Articles in the Geeky Category
Currently Reading, Dating »
A Smart Canucks post, “Do we take multiculturalism for granted here in Canada?” (warning: a NSFW image is first thing in that post) alerted me to this seemingly surreal book, a recently published exposé by former Wall Street money manager J.C. Davies, I Got the Fever. Her credentials to write this book include, according to her bio, an undergraduate degree in psychology, a masters degree in public health, and 20 years of dating men of different cultures*. The book purports to cover from her own experiences and interviews with women …
Currently Reading, mememe »
My one-time personal trainer–two sessions came with my gym membership–told me that losing weight is 80% diet changes. That 20% from lifestyle change sounds so minimal it was quite a disincentive for me to go hardcore and hit the gym often. (Yes, I know, physical activity confers bountiful benefits beyond shedding pounds.) I know that something in my brain is wrong that allows me, nay, urges me to eat as much as I can some days. And I’ve never been a dieter or calorie counter: “being on a diet would …
Geeky »
Oh, WordPress, how much do I love thee….? I feel like I’m on some kind of path towards technical/blogging enlightenment and those who have attained it would roll their eyes at me but here are the steps and stories I have identified so far:
Level 1
I was a little slow to the game, hanging on to Blogger for the longest time, reveling in the smallest update they had that was nowhere near the awesomeness WordPress inhererently is. Like so many, I dipped my toes in the WordPress pool with multiple free …
Geeky »
Gee whiz, it looks like I’ve done nothing in 2011 except eating. Partly, that’s because I’ve taken on a more difficult task this year in terms of reading.
Last year’s reading journey ended up including 11 “Asian-American” novels and a handful of others (like, Year of the Flood and Self-Made Man). This year so far I have finished P.D. James’ Children of Men, a science fiction novel, but otherwise plan on focusing on non-fiction, you know, to make me a better person.
Judging from the way it’s going so far, it’s going to …
Geeky, Shopping »
Well aren’t group-buying sites like Groupon and Living Social the greatest things these days? This time last year, I was flipping through (and flipping through again) my Entertainment Book, seeing the same-old restaurants, wishing there was something I could use after, of course, using the Tropika coupon.
Group-buying sites have been big winners because of the magical (synergistic?) combination of addiction-creating features. They are “social” by requiring a minimum number of buyers to activate, and then with all the Web 2.0 add-ons to share your sweet purchase on Facebook and Twitter. …
Reading Asian American Literature »
As with a lot of the world, I learned about this novel when the 2010 movie got rave reviews and mentioned the origin of the screenplay. I heard it was a sci fi storyline with low/no tech, so of course it intrigued me to read the novel before watching the movie. A Japanese-British author behind it with Remains of the Day under his belt did not dissuade me at all, quite the contrary.
The story is told from the conversational narrative point-of-view of Kathy H. who is played by Carey Mulligan. I …
Geeky, mememe »
The fanciest way to describe what I did at my first job was work in a production environment. My InDesign instructor, who is a real production manager at ICBC, emphasized how good it looks on a resume to say you worked in “production” if your job had some aspect of it. At my first workplace, we killed so many trees but we were surrounded by cool and fast printers and copiers, a clattering paper-folding machine, punching and binding machines, and an impressive shelf array of paper types, sizes, and other …
Currently Reading »
I had to deliberate with myself whether to post this “review” on my main blog or the (low-trafficked) miscellaneous review blog I keep for fun. I really do like writing that much. I feel so unqualified to remark on, let alone review, a Margaret Atwood novel like The Year of The Flood (YOTF). Especially when I don’t have the greatest recollection of reading Oryx and Crake (O&C), which first introduced her readers to this post-apocalyptic world; however, Year of the Flood is not a sequel and I’ll try to comment …
Reading Asian American Literature »
I learned about Margaret Dilloway’s How to Be an American Housewife from the June 2010 batch of LibraryThing.com’s Early Reviewer’s List. I peruse the list every month when I get the e-mail alert but I don’t know how to win the “lottery” and obtain a book hot off the presses to review it for the Library Thing site. So I immediately requested a copy from the library and waited (and waited and waited) for the library to get it after its August release date.
The bulk of my Asian-American lit reviews are …
Currently Reading, Reading Asian American Literature »
Earlier this summer, I read Lisa See’s Snow Flower and the Secret Fan because it will be a Hollywood movie in 2011. See’s current novel is Shanghai Girls, released last year in May.
Snow Flower is probably See’s masterpiece so I was willing to read another See novel, one still too new for us to know its ultimate impact. I caught a glimpse of a review on Amazon.com of Shanghai Girls (SH Girls) that was quite negative in terms that See tried, but failed, to recreate the bond between two women …
