Tuesday/ to be or not be .. a Republic

South Africa became a republic* exactly 50 years ago on May 31, 1961.   But that ended in 1994 when on the last South African Republic Day,  the country rejoined the Commonwealth of Nations.     The USA is a republic, and its constitution actually guarantees that each state in the union is a republic as well.   China is officially the People’s Republic of China, all of which illustrates that ‘republic’ is probably as political a word as ‘democracy’.    Then there is the Democratic Republic of Congo – not to be confused with its western neighbor the Republic of the Congo!

So below I show the old South African flag and the new (post 1994) South African flag.   The new flag is simpler and has typical African flag colors (green, gold and black).     Easier to draw, too!   I hated drawing those tiny little flags in the middle of the old flag!  (They are the Union Jack, the old Free State Republic flag and the old Transvaal Republic flag).

*From Wikipedia : A republic is a form of government in which the people – or some significant portion of them – retain supreme control over the government.  The term is generally also understood to describe a government where most decisions are made with reference to established laws, rather than the discretion of a head of state, and therefore monarchy is today generally considered to be incompatible with being a republic. One common modern definition of a republic is a government having a head of state who is not a monarch.   The word “republic” is derived from the Latin phrase res publica, which can be translated as “a public affair”, and often used to describe a state using this form of government.

The old South African flag

The new South African flag (after 1994) 

Saturday/ Hong Kong Art Fair 2011

Here are pictures from the Art HK11 art fair (see the web site www.hongkongartfair.com).   I had to check my backpack and camera before they allowed me in but once inside I saw people taking pictures with their phone cameras so I did the same and could get a few pictures that way.

I’m not sure that the ‘thing’ in the outside hall is with the white ‘hairs’ .. or was it the intention of the artist to make us wonder?  At least the giant ketchup bottle in the background is no mystery!    I liked the friendly flowers at the sitting area.  There is a giant manga/ anime mural in the background, and the next picture is a close up.  I heard the agent say it has been sold already for serious money : US$250,000.

The painted BMW M3 GT2 was done by Jeff Koons and is the 2010 BMW art car.   The exhibition also featured several ‘classic’ modern works of art.   This is the famous ‘Milkdrop Coronet’ from 1957 and done by strobe photography pioneer Dr Harold Edgerton.  (I wonder if he thought of himself as an artist, though!).

The Chinese Girl on a Dish is by Yoshimoto Nara (1993), acrylic on cotton.  I didn’t make a note of the guy in the baseball cap.   The colorful playground composite picture is titled ‘Water is deep here in Beijing (2010)’ and the artist is Bu Hua (click to enlarge).    Bu Hua was born in 1973 into a painters’ family in Beijing and, as a small child, her father asked her to practice drawing each day.   She published a postage stamp at 10, and held a personal art exhibition in Hong Kong at 12 !    She is now foremost a Flash animator  – the art of creating short animated films for the internet.

I didn’t make notes of the other works of art .. but noted that the fine stainless steel mesh motorcycle with the incredible detail was done by a female artist !   The self-picture was meant to be a distorted image from a ‘time-warp’ mirror but I held the camera too close to the mirror.     So I look like my normal self – slightly disappointing, since I wanted to look a little weird to fit in better among the cool artsy people exhibiting their work and those attending the fair.  :  )

 

Thursday/ sugus and Pong

It didn’t take long for me to polish the little bag of Sugus gummies.    Way back when I was growing up, I knew Sugus in another form, as square chewy candies wrapped in wax paper.    So I was looking for a picture of the packaging from back then and stumbled onto these young Spanish lasses playing a soccer version of Pong (while chewing their Sugus, I presume).    Pong is one of the earliest arcade video games to reach mainstream popularity, originally manufactured by Atari Incorporated (Atari), who released it in 1972.    I loved it when I played it the first time – in a Holiday Inn where I stayed with my family in the port city of Durban in South Africa.    

