♥ McCain

November 4th, 2008

Somehow I think McCain’s concession speech was much, much better than Obama’s victory speech; it reflected everything I have always admired him for as a politician no matter how his views and takes differed from mine.  In my book he has always been a great leader, and always will, as his speech tonight reconfirmed.

Cute LOLcat(s) of the Day

November 3rd, 2008

Taken from icanhascheezburger.  ♥

Update

November 1st, 2008

So, in case the “One Year and Some More” post wasn’t clear enough, I am back to single.  And this time I am not going to say much about it.

It isn’t that I don’t have much to say: In fact, if I were to sit down and start typing about what has happened and what has been on my mind over the past three months, I would probably spend a whole night just doing that, and the resulting article would break your RSS reader or friends page, and maybe crash your browser too….  LOL  I just decided that this time I am going to respect the memories and things that I have shared with Eugene, despite the bad ending.  After all, there is no point carrying sourness farther than necessary.

I am still having some hard time adjusting to the new status; since I have seriously considered marrying her (and at my age, “serious” means much more than one would guess… haha), there are so many areas in my life where she had deeply tied in; erasing her traces in my daliy life will not be an easy task.  One thing is for sure though: I will be spending much more time playing PIU, because it has been clinically proven to cleanse my busy mind (I noticed that earlier this year when work was nearly killing me).  Haha.

Happy Birthday Mel!

October 30th, 2008

Lightcyan

October 29th, 2008

Taken from Mayene.


you are lightcyan
#E0FFFF

Your dominant hues are green and blue. You’re smart and you know it, and want to use your power to help people and relate to others. Even though you tend to battle with yourself, you solve other people’s conflicts well.

Your saturation level is very low – you have better things to do than jump headfirst into every little project. You make sure your actions are going to really accomplish something before you start because you hate wasting energy making everyone else think you’re working.

Your outlook on life is very bright. You are sunny and optimistic about life and others find it very encouraging, but remember to tone it down if you sense irritation.

the spacefem.com html color quiz

Cyan is also toxic.

One Year and Some More

October 28th, 2008

“Eugene Loves Eugene”

2007‒09‒16 – 2008‒10‒27

Korean Internet Is Not an “Inter”-net

October 24th, 2008

The Korean Internet is quite an interesting place.  Although the situation has been improving somewhat these days, for the longest time (ever since the beginning of its prime time in late 1990s) a small number or giant “portals”—the one-stop starting point for all activities—have held undue influence and dominance on most people’s Internet usage.

These portals operate technically on top of the TCP/IP network just like the rest of the Internet does, but their business strategy and mindset are little different from those of old monolithic service providers such as Compuserve and AOL: They tend to build a wall around their service, making it way too inconvenient to access whatever contents/information contained inside the wall from the outside.

Take robots.txt, the web-crawling robot exclusion policy of the top Korean portal as an example:

User-agent: *
Crawl-Delay: 5
Disallow: /PostList.nhn
Disallow: /PostPrint.nhn
Disallow: /NBlogPostPreview.nhn
Disallow: /NBlogHidden.nhn
Disallow: /BlogInfo.nhn
Disallow: /PostExportDoc.nhn
Disallow: /PostPreview.nhn
Disallow: /NTag4Ajax.nhn
Disallow: /NWeather4Ajax.nhn
Disallow: /buddy/
Disallow: /export/
Disallow: /common/
Disallow: /post/
Disallow: /npost/
Disallow: /main/ 

This is the exclusion policy of NAVER Blog, the leading blog service provider in Korea.  The URL space /post/ stores, yes, all post contents; by excluding that, NAVER prohibits Google (or any other crawler) from indexing post text, effectively nullifying the purpose of crawling.

How about NAVER’s knowledge base service, kin.naver.com (similar to Yahoo! Answers, which was more or less modeled after it)?

User-agent: *
User-agent: *
Disallow: /browse
Disallow: /api
Disallow: /detail
Disallow: /db
Disallow: /editor
Disallow: /expert
Disallow: /ing
Disallow: /kinac
Disallow: /knowhow
Disallow: /list
Disallow: /nboard
Disallow: /ngc
Disallow: /open100
Disallow: /openkr
Disallow: /poll
Disallow: /qna
Disallow: /search
Disallow: /wizard
Disallow: /xfile

Not much different.  Again, it prevents virtually everything from being indexed by third-party crawlers.

Why do the Korean portals have to be so draconian in their indexing policy?  It can be explained by the fact that, for example, NAVER also happens to be the number-one Internet portal and search engine in Korea—even Google has had a hard time penetrating into the monopoly.  The portals need to “protect” the vast array of contents (blog, news, knowledge base, etc) in order to force people to use their directory and search service, thus building a self-contained, vertical empire.  In fact, if you go to any Internet cafe in Korea, there is a 99% chance that the web browser has NAVER as its startup page.  It’s not that NAVER bribed Internet cafe owners or anything on a massive scale; it just happened that people would need to go to NAVER in order to find what they want to find, because NAVER’s contents will not be available through any other portal or search engine.

The beauty of Internet (or at least the web portion of it) is that everything is interconnected together so you can hop among a multitude of relevant contents and information before you realize.  In that sense, the Korean Internet does not deserve the name, in that the contents are often not inter-connected, but unidirectionally linked pursuant to the interest of a small number of corporate giants.

Fortunately, there are a growing number of “web 2.0” companies in Korea, most of them fairly new to the scene, that do seem to realize the importance of inter-contents-provider synergy; it remains to be seen whether those pioneers would succeed to change the landscape of the Korean Internet for the better.

Munchkins Invade San Francisco

October 23rd, 2008

I just found out that one of the best musicals I have ever watched opens in San Francisco on January 27, 20091: Wicked.  And yes, as in the case of every good musical, I am going to watch it again, this time with Mom.

If you want to join, please respond ASAP, because Wicked is notorious for selling out fast—even right now it is nearly impossible to find good orchestra/loge tickets for February and early March.


1Preview performances are scheduled through February 5th; regular performances start on February 6th.

The Chestnut Tree

October 20th, 2008

The Chestnut Tree

An animation by Hyun-Min Lee

(Note: Make sure you watch through the end.)

I Don’t Wanna Go to Bed

October 20th, 2008

I’m now in the last phase of cold: Postnasal drip → constant coughing.

The oTZLish thing is that the cough gets worse when I sleep, and when I wake up I have to cough up everything that got lodged in the airway while I was asleep.  It’s never a pleasant experience to get up and feel as if I’m about to suffocate.

I hate life.  Augh.