Sunday/ South Korean bank notes

I got a few South Korean bank notes at Incheon airport on Saturday.   The won has been in use for thousands of years, but represented by different denominations and notes over the centuries, of course.    Today South Korean paper money comes in 50,000 won (introduced only in 2009, equal to US$ 45), 10,000 won (US$ 9), 5,000 won (US$ 4.50) and and 1,000 won (US$ 0.90).    So the $9 in exchange for the 10,000 won note is fine for adding it to my world money collection.

The front of the 10,000 won note shows Sejong the Great, the fourth king of the Joseon Dynasty of Korea (born May 7, 1397 – dec. May 18, 1450).    The background contains a folding screen from this time, and text from the first work of literature written in Korean.   The work is called ‘Songs of the Dragons Flying to Heaven’, and was also compiled during this time.

Saturday/ in Seattle

I arrived in Seattle a few hours ago via Seoul.   The van picked 3 of us up in Dameisha on Saturday morning.     The first picture is on the way there; the ubiquitous red Hong Kong taxi making it into the picture.   Next stop Hong Kong airport, super efficient and organized as always.    I opted for the Korean dinner on the Asiana Airlines flight, called Bibimbap (‘mixed meal’), a signature Korean dish.    It is served as a bowl of warm white rice and namul (sautéed and seasoned vegetables) and gochujang (chili pepper paste).   My version had sesame oil and some ground beef as well.  The ingredients are stirred together thoroughly just before eating.   Delicious!   The stewardess said I got the good version of bibimbap, supplied by a Korean company, and that the meals they get from Hong Kong suppliers are not nearly as nice.   The soup was salty with bit of dried fish, onion and cabbage and was very good, too.

The final picture is our approach into Incheon airport in Seoul with a nice suspension bridge in the distance.

Friday/ shipping out

It’s Friday, it’s two weeks after the go-live, and most of the Americans are going home for a week.     So we are as happy as robot cat Doraemon on the candy tin (picture from a candy store in Hong Kong), and sitting pretty as the spotted cat (leopard) in the tree (picture from a colleague, taken in a private game reserve in South Africa). 

I will stick around in Dameisha tonight and then get picked up in the morning to catch my flight out to Seattle on Saturday,  Asiana Airlines via Seoul.    And I might even arrive there with 64 degrees and the sun shining. 

Thursday/ countdown to Universade 2011

 I took these pictures Thursday in Dameisha.   Shenzhen is the city that hosts the 2011 Universiade (the ‘Start Here’* picture is presumably an office that sells tickets to events -or registers participants?).   The Universiade is an international multi-sport event, organized for university athletes by the International University Sports Federation (FISU).      It has 10 compulsory sports, namely track and field, water sports (swimming, diving and water polo), basketball, soccer, fencing, gymnastics, judo, table tennis, tennis and volleyball.

*the ‘Start Here’ reminded me of the Windows 95 launch .. and sure enough, the ‘ Start’  on the picture with Bill Gates uses the same font !

I discovered later the ICIF on the green ball stands for the International Cultural Industries Fair of 2011 which is the 7th annual cultural trade fair in China.     So there is that going on somewhere in the area as well.  

Wednesday/ China’s Oprah

Here are a few TV pictures I snapped Wednesday night.   It is of Chen Lu Yu, the host amd creator of A Date With Luyu and a guest.    She is sometimes referred to as China’s Oprah.    I couldn’t make out much of the conversation on this show where she interviewed the blond-haired lǎo ​wài*.   (I don’t know his name).    He speaks Mandarin fluently and his voice has a nice tenor to it when he sings.

*foreigner, a neutral term.     We use it frequently on the bus or at work to describe ourselves to our Chinese collegues and client team members here, as in ‘Will ​lǎo ​wàis be able to order food at that restaurant without help?’

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tuesday/ how to build a 1,000mph car

 .. which is of course not really a car : it’s a rocket on wheels.   

