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Browsing Posts published in January, 2009

Happy Chinese New Year

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2009, The Year of the Ox. Wish everyone Happy Chinese New Year and Gong Xi Fa Cai ^_^

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Below are some tips/beliefs for Chinese New Year from Wikipedia.

Good luck

  • Opening windows and/or doors is considered to bring in the good luck of the new year.
  • Switching on the lights for the night is considered good luck to ‘scare away’ ghosts and spirits of misfortune that may compromise the luck and fortune of the new year.
  • Sweets are eaten to ensure the consumer a “sweet” year.
  • It is important to have the house completely clean from top to bottom before New Year’s Day for good luck in the coming year. (however, as explained below, cleaning the house on or after New Year’s Day is frowned upon)
  • Some believe that what happens on the first day of the new year reflects the rest of the year to come. Chinese people will often gamble at the beginning of the year, hoping to get luck and prosperity.
  • Wearing a new pair of slippers that is bought before the new year, because it means to step on the people who gossip about you.
  • The night before the new year, bathe yourself in pomelo leaves and some say that you will be healthy for the rest of the new year.
  • Changing different things in the house such as blankets, clothes, mattress covers etc. is also a well respected tradition in terms of cleaning the house in preparation for the new year.

Bad luck

  • Buying a pair of shoes is considered bad luck amongst some Chinese. The character for “shoe” (?) is a homophone for the character ?/?, which means “rough” in Cantonese; in Mandarin it is also a homophone for the character for “evil” (?).
  • Getting a hair-cut in the first lunar month puts a curse on maternal uncles. Therefore, people get a hair-cut before the New Year’s Eve.
  • Washing your hair is also considered to be washing away one’s own luck (although modern hygienic concerns take precedence over this tradition)
  • Sweeping the floor is usually forbidden on the first day, as it will sweep away the good fortune and luck for the new year.
  • Saying words like “finished” and “gone” is inauspicious on the New Year, so sometimes people would avoid these words by saying “I have completed eating my meal” rather than say “I have finished my meal.”
  • Talking about death is inappropriate for the first few days of Chinese New Year, as it is considered inauspicious.
  • Buying (or reading) books is bad luck because the character for “book” (?/?) is a homonym to the character for “lose” (?/?).
  • Avoid clothes in black and white, as black is a symbol of bad luck, and white is a traditional Chinese funeral colour.
  • Foul language is inappropriate during the Chinese New Year.
  • Offering anything in fours, as the number four (?), pronounced , can sound like “death” (?), pronounced s?, in Chinese. Pronunciations given here are for Mandarin, but the two words are also homophones in Cantonese. See tetraphobia.
  • One should never buy a clock for someone or for oneself because a clock in Chinese tradition means one’s life is limited or “the end,” which is also forbidden.
  • Avoid medicine and medicine related activities (at least on the first day) as it will give a bad fortune on one’s health and lessen the luck one can obtain from New Years.

This is a very nice video introduction of a Travel Show in Taiwan of Kuching, Sarawak, Malaysia. There is a very nice section showing how Kek Lapis is made… unique to Sarawak Community. Have a look ^_^
Actually there are a lot of sections about food.

To have a bit of an idea about Kek Lapis… have a look here.

Technology = More Work Done!

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robot

Have you ever wondered why Singapore can keep developing even with so limited land? I saw an interesting graph today. Look at the graph above. Singapore has the second highest concentration of robots worldwide. That means that they have machines more efficient than humans doing or replacing what is normally done by humans. What does this mean? Higher productivity. Redudant tasks are given to robots while humans concentrate on the more creative tasks, idea generating as well as R&D. We are in the age of information technology. Tasks like farming, harvesting, natural resources, industrial work… these are all jobs that need to be offloaded from humans to robots; humans should be creating more ideas. For the brain is something so powerful and deep that no science can explain. Make full use of it by generating more ideas and knowledge. Leave those redundant tasks to robots. But someday… when humans get lazy… may be robots can do the thinking for us… iRobot anyone? haha…

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Will we arrive at the day when robots will ask for equality? Will there be robot unions who protects the interest of robots worldwide? When can we term a robot as a living being? Will robots end up controlling the human race?

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For me… I think to make a robot fully “living” would need a master piece of algorithm which can evolve itself… learn new stuff… and make a better version of itself. Imagine a robot which can make itself a new body… then do some programming… transfer its’ memory onto the new system… become better… then continously do so in a cyclic circle… would that not make the robot smarter and more powerful? A code that can rewrite itself to find more efficient and better algorithms mutating itself. Living beings have DNA which adapts itself over a long period of time. With the speed of processing power improving leaps and bounds every year… a machine might be able to reinvent itself better each time. A human might live up to 100+ years. But an evolving machine might be able to live for a very very long time as long as there is a source of energy.

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One last thought of the day… can we someday built a robotic body and then transfer our mind into the system? Will this make us able to live as long as possible? Imagine knowledge of centuries accumulating… certainly something to ponder I would say.

terminator_3_rise_of_the_machines_movie

ironmonger_2008film

See… I told you… I got fat… hahaha… Paul v2.0

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