Monday, June 27, 2011
If its too loud
It is in my best interest (and yours too) to let you know, that I have a hearing deficiency of maybe -25%. ..Umm that’s about not being able to hear you calling my name from a distance of 10 feet or less, depends on what’s playing on my portable player.
It is not something new, and I believe I have had the problem ever since I partied in the 80s!
That said, as I am constantly affixed to the monitor solving infinity loops on the database, if you find yourself calling my name twice, three or more times, please do not take it that I am ignoring you.
Best regards,
HR Information Analyst
Monday, June 22, 2009
Eternal toggling of the spotless lens
Alo alo, it’s a damn camera article once again, and that’s all there is on the title too. Today is camera retrospect day.
The Canon G7 came, shot, conquered and sold. It was one of the best compacts I had. Wuz. It had great stills in ample light and sometimes surprising results even in low-light. But the bulk and weight just did it wrong. That brick can really get brickier and brickier the longer it hangs around your neck. Forget about slipping it in your pocket, it just won’t. It doubles as a weapon though. I still love it, but priorities change.
Like sunbeam parting clouds, it unfolded one day. You can never ever get a compact to perform like an SLR and vice versa…well, at least yet (before the digital Olympus Pen) so you need to get both – an appropriate consumerist response. Review, review, then voila!, TZ5 = all around compact. I then sorted my way to justifying a DSLR because of what the compact was not…and I was getting married soon so I needed decent pictures.
And so it was the TZ5, it was great while we lasted, a short relationship and it is now shooting happily with my co-worker who gave up a few clams for a decent 3-month old compact, she made a smart choice, it was a bargain at $180 (the TZ5). Wide at 28 and narrow at 10 (the TZ5). A compact, but not really, unless you are into deep pocketed low-rise look-me-undies-are-showin jeans. The TZ5 did it all, you name it: face detect, choose the scene and ISO for you, shoot video, wicked zoom, format select, vacuum room, teleport and all bunch of craps that you will not remember when its time to shoot. It was almost perfect, it became – utterly boring. My biggest peeve was the flash being under the zoom lever which eventually gets covered by my finger. I know, it’s not her, it’s me. But we can’t go on making pictures with half of my subjects lurking in the dark.
An angel came to my dreams and told me it was time, I will be-get-ting a DSLR soon and it shall be called Canon450D, Lumix G1, Olympus E420, … a Nikon D60! And so I became a Nikonian and trashed those bloody user-interface-challenged Canon users. I made good results with city lights taken from the roof-deck of a building tower…tower-building. ..A building that is tall. Tall building. But, it does not have “live view”. Most people got confused and their mouths frothed when they realized they can’t see subjects on the screen. My patience was challenged every time I had to explain why a “real” or “like a pro” camera cant display the subject on the screen. It’s not her, its them.
Every so often I would see a nice Kodak-moment opportunity. I needed to be fast and furious but often end up slow and infuriated, hoping I had the “real” camera with me. And then I realized…(yes, half of my life is spent on realizations) that there it was, my D60 zoom set that I was NOT lugging around. The sleek AF-S DX VR 55-200MM F/4-5.6G IF-ED lens with all the codes they can slap on it; waiting as pristine and unused. The adage lives on, a compact in your pocket beats any DSLR that you don’t have with you. It was gone in 60 days.
Enter Eleanor…errr LX3. I now attest to Pannie’s success in flooring its camera business from zero to 60 faster than any of the old boys. Which also begs to ask why Sony failed - even with the Minolta legacy under its belt. I’ve went around 3 Lumixes now. I can say Pannys are fun. They’re like the Tamiyas in the RC world, never a champ at competitions but always comes out with the most interesting and fun factors; like Wild Willy’s and Lunchboxes, fun, fun. But I digress, the LX3s selling point are: the rangefinder look, F2 lens, wide at 24 and all the crap that I’ll never use. The bummer: short 2.5 zoom and a missing view finder. My D60 had a good view finder and no live view and now this has a live view but no v-finder. Irony rules.
The Jurassic lunch box casio camera begat casio compact, which begat panny Zoom camera which begat lumix pocket camera (again), and everybody in da house went hoooow~hoo~oow, pocket camera begat canon brick enthusiast camera which begat panny zoom compact which was joined with entry level Nikon DSLR.
