Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Scientists see asteroid hurtle to Earth

Scientists see asteroid hurtle to EarthPARIS (AFP) - - Stunned astronomers watched a car-sized asteroid explode into a brilliant meteor shower as it crashed into Earth's atmosphere, and then wandered into a Sudan desert to pick up the pieces, a study released Wednesday reported.

It was the first time ever that scientists recovered fragments from an asteroid detected in space, according to the study, published in the British journal Nature.

"Any number of meteorites have been observed as fireballs and smoking meteor trails as they come through the atmosphere," said co-author Douglas Rumble, a researcher at the Carnegie Institution.

"But to actually see this object before it gets to the Earth's atmosphere and then follow it in -- that's the unique thing."

The drama unfolded like an overheated Hollywood script, according to a reconstruction of the event by Nature.

On October 6 last year, an amateur star gazer in Arizona submitted the coordinates of an asteroid he had spotted to the Minor Planet Center in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

It was a routine logging, one of hundreds. But the computer system mysteriously refused additional data, recalled the Center's director, Tim Spahr.

"As soon as I looked at it and did an orbit manually, it was clear it was going to hit Earth," he told the journal.

The size and brightness of the asteroid -- which, by this time, has been assigned the name 2008 TC3 -- did not suggest danger, but Spahr followed standard safety procedure and called a NASA hotline.

He also alerted the Jet Propulsion Laboratory's Steve Chesley, who did a rush calculation on the asteroid's orbit. The program indicated a 100 percent chance of impact.

"I'd never seen that before in my life," he said.

The program also showed that the hurtling mass of rock would hit Earth's atmosphere -- with the force of one or two kilotonnes of TNT -- in less than 13 hours.

Suddenly, scientists accustomed to thinking in light years found themselves scrambling in real time to track the asteroid and figure out where its fragments might land.

Their chatter burned up the Internet and international phone lines. "IMPACT TONIGHT!!!", wrote physicist Mark Boslough of Sandia National Laboratories in New Mexico to colleagues, Nature reported.

Within minutes, it was determined that the asteroid would burst into pieces over the sparsely populated Nubian Desert in northern Sudan.

Tipped off by a meteorologist, a KLM passenger jet pilot flying from Johannesburg to Amsterdam spotted a brilliant flash some 1,400 kilometres distant as 2008 TC3 smashed into the atmosphere at 12,000 metres per second.

Weeks later, Peter Jenniskens, an astronomer at the SETI Institute in Mountain View, California and the study's lead author, was still waiting for the first report of a 2008 TC3 meteorite find. Nothing came.

So Jenniskens flew to Sudan in early December and teamed up with Muawia Hamid Shaddad of Khartoum University.

Together with a small regiment of students, they headed into the desert, asking local inhabitants along the way if they had seen a ball of fire in the sky.

When they zeroed in on the likely crash zone, the researchers fanned out to comb the area. In three days, they recovered 280 fragments weighing a total of several kilogrammes.

2008 TC3 falls into a category of very rare meteorites -- accounting for less than one percent of objects that hit Earth -- called ureilites, all of which may have come from the same parent body, Rumble said.

Being able to match spectral measurements of 2008 TC3 taken before it disintegrated with chemical analyses of the rock fragments should make it easier to recognize ureilite asteroids still in space, he noted.


- wong chee tat :)

Revised electricity tariff formula to kick in from July

Revised electricity tariff formula to kick in from July
By Hasnita A Majid, Channel NewsAsia Posted: 31 March 2009 1823 hrs

SINGAPORE: The revised electricity tariff formula for households will kick in from July after the Energy Market Authority's (EMA) consultation with key stakeholders in the energy industry and members of the public.

The new approach will calculate the electricity tariff for the third quarter of 2009, from July to September 2009, based on the average of fuel oil prices in the preceding three months – from April to the middle of June 2009.

Currently, the EMA uses only the fuel oil price in the first month of the previous quarter to set tariffs for the current quarter.

SP Services, which supplies electricity to all households, will calculate the new tariff and seek EMA's approval before announcing it by end-June.

EMA said the revised formula will allow the electricity tariff to be more reflective of the prevailing market price of fuel, since more recent fuel price data will be used in computing the tariff.

The averaging of fuel oil prices over the three months will also help to smoothen out any large swings in the fuel oil market within this period.

EMA also pointed out that while the revised formula is an improvement over the existing one, it does not necessarily result in a lower tariff all the time.


- CNA/so

Monday, March 30, 2009

Sunday, March 29, 2009

劉德華-木魚與金魚MV



Can you guess what was the MV about?

- wong chee tat :)

Not all venereal diseases care whether you're circumcised

I don't normally post this in here, after reading this below, maybe that's a need to rethink how the venereal diseases and how it affect both circumcised males and non-circumcised males.

These are quite interesting observations and findings and I can sensed there will be some new debates (?) regarding pros and cons of circumcised.

Anyway, let's have a look:

"Not all venereal diseases care whether you're circumcised: A little while back, it was announced that male circumcision significantly reduced the odds of picking up an HIV infection. That finding undoubtedly sparked a series of follow up studies to confirm the effect, and the results of one of them appeared in this week's New England Journal of Medicine. This one doesn't focus on HIV, however. As part of the follow-up process, the authors screened for a variety of additional sexually transmitted diseases.

It turns out that HIV is hardly the only virus where circumcision affects spread. Herpes simplex virus type 2, which (surprise!) causes genital herpes, had a slightly reduced transmission to circumcised males. Human papillomavirus, or HPV, a major contributor to cervical cancer, saw a much larger reduction. This doesn't mean that circumcision is a general good deal when it comes to STDs, however, as the one bacterial infection they tracked, syphilis, seemed to spread to both the circumcised and control populations at equivalent rates."

Abstracts (here):

Male Circumcision for the Prevention of HSV-2 and HPV Infections and Syphilis

Background Male circumcision significantly reduced the incidence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection among men in three clinical trials. We assessed the efficacy of male circumcision for the prevention of herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) and human papillomavirus (HPV) infections and syphilis in HIV-negative adolescent boys and men.

Methods We enrolled 5534 HIV-negative, uncircumcised male subjects between the ages of 15 and 49 years in two trials of male circumcision for the prevention of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections. Of these subjects, 3393 (61.3%) were HSV-2–seronegative at enrollment. Of the seronegative subjects, 1684 had been randomly assigned to undergo immediate circumcision (intervention group) and 1709 to undergo circumcision after 24 months (control group). At baseline and at 6, 12, and 24 months, we tested subjects for HSV-2 and HIV infection and syphilis, along with performing physical examinations and conducting interviews. In addition, we evaluated a subgroup of subjects for HPV infection at baseline and at 24 months.

Results At 24 months, the cumulative probability of HSV-2 seroconversion was 7.8% in the intervention group and 10.3% in the control group (adjusted hazard ratio in the intervention group, 0.72; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.56 to 0.92; P=0.008). The prevalence of high-risk HPV genotypes was 18.0% in the intervention group and 27.9% in the control group (adjusted risk ratio, 0.65; 95% CI, 0.46 to 0.90; P=0.009). However, no significant difference between the two study groups was observed in the incidence of syphilis (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.10; 95% CI, 0.75 to 1.65; P=0.44).

Conclusions In addition to decreasing the incidence of HIV infection, male circumcision significantly reduced the incidence of HSV-2 infection and the prevalence of HPV infection, findings that underscore the potential public health benefits of the procedure. (ClinicalTrials.gov numbers, NCT00425984 [ClinicalTrials.gov] and NCT00124878 [ClinicalTrials.gov] .)

and also

Male Circumcision and STI Prevention: More Good News


Add protection against HSV-2 and HPV infections to the list of circumcision’s benefits.

Although we have strong evidence that male circumcision reduces the incidence of HIV infection in high-risk men, its benefits regarding other sexually transmitted infections (STIs) have remained unclear. To examine this wider issue, researchers examined data obtained in Uganda during two earlier trials of male circumcision for preventing HIV infection. A total of 5534 uncircumcised males aged 15 to 49 were involved.

Of 3393 participants who were HIV and herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) seronegative at enrollment, 1684 were randomized to undergo immediate circumcision (intervention group) and 1709 to undergo circumcision 24 months later (control group). Serial screening (physical examination, an interview, and testing for HSV-2 and HIV infection and syphilis), conducted at baseline, was repeated for both groups at 6, 12, and 24 months. A subset of study participants also underwent screening for human papillomavirus (HPV) infection at baseline and at 24 months.

At 24 months, the cumulative probability of HSV-2 infection was lower for the intervention group than for the control group (7.8% vs. 10.3%; adjusted hazard ratio, 0.72; 95% confidence interval, 0.56–0.92). In addition, the prevalence of high-risk HPV genotypes was lower in the intervention group than in the control group (18.0% vs. 27.9%; adjusted risk ratio, 0.65; 95% CI, 0.46–0.90). However, no significant between-group difference in syphilis incidence was demonstrated (adjusted HR, 1.10; 95% CI, 0.75–1.65).

