Category Archives: Daily Scribble

My random thoughts of the day.

The world is not flat

Like many hi-tech firms, my company is starting to outsource some works to Indian. The next project I am going to work on will have half of the engineers located in Indian. None of us is particularly fond of working those the Indians. It is not because of their English, we can sort of understand what they say. It is not because of their skills, some of them are brilliant but the rest is just what you pay is what you get.

The problem is the world is not flat, literally. There is a 12 hours time difference between Vancouver and Bangalore. The normal working hour of both side do not overlap. Email is not a very effective communication tool, especially when it involves discussions. The turn around time is too long. We must have teleconference to get both side on the same page when trying to solve some technical problems. I have two options, either having the meeting at 8a.m. in the morning or 8p.m. in the evening. Both options are not very desirable. It seems I don’t have much choice, I have to work with the Indians to get things done. I would rather fly over to India for a week then having 8a.m. meeting everyday for a week.

Skiing basics

This is my toastmaster speech on humorously speaking.  The objective of this speech is to open the speech with a humorous story.

People from Scotland are notorious for their meanness and I met one of them in ski school at Whistler.  I heard he said to the ski instructor, “I want to learn to ski, I want to ski with one leg only.”  The instructor asked him, “Yes sir, I can teach you how to ski on one leg, but may I ask why?”  The Scottish answered, “Because I will only need one ski.  It will be cheaper to buy one ski than two!”

Mr. Chair, dear fellow Toastmaster, summer has gone, the day is getting shorter and shorter.  Yes, winter is coming soon.  It is time for us to take out our ski gears from the closet and get ready for the skiing season.  May I ask how many of you ski?  Please raise your hand.  You may have been skiing for many years, you can race down the mountain like a bullet.  Maybe you are new to the sport, looking forward to graduate from the bunny hill.  Today, I am going to review some basic skiing techniques.  There are 3 core techniques in skiing, balancing, pivoting, and edging.  Let’s start with balancing.

If you cannot balance, you will fall.  Stance and balance is most fundamental skill in skiing.  What is a good balance?  The technical definition of having a good balance in skiing jargon is the center of mass over the bass of support.  Well, the jargon doesn’t make much sense even to a room full of engineers.  To make it easier, you just have to know my friend Bob.  Bob can really help you ski.  Who is bob?  Bob’s name is short for Butt over Boots.  When you start a turn, you must be like Bob.  When you are skiing, may Bob be with you.

What is the natural enemy to skiers?  It is the trees!  How to avoid hitting a tree, you have to learn how to turn when you see a tree ahead of you.  All turnings are initiate by pivoting your ski.  Many beginners make a common mistake when they try to initiate a turn.  Instead of pivoting their ski, they rotate their body to direction they want to go.  Don’t do it.  Rotating your body will not initiate a turn, it will only make your ski go faster.  Pivoting is pointing the tip of your ski to the direction you want to go, the key is to turn your legs independent of your body.

How many ski instructors need to change a light bulb?  Six.  One to screw in the light bulb and five to say “nice turn”.  Edging is a more advance turning technique that gives you a nice turn.  Instead of pivoting your ski, you have to angulate your ankle and lean on one edge of your ski.  Because of the curve shape of the ski, exerting pressure on one edge of the ski will turn the ski.  The shape of the turn is depending on your speed, the pressure you put the edge, and the degree you lean against the slope.  The only way to make a perfect turn is practice, practice and more practice on your edging.

Now let’s review the three core skills of skiing.  They are stance and balance, pivoting and edging.  If you can master this three basic skills, you will be skiing like a pro.  Wish you all have a great skiing season.

Wedding show

wedding show

Today I have tried many things the first time in my life. I went to a wedding show the first time. I see how hair is set the first time. I see how to put on makeup the first time. I see a fashion show the first time. This afternoon, me and Pat went to the Creme de la Creme grand wedding showcase in the Four Season Hotel at downtown Vancouver. The ticket is a bit pricey, but the show is quite an eye opener.

