Monthly Archive for September, 2007

In Green

[20070108] Uniform

Once again, it’s time to don my green superhero outfit (plus red cross armband) and defend Singapore from the evil forces of… (fill in appropriate threat here).

Will be back on Wednesday, 3rd October.

‘Til then…

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Singapore in the 1930s

An overlay I did with Yahoo’s MapMixer.

Yahoo will need to improve its maps and satellite imagery for Singapore before this becomes truly useful in the local context. The maps don’t go down to anywhere near street level. Likewise, the satellite imagery, which is also filled with cloud cover. If you zoom in, you’ll notice that the placement is not as accurate as it should be. The placement tool needs further refinement too. I couldn’t manipulate the map as I would have liked when placing it.

Still, a nice try by Yahoo. Come on Google Maps, allow graphic overlays!

View the map.

UPDATE Kevin wrote about the map, pointing out a few things I should have mentioned: “Play with the Layer Opacity and Zoom sliders, as well as the Map / Satellite views.”

And you can drag the map to view different parts too.

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Gimme Banana

I was looking for something else when I came across this video. From what I can gather, it is an ad for a Brazilian MSM company’s web portal. I really couldn’t help but copy and paste the code to share this tv commercial. While I don’t agree with the advert’s point-of-view, I still found it funny.

Now, where’s my banana?

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Fantasie Passionée - A performance by the NUS Symphony Orchestra

Fantasie Passionée

Fellow Friend of Yesterday.sg, PY, will be performing in concert next week. PY plays the double bass. I was unable to attend her previous performances. This time, I am able to make it. Let’s hope nothing crops up from now ’til then!

———-

Join the NUS Symphony Orchestra for a relaxing afternoon of flowing melodies from popular opera and theatre. Enjoy music with themes of passion and fantasy, from the fatally seductive Carmen and the deadly passionate Faust, to the royal fantasy of The King and I and the romantic phantom of the opera house.

Established in 1995, the NUS Symphony Orchestra has grown under the baton of Maestro Lim Soon Lee. The orchestra comprises over 80 students, alumni and guest players all passionate about making music.

Beyond Campus
Fantasie Passionée

by NUS Symphony Orchestra
(a member of NUS Centre For the Arts)

Sat, 15 Sept 2007, 3pm
The Plaza, National Library

Free Admission

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Rugby World Cup 2007

England v Samoa

It’s been four years.

Four years since I watched almost every game of RWC at the stadium or via live telecast.

Four years since the RWC theme - The World in Union* - sent tingles down my spine each time I heard it before a game. Stirring stuff.

Four years since I was at the Telstra Dome where England got an almighty early scare but ultimately defeated the Samoans.

Four years since I witnessed Jonny Wilkinson put the boot into Australia’s cry of “Dad’s Army” during the dying minutes of the final in extra time. It was a delightful, delirious evening for me - a day after my 26th birthday - viewing the final on a big screen among a partisan home crowd at Federation Square.

My voice was hoarse from the screaming, shouting and cheering.

My grades dipped for the first and only time during my University days.

Being there was worth it. Every moment of it.

Four years on…

England’s not going to win this one.

But let the game they play in heaven begin.

My prediction: a France - New Zealand final. I would rather the All Blacks win, but I have a feeling the French rugby team will emulate their football counterparts.

P.S. Continuing on from yesterday’s topic, I want to highlight something Brian Miller wrote in yesterday’s New Paper. He pointed out that New Zealand lost to England in the semi-finals. This is wrong. New Zealand lost to Australia in the semis. England defeated France in the other semi-final.

So much for Ong Sor Fern’s trust in print media (emphases mine):

I trust these established systems of delivering information simply because there is quality control. When I read a newspaper, I can be assured that the journalist is subject to a code of ethics, his work has been audited by editors and his sources verified.

* Based on Gustav Holst’s Jupiter from The Planets, which also became music for the hymn I Vow to Thee, My Country.

UPDATE Ah, after I put my prediction in print, France decide that they don’t really want to win the Rugby World Cup. It’ll be an uphill task for them to reach the final if they qualify second in their group. And it might mean a match up with New Zealand earlier in the tournament. Maybe France will end up beating them on their way to the final! They are that kind of team. Capable of being totally insipid on one day, and being world-beaters the next. But Argentina played really well. Congrats to them on their gutsy win!

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