# Wednesday, March 31, 2004

http://asianamericanfilm.com/boards/dcforum/DCForumID5/269.html

Let's the mud slinging begins. Me opinione : I find it funny.

posted on Wednesday, March 31, 2004 7:24:55 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

Digs is moving to Singapore in May for a DHL job.

I moved there for  a bit in November 18, 2001. Definately one of the best place to be for a growing career.

Congrats.

But again, it's a disneyland with a capital punishment. If you like disneyland, great.

posted on Wednesday, March 31, 2004 4:01:39 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]
# Tuesday, March 30, 2004

6 miles 6 days a week. I am a thirty six miles guy.

It's still a big talk because I've just reach my second week and Lord, there are more days of running to come.

posted on Tuesday, March 30, 2004 5:39:05 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]
# Monday, March 29, 2004

One pair of rented shoes $4
One game of bowling $4
One evening spent with friends ....$8
Kicking those suckers' ass with my 144 points ...priceless

:)

posted on Monday, March 29, 2004 2:30:24 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

I ran earlier today, chased by the dark cloud and lost. I was drenched from head to toe, running 2 miles in the mini storm on the beach. I could see no further than 10 feet as the night approached and ferocity of rain blurred the horizon.

Half way, I found myself running alone, as other runner must have magically vanished into the air. All those sands and water and just me.

Every step weighed down by the water soaked shoes. One step, and then another, and then another, ignoring what's ahead, motivated by the sighted of Chicago skyline as a guide to home and hot shower.

 

posted on Monday, March 29, 2004 3:30:14 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]
# Sunday, March 28, 2004

Van Auken, like many of the family members in the gallery, began to cry. "I cried hysterically, and I couldn't stop. Here was somebody, at last, telling the truth." (Newsweek)

posted on Sunday, March 28, 2004 7:15:16 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

”Mohamed Suharto has received a dubious honor from Transparency International, which named the former Indonesian president the most corrupt world leader of the past 20 years. With his family's takings estimated at between $15 billion and $35 billion, Suharto topped such notorious kleptocrats as Ferdinand Marcos of the Philippines ($5 billion to $10 billion) and Nigeria's Sani Abacha ($2 billion to $5 billion). How did the longtime Indonesian strongman amass his wealth?” (Slate)

I was involved a couple of anti-suharto campaign while I was a student back in Brisbane. Man, those were the days, being involved in home politics from abroad, organizing with other students, writing plays and poems, and street demonstration.

They must have some files on me somewhere down there.

posted on Sunday, March 28, 2004 6:57:52 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

 
How happy is the blameless vestal's lot!

The world forgetting, by the world forgot.
Eternal sunshine of the spotless mind!

Eloisa to Abelard by Alexander Pope

A beautiful, echanting, clever, charming romance movie.

 

posted on Sunday, March 28, 2004 8:27:08 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]
# Saturday, March 27, 2004

I only manage to finish  two books this week (yeah I know, that's little. Go ahead and flog me) and both of them are mediocre book.

1. The Fifth Angel by Tim Green. This is another cliche infested crime thriller book. The plot is predictable and full of cheap tricks to advance its story (even porn movies have better and more coherent plots).

This book is the kind of book they force you to read when you fall into the oh, so eternal hell. Avoid, even if your life depend on it.

2. Discover Your Genius by the guy that wrote “How to Think Like Leonardo da Vinci“, Michael J.Gelb (I haven't read that book). This book is a self improvement book that retell the stories and lesson learnt from 10 geniuses in history (Plato, Elizabeth I, etc).

Inspiring history in short.

The book is uneven. I like its section on Plato, Brunelleschi and Elizabeth I (Non Sine Sole Iris. gosh, love that phrase) but the rest are ho hum affairs.

My recommendation: go to the library and read the section on the aforementioned chapters. Do not buy.

