Friday, June 26, 2009

Something special happen in my college


What Happen har~~



lol...[=.=]lll, what jonathan doing...

Anyway, don't forgot to buy 4D har~~~

Monday, June 22, 2009

Have Your Say and Win RM3,000 in Cash! by Digi and Nuffnang!!

Saturday, June 20, 2009 / Written by C0conut Wan Kah / For Wan Kah (0)


Do you think that Malaysia needs a change?

Do you think your voice can make a difference?

YES I CAN

It's now your chance to speak up and be heard!
Share your views with DiGi´s "Speak Up Malaysia" contest on how to improve Malaysia and hope for that change. What´s more, you´ll get rewarded for voicing out your thoughts with cool LG Cookie mobile touch phones, iPod Shuffles, 100 pairs of movie passes or RM3,000 CASH ! There are different categories offering different prizes just to ensure no one´s left out.

Speak up now!

Check out what your friends and others have said!
To find out how to participate, click here.

Here is my Contest photo uploaded. " STOP FIGHTING BETWEEN ETHNICS "

Ethnics keep fighting. As a result, bec0ming a MUMMY

I injured my leg last month and it takes a long way to get fully recovered, but it reflects me of the 13th of May incident occurs in our beloved country, Malaysia.

The May 13 Incident is a term for the Sino-Malay race riots in Kuala Lumpur (then part of the state of Selangor), Malaysia, which began on May 13, 1969. The riots led to a declaration of a state of national emergency and suspension of Parliament by the Malaysian government, while the National Operations Council (NOC or MAGERAN) was established to temporarily govern the country between 1969 and 1971.

Officially, 196 people were killed between May 13 and July 31 as a result of the riots, although journalists and other observers have stated much higher figures. Other reports at the time say over 2,000 were killed by rioters, police and Malaysian Army rangers, mainly in Kuala Lumpur. Many of the dead were quickly buried in unmarked graves in the Kuala Lumpur General Hospital grounds by soldiers of Malaysian Engineers. The government cited the riots as the main cause of its more aggressive affirmative action policies, such as the New Economic Policy (NEP), after 1969.

21st century babies, come back Young man and women, It is time for us to change the life in Malaysia.

As Arnold says in Terminator "I'm back" to protect people as every time the enemy sends a robot to eliminate the leader of the resistant, and we Malaysian Says "Malaysia is back" with new faces as more and more people trying to separate the Fore between Ethnics in Malaysia.!!

Ciong!!!!! MAlaysia.

via- wikipedia.

Short Video Clip 1

Short Video Clip 2 or watch below





It's very hard to search for an old video for year 1969. We are learning from the incident. A short 21 seconds of video. Hope you all enjoy the meaning behind rather than "WAT? jus 21 seconds? what is that?"

click the picture for more information.


&

SUPPORT digi!

Im a digi user...

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Linux vs. Mac OS X vs. Windows



LINUX
Light on its feet and ready to strut its stuff
Let's get the unpleasant part out of the way first: If running Adobe Premiere is the most important thing in your life, or you want to play Halo, Linux isn't going to do it for you, at least right at the moment. While most Windows software can run under Linux in one fashion or another, applications that make extensive use of hardware drivers or high-end graphics may not work right.

But for everything else, Linux is definitely the way to go.

Unlike Mac OS and Windows, Linux is free as air and open to development by folks who are motivated by the desire to make the technology better, rather than by corporate tech farms whose real interest is the bottom line. Which is all very nice, but is it any good as a desktop operating system? You bet.

Size and speed
Let's start with the hardware footprint: With the possible exception of BSD, Linux's 'sister,' Linux is the lightest thing you'll ever install on your computer. While the minimum required hardware for Windows has been bloating, and Macs need more and more horsepower to run OS X, you can still dig out your old 486 and fire up Linux without problems.

I recently got one of the One Laptop Per Child XOs -- a machine with 256MB of RAM and a power-miserly processor -- and had no trouble running Xubuntu Linux on it. Meanwhile, Windows XP needs to be sliced and diced like crazy to fit onto the same hardware.

It's not for nothing that you'll find Linux inside of devices where hardware cost is an issue, like DVRs (TiVo anyone?) and routers. I was somewhat shocked to find that my recently purchased 52-in. LCD TV has a Linux kernel inside of it. If you hunt around, I'll bet you'll find at least one device in your home running Linux.

