Online knowledge

Digital Universe is a non-profit website (four years in the making) and aims to be the most comprehensive online research storehouse. Apart from being yet another online encyclopaedia site, Digital Universe seeks to improve on the ground broken by Wikipedia, the online encyclopaedia that allows anyone to contribute and edit articles which incidentally boasts 1 million articles in English on everything from art deco to nuclear physics. However, Wikipedia’s open system has also led to the publication of fraudulent articles and critics have charged that authors sometimes have undisclosed conflicts of interest. To counter this, Digital Universe pays top academics to create authoritative maps, articles, and provides links to third-party content related to virtually any scholarly topic.

What does all this mean to you and me – the general public? More and more information which is both more reliable and free! Can’t really beat that now, can you??

Good guys, bad guys

While I was in Canberra, managed to find some time to watch a couple of movies. Coincidentally, both movies centred around topical Israel-Palestine struggles, where good or bad are not always as clear-cut as they are portrayed in the mainstream media. Both movies were also extremely thought-provoking in my opinion.

In the Steven Spielberg-directed Munich (also IMDB link) we see a fictionalised account of the retaliatory actions by the Israeli government following the failed and ultimately fatal kidnapping of Israeli athletes in the 1972 Munich Olympic Games. The protagonist Avner – played by Eric Bana – shoulders the responsibilities of a nation to hunt down the ones who plotted the incident. As the story unfolds, we see him torn between family, loyalty to country and his own conscience. We also see his struggle against becoming into a cold-blooded murderer himself, i.e. the very people he has been tasked to eliminate. In the end, you walk away feeling stunned, no longer sure who are supposed to be the “good guys” any more. Two peoples, both fighting endlessly for just a chance to have a place to call home. By the way, the soundtrack is also hauntingly beautiful that is sure to stay in your head once you leave the cinema.

Paradise Now (also IMDB link) shows us the life of two young men in the West Bank. They seemed bored with life and can see no way out except through a glorious and explosive death that will lead to paradise. It was both sad and ironic when one of main characters explained matter-of-factly why there was no cinema in town: there was a protest against the injustice of not able to work in Israel and when they reached the cinema they just decided to burn it down as there was nothing else better to do. Despite the gloomy overtones, the director does allow us a glimmer of hope towards the end of the movie. Let us hope that this can also happen in real life some day.

Eternal bliss

A series of posts on a friend’s blog about depression prompted the following thoughts.

It’s actually not that far-fetched that your diet – or more correctly chemicals in the foods – can have an effect on your state of mind, and hence your mood. After all, the things we eat are already influencing our hormonal balance, no? This in turn can lead to pimples (something external), increased agitation (psychological), etc. “Heatedness”, the commonly used term in the Chinese community, is not just referring to the physical condition but also the emotional health.

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To Mac or not to Mac?

After returning from the recent Machine Learning Summer School in Australia, my itching to become a Mac user has gotten even stronger*. For a start, there were many Mac Powerbook users at the Summer School (presenters and attendees alike). And, let’s face it, the Powerbooks are cool… 😉

Finally the top two reasons that had me pretty convinced:

  1. Mac Powerbooks/iBooks work straight out of the box (desktop software as well as server-oriented stuff) without needing much additional software or reading complicated manuals.
  2. I can continue to use many of my favourite Unix softwares under OS X.

*With the caveat that if the price is right of course.

Souvenir find

While in Canberra recently, perhaps it was more a sense of “home-coming” (well, it was my home for about 4 years after all??), I did not end up buying any ‘speciality’ souvenirs there before returning to Singapore. Actually, I have never really been fond of buying souvenirs even on my previous trips – mostly postcards in fact, and perhaps a booklet here or here!?

However, on this trip I did come away with an almost overflowing bag! Why? I bought the following books:

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No bags

On the trip back from Australia, the unthinkable happened.

My bag was lost in transit! As it turned out, it seems that my bag was not even loaded onto the flight from Sydney to Singapore! While I am sure this is not an unusual incident as far as international travelling is concerned, this is definitely a first for me. Oh well, at least I still had my house keys in the carry-on luggage… 🙁

Web design patterns

Looking for some inspirations to build that new website of yours? Well, here are some excellent ideas and examples which I am sure to study very carefully.

  • welie.com, with lots of samples.
  • Designing Interfaces, the companion website to Designing Interfaces: Patterns for Effective Interaction Design – an intermediate-level book about interface and interaction design, structured as a pattern language from O’Reilly.
  • WebPatterns