Comment: Studies conducted in Africa have shown that male circumcision decreases the rates of several STIs in men and in their female partners. Such benefits should guide public health policy for neonatal, adolescent, and adult male circumcision programs in areas such as Uganda, where prevalence of HIV infection is high. Whether circumcision confers similar benefits in other settings is unclear.


I don't think our library has access to these journals, but if you have, please share. =)


- wong chee tat :)

Saturday, March 28, 2009

The Sutra in Forty-Two Sections

The Sutra in Forty-Two Sections


(Taisho Tripitaka 0784)

Translated from Sanskrit into Chinese in 69 CE by Kashyapa Matanga and Gobharana

Translated from Chinese into English by the Buddhist Text Translation Society



Sutra Preface

When the World Honored One had attained the Way, he thought, "To leave desire behind and to gain calmness and tranquillity is supreme." He abided in deep meditative concentration and subdued every demon and externalist.

In the Deer Park he turned the Dharma-wheel of the Four Noble Truths and took across Ajnata-kaundinya and the other four disciples, who all realized the fruition of the Way. Then the Bhikshus expressed their doubts and asked the Buddha how to resolve them. The World Honored One taught and exhorted them, until one by one they awakened and gained enlightenment. After that, they each put their palms together, respectfully gave their assent, and followed the Buddha instructions.


Section 1: Leaving Home and Becoming an Arhat

The Buddha said, "People who take leave of their families and go forth from the householder life, who know their mind and penetrate to its origin, and who understand the unconditioned Dharma are called Shramanas. They constantly observe the 250 precepts, and they value purity in all that they do. By practicing the four true paths, they can become Arhats."

Arhats can fly and transform themselves. They have a life span of vast eons, and wherever they dwell they can move heaven and earth.

Superior to the Arhat is the Anagamin. At the end of his life, an Anagamin vital spirit will rise above the nineteenth heaven, and he will become an Arhat.

Superior to the Anagamin is the Sakridagamin, who ascends once, returns once more, and thereafter becomes an Arhat.

Prior to the Sakridagamin is the Srotaapanna, who has seven deaths and seven births remaining, and then becomes an Arhat. Severing love and desire is like severing the four limbs; one never uses them again."


Section 2: Eliminating Desire and Ending Seeking

The Buddha said, "Those who have left the home-life and become Shramanas cut off desire, renounce love, and recognize the source of their minds. They penetrate the Buddha profound principles and awaken to the unconditioned Dharma. Internally they have no thing to attain, and externally they seek nothing. They are not mentally bound to the Way, nor are they tied to karma. They are free of thought and action; they neither cultivate nor attain certification; they do not pass through the various stages, and yet they are highly revered. This is the meaning of the Way. "


Section 3: Severing Love and Renouncing Greed

The Buddha said, "Shaving their hair and beards, they become Shramanas who accept the Dharmas of the Way. They renounce worldly wealth and riches. In receiving alms, they accept only what enough. They take only one meal a day at noon, pass the night beneath trees, and are careful not to seek more than that. Craving and desire are what cause people to be stupid and dull."


Section 4: Clarifying Good and Evil

The Buddha said, "Living beings may perform Ten Good Deeds or Ten Evil Deeds. What are the ten? Three are done with the body, four are done with the mouth, and three are done with the mind. The three done with the body are killing, stealing, and lust. The four done with the mouth are duplicity, harsh speech, lies, and frivolous speech. The three done with the mind are jealousy, hatred, and stupidity. Thus these ten are not in accord with the Way of Sages and are called the Ten Evil Deeds. To put a stop to these evils is to perform the Ten Good Deeds. "


Section 5: Reducing the Severity of Offenses

The Buddha said, "If a person has many offenses and does not repent of them, but cuts off all thought of repentance, the offenses will engulf him, just as water returning to the sea will gradually become deeper and wider. If a person has offenses and, realizing they are wrong, reforms and does good, the offenses will dissolve by themselves, just as a sick person who begins to perspire will gradually be cured. "


Section 6: Tolerating Evil-doers and Avoiding Hatred

The Buddha said, "When an evil person hears about your goodness and intentionally comes to cause trouble, you should restrain yourself and not become angry or blame him. Then the one who has come to do evil will do evil to himself. "


Section 7: Evil Returns to the Doer

The Buddha said, "There was a person who, upon hearing that I observe the Way and practice great humane kindness, intentionally came to berate me. I was silent and did not reply. When he finished abusing me, I asked, 'If you are courteous to people and they do not accept your courtesy, the courtesy returns to you, does it not? '

"It does, 'he replied. I said, ow you are scolding me, but I do not receive it, so the misfortune returns to you and must remain with you. It is as inevitable as an echo that follows a sound, or as a shadow that follows a form. In the end you cannot avoid it. Therefore, be careful not to do evil. '"


Section 8: Abusing Others Defiles Oneself

The Buddha said, "An evil person who harms a sage is like one who raises his head and spits at heaven. Instead of reaching heaven, the spittle falls back on him. It is the same with someone who throws dust against the wind. Instead of going somewhere else, the dust returns to defile his own body. The sage can not be harmed. Misdeeds will inevitably destroy the doer. "


Section 9: By Returning to the Source, You Find the Way

The Buddha said, "Deep learning and a love of the Way make the Way difficult to attain. When you guard your mind and revere the Way, the Way is truly great! "


Section 10: Joyful Charity Brings Blessings

The Buddha said, "When you see someone who is practicing giving, aid him joyfully, and you will obtain vast and great blessings. "

A Shramana asked, is there an end to those blessings? "

The Buddha said, "Consider the flame of a single torch. Though hundreds and thousands of people come to light their own torches from it so that they can cook their food and ward off darkness, the first torch remains the same. Blessings, too, are like this. "


Section 11: The Increase in Merit Gained by Bestowing Food

The Buddha said, "Giving food to a hundred bad people is not as good as giving food to a single good person. Giving food to a thousand good people is not as good as giving food to one person who holds the Five Precepts. Giving food to ten thousand people who hold the Five Precepts is not as good as giving food to a single Srotaapanna. Giving food to a million Srotaapannas is not as good as giving food to a single Sakridagamin. Giving food to ten million Sakri dagamins is not as good as giving food to a single Anagamin. Giving food to a hundred million Anaga mins is not as good as giving food to a single Arhat. Giving food to one billion Arhats is not as good as giving food to a single Pratyekabuddha. Giving food to ten billion Pratyekabuddhas is not as good as giving food to a Buddha of the three periods of time. Giving food to a hundred billion Buddhas of the three periods of time is not as good as giving food to a single person who is without thoughts, without dwelling, without cultivation, and without accomplishment. "


Section 12: A List of Difficulties and an Exhortation to Cultivate

The Buddha said, "People encounter twenty different kinds of difficulties: It is difficult to give when one is poor. It is difficult to study the Way when one has wealth and status. It is difficult to abandon life and face the certainty of death. It is difficult to encounter the Buddhist sutras. It is difficult to be born at the time of a Buddha. It is difficult to be patient with lust and desire. It is difficult to see fine things and not seek them. It is difficult to be insulted and not become angry. It is difficult to have power and not abuse it. It is difficult to come in contact with things and have no thought of them. It is difficult to be vastly learned and well-read. It is difficult to get rid of pride. It is difficult not to slight those who have not yet studied. It is difficult to practice equanimity of mind. It is difficult not to gossip. It is difficult to meet a Good and Wise Advisor. It is difficult to see one own nature and study the Way. It is difficult to teach and save people according to their potentials. It is difficult to see a state and not be moved by it. It is difficult to have a good understanding of skill-in-means."


Section 13: Questions about the Way and Past Lives

A Shramana asked the Buddha, "By what causes and conditions can I know my past lives and understand the ultimate Way? "

The Buddha said, "Purifying your mind and preserving your resolve, you can understand the ultimate Way. Just as when you polish a mirror, the dust vanishes and brightness remains, so too, if you cut off desire and do not seek, you then can know past lives. "


Section 14: Asking about Goodness and Greatness

A Shramana asked the Buddha, "What is goodness? What is the foremost greatness? "

The Buddha said: "To practice the Way and uphold the truth is goodness. To unite your will with the Way is greatness."


