Practice attitude

We have a foosball table in the game room at work.  We have a group foosball friends usually go to the game room after lunch to have some fun.  Some of us had played foosball in school, have really good skills, while the others play foosball the first time here at work.  We have been playing foosballalmost  daily over a year, practice really improves our skill.  I started as a novice player, but now I can pretty much rule the table playing against an average player.

We play foosball just to relax between work, most of us play casually to have fun.  Somehow one of my friends takes foosball quite serious.  Foosball suppose is not an vigorous game, you just have to stand next the to table doing nothing other than rotating your wrists, but this guy manage to sweat like playing a basketball game and totally exhausted after playing foosball.  I think most of us play the same amount of games.  Because this guy play really seriously every day, his skill improve much faster than us.  He started as a novice, now he is probably the best player in the group.

The more you practice the better you become, but the attitude of how you practice can make a big difference.  If you want to be good at something, not only that you have to do it a lot, you have to do it seriously.

How to order in all you can eat sushi restaurant

Many of us go to all you can eat sushi restaurants.  Ordering food could become a headache when the table is too big.  There are over hundreds of items in the menu, everyone has different preference, but we only got one ordering sheet.  So what is the most efficient way to order food?

One obviously approach is going through the list one item at a time, ask people to raise their hand and vote on how many dishes of each item should order.  This approach is very inefficient, it takes forever to go through the list while we are starving.  When the food comes, people forgot what they have ordered, so they just grab whatever they feel like eating regardless whether they have ordered it or not.  This approach forget that we can submit order more than once.  Regardless what we order in the first round, we’ll have to order the second or the third round.  Why being so picky on the first order?

A better way to order all you can eat sushi is using pipeline and narrow it down approach.  The goal of the first round is minimize the turn around time instead of getting an accurate order.  Someone just order something everyone loves, like the most expensive item on the menu, sashima or popular sushi rolls, the lowest common denominator.  Get the order into the kitchen to get the ball rolling, so that the food can show in the shortest amount of time.  While we are waiting for the first order to show up, we have more than enough time to vote on the remaining items in the menu.  Using this approach, everyone gets to eat what they like within the shortest amount of time waiting with an empty stomach.

景賢里

King Yin Lane

有七十年歷史﹐坐落在香港灣仔的景賢里﹐大慨是全港僅餘少數具中國特色紅牆綠瓦的建築物。其歷史值價相信沒有任何爭議﹐早應例入法定古蹟受到保護。在上星期業主忽然動工清拆瓦頂彫花﹐相信是趕在建築物列為古蹟前重建﹐以免四億地價見財花水。保育人士固然強烈遣責﹐政府也從善如流把景賢里例為臨時古蹟﹐勒令清拆工程馬上停止進行﹐可惜為事已晚景賢里受到無可挽救的摧殘。

報章上的評論大部份都是批評政府﹐說香港欠缺完善的古蹟保護政策﹐沒有古蹟業主商討換地賠償的機制。大伙兒一起捧打落水狗﹐打過亦不樂乎﹐反正政府這次難逃其責。有少部份評論批評業主﹐說他貪取利益無視歷史意義。不過四億不是少數目﹐在尊重產權的香港﹐總不能叫業主血本無歸。在古蹟賠償機制不清楚的情況下﹐業主先下手為強清拆建築物﹐保障自己的地產投資也是無可厚非。蘋果日報的薪果批則批評保育人士﹐認為保育團體要求激烈﹐什麼舊建築物都不能拆﹐業主被迫在被保育份子看上前清拆。陶傑撰文駁斥﹐左一句中國小農思維﹐右一句與爭取民主扯上關係﹐說得好不過癮。其實蘋果批文中的推論也是事實﹐在外國古蹟保護法例完善的地方﹐很多業主會趕在古蹟死期前重建樓宇﹐好增加地產投資的回報。蘋果批只不過用錯了元兇二字﹐誤把清拆的責任加在保育份子身上。用經濟誘因去解釋﹐業主提早清拆舊建築物﹐是加強古蹟保護法例的必然結果。

在清拆事件發生前﹐ 我從來沒有聽過香港有這橦歷史建築物。算是我不學無術﹐不過相信也沒有多少香港市民聽過。也許來香港的外國遊客﹐比我們更熟悉景賢里這個名字﹐畢竟好歹也是個旅遊景點。我寫這篇文章時心想﹐既然景賢里這麼具歷史價值﹐網上必定有很多相關資料﹐可以參考了解它的歷史﹐欣賞它的優美建築吧。很可惜我什麼也找不到﹐除了維基上短短數百字的簡介﹐以及那一千零一張遣照。其他所有資料也是新近的評論﹐照片則只有清拆後的頹垣敗瓦。保育份子早前天星皇后事件中﹐在那兩件次貨古蹟身上﹐前後浪費了不知多少個月的時間。若果他們真的是有心搞保育工作﹐就不應該柴娃娃地聚在碼頭示威﹐政府偷懶不做古蹟評估﹐難道民間保育團體就不可以做嗎﹖若果保育人士懂分輕重緩急﹐不把精神花在沒有保留價值的偽古蹟上﹐把時間放在記錄香港貨直價實的古蹟上﹐至少我們不會連景賢里的照片也沒有得看了。保育歷史固然重要﹐但揀選適合保育的對象更加重要﹐香港總不能什麼也不許拆吧。

Running the Number

What is it in the photo?

426k phone

Zoom in a bit closer.

phone zoom in

It is 426000 old cell phones Americans discard every day. The photo created by Artist Chris Jordan in his Running the Number Series showing at the Paul Kopeikin Gallery in Los Angeles. Chris Jordan try to give a new perspective of American statistics in this series by giving the number a visual meaning.

I admire his effort to increasing the public awareness of many social issues through his creative artwork.  However, just like plain old statistic on paper can lie, statistic represent in photos can also lie.  Chris twists the reality to deliver the stunting visual effect, just impress the audience without giving any meaningful interpretation of the statistics. He pick an arbitrarily very very large number to aggregate the statistic for his photos. Yet he forgot a simple fact, US has over 3 billion population. A photo full of old cell phones looks scary, but you do the math, it is only one new cell phone per person every two years, which is quite reasonable.

Here is my art work depicts half a cell phone, equal to the number of cell phones retired per person in the US every year.

.half phone

See, old cell phone is not that scary after all if you represent the statistic in the right way.

Book club

Joining a book club is one of the best way to force yourself to finish a book, especially those difficult to read non-fictions not writing with the general public in mind.  It is like taking a distant course with weekly assigned readings and follow up discussion.  Fellow book club members makes you feel good that you are not reading alone.  The book club reads only one or two chapters each week.   The pace is just right, not too fast nor not too slow, or you won’t have time to absorb the materials.  You can’t read too many pages of those non-fiction difficult title in one sitting anyways or you will start falling asleep.  Reading with a book club gives you discipline to actually finish the book.

I joined a book club starting in the summer, reading “A History of Christian Thoughts” by Paul Tillich.  Then I joined another book club reading the Philosophy of Law starting September.  Both book clubs are really good, the books I am reading are very interesting.  The only problem is I think I am too greedy. Catching up with the reading takes quite some amount of time every week.  I don’t think I can handle two reading club at the same time.  Maybe I should consider dropping one book club.