
Archive for November, 2007


Turkey Durkey
Friday, November 9th, 2007
Had Thanksgiving dinner tonight :) Whole family was there including 二哥Shaun and Leanne, grandma and Hao…mm, turkey with drippings and apple-cranberry sauce, sauerkraut, mango salsa, salads, tomatoes in balsamic vinaigrette, sun-dried tomatoes, corkscrew pasta, mashed potatoes, fruit fizz and Shaun’s chocolate mousse thing made with dark chocolate from Max Brenner’s. Oh, and awesome coffee.
I am so full now :/
The past year has been full of bumps and happies. I just know one day I could probably sell my life story to Bollywood, and they’ll make it into a 42-hour feature film complete with coconut trees and hills and backup dancers on a random hill. :D
Thanksgiving. For graduating with honors, for a secure job that I love, for friends easily made and not so easily lost. For a closer walk with God, for being surrounded by brothers and sisters in Christ who’re Weird For God together and who love me to the point of (s)mothering me :P
For love. For a man whom I truly adore, for the amazing fact that he adores me right back. For perfect timing, that God sent us to each other just when we needed it most. For peace of mind and comfort and an enduring love. For hugs and kisses and a hand that fits perfectly around mine, for parents who’ve embraced the man I love and welcomed him. Because I’ve had a peek into the future and even though it’s going to be difficult, I can’t wait for the rest of my life :)
For business opportunities, for family who support me, for an adopted brother and sister who weren’t born into our family but who might as well have been.
For love - agape love, friends and family.
Thank You.
Had Thanksgiving dinner tonight :) Whole family was there including 二哥Shaun and Leanne, grandma and Hao…mm, turkey with drippings and apple-cranberry sauce, sauerkraut, mango salsa, salads, tomatoes in balsamic vinaigrette, sun-dried tomatoes, corkscrew pasta, mashed potatoes, fruit fizz and Shaun’s chocolate mousse thing made with dark chocolate from Max Brenner’s. Oh, and awesome coffee.
I am so full now :/
The past year has been full of bumps and happies. I just know one day I could probably sell my life story to Bollywood, and they’ll make it into a 42-hour feature film complete with coconut trees and hills and backup dancers on a random hill. :D
Thanksgiving. For graduating with honors, for a secure job that I love, for friends easily made and not so easily lost. For a closer walk with God, for being surrounded by brothers and sisters in Christ who’re Weird For God together and who love me to the point of (s)mothering me :P
For love. For a man whom I truly adore, for the amazing fact that he adores me right back. For perfect timing, that God sent us to each other just when we needed it most. For peace of mind and comfort and an enduring love. For hugs and kisses and a hand that fits perfectly around mine, for parents who’ve embraced the man I love and welcomed him. Because I’ve had a peek into the future and even though it’s going to be difficult, I can’t wait for the rest of my life :)
For business opportunities, for family who support me, for an adopted brother and sister who weren’t born into our family but who might as well have been.
For love - agape love, friends and family.
Thank You.

Don’t like your son-in-law? Tell America he’s from Al Qaeda.
Thursday, November 8th, 2007
I love the father-in-law’s response - “I didn’t think the American authorities were that stupid. But apparently they are.”
Zing!
STOCKHOLM (AFP) - A man in Sweden who was angry with his daughter’s husband has been charged with libel for telling the FBI that the son-in-law had links to al-Qaeda, Swedish media reported on Friday.
The man, who admitted sending the email, said he did not think the US authorities would be stupid enough to believe him.
The 40-year-old son-in-law and his wife were in the process of divorcing when the husband had to travel to the United States for business.
The wife didn’t want him to travel since she was sick and wanted him to help care for their children, regional daily Sydsvenska Dagbladet said without disclosing the couple’s names.
When the husband refused to stay home, his father-in-law wrote an email to the FBI saying the son-in-law had links to al-Qaeda in Sweden and that he was travelling to the US to meet his contacts.
He provided information on the flight number and date of arrival in the US.
The son-in-law was arrested upon landing in Florida. He was placed in handcuffs, interrogated and placed in a cell for 11 hours before being put on a flight back to Europe, the paper said.
The FBI contacted Swedish intelligence agency Saepo, which discovered that the email tipping off the FBI had been sent from the father-in-law’s computer.
The father-in-law has been charged with aggravated libel.
He has admitted sending the email, but said he didn’t think “the authorities were so stupid that they would believe anything. But apparently they are.”
He said he “couldn’t help the US authorities’ paranoid reaction”.
I love the father-in-law’s response - “I didn’t think the American authorities were that stupid. But apparently they are.”
Zing!
STOCKHOLM (AFP) - A man in Sweden who was angry with his daughter’s husband has been charged with libel for telling the FBI that the son-in-law had links to al-Qaeda, Swedish media reported on Friday.
The man, who admitted sending the email, said he did not think the US authorities would be stupid enough to believe him.
The 40-year-old son-in-law and his wife were in the process of divorcing when the husband had to travel to the United States for business.
The wife didn’t want him to travel since she was sick and wanted him to help care for their children, regional daily Sydsvenska Dagbladet said without disclosing the couple’s names.
When the husband refused to stay home, his father-in-law wrote an email to the FBI saying the son-in-law had links to al-Qaeda in Sweden and that he was travelling to the US to meet his contacts.
He provided information on the flight number and date of arrival in the US.
The son-in-law was arrested upon landing in Florida. He was placed in handcuffs, interrogated and placed in a cell for 11 hours before being put on a flight back to Europe, the paper said.
The FBI contacted Swedish intelligence agency Saepo, which discovered that the email tipping off the FBI had been sent from the father-in-law’s computer.
The father-in-law has been charged with aggravated libel.
He has admitted sending the email, but said he didn’t think “the authorities were so stupid that they would believe anything. But apparently they are.”
He said he “couldn’t help the US authorities’ paranoid reaction”.