Anyway I apologize for the sordid affair of this book review. I am in the processes of reading three HUP (Harvard University Press) books that so far still quite interesting. Next week is bound to be exciting.  

posted on Saturday, March 27, 2004 7:10:04 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]
# Thursday, March 25, 2004

A sample from Noam Chomsky's weblog

”The IMF is hardly more than a branch of the Treasury Department. Economist Jagdish Bhagwati, no radical, refers to the IMF- Treasury-Wall St complex that is a core part of de facto world government. The Treasury Department is part of the US government. If we had anything remotely resembling a democratic culture, actions of the government would be under the control of citizens, which would mean that citizens have to at the very least know something about them. And beyond that, we would have mechanisms to engage in political action. And in a more democratic society the third component, Wall St., would not exist in anything remotely like its present form, and what would exist would be under popular democratic control. “

posted on Thursday, March 25, 2004 4:31:06 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

I watched his testimony to the 9/11 comission this after during lunch break (live through Internet feed) and I thought he handled himself well. He was cool, poised and deliberate in his answer.

WashingtonPost analysis thinks so too.

“It was a masterful bit of showmanship by the former bureaucrat who became a household name in the past week with his charges about Bush. Though more prominent personalities testified in the commission's two-day public hearings, the longtime foreign policy bureaucrat stole the show. “

And I regard his opening as a class act.

“With two dozen cameras recording his every twitch, Clarke disarmed the crowd by starting with an apology to those who lost loved ones on Sept. 11. "Your government failed you," he said. "Those entrusted with protecting you failed you. And I failed you."

posted on Thursday, March 25, 2004 6:09:05 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]
# Wednesday, March 24, 2004

It feels like it.

posted on Wednesday, March 24, 2004 2:41:44 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

Greetings from Chi-Town.

posted on Wednesday, March 24, 2004 1:58:11 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

I sent the instruction to the nomadlife account last night. The hotmail account bounced back. I'll be online tonight.

posted on Wednesday, March 24, 2004 3:10:10 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]
# Tuesday, March 23, 2004

I took me just an hour to whip up this latest design (I got the base design from http://oswd.org) last night. Let me know if you like it or hate it.

posted on Tuesday, March 23, 2004 5:51:39 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [1]

SilverKey is the home LongDistanceRunner website starting from tonight. Expect cool stuff to happen in the coming as we'll be working closely with them to create the ultimate indie band site. 

posted on Tuesday, March 23, 2004 12:56:11 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [1]
# Saturday, March 20, 2004

Just got back from covering the anti-war protest. More details tonight, with tons of pictures.

The photographs are available at http://photo.dodyg.org. Enjoy.

posted on Saturday, March 20, 2004 11:40:44 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

1. “Blue Horizon” by Wilbur Smith.

I must confess that I am a huge Wilbur Smith fan. His book is not the type of literary masterpiece or of clever narrative, but all of them have the sense of unabashed fun and adventure in colonial era and ancient Egpyt in  Africa.

Fun, adventure, Africa. Definately my cup of tea.

Blue Horizon stays true to that path.

If you are not familiar with Wilbur Smith work, this is a good book to start.

2. “Thinking How To Live“ by Allan Gibbard.

This is another heavy duty philosophy book that I refuse to finish. I know from the beginning that this book is written specifically to the academic circles, its theme to be debated endlessly by the occupants of the high towers.

It takes the central theme of the difference between normative thought and descriptive thought.

Yeah, if that theme doesn't put you to sleep already, sail ahead, otherwise avoid.

I do like its cover though. Yet another prove that to dodysm that you can only judge magazine by its cover, not books.

3. “How digital is your business” by David J. Morrison, Karl Weber, Adrian Slywotzky.

This books advocate the use of information technology to radically alter and improve the performance of your enterprise (4x, 10x performances). You only need to read the first three chapters of this book as the rest are dedicated to case studies of companies that espouse this digitization value.

How valuable is this book? If you are not familiar with the concept of digitizing business, you will reap great insights from this business, otherwise this book is  a ho-hum affair.

The central lesson of this book is that you need to automate, automate, automate as much as possible inside your organization and combine the effeciency of machine with the agility of talented people in your company. Got it?

