Monday May 30 that Germany will target 2022 to have all their nuclear power plants shut down). The text on the TV program picture says ‘Remaining Risks of Nuclear Exit : Too Quick? Too Soon? Inconsequential?’ My German was far too poor to follow the discussion, but it prompted me to find out more about the debate.
What I found out so far : 1. The majority of Germans do not want nuclear power, it’s a very political issue. 2. Germany gets about 25% of its energy from nuclear power (the chart says 29% because it is a little outdated), about the same percentage as the USA. 3. The government will lose about €1 billion ($1.44 billion) in tax revenues every year. 4. Someone will have to pay for the new sources of energy – who? The utility companies? (They are planning to take legal action against the government) The consumer?
Finally – the chart shows the Netherlands get only 4% of their power from nuclear sources (and look at the French). They get most of their energy from gas and coal, but they do have a significant installed capacity of wind power.
Sunday/ blue sky and warm weather in Hong Kong
Sunday was a bright sunny day in Hong Kong .. a little too warm to be outside so I escaped into the shopping malls to get out of the heat. The first tram picture is close to the Marriott Courtyard Hotel. The Taiwan tram makes one want to go visit but hey! – they will have to get themselves out of the news with the current food additive scandal. Taiwan authorities found on May 23 that a chemical company in New Taipei City had sought to cut production costs by adding DEHP, a common plasticizer identified as a toxic and cancer-causing chemical, as a substitute for the more expensive palm oil to produce clouding agents used in food. The scandal involves 206 food producers in Taiwan, including almost all the major names, and hundreds of food products.
The fertility goddess (I think – I should have looked at the plaque and I didn’t!) is in the plaza at Heritage 1881 on Canton Rd in Kowloon. Then I took the Star Ferry back to Hong Kong island. The tall building on the right with the claws (scraping at the sky?) is the International Finance Center. The citizens wearing oxygen tank and breathing apparatus is from a billboard at the ferry terminal promoting clean air in the city. And there is an onslaught of advertising in the subway, on billboards and on buses : another Transformer movie is coming.
Saturday/ immortal peaches
The weekend finds me in Hong Kong again, and these works of art are from a display in the Pacific Place II mall on Hong Kong island. The artist is Qu Guang Ci, born in 1969 in Shanghai and currently living and working in Beijing. The bunnies on the floor are really faces with bunny ears and are called the ‘The Bunny Guy’. The second picture shows the ‘Immortal Peaches and Cake’ depicting Sun Wukong, the ‘Protector of the Peaches’ from the famous Chinese novel Journey to the West. Eating them makes one immortal (which sounds very much like the forbidden fruit from the Garden of Eden!). The man and woman in the Zongshan suits (also known in the West as Mao suits) are called ‘Standing On High’. I am not sure what that refers to, and it is hard to read from their facial expressions what they feel !
Friday/ disappointing US jobs report
The Labor Dept reported Friday that the US economy added only 54,000 jobs in May – a significant slowdown from 232,000 jobs added to payrolls in April. Since economists were expecting a gain of around 170,000 jobs, it was a big disappointment. By most estimates the economy needs to add about 150,000 jobs a month just to keep pace with population growth.
This is also the time that new graduates are looking for work, and I found this editorial written by David Brooks that appeared in the New York Times very interesting! It’s a big world out there and the realities for job seekers can be harsh. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/31/opinion/31brooks.html
Thursday/ Na Li is making history
Chinese tennis player Na Li is in the final of the French Open tournament – a big deal for China’s tennis fans. She will play against Francesca Schiavone of Italy in the final.
Na Li already made the front page of a regional newspaper after reaching the semi-final.
The other picture, after her semi-final win, is from the French Open website.
Wednesday/ don’t climbing over the fence
These evening pictures are of the Dameisha beach. Some of the beach is being prepared for events (beach volley ball, I suspect) for the Universiade (international student Olympics) in August. So don’t climbing over that fence ! Word is that with a holiday weekend coming up the incoming tide of beach-goers will be limited to 40,000. .. that still means it will be packed, though.
Here is my best effort to look up the Chinese characters by using the English.
切莫qiè mò – you must not / please don’t… / be sure not to / on no account (do it)
攀爬 pān pá to climb
And of course there are colorful idioms associated with climbing as well :
难于登天nán yú dēng tiān – harder than climbing to heaven (idiom)
爬山涉水pá shān shè shuǐ – to climb mountains and wade rivers (idiom); fig. to make a long and difficult journey
缘木求鱼yuán mù qiú yú lit. climb a tree to catch a fish (idiom); fig. to attempt the impossible































