This recent article on the Bloodhound Supersonic Car project appeared in last week’s Economist (see text below).   I found the diagram of the other British landspeed records elsewhere.  And where exactly is the proposed Hakskeen Pan test site?  I wanted to know.   Well, it’s in the north-west of South Africa, right in that wedge between Botswana and Namibia, in the Kalahari desert.     Could that place ever be the same after that insatiable need-for-speed Hound had thundered across its flats?

 

From May 5 issue of The Economist :

How to build a 1,000mph car

THIS summer Daniel Jubb will perform the equivalent of lighting the blue touch paper and standing clear. The 27-year-old will undertake the first full test firing of a hybrid rocket which he has designed to help a British team set a new land-speed record by driving at 1,000mph (1,609kph). Mr Jubb’s rocket, however, will also need the assistance of a powerful EJ200 jet engine from a Typhoon fighter aircraft and a Cosworth Formula 1 racing engine if Bloodhound SSC (supersonic car) is to become the fastest thing on wheels.

Combining a rocket, a jet and a racing-car engine into one vehicle is engineering of an extreme sort, but record-breaking often demands that new problems be solved. Mr Jubb’s task was to build a rocket that could be used safely in a car, but was also controllable and could be switched off quickly in the event of an emergency.

A rocket works by burning fuel with an oxidiser, which provides a source of oxygen for combustion. The hot exhaust gases are then blasted through a nozzle to produce thrust. Rockets using liquid propellants can be shut down reasonably easily by turning off the pumps delivering the fuel and oxidiser, but they tend to be complex and their propellants, such as liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen, difficult and hazardous to handle.

Solid-fuel rockets, in which the fuel and oxidiser are pre-mixed into a stable, solid propellant and then packed inside the case of the rocket, are simpler, lighter and relatively safer. But once a solid-fuel rocket is ignited, it is off like a firework and keeps going until all the fuel is burned up. About the only way to stop it is to blow it apart. In a car, that would not do.

The hybrid design which Mr Jubb has come up with uses a solid fuel called hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene, a form of synthetic rubber used to make things like aircraft tyres. It is contained within the case of the rocket, into which is pumped a liquid oxidiser called high-test peroxide (HTP), a concentrated form of hydrogen peroxide which is relatively safe to handle. When the HTP comes into contact with a catalyst contained within the rocket, it turns into steam and oxygen. And it does so at a high enough temperature to ignite the solid fuel. This provides the added advantage of not having to build an ignition system into the rocket.

If the hybrid rocket needs to be shut down in a hurry all you need do is turn off the pump delivering the oxidiser. That is where the Cosworth engine comes in. Apart from generating auxiliary power for Bloodhound SSC’s electrical and hydraulic systems, it also drives a high-speed pump capable of delivering all 800 litres of HTP in the tank to the rocket in 20 seconds.

The rocket gives the car plenty of power, but it is either on or off. To provide some form of throttle to allow acceleration and deceleration, the vehicle’s designers added the EJ200 jet engine. This will be used by Andy Green, a Royal Air Force pilot who will drive the car, to get the vehicle moving. At about 200mph he will start the pump to deliver the HTP into the rocket.

At first there will be a stream of steam coming from the rocket. But then ignition gets going and at full blast the jet and the rocket will each provide about half of the 210,000 newtons (47,000 pounds) of thrust needed to break the record. At about 750mph the car will go through the sound barrier. Wing Commander Green has been there before—and not only in a fighter plane. In 1997 at Black Rock Desert, Nevada, he drove Thrust SSC to become the first person to break the sound barrier in a car and set the existing land-speed record of 763mph. This time the Nevada desert will not be big enough, so the attempt will take place over an even larger expanse of flat ground at Hakskeen Pan in the Northern Cape in South Africa, perhaps next year.

Bloodhound SSC could reach up to 1,050mph. Wing Commander Green then has to slam on the brakes. After turning off the jet and rocket he will deploy an air brake at 800mph, parachutes at 600mph and finally put his foot on a car-type friction brake at 250mph—any faster and the brakes could explode.

Then the car is serviced and refuelled to do it all over again. This is because the Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile, which keeps the land-speed records, takes as its measure the average of two runs over one mile in opposite directions completed within one hour.

