So I watched Salmon Fishing in the Yemen and started reading some on salmon, etc. and came across these two amazing pictures, man-made weir to assist salmons in their migration:
Photo credits:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Fish_ladder_at_Tawe_Barrage_-_geograph.org.uk_-_1607929.jpg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:RockyReachDam-FishLadder.jpg
Cosmic Karma
Tuesday, January 8, 2013
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
3D Printing
Wow, this is just too amazing. Wonder what I can design to make a few bux. =D
http://money.cnn.com/2011/06/17/smallbusiness/3-D_printers_small_business/index.htm
http://money.cnn.com/2011/06/17/smallbusiness/3-D_printers_small_business/index.htm
Monday, June 13, 2011
Zediva
So today I was finally "inducted" into Zediva. If you don't know what it is, it's a company that streams movies newly released on DVD. They get around the no-streaming-newly-released-DVD rules by using physical DVDs. Essentially, when you rent a movie, you are controlling a remotely located DVD player.They are a start up with limited resources, so there's a wait list to sign up. After about a month's wait, I finally received the registration link today and I have just watched my first movie.
Pros:
1) new movies
2) no need to wait for it in the mail
3) no need to drive to a redbox/blockbuster (and no need to return it)
4) better than netflix streaming in that it has subtitles
5) $10 for 10 movie credits, cheap like a kiosk
Cons:
1) since you are controlling a remote DVD players, pausing/playing/rewind etc. are not as convenient
2) quality is not as good as Netflix, not sure if it's streaming speed or regular definition DVDs
3) the sound and images are a little out of sync
4) no ipad app
So long as you are not watching a movie that's meant to be watched in HD, it gets the job done. Perfect for lazy people like me who wanted to watch a new movie. :)
Pros:
1) new movies
2) no need to wait for it in the mail
3) no need to drive to a redbox/blockbuster (and no need to return it)
4) better than netflix streaming in that it has subtitles
5) $10 for 10 movie credits, cheap like a kiosk
Cons:
1) since you are controlling a remote DVD players, pausing/playing/rewind etc. are not as convenient
2) quality is not as good as Netflix, not sure if it's streaming speed or regular definition DVDs
3) the sound and images are a little out of sync
4) no ipad app
So long as you are not watching a movie that's meant to be watched in HD, it gets the job done. Perfect for lazy people like me who wanted to watch a new movie. :)
Sunday, June 12, 2011
Stupid AT&T U-verse Commercial
For reasons beyond understand, I love this stupid commercial. I think it's that stupid song. =
Wednesday, June 8, 2011
End of the World
Harold Camping, a name that we should all have heard of by now. Okay, maybe not, but almost everyone who is not living in a cave should have seen or heard about the May 21, 2011 end of the world prediction and Harold Camping was the guy behind that rumor. I always entertain a good end of the world idea/prediction. For starters, it breaks up the normal monotony of everyday life. I look at it from a morbid curiosity point of view, "Really? Is this time going to be real?" Of course, they are all disappointingly wrong. All I am trying to say is, at a very minimum, whenever I hear another one of these, I'll at least look it up online to see what are the basis of said prediction. At this day and age, when everyone should at leas, if not a smart phone, why would anyone not look it up, especially those who are susceptible to such things. Evidently, most of my friends have no idea who Harold Camping is and know not much more than what's on the billboards -- May 21, 2011 will be the end of the world. Then again, most of them also paid no attention to the said date and time.
But for people who actually freaked out over the date, shouldn't they at least have Googled the prediction just once and find out what it's all about? At the very minimum, they would have realized that this person had already predicted and fail back in 1994, and take the May 21 date with a grain of salt... Originally, I only find the whole prediction thing entertaining, little do I know people will actually take it as far as quitting their jobs, giving their earthly possession away, or even commit suicides/homicides. Here's a few examples of the extreme.
The scariest thing about this entire rapture fiasco was not just that some people buy into his words, it's that these people were so freaked out that they were going to kill themselves, yet it never at any point occurred to them to stop and think, "Let me look up this guy and his theory and see what kind of supporting evidence he has." Don't tell me these people have never heard of the internet, or Google. Had they spend a few minutes on line, they would have learn that this person already had a faulty prediction back in 1994, so even if rapture is real, his date can be off, again. The lack of analytical thinking, heck, the lack of the ability to even realize the possibility of verifying the information independently is appalling. Perhaps that is more of a problem than individuals like Camping.
Before I read all these crazy stories, I was going to say, This prediction thing can't be good for business.If the prediction is right, there will be nobody left to be believers. If it's wrong, it is going to lose their fans. Or, at the very minimum, why make a date so close? Don't they want to string people along for longer, and maximize the profit? Or does Campbell really believe in his own prediction? If you ask me, he just sounds like an old man who is very afraid to face his own mortality, so instead, he wants to think that he will be able to experience rapture and not face death itself and somehow he was able to convince a relatively small group of people to buy into his words.
And, as a friend of mine had casually pointed out (yes, I didn't realize till she asked), "What is the point of giving away one's earthly possession if he/she believes that the world is going to end? How will that benefit the recipients?"
At the very minimum, can we at least make Camping organization pay federal and state taxes so at least some good can come out of it??
But for people who actually freaked out over the date, shouldn't they at least have Googled the prediction just once and find out what it's all about? At the very minimum, they would have realized that this person had already predicted and fail back in 1994, and take the May 21 date with a grain of salt... Originally, I only find the whole prediction thing entertaining, little do I know people will actually take it as far as quitting their jobs, giving their earthly possession away, or even commit suicides/homicides. Here's a few examples of the extreme.
A 14 year-old teen committed suicide due to Harold Camping’s May 21st Rapture Prediction
Florida man's drowning in Antioch lake related to Rapture prediction, detective says
Man Commits Suicide by Crucifixion in Anticipation of Raptur
Woman Slits Throats of Her Kids and Herself Due to Rapture Prediction
A woman donates around $300,000 estate to a failed prediction
The scariest thing about this entire rapture fiasco was not just that some people buy into his words, it's that these people were so freaked out that they were going to kill themselves, yet it never at any point occurred to them to stop and think, "Let me look up this guy and his theory and see what kind of supporting evidence he has." Don't tell me these people have never heard of the internet, or Google. Had they spend a few minutes on line, they would have learn that this person already had a faulty prediction back in 1994, so even if rapture is real, his date can be off, again. The lack of analytical thinking, heck, the lack of the ability to even realize the possibility of verifying the information independently is appalling. Perhaps that is more of a problem than individuals like Camping.
Before I read all these crazy stories, I was going to say, This prediction thing can't be good for business.If the prediction is right, there will be nobody left to be believers. If it's wrong, it is going to lose their fans. Or, at the very minimum, why make a date so close? Don't they want to string people along for longer, and maximize the profit? Or does Campbell really believe in his own prediction? If you ask me, he just sounds like an old man who is very afraid to face his own mortality, so instead, he wants to think that he will be able to experience rapture and not face death itself and somehow he was able to convince a relatively small group of people to buy into his words.
And, as a friend of mine had casually pointed out (yes, I didn't realize till she asked), "What is the point of giving away one's earthly possession if he/she believes that the world is going to end? How will that benefit the recipients?"
At the very minimum, can we at least make Camping organization pay federal and state taxes so at least some good can come out of it??
Tuesday, June 7, 2011
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