Thursday, 30 April 2015

The Sphinx's Riddle, And Me

"What goes on four feet in the morning, two feet at noon, and three feet in the evening?"

Spoiler Alert: "Humans."

That's what I feel about me my days too. 

I start off on a slow pace in the morning, 
speed up to the max by noon, 
run all afternoon 
and retire by night, 
perhaps to write 
and summarize my day.

Sunday, 26 April 2015

Quote of the Night #0

Our lives are not our own. We are bound to others, past and present, and by each crime and every kindness, we birth our future.” - Cloud Atlas, by David Mitchell

A possible Christian similar...
Life belongs to God; our lives are not our own

And to that, my ego says, "OK then! What, in the entire universe, do we have to lose?".

Saturday, 25 April 2015

Github DDOS Attack...by China

http://tech.slashdot.org/story/15/04/24/2050210/github-ddos-attack-as-seen-by-google

Github DDoS Attack As Seen By Google

Posted by Soulskill  
from the i-can-see-my-house-from-here dept.
New submitter opensec writes:Last month GitHub was hit by a massive DDoS attack originating from China. On this occasion the public discovered that the NSA was not the only one with a QUANTUM-like capability. China has its own "Great Cannon" that can inject malicious JavaScript inside HTTP traffic. That weapon was used in the GitHub attack. People using Baidu services were unwitting participants in the denial of service, their bandwidth used to flood the website. But such a massive subversion of the Internet could not evadeGoogle's watchful eye. Niels Provos, engineer at Google, tells us how it happened. Showing that such attacks cannot be made covertly, Provos hopes that the public shaming will act as a deterrent.
This is how things would probably go in a free market.

Block 'em. Drop their packets. Hell, block everybody associated with them. And let the ostracism start.

But seriously, that JS injection attack is pretty cool.

Sunday, 19 April 2015

My Recent Visit to a Hospital

Recently, I had to go visit my grandmother in a hospital. Basically, what happened was that she wounded her leg on some coral reefs and other wildlife.
Those wounds became infected and poisoned, causing fever, nausea and massive swelling.

The strange thing was that she was all right for almost a week, when the symptoms arose. Very strange indeed.

What can I learn from this? Irrigate the hell out of any wound as soon as possible. Distilled water is cheap but getting sick can be really expensive. Sterilize. If in doubt, get help immediately and don't assume you know what's going on. Actually, don't assume doctors know for certain what's going on. 

Anyway, about the hospital. Now, this hospital has been renovated within the last decade. But honestly, it doesn't make it any better of a place to stay.

1. This was not a private room. (Or...)

We weren't planning a long stay, so we decided any room would do. The most common kind of room has about 10 patients in it.

Now, if you estimate that 1 in 10 people are snorers, you would expect at least 1 snorer in the room, and 1 next door, and so on.

And things are constantly happening. Patients move in and out, nurses do their rounds, things get wheeled around.

Perhaps the only good thing is the greater opportunities for interacting with other patients in the same state as you.

2. Everything seems to be kept so clean, but is also so dirty.

One thing you notice in any current hospital are the number of sanitizers, wash stations. I think I could count 1 every 10 meters.

Another thing one sees during visitation is how many people go there wearing some kind of respiratory mask. Note that we were in the middle of a significant flu season and every hygiene poster I saw recommended wearing a mask, among other precautions.

Yet another point i realized was just how many possible surfaces could have nasty germs on them. For example, the heart rate monitor trolley. Before it was used, everybody was advised to put their masks on. While it is a sensible precaution, it does raise questions about hygiene.

To top it off, there are plenty of superbugs that are likely present in any major medical facility. Hospital-acquired infections are pretty common (A common estimate stands at 10%). The patient next to my grandmother somehow ended up with some serious infection after leg surgery and had to undergo amputation on short notice.

And so, within the hour I was there, I became germophobic and decided that I would not touch anything at all. I would look at a knob, an elevator button and sing "Can't Touch This".

I can't say it's healthy, but maybe that's the only way to be, in such an environment.

3. Food was bland and not very nutritious.

Hospital food is not bad, but it's bland. It saps at one's will to live.

Opposite my grandmother was this Indian woman whose visitors brought her some very fragrant curry. Very lucky.

4. You can't feel the sun.

The rooms are, well, indoors. While some have windows, they were always closed. You can't feel the sun and the sky. Shouldn't everybody be getting more Vitamin D?

5. Healthcare workers, patients and their kin are affected by all of the above.

How would I describe the atmosphere... very sober. The workers were very methodical and professional. The cleaners, nurses would small-talk to each other while they passed each other. The patients seemed, for the most part, calm and relaxed.

But no one seemed happy. Or at least they didn't show it. It made me think just how much hospitals actually need people like Patch Adams.

Conclusion

An , keeps the doctors away!

Truth be told, healthcare outcomes are likely better than it has been for all of human history. But there is a really long way to go before they become the medical facilities of Hollywood movies.

Until then, try to stay out.


Some stats from the Dept of Health in HK.

http://www.dh.gov.hk/english/statistics/statistics_hs/files/Health_Statistics_pamphlet_E.pdf

Tuesday, 14 April 2015

What I think about the AppleWatch



Report: Apple Watch Preorders Almost 1 Million On First Day In the US

Posted by samzenpus 
from the i-want-i-stuff dept.