Section 15: Asking about Strength and Brilliance

A Shramana asked the Buddha, "What is the greatest strength? What is the utmost brilliance? "

The Buddha said, "Patience under insult is the greatest strength, because people who are patient do not harbor hatred, and they gradually grow more peaceful and strong. Patient people, since they are not evil, will surely gain the respect of others. Then the mind defilements are gone completely, so that it is pure and untainted, that is the utmost brilliance. When there is nothing, from before the formation of the heavens and the earth until now, in any of the ten directions that you do not see, know, or hear; when you have attained omniscience, that may be called brilliance. "


Section 16: Casting Aside Love and Attaining the Way

The Buddha said, "People who cherish love and desire do not see the Way. Just as when you stir clear water with your hand, those who stand beside it cannot see their reflections, so, too, people who are entangled in love and desire have turbidity in their minds, and therefore they cannot see the Way. You Shramanas should cast aside love and desire. When the stains of love and desire disappear, you will be able to see the Way. "


Section 17: When Light Arrives, Darkness Departs

The Buddha said, "Those who see the Way are like someone holding a torch who enters a dark room, dispelling the darkness so that only light remains. When you study the Way and see the truth, ignorance vanishes and light remains forever. "


Section 18: Thoughts and So Forth Are Basically Empty

The Buddha said, my Dharma is the mindfulness that is both mindfulness and non-mindfulness. It is the practice that is both practice and non-practice. It is words that are words and non-words, and cultivation that is cultivation and non-cultivation. Those who understand are near to it; those who are confused are far away, indeed. It is not accessible by the path of language. It is not hindered by physical objects. If you are off by a hairsbreadth, you will lose it in an instant. "


Section 19: Contemplating Both the False and the True

The Buddha said, "Contemplate heaven and earth, and be mindful of their impermanence. Contemplate the world, and be mindful of its impermanence. Contem-plate the efficacious, enlightened nature: it is the Bodhi nature. With this awareness, one quickly attains the Way. "


Section 20: Realize that the Self Is Truly Empty

The Buddha said, "You should be mindful of the four elements within the body. Though each has a name, none of them is the self. Since they are not the self, they are like an illusion. "


Section 21: Fame Destroys Life Roots

The Buddha said, "There are people who follow emotion and desire and seek to be famous. By the time their reputation is established, they are already dead. Those who are greedy for worldly fame and do not study the Way simply waste their effort and wear themselves out. By way of analogy, although burning incense gives off fragrance, when it has burned down, the remaining embers bring the danger of a fire that can burn one up. "


Section 22: Wealth and Sex Cause Suffering

The Buddha said, "People are unable to renounce wealth and sex. They are just like a child who cannot resist honey on the blade of a knife. Even though the amount is not even enough for a single meal serving , he will lick it and risk cutting his tongue in the process. "


Section 23: A Family Is Worse than a Prison

The Buddha said, "People are bound to their families and homes to such an extent that these are worse than a prison. Eventually one is released from prison, but people never think of leaving their families. Don't they fear the control that emotion, love, and sex have over them? Although they are in a tiger jaws, their hearts are blissfully oblivious. Because they throw themselves into a swamp and drown, they are known as ordinary people. Pass through the gateway! Get out of the defilement and become an Arhat! "


Section 24: Sexual Desire Obstructs the Way

The Buddha said, "Of all longings and desires, there is none as strong as sex. Sexual desire has no equal. Fortunately, it is one of a kind. If there were something else like it, no one in the entire world would be able to cultivate the Way. "


Section 25: The Fire of Desire Burns

The Buddha said, "Person with love and desire is like one who carries a torch while walking against the wind: he is certain to burn his hand. "


Section 26: Demons from the Heavens Try to Tempt the Buddha

The heaven spirit offered beautiful maidens to the Buddha, hoping to destroy his resolve. The Buddha said, What have you skin-bags full of filth come here for? Go away, I've got no use for you. "

Then the heaven spirit became very respectful and asked about the meaning of the Way. The Buddha explained it for him, and he immediately attained the fruition of Srotaapanna.


Section 27: One Attains the Way after Letting Go of Attachments

The Buddha said, "Person who follows the Way is like a floating piece of wood that courses along with the current. If it does not touch either shore; if people do not pluck it out; if ghosts and spirits do not intercept it; if it is not trapped in whirlpools; and if it does not rot, I guarantee that the piece of wood will reach the sea. If students of the Way are not deluded by emotion and desire, and if they are not caught up in the many crooked views, but are vigorous in their cultivation of the unconditioned, I guarantee that they will certainly attain the Way. "


Section 28: Don Indulge the Wild Mind

The Buddha said, "Be careful not to believe your own mind; your mind is not to be believed. Be careful not to get involved with sex; involvement with sex leads to disaster. After you have attained Arhatship, you can believe your own mind. "


Section 29: Proper Contemplation Counteracts Sexual Desire

The Buddha said, "Be careful not to look at women, and do not talk with them. If you must speak with them, be properly mindful and think, I am a Shramana living in a turbid world. I should be like the lotus flower, which is not stained by the mud. ' Think of elderly women as your mothers, of those who are older than you as your elder sisters, of those who are younger as your younger sisters, and of very young girls as your daughters. Bring forth thoughts to rescue them, and put an end to bad thoughts."


Section 30: Stay Far Away from the Fire of Desire

The Buddha said, "People who cultivate the Way are like dry grass: it is essential to keep it away from an oncoming fire. People who cultivate the Way look upon desire as something they must stay far away from."


Section 31: When the Mind Is Still, Desire Is Dispelled

The Buddha said, "There was once someone who was plagued by ceaseless sexual desire and wished to castrate himself. The Buddha said to him,"To cut off your sexual organ would not be as good as to cut off your mind. Your mind is like a supervisor: if the supervisor stops, his employees will also quit. If the deviant mind is not stopped, what good does it do to cut off the organ? '"

The Buddha spoke a verse for him:

Desire is born from your intentions.
Intentions are born from thoughts.
When both aspects of the mind are still,
There is neither form nor activity.

The Buddha said, this verse was spoken by the Buddha Kashyapa. "


Section 32: Emptying out the Self Quells Fear

The Buddha said, "People worry because of love and desire. That worry then leads to fear. If you transcend love, what worries will there be? What will be left to fear? "


Section 33: Wisdom and Clarity Defeat the Demons

The Buddha said, "People who cultivate the Way are like a soldier who goes into battle alone against ten thousand enemies. He dons his armor and goes out the gate. He may prove to be a coward; he may get halfway to the battlefield and retreat; he may be killed in combat; or he may return victorious. Shramanas who study the Way must make their minds resolute and be vigorous, courageous, and valiant. Not fearing what lies ahead, they should defeat the hordes of demons and obtain the fruition of the Way. "


Section 34: By Staying in the Middle, One Attains the Way

One evening a Shramana was reciting the Sutra of the Teaching Bequeathed by the Buddha Kashyapa. The sound of his voice was mournful as he reflected remorsefully on his wish to retreat in cultivation. The Buddha asked him, "In the past when you were a householder, what did you do? " He replied, "I was fond of playing the lute. " The Buddha said, "What happened when the strings were slack? " He replied, "They didn't sound. " What happened when they were too tight? " He replied, "The sounds were cut short. " What happened when they were tuned just right between slack and tight? " He replied, "The sounds carried. " The Buddha said, "It is the same with a Shramana who studies the Way. If his mind is harmonious, he can attain the Way. If he is impetuous about the Way, his impetuousness will tire out his body; and if his body is tired, his mind will become afflicted. If his mind becomes afflicted, then he will retreat from his practice. If he retreats from his practice, his offenses will certainly increase. You need only be pure, peaceful, and happy, and you will not lose the Way. "


Section 35: When One Is Purified of Defilements, the Brilliance Remains

The Buddha said,"People smelt metal by burning the dross out of it in order to make high quality implements. It is the same with people who study the Way: first they must get rid of the defilements in their minds; then their practice becomes pure. "


Section 36: The Sequence that Leads to Success

The Buddha said, "It is difficult for one to leave the evil destinies and become a human being.

Even if one does become a human being, it is still difficult to become a man rather than a woman.

Even if one does become a man, it is still difficult to have the six sense organs complete and perfect.

Even if the six sense organs are complete and perfect, it is still difficult for one to be born in a central country.

Even if one is born in a central country, it is still difficult to be born at a time when there is a Buddha in the world.

Even if one is born at a time when there is a Buddha in the world, it is still difficult to encounter the Way.

Even if one does encounter the Way, it is still difficult to bring forth faith.

Even if one brings forth faith, it is still difficult to resolve one mind on Bodhi.

Even if one does resolve one mind on Bodhi, it is still difficult to be beyond cultivation and attainment. "


Section 37: Staying Mindful of Moral Precepts Brings Us Close to the Way

The Buddha said, "My disciples may be several thousand miles away from me, but if they remember my moral precepts, they will certainly attain the fruition of the Way. If those who are by my side do not follow my moral precepts, they may see me constantly, but in the end they will not attain the Way. "


Section 38: Birth Leads to Death

The Buddha asked a Shramana, "How long is the human life span? " He replied, "Few days." The Buddha said, "You have not yet understood the Way. "

He asked another Shramana, "How long is the human life span? " The reply was, "The space of a meal." The Buddha said, "You have not yet understood the Way. "

He asked another Shramana, "How long is the human life span? " He replied, "The length of a single breath." The Buddha said, "Excellent. You have understood the Way. "


Section 39: The Buddha Instructions Are Not Biased

The Buddha said, "Students of the Buddha Way should believe in and accord with everything that the Buddha teaches. When you eat honey, it is sweet on the surface and sweet in the center; it is the same with my Sutras."