Now that I look at it, I remember that day when I was at a Japanese roadside festival shooting with my manual, a Canon AE. , I saw this guy shooting around with what looked like a tiny version of my SLR, I moved closer and a Leica M7 it was. From then on I thought I will have somethin like that. Soon. The LX3 is the closest (at that moment) and most affordable rangefinder (that is not really a rangefinder), that I was probably wanting all along.
“Would you tell me please which way I ought to go from here?”
“That depends a good deal where you want to get to,” said the Cat.
“I don’t care where…” said Alice
“Then it doesn’t matter which way you go,” said the Cat.
Saturday, June 20, 2009
Saturday, May 02, 2009
We has to check your sick
Thursday, February 05, 2009
Ang Pintorero - Budding artists of Mandaluyong
Its up, its up. After some time. 8 years to be exact when we had our petty exhibit. Who knows where the budding (desperate) painters ended up after that. Carlo for one got picked-up by the Boston Gallery, the rest will have to settle for building portfolios... some went full time and some opted for a day job.
Fast forward 2009, by sheer luck I had a friend who wants Amorsolo replicas, and since I dont have the patience and time for landscape paintings, especially farmlands, I contacted wellers - which contacted conyat, then the deal was set. When we first had our exhibit, I guessed we've learned a lot from each others work, perhaps this time again, on a whole different dimension.
Thursday, August 07, 2008
scents continued
Polo RL green – I sniffed on this last time I was in our stockroom (where the abandoned stuff reside) and wondered how the hell I carried this scent. Its way bigger than me...and way older.
If you love Poison® you will love Enchantment - nyahah! There was a time when copy cat scents abound, and it came in spray cans, was cheap and readily available. I once sprayed this all over like mad then went into a fully seated classroom. I remembered the class went still for about 10 seconds, and everything after that was a blur…I must’ve erased it in my memory.
Chaps – Argyle socks, bitin pants, and lotsa hair gel. No eyeliners tho.
Paco Rabanne Pour Homme - It brings sad memories.. dahil nanakaw sa classrroom!
Jazz YSL – An ex girlfriend told me she loves the scent.. coz her ex wears the same... I thought , that's cool.... now that I think bout it… that was lame.
Kouros YSL - Knowing I like these things my sister was my dealer of scents. I have no complaints, It was free.
Pleasures – Estee Lauder – my graduation from puberty, to part time adulthood. This toilette is light and pleasing. I barely know its there til I get compliments.
Perfumes can be boring or exciting, repulsive or attractive depending on the temperature, the whos, wheres, and whens. I find light fragrances best for the office due to close proximities, and it works well on Summer. Interesting scents are best at night, coz everyone have the right to smell unusual in the dark. As i grow older I also try to adjust what I wear, Johnson's baby cologne feels a tad bit too close to old home -or the crib. And when I smell baby ginger scents on old women, my brain gets confused. I have yet to understand the point of Old Spice and other barbero scents.
Thursday, July 03, 2008
Scents and Sensibilities
Fastforward to one shopping day…there I was looking at perfumes and I recognized the shape of the bottle, I wasn’t sure it was the one I tried or if it was for men, it didn’t say “pour homme” (poor homey..nyahahaha) but I should’ve known better that “parfum” is exclusively women’s – but my nerdiness got the better of my judgment coz technically, “parfum” means a stronger concoction over ”eau de toilette” – and since I remembered it was a very strong scent then that must be it. Bought.
Surely enough the norm is not inclined to my geeky mind and after checking the net…I found out I bought the girl’s version. I’d say it is sweeter but generically the same as the men’s version, unmistakably Angel. Yummy at cooler temps but would probably smell like a bakeshop in hot or humid weather.
There is a magical thing goin on with scents, for one, you cant see it but its there, it can bring back memories as good if not better than thoughts….thats because the memory and smell brains are neighbors...neurons are…blah blah …geek speak.
I like scents and my wardrobe goes:
Cool Waters – Davidoff , a backburner scent, when I just feel like it..a scent most people would recognize these days coz their boyfriend/husband/uncle wears it.
Eternity – CK , I used to wear this with a slight thought that my scent is like my love to my ex which is forever….
Escape – CK , I bought this to try if it can subliminally tell ex I’m ready to abandon ship … and my mom goes crazy with this… crazy as in “I hope your co-workers are ok, my goodness you are making me dizzy!!”
True Star – Tommy Hillfiger , my first aqua, it was ok from d bottle, how it is on me, no idea, so far no one complains.