Stability, security, transparency, flexibility
Linux is not only small, but it's also stable. I have several Windows boxes at home, and it seems like whenever I blink, something has gotten screwed up in the registry or I have a Dynamic Link Library conflict.

Linux has all the configuration data and libraries right out where you can see them, in files. You can see what's changed and make edits manually, without having to figure out which of 9 million HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE registry entries is the one you want. Even the system-configuration tools that have nice graphical user interfaces (GUI) end up generating human-readable and editable files at the end of the day.

In the recent "Pwn 2 Own" hacker challenge, computers running Mac OS X and Windows Vista were cracked, but the Linux machine wasn't. I won't claim that Linux has no security or virus problems, but they tend to be right out in the open where you can see them if you look. At the moment, there are far fewer Linux viruses out in the wild than Windows viruses, and there are fairly bullet-proof ways to detect viruses under Linux using checksums on files.

Conversely, it's much easier to move your Linux system to new hardware or clone an existing system because there's no licensing. I've never had a problem moving a Linux system disk to a new computer, even when the hardware was drastically different. There's basically no way to do this on either a Windows or a Mac system.

You also have your choice of Linux distributions, from geek-friendly Debian and end-user-friendly Ubuntu to business-friendly Red Hat and Novell SUSE. And no matter which one you pick, you can rest assured that they'll all run the same apps.

Applications and interface
It used to be the conventional wisdom that the problem with Linux was desktop applications. But with tools such as Wine, CrossOver Linux and VMWare Player, many Windows applications run just fine under Linux these days.

And in some cases, native Linux applications may serve you just as well. OpenOffice is a mature replacement for Microsoft Office, and there are good (and free) tools for video and photo editing, audio editing, and many other common applications. Just do a quick Google search for "Linux video editing," for example, and you'll see what I mean.

More importantly, more and more applications are transitioning to Web-based versions using JavaScript or Flash/Silverlight/Flex/Air. Who cares if you can't run TurboTax on Linux, when you can use the Web-based TurboTax right from your browser?

Finally, the Linux desktop experience is now the match of any other desktop GUI in existence. The user interface is intuitive and clean, but still powerful. If you choose a user-friendly distribution like Ubuntu, installing Linux is as easy as installing Windows -- and unlike Windows, you can even "try before you buy," since distributions such as Ubuntu have a "live" install CD/DVD.

You can even run a full Linux distribution such as Damn Small Linux from a 128MB (or larger) USB drive. Did your Windows PC crash again? Plug in the USB drive, and you've got access.

Heck, most Linux distributions will even shrink a Windows partition and set up dual-booting automatically. Ignore all the fear, uncertainty and doubt you'll hear about nightmare installs and bad device support -- that's from the bad old days!


Mac OS X
All you need in one dynamite package
Computing nirvana isn't difficult to find. If you want a simple-to-use computer that can run virtually any application you need on stylish hardware that gives you easy online access and instant connectivity to all types of satellite devices, just go to an Apple store and buy a Macintosh.

A complete software/hardware ecosystem
When it comes to integration, no other operating system can boast the unity of purpose and results that exist on the Mac platform. While the competition is busy mashing feature after feature into poorly designed products, Apple Inc. focuses on what's important: creating a software/hardware ecosystem that gets out of the way so you can do what you bought a computer to do -- work, make movies, build Web sites, communicate or crunch data.

You know what I'm taking about -- all those annoying little things that add up when using Windows. Plug in a mouse on a PC, and a little dialog box pops up exclaiming that it just sensed you plugged in a mouse, and after installing the driver, it's ready to go! This isn't a shuttle launch; I just plugged in a mouse. I'll know the operating system recognizes it as soon as I can move the pointer, so stop bugging me with alert boxes!

Apple's relentless attention to detail has created a world where hardware and software are equally polished -- so polished, in fact, that a wireless mouse, an iPod or an iPhone feels more like a natural extension of the Mac than a separate device.

For those still stuck with Windows, that kind of experience remains a mirage, always just over the horizon. With Vista, users get an operating system that comes in six -- six! -- different versions, all of them with driver issues. Many older PCs can't handle the operating system -- and even a lot of those newer "Vista Capable" machines may not be so capable after all.