Section 40: The Way Is Practiced in the Mind

The Buddha said, "Shramana who practices the Way should not be like an ox turning a millstone. Such a one walks the Way with his body, but his mind is not on the Way. If the mind is concentrated on the Way, what further need is there to practice? "


Section 41: A Straight Mind Gets Rid of Desire

The Buddha said, "One who practices the Way is like an ox pulling a heavy load through deep mud. The ox is so extremely exhausted that it dares not glance to the left or right. Only when it gets out of the mud can it rest. The Shramana should regard emotion and desire as being worse than deep mud; and with an undeviating mind, he should be mindful of the Way. Then he can avoid suffering. "


Section 42: Understanding that the World Is Illusory

The Buddha said, "I look upon royalty and high positions as upon the dust that floats through a crack.

I look upon treasures of gold and jade as upon broken tiles.

I look upon fine silk clothing as upon cheap cotton.

I look upon a great thousand-world universe as upon a small nut kernel.

I look upon the waters of the Anavatapta Lake as upon oil used to anoint the feet.

I look upon the door of expedient means as upon a cluster of jewels created by transformation.

I look upon the Unsurpassed Vehicle as upon a dream of gold and riches.

I look upon the Buddha Way as upon flowers before my eyes.

I look upon Dhyana samadhi as upon the pillar of Mount Sumeru.

I look upon Nirvana as upon being awake day and night.

I look upon inversion and uprightness as upon six dancing dragons.

I look upon impartiality as upon the one true ground.

I look upon the flourishing of the teaching as upon a tree blooming during four seasons."

- wong chee tat :)

S'pore observes Earth Hour, many buildings switch off lights for an hour

S'pore observes Earth Hour, many buildings switch off lights for an hour
By Timothy Ouyang, Channel NewsAsia

SINGAPORE : Thousands of people across Singapore observed Earth Hour on Saturday, as individuals at home and organisations switched off their lights for an hour.

Many parts of Singapore were plunged into darkness, as the lights went off at 8.30pm Singapore time, and remained switched off until 9.30pm.

Earth Hour is a global initiative by the World Wide Fund for Nature to raise awareness of climate change. It is the second year that Earth Hour is being observed in Singapore.

Various hotels across the Marina Bay area switched off their lights at 8.30pm sharp.

Even the Singapore Flyer took part in observing Earth Hour this year.

The Fullerton Hotel dimmed its lights at 8.30pm sharp, while over at Raffles Place, the colourful lights outlining the Maybank building were switched off as well.

Downtown at Orchard Road, shopping malls also joined in to play their part in raising awareness of global warming and climate change.

More than 10,000 people pledged to take part in Earth Hour this year, and more than 450 businesses also said they would switch off their lights.

Earlier, on Saturday evening, hundreds of people gathered at the Esplanade Park for a picnic. Some of them told Channel NewsAsia that they were there to show support for Earth Hour, while others just wanted to have some fun.

Singapore is of one of the many countries in Asia that have joined the world in switching off its lights for 60 minutes.

Altogether, some 83 countries are expected to observe Earth Hour this year.

- CNA/ms

- wong chee tat :)

Sydney first major city to mark Earth Hour 2009

Sydney first major city to mark Earth Hour 2009

March 28th, 2009 By KRISTEN GELINEAU , Associated Press Writer

Enlarge

About a hundred participants in an event to mark Earth Hour celebrate with a group photo after the event in which they freeze their movement for a few minutes at a shopping mall in Beijing, China, Saturday, March 28 , 2009. The lights are going down from the Great Pyramids to the Acropolis, the Eiffel Tower to Sears Tower, as more than 2,800 municipalities in 84 countries plan Saturday to mark the second worldwide Earth Hour. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

(AP) -- The floodlit cream shells of the famed Opera House dimmed Saturday as Sydney became the world's first major city to plunge itself into darkness for the second worldwide Earth Hour, a global campaign to highlight the threat of climate change.

From the Great Pyramids to the Acropolis, the London Eye to the Las Vegas strip, nearly 4,000 cities and towns in 88 countries planned to join in the World Wildlife Fund-sponsored event, a time zone-by-time zone plan to dim nonessential lights between 8:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.

Involvement in the effort has exploded since last year's , which drew participation from 400 cities after Sydney held a solo event in 2007. Interest has spiked ahead of planned negotiations on a new global warming treaty in Copenhagen, Denmark, this December. The last global accord, the Kyoto Protocol, is set to expire in 2012.

Despite the boost in interest from the Copenhagen negotiations, organizers initially worried enthusiasm for this year's event would wane with the world's attention focused largely on the global economic crisis, Earth Hour executive director Andy Ridley told The Associated Press. Strangely enough, he said, it's seemed to have the opposite effect.

"Earth Hour has always been a positive campaign; it's always around street parties, not street protests, it's the idea of hope not despair. And I think that's something that's been incredibly important this year because there is so much despair around," he said. "On the other side of it, there's savings in cutting your power usage and being more sustainable and more efficient."

In Australia, people attended candlelit speed-dating events and gathered at outdoor concerts as the hour of darkness rolled through the country. Sydney's glittering harbor was bathed in shadows as lights dimmed on the steel arch of the city's iconic Harbour Bridge and the nearby Opera House.

Earlier Saturday, the Chatham Islands, a group of small islands about 500 miles (800 kilometers) east of New Zealand, officially kicked off Earth Hour by switching off its diesel generators. Soon after, the lights of Auckland's Sky Tower, the tallest man-made structure in New Zealand, blinked off.

Forty-four New Zealand towns and cities participated in the event, and more than 60,000 people showed up for an Earth Hour-themed hot air ballooning festival in the city of Hamilton.

At Scott Base in Antarctica, New Zealand's 26-member winter team resorted to minimum safety lighting and switched off appliances and computers.

China was participating in the campaign for the first time, with Beijing turning off the lights at its Bird's Nest Stadium and Water Cube, the most prominent venues for the Olympics, according to WWF. Shanghai was also cutting lights in all government buildings and other structures on its waterfront, while Hong Kong, Baoding, Changchun, Dalian, Nanjing and Guangzhou were also participating, WWF said.

However, the official WWF Earth Hour Web site appeared to be blocked in Beijing, Shanghai and Tianjin on Saturday afternoon. While China rarely gives reasons for blocking Web sites, the campaign coincided with the 50th anniversary of the suppression of an uprising in Tibet that forced the Dalai Lama to go into exile.

In Hong Kong, the government planned to suspend its nightly "Symphony of Lights," which beams lasers and lights into the sky from 44 buildings on the city's famed Victoria Harbor. Landmarks along the harbor also were to switch off nonessential lights for an hour.

Later Saturday, Thailand's Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva planned to press a button to turn off the lights at Khao San Road, a famous haven for budget travelers in Bangkok that is packed with bars and outdoor cafes.

Lights were to go down at the Grand Palace and other riverside monuments, and businesses along some of the Thai capital's busiest boulevards were also asked to participate, the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration said in a statement.

The capital hoped to reduce electricity consumption in the city of more than 8 million people by at least 30 percent - or 1,400 megawatts - during the event. Earth Hour organizers say there's no uniform way to measure how much energy is saved worldwide.

Earth Hour 2009 has garnered support from global corporations, nonprofit groups, schools, scientists and celebrities - including Oscar-winning actress Cate Blanchett and retired Cape Town Archbishop Desmond Tutu.

McDonald's Corp. planned to dim its arches at 500 locations around the Midwest in the United States. The Marriott, Ritz-Carlton and Fairmont hotel chains and Coca-Cola Co. also planned to participate.

- wong chee tat :)

Earth Hour



Did you do your part ?

I played a small part by temporarily off my systems for an hour!

Earth Hour

- wong chee tat :)

Conficker Worm Prepares For A New Release On April 1

Conficker Worm Prepares For A New Release On April 1

March 27th, 2009 by John Messina Conficker Worm April 1 Release

(PhysOrg.com) -- The conficker worm created havoc last year when it infected over 10 million computers on a global scale. The unique design of the conficker worm allowed for this large scale attack to over 8 million business computers and scores of individual computers in 2008.

The conficker worm is periodically evolving by downloading updates that creates thousands of false domains daily to throw off security investigators. On the day it chooses to update, it selects 500 correct domains out of the 50,000 candidates to download malware and updates from.