Curve – Curve, Chill, Crush – Liz Cairborne a set I got myself for Christmas. a cologne and a waste of money.
Magic Pheromone oil – got this from ebay, add says it will attract women…. didn’t say what kind of women…mosquitoes love it.
Johnson’s Baby cologne – after a steak meal, popcorn, and all the compounded restaurant smell, dabbing this around my lips n chin makes me believe I don’t really smell like food.
Bvlgari Pour Homme – Bvlgari , I loved it on first try, Im on my third bottle and its my when-in-doubt ‘toilette. Actually wore this on my first date with my fiancĂ©…I think it worked.
Monday, June 23, 2008
Whale with wasabi
I'd like to see how this one turns out.
Junichi and Toru, the pro-whale activists have been arrested in Japan for exposing the truth about corruption in the taxpayer-funding whaling programme. Turns out that they've tracked where the whale meat ends up after it is "studied" which surely enough as every activists accusses the whaling programme - consumers. Japan is set to hunt and kill thousands of whales per year under the cloak of Science, dubbed "for research" . The government programme (wow!) insist that it isnecessary to kill the animal to study its life... oxymoronic ...hehehe... and this is from one of the most advanced nation on the planet... oh by the way, dolphin and whale meat is on the menu of the Japanese household.
We probly wont hear much from the Chinese consumers on this issue, as the populace is also gung-ho on shark's fin. The argument, as much as I've heard from Sino and Japanese acquaintances is: its downright meat. You eat cow meat, we eat whale meat. Some Japanese are used to eating them much like you would eat beef.
My way on putting it would be: Some Filipinos can eat dog meat. If they (Japanese whale-dolphin eaters) arent disgusted yet, they'd probably be at least balking on the idea of consuming pet friends. Same meat. Different mindset...and I havent even brought up the legality of specie endangerment.
Tuesday, November 06, 2007
When we were Malays and Negroids
“These first settlers landed in northern Luzon in the Philippines. Over the next thousand years up until 1500 B.C., their descendants started to spread south to the rest of the Philippine islands, Celebes (modern-day Sulawesi), northern Borneo, Molucas (modern-day Maluku), and Java.
The settlers in Moluccas sailed eastward and began to spread to the islands of Melanesia and Micronesia between 1200 B.C. and 500 B.C. repectively. Those that spread westward reached Sumatra, the Malay Peninsula and southern Vietnam by 500 B.C.
The oceanic Austronesians reached Polynesai in 0 A.D. and spread to its three furthest points Hawaii in 500 A.D. New Zealand by 1300 A.D. and Easter Island between 300 AD and 1200 AD. In the Indian Ocean they reached Madagascar. Wikipedia on Austronesian People
The concept of a Malay race (Malay: Bangsa Melayu) was proposed by the German scientist Johann Friedrich M Blumenbach (1752-1840). Since Blumenbach, many anthropologists have rejected his theory of five races, citing the enormous complexity of classifying races. However, the term Malay is still often used in this context, and it is the basis for Malay identity within the Malaysian nation.
By 1795, Blumenbach added another race called 'Malay' which he considered to be a subcategory of both the Ethiopian and Mongoloid races. The Malay race were those of a "brown color, from olive and a clear mahogany to the darkest clove or chestnut brown." Blumenbach expanded the term "Malay" to include the inhabitants of the Marianas, the Philippines, the Malukus, Sundas, as well as Pacific Islands such as Tahitians. He considered a Tahitian skull he had received to be the missing link; showing the transition between the "primary" race, the Caucasians, and the "degenerate" race, the Negroids. - A Racial expert being Racist!!
Philippine context
“In the Philippines, many Filipinos consider the term "Malay" to refer to the indigenous population of the country as well as the population of neighboring countries like Indonesia and Malaysia. This misconception is due in part to American anthropologists H. Otley Beyer who proposed that the Filipinos were actually Malays who migrated from Malaysia and Indonesia. This idea was in turn propagated by Filipino historians and is still taught in schools. However, the prevalent consensus among contemporary anthropologists, archaeologists, and linguists actually proposes the reverse; namely that the Ausronesain people of Malaysia and Indonesia originally migrated south from the Philippines during the prehistoric period.” Wikipedia on Malay Race
Degraded, misled and misinformed through the colonial educational system unto the very essence of ones' true heritage. Punyemas naman oh, all this time and what have the Philippine intellectual-smart-ass "scholars" been doing? Balik nyo tuition koooo!!