Now I hold dear this concept because SilverKey is founded just simply for this purpose, digitizing business. Business upgrade version 3.0. Let the machine do the mundane, the predictable and the repetition, and free the human to have more time to innovate, push boundaries and play.

posted on Saturday, March 20, 2004 7:37:14 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [1]
# Friday, March 19, 2004

Washington Post ”USA Today reported this morning that it has found "strong evidence" that one of its star reporters "fabricated substantial portions of at least eight major stories" and lifted quotes or other material from competing publications. “

posted on Friday, March 19, 2004 6:00:01 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

 

MY EXPERIENCE OF LIVING THROUGH ONE AFRICA’S MORE BUTAL CIVIL WARS –  MY STORY

(by Henry K. Kulee currently in Monrovia, Liberia) 

 

If you have never been caught up in a war situation, especially the likes of the brutal civil wars incessantly occurring in parts if Africa, your perception, most likely, of war might just not transcend the ghastly images that international news network transmit to you via television, radio, newspaper or the internet. War to you might mean nothing more than the massive humanitarian aid efforts that flood a war zone after a low, a cease-fire or an end to the actual conflict.

 

Though images of war as are transmitted help in no small way in garnering global support at a variety of fronts, the fact is the actuality of war is far much more poignant. I have come to grasp with this murky realization over the fourteen years Liberia has been at war with itself, a war that has left the country groping in the shadows of its glorious past.

 

I grew up as an enthusiastic follower of world conflict, past and present. Reading on war history – the World Wars, Viet Nam, Korea, Arab-Israelis and “revolutionary” and independent wars in Africa - was favorite past time activity for me. By the time the Falkland, Iran-Iraq wars, the Granada, Panama, and Lebanon invasions were raging; I had already developed a keen early interest in radio and so, zealously followed them live.

 

My interest in radio at an early age explains why at age 12 I had already memorized no less than half of Africa’s serving Presidents. I was very informed on global goings-on by then; I could spend countless hours lecturing friends on wars or on who had become head-of-state where and how. Victory of the side I favored in a war dazzled me extraordinarily. In those days the destruction and humanitarian nightmare that punctuate wars didn’t dawn on me at all. I simply viewed the casualties and destruction of war in terms of victory; that winning a war justified death and destruction notwithstanding the enormity; the act of war trilled me, it was an obsession, a fascination!

 

I tell you what! I was a great fan of the Apartheid South African Defense Force! This might sound weird but it simply revealed the level of my obsession with war. As a Black Africa – though I was young then – you would expect my support for the ANC. The SADF had the military muscles to strike across borders with such ease; that fascinated me!

 

My rather wacky fascination with war spelt the reason why even I embraced the news of a rebel incursion into Liberia with so much glee. In fact the whole nation became so blasé about the rebel incursion. Then President Samuel K. Doe was a despot; to most Liberians this fact legitimized the incursion. Most believed the President had to go and so means of disposing of him didn’t matter as long as it aided the ushering of the democracy promised by our “Liberators”. President Doe died at the hands rebels! Unfortunately democracy didn’t result; instead a ruthless fourteen-year on-off war ensued. Today, I wonder whether my young inquisitive mind would have accepted war in Liberia as panacea to its long problem of governance had known it would suck fourteen years of my youth and threaten the future of my two beautiful daughters – 12 years later.

 

My view of war is forever is changed! The brutality and chilling reality of war runs fear down my spine. War to me is no longer about who wins or loses or of its legitimacy. War now to me is much more about the destruction, the death, the massacre, the hunger, the trauma and ….

 

In fourteen long years, I have witness the evil of war in all shapes and forms: a man killed simply because he turned up on the wrong side of the military divide where his ethnicity branded him an enemy; a young man summarily executed on suspicion of being an enemy fighter; a healthy grizzled bearded man, with protruding stomach bayoneted to death excused of being an official of President Doe’s government, rendering him an enemy; a pregnant woman’s belly slit open to settle an altercation among some wud soldiers on the sex of the child she carried; a man’s rib split open, heart extracted, cooked and eaten; a victim’s intestine dangled across a rebel checkpoint - rebels way exhibiting their war exploit; a queue is ordered formed, a sudden sadistic deafening ‘you!’ shout broke the quiet, a young man looked in the direction of the shout, is ordered off the queue and executed! A man head is rammed with a sledgehammer as a punishment for desertion of his post.

 

When such gruesome crimes unfold right before your eyes, you realize that war is more than about military superiority. When your little two-year old daughter begins to mimic the sound of guns, you quickly fathom the psychological destruction millions of children caught up in war ravaged societies have to endue then you quickly realize war more than about the side that has the greater armament. What more could crown my experience!  