On the first release it tried to download and execute a file called loadav.exe. It turned out that the file was never uploaded and the next generation did away with this. This led investigators to believe it was a malware program trying to promote itself as fake antivirus software.

The second release, the worm used Windows Services, on unpatched machines, to spread. This new release also had the power to spread over network shares by trying to log in autonomously into network machines with weak passwords. It developed the ability to infect USB sticks connected to infected machines, giving it another means of transmission.

On the final and third release, which became know as the Downadup virus, peer-to-peer communication between infected systems was added to it's arsenal of weapons. The virus also added new domain-generation algorithms to help it disguise where it was receiving its updates from.

Microsoft is offering a bounty for the worm's writers and security experts are no closer to having any clue as to the individual or individuals who are writing the Conficker code.

As Conficker continues to spread and get smarter, there is little doubt it's creating an army of infected machines, one that can cause serious damage. On April 1 we will see the attacks be taken to the next level. One can only guess what this next release has in store for the Global Internet Community.

© 2009 PhysOrg.com

- wong chee tat :)

Fix Corrupted Computer Profile in Vista


Vista Woes?


Just yesterday or so, a fren, A, came and asked for help as she had some problem with her Vista (Business) laptop. She was unable to access her administrator profile but able to access the guest account.


She then showed us (me and Y) the message which is somewhat similar to user profile unable to load.


Y suggested that to boot into the safe mode using F8 and worked it from there. So we boot the lappy into safe mode, and we go straight to the event log. The event log basically logged whatever problems (especially error) that Vista encountered. From there we could get a glimpse of what actually happened in the process and why she was unable to load her administrator profile.


Investigation!


Looking at error messages from the event viewer, we then knew that the adminstrator profile is corrupted.


A quick googling around, one of the fixes is to edit the registry settings without reformatting:
In short, you go to regedit (Start --> Run --> "regedit") and edit from there:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\ProfileList


Surprised???


When we delved into the profile list in the registry, I was in for a little surprised!


In her computer profiles, there are a couple of profiles with different SIDs! Three of them are from the system.1 is her original administrator account, 1 guest account and another don’t know what account. Okay, this seems to be confusing! But it wasn't.


Let us analyzed below:


Her original administrator account has been renamed with a .bak extension and her guest account has been "promoted" to the administrator status. Well, the last three digits of the SID ended with 5xx. That seemed impossible right? The administrator account is therefore is visible (to us) but Vista will not allow you to load when the account is selected.


Okay, what's next?

Most important thing is that did she backup her data? If she did, then it would be easier to fix the system. Y asked her if she had any thumb drive or portable hard disk with her. She did not had and a while, she came back with her portable hard disk, and a simple transfer of files are done and it was time to "hack" or "fix" her system via registry modification as mentioned earlier. (Evil grin... hehe)


Fix it


Renaming the other profiles to .old or you can simply delete the profiles.
Unrename the .bak and allow the administrator account to be reinstated


Oh, btw, you will not be allowed to change the ".bak" extension to original (no .bak attached at the end) if your SID of both original account and other account are the same. Just see and compared the SIDs(numbers)!


If you goggled around, there are other fixes:
"There was 1 line for each profile. Crucially if a profile is bad there are 3 things worth checking
a) Ensure the key name doesn't end in ".bad"
b) Ensure the RefCount value is 0
c) Ensure the State value is 0"


Test it!


A simple renaming is done and rebooted the system. The laptop screen loaded and she selected the administrator account and she is able to load her original administrator account successfully! (Yay!)

-Special Thanks to Y for info and her help!

- wong chee tat :)

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Thoughts

Feeling Stressed. Enough Said

- wong chee tat :)

Monday, March 23, 2009

UBS lays off S'pore team

UBS lays off S'pore team

UBS, the world's biggest wealth manager, has axed a team of six private bankers in Singapore, who were managing wealth for Turkish clients, sources familiar with the situation told Reuters on Monday.

UBS is struggling after losing billions in the risky US housing market, which forced it to obtain financial aid from the Swiss government.

The Singapore team was managing clients' assets worth between US$200 million (S$) to US$300 million and was hired from Swiss rival Credit Suisse two years ago, a source briefed on the situation said.

Singapore acts as an offshore booking centre for UBS' clients from Asia and Europe.

A second source said the firm has no plans to exit wealth management for Turkish clients despite the removal of the team in Singapore, which was done as part of a group restructuring.

'Like any organisation, UBS continually reviews its strategic needs and resources the businesses according to the environment and its outlook,' a UBS spokesman said in a statement.

'Asia Pacific remains a strategic priority for UBS, and a region in which the group will continue to invest,' she said.

UBS declined comment on the layoffs.

-- THOMSON REUTERS


- wong chee tat :)

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Paint the Sky with Stars by Enya

2009 Phases of the Moon



- wong chee tat :)

Thoughts

At this moment, do not commit any transgressions.

At this moment, be aware of karmic causes and consequences.

At this moment, be unbound by the cycles of transmigration.


- www.tbsn.org

- wong chee tat :)

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Rainbow

Managed to capture rainbow today in the evening. I will upload the pics soon!

- wong chee tat :)

Buddhist Chant - Heart Sutra (Mandarin) by Imee Ooi



- Thanks to all who shared!

- wong chee tat :)

Project Updates /Status

Exams are coming and I will temporarily stopped coding and ought to focus on my exams. Will continue after exams.

I will provide more updates after my exams!

Good luck to all!


- wong chee tat :)

Career Fair 2009

20-22 March 2009

Suntec Singapore, Halls 602 & 603, level 6

10 - 7pm Daily



Highlights of Career Expo 2009

1. Apply for jobs with prestigious companies!
2. Sign up for valuable training courses to upgrade yourself!
3. Attend free career talks and learn useful job hunting tips!



- http://www.jobsdb.com.sg/SG/EN/V6HTML/HOME/careerexpo2009/jobseeker/

- wong chee tat :)

Advice

Put your utmost effort into doing good deeds and do not slack. Print more virtuous books and distribute them.

- www.tbsn.org
- wong chee tat :)

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Project Status / Updates

For the project that I am currently working on, I had compiled the data and simulations results and sent.

I intended to do more as the scope of the project is interesting but that required a lot of reading and reading of materials and I don't have the time. Instead, I will focus on the coming exams. Oh, I only have less than a month o prep for exam.

Here are the things I did not include in the current results due to lack of time:

Obtain the smallest possible D_bar and from there find the extracted area.

Obtain the data from the previous simulation and perform a complete simulation.

Comparing the current simulation model from Feng and Verboncoeur's model.

And maybe somemore....

Maybe I will try to implement and / or improve on the models and the codes after the exams if possible.

- wong chee tat :)

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Stress harm the brain

Stress harm the brain?

Let's go to here:

http://www.physorg.com/news156452043.html

I have no time to read the whole article due to recent deadlines and I will just provide the link. I will come back to this article when I have the time.

- wong chee tat :)

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Exams

Just realized that next month is exams!

- wong chee tat :)

THE SUTRA OF FORTY-TWO SECTIONS SPOKEN BY THE BUDDHA

Translated by Upasaka Chu Chan (John Blofeld)
Key'ed in from hardcopy by TY with permission from publisher
(Yan Boon Remembrance Commitee in Hong Kong)

Note: [] indicates comments by TY

THE SUTRA OF FORTY-TWO SECTIONS SPOKEN BY THE BUDDHA

Jointly translated in the Later Han Dynasty by the monks
Kasyapa Matanga and Gobharana from Central India.

When the World Honored had become Enlightened, he
reflected thus: "To abandon desire and rest in perfect
quietude is the greatest of victories. To remain in a
state of complete abstraction is to overcome the ways
of all the evil ones." In the Royal Deer Park, he
expounded the Doctrine of the Four Noble Truths, converting
Kaundinya and four others, and thus manifesting the fruit
of the Way. There were frequently monks who voiced their
doubts and asked the Buddha to resolve them, so the World
Honored taught and commanded them, until, one by one, they
became Enlightened and, bringing their hands together in
respectful agreement, prepared to follow the sacred commands.

1. The Buddha said: "Those who, taking leave of their
families and adopting the homeless life, know the nature
of their minds and reach to what is fundamental, thus
breaking away (from the phenomenal and attaining to)
the unphenomenal, are called Sramanas. They constantly
observe the two hundred and fifty precepts, entering into
and abiding in perfect quietude. By working their way
through the four stages of progress, they become Arhans, who
possess the powers of levitation and transformation, as
well as the ability to prolong their lives for many aeons
and to reside or move about anywhere in heaven or earth.
Below them come the Anagamins, who at the end of a long life,
ascend in spirit to the nineteen heavens and become Arhats.
Then come the Sakridagamins who must ascend one step and be
reborn once more before becoming Arhans. There are also the
Srota-apanas who cannot become Arhans until they have passed
through nine more rounds of birth and death [original Chinese
text states seven, not nine]. One who has put an end to his
longings and desires is like a man who, having no further
use for his limbs (literal: having cut off his limbs), never
uses them again."