Monday, November 05, 2007
Thursday, September 27, 2007
Jolenz
Monday, July 30, 2007
Compliments Shkomplimench
Another lady in the group asked why he always seem to comment only on what I'm wearing while he never had any on the women's.
Here's the cut; When a guy appreciates another guy's stuff, it is a statement of common likes - that we have the same "good taste". But when a guy starts checking out women's dress, accessories and what have they, - it sets an alarm that sexuality maybe in question. U wont hear Arnold Scwarrgrrghre say "hey, I like your skirt!" - that might even land him into a sexual harassment case. Women on the other hand can do it because they can appreciate style and fashion verbally and actually wear boys stuff and nothing can be implied. Its normal that way, lest bi-sexuality and weirdness is your cup of latte.
Complimenting looks. "You look great today". Now thread on this one slowly because there are two premises hereto; one is that you never really looked good, and the other is you look good only today. This scenario had a more sinister play on me when I wore a pink shirt at work and my co-worker commented "you look clean today" - I convinced myself that it was just the limited English vocabulary that most Japanese tend to suffer from and get them close - but not exactly near to what they mean... I replied, "you mean "neat" right?" ... she paused but so wantonly decided to have me in that trap and responed , "No, you look "Clean" : ) ..." wooookey... thank you very much, I'll do my best to always look "clean" all the time. Women are lovable-mean monsters.
Monday, July 16, 2007
Rename ??
Saturday, May 26, 2007
Summer 07
12th - It was hot. When I melted into what appears to be a wimpy piece of soaked rag, I decided to stay indoors.
13th -Migraine, migraine, migraine.
14th - Hotel hunting for sis.
15th - Sis arrives. - 22nd All sched for sis.
20th - Mallof Asia - same stuff, just bigger. Dampa was cool.
22nd - LASIK - farewell eyeglasses - hello starbursts, halos and blurry-vision-up-close and some hazy stuff. Dr. says its temporary. I really hope so.
23rd - Bed rest at hotel. breakfast at local carinderia. Heavenly.
24th - St.Luke's, follow up eye-check. Grocery for birthday. Japanese cuisine tonite.
25th - Shopping
26th - Dermatologist check
27th - 28th - Baguio
29th - Eye Check. Dental appt. Derma - whoooa ..overhaul.
30 - Cemetery, bid father farewell. San Agustin church - reflection and closures.
June 1 - Back to Okinawa.
Saturday, May 05, 2007
Hate Me by Blue October
Friday, May 04, 2007
The Station
by Robert J. Hastings
Tucked away in our subconscious minds is an idyllic vision. We see ourselves on a long, long trip that almost spans the continent. We're traveling by passenger train, and out the windows we drink in the passing scene of cars on nearby highways, of children waving at a crossing, of cattle grazing on a distant hillside, of smoke pouring from a power plant, of row upon row of corn and wheat, of flatlands and valleys, of mountains and rolling hills, of biting winter and blazing summer and cavorting spring and docile fall.
But uppermost in our minds is the final destination. On a certain day at a certain hour we will pull into the station. There sill be bands playing, and flags waving. And once we get there so many wonderful dreams will come true. So many wishes will be fulfilled and so many pieces of our lives finally will be neatly fitted together like a completed jigsaw puzzle. How restlessly we pace the aisles, damning the minutes for loitering ... waiting, waiting, waiting, for the station.
However, sooner or later we must realize there is no one station, no one place to arrive at once and for all. The true joy of life is the trip. The station is only a dream. It constantly outdistances us.
"When we reach the station, that will be it !" we cry. Translated it means, "When I'm 18, that will be it ! When I buy a new 450 SL Mercedes Benz, that will be it ! When I put the last kid through college, that will be it ! When I have paid off the mortgage, that will be it ! When I win a promotion, that will be it ! When I reach the age of retirement, that will be it ! I shall live happily ever after !" Unfortunately, once we get it, then it disappears. The station somehow hides itself at the end of an endless track.