 

Narrowing an experience of living pretty close to 14 years enmeshed in one of Africa’s most horrendous wars to just few pages is as difficult as attempting to push a camel through a needle whole. The wrongs, the evil, the atrocities… that the war has left in its shadow (wake) are too countless to remember, let alone write about. I sure am giving it a try notwithstanding the monstrosity of the task.

 

War is war as long as people are killed! However three are specific events or periods that tend to remain, for a whole batch of reasons, in your mind forever. These events kind of form a cyst on your thought line. In fourteen years of on-off bloody conflict three specific events point to my worst experiences

 

 

To be continued...

posted on Friday, March 19, 2004 5:03:05 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [2]

It is a strange night and I'm going to sleep feeling stupid.

posted on Friday, March 19, 2004 8:53:22 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]
# Thursday, March 18, 2004

"Newlyweds" star Jessica Simpson to Secretary of the Interior Gale Norton during a White House tour: "You've done a nice job decorating the White House." (The Washington Post via Lloyd Grove's Lowdown)

posted on Thursday, March 18, 2004 10:01:59 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]
# Wednesday, March 17, 2004

It's St. Paddy's day today and we have a snow storm. Yay. Steph, where are ye? And I will pray in the alter of Guinness tonight.

posted on Wednesday, March 17, 2004 6:57:36 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

Usually I do my round of quick book reviews on Saturdays, but I have just finished reading book of an extraordinary tales of a Chechnyan surgeon named Khassan Baiev who stayed in Chechnya operating the wounded during the first and second Chechnyan war in the 90's .

The book is a vivid and moving personal story to the tragedy that is Chechnya. A destruction of war and conflict from the ground level. His account on the terrible toll he saw as he operated on his patients (in once case, three days straight, as he was the lone doctor, helped with volunteer nurses) is sickening. You will find yourself cringe from time to time. It's a tale filled with tragedy and unbelievable cruelty that one human being can do to another. Yes, those shocking pictures and moving videos of Chechnya, people lived there throughout the war, during the intense bombardment, without electricity and water.

If you do not care much about the conflict before, you will after.

You will learn about the culture of the Chechnyan people.

And you will be inspired by the strength and compassion of those people who survive through the whole ordeal.

If you think you have it tough, you will feel lucky after you finish this book.

This is a book you can draw inner strength from.

“The Oath : A Surgeon under fire“ (by Khassan Baiev)

A must read.

 

posted on Wednesday, March 17, 2004 8:49:09 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [1]
# Tuesday, March 16, 2004

http://dodyg.org now runs on a Windows 2003 server.

posted on Tuesday, March 16, 2004 3:46:20 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [1]
# Sunday, March 14, 2004

posted on Sunday, March 14, 2004 9:04:55 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [6]
# Saturday, March 13, 2004

Mark of Long Distance Runner threw an awesome St. Paddy's day party last night. Man, the people he brought in were so diverse and interesting that I had a ball jumping from one conversation to another (surfing the waves of ideas).

Cool crowd. Interesting misfits. Party animals. Energy. Youth. Rock 'N Roll.

And no one, not single person, asked me about what I do for a living. YEAHH!!! Wow!! That's how party should be.

Stories. You. And. Me. And. US. Everyone.

Tragedy, shock, inspiration, awe.

Irish Car Bombs.

A heaven sent from Nord di Italia, with delicate lips of sweet young Summer red wine.

Art (forallicare.com) and I brought a GALLON of Jack Daniel. That says it all.

And that would be the one and only St.Paddy's celebration for me this year. What a party.

posted on Saturday, March 13, 2004 6:44:56 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

I read 5 books this week (completed three)

1.  “Blow Fly” by Patricia Cornwell. This is the latest saga from her famous Scarpetta character. I read it in 4 hours. It's pretty much content free. There ain't much brain required to read this baby. If you are fan, you'll like this latest book, otherwise it is a pretty mediocre novels (illogical ending, distruptive thrill)

2. “The free-market innovation machine” by Willliam J. Baumol. This book is drier that the Saharan dessert in the peak of Summer. The purpose of the book is to argue that “innovation, not price-setting, to whichmanagement gives priority in important sectors of the economy”, “innovation plays a role of at least comparable importance for theory of the firm and competition”.

I only managed to go through 3 chapters (out of 16 chapters) in 3 weeks time (I have to return the book today to the library). I wish I have more time.