The attempt is being organised by Richard Noble, a veteran British record-breaker, and is sponsored by a number of companies. Mr Jubb’s firm, The Falcon Project, was one of the first to step forward—and into the limelight. He usually designs and manufactures secretive military rockets in Britain and the United States. Construction of Bloodhound SSC has begun at an apt location: a borrowed warehouse on the dockside in Bristol next to Isambard Kingdom Brunel’s SS Great Britain, which in 1845 crossed the Atlantic in a record 14 days.

Unusually for such an enterprise, all the technical details, including computer-aided design files, are available online (bloodhoundssc.com). Mr Noble is involving schools in the project to encourage interest in engineering as a career. So far, more than 4,000 schools are taking part. This was part of a deal with Britain’s defence ministry in order to borrow the EJ200. It is to be hoped, though, that none of the children will try to build one of these cars at home.

Monday/ earplugs to the rescue

I stayed at the hotel on Monday to get over my cold.   Of course : I had to get a day with lots of activity out front in the street.   Whole trees getting lifted up by a crane and put in by the enormous (but empty) apartment complex, AND a crew with jack hammers breaking up the pavement in front of the hotel.     So that’s where you need these little memory foam earplugs.  Granted, they take a little getting used to but they drown out the decibels from screaming babies, jack hammers and jet engines.

Sunday/ happy Mother’s Day 母亲节 !

Happy Mother’s Day to all the mothers!  We love you! [big hug-g].

The TV screen is from my hotel room in Dameisha after I had arrived.      So .. to make my way back to Dameisha today, I took a taxi from the hotel on Hong Kong Island to the Hung Hom terminal station of the East Rail line (light blue line on the map).   That train runs up all the way to the Lo Wu border crossing (about 40 mins).   Then you walk through the Hong Kong and mainland China crossings, and catch a taxi again for Dameisha.    I worried that I might be stopped at the border if I had a fever (I have a runny nose and a sore throat), but I made it through.   ‘Stay away from wild animals’ said a sign coming in to the mainland.   Yes- nevermind the animals, I’m staying away from humans so as not to make them sick!

Getting on the train at Hung Hom station.  As the railway line approaches the mainland border, it splits into two, one route going to Lo Wu and the other to Lok Ma Chau.
Tai Po Market station. The Hong Kong Railway Museum is located a10-min walk away from the station.
The arum lily art is at Fan Ling station (we call them pig’s ears in Afrikaans in South Africa).
Approaching Lo Wu station.
Luo Wu station on the Shenzhen side, after I had entered mainland China through customs.  The taxi stand is downstairs by escalator.  

Saturday/ searching for medicine

Yes, the odd work hours and the stress of last week must have gotten to me.    I have a sore throat (this is Sunday morning) and a stuffy head.     I did find some Cepacol throat tablets (made in the USA, no less) .. these have been around a long time since I took them as a youngster in South Africa.       Check out the colorful labels on the medicines one finds in the drug stores here.    Doraemon the robot cat is also deployed to market products aimed at kids !

Friday/ Hong Kong

Friday was busy at work.  We discovered a bug in the SAP program that creates work orders, and several hundred work orders needed to get fixed.    We got the fix in and since we did not have to come in to work this weekend,  my colleague and I hopped on the bus and came to Hong Kong.     It took 3 hours to get here – about average – and this picture was taken outside the Four Seasons hotel, on Hong Kong island.      The snacks we had at the bar, was also dinner.

Thursday/ dinner at Dynasty

These chopsticks are from the Dynasty restaurant in the Sheraton Dameisha Hotel where we had dinner Thursday night : lacquered with metal ends.   (See the dragon in the picture?).    I have seen really expensive sticks carved from jade.      But it turns out for me that the lowly bamboo ones we use at lunch in the cafeteria every day are the very best :  light and with tips that can hold on the morsel of food that is picked up from the plate or the bowl.