8-0!
Wednesday, November 7th, 2007
Liverpool = Frickin’ Awesome.
Liverpool = Frickin’ Awesome.

Happy birthday
Tuesday, November 6th, 2007
to Copper & Clay.
:)
love,
me
to Copper & Clay.
:)
love,
me

Jealousy
Tuesday, November 6th, 2007
I’M SO JALOUS.
Everyone has been jetting off to sunny beach holidays lately.
The next person who posts happy beach photos on Facebook will have to suffer me wailing on their shoulder for white beaches and warm seas.
Sneefle.
I’M SO JALOUS.
Everyone has been jetting off to sunny beach holidays lately.
The next person who posts happy beach photos on Facebook will have to suffer me wailing on their shoulder for white beaches and warm seas.
Sneefle.

Katamariiii!
Monday, November 5th, 2007
I know what I want for Christmas.
I want Katamari Damacy handphone danglies.
OH PLEASE OH PLEASE I WANT.
PEOPLE MADE THEM INTO FRIDGE MAGNETS!
*salivates*
We find these…most appealing. Magnets, yes. They are so Woof! Po-Woof-Ful! We are pleased.

I know what I want for Christmas.
I want Katamari Damacy handphone danglies.
OH PLEASE OH PLEASE I WANT.
PEOPLE MADE THEM INTO FRIDGE MAGNETS!
*salivates*
We find these…most appealing. Magnets, yes. They are so Woof! Po-Woof-Ful! We are pleased.