An anonymous reader writesThe launch of the Apple Watch has got off to a good start, with an estimated 1 million pre-orders in the U.S. on Friday. "According to Slice's Sunday report, which is based on e-receipt data obtained directly from consumers, 957,000 people preordered the Watch on Friday, with 62% purchasing the cheapest variant, the Apple Watch Sport. On average, each buyer ordered 1.3 watches and spent $503.83 per watch."
"A fool and his/her money is soon parted."

Update: 

"But fools are many and everywhere. And fools look at what other fools like and act accordingly."

Go figure.

Sunday, 12 April 2015

Tragik. Really??

http://yro.slashdot.org/story/15/04/10/1541258/florida-teen-charged-with-felony-hacking-for-changing-desktop-wallpaper?sbsrc=md

And then they wonder why there is a tech gap, when they are encouraging structured thinking and conformity on all fronts, from the very beginning.

Update 1704:

Tech can be the most freeing thing ever, but it can always be used to take freedom away.

Strategic incentive, freedom can be used to develop better tech. But that tech can also be used to better take away freedom, without the impression that freedom is being taken away.

So what's at stake is not tech itself, but rather, incentives. That's the opening in the cycle. As long as the market, social incentive are not in your favor, change is in the realm of impossible and very unlikely.




Book & Movie Review: Wild, by Cheryl Strayed


"When one tugs at a single thing in nature, he finds it attached to the rest of the world." - John Muir


When Wild the movie came out, I was doing my mountain craft course. I went and watched it. 

This is my review.

It's a mediocre movie. The acting was minimal. The actress really doesn't look like she hiked the whole day. Or that she has a pack that weighs half of what she does. On the emotion, it's just a little annoying. I don't know how to put it. It doesn't feel...realistic.

I felt that a book that boring simply could not have made it to film, so I went to read the novel.

The book was, as expected, better. Perhaps I was substituting what I would do, or what I knew to be the best ways to do things (eg. how to safely put on your pack, how to ). If you have some outdoors experience, it's easy to laugh at her efforts and noobiness. But that doesn't change the fact that she pushed her limits and took risks.

The story begins with the death of the author's mom. Basically, she came from an abusive family, married abusive men, worked in a chemical factory, found out too late she had cancer and ended up dying of it.

So the author becomes depressed and ruins her life. Despite being in a stable marriage, she commits adultery and becomes a drug addict. However, thanks to her supportive husband and friends, Strayed files for divorce and sets out to "do something difficult in the wild".

Strayed set out to do the Pacific Crest Trail on her own. But through self-sufficiency, self-responsibility and solitude, she realizes instead, that she is never alone. And of course, she meets many people on the way, who are on the same trail, facing the same problems and it turns out there are lots of kind people help her on the way. She finds herself, at one with nature.

There's a lot of stuff I won't go into detail here. The story itself is a lot like walking on a long trail. One step might not change the scenery much, but a thousand will. The journey's plot is intertwined with flashbacks to her past, just like how one would think when on a long walk. It's not literature-quality, but that was not necessary.

Update:

If anything, Wild exemplifies the very pioneering spirit that made America - "my current life sucks and I'm going to go try something totally crazy, downright scary and new!". It doesn't matter why your past-life sucks, you can go do something awesome immediately! That, I believe, is what makes this book a sensation. It's a story told countless times throughout history in context. It's the story of the Pilgrims, the War of Independence, the Lewis & Clark Expedition, John Muir, the Chinese Immigrants who worked on the Railroad, the Donner Party, Ayn Rand, Chris McCandless, Apple, the modern startups...

Now I want to go do a long trail.

Because, as the American naturalist and conservationist John Muir says, 

"In every walk with nature one receives far more than he seeks."



Photo Source: http://idyllway.blogspot.hk/p/the-john-muir-trail.html

Tuesday, 7 April 2015

Nice!

ASUS ZenFone 2 ZE550ML (4+32GB) 香港版  


作業系統:
Android 5.0 (Lollipop)
制式:
GSM/GPRS/EDGE; WCDMA/HSPA+/ FDD-LTE
顯示屏:
IPS 5.5吋
解像度:
Full HD 1920 x 1080 / 403 PPI
鏡頭:
1300萬畫素PixelMaster相機及f/2.0 超大光圈
通訊:
HSDPA/GPS/WIFI/BT/NFC/FM
擴展:
Micro-SD 卡 (最高可到128GB)
重量:
170g
尺寸:
77.2 x 152.5 x 3.9 ~ 10.9 mm (寬x長x高)

http://www.price.com.hk/product.php?p=189423

Wednesday, 1 April 2015

Toothbrush Tale

Dream. Non-fiction. Pre-dream writing.

I was brushing my teeth this morning, when I remembered a story my parents liked to tell me when I was around 7 years old.

"Don't run around with that toothbrush. You'll get it stuck down your throat!"

Just realized it could just be made up lol!

So I asked my mom if it was true.

"I don't remember...I think we made it up. It could happen though."

Heh, pretty creative.