3. “The emotional hostage: Rescuing your emotional life“ by Leslie Cameron-Bandlre and Michael Lebeau. There one word to describe this book: Narcisist.

Blah..blah..blah..you are a tramp. Sorry, I didn't finish this book as well because I cannot stand the sugary approach they use in writing this book, otherwise I'll end up with diabetes.

Avoid. Waste of time. Read Buddhism treatist on emotion instead of this crap.

4. “Re-Imagine“ by Tom Peters. Tom Peters book, as usual, acts like a stimulant to a business mind. You should read it just to revive all your creative energy in finding and acting on new ideas.

Must read. Even just for the entertainment value of it.

5. “The Art of Profitabililty“ by Adrian Slywotzky. This is a brilliant book that present 23 (twenty three) ways corporation build their profit model. It presents the models in  simple easy to understand graphs (in a Zen painting style) . You can race through this book in 2 hours as he use fictional characters and narrative to explain his theory.

That's all for this week. I will get 5  more new ones ready for review next time. Adios.

 

posted on Saturday, March 13, 2004 6:39:01 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

I'm probably gonna regred this, but as a reminder, dont' make out with a 18 freshman college girl again although she's Italian and beautiful. Mamma mia.

posted on Saturday, March 13, 2004 1:25:24 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

Is the crucifiction of Jesus Christ the most prominent example of religious prosecution?

posted on Saturday, March 13, 2004 6:44:26 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

Plaza de la Cibeles  , Madrid.

posted on Saturday, March 13, 2004 6:27:19 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]
# Friday, March 12, 2004

NYTimes editorial : ”We are all Madrileños now.”

posted on Friday, March 12, 2004 7:25:55 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]
# Thursday, March 11, 2004

”Oh, you are in my blood like holy wine
You taste so bitter and you taste so sweet
Oh, I could drink a case of you, darling
And I'd still be on my feet
I'd still be on my feet

posted on Thursday, March 11, 2004 8:14:28 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

I feel cranky and impatient tonight. It's probably because the f*ckin' deficit shoot monthly record.

From the place Jayson Blair burned down “The United States trade deficit climbed to a monthly record of $43.1 billion in January as imports continued to flood in from China and American exports were hurt by slumping demand from Europe and other parts of the world.”

posted on Thursday, March 11, 2004 7:52:02 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

Let me introduce you to stupid :

From New York Times:

”Now, though, producers here are facing a serious new challenge in their biggest market. On Dec. 31, the Southern Shrimp Alliance filed a dumping complaint against Brazil and five other countries, seeking to impose tariffs of up to 300 percent, and last month the Commerce Department ruled that there were grounds to proceed because there were indications of a "danger of injury" to American producers.”

“Shrimp producers here argue that there is simply no way for American shrimpers operating from trawlers to compete against more efficient farms. Production in the United States has stalled over the last decade, they maintain, because of the vagaries of weather, overfishing, high costs and a reluctance to embrace aquaculture.

"We saw the writing on the wall," said Mark Kleinberg, an American who formerly had a shrimp fleet in Brownsville, Tex., and has shifted operations to northeast Brazil. "Shrimp boats cannot compete because insurance premiums and the cost of diesel fuel, repairs and maintenance are so high, and if you try to keep that around, you're just dragging out the misery."

But American shrimpers dispute that claim. "All we are doing is harvesting, which is cheaper than trying to raise shrimp yourself," Mr. Gordon said. "It's much harder and requires a lot more effort and cost to raise shrimp larvae and build a pond for them than to just go out to harvest them at sea."”

posted on Thursday, March 11, 2004 7:40:25 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

(312) 994 - 2334 (Business Line) courtesy of Vonage

posted on Thursday, March 11, 2004 6:42:06 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

I was on a phone with a high school friend I haven't talked to for about nine years. She is currently in Western Australia and will be completing a PhD in June. From her, I learn that another friend is currently living in Paris (another PhD) and yet another PhD candidate in Munich, Germany.

I know of another friend currently pursuing her third degree in the US. One friend is currently residing in Sydney, pursuing her CPA certification after completing her 2nd degree. Vancouver also hosts another still in study friend.