Tuesday/ picture book of Japan

Here is the little picture book I bought at Shosen Book Tower in Tokyo.   Click once on each picture to make it bigger, and check out the translations. I love the layout and the crisp style of the pictures.  Rabbit is ugasi and horse is uma.  The  picture of the 7-11 type food mart looks exactly like the ones I were in. And on the layout where American fast food meets Japanese language,  I see that McDonalds is called Makudonarudo and Kentucky Fried Chicken is called Kentuckii Furaido Chikin !  I would hate to see too many McDonalds and too many KFCs popping up in Japan, though.  Finally – I bet you do not know any of the Japanese groups or pop stars!  I did not!

Note – The book is available on Amazon Japan.  Do an advanced search on Japanese Books and use ISBN-13 number 978-4533074684.  (No, I am not getting money for promoting the book !)    

Monday/ the rainy season starts

This picture toward Hong Kong airport, is from the Marriott Skycity hotel where I caught a few hours sleep on Sunday night before the pick-up van arrived at 7.15am to take me to mainland China.    It was a wet weekend there, I am told, so the rainy season has started in earnest.     Here in the Hong Kong-Shenzhen area in southeast China we are in the wettest part of the country.    Huoshaoliao in Taiwan is the rainiest place around, receiving 6700 mm (264 inches!) of rain a year.   That’s a lot of water falling from the sky.   Which is the wettest place on dry earth, though?   According to the Guinness Book of World Records the Indian village Mawsynram received just about 1,000 inches  in 1985 and averages 467 inches per year.

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.

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 !

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.

Wednesday/ early morning walk

The two striking bottled water advertisements* are from shop windows on my early morning walk around Dameisha (getting up early made possible by my jet lag, hard for me to do otherwise!).    It’s also nice to be able to take a in-the-middle-of-the-street picture since there is no traffic.     The building with the curved roof is a recent construction close to where we work in the Da Peng area but I’m not sure what its purpose is.    The final two pictures are from buildings close to the power station.   They house indoor sports facilities such as basket ball courts.   

*Yes, I know I should not promote bottled water.   These 5 good reasons from a web site called Mother Nature Network –
1) Bottled water isn’t a good value for one’s money
2) No healthier than tap water (my note: it depends where in the world you are)
3) Bottled water means garbage
4) Bottled water means less attention to public systems
5) The corporatization of water 

Tuesday/ Doraemon the Gadget Cat

As promised here are some images from the Doraemon – Gadget Cat from the Future – books I bought at Narita airport.    This is the first in a a series of 10 books.   I thought I’d get the first two and see if I like it .. and so far I do!    The little copters allows the Cat and those with him to fly.  And check out the Cat’s matching facial expressions as he asks ‘Did I upset you?‘ and says ‘I can’t answer all of your questions at once’.

The last two pictures are of items with Doraemon pictures on that I found in the grocery store here in Dameisha.

Monday/ all systems go

The ice cream was a welcome little snack we got on the plane ride in to Hong Kong.     It was 1 am by the time I checked into the Pattaya Hotel in Dameisha (view from my balcony this morning) .. my driver and I again had long waits at the border crossings out of Hong Kong and into mainland China (this is at 12 midnight on a Sunday night !).     We also run into a lot of  traffic into work this morning.    Someone said a journalist from Hong Kong to demonstrated recently that almost anyone can get into the main security entrance gate and that there has been a crackdown and every vehicle is now checked.

So here at the work site the final upload sequence into the live SAP production system (as we call it) has started.   It’s all systems go!  and all hands on deck!  for the teams.     Wish us well !

Tuesday/ out with the Dove man-soap

Dove’s ‘White’ soap – a non-fragranced, no-nonsense, mild soap – is my favorite, but the store was out of it yesterday and I thought I’d try their new soap for men (with patented technology .. I love technology).   Well, the verdict is in and it is : out with the man-soap.  I don’t like the fragrance, and the corners and edges on the soap is a classic case of ‘form over function’ in design.   Sorry Unilever, I’m sure you spent a lot of money on it.

Just for fun I checked out some the product reviews on line.   This one from a reviewer from Chicago and made me smile.

Hello Manhood ***** (5 out of 5 stars) Yes!  – I feel cleaner and manlier using this soap.  My wife wants to have 5 more kids as a result.   She cannot stop grabbing me and giving me a nice long sniff.   Get it, enjoy it and subscribe to it  …much cheaper and you will preserve your manhood.  Go on, be a man.