2. The Sramana who, having left home, puts an end to his desires
and drives away his longings, knowing the source of his own mind,
penetrates to the profound principles of Buddhahood. He awakes
to the non-phenomenal, clinging to nothing within and seeking
for nothing from without. His mind is not shackled with dogmas,
nor is he enmeshed by karma. Pondering nothing and doing nothing,
practising nothing and manifesting nothing, without passing through
all the successive stages, he (nevertheless) reaches the loftiest
of all. This is what is meant by "The Way".

3. The Buddha said: "He who has shorn his locks and beard to
become a Sramana and has accepted the Doctrine of the Way,
abandons everything of worldly value and is satisfied by the
food he obtained by begging, eating but once a day. If there
is a tree under which to rest, he desires nothing else.
Longings and desires are what make men stupid and darken their
minds.

4. The Buddha said: "There are ten things by which beings do
good and ten by which they do evil. What are they? Three are
performed with the body, four with the mouth, and three with the
mind. The (evils) performed with the body are killing, stealing
and unchaste deeds; those with the mouth are duplicity,
slandering, lying, and idle talk; those with the mind are
covetousness, anger, and foolishness. These ten are not in
keeping with the holy Way and are called the ten evil practices.
Putting a stop to all of them is called performing the ten
virtuous practices."

5. The Buddha said: "If a man has all kinds of faults and does
not regret them, in the space of a single heartbeat retribution
will suddenly fall upon him and, as water returning to the sea,
will gradually become deeper and wider. (But), if a man has
faults and, becoming aware of them, changes for the better,
retribution will melt away into nothingness of its own accord,
as the danger of a fever gradually abates once perspiration
has set in.

6. The Buddha said: "If an evil man, on hearing of what is good,
comes and creates a disturbance, you should hold your peace.
You must not angrily unbraid him; then he who has come to curse
you will merely harm himself."

7. The Buddha said: "There was one who heard that I uphold the
Way and practise great benevolence and compassion. On this account,
he came to sold me, but I remained silent and did not retort.
When he had finished scolding me, I said: "Sir, if you treat
another with courtesy and he does not accept it, does not the
courtesy and he does not accept it, does not the courtesy rebound
to you?" He replied that it does and I continued: 'Now you have
just cursed me and I did not accept your curses, so the evil
which you yourself did has now returned and fallen upon you.
For a sound accords with the noise that produced it and the
reflection accords with the form. In the end there will be no
escape, so take care lest you do what is evil."

8. The Buddha said: "An evil man may wish to injure the
Virtuous Ones and, raising his head, spit towards heaven, but
the spittle, far from reaching heaven, will return and descend
upon himself. An unruly wind may raise the dust, but the
dust does not go elsewhere; it remains to contaminate the
wind. Virtue cannot be destroyed, while evil inevitably
destroys itself."

9. The Buddha said: "Listen avidly to and cherish the Way. The
Way will certainly be hard to reach. Maintain your desire to
accept it humbly, for the Way is mighty indeed."

10. The Buddha said: "Observe those who bestow (knowledge of)
the Way. To help them is a great joy and many blessings can
thus be obtained." A Sramana asked: "Is there any limit to such
blessings?" The Buddha replied: "They are like the fire of a
torch from which hundreds and thousands of people light their
own torches. The (resulting) light eats up the darkness and that
torch is the origin of it all. Such is the nature of those
blessings."

11. The Buddha said: "To bestow food on a hundred bad men is not
equal to bestowing food on one good one. Bestowing food on a
thousand good men is not equal to bestowing food on one who
observes the five precepts. Bestowing food on ten thousand who
observe the five precepts is not equal to bestowing food on
one Srota-apana. Bestowing food on a million Srota-apanas is not
equal to bestowing food on one Sakrdagamin. Bestowing food on
ten million Sakrdagamins is not equal to bestowing food on one
Anagamin. Bestowing food on a hundred million Anagamins is not
equal to bestowing food on one Arhan. Bestowing food on a
thousand million Arhans is not equal to bestowing food on one
Pratyeka Buddha. Bestowing food on ten thousand million
Pratyeka Buddhas is not equal to bestowing food on one of the
Buddhas of the Triple World. Bestowing food on a hundred
thousand million Buddhas of the Triple World is not equal to
bestowing food on one who ponders nothing, does nothing,
practices nothing, and manifest nothing."

12. The Buddha said: "There are twenty things which are hard for
human beings:
"It is hard to practice charity when one is poor.
"It is hard to study the Way when occupying a position of great
authority.
"It is hard to surrender life at the approach of inevitable death.
"It is hard to get an opportunity of reading the sutras
"It is hard to be born directly into Buddhist surroundings
"It is hard to bear lust and desire (without yielding to them).
"It is hard to see something attractive without desiring it.
"It is hard to hard to bear insult without making an angry reply.
"It is hard to have power and not to pay regard to it.
"It is hard to come into contact with things and yet remain
unaffected by them
"It is hard to study widely and investigate everything thoroughly.
"It is hard to overcome selfishness and sloth.
"It is hard to avoid making light of not having studied (the Way)
enough.
"It is hard to keep the mind evenly balanced.
"It is hard to refrain from defining things as being something or
not being something.
"It is hard to come into contact with clear perception (of the Way).
"It is hard to perceive one's own nature and (through such perception)
to study the Way.
"It is hard to help others towards Enlightenment according to their
various deeds.
"It is hard to see the end (of the Way) without being moved.
"It is hard to discard successfully (the shackles that bind us to
the wheel of life and death) as opportunities present themselves.

13. A Sramana asked the Buddha: "By what method can we attain the knowledge
of how to put a stop to life (in the phenomental sphere) and come
in contact with the Way?" The Buddha answered: "By purifying the mind
preserving the will (to struggle onwards) you can come in contact
with the Way just as, when a mirror is wiped, the dust falls off and
the brightness remains. By eliminating desires and seeking for nothing
(else) you should be able to put a stop to life (in the phenomenal
sphere)".

14. A Sramana asked the Buddha: "What is goodness and what is
greatness?" The Buddha replied: "To follow the Way and hold to what
is true is good. When the will is in conformity with the Way, that
is greatness."

15. A Sramana asked the Buddha: "What is great power and what is
the acme of brilliance?" The Buddha answered: "To be able to bear
insult (without retort) implies great power. He that does not cherish
cause for resentment, but remains calm and firm equally (under all
circumstances), and who bears all things without indulging in abuse
will certainly be honored by men. The acme of brilliance is reached
when the mind is utterly purged of impurities and nothing false or
foul remains (to besmirch) its purity. When there is nothing, from
before the formation of heaven and earth until now or in any of the
ten quarters of the universe which you have not seen, heard and
understood; when you have attained to a knowledge of everything, that
may be called brilliance."

16. Men who cherish longings and desires are those who have not
perceived the Way. Just as, if clear water be stirred up with the
hand, none of those looking into it will perceive their reflections,
so men, in whose minds filth has been stirred up by longings and
desires will not perceive the Way. You Sramanas must abandon
longings and desires. When the filth of longing and desires has
been entirely cleared away, then only will you be able to perceive
the Way."

17. The Buddha said: "With those who have perceived the Way, it is
thus. Just as, when one enters a dark house with a torch, the
darkness is dissipated and only light remains, so, by studing the
Way and perceiving the truth, ignorance is dissipated and insight
remains forever."

18. The Buddha said: "My Doctrine implies thinking of that which
is beyond thought, performing that which is beyond performance,
speaking of that which is beyond words and practising that which
is beyond practice. Those who can come up to this, progress, while
the stupid regress. The way which can be express in words stops
short; there is nothing which can be grasped. If you are wrong by
so much as the thousandth part of a hair, you will lose (the Way)
in a flash."

19. The Buddha said: "Regard heaven and earth and consider their
impermanence. Regard the world and consider its impermanence.
Regard the spiritual awakening as Bodhi. This sort of knowledge
leads to speedy Enlightenment."

20. The Buddha said: "You should ponder on the fact that, though
each of the four elements of which the body is made up has a name,
none of them (constitute any part of) the real self. In fact, the
self is non-existant, like a mirage."

21. The Buddha said: "There are people who, following the dictates of
their feelings and desires, seek to make a name or themselves, but,
by the time that name resounds, they are already dead. Those who
hunger for a name that shall long be remembered in the world and who
do not study the Way strive vainly and struggle for empty forms.
Just as burning incese, though others perceive its pleasant smell,
is itself being burnt up, so (desires) bring the danger of fire which
can burn up your bodies in their train.

22. The Buddha said: "Wealth and beauty, to a man who will not relinquish
them, are like a knife covered with honey which, even before he has
had the pleasure of eating the honey, cuts the tongue of the child that
licks it."