Sure, you could try Linux. But the kind of integration I'm talking about isn't possible in Windows, never mind Linux. When software and hardware engineering and design are divvied up among multiple companies and communities -- each with its own agenda -- complete hardware/software unification is just not a realistic expectation. (I'll give devotees an A+ for effort, though.)

Elegance and ease of use
The glue that binds the hardware is the operating system, and Mac OS X 10.5, a.k.a. Leopard, has elegance and ease of use baked right in. Leopard easily leads the pack in terms of security, ease of installation, maintenance and integration of applications whose learning curves are so minimal Apple doesn't even bother with full manuals. That isn't an accident.

Let me just reel off a few Mac OS X advantages:

* Drag-and-drop application installs
* Notifications written in real English and not Geek-English
* One-click, set-and-forget automatic backups that people actually use
* The ability to peer inside files without having to launch an app
* Tech support that doesn't involve being bounced between different companies
* Inherent security with no real-world exploits, despite dire warnings every year
* A clean and consistent look throughout the operating system and applications

Run any application in the world
Other operating systems have their strengths. Windows is ubiquitous; it isn't going anywhere soon. And the collective hive of developers working to make Linux better is impressive. But Apple's switch to the Intel architecture, along with today's impressive virtualization software, means Macs can now run those other operating systems -- at full speed. That gives you access to software across all three platforms, letting you work and play without walling yourself off from the rest of the computer world.

Let me say it again: All Macs can run Windows and, consequently, all of the software that runs on Windows. All versions. At once, if you want to.

Did I mention that Leopard is a certified Unix product, too? Mac OS X is the only operating systems that can run all mainstream Windows and "*nix"-based operating systems -- and host "*nix" software natively -- with few of the usual security risks.
Security

Along with its famed user interface, one of the keys to the success of Mac OS X is the lack of malware, spyware and self-propagating viruses. We can debate the reasons -- whether it's the security inherent to the modern BSD underpinnings of Apple's code or the "security by obscurity" theory -- but Macs are not susceptible to the problems that have always plagued Windows PCs.

Let me put it in perspective: I have been working with Macs since 1993, and not a single second of downtime has been caused by a virus, spyware or malware. Think about that for a moment. Not a single second has been wasted dealing with security.

And ponder this: If 100,000 viruses or malware variations targeting OS X sprang up tomorrow, that number would still pale in comparison with the malware aimed at Windows every year.

Look, it's the 21st century. Computers are everywhere; shouldn't they just work by now? Who wants to spend their time running spyware scans and virus scans? (Imagine having to run a virus scan on a microwave or DVD player.) Just because folks who use other operating systems have to put up with it doesn't mean that's the way it has to be.


Window vista
The best there is (despite the bad rep)

If you want the best operating system available today, there is only one choice: Windows Vista.

You heard me right: Vista, the operating system that people love to hate. The system that has been blamed, it seems, for everything from global warming to the U.S. economic meltdown.

I'm here to tell you that the conventional wisdom is flat-out wrong. Vista is a solid, hard-working operating system that will run whatever software you need with simplicity and grace. And it doesn't suffer from the world of woes that affect its competitors.
Interface, tweakability and extras

Why is Vista the best operating system? The interface is a good place to start. Vista has a straightforward elegance, featuring transparent windows that niftily whoosh into and out of place when you minimize or maximize them.

Don't like the way Vista looks or works? No problem; change it. From the transparency of windows down to almost every level of the operating system, there's a way to customize it. And there's plenty of free and cheap software for further tweaking.

Vista's user interface is more than just a pretty face. Windows Flip 3-D, which shows you all of your open windows in a 3-D flip book, is exceptionally useful. So are Live Thumbnails, which show small thumbnails of what's happening in your minimized windows, including real-time video.

The integration of search into every level of the OS, including the Start menu and Windows Explorer, makes finding any information easy and fast. All your documents, files and communications are instantly indexed, and searching is lightning-fast. And it integrates with Microsoft Office applications, so that when you search in Outlook for e-mail, for example, you're using the Vista search tool, and you get near instantaneous results.

Vista also includes some very nice extras, such as gadgets for the Sidebar; the Sync Center, which makes it easy to keep data on multiple PCs in sync; and easy wireless networking.

Best choice of software
An operating system by itself is a lonely thing ... in fact, a worthless thing. Its true purpose is to let you run software for work, play or hobbies.

Do you need to run enterprise software at work? Don't try it with Mac OS X or Linux -- most likely they won't work. How about games? Again, Windows rules. There simply aren't nearly as many games that run on the Mac or Linux. The same holds true for many other kinds of software.