Unlike the trade show style wedding show in HK, I don’t see any sales promotion in today’s wedding show. No bargain package, no discount price, in fact it is not place to make a sale. It is a showcase, a brand building event of the wedding companies. The show is not very big, but it has every aspect of a wedding, from invitation card to decoration to photographers presented tastefully.  I love the free cake, dessert and appetizer samples.  Pat get to try out hair styling and makeup service for free.  I never seen how makeup or hair styling is done, so I took out my phone and video tape the whole process.  The makeup artist and hair stylist did a pretty decent work, probably because I give them some good stress for taping their work.  It took almost an hour combined to draw the face and set the hair.  Pat bought a set of fake eyelash and the makeup girl use some sort of white glue to glue the eyelash on her eye.  Yuck!  I would never let anyone glue anything to my eye.

The highlight of the wedding show is the bride dress fashion show.  We were browse the booths and forgot about time, so we couldn’t get good seats in the front.  We end up standing at the back of the crowd.  It is kinda interesting to see catwalk live.  The models walk funny with lots of twisting to towards the crowd, then stop and pose unnaturally at the T end of the sky walk.  Somehow they love to swing their hand every time the turn around.  The models must have a talent to get change rapidly, each session in the fashion show has 3 or 4 models and they keep come out in a new dress.  The first 30 minutes is quite interesting, I see lots of wedding dress in different style.  The next hour is really boring, since I am just seeing similar design over and over again.  At one point it so boring that I even doze off a little bit.

After see this show, I think designing a wedding dress should not be not too hard.  Almost all wedding dress I saw are in the format of combo A+B+C.  All I need is a huge database that samples all the different style of every parts in a wedding dress.  I can mix and match or simply let computer randomly select the parts and styles from the database to assemble a new wedding dress design.

W Class

I am taking PHIL 120W this term.  The letter W in the course number indicate this course satisfy the writing credit requirement.  Over the years, employers complain university graduate cannot write.  The mandatory writing credits requirement is the response from the university.  The W courses is writing intensive.  It suppose to help the students improve their writing abilities and overall communication skill.  Writing intensive means the course has lots of writing assignment.  We have to hand in 4 essays over a period of slightly longer than 2 months.

I am taking philosophy classes for fun and to learn some new ideas.  I don’t need to satisfy any writing credit requirement.  Sometimes I feel kinda silly taking a course with such a heavy work load.  Complaining about the work load is one thing, I have to admit the writing assignment really helps me learn.  To complete the assignment, first I have to examine the arguments in the textbook and carefully evaluate their validity.  Then I have to come up with my own objections, expecting replies to my objections and defenses for my objections.  I feel like I am thinking like a real philosopher.

Learning philosophy is like learning engineering.  It is one thing to memorize all the equations, it is another thing to apply the equations to solve real world problems.  It is one thing to recite the thoughts of all the great philosophers, it is another thing to apply those ideas to solve philosophical dilemmas.

Textbook

School has started for almost 2 months, the textbook for my course has finally arrived in mail today.  Textbook selling in the university bookstore is ridiculously expensive.  A new paper back textbook is selling for $120, a well beaten used copy with lots highlight and dog ears is selling for $80.  For the same textbook, I can find a new one online for $70 including shipping.  It is obvious any reasonable man will order textbook online instead of getting rip off by the bookstore. 

Well… everything comes at a price.  In the university bookstore, you go home with the textbook in your hand.  In a online store, you have to wait patiently for the textbook arrive in snail mail.  The online book store, abebooks, I usually buy from is pretty reliable on delivery.  Somehow they screw up my order this time, the book never arrive, probably lost in mail.  So I have to cancel the original order and order a new one.  I end up having no textbook for almost 2 months.  Luckily a kind hearted classmate let me photocopy her textbook for the assigned readings.  I can also read some sections of the textbook on Google books.  I should order the textbook before school starts next time, so it will arrive on time.