Tuesday, September 28, 2010

The Speed Show

India will be the latest country to host the F1 Grand Prix. It will be held in October 2011 at Jaypee Group Circuit, in Greater Noida, about 50 kilometres from the national capital New Delhi.

The estimated cost to develop the 5.15 km circuit is about US$215 million with a seating capacity of 150,000.


Abu Dhabi, the capital city of the United Arab Emirates, began hosting the F1 GP in 2009. The Yas Marina track will cost an estimated US$1.5b to build.



Singapore began hosting the event in September 2008.

The Singapore government is shouldering 60% of the US$100m cost for hosting the event for the next five years.

The race took place right in downtown Singapore, disrupting traffic and businesses, meant both the cost and inconvenience of staging the event is high.



The 2011 calender.
13/03 Bahrain
27/03 Australia
10/04 Malaysia
17/04 China
08/05 Turkey
22/05 Spain
29/05 Monaco
12/06 Canada
26/06 Europe
10/07 Great Britain
24/07 Germany
31/07 Hungary
28/08 Belgium
11/09 Italy
25/09 Singapore

Saturday, September 25, 2010

They Feed The World

Coffee is the most consumed commodity after fossil oil.

And the cuppa you are enjoying comes from these largest coffee producers in the world.
1. Brazil
2. Vietnam
3. Colombia
4. Indonesia
5. India

Tea was born in China.
The top ten tea producing countries in 2008 (in tons)
China 1,257,384
India 805,180
Kenya 345,800
Sri Lanka 318,470
Turkey 198,046
Vietnam 174,900
Indonesia 150,851
Japan 94,100
Argentina 76,000
Iran 60,000

Brazil is currently the world's largest exporter of ethanol and the second-biggest producer after the USA.
Sugarcane converts very easily to ethanol, and provides Brazil with huge supplies of ethanol.
Ethanol is commonly mixed with gasoline to boost the octane level.

From this Brazil is also the worlds biggest supplier of sugar.

Brazil produces about 17 million tons of oranges annually, the biggest in the world.
The orange is assumed to have originated in southern China and Indochina.

China is the largest producer of apples with 27.5 million tons every year.
China also leads the production of Pear with 12.6 tons annual production.
China again tops the production of Mandarin Orange with 15.1 tons annual production.

Spain is the biggest producer of Olive, with 6.2 million tons out of global production of 18 million tons.

The largest producer of coconut in the world is Indonesia with an estimated annual production of 19.5 million tons.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Final Days of a Dictator

It is 4 p.m., Jan. 13, 2008.
The main entrance to Pertamina Hospital in South Jakarta is besieged by dozens of journalists.

Gen. Suharto, the 86-year old former military dictator who ruled Indonesia for more than three decades, is lying somewhere deep inside this unattractive concrete structure, dying or more precisely in a "very critical condition" after almost all organ functions failed, so his doctor said.

According to the United Nations and the World Bank, Suharto tops the list of embezzlers with an estimated $15-35 billion, followed by former Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos. An impressive achievement considering that Suharto's salary in 1999—the year he was forced to resign after massive demonstrations that shook Jakarta—was only $1,764 a month.

More than $73 billion is said to have passed through the family's hands during Suharto's 32-year rule.

On the night of Sept. 30/Oct. 1 1965, Suharto joined surviving right wing Gen. Abdul Haris Nasution to spearhead a propaganda campaign against the Communist Party of Indonesia.(P.K.I.)
What followed was a military takeover and a months long orgy of terror, the mass murder of P.K.I. members, citizens of Chinese origin, left-leaning men and women, intellectuals, artists, and anyone who was denounced by neighbors or foes.

The West did not protest. Suharto was viewed as an ally by the United States, Britain, Australia, and other nations who were delighted to have the leader of Indonesia a free-marketer and an ally in the Cold War.

Suharto may be a man responsible for more deaths than any other dictator since World War II.

Suharto may die a free man, but it is not easy to forget a million people, a million deaths.
Standing next to each other, they can fill enormous space and their screams, coming in unison, can break the walls of any hospital—even a private one. And once these screams and cries reach him, he will know that he departs a criminal.

It seems this state of affairs suggests that he has not lived a decent life, but rather has much to account for and that keeps him lingering on, dying this long death.

There is the story of a local village leader who took advantage of his position, was corrupt, took land and money from the village, and enriched himself at the expense of others. When he lay dying he could not die. So, the village came together and discussed this problem and it was decided that they would just let it all go. Not to forget. Not to forgive. But just let it go. The man quickly died soon after their meeting.

In fact, yet another side story says Suharto can’t die so easily cause he’s got too much ilmu. A designated person will have to cross a river with Soeharto’s underpants on his head so he can die.

Suharto claimed that he himself was a dukun and there is real evidence that he studied under one. Another reason he cannot die a clean fast death. The diagnosis among believers here in Solo, the heart of Javanese culture, is that powerful occult forces in his body will not let him go, that certain rituals that would cleanse his spirit have not yet been performed or that nature has not yet signaled that it is ready to receive him.

After the death of Mr. Suharto’s wife in 1996, spiritualists as well as political scientists saw Mr. Suharto becoming less deft as a ruler.
In his desperation near the end, he called in a West African spiritualist to help him.