Now, it's true that for the moment, Windows XP is superior to Vista when it comes to software compatibility. But that won't last long. The best and newest software will be built for Vista, not XP. So if you want to look to the future, not the past, Vista is the way to go.

Security
With its built-in firewall, antispyware and antiphishing features, Windows Vista is far safer than XP. Making it even more secure are its under-the-hood features such as Window Service Hardening, which stops malicious activity from taking place in the file system, the Registry and the network to which the PC is attached. Similarly, Network Access Protection (NAP) stops an infected computer from making a connection to a network, ensuring that it can't infect other PCs.

Much has been made of the fact that Windows has been subject to more attacks than Mac OS X or Linux. That's not necessarily due to inherent Windows security problems, though. It's simply because there are so many more copies of Windows in existence, so malware writers target it.

Why it beats the competition
Why is Vista better than the Mac OS X, Linux and XP? Let's start with the Mac. There's no doubt that Mac OS X is a very pretty operating system. But it also runs only on expensive, proprietary hardware, and it can't run much common software, including enterprise applications and games.

Some people claim virtualization software like Parallels Desktop for Mac solves that problem, but it's not true. Virtualization software creates big problems for organizations with regard to volume licensing, technical support, creating standard enterprisewide images and so on. And as for games, consider this: Parallels can't run even the most basic Vista games such as FreeCell, Hearts, Pinball, Solitaire and Minesweeper, because it doesn't support DirectX 9.

So if you want to pay through the nose for a computer that can run only a limited number of apps and games, go ahead and throw away your money. Just keep in mind that you'll be putting money into the coffers of a company whose CEO has hypnotized its users into drinking the true-believer Kool Aid. Do you really want to join the club of users who get a big dose of their sense of self-worth from the type of computer they use?

As for Linux, if you're a fan, feel free to fly your uber-geek badge every time you boot up -- but don't expect to run your company's enterprise software, much less mainstream software and games. And do expect to become very familiar with the confusing vagaries of the specific version of Linux you've installed.

Windows XP? It's cartoonish and gauche compared with Vista, plus it lacks Vista's security, fit and polish, and extras. It's also looking backward, rather than forward. I have a dual-boot Vista/XP laptop, and every time I boot into XP instead of Vista, I cringe at what faces me.

Window XP
The people's choice
The people have spoken. Windows XP rules.

Forget, for a moment, Mac OS X and Linux with their puny 8% combined market share. First, just consider how the "upgrade" from XP to Windows Vista is going.

Microsoft gamely touts increasing Vista adoption, but the backlash against XP's successor is unprecedented. I would call it a near-disaster. When is the last time a petition was circulated that gathered more than 100,000 signatures to save an operating system?

Dell Inc. has caved in to customer demand and reversed its Vista-only policy for many of its computers. Earlier, Dell had pointed out to Microsoft several mistakes made with the Vista rollout, including confusing marketing, broken drivers, hardware compatibility issues and other problems, according to a class-action lawsuit about Vista marketing.

Internal documents brought to light in the lawsuit show that Microsoft officials themselves dissed Vista shortly after its release.

I could go on and on, listing articles about tests showing that XP is faster than Vista at some tasks, explaining to anxious users how to make XP last for seven more years and instructing frustrated Vista users how to downgrade from Vista. See a common thread there?

Security
Security has always been the favorite criticism of Microsoft operating systems in general, but Service Pack 2 vastly improved the safety of XP, with better network protection, memory protection, improved e-mail security and safer browsing.

And do you really think Mac OS and Linux will be any safer if they gain enough market share to become relevant and get the full attention of hackers?

All the features you need
Of course, Microsoft will eventually force the migration to Vista. But for right now, you will get several Vista features, such as Network Access Protection, in the upcoming XP Service Pack 3. Other Vista components available for XP include Media Center, Internet Explorer 7, Media Player 11 and Windows Defender.

And there are plenty of sites that tell you how to get or at least simulate other Vista features in XP.

Source:http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&taxonomyName=Operating+Systems&articleId=9075000&taxonomyId=89&pageNumber=1
By Michael DeAgonia, Preston Gralla, David Ramel and James Turner

Everything is going to become mad...

