Wednesday, January 31, 2007

inbound 6

as the caption below mentions.

this is an all out attack. see how messy the armada is

especially like the plane at the foreground of the shot by the sdf-1's leg, bit to the right, (not left as the caption states).

it's all overloaded with bombs. so much so that it's kinda tilted to it's side it's the vf-1e, valkarine (valkarines by the way have something to do with some norse myth, true?) imagine you're using all your power just to keep that baby in the air, or space that is.

also, the left background near the sdf-1 leg, notice the cat's eye, the macross/robotech version of the awac. that too looks nice with a dish over its head.

both these planes are slow flyin one's. don't expect a-wing capability.

A vs A 2

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

who we? we3!






we3!

what do you get when you cross terminator and the incredible journey. you get we3. we3 tells the story of 3 pet animals, a dawg, cat and rabbit. these guys have been given high end military hardware wired into their systems. it's so advanced, that they can "talk". with limited vocabulary though.

the dawg's the "tank" equiped with surface to air, the cat's the "stealth fighter", all hush and slick, the rabbit's the "mine layer" of the group, it "shits" mines to shake off it's trail.
it's 3 issues. the art's great and price by now has gone up. ding says it's 15 bucks each. that's 45 bucks in total for the 3 issues. day light sia.

so some snaps to oggle, enjoy and dream.

fright of the intruder


the a6 intruder, the pride of the united states navy. all weather carrier based sub sonic
bomber.

this baby has the ability to deliver it's max pay load of about 18000kg to it's target, spot
on at low visibility and rough weather. it was described that the vietnam war could have
been won if it was a stormy night every night, that meant the intruder was able to deliver
it's bombs and anti aircraft would have a hard time shooting or even finding it.

the body shape of the intruder makes it unique and also it's seating configeration of pilot
and bombardier/navigator being side by side. instead of the f-4 or f-14's one behind the
other configeration. kinda feels like being in a car with a navigator. the bombing range of the intruder still exceeds the cabilities of the navy's existing birds. only the sub sonic speed of the intruder makes it open to anti air attacks.

what's your choice of hardware?

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Star Wars IV Alternative

http://www.morningstar.nildram.co.uk/A_New_Sith.html

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

March of the emperor

Overseas Marathons!

In addition to our legandary oath to do the Singapore marathon this year, i've something better!

Who's with me and who's a pussy?

Monday, January 08, 2007



Tuesday, January 02, 2007

Mark Chan is back in town!






just some pics taken...

Sunday, December 31, 2006

Wtf....

Saturday, December 30, 2006

Rethink







Friday, December 29, 2006

Irritating games

Try these irritating games to waste ur time at work!

Thursday, December 28, 2006

X'mas Lunch





Time's Invention of the Year


Very aptly, Time's invention of the year is YOUTUBE! Here's the full story..