23. The Buddha said: "People who are tied to their wives, children, and
homes are worse off than prisoners. A prisoner will be released sooner
or later, but wives and children have no thought of betaking themselves
off. Why fear to rid yourselves immediately of the longing for
physical beauty? (Otherwise,) you are tamely submitting to the jaws
of a tiger and deliberately allowing yourselves to drown in the
quicksand into which you have fallen, thus meriting the name of 'simple
fellows'. If you can reach the point (of abandoning such things), you
will rise from the dust and become Arhans.

24. The Buddha said: "Of all longings and desires, there is none stronger
than sex. Sex as a desire has no equal. Rely on the (universal) Oneness.
No one under heaven is able to become a follower of the Way if he accepts
dualism.

25. The Buddha said: "Those who (permit themselves) longings and desires
are like a man who walks in the teeth of the wind carrying a torch.
Inevitably, his hands will be burnt.

26. The gods bestowed the jade girl upon me, hoping to shake my
determination. I said, 'O skin bag, full of every kind of filth!
For what have you come here? Go! I do not need you.' Then the gods
payed me profound reverence and, as they asked me to expound the Way,
I enlightened them and they became Srota-apanas as a result."

27. The Buddha said: "Those who follow the Way are like a piece of
wood in the water, which floats along, touching neither bank, and
which is neither picked up by men, intercepted by the gods, hindered
by floating scum, nor rots upon the way. I am prepared to undertake
that such a piece of wood will certainly reach the sea. If those
who study the Way are not misled by their feelings and desires, not
disburbed by any sort of depravity, and, if they earnestly advance
towards the unphenomenal, I am prepared to undertake that they will
certainly attain to the Way."

28. The Buddha said: "Be careful not to depend on your own intelligence--
it is not to be trusted. Take care not to come in contact with physical
attractions-- such contacts result in calamities. Only when you have
reached the stage of Arhan can you depend on your own intelligence."


29. The Buddha said: "Take care to avoid looking on the beauty of women and
do not converse with them. If you do (have occasion to) converse with
them, control the thoughts which run through your minds. When I was a
Sramana and came in contact with the impure world, I was like the lotus
which remains unsullied by the mud (from which it grows). Think of old
women as of you mothers, of those older than yourselves as of your elder
sisters, of those younger than yourselves as of your younger sisters, and
of very young ones as your daughters. Dwell on thoughts of Enlightenment
and banish all evil ones."

30. The Buddha said: "Those who follow the Way are like straw which must
be perserved from fire. A follower of the Way who experience desire must
put a distance between himself and (object of his) desire."

31. The Buddha said: "There was one who indulged his sexual passions
unceasingly but who wished, of his own accord, to put an end to his evil
actions, I said to him: "To put a stop to these evil actions will not be
so good as to put a stop to (the root of the evil) in your mind. The
mind is like Kung Ts'ao. If Kung Ts'ao desists, his followers will stop
also. If mental depravities continues, what is the use of putting an
end to evil actions?' I then repeated this verse for him: 'Desire
springs from your thoughts. Thought springs from discernment (of matter).
When the two minds are both stilled, there is neither form nor action.'
I added that this verse was first spoken by Kasyapa Buddha".

32. The Buddha said: "The sorrows of men comes from their longings and
desires. Fear comes from these sorrows. If freedom from desire is
attained, what (cause for) grief and fear will remain?

33. The Buddha said: "Those who follow the Way are like one who has to
fight ten thousand and who, putting on his armor, steps out of the gate.
His toughts may be timorous and his resolution weak, or he may (even) get
halfway to the battle-ground and then turn around and flee. Again, he
may join battle and be slain. On the other hand, he may gain the victory
and return. The Sramana who studies the Way must have a resolute mind
and zealously build up his courage, fearing nothing that lies before him
and destroying all demons (of temptation that stand in his way), that he
may obtain the fruit (of diligently studing) the Way."

34. One night, a Sramana was intoning "The Sutra of Teachings Bequeathed
by Kasyapa Buddha." The sound of his voice was mournful, for he though
repentantly of his back-slidings, born of desire. The Buddha asked him:
"What did you do before you became a monk?" "I used to like playing the
lute," he replied. "What happened," said the Buddha, "when you loosened
the strings?" "They made no sound." "And when you pulled them taut?"
"The sounds were brief." "And how was it when they were neither taut
nor loose?" "Then all the sounds were normal" replied the Sraman. To this
the Buddha said, "It is the same with a Sraman studing the Way. If his
mind is properly adjusted, he can attain to it, but if he forces himself
towards it, his mind will become weary and, on account of the weariness
of his mind, his thoughts will become irritable. With such irritable
thoughts, his actions will retrogress and, with such retrogression, evil
will enter his mind. But if he studies quietly and happily, he will not
lose the Way."

35. The Buddha said: "If a man smelts iron until all impurities have been
eliminated (before proceeding to) make implements with it, the implements
will be of fine quality. If one who studies the Way first purges his heart
of all foul influences, his actions will then become pure."

36. The Buddha said:
"It is hard for one to leave the grosser forms of incarnation and be born
a human being.
"It is hard for such a one to escape being a woman and be born a man.
"It is hard for such a one to be born with all his organs in perfect
condition.
"It is hard for such a one to be born in China.
"It is hard for such a one to be born directly into Buddhist surroundings.
"It is hard for such a one to come in contact with the Way.
"It is hard for such a one to cultivate faith in his mind.
"It is hard for such a one to attain to the Bodhi-heart.
"it is hard for such a one to attain to (the state where) nothing is
practised and nothing manifested."

37. The Buddha said: "A desciple living thousands of miles away from me
will, if he constantly cherishes and ponders on my precepts, attain the
fruit (of studying) the Way: but one who is in immediate contact with me,
though he sees me constantly, will ultimately fail to do so if he does not
follow my precepts."

38. The Buddha said to a Sramana: "How long is the span of a man's life?"
"It is but a few days," was the answer. The Buddha said: "You have not
understood," and asked another Sramana, who replied: "It is (like) the time
taken to eat(a single meal.") To this the Buddha replied in the same way
and asked a third: "How long is the span of a man's life?" "It is (like)
the time taken by (single) breath," was the reply. "Excellent," said the
Buddha, "You understand the Way."

39. The Buddha said: "Those who study the Way of the Buddha should believe
and follow all that is said by the Buddha. Just as, when you eat honey
(you find that), every drop of it sweet, so it is with my words."

40. The Buddha said: "A Sramana studying the Way should not be as an ox
turning the millstone which though it performs the necessary actions with
its body, does not concentrate on them with its mind. If the Way is followed
in the mind, of what use are actions?"

41. The Buddha said: "Those who follow the Way are like an ox bearing a
heavy load and walking through deep mud. It feels so weary that it does
not dare to look to left or right and, only on emerging from the mud, can it
revive itself by resting. A Sramana should regard feelings and desires
more seriously than (the ox regards) the mud. Only by controlling his
mind and thinking of the Way can he avoid sorrow."

42. The Buddha said: "I look upon the state of kings and princes as upon
the dust which blows through a crack. I look upon ornaments of gold and
jewels as upon rubble. I look upon garments of finest silk as upon worn-
out rags. I look upon a major chiliocosm as upon a small nut. I look upon
the Anavatapta as upon oil for smearing the feet. (On the other hand), I
look upon expedient methods (leading to the truth) as upon spending heaps of
jewels. I look upon the supreme vehicle as upon a dream of abundant wealth.
I look upon the Buddha's Way as upon all the splendors which confront the
eye. I look upon dhyana meditation as upon the pillar of Mount Sumeru. I
look upon Nirvana as upon waking at daybreak from a night's sleep. I look
upon heresy erected as upon six dragons dancing. I look upon the universal,
impartial attitude (of a Buddha) as upon the Absolute Reality. I look upon
conversion (to the Way) as upon the changes undergone by a tree (due to the
action of the) four seasons."

- wong chee tat :)

THE SUTRA OF FORTY-TWO SECTIONS SPOKEN BY THE BUDDHA

4. The Buddha said: "There are ten things by which beings do
good and ten by which they do evil. What are they? Three are
performed with the body, four with the mouth, and three with the
mind. The (evils) performed with the body are killing, stealing
and unchaste deeds; those with the mouth are duplicity,
slandering, lying, and idle talk; those with the mind are
covetousness, anger, and foolishness. These ten are not in
keeping with the holy Way and are called the ten evil practices.
Putting a stop to all of them is called performing the ten
virtuous practices."