These are all friends back from my Catholic high school in Surabaya, Indonesia back 9 years ago. My class (class of '95) probably represents the highest percentage of graduates that go, study and live overseas (close to 50%).

That is something.

Will the next generation of leaders in Indonesia come from that line of gungho internationalists? Only time will tell.

posted on Thursday, March 11, 2004 6:38:20 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]
# Wednesday, March 10, 2004

Henry's the Nation is back baby:

”I tell you what! Businesses are sprouting here and there every day. I have not seen any thing like this in Liberia for many, many years!!!! Well, I think this is the just the beginning!! The new Liberia I had long dreamt of is sure on its way!!”

posted on Wednesday, March 10, 2004 6:35:29 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

Through Scoble

Amazing performance at TED conference

David Weinberger brings us an amazing musical performance from TED. You have to read the blog to see why it's amazing. Thanks David and TED for this!”

Indeed. This one is a must *experience*.

posted on Wednesday, March 10, 2004 9:31:56 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

Henry's daughter (currently in Liberia. I presume Monrovia, but I don't know for sure). And if you haven't read Henry's remarkable piece on Liberia, you should.

posted on Wednesday, March 10, 2004 6:07:23 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

Today is a rebound day. New ideas, refreshed energy and new found inspiration. What a rollercoaster.

I spent yet another Tuesday at Chicago Museum of Art (it's free on Tuesday). I did a survey on the place and man, it was huge. At least as big as the Met. I'll be returning to this place for at least another 5 weeks before I can absorb all these artful goodness.

posted on Wednesday, March 10, 2004 5:06:25 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]
# Tuesday, March 09, 2004

This Monday is a bad day, a day that I only wish for my worse enemy (hey, I'm not a saint).

I have a 5 hours black zone. Burnt out. Scratch that. Instantaneous Combustion. Boom.

It started at 2 pm and bam, suddenly I just got really really depressed. I regard myself as a pretty cheerful happy-go-lucky guy, so this 'attack' surprised me.

I felt like something was dead in some part of my conciousness and I was paralyzed with hopelessness. Drowning. I went on working, but with a heavy heart, completing tasks that usually takes 2 hours which this time went on to about 5 hours (I did complete them though)

Everything just slowed down to a crawl. Tedious. Desperate. Meaningless. Paralyzed.

Not an ounce of anxiety. (it's already pretty shitty without *that* one). So I can rule out panic attack (not that I have anything to be panick about)

I took breaks, went outside, got coffee, did my exercise (did a 60 laps), stop for a while, grab a book, did nothing.

Those didn't work.

Nothing I did could shake it away. Just a painful sense of dread. OMG, am I burning out?

I never crack under pressure (yes, there's always the first time). But, there is nothing special in terms of deadline pressure this Monday. Just a normal boring Monday.

I slept 7 hours last night. Not in my usual sleep deprived reality. None. N-O-R-M-A-L DAY

The depression died out as the night sky appeared. And Jackie called at the end, which really helped my spirit up. I'm totally fine now.

But I still have no explanation for what happen. Blank. No theory.

Burnt Out is one single thing that can ruin this whole effort to build a viable business (well, that and got run over by a truck) so I am pretty careful in maintaining my emotional health. And this single event today does worry me a bit.

My tolerance for stress and pain are pretty high (i'm an island boy afterall) but that could be a problem. I don't know.

So I was broken a bit today. Got an invisible scar. Bled a bit. Just painful reminder I'm not invicible.

Let's see what tomorrow brings. I'll let you know if I end up clinically insane (heck, it will make a good story for you - “I know someone who go insane“ story).

 

posted on Tuesday, March 09, 2004 7:05:50 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]
# Monday, March 08, 2004

Sending off Becky to New Zealand and Australia for a three weeks of funs. On a coffee breakfast, with Dave. The travelling season starts.

I won't be left behind this time.

Ellisa is graduating on March 22nd from University of Ancona, Italy.

 

posted on Monday, March 08, 2004 5:05:37 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

Now you know why the rush to outsourcing. Outsourcing is the new DotCom boom. Not entirely rational, but it produces some good stuff along the way.



From SFChronicle



 
 

graphical line

OFFSHORING: BY THE NUMBERS

Definitive data on jobs shipped overseas is a hard thing to find. But there is no shortage of collateral figures on the phenomenon. The sheer volume of studies on this topic tells us that people are trying hard to quantify the trend. Here's a look at some of the numbers behind this national issue (and their source):

HOW MANY JOBS COULD WE LOSE?

