August 2006 Archives

On cars and bandwagons

August 29, 2006 10:57 PM | Comments (0)

Think of a car.

When it was first invented, everybody wanted to sit in one (I assume. Just humour me).

People don't care so much where the car takes them
Or whether it gives them a quality ride.

It's just so novel.

In time, when cars become mainstream...

Quality becomes more important. And getting the right directions. Getting to the destination on time. Safety. Fuel efficiency.

When cars in themselves get taken for granted, other things become more valuable to people. The system re-adjusts itself.

Until the next new mode of transport comes along. Then it starts all over again.

The same goes with any other form of technology.

I've invented a new term. It's a bit like a car. Actually, it's a bandwagon.

The New Media Bandwagon Syndrome.

I'm the last person to be averse to the use of new media, and wouldn't dream of discouraging anyone from trying something new, if it's worthwhile.

But we must look at our target audience and think, "Are they likely to use it? Will life be easier / more convenient or accessible / more affordable etc for them if we use new media?"

Technology in itself is usually not the most difficult thing to implement. Especially in a place like Singapore. More often, it's our own mindset.

If you want to start a corporate blog, ask yourselves: "Are we prepared to allow readers to post comments which may not be complimentary to our company?"

If your answer (or more likely, your bosses' answer) is "No. NEVER!!! We must look good all the time and never show our vulnerable, human side!!!", then don't start the blog :)

Dell is learning the hard way but at least they're publishing lots of comments now and sounding more real.

In fact, having an open corporate blog is an opportunity to get constructive comments. And it's how you react to negativity that shows how capable your company is of serving your customers. It lets you gather feedback in real time, and build relationships with your customers. And it showcases your responses for the world to see, rather than just build up in some private email database.

People pay lots of money to get feedback and engage their customers in more formal ways. Think of consultants. Focus groups. Surveys, questionnaires and polls.

The same goes for trackbacks which are just a more sophisticated form of comments via other blogs.

Don't worry about the spam. It happens so often that any reader with a brain will know it has nothing to do with your organisation. (Of course, you should still delete the spam and not leave it there, because it may show you aren't good at housekeeping.)

If you want to start a podcast, think: "Can we produce enough content that people will actually want to listen to and download regularly? Is our target audience the type that will know how to subscribe to our podcasts, and have the means to do so?"

If the answer is no, you're better off spending your money and manpower on something else.

That's all I have to say for today. Overall, I am encouraged by responses around me and there is much to be done. Just that we need to make sure that the 'much' we need to do, will be done the right way.

Thank you, God

August 29, 2006 12:01 AM | Comments (2)

Those who've seen me on MSN lately should know what's been on my lips - Thank you God.

He lifted me out of the darkness over two years ago and gently guided me back to what I like doing best.

He put me with the right people. He made me wait, to learn patience. Sometimes we have to start something new and live with uncertainty, not knowing if we have done the right thing.

Well I hope some of us can breathe easier time now, what with the directions set a week ago. Things are definitely moving the right way.

New visitors are reading about me and looking at my posts on God. Maybe that is part of His plan. Whatever I am, He has made me. Whatever I have, He has given me. I cannot thank Him enough for that.

Amen.

A couple of people signed up recently and I was prompted to check out how many people in Singapore were interested in a Web Standards meetup.

I was impressed.

Shall we?

[Another question - where exactly can we meet up? Somewhere we can hang out and hopefully with free wireless...]

Books I'm currently reading

August 23, 2006 10:50 PM

I was asked today what are my other hobbies apart from techy stuff and music. I was like, ermmmm .... hmmm .... reading? But I haven't completed reading anything for a while.

You see, I am reading the following books at any one point in time, skipping chapters to wherever I see fit:

The Paradox of Choice by Barry Schwartz
The Paradox of Choice Is choice really all that good? It actually depends on how many options people are given. Beyond a certain number, they may not actually feel like making a decision at all. I chose this particular hardcover edition because I liked the cover photo. See, I didn't have too many version to choose from :P
Likelihood of completion: High.
Globalization and Its Discontents by Joseph E. Stiglitz
Globalization and Its DiscontentsThis looks like a frank discussion of the problems faced in the World Bank and other institutions. The author has a Nobel Prize in Economics. I didn't know what I was in for when I bought this book. Too dry for me - I think I'll switch to Freakonomics.
Likelihood of completion: Low.
A Church At War - Anglicans and Homosexuality by Stephen Bates
A Church At WarA sore topic that has split the Anglican/Episcopal Church apart. Good discussions and interviews with both camps (ie the Church versus the "Happy" Campers). But ultimate I wonder: is one sin worse than another? None of us are perfect. Or is it the symbolism that one is continuing to live in sin yet serving as a priest, the main issue?
Likelihood of completion: Medium
The End of Poverty - How We Can Make It Happen In Our Lifetime by Jeffrey Sachs
The End of PovertyThe idealistic title caught my eye. Bono wrote the Foreword, rather poetically. But beyond that, it is a serious book. I'm not good for economics but the cost of having poor health is something I can understand.
Likelihood of completion: Medium. But not in time for IMF ;-)
Collapse - How Societies Choose to Fail or Survive by Jared Diamond
CollapseI started off excitedly but after reading about the dearth of the mining industry in Montana, I thought of Brokeback Mountain. I skipped to the chapter on "China, Lurching Giant" which was more relevant considering the region I live in.
Likelihood of completion: Low. I will only read the chapters that interest me.
The Da Vinci Notebooks
The Da Vinci NotebooksThis is a collection of Leonardo Da Vinci's thoughts. His thoughts are in no particular sequence or structure, but they give me an insight to the great man's mind. It also inspired me to jot down my own ideas and sketches in a Moleskine notebook.
Likelihood of completion: Medium.
Ambient Findability by Peter Morville
Ambient FindabilityThis is the book of the future. Covers the long tail theory and more. You can even see it as a marketing book, in an oblique way because things shouldn't just be built and left lying around, they must also be easily found.
Likelihood of completion: High.