"Relish the moment" is a good motto, especially when coupled with Psalm 118:24: "This is the day which the Lord hath made; we will rejoice and be glad in it." It isn't the burdens of today that drive men mad. Rather, it is regret over yesterday or fear of tomorrow. Regret and fear are twin thieves who would rob us of today. So, stop pacing the aisles and counting the miles. Instead, climb more mountains, eat more ice cream, go barefoot oftener, swim more rivers, watch more sunsets, laugh more and cry less. Life must be lived as we go along. The station will come soon enough.
...... i will not buy another camera because my G7 is it!, I will not buy a D40 because it will give me better pics, I will not buy a D40 because it gives better edge on low-light situations, i will not buy D40... I will not.. I will nnn... I will probably...I will
Friday, April 20, 2007
The Model 7
From this religious aspect, Canon model numbers has been said to be aligned to its significance in numerology as well. In Japanese culture, the number 7 is an important number, there is the 7 Gods of Luck and Happiness, there is the 7 principles of the Bushido, 7 days of mourning, 7 reincarnations, ..so on. EOS 7, EOS Elan 7, Canon T70, Rangefinder 7/s are all worthy of praise and according to my story teller, it is the same with the G7 as Canon would forever protect the integrity of this model number. And why would I believe my sales guy? he is after all selling me something... well, the story was told after I made my purchase and while he was packing the goods. Ah, my first (among many) digital cameras that I intend to cherish and keep.
Tuesday, March 27, 2007
Canonized
The Need: To have a point and shoot compact that can do all features: Weather-proofing, a Nikon interface, Fuji's Honeycom CCD, rangefinder look, 28mm wide if possible and some decent zoom and does not cost a kidney like that sonuvagun rangefinder Leica M8. Pixel count is not important as I wont print any larger than 8 x 11 anyway.
The Subjects:
Panasonic Lumix TZ3 - Powerful 10x zoom on a compact that starts with a remarkable 28mm Leica Vario Elmarit wide angle lens.
Panasonic LX2 - Retro styled with a wide lens angle on a 16:9 screen ratio.
Canon TX1 - New entry of Canon that promises the 10x zoom and High Def video recording in a very compact body.
Nikon P5000 - Still warm from the factory, the P5000 promises to fill the gap between the DSLR and compact cameras.
Canon G7 - Canon's G series that only comes once every 3-5 years promises full manual control much like an SLR could
Fuji F40fd - Fuji kicked everyone's dark butt by introducing the highest useful ISO settings in a compact camera without being overly noisy on the pics.
Olympus SP550 UZ - 28mm to 504mm , that's 18x optical zoom !! , yeah baby yeah!! Not that its that shagallistic but that is one long stretch of a zoom.
Elimination of losers:
It was a tough call, the subjects were all capable of the need: Compact, great pictures, Wide angle possibilities, Zoom and all the works. The process of elimination threw out the Olmypus zoomer and Fuji F40fd first as they failed the most; The SP550 was a great zoomer and oh what long lens it has when it stretches to 504 mm, but the pictures are just so so and it aint really a compact unless you can take on the idea of a big bulge on your pocket. Fuji F40fd's design is consumer- taste inspired - butt ugly. But lo! it is still the reigning king of the dark world, no compact comes close to its ability to take great pix even at the high 400-800 ISOs level, but it lacks the manual controls, not having a wide,neither a zoomer. If one doesnt mind style and other bells and whistles - Fuji F40fd wins hand-down. The Canon TX1 might have it all except for the wide angle, but as hybrids often are : Jack of All Trades- Master of none, it can give just slightly good photos, slightly better videos than the TZ3 and a 10x zoom ..and that's it, its purpose in life is yet to be discovered. The LX2 have had a great following for those who were still nostalgic of the 35mm rangefinders as its shape is rather slim and long, but beside the wide lens and styling, the price is just $30 less then the G7, finally LX2 bears the curse of all Lumixes - Noise.
The Final 3
The Nikon P5000 felt really comfortable and very compact, it boasts of a 3200 ISO (at 5mega pixels though) and Nikon's new (old story for the rest) stabilized system. It has a lot of manual controls including a wheel for fast ISO and F Stop adjustments. Superb and I'd say one of the best user interface, easy to navigate, easy to control and far better shutter response than the G7. The hotshoe for external flash is a plus. Wide and Telephoto adapter lens available ( at approx $160-$200 each , nuts!). Price $350
The Panasonic TZ3 is the most compact of all wide-tele digital camera out there, followed perhaps by Ricoh's R series. Its got all the bells and whistles and the reliable Paanasonic stabilization system that really helps at the far end of the zoom. What it lacks however is the manual control as it was targeted for the great majority of point and shooters. The 10x zoom and video capability would be of great value to soccer mom's and dads but may be lacking for enthusiasts. Zoomers cant have it all, thus this one suffers from noise and over use of noise reduction - the Achilles heel of Panasonic Lumix cameras. Price $440. Winning point: 28mm Wide to 10x Optical zoom.