3.3 million

The number of U.S. jobs expected to be outsourced by 2015 (Forrester)

14 million

The number of U.S. jobs vulnerable to outsourcing (UC Berkeley)

11 percent The percentage of U.S. jobs vulnerable to offshoring (UC Berkeley)

17 percent The percentage of Silicon Valley jobs vulnerable to offshoring (UCBerkeley)

WHY IS THIS HAPPENING?

$70,000

What the average American computer programmer is paid (UC Berkeley)

$8,250

What the average computer programmer in India makes (CIO Magazine)

$9,000

What the average computer programmer in China makes (CIO Magazine)

$300

Approximate monthly rent for a two-bedroom apartment in Shenzhen (Chronicle research)

$200

Approximate monthly rent for a two-bedroom apartment in Bangalore, India (www.Indiaproperties.com)

$1,250

Approximate monthly rent for a two-bedroom apartment in Santa Clara County (RealFacts)

posted on Monday, March 08, 2004 5:10:11 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [1]
# Sunday, March 07, 2004


ritesh says:

yep! Indians go crazy on two holidays.... ie Holi(festival of colors) and Diwali(festival of lights).

It's an exhilirating feeling to have your own company connected over 12 hours of time zone in two different cultures. It's nothing compared to Aiesec yet, but hey, we are building this from scratch :)

posted on Sunday, March 07, 2004 8:04:55 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

John Udell : ”We should also find better ways to reward risk-takers. “We’re going to be forced to expense stock options, meanwhile China has announced it will implement a stock-option-like program,” Cook says. He suggests a rethink of the Sarbanes-Oxley pendulum swing. “The prescriptive rules are doubling my accounting fees,” he says. And most of all, Cook wants to fix health care. “When you move the work to India and China you get an immediate $6,000 savings right there,” he says. “It’s huge.” “

Tom Friedman : “That is so right. As Robert Hof, a tech writer for Business Week, noted, U.S. tech workers "must keep creating leading edge technologies that make their companies more productive — especially innovations that spark entirely new markets." The same tech innovations that produced outsourcing, he noted, also produced eBay, Amazon.com, Google and thousands of new jobs along with them.”

posted on Sunday, March 07, 2004 12:29:34 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

Name : Dody Gunawinata.

Citizenship : Indonesia / Australia.

Language Spoken : Indonesian, Chinese, English, Spanish, Arab, Italian, French, Hebrew.

Wealth : Money is no longer an issue.

Current Place of Residence(s) : Lima (Peru), Beijing (China), Jerusalem(Israel/Palestine), Chicago (USA).

Status : Not Married.

Work : Travelling Diplomat for SilverKey (10 countries). Contributing writer for Foreign Policy Magazine. Founder of Freedom School, Liberia. 

Musical instrument : Guitar. Vocalist.

Countries travelled: 100.

Continents : 6, including South Pole.

Sports : 4 Marathons.

Certified Twin Engine Pilot. Medium Dive Certified. Pass California Bar Exam. Own a Ballet Company. Go on a national tour with a Band. Ride a bike across Iran.

posted on Sunday, March 07, 2004 7:45:38 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

A friend just recently asked me whether I'm still on my pasta diet. Yes, Ma'am. Although I've been adding more non-meat protein into my diet as my Spring training has started.

I cut down my Alcohol intake severely (once per month). No White Bread. Eat 5 times a day with Low Glycemic Carbs (Pasta) combined with Low Fat and High Protein food (Tofu and Tuna for example). Eggs once every other day. Water. 7 hours sleep. Milk.

5 times a week I would go for my green variation. $2.75 raid to the salad bar accross the street. Vegs and Fruits, just like Mom recommended.

I realized that I've accustomed myself of not eating meat. No fear though, I'm not becoming vegetarian anytime soon.

I want to run a Marathon this year so I started with an cozy 3 miles run last weekend. Weight training started last week as well. Swimming is on schedule. What I'm missing right now is cross training. That will probably come in late Spring.

I'm shooting for three goals:

1. More aerobic capacity (aka. uninterrupted 16 miles run).

2. More lean muscle mass.

3. 6.5% body fat by the end of Summer.