Fom: THE SUTRA OF FORTY-TWO SECTIONS SPOKEN BY THE BUDDHA

- wong chee tat :)

Homage to the 36 trillion, 119 thousand, 500 Amitabha Buddhas

Homage to the 36 trillion, 119 thousand, 500 Amitabha Buddhas

Homage to the 36 trillion, 119 thousand, 500 Amitabha Buddhas

Homage to the 36 trillion, 119 thousand, 500 Amitabha Buddhas

Homage to the 36 trillion, 119 thousand, 500 Amitabha Buddhas

Homage to the 36 trillion, 119 thousand, 500 Amitabha Buddhas

Homage to the 36 trillion, 119 thousand, 500 Amitabha Buddhas

Homage to the 36 trillion, 119 thousand, 500 Amitabha Buddhas

Homage to the 36 trillion, 119 thousand, 500 Amitabha Buddhas

Homage to the 36 trillion, 119 thousand, 500 Amitabha Buddhas

- wong chee tat :)

Monday, March 16, 2009

OM MANI PADME HUM



- Peace to all!

- wong chee tat :)

Job losses this year expected to exceed 29,000, says SNEF

Job losses this year expected to exceed 29,000, says SNEF
By Asha Popatlal, Channel NewsAsia

SINGAPORE: This year's retrenchment figures are likely to bust the record of 29,000 jobs lost in 1998 during the Asian financial crisis, according to Singapore National Employers Federation’s (SNEF’s) president, Stephen Lee.

Mr Lee was commenting on a survey finding by HR firm Manpower Staffing Services where 636 employers across seven industry sectors were polled.

The survey found that 50 per cent of employers anticipate a cut in headcount, 29 per cent expect no change, while only seven per cent expect to increase staff strength in the second quarter.

On an industry basis, the survey found that the bleakest prospects are in the transport and utilities sectors, followed by public administration and education.

Hiring prospects are also weak in the trade and retail and services sectors, although quarter-over-quarter, there has been a slight improvement in the outlook for the finance, insurance and real estate sectors.

One emerging trend is more contract hiring, which gives more flexibility to employers.

SNEF has seen such numbers growing from 172,000 in 2006 to 190,000 last year and expects it to strengthen further.

SNEF says the silver lining here are the few sectors that are still hiring like the integrated resorts and start-ups, and encouraging take-up rates for training.

13,000 workers from 30 companies are taking up the national training programme SPUR.

But the job situation is likely to get worse before it gets better.

Mr Lee said: "NTUC's secretary-general Lim Swee Say had already said most likely in the first quarter, retrenchment figures will hit 10,000. So if we work on that sort of figure, then I anticipate that in the second quarter, it (retrenchment figures) will continue to escalate. I don't think we have seen the worst yet. Hopefully it will peak out in the second quarter of this year."

- CNA/yt

More S'pore grads jobless

More S'pore grads jobless

The number of degree holders who lost their jobs rose sharply to 14,800, or 21 per cent in December, up from 6,200, or 14 per cent a year ago.

MORE graduates have joined the jobless ranks as companies hit by the economic downturn shed workers.

The number of degree holders who lost their jobs rose sharply to 14,800, or 21 per cent in December, up from 6,200, or 14 per cent a year ago, according to the Ministry of Manpower labour market report released on Monday.

But the below secondary educated formed the largest group of unemployed residents at 21,300, or 31 per cent. Many of them were 40 years or older, making up 15,400 or 22 per cent of all unemployed residents.

'Consequently, long term unemployment for locals at both ends of the education spectrum more than doubled over the year. As at December 2008, 12,900 of the unemployed residents had been looking for work for at least 25 weeks, up from 8,700 in December 2007,' said MOM.

They formed 0.7 per cent of the resident labour force, higher than 0.5 per cent a year ago.

Fewer vacancies
There were 26,100 job vacancies in December, down by 27 per cent from September, and 30 per cent from a year ago.

Many industries reported fewer vacancies than a year ago. The major exception was community, social and personal services, supported by public sector hiring.

Together with higher unemployment, the seasonally adjusted ratio of job vacancies to unemployed persons fell for the fourth straight quarter to 51 openings for every 100 job seekers in December, said MOM. This is comparable to the level in December 2005.

Earnings down
Nominal earnings rose over the year by 2.4 per cent in the fourth quarter, lower than the 5.5 per cent in the preceding quarter. This cut the earnings growth in 2008 to 5.4 per cent over the 6.2 per cent in 2007.

After discounting for inflation which stood at 6.5 per cent in 2008, real earnings declined by 1.1 per cent for the year, after rising by 4 per cent in 2007.

Productivity falls
Dragged down by the contraction in output, labour productivity fell by 12 per cent in the fourth quarter, deeper than the 9 per cent drop in the earlier quarter. In 2008, productivity slid by 7.8 per cent, following the decline of 0.8 per cent in 2007.

'This reflected slower GDP growth and strong employment gains in the first half of 2008,' said MOM.

The labour market is available on the MOM's website at http://www.mom.gov.sg/mrsd/publication.

This is really worrying. Will this batch of graduating students and next batch of graduating students faced the same problems too?

- wong chee tat :)

Massive crowds throng IT Show 2009 closing day

Massive crowds throng IT Show 2009 closing day
By Satish Cheney, Channel NewsAsia

SINGAPORE: Despite the economic slump, IT Show 2009 generated a record S$58.5 million, which is S$4.5 million more than last year.

Vendors at the show were thrilled that customers came out in full force due to the massive bargains on offer.

The exhibition hall was not a place to be if you are claustrophobic. But if good bargains were what you were after, you were probably at Suntec Singapore over the weekend for the massive IT show.

It was one of the biggest exhibitions in Singapore with a floor area amounting to half a stadium.

But something you would never expect at a technology show happened on Saturday night - a technology glitch. For about an hour, customers were not able to make electronic payments as the lines went down.

One vendor reckoned her company lost at least S$30,000 as frustrated customers walked off.

But overall, vendors Channel NewsAsia spoke to said they were pleased with the better than expected turnout and remained bullish for upcoming exhibitions as well.

General manager of Epson Singapore, Felicia Gan, said: "Given that Singapore is a IT hub across the region - Singaporeans, youngsters are all IT freaks and gadget-savvy - so I think (the buying) will still happen. IT just changes too fast, so people will still buy (new gadgets)."

So, whether they were IT freaks or just gadget-savvy, it looked like Singaporeans just could not get enough of tech toys.

While many walked away with bargains, they also had to jostle with the large crowds. Coupled with the heavy rain, this resulted in a massive human jam at the adjoining underground City Link Mall, where many pedestrians tried to take shelter.

Callers to the MediaCorp news hotline said it was tough to get in or out of the underground mall. Mall operators closed some entrances to stop more people from entering and put marshals on duty.

- CNA/yt

For those who went to the IT Show, did you get anything?

- wong chee tat :)

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Singapore's public universities will not raise tuition fees this year

Singapore's public universities will not raise tuition fees this year

SINGAPORE: The National University of Singapore (NUS), Nanyang Technological University (NTU) and Singapore Management University (SMU) announced in separate statements on Friday that they would not be raising tuition fees this year.

NUS said it is deferring the planned adjustments to its tuition and hostel fees for one academic year. This means both new and existing students will pay the current rates. A review will be made at the end of the year.

The university has also stepped up its efforts to help needy students. The eligibility criteria for financial assistance have been adjusted to enable more Singaporean students to qualify.

NTU will be pumping S$2.2 million more to fund its bursaries and work-study scheme, bringing the total amount available to S$12.48 million. There will also be no change in tuition fees for current students.

Any fee increase for new undergraduates will be deferred and the university will review the situation in the next academic year.

At the same time, SMU has deferred any revision to its tuition fees for a year.

To help those in need, the university is offering more than 200 bond-free scholarships to new undergraduates. This means an average of one in eight freshmen will get a chance to be awarded a scholarship.

In addition, one in six will benefit from a wide range of financial assistance, from study grants to book allowances.


- CNA/so

- wong chee tat :)

Legend of the Condor Heroes 2008 Opening



Currently watching the above.

- wong chee tat :)

Om Mani Padme Hum



-Peace to all!

- wong chee tat :)

System Update

The old and trusty 5 port SMC switch is dead and is pulled out of service. It worked great for a couple of years. (Should be from 2005 if I remembered correctly)

A new switch will be up and running soon.

- wong chee tat :)

Friday, March 13, 2009

Friday the 13th

I just realized that today is the special day: Friday the 13th! Looking back, last month, Feb 2009 also had Friday the 13th.

Let us head over to wikipedia:

Friday the 13th is the thirteenth day in a month that falls on Friday, which superstition holds to be a day of good or bad luck. In the Gregorian calendar, this day occurs at least once, but at most 3 times a year. Looking at the table and I found that 2009 have 3 Fridays the 13th!

Year Months
2009 February, March, November

Heading to Wolfram gave us an interesting account of Friday the 13th.

Anyway, today seems to be quite okay for me. Happy Weekends!

By the way, there is an IT Show at Suntec City from Thursday till Sunday. So who's going?

- wong chee tat :)