The Canon G7 like its previous G models are targeted for those on the border but not yet wanting to cross to the SLR camp. It features full manual controls yet still capable of working as a P&S camera. It has 6x zoom and an image stabilizer which is becoming standard these days. ISO ranges from 80 to 1600, max at 3200 (dont know how usable that is). Its a brick and I wish the magnesium alloy was used here instead on the P5000. It takes time to master and controls are not easy to find. A hotshoe can take in external flash, Wide and Tele adapter lens available (not cheap if u need this, just get an SLR). Price $480
Its not a gazillion dollar purchase like an RD1 or Leica M8, but heck I have all the time to pry nooks and crannies for my point and shooter. The TZ3 will have to go, as though it has everything I would want in a compact, it failed to impress on all of it. The P5000 is as great as its price, nothing more ,nothing less. The downside and what turned me off is the cheap feel as it is really very light (why the magnesium alloy?), for me Its Nikon's attempt to match the G7 but tried to cut corners to lower cost and ended up looking like an A640. The G7 leads the P5000 in every aspect except ease of operation - can deal with that...as I like complexity, it matches my state of mind. With the G7 and P5000 comparison, Its exactly like paying for the xtra stuff, more zoom, more controls, heavier, sturdier feel = more $$. In a year or two I will be drawn to new models and in this context, I believe the G7's resale value will far exceed any compact models around. And so it is cast, the G7 is going home with me.
As I was patiently waiting for the camera shop staff to inspect the package contents and write my warranty papers, I casually asked what he thinks about the P5000 compared to the G7.... he stared at me with a slight twinkle in his eyes as if waiting for me to ask that question ....coming next on my blog
Tuesday, March 20, 2007
Friday, March 16, 2007
On Taking Time
I am Nelson and I am a watchaholic. My watches are not as expensive as the Pateks and Piguets (funky names if you ask me). From my own economic perspective, (single-selfish-dont care and employed) my watches arent that much, but for some who arent crazy bout watches and those who are in a tighter budget, my watches are impractical and extravagant. Same shit, different scale. Fine, I agree that I am among them who tread the path of senseless extravagance, nothing to be proud of...but a teeny bit of something's gotta give.
More alibi. Most of the time, it pays to dress for success - one can expect to be treated as one looks. if you look cheap, you will be treated like one. Psychologically, it can be a confidence booster - not that i need it, but self improvement is always good, lest it harms others.
The right piece at the right time. I wear my accessories according to the occasion and location. I've never worn Cartier in Manila, everybody will think its a knock-off anyway. I do however wear the fakies in Japan where nobody cares because people can actually afford the real deal.
I can see my watch collection as a benchmark for my personal achievements, a tool to enrich my life and from time to time a means to validate my time-space existence.
Categorized by its function are my passion-driven-time-accessories:
Swatch Skin, Racing Numbers chrono - One can never have enough Swatches in their lifetime. This watch is for forgetting it was there.
Casio MTG700M - From hiking to fending Divisoria mobs on a xmas rush, this watch has never let me down.
Dunhill Dunhillion- for that job interview, you have to look like you are not really desperate about the job.
Early 90's TAG 2000 Series (now tagged as a classic 2000 - you just know you're getting old) - My first pricey watch. Although the bezel is loose, and the date has gone berserk, it still tells time accurately and goes with any style, also used for offending other officemates who sport Formulas.
Orient Automatic - Clad with a black dial and wrinkled black leather, for calmer days, Wednesdays and I don't care what you think, my watch tells time kind of days.
Timex Leather Expedition - TGIF, perfect watch as I eject from my cubicle to after-work gimiks.
Techno Marine Maori (funky and fake) - Am not that nuts to buy this model, just wanted to try it... cool enough but with the real one weighing like an anchor and with just a Swiss movement up its sleeve, I dont think its worthy of its price tag.
Must 21 Cartier - Funny, the only person who commented on it was an old lady boss, it tells time accurately, other than that its just a name.