4th sem is in progress...
what a stress+ing sem...
become lazy somemore...
haiz...CGPA only 2.8... how to hit more than 3.0...

father is going to retired this August...
more stress will put on my head after this...who call me i'm the eldest son...
somemore wan to save money for my U.K oversea...uhh...>.<

after study do what...work lor...
work for what, for myself, my father mother, somemore my brother...until him graduate
WAIT, when i gonna marry? no more extra time for 'dating', no more extra money for 'marry'
...gonna become monk...=='

Just Buy A New Phone, Congra to me

Sony Ericsson C510




C510 Cyber-shot features a 3.2 Megapixel Cyber-Shot auto focus camera with Smile Shutter, Face Detection technologies that can be found on Sony’s Cyber-Shot digital cameras. The phone does also Auto-rotation that will alter the landscape and portrait view by rotating the mobile phone.



Other Specification about my new phone:

* 2.2 inches TFT scratch-resistant display with 262K colors and 240 x 320 pixels
* 3.2 MP camera with autofocus, face detection and geotagging
* Slide in lens cover
* Illuminated imaging shortcuts
* Auto-rotation
* Snapfish application (by HP)
* Google Maps
* Access NetFront browser
* Email
* Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync
* YouTube upload
* Bluetooth
* Media player
* FM radio with RDS
* SMS conversation style
* 100 MB of internal memory
* Memory Stick Micro M2 cards support
* 92 grams
* 107 x 47 x 12.5 mm

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

17 JUN..

Maths 4 tutorial class cancel so my lecture start at 3 to 6pm.....but i reach home at 8pm....all because of train.
At 1st....yew lap fetch me to LRT station....i tot have place to sit but still had to stand......
When i change LRT to KTM at KL sentral i have to wait 15 min for the next train....
Leg so tired......standing for 13 min doing nothing.....then next and next the train keep add people & not less.....i almost become smash potato.

At the end spend me 2 hours for reach home....

Really tired.....TT

So sorry to Eunice....can't celebrate birthday with you & all the primary school friend
At here wish you happy birthday Eunice , wish all your dream come true.....

Jel...send me a mail...
我要結婚了

我就要和相處一年的女友結婚了,毫無疑問,我很高興。
唯一困擾我的是,我未來的小姨子,一個
20歲的辣妹。
她喜歡穿緊身的低胸
T-Shirt 以及迷你短裙。
她經常在我的跟前有意無意的彎下腰,更要命的是在別的男人面前她從不這麼做。
直到那一天,我未來的小姨子
Call我,讓我去看看請柬的準備情況。
當我到時,她家只有她一個人,迎接我的是她無盡幽怨的眼神
說:
我愛的人結婚了,新娘不是我,我現在唯一想做的即是在你結婚之前,把我獻給你。
她在樓梯上對我
說:我在臥室等你,如果你決定了,就上樓來找我。
當她走到樓梯的盡頭,和她睡衣一起滑落灑向我的是她眼中的期待。
我呆立了一分鐘,然後做了我當時唯一能做的事:拉開大門,走向我的汽車。
門外,我未來的岳父大人濁
淚橫流,給了我一個惡狠狠的擁抱:good boy,我們家的測試你已經通過了,歡迎你加入到我們的大家庭。
這個故事告訴我們
..........







【保險套放在車上是對的!!】

LOL i agree...HAHAHA

That outing with the "other" Group F to that quaint little "village"



If there's one thing about me I wish would never change, it is the fact that I like to do things in life spontaneously.

So when Siaw Wei, a girl I met through the SWC, asked me if I wanted to come for a weekend trip to her hometown, which I've never heard of before. I couldn't stop myself from saying "Yes."

It's a pretty long-winded story...how things became the way it did... and I'm too lazy to explain. It just did =D

I nearly did say no though. Actually, Mervin was supposed to go too but I forgot why he couldn't, so I was having second thoughts of going because that would mean I'd be going with a total bunch of strangers...I found out later that a lot of her classmates were going.

But after Siaw Wei gave me a couple of links that showed all the awesome food at her place...well...hehe. FOOD BA! Food is like one of the three things in life that makes life worth living, the other two being Manchester United and Manchester United.

Never mind la if I don't know anybody. Make new friends ba X D. Opportunities like this don't come along so often, so better visit as many places while I'm still "young".

By the way, the name of her hometown is called

TANJUNG SEPAT!

Google it up. A lot of interesting things at this place..