In short ... I need more RAM in my head for reading!

Gahmen embraces new media

August 23, 2006 9:51 AM | Comments (4)

Welcome, Straits Times readers. I'm honoured to be mentioned in the papers today. This is a spin-off from Prime Minister Lee's rally speech that we must embrace new media. Right on!

We are public servants - and we blog too Gahmenbloggers, unite!
- spinoff: UCLA reports the article!

Blogging: Govt agencies getting into the act One of our projects was mentioned here.

Subscription required.

My little piece of history

August 21, 2006 1:29 AM | Comments (0)

For those of you who haven't checked out our museum blog Yesterday.sg, do pay a visit. It has snippets of nostalgia, reminders of our Singapore heritage, news and reviews. I am a contributing blogger, aka "Friend".

My first (and only) post so far on the blog: The day I sat on David Marshall's chair.

[ps. Sorry about the double paragraphing there - I can't edit it myself!]

Arsenal v Aston Villa

August 20, 2006 9:26 PM | Comments (0)

I was disappointed with the 1-1 scoreline, but at least Arsenal equalised. The bonus was finally watching Theo Walcott come on for Freddie Ljungberg. He immediately shook up the Villa defence and provided a valuable assist for Gilberto to equalise. Good lad!

Arsenal is definitely in need of more experienced players if they want to seriously contend for titles. I can't wait to see how our youngsters of today blossom into top-rate players in a few years' time. For now, however, the Premiership title will have to wait.

This press release, just released today (17 August 2006) has given some food for thought:

The Government has accepted the key recommendations of The Third Committee on the Supply of Lawyers chaired by the former Attorney-General Chan Sek Keong. The recommendations include: ... Allowing Graduates with Second Class Lower Division Honours degrees to practise law: The Government also agreed in-principle with the Committee's recommendation to allow Singaporean citizens or PRs who graduated from Overseas Scheduled Universities with Second Class (Lower Division) Honours to practice, provided they possess certain relevant work experience or qualifications. To ensure that the quality of our lawyers is maintained, in addition to the requirements (3 years relevant work experience or having the qualification as solicitors of Hong Kong or England & Wales), they will be interviewed by the Board of Legal Education (which will consider factors such as the actual results they obtained and the nature of their work experience). The Board of Legal Education will announce the details in the next two to three months.

For newer readers who may not know much about me, I am an overseas law graduate from one of the recognised law schools in the UK. Unfortunately, I obtained a Second Class Lower Division (Honours) degree instead of a Second Class Upper, which meant that I and almost half the cohort of other Singaporean graduates in my university were unable to practise Law in our own country.

I wrote a letter of appeal to the Minister of Law, but received a negative reply. I heard that the Minister wasn't even in Singapore at the time, so it could have been a standard rejection template. Anyway, I understood from my seniors that appeals were rarely granted and that the last successful applicant was a girl who fell ill and therefore did not do well for her exams.

In any case, life had to go on. Some of my schoolmates stayed on to take the London Bar exams, in the hope of working in a UK law firm. Very few were able to do it - even those with Second Class Uppers.

By that time I had noticed an attractive job ad for a new Singapore Press Holdings newspaper called Project Eyeball. Right after coming back from my graduation, I went for the interview and got the job as a web designer and writer. I discovered that I loved this type of work and the rest is history.

My friends who are currently working in large law firms are probably earning twice my salary by now. But if I let material facts like that bug me, I'd have gone mad a long time ago. I still like my work and the people I work with. There are different ways of serving my country and I'm pretty happy with the way things are working out at the moment.

As stated in the extract above, to return to the legal workforce, I need 3 years' relevant work experience or be called to the Bar in Hong Kong, England or Wales, and be interviewed by the Board of Legal Education. I don't have that much work experience in law firms but anyway it seemed a bit like a Catch-22. Judging from the job ads I used to pore over, most law firms and in-house legal departments generally preferred to hire candidates who have a Second Class Upper degree and have been called to the Singapore Bar. If I wanted to rejoin the legal community, the best option for me would be to apply to take the London Bar exams.