Rolex GMTII (Greenhills special, I still dont know what's so great bout Rolex' , except for the GMTs - its darn ugly, again just for trying and seriously enough, am not convinced) I'd go with an Omega Moonwatch or Seamaster anytime.
Wired - Offering uniquely designed watches (online Japan only) Seiko's experimental venue for watch nerds offer these high quality timepieces. I have 2 of them, a squared digital that gets quite a lot compliments and a gigantic-sparkling blue chrono that makes my tiny hand even tinier. Except for the non-Saphire glass, the build and quality of the Wired XYZ models are great.
And this year's Christmas gift from girlfriend - A titanium, 5 motor, 5 band wave ceptor, solar powered, world-time, chrono, 10 alarm, auto adjust to 3 continents, perpetual calendar, GMT, self-correcting Casio Oceanus with a manual 20 pages long. And yes, I have a need for all those functions for my daily existence.
Tuesday, February 20, 2007
Here's one for you
Wednesday, February 07, 2007
let's drink to this...
Asahi to sell 1 million yen ($10,000) brandy.
Asahi Breweries Ltd. said Monday it will market Louis XIII Black Pearl French brandy with a price tag of 1 million yen per 700-milliliter bottle. Asahi will sell 60 to 70 bottles produced by the Remy Cointreau Group, the internationally acclaimed French brandy maker which will limit the number of bottles it produces to 786, Asahi said.
The brandy will come in a special crystal bottle designed by French crystal vessel maker Baccarat. Louis XIII Black Pearl is made by blending 1,200 unblended brandies. The crystal bottle reflects colors such as silver, black and charcoal gray depending on how light is shone on its surface, it said.
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$71.42 per per bloody tablespoon!!!
Friday, January 12, 2007
On Prophechies
Jewish Antiquities 1:194-195
Didn't it resemble the first and second atom bombs? or perhaps an event soon to unfold?. The descriptive annihilation resembles so much of a nuclear explosion aftermath. The God of that age must have had nuke-like powers with him. Just like the gods we have these days.
Friday, December 22, 2006
reflections
Thursday, December 21, 2006
Catch
Tuesday, October 31, 2006
25 Golden Rules for Writing Well
1. Don't abbrev.
2. Check to see if you any words out.
3. Be carefully to use adjectives and adverbs correct.
4. About sentence fragments.
5. When dangling, don't use participles.
6. Don't use no double negatives.
7. Each pronoun agrees with their antecedent.
8. Just between you and I, case is important.
9. Join clauses good, like a conjunction should.
10. Don't use commas, that aren't necessary.
11. Its important to use apostrophe's right.
12. It's better not to unnecessarily split an infinitive.
13. Never leave a transitive verb just lay there without an object.
14. Only Proper Nouns should be capitalized. also a sentence should begin with a capital letter and end with a full stop
15. Use hyphens in compound-words, not just in any two-word phrase.
16. In letters compositions reports and things like that we use commas to keep a string of items apart.
17. Watch out for irregular verbs that have creeped into our language.
18. Verbs has to agree with their subjects.
19. Avoid unnecessary redundancy.
20. A writer mustn't shift your point of view.
21. Don't write a run-on sentence you've got to punctuate it.
22. A preposition isn't a good thing to end a sentence with.
23. Avoid cliches like the plague.
24. 1 final thing is to never start a sentence with a number.
25. Always check your work for accuracy and completeness.
Now put pen to paper
But, don’t forget the rules!!
Tuesday, September 26, 2006
The water and the stoopid
I never though I'd be in that age of humanity when people start paying for water like it is a manufactured product.
By "manufactured' I meant that the raw materials did not resemble the end product. A bottled water cost $1.00 for the 20oz. Pepsi in comparison, cost the same, but with value-added nuritional stuff like: carbonated water, sugar, caffeine , some weird acids, number-coded colors and other artificail alien secretions that we probably dont want to know.
The Aquafina bottle says: "All bottled waters are not the same. Aquafina's state-of-the-art hydRO-7 TM purification system consistently removes substances most other bottled waters leave in. So the only thing you taste in your water...is water".
Straight from their Marketing slogan, there's nothing in it but water. They gave us damn pure water, there werent minerals, no Sodium, not even a single calorie in it!! And like mindless creatures, we actually love and pay for it. I must be damn rich because I bathe, tub and flush with the same stuff everyday! If you make it, they will dumb.