The trip took place one day right after exams. Siaw Wei had told me to be at Canteen 2 foyer at 10.30a.m.

I remembered I was super duper tired.... the night before(the now extinct) Group F had went to Feeling Cafe to celebrate the end of exams and one year of us being a group X D ...played pool and chatted and laughed and did nonsense till like 3 a.m

I played the worse pool game of my life that night...T.T

...then the NEXT day I woke up at 8 to pack and go for a last minute society meeting =.="

I got to the canteen at 10.35 and when Siaw Wei saw me she was like, "Aiya, THERE you are. Everybody waiting for you already la."

waa....this aunty ah...5 minutes late nia already like that.

The journey there took about 4 hours, 1 hour more than what my hostess originally said it would take. I was sleeping most of the way.

See?

It took longer because there was still a taxi ride from Banting to Tanjung Sepat (Samuel, I've apologised many times, but I'm sooooooo sorry!!! I forgot you moved to Banting!! MY BAD!). The taxis were old but the journey there was very nice..which somehow reminded me of Kuching.

Then again, most roads in rural Kuhing are like this huh? Two-lanes with trees and other shrubs along the road
Oh look! More palm trees!

Then again, when we finally arrived at Tanjung Sepat, everything there just felt like home. It was as if I came back to Kuching two weeks early = D

The main shophouse road was like Carpenter Street, the hawker centre Siaw Wei brought us to reminded me of Jubilee Ground, the restaurant she brought us to for dinner was EXACTLY like Muara Tebas or Teluk Buntal.

I never told her this, but even the exterior looks of her house reminded me of my grandma's place X D


After setting down our stuff, the first place we went to was the aforementioned hawker centre. Only one stall was open, the dessert shop.


I had no idea what to order...so I told Swei that I'll have whatever she's having. This became one of the most used tactics I have whenever I'm eating out at Chinese-speaking places, having whatever a friend is having. What I got was this!

Heavenly...and cold too..sweet temptations..forgot what it's called

After that, we went to "Tanjung Sepat's World Famous Pau Shop"™

You know what those Chinese words read? It reads, "PAU SHOP" X D
Haha. Look at that cute chubby kid
They allowed people to see them do the pau. Promotional gimmick?

It is so famous that all those celebrity tv food critics came here before. They dedicated a whole section of their wall to point that out


I know this old dude! I always saw him on Wah Lai Toi last time when my mom was watching tv

They had every flavour and size imaginable. Meat, kaya, red bean, peanut, vegetarian,normal-sized, babyhead-sized...but no cha sio pau

WHAT KINDA PAU STALL DOESN'T SELL CHA SIO?!?! THIS IS BLASPHEMY!!!

Not knowing what flavour to take...I one again asked Swei...=.= hehe. err....yeah. Don't exactly know how to describe how I feel...it's like a little boy always asking mummy what's nice to eat you know.


Swei never disappoints though ^^ the red bean pau was nice

Also, we met two of Swei's close friends, Bybae and Ah Hui. These three girls all know how to ride a bike. In fact, nearly everyone knows how to over here...and here I am, just finished learning how to ride a bicycle = P

Bybae explained to me that Tanjung Sepat was one of those "Kampung Baru" that was formed during the Emergency back in the 50s. It sure has developed though because it resembles NOTHING like a kampung. The roads are all tarred and every house has at least one car. Some even had BMWs or Camrys parked outside their house. Damn stylish wei.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Oh, and if there's one other feeling that Swei made me feel asides from "at home" during the trip, it was "circus freak".

She goes around and tells her friends, "This is the banana I'm talking about la *points at me*. Eh Jo. Say something in English"

My mind is at a blank, and so the first sentence I uttered was, "Hi, it's nice to meet you."

And what did they do? They laugh -_-''

Err...yeah. The Chinese who can't speak Chinese. Definite circus material X D

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Then at dusk, we went to the seaside for dinner at Ocen Seafood Restaurant.

Before anyone crucifies me for my perceived spelling error, really, the restaurant's name is Ocen


Just like Muara Tebas, there's a jetty located right next to it. The locals call it "Lover's Bridge." When I asked why, well....let the pics do the talking

This one's nothing...
But it keeps getting better..
and better...
and better...

Beautiful, huh?

I should insert a group pic right about now. Haven't shown the group yet.