There you go.

posted on Sunday, March 07, 2004 4:45:14 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [3]
# Saturday, March 06, 2004

Book finished this week.

”Simplicity : The New Competitive Advantage” [Bill Jensen] -- Read Them. Bill presents an interesting  view on how to cut through the information glut and help others make decision.

“Thinker's Toolkit: Fourteen Skills for Making Smarter Decisions in Business and Life” [Morgan D.Jones] -- Skim. Spend no more than 15 minutes. Quite useful, but it doesn't present any new techniques. The insight about the unreliability of human mind as an effective decision making mechanism  in the first chapter is worth the whole book.

“Citizen Soldiers” [Stephen E. Ambrose] -- Well, this is a very engaging book about the final year of WW II, post Normandy.

posted on Saturday, March 06, 2004 6:03:35 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [1]

ArtRage (it's a software)

posted on Saturday, March 06, 2004 6:35:12 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

From Doc  : ”Somewhere around here I have Peter Drucker's Post-Capitalist Society. I don't know if it was in that book, or somewhere else, that Drucker talks about the end of the "modern corporation," which he said was only one and a quarter centuries old. For most of that period, Drucker said, the largest corporations possessed advantages exclusive to size: access to capital, international reach, publishing clout, the ability to confer health and retirement benefits. In the last decade the first three of those ceased to be exclusive, and the fourth was reduced extensively. At the same time, the downdrift of those advatages to companies of every size has had endless positive effects. The thresholds of creation, innovation and just about everything else have been reduced to surmountable levels for companies of all sizes. This is not a bad thing.”

SilverKey VC is The Office of Personal Credit Cards. And that's probably the last VC we'll ever use.  

Here's to those Credit Card Funded enterprises. Cheers.

posted on Saturday, March 06, 2004 5:17:49 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]
# Friday, March 05, 2004

I found myself last night on the other side of the gun, getting relationship advice from Digs. He dished it like it is.

Man, was it brutal or what? I was left with bloody nose and shattered pride.

And I still haven't figured out what I'm looking for. I suspect I won't come out of this unscathed.

posted on Friday, March 05, 2004 5:41:18 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]
# Tuesday, March 02, 2004

Overview: Rembrandt van Rijn (1606–1669) is one of the most creative and celebrated artists in history. With more than 200 works from all periods of his long career—approximately 20 paintings, 30 drawings, and 150 prints drawn from major collections here and abroad—this is the first American exhibition to explore Rembrandt’s astonishing range and variety of activity as a brilliant etcher seen in the context of his paintings and drawings. Rembrandt’s Journey highlights the parallel relationships among the master’s paintings, drawings, and prints—closely examining imagery, narrative content, and the marks of the artist’s hand, as well as his approach to religious illustration in all of the media he mastered and reinvented. A closer study of the expressions, gestures, and body language of his figures will provide deeper insight into the inventive, subtle, and complex way he interpreted Biblical texts and imaginatively projected himself into them. The exhibition will focus on several of the subjects to which Rembrandt returned—portraits and self-portraits, everyday life, landscape, the nude—at various stages of his career.”

Chicago Art Institute. Ends on May 9.

Update:

That exhibition is awesome. Man, I hope that guy went to heaven, there were so many etchings taken from the Bible.

posted on Tuesday, March 02, 2004 11:43:13 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]

From Mike :

“3 miles ran with Dody...I hate you Dody. “

Trust me Mike. Four more runs and we'll reach 6 miles without breaking a sweat.

posted on Tuesday, March 02, 2004 6:13:59 AM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0]
# Monday, March 01, 2004

“Here is my own experience with offshoring. I am programmer working for Russian company located in Novosibirsk.  I am participating in a long run ousourcing project (it lasts more than for 3 years now). Our company does software design and implementation while our counterpart do marketing, sales, high level pecifications and provides feedback from users. It looks like successfull project (we have already released several versions of our software) and our partners are satisfied with it. In short our case supports opinion of Dody Gunawinata that in order to not to run into miscellaneous weird problems you have to have YOUR team you outsource to. Only difference is that we had already  been mature development team before the project started. Not everything here is cloudless of course.”

posted on Monday, March 01, 2004 7:30:03 PM (Egypt Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [1]