Today I share with you a brief video clip of an adorable baby orangutan. There’s just something about the young of various species that is inexplicably adorable.
Puzzle rental
I wonder if there’s a market for puzzle rentals. I think we should be able to rent them out and return them after we’ve solved them, much like borrowing books from the library or getting movies from Netflix. That way we get the satisfaction of solving more of them without the associated price tag of purchasing them. In trying to find such a thing, I came across RentAPuzzle, which does just that, but forces a time limit on solving the puzzle and costs a pretty penny. I’d like a more economical way of playing around with puzzles – one that lets me do so in my leisure the way Netflix lets you enjoy a movie for as long as you want before you swap it in for the next one.
Based off that site, it doesn’t seem to be a hugely popular thing (or perhaps it’s just because people are like me and prefer not to have a 2-month restriction). Might also be that people who spend a lot of time putting a puzzle together never want to take it apart again. Though it’s kind of cool to have around as a keepsake, if I wanted to put a puzzle together to seal it with glue and put up, I would have just gotten a painting instead. Certainly I would take plenty of pictures to remember it by, but I’d rather have another one to work on and challenge me (and without dropping hundreds of dollars on those crazy huge ones).
Or maybe I could just get these eco-friendly ones, which are super cute. The paper is embedded with seeds (see more on seed paper here) so you can finish the puzzle, then plant the pieces! Now there’s a dual use. As the paper biodegrades, it becomes fertilizers for the little seedlings sprouting. Pretty nifty, but then nobody else gets to enjoy that puzzle. I still think the best solution is a huge warehouse of them where people can choose the ones they want to work on and exchange them for the next one when they’re ready. That way everybody gets to do more with fewer puzzles being created, which means less material and energy used. I’m all about saving the environment in every little area possible.
Patented genes
I watched a 60 Minutes video on companies that own patents to certain genes, in particular the “breast cancer genes” – the ones that are closely tied with whether or not a woman is more or less likely to develop breast cancer. Is it wrong for companies to be able to “own” genes? I definitely think so. My understanding is that patents are to protect ideas and inventions, of which neither can be laid claim to in this case. However, I do think they can patent the processes in which they discovered these genes (if, of course, they actually came up with these methods and didn’t use someone else’s). After all, what right do they have to own something within our very bodies?
This legal terminology wouldn’t really matter too much if it didn’t have the real-life implications it does. Women who want to get tested for the breast cancer gene can only do so through Myriad, the company with those patents. They can’t even get a second or third opinion! Oh, and let’s not forget that having the monopoly on testing means they set the price – which is estimated to be ten times what it could be if they had competition. Nobody else is allowed to test for or even look at this gene without approval. Now that’s just ridiculous. How are we supposed to be able to come up with solutions to battle breast cancer at the cellular level if you can’t even look at the genes involved?! A restriction like that halts research that would save so many lives. After all, the more people working towards a common goal, the better chances of breakthroughs.
Their argument is that the genes are something different when isolated – but can you create them yourself? NO. Hence, I think they have no right to claim ownership of it. As far as I know, every single patented thing up until now has been something conceived of from the human mind or created by humans artificially. And if that’s not the case, it should be. After all, everything in nature was nothing created by us, and should not be owned by any of us.
River fun
Taking a tour outside Bangkok and it’s time for lunch on the river, literally!
floating restaurant from Mary Qin on Vimeo.
Then we zoomed upriver to the bamboo rafts awaiting us.
motor boating up the river from Mary Qin on Vimeo.
This looked like a fun party!
floating river party from Mary Qin on Vimeo.
And a peaceful ride back down to our floating restaurant/hotel.
bamboo rafting from Mary Qin on Vimeo.
Festival of Books
It’s that time of year again! This weekend was the LA Times Festival of Books and I went with some friends. This year they had a mobile scavenger hunt with the prize of an iPad. Panda and I decided to participate and we invited our friend, Houdini, to join in. Saturday, Houdini and I spent a good 4-5 hours running around the UCLA campus answering clues to the hunt. I unfortunately took a hit when I got a question wrong, but that allowed Houdini to get a perfect score on the hunt… let’s just hope he gets enough bonus points for pictures to outdo the competition! That’d be awesome, considering it’s his first time to the fair!