Lucky charms that have been spiritually implanted in Mr. Suharto’s body have become malevolent and are prolonging his suffering. Spiritually, he is ready to die and should be relieved of his pain, but those charms will not release him until they have been ritually removed. A Muslim cleric named Nasruddin Ansory suggested that the removal could be done by having 40 pure-hearted people pray by his bedside.

Another solution was proposed by a spiritualist named Permadi, who is also a member of Parliament saying the spirits would release Mr. Suharto if he apologized to Sukarno, the man he supplanted as president in 1967.

Suharto Died — 27 January 2008 aged 86.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Sofa So Good

To the common man, buying a leather sofa is as alien as putting the different grades of petrol into the car. In short we cannot tell the knee from the elbow.



Leather sofas were once only for the very rich., But today's leather sofas is affordable although for the mass market, low grade hide is used.

Natural leather is the most luxurious but are expensive and easily stained or damaged.



Many low priced sofas are made from pig/goat leather. Some are a mix of plastic or vinyl and very low grade hides.

So advertisements offering cheap "genuine leather" sofas should be treaded cautiously. Remember the old saying you get monkeys when you pay peanuts is often true.


Wednesday, September 8, 2010

A Sick Earth

Pakistan is struggling to recover from its worst flooding in 80 years

Russia has seen the longest unprecedented heat wave for at least one thousand years

Christchurch quake is the worst to hit New Zealand since 1931

China hit by the worst floods in 12 years

Victoria Australia floodwaters not seen in 30 years

Singapore hit by the worst flood since 1978

So where did the water came from ?



Recent warm summers accelerated the mass loss to 273 Gt per year (Gt is the mass of 1 cubic kilometre of water), in the period 2006-2008, which represents 0.75 mm of global sea level rise per year.

Professor Jonathan Bamber from the University of Bristol said: "It is clear from these results that mass loss from Greenland has been accelerating since the late 1990s and the underlying causes suggest this trend is likely to continue in the near future.



In a first-of-its-kind study, Professor Eric Rignot, a scientist with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, estimated Antarctica’s ice loss will raise global sea level by 0.3 millimeters a year in 1996, to 0.5 millimeters a year in 2006.

The earth is having a flu. The virus is humans.

Saturday, September 4, 2010

The Concerts

The Singapore economy seems sizzling hot, many big ticket concerts heading this way.

Tsai Chin 2010 The Endless Love, Once More
11 Sep 2010 at 8pm
Resorts World Convention Centre Compass Ballroom
Tickets S$168, S$138, S$108, S$78

CoCo Lee East2West World Tour
2 October 2010 8pm
Singapore Indoor Stadium
Ticket S$178, S$148, S$118, S$88

Rainie Yang World Tour 2010
16 Oct 2010 Sat, 8.00pm
Singapore Indoor Stadium
Ticket S$178, S$148, S$118, S$88, S$38

Fong Fei Fei World Tour 2010
23 Oct 2010 Sat, 8:00PM
Singapore Indoor Stadium
Ticket S$178, S$148, S$118, S$88, S$38

“2010 Wang Jie World Tour . Singapore”
23 October 2010, 7.30pm
The MAX Pavilion @ Singapore Expo
Ticket S$158, S$138, S$108, S$78

Sammi Cheng Love Mi World Tour - Singapore
6 November 2010 8pm
Venue: Singapore Indoor Stadium
Ticket S$178, S$158, S$138, S$118, S$88

Rene [One Night in Singapore] Concert
27 Nov 2010 Sat, 8pm
Singapore Indoor Stadium
Ticket S$158, S$138, S$108, S$88

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Lobo Is Coming To Town

Lobo serenaded teens over 40 years ago and now aged 67 is still serenading the same teens who are now grandparents.

From his first hit in 1971 titled "Me and You and a Dog Named Boo" Lobo even today never ceased to attract and entertain full attendance concerts.



Lobo’s last visited Malaysia in 2006 where he performed to overwhelming response at the Arena of Stars in Genting Highlands on September 2.

And he is returning to the same venue at 8.30pm October 15th 2010.

His shows command tickets prices of RM80, RM120, RM160, RM200, and RM250.



From Malaysia he will make his way down to Singapore on Saturday, 16 October 2010 at 8pm for a one night only concert at the Singapore Expo.

Ticket Prices: S$218, S$188, S$148, S$118, S$78

This from the man who is known in Spanish for wolf.



Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Food For The World

McDonald's has over 32,158 outlets in 121 countries, with over 14,000 restaurants in the USA.

McDonald's has opened more than 1,050 outlets in China, and will open another 175 outlets in the country this year.

After the U.S. and Canada, Japan ranks third in the number of McDonald's outlets per capita.




Subway is picking up steam with just a few hundreds behind McDonald's worldwide.

Subway currently has 31,771 shops worldwide and now have more than 23,000 locations in America.



Burger King has over 12,000 in 74 countries, 7,830 outlets in USA.



Starbucks has 16,000 locations worldwide, including 11,000 outlets in USA.



Pizza Hut has 37,000 locations in more than 120 countries, with 7,566 outlets in USA.



Kentucky Fried Chicken has over 15,000 KFC outlets in 105 countries, 5,162 outlets in USA.



Wendy's has over 6,000 in 34 countries, 5,800 outlets in USA.



Jack in the Box has over 2,200 restaurants is relatively unknown outside USA.