Wednesday/ evening walk

Just a few pictures from my evening walk around Da Mei Sha : the entrance to the freeway that runs to Shenzhen,  the Jing Di hotel on the beachfront (hotels.com reports that it goes for US $106 a night – that puts it halfway between the cheapest hotels in Dameisha which go for $33 and the Sheraton which goes for $250),  and flood lights on the Mei Sha beach around 8pm in the evening with some evening swimmers.

Tuesday/ Day One

We had an early start (5.45am bus departure from Dameisha!) to make it in for the go-live.    But please note that we are not opening a website that sells tickets for a rock concert.     So the system does not get flooded with thousands of users trying to get in.   Instead, the first day users are the work planners, the supply chain users and the finance guys .. and some of them have already been in the system since last week.

And are you ready for your 5-minute crash course on how to install  SAP?    Let’s go!    Start by setting up a development (DEV) and sandbox (SBX) system.     SAP comes with packaged programs and some configuration but you will have to set up your own company’s configuration and master data.      Then do a ‘blueprint’ phase to draw up the plan for what functions the system needs to have.      The DEV system is used for this and for the ‘realization’ phase.    The realization phase – the construction phase – can take 6 to 12 months!    You then need a ‘quality assurance’ system (QAS) for testing the prototype that you built.    For that, convert your legacy system’s data into the QAS.     And then when all defects have been fixed and tweaks made to the design, you are ready to create the final system.      In our case we had a ‘production system’ (PRD) up and running already that had been in place for a few years.     But if it’s the first time SAP is installed at your company, you will create a brand-spanking new PRD system.   (A system is a gigantic database with several hundred thousand connected tables, a set of SAP application software, and database software from Oracle or IBM to keep the millions of data records indexed and organized).  

So all of this to say our project has ‘arrived’ at the end of the line.   We have a system that is up and running, that have active users in, that has the basic SAP functions with added bells and whistles that make it support the work methods here.     Which in our case is running a nuclear power plant’s work management activities,  engineering activities, supply chain functions (purchases of parts, materials and services) and all the finances that go with it.  

 

Monday/ the Great Doughnut Hunt

Monday’s mission was to find some doughnuts and bagels in Hong Kong for the SAP go-live here in Daya Bay.    So here are the highlights of the events that led to the delightful sight of pink-sprinkly and chocolate-with-nuts frosted doughnuts.     The doughnut shop in Lan Kwai Fong we found on the internet went out of business some time ago.    So, off to the nearest Starbucks.   It had all of 8 doughnuts (we needed forty-8!).   Well – we’ll take all 8, we said.   Something is better than nothing.    And would they know where to get more?  Or when is the next delivery?  There is a factory in the city but they only deliver again at 3 pm.   It would have been best to order one day ahead.   But the barista was very helpful, offering to call other Starbuckses and tracking down more for us.   Well – we didn’t have time to go to 6 other Starbuckses in the city!   So we remembered a Marks & Spencer store down on Queens Rd., and off we went.   The store’s food dept was in the basement.   As we made our way through the underwear department which was also down there, we went .. hmm, what are the chances of any doughnuts down here?   But sure enough, they had a bakery and there they were,  in the display case (pictures).    And they had plenty more in the deep freezer.   Turns out they keep them there and defrost them a dozen at a time – otherwise the frosting goes gooey in the humid Hong Kong atmosphere.    Alright! we said.  4 dozen frozen ones, please !   Mission accomplished.    (Soon after that we learned of the news of the big mission from the US Marines that had been accomplished as well).

Sunday/ Madame Tussaud’s Wax Museum

Sunday was May Day here in Asia and in Europe (Google’s homepage), and in most places that makes Monday a holiday.    My colleague had not taken the Hong Kong Peak Tram, and so we did that — but the line was so long that we bought a combination Madame Tussaud’s Wax Museum plus Tram ticket in the much shorter line.      The museum was a lot of fun.   (The picture of Einstein is my favorite*.   One could only get a picture with President Obama from the official photographer, that’s why I couldn’t pose with him on my picture).