The focus this year really centered around the scavenger hunt, which was really a nice way to check out most parts of the event. From the poetry corner to the kids’ stuff to the cooking stage to the news booths, we saw a lot! It was also nice to get out on such a beautiful weekend rather than lazing around all day like I usually would. I do need to get (and stay) more active and though my back hurt and my legs were aching after the first day, it felt good to be outside moving around. I also ran into some random people, which is always fun.
I found that this year I didn’t really have an interest in checking out the booths like I have in previous years. Perhaps it is because there were so many people there that anything I might have wanted to do would have taken up a lot of time standing in line. Plus, I wasn’t out to buy anything, so none of those booths interested me, and I’ve never been one for book signings or readings or cooking shows. It’s nice to just hang out and enjoy the atmosphere and catch bits of performances as I pass.
Oh, and then today we got word that Houdini won the iPad from a raffle we entered on Saturday! Pretty awesome, especially considering we were really donating money to help homeless people when we bought those tickets. I remember seeing it was a 32 gig one, which is better than the one the LA Times has up for grabs from the scavenger hunt! That one seems out of our reach though. And as Panda and I were going through completing the hunt for him today, we were able to snag a really nice poster and a button, which was great for him since he has empty walls to fill and collects buttons. 🙂 All in all a great weekend, no? If only I could have won that iPad so I could feel better about the iPod Touches that I no longer own… 😛
Welcome to my office
I work at a really cool place. There aren’t many of us, so a lot of the furniture seems to get neglected, but hey, at least we’re ready for guests!
Note that my neighbor used to be a dog (see his bed and toys?), but he got relocated when we got ourselves a new guy to go there.
Other gem to note: the random machine at the end of the entryway, which gets used for only seconds at a time. There’s also weights and a bench in another section (not pictured).
Life as a musical
Panda and one of my coworkers seem to love the idea of life being like a musical. Whenever we walk, Panda will start singing a little tune he makes up to go with the rhythm of our footsteps. My coworker always is talking about breaking out into song and dance (and apparently he’s sizing up everyone to see who he’d want to be near if this did happen, so he could be next to the better dancers). Yeah, I’m surrounded by strange people.
When I was younger, I used to sing a lot too. I think for me it stemmed in my upbringing. My parents would sing old Chinese songs for no real reason as I was growing up. In the car, we’d pop in a cassette or CD and sing along (that actually served a purpose: keeping my dad awake and alert while driving). Around the house, they would do so without any accompaniment. And there’s something really harmonious about singing or humming while gardening, which is something my mother loved to do. I never saw any shame in singing in public and only in later years did I learn to tone it down.
This unconscious behavior got suppressed over the years as people always looked at me funny or asked me why I would burst into song. Perhaps my voice is not that great, but I didn’t care. It felt good and it felt right. But nowadays, that doesn’t really happen and I wonder if that feedback affected me over the years until I got to this point, where I laugh and shake my head at people who sing randomly (or would like to). It’s a pity, because I see nothing wrong with it. I’d like to get in touch with that part of my behavior again.
What is so wrong or strange about singing in public anyway? I find it to be a great way of expression, and usually a positive outlet. Though I listen to certain types of songs when I am down and want to get sadness out of my system by having a bit of a cathartic release, I can’t ever recall wanting to sing a melancholy tone to express myself. I can imagine a sad song being sung at organized events and the like, but not really by a lone person walking the streets. Instead, I’m always inspired by happy, positive, upbeat feelings – and it brings a smile to almost everyone’s faces, whether or not they actually like my singing. The spontaneous desire to sing tends to go hand-in-hand with smiling and skipping.
It would be really cool if life were a musical and people burst out into song and dance more often. It’d certainly make my world a happier place. For now, I’ll just settle for the bit of singing Panda and I do from time to time, usually without realizing it’s happening. There must be something deep down that drives us to do it and why should we deny ourselves that sort of innate joy? It’s a beautiful thing, really.
Chirping memories
This was reminiscent of my grandfather’s house. Not that it’s quite so loud, but he does love to raise birds and out of sight in this clip are bamboo/wooden cages that really reminded me of the ones he has at his home.
along the bird market from Mary Qin on Vimeo.