Facebook is more addictive than porn
Sunday, November 4th, 2007
by Bill Tancer
When I wrote last week’s column comparing the social-networking sites MySpace and Facebook, I included a line after my signature stating that I had only 124 friends on Facebook, and urged readers to add me as their friends. As of today I have 261 new Facebook friends, the majority of which are Generation Y college students.
I turned to Hitwise data to find out more about them. By examining which websites social-network users visit after logging into their profiles, we can gain a bit of insight into how sites like Facebook fit into their members’ daily online lives. The data showed that after other social networks, the most clicked-on category of sites was search engines, with 11.6% of all downstream visits. Web-based e-mail services were next with 8.5%. Blogs came in third in popularity at 6.1%, claiming more than four times the number of visits to traditional news sites, which logged 1.5% of downstream visits.
Perhaps a more interesting — and more accurate — way to figure out where college students are going online is to assess which of the 172 web categories tracked by Hitwise get the most hits from 18- to 24-year-olds. Here’s a shocker: Porn is not No. 1. I’ve actually been puzzled by the decrease in visits to the Adult Entertainment category over the last two years. Visits to porn sites have dropped from 16.9% of all site visits in the U.S. in October 2005 to 11.9% as of last week, a 33% decline. Currently, for web users over the age of 25, Adult Entertainment still ranks high in popularity, coming in second, after search engines. Not so for 18- to 24-year-olds, for whom social networks rank first, followed by search engines, then web-based e-mail — with porn sites lagging behind in fourth. If you chart the rate of visits to social-networking sites against those to adult sites over the last two years, there appears to be a strong negative correlation (i.e., visits to social networks go up as visits to adult sites go down). It’s a leap to say there’s a real correlation there, but if there is one, then I’d bet it has everything to do with Gen Y’s changing habits: they’re too busy chatting with friends to look at online skin. Imagine.
This reshaped online landscape leaves me feeling old and out of the loop. It seems that social-networking sites have not only usurped porn in popularity, but they’ve also gobbled up time Gen Y-ers used to spend on traditional e-mail and IM. When you can reach all of your friends through Facebook or MySpace, there’s little reason to spend time in your old-school inbox. So, if social networking is becoming e-mail 2.0, then perhaps Microsoft’s recent $240 million dollar payout for such a small stake in Facebook isn’t that ridiculous.
The reality is that Facebook isn’t just for kids. Last week — and this was a highlight — my dad, who just turned 75, added me as a friend on Facebook. I considered sending him a virtual beer to celebrate the occasion, but I didn’t think either of us would see the point. Back in my day, we drank beers out of bottles and cans — we didn’t have these new-fangled virtual beers. But, then again, I think that’s something I probably still have in common with the younger generation, something I don’t need Hitwise data to back up: the love of a good old-fashioned beer.
Let the messages roll in.
-taken from Time.com
by Bill Tancer
When I wrote last week’s column comparing the social-networking sites MySpace and Facebook, I included a line after my signature stating that I had only 124 friends on Facebook, and urged readers to add me as their friends. As of today I have 261 new Facebook friends, the majority of which are Generation Y college students.
I turned to Hitwise data to find out more about them. By examining which websites social-network users visit after logging into their profiles, we can gain a bit of insight into how sites like Facebook fit into their members’ daily online lives. The data showed that after other social networks, the most clicked-on category of sites was search engines, with 11.6% of all downstream visits. Web-based e-mail services were next with 8.5%. Blogs came in third in popularity at 6.1%, claiming more than four times the number of visits to traditional news sites, which logged 1.5% of downstream visits.
Perhaps a more interesting — and more accurate — way to figure out where college students are going online is to assess which of the 172 web categories tracked by Hitwise get the most hits from 18- to 24-year-olds. Here’s a shocker: Porn is not No. 1. I’ve actually been puzzled by the decrease in visits to the Adult Entertainment category over the last two years. Visits to porn sites have dropped from 16.9% of all site visits in the U.S. in October 2005 to 11.9% as of last week, a 33% decline. Currently, for web users over the age of 25, Adult Entertainment still ranks high in popularity, coming in second, after search engines. Not so for 18- to 24-year-olds, for whom social networks rank first, followed by search engines, then web-based e-mail — with porn sites lagging behind in fourth. If you chart the rate of visits to social-networking sites against those to adult sites over the last two years, there appears to be a strong negative correlation (i.e., visits to social networks go up as visits to adult sites go down). It’s a leap to say there’s a real correlation there, but if there is one, then I’d bet it has everything to do with Gen Y’s changing habits: they’re too busy chatting with friends to look at online skin. Imagine.
This reshaped online landscape leaves me feeling old and out of the loop. It seems that social-networking sites have not only usurped porn in popularity, but they’ve also gobbled up time Gen Y-ers used to spend on traditional e-mail and IM. When you can reach all of your friends through Facebook or MySpace, there’s little reason to spend time in your old-school inbox. So, if social networking is becoming e-mail 2.0, then perhaps Microsoft’s recent $240 million dollar payout for such a small stake in Facebook isn’t that ridiculous.
The reality is that Facebook isn’t just for kids. Last week — and this was a highlight — my dad, who just turned 75, added me as a friend on Facebook. I considered sending him a virtual beer to celebrate the occasion, but I didn’t think either of us would see the point. Back in my day, we drank beers out of bottles and cans — we didn’t have these new-fangled virtual beers. But, then again, I think that’s something I probably still have in common with the younger generation, something I don’t need Hitwise data to back up: the love of a good old-fashioned beer.
Let the messages roll in.
-taken from Time.com

Moonlighting
Saturday, November 3rd, 2007
Half a year ago, I was doing layout and advertising full-time and teaching to earn money on the side. Now, I’m teaching full-time and doing layout and advertising to earn money on the side.
I’m just glad that I get the chance to continually do things I enjoy (and get paid for it, woo).
Thanks Boss :P
Half a year ago, I was doing layout and advertising full-time and teaching to earn money on the side. Now, I’m teaching full-time and doing layout and advertising to earn money on the side.
I’m just glad that I get the chance to continually do things I enjoy (and get paid for it, woo).
Thanks Boss :P