A couple of friends with Second Class Lower degrees have managed to find in-house work and they should have a good chance of going back to a local law firm, if they wanted to. Some other friends with Second Class lower degrees who have been called to the London Bar, and have legal work experience, also stand a good chance of moving to a Singapore law firm.

When this policy is implemented, there may be a mad rush of applications from the last decade (since the Legal Profession Act raised the standards). More recent law graduates would still have the law freshly in their heads, whereas older fogies like me would have to read the textbooks all over again.

In the last six years since graduation, many of us have moved on. Some of us are in Government jobs. Others who did get their Second Class Uppers, got called to the Singapore bar and worked in Singapore law firms, are either still working as lawyers, have taken time off and travelled the globe, or totally changed their jobs. One ex-lawyer friend of mine has opened a childcare centre. We've read of many others in the newspapers who have set up their own businesses, such as selling gelato. I think many of us are actually happier this way.

With the new policies, the net will be cast wider. But ultimately if the workplace environment for lawyers remains highly stressful, there will still be high dropout rates. There is still the cost of interviewing, hiring and training new lawyers, and even then some knowledge is lost through experienced lawyers who have left the firm.

All in all, if anyone asks me today if I'd want to become a lawyer in Singapore now that I have the chance - I'd probably say no.

[Update: This post has been linked on SingaporeSurf. View similar opinions by other blogs on this topic.]

Crazy Stone

August 17, 2006 12:05 AM | Comments (1)

Had dinner at Lao Beijing, and then watched a HK/China movie called Crazy Stone which has apparently received pretty positive reviews.

Every minute of the movie was entertaining, funny and at times just hilarious. There are many intertwining sub-plots and themes.

There are the good guys versus the bad guys - the security team versus two different groups of thieves.

There's also the evil, rich and greedy group who get people into more debt, versus the poor and desperate group who go out on a limb just to pay their debts.

There's betrayal of love, and betrayal of familial trust. In the end, each character gets what they deserve, by an uncanny twist (and yet another twist) in the plot.

The start of the movie is like a Quentin Tarantino movie, in the sense that there are flashbacks in time to show how the whole story fits in together. The good and bad guys' lives are paralleled, quite literally side by side. You'll see what I mean if you watch the movie ;-)

New gizmos

August 14, 2006 11:43 PM

New Segway models - the i2 and the x2.

New Nikon D80 digital SLR camera. A 10.2 megapixel CCD can be very tempting.

Sony launches mylo, a 'new pocket-sized communicator'. Hmm doesn't that sound like a nice cup of hot chocolate?

Chelsea v Liverpool

August 13, 2006 9:54 PM | Comments (3)

Last year, Chelsea beat Arsenal. Tonight I hope Liverpool draws first blood in the new season's challenge for trophies.

Go, Reds! Beat them black and Blue.

[Update: Yess! 2-1 to the Reds. Amazing run by Riise.]

Firefox 2 invitation

August 5, 2006 12:25 PM | Comments (0)

Who hasn't tried Firefox before, but might if I sent them an invitation?

Let me know and we can get our names immortalised in Firefox 2. Note: I can only send this to one friend. So make it good.

What Food Am I?

August 5, 2006 1:22 AM | Comments (2)

You Are Mexican Food

Spicy yet dependable.
You pull punches, but people still love you.

What Kind of Food Are You?

I finally took the quiz after seeing it on other blogs for a while. Yes, I try not to hit most people too hard now.

[Stripped out the annoying table code and font tags.]

I discovered this a little late, but it's happy news nontheless.

Things Magazine looks like it's been put together with a lot of thought - a lot like Arts & Letters Daily. An excerpt from the 'About' page:

things magazine was originally founded in 1994 by a group of writers and historians based at the Victoria & Albert Museum/Royal College of Art in the belief that objects can open up new ways of understanding the world.

Now an independent magazine, things has built a reputation as
a home for new writing – essays, reviews, short stories and poems –
about objects and their meanings. The website contains a weblog, photography galleries, special projects, searchable archives and the occasional on-line only article.

I'm subscribing to their news feed.



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The young ones, and the young once

August 1, 2006 10:18 PM

This evening, I attended a big dinner party for an old family friend and was ushered to a table of young, beautiful people.

Yes, younger than I, and more beautiful - including the men, and they were straight, too! Mmm. Everyone lived or studied overseas - and in exotic locations, not just the usual *yawn* UK, Australia and US but Spain, Italy, France. Everyone drank wine. The young men didn't gulp it down. No, they swirled it, inhaled the aroma, analysed it - and they didn't look one bit like posers.

I was thinking, 'Oh shoot, why did I choose to join this dinner party... I am going to be so uncool next to them'. Then I thought, hey, I'm supposed to be able to relate to them. I'm still in my twenties! I'm not a country bumpkin either. Hold my ground!