*The weekend China Post reports that there is an Einstein exhibition planned for Shanghai and that authorities there insisted that it be coupled with an exhibit of Confucius

Saturday/ International Commerce Center building

Today we started out on Hollywood Rd on Hong Kong Island where all the antique shops are, stopped by the Hard Rock Cafe for lunch and then went to International Commerce Center which has opened its obsevarion deck just a few weeks ago.

Pictures – Man Mo temple on Hollywood Rd burns a lotof incense (spiral coils)!    The International Commerce Center comes in at No 4 according to a chart on the observation deck.  Notably Chicago boasts two skyscrapers in the top 10 : Willis Tower (Sears Tower’s new name) and Trump’s Tower.  (Message to Mr Trump :  stick to real estate and stay out of politics).    The blue floor with a model of Hong Kong is at one’s feet when stepping out of the elevator on the 100th floor.   The tower is in Kowloon, so that’s Hong Kong Island across Victoria Harbor.  The observation deck has little mascots (to make it interesting for young visitors?)  The picture shows a little of the side, and that’s me in the ‘take a photo’ cube.

We noticed that there’s a number of floors above the observation deck .. that is actually a Ritz-Carlton Hotel (!) occupying floors 102 through 118.    It has the world’s highest swimming pool and bar within a building.   The 30,000 sqf Presidential Suite which costs 100 000 HKD per night ($US 12,500) is on floor 117.

Friday/ to Hong Kong

The corporate steering committee’s reviews and assessments have been completed. and we have been given the green light to go live on Tuesday with our system.   The cut-over activities went well this week – so well that we don’t have to work over the weekend.      So a colleague and I jumped on the bus and came to Hong Kong.   Pictures :  a new face for the Sha Tou Jiao border crossing building, waiting for the bus to Hong Kong.    Prince Edward station on the Hong Kong metro and a British pub in Lan Kwai Fong televising the Royal Wedding (of course).    All kinds of pubs and restaurants in Lan Kwai Fong, we picked a Greek restaurant for dinner.   The Hong Kong Hard Rock Cafe has just opened.

Thursday/ instant noodles with tonkotsu flavor

What’s for dinner in the hotel room if one is too tired to go out?   Why – instant noodles, of course!     Add boiling water, let it steep for 3 minutes and it’s ready!   Tonkotsu flavor is pork bone broth flavor (or an imitation of that? doesn’t matter, it’s tasty and good).   My research shows that instant noodles were invented in 1958 by Momofuku Ando, the Taiwanese-Japanese founder and chairman of Nissin Foods (same as my noodle  cup’s brand), now run by his son Koki Ando.   

A final note :  instant noodles was named the greatest Japanese invention of the 20th century in a Japanese poll.    (Source : Wikipedia.   It did not say which other inventions the instant noodle competed with).

Wednesday/ 2011 Year of the Rabbit silver coin

Here is the coin that I bought Tuesday.   (Never mind that silver’s price surged over $49 an ounce on Monday,  briefly putting it within $1 of a 30-year-high!   I bought the coin as a souvenir and not as an investment).

This commemorative 1 oz silver coin of Year of the Rabbit 2011 is legal tender of the People’s Republic of China, issued by People’s Bank of China.    The obverse (front) shows the Rabbit and the reverse says People’s Republic of China with the Forbidden Palace in the center.

Tuesday/ Shenzhen Museum and Civic Plaza

Since I had Tuesday off (due to Monday’s night shift) I went back to where I was on Sunday : the Shenzhen Library and Concert Hall.    (I bought a silver coin with a rabbit on.   I will show it tomorrow).    So the first picture is of the Shenzhen Library.    Remember the building with the wavy roof?    It houses the Shenzhen Museum, and check out the second picture – made me think the building is galloping towards me, very cool.   It was designed by architect Li Mingyi, built by the Shenzhen QiXin Construction Group and completed in 2004.     The small picture is an artist’s rendition.   It shows the entire structure which I couldn’t into a single picture, so I covered it from left to right with three pictures.    The Civic Plaza from where I took these three pictures has big and small light fixtures powered by solar energy.     I don’t know the names of the other glitzy new glass and steel buildings, but the last picture is of the Children’s  Palace.   It’s a science museum but it was very much closed on Tuesday night.