Friday

My license plate tags arrived, so my old Camry is now good until 2012 (seems so far away, but it’s not really, right?).    It was a beautiful blue sky day here in Seattle (photo taken at the corner of Denny and Fairview).   I bought the letter opener in Seoul’s Incheon airport on the way in on my last trip.    Very handy.  Now I can avoid getting paper cuts on my finger when opening my pile of junk mail ! (Yes, I should just throw it away but some have credit card offers in which I take out and shred).

Friday/ kicked out!

Here’s a message to all those financial planners that opine that it’s  not ‘really’ necessary to own a place to live/ better to rent a place.   My advice  : if you can afford it,  it actually is.    I had an apologetic colleague that handles our project team’s apartment leases, and a non-apologetic aloof property agent knock on the door last night.   There was a mistake and my lease had actually expired Mar 31 and, AND  : the landlord insisted that the apartment be evacuated immediately.    Whoah!  I said.  What exactly does ‘immediately’ mean?   Do I have two hours?  You’re going to kick me out with the clothes on my back and with my dinner cooking in the toaster oven?  (It was just toast with cheese but hey,  that was dinner and they interrupted it). 

Several phone calls later we managed to I get agreement that I could stay one more night to pack up my stuff.   So this is Saturday morning, and I’m ready to move into the hotel next door.   And  I’m not canceling my trip to Beijing.    I’m flying there this afternoon and I will have Sunday and Monday to check out the city and the Great Wall.     Let’s go!

Thursday/ adopt a turtle?

8.00am Friday The little turtle was a project team member’s apartment pet as far as I could find out – possibly found somewhere on the streets here in Dameisha.  It has already been handed over to another caretaker, who is now also leaving the project.    It looks like a water turtle and ideally it should get a nice big fish tank with some decoration to mimic its natural surroundings like those we see at zoos or aquariums !    Maybe the little fella should just be set free if it can take care of itself.       

Update 1.00pm Friday  The little turtle has found a happy home ! .. was adopted by a team member who’s daughter has two others already.   Hopefully he will fit in and it’s not a case of two’s company, three’s a crowd  !

Monday/ at the grocery store

This picture is from the newspaper at the grocery store.   The gas mask makes for an otherworldly, other-creature look out of our collective nightmares, does it not?   And of course a gas mask can just filter out radio-active airborne particles.   It doesn’t really protect against the radiation itself .. or maybe some masks have a lead lining?   (I’m sure the picture is from Japan since we’re not under any threat of any possible radiation from the troubled reactor there).      The second picture is a happier one – of the kid running rice through his hands.   No harm done since the rice will be cooked, and if only it were as easy as that to get rid of contamination!

Thursday/ Nin Jiom Pei Pa Koa

What is that you have there on the desk, Shan Shui? I asked my China colleague today.   Herbal tea? Chinese candy?   No, no.  It’s a very old and famous Chinese cough syrup and available world-wide.  (I haven’t seen it in the USA but if I do, I’ll buy it just to get a hold of the cool packaging it comes in).

‘Nim Jiom’ means ‘in memory of my mother’.   The formula for Pei Pa Koa was originally created by doctor Ip Tin-See, a physician for the Qing Dynasty.  Yang Jin,  a county commander, asked doctor Ip to treat his mother’s persistent cough.    They were so impressed that they created a factory to mass-produce it.

Are you ready for the list of ingredients of Pei Pa Koa syrup?    You have to be ready!  – it is an impressive list !  The blend of herbal ingredients include the fritillary bulb,  loquat leaf,  ladybell root,  Indian bread,  pomelo peel,  Chinese bellflower root,  pinellia rhizome,  Schisandra seed,  Trichosanthes seed, coltsfoot flower, thinleaf milkwort root,  bitter apricot kernel,  fresh ginger,  licorice root and menthol – all  in a syrup-and-honey base.    The base gives the cough syrup a palatable taste.   Maybe I should try a little of it tomorrow? 

P.S.   This is the flag of the Qing dynasty.   I love the dragon on it.