Meet Peter. Peter is a 79-year-old English retiree. Back in WW II he served as a radar technician. He is now an international star.
One year ago, this would not have been possible, but the world has changed. In the past 12 months, thousands of ordinary people have become famous. Famous people have been embarrassed. Huge sums of money have changed hands. Lots and lots of Mentos have been dropped into Diet Coke. The rules are different now, and one website changed them: YouTube.
It's been an interesting year in technology. Nintendo invented a video game you control with a magic wand. A new kind of car traveled 3,145 miles on a single gallon of gas. A robot learned to ride a bike. Somebody came up with a nanofabric umbrella that doesn't stay wet. But only YouTube created a new way for millions of people to entertain, educate, shock, rock and grok one another on a scale we've never seen before. That's why it's Time's Invention of the Year for 2006.
But if YouTube is the Invention of the Year, who exactly invented it?
Let's be clear: we know who started it. That would be three twentysomething guys named Steve Chen, Chad Hurley and Jawed Karim. At a Silicon Valley dinner party one night in 2004 they started talking about how easy it was to share photos with your friends online but what a pain it was to do the same thing with video.
So they did something about it. They hacked together a simple routine for taking videos in any format and making them play in pretty much any Web browser on any computer. Then they built a kind of virtual video village, a website where people could post their own videos and watch and rate and comment on and search for and tag other people's videos. Voilˆ: YouTube.
But even though they built it, they didn't really understand it. They thought they'd built a useful tool for people to share their travel videos. They thought people might use it to pitch auction items on eBay. They had no idea. They had opened a portal into another dimension.
The minute people saw YouTube they did its creators a huge favor: they hijacked it. Instead of posting their home movies, they posted their stand-up routines and drunken ramblings and painful-looking snowboarding wipeouts. They uploaded their backyard science projects, their delivery-room footage and their interminable guitar solos. They sent in eyewitness footage from the aftermath in New Orleans and the war in Baghdad—from both sides. They promulgated conspiracy theories. They sat alone in their basements and poured their most intimate, embarrassing secrets into their webcams. YouTube had tapped into something that appears on no business plan: the lonely, pressurized, pent-up video subconscious of America. Having started with a single video of a trip to the zoo in April of last year, YouTube now airs 100 million videos—and its users add 70,000 more—every day.
What happened? YouTube's creators had stumbled onto the intersection of three revolutions. First, the revolution in video production made possible by cheap camcorders and easy-to-use video software. Second, the social revolution that pundits and analysts have dubbed Web 2.0. It's exemplified by sites like MySpace, Wikipedia, Flickr and Digg—hybrids that are useful Web tools but also thriving communities where people create and share information together. The more people use them, the better they work, and more people use them all the time—a kind of self-stoking mass collaboration that wouldn't have been possible without the Internet.
The third revolution is a cultural one. Consumers are impatient with the mainstream media. The idea of a top-down culture, in which talking heads spoon-feed passive spectators ideas about what's happening in the world, is over. People want unfiltered video from Iraq, Lebanon and Darfur—not from journalists who visit there but from soldiers who fight there and people who live and die there.
The videos may not be slick, but they're real—and anyway, slick is overrated. Slick is 2005. The yardstick on YouTube is authenticity. That's why celebrities like Paris Hilton and P. Diddy can compete with a cute sleepy kitty and a guy doing a robot dance—and lose. That's why Peter's crusty, good-natured reminiscences have made him the all-time second-most-subscribed-to uploader on YouTube. That's why Michael J. Fox let his Parkinson's tremors show. That's why politicians have suddenly started to act like real human beings in their campaign ads, and why some—like Senator George Allen of "Macacagate" fame—have been busted for getting a little too real.
Less than a year after its launch, YouTube has become a media giant in its own right. Last month the company moved out of its 30-person office above a pizzeria in San Mateo, Calif., and into an office building in nearby San Bruno. Oh, and on Oct. 16 Hurley and Chen sold the company to Google for $1.65 billion.
With that kind of money behind it, YouTube has to start conducting itself with a little more legal and financial gravitas. That means making money—mostly through advertising—and convincing the TV, movie and music executives who find copyrighted material on YouTube that it's a revenue opportunity and not grounds for litigation. The learning curve is still steep. "The people marketing content see it as a great new platform, but the legal side of the business doesn't know how to react," Hurley says. "We have instances where someone within the company uploaded something, and the other side's asking you to take it down."
But YouTube isn't Napster. It already has partnerships with NBC, CBS, Universal Music, Sony BMG and Warner Music. And come on—it's the one place on the Net where people willingly, knowingly click on ads, like Nike's legendary clip of sharpshooting soccer star Ronaldinho. If you can't find money on YouTube, you're in the wrong economy, buddy.
YouTube is ultimately more interesting as a community and a culture, however, than as a cash cow. It's the fulfillment of the promise that Web 1.0 made 15 years ago. The way blogs made regular folks into journalists, YouTube makes them into celebrities. The real challenge old media face isn't protecting their precious copyrighted material. It's figuring out what to do when the rest of us make something better. As Hurley puts it, "How do you stay relevant when people can entertain themselves?" He and his partners may have started YouTube, but the rest of us, in our basements and bedrooms, with our broadband and our webcams, invented it.

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

back

hey fellas... sorry 'bout the late notice.. these last few days have been hectic and crazy...

but i'm back in sg! will be here till CNY hopefully...

catch up soon ya..

Saturday, December 23, 2006

dive dive


this afternon, saturday 23rd dec, head on down to the dawg park at west coast at bout 1600 and you'll see stuff like this. well, not exactly though.

ru ding and i have been headin there with angela and labby (baby) to toss discs with the dawgs and it can be a real dawg fight alright.

the picture shows a frisbee move called a layout, cos you lay out all that you've got to catch the disc. pretty devoted to the cause if you do that.

disc in!

Friday, December 22, 2006

shit storm


must be a bummer for this stormy when the death star blew up.

imagine you're takin a dunk when wedge and lando blew up the reactor core in the 2nd death star in return of the jedi.

i mean, how do stormys take a poop. guess this is it.

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

mel gibson?


the pattriot missile system

this technology was bugging me during one of me engineering modules. dynamics and control, don't know what so dynamic it is about this subject that no one has control over. was tyin to link something interesting to the subject. but it still didn't make sense.

the principal of how the system is linked to the subject is that once the missile is fired, there's all this guidence and flight path crap that the system has to take into consideration in order to kill the scud.

don't know how i'll do for the subjcet. high kill rate sia.