If any Group F (or now..E) ppl are reading this, this is the "other" Group F

The dinner there was pretty good. Seafood can't get any fresher. Didn't take any pics coz I was famished at the time.

After that, we went to this place where there was a festival going on...once again, I forgot what it was. Somewhere along the line, everything was lost in translation.

Lots of food stalls, lots of performances going on. Just like Carpenter Street during Mooncake Festival. I like!!!

You see those Chinese words? When translated, it mean, "Kompleks Muhibbah (Tg. Sepat)"
I'm so smart right? X D

Dude, check out the Nemo
This kid was super cute and friendly. haha. Kept playing around with him

There was also a Chinese opera performance and CHECK.OUT.THE.CROWD.


It's hard to attract a crowd like this anymore..

As sakai as I was, I ate this sweet that I've never tried before. No idea what it's called, but I like!


After that, we went to one more place before retiring for the night. I fell asleep almost immediately.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Next day, for breakfast, we had Bak Kut Teh

Understandably, everyone was feeling tired, but the food was awesome. I was content to just stay quiet and savour the taste = D


Btw, this is Siaw Wei



This was only the 2nd time I had Bak Kut Teh since coming to KL, believe it or not. DAMN HARD to find good pork round my place.

After that, we went to the mushroom farm...what's the name....err...LING ZHI MUSHROOM! yeah. Swei kept saying that to me.

For me shrroms are still shroom, be it button shroom or shiitake or whatever. But here at the mushroom farm, they take mushrooms very, very seriously...



They're everywhere...

Here's their number one promoter btw



Haha. We tasted all the different types of mushroom tea or something like that. I even bought some to bring home so that I could cook a herbal soup for my mom on Mother's Day (I forgot to bring it back and left it at my room...dumb ass son...always forgetting to bring something)

The mushroom farm was located next to another bridge, which was called "Suicide Bridge." Apparently, ppl used to like to commit suicide here, for lack of tall buildings.

Even the scenery makes me feel suicidal..

Don't worry. He ain't being emo.

We caught some hermit crabs.


Nothing much really about this place. In the afternoon, we went to the beach...which name I have forgotten...gawd, I'm old

Cows otw there...she slowed down the car deliberately so that I can take pics of em...I forgot to mention that I've seen cows before...but I took some pics anyway X D

The beach was alright I guess. We didn't do anything that my gang and Ihaven't done before...so just check out some of the pics I stole from facebook = P


The ever necessary mid-air jump

And also the pose in the water ^^

Steven and I, two Sarawak boys, proving to the world that we Sarawakians, indeed, still live on trees!

Then we went further up to a place called....ah...Sepang Gold Coast...it's like a high-end place which has bungalows built on stilts jutting seawards.



I know many people have many things to say about my many slippers. But I don't wanna hear it =D

Something interesting happened at this place....but I'm lazy to elaborate...safe to say, we weren't in any trouble.

For dinner, we went back to the same place as the previous night and had STEAMBOAT!!!

Siaw Wei punya gang

After that, went back to her place, took a quick shower, then I was off to KL again. My Penang trip was the next day after all.

Jack, Siaw Wei's friend gave me a ride back. Very very very very very very very....good...driver...hehe. I didn't feel scared at all!! *nose bleeding*

It was a short two days trip...but a very very fun one. Siaw Wei and her gang (i.e. Bybae and Ah Hui) were really bombastic hosts and I'm super grateful to have a friend like her, that even though we ain't that close she was hospitable to bring me around her hometown and even stay over. She made Kuching seem extra lame and boring for me. haha

If she ever comes to Kuching, I hope I'll be as good a host as she was. Maybe can bring her for RWMF next time. That would be totally awesome

I think I fell in love with Tanjung Sepat. It really felt like a home away from home. I'll try and organise a day trip with my mates just to go there makan next time X D

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Phew....finally finished blogging this after 3 hours...and now it's Father's Day...and Neko is using my foot as her bed...

That's Neko...she's been at J block since last sem and we've been taking care of her..

I've never named any anmal before, but I decided to call this one Neko. You see, Neko is Japanese for cat. I know...my "creativity" knows no bounds

Anyway, Happy Father's Day dad...I know I've been busy lately till no time to call and stuff, but it doesn't mean I've forgotten about you guys.



Hope you have a great Father's Day dad. Love ya...and as a present, no Liverpool jokes for the day. Only today, don't get your hopes up...