Tuesday/ rooting for Japan

This picture is from the Financial Times that I got on the airplane last Thursday.  David Pilling writes in the accompanying editorial with the heading ‘The Japanese Miracle is Not Over’ that .. the grave faces of public officials cannot have looked much graver in 1945, after the nuclear bombs fell and Emperor Hirohito went on the radio to ask his countrymen to endure the unendurable.  On Wednesday his son, Emperor Akihito, made a rare live television appearance to ask his people to work together to ‘overcome these difficult times’.

The recent events also made me recall a striking TIME magazine cover about Japan from when I was a student, and I just had to look it up.    Found it – the cover of August 1, 1983.    A lot has happened with Japan since that year : greatly inflated real estate and stock prices from 1986 to 1991 followed by a decade-long  recession.    I really hope things are looking up from here for Japan and its people.

From the TIME magazine article:

The Japanese postwar economic miracle is cresting. Japan is a fascinating success, as a business and as a society. It is prosperous and famously homogeneous, safe and civil, bound together by a social contract that is startlingly effective.

Today, Japan is the second most powerful economy in the free world. Its trillion-dollar-a-year industrial machine accounts for 10% of the world’s output. By 1990, the Japanese may achieve a per capita gross national product that surpasses that of the U.S. – Lance Morrow writing for TIME magazine’s Aug 1, 1983 issue

Monday/ a black taxi and the Boomtown Rats

My colleague and I  took a ‘black’ taxi to work yesterday.   Black does not mean the color black, of course : ) .. it means the taxi is not from an official taxi company – it’s a private person moonlighting as a taxi driver.    As we paid him and got out, he signaled ‘call me’ with thumb and index finger to his ear, and gave me his business card.    I recognize the 王 character (for his surname Wáng) on the front of the card but not much else.    The back has English on as well.

Then today on the bus back to Dameisha one of the team members played I Don’t Like Mondays from The Boomtown Rats for us.   The Boomtown Rats are Irish, and even though I have known and liked the song for a long time,  I only found out today (!) on Wikipedia that its dark references are related to shooting incident in a school in California.   It was more or less banned from the airwaves in the USA when it came out but did appear on the Billboard Hot 100 some time later.  The picture is a still of  a young Bob Geldof singing in a music video of the song, with the lyrics below.

 

I Don’t Like Mondays (1979) – The Boomtown Rats

The silicon chip inside her head
Gets switched to overload
And nobody’s gonna go to school today
She’s gonna make them stay at home
And daddy doesn’t understand it
He always said she was good as gold
And he can see no reasons
‘Cos there are no reasons
What reason do you need to be show-ow-ow-ow-own?

Tell me why
I don’t like Mondays
Tell me why
I don’t like Mondays
Tell me why
I don’t like Mondays
I wanna shoo-oo-woo-woo-woo-oot the whole day down

The Telex machine is kept so clean
And it types to a waiting world
And mother feels so shocked
Father’s world is rocked
And their thoughts turn to their own little girl
Sweet 16 ain’t that peachy keen
Now that ain’t so neat to admit defeat
They can see no reasons
‘Cuz there are no reasons
What reasons do you need?
Oh Oh oh whoa whoa

Tell me why
I don’t like Mondays
Tell me why
I don’t like Mondays
Tell me why
I don’t like Mondays
I wanna shoo-oo-oo-woo-woo-oot
The whole day down, down, down, shoot it all down

And all the playing’s stopped in the playground now
She wants to play with the toys a while
And school’s out early and soon we’ll be learning
And the lesson today is how to die
And then the bullhorn crackles
And the captain tackles
(With the problems of the how’s and why’s)
And he can see no reasons
‘Cos there are no reasons
What reason do you need to die, die?
Oh Oh Oh

Tell me why
I don’t like Mondays
Tell me why
I don’t like Mondays
Tell me why
I don’t like
I don’t like (Tell me why)
I don’t like Mondays
Tell me why
I don’t like
I don’t like (Tell me why)
I don’t like Mondays
Tell me why
I don’t like Mondays
I wanna shoo-oo-oo-woo-woo-woot the whole day down