Archive for July, 2005

Meme? What meme?

I think this is the first Planet Debian meme I’ve been in…

Which Fantasy/SciFi Character Are You?

Qantas being stingy?

Why is it that Qantas never automatically credit my Cathay Pacific flights to Australia into my Qantas Frequent Flyer account? Case in point: my CX flights to Melbourne way back in Easter this year are nowhere to be seen, yet the CX ones I took to Tokyo didn’t pose a problem. Even my Finnair flights to Helsinki last week already show up in the online account summary.

Way to go, Qantas…

No Way For Linux To Replace Proprietary Software

First of all, thank you DebConf5 organizers! You guys did a fantastic job in providing the opportunity for both DDs and non-DDs alike to meet face-to-face with each other. Debian definitely is alive and kicking!

So it is with great disappointment to see articles like this (”No Way For Linux To Replace Proprietary Software”) when I came back to Hong Kong. It’s an op-ed piece in a local newspaper by Charles Peter Mok, and begins by attacking last week’s Evans Data report for lacking objective data, therefore the conclusion reached (OSS adoption is speeding up) is too far-fetched. This is followed by (translation to English mine):

In fact, due to their love of open source systems (sic), open source supporters often are shallow when it comes to analysis and reaching conclusions, and confirming their subjective wants become their priority; of course, open source critics, like the Microsoft Windows camp and Sun Micro’s Unix camp, sometimes do the same thing.

Maybe he takes the /. crowd too seriously? Anyway, he then essentially translates the month-old SG Cowen report as an example of an objective argument… actually the translation is rather dubious. For example, the report only said “Linux seems to be hitting a limit” (via BusinessWeek); he translated that as “Linux’s development has reached the stage where it’s facing piling limitations”. What a nice and objective extrapolation!

Moving on, he uses the report to reach the conclusion that (again translations mine):

… whether Linux will still enjoy considerable growth, or the red light has been lit, is at the moment too early to say. Enterprise and personal users who use proprietary software such as Windows are still the majority.

Thanks for stating the obvious, Charles. So where’s the objective argument that supports the title of the article?

Next flight

AY67, Helsinki -> Hong Kong, July 16 17:00 (EEST) - 07:45+1 (HKT)

DebConf5 is coming to a close…

Metro

richeyxx, your analysis of the impending free-newspapers-war in Hong Kong is interesting, but there’s one problem: Metropolis Daily is in fact part of the global Metro group, not the Associated Newspapers. Check out their 2004 Annual Report; it says their Hong Kong operations is one of the fastest growing.

(ps. richeyxx, I could not figure out how to leave a comment or otherwise respond to your post, so I’ve responded to it here instead)

Hmmm

DPL has his height measured

Nothing is immune to fakes

Fake casinos in Macau… no, not your typical underground poker tables. This one is setup inside a Presidential Suite of a hotel which already has its own casino, thereby pretending to be the VIP Room of the hotel. Complete with fake security, fake staff, fake gamblers…

What can’t be faked nowadays?

Helsinki: some observations

  • Europe is expensive
  • Helsinki is hot
  • Jacques Chirac did have a point
  • Helsinki is hot
  • Now that I’ve been to Europe, I finally found out what all those comments about Melbourne being really similar to a European city is all about… the trams, the alleys, the city layout, the architecture, even the icy-cold’n tasty tap water!
  • Did I mention Helsinki is hot? If there’s air-conditioning around then it’s fine, but there are none… not in the hotel, not in lecture theatres, not on buses nor trams, not in restaurants; in fact it is often cooler outdoors. WTF?

Hong Kong: Fusion Swearing

Came across the article “Inquiry into the Chinese and Foreign Philosophies of Swearing” by a Lin Siyun the other day (via Simon and HuiChieh). While I don’t agree on all the points made in the article, for the sake of discussion I would like to point to the excellent Cantonese Swearing Research Net. Hopefully I’ll have time to translate that into English some time in the future, but suffice to say if the points raised by Lin Siyun are true, then Hong Kong-style swearing is truly the fusion of East and West.

Update Even if you can’t read Chinese, I suggest Section 9.5 — English Homonyms. At least you’ll then know when a Hong Konger is actually swearing. (With apologies to Macau, France, and the Netherlands.)

All hail glorious China and its law-abiding CCP!

This has to be the funniest thing I have read in a while (emphasis mine):

“China is controlled by law. We handle our affairs according to law. There is no so-called political persecution at all,” the foreign ministry said in a statement.

From The Age.




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