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Here are posterous posts filed under singapore...

Hula says...

An awesome evening at a barbeque hosted by my colleague and his friend. It was a great evening and my first proper interaction with singaporeans. Loved the simplicity of people and made a few friends.
I owe Adrian one for Inviting me over. Thanks buddy.

Filed under: Singapore

Mount Faber view

Filed under: Singapore

View of Sentosa from Mount Faber, Singapore

Filed under: Singapore

AD says...

After a delayed take-off from Denpasar we arrived in Singapore early this afternoon. I'm impressed so far with the efficiency I've seen but after 6 weeks of Indonesia perhaps any modern city would seem efficient. We took the train from the airport to within walking distance of our hotel for $1.60. This afternoon we went laptop/netbook hunting in Simlim mall, a 5 6 story computer and technology centre. Lisa's looking at a netbook and I'm looking at something a little bigger but not too big for travelling with (just big enough to run COD4 MW2). I think the motherboard has gone on her old laptop so that's pretty much the end of the road for that. We'll salvage the hard drive and get an external case for it. Anyway the choice available is a little overwhelming so I'm doing some reasearch both for Lisa and myself. Intel has a good site for comparing cpus and Netbookcheck is good for comparing mobile gpus.

Food seems to be cheap here although as in Indonesia where they sold 200g bags of potato chips for NZ$10 here they sell Ben and Jerrys icecream, 425g for NZ$15. That sort of pricing would keep the nation's waistline in check. All this rice isn't doing my waistline any harm. I had the only pair of shorts that I have without a drawstring taken in by a tailor earlier this week.

Filed under: Singapore

tajmusco says...

                   
Click here to download:
A_little_Malaysia.zip (2895 KB)

Filed under: Singapore

tombodley says...

The Esplanade Drive bridge over Marina Bay here in Singapore makes for an interesting spot for morning photography, both before and after sunrise. I found the early morning sun lighting up the underside of the bridge today and it reminded me of the wide range of zones of light in the slot canyons in northern Arizona--well almost!

Filed under: singapore

Thai Wey says...

                                   
Click here to download:
singapore-trip-day-2-HhIcwftpvyxkkpAEJpka.zip (16444 KB)

Filed under: Singapore

Rusho says...

(download)

Here's a place called Bread Talk. It's like a Duncan Donuts but better. The guy in video is my roommate Nico.

Filed under: Singapore

Fred Jame says...

However, once you reach 45 and above, finding a job is a challenge. Older Singaporeans have struggled with this problem for many years. Recently the MoM came out with a set of guidelines on the re-employment of older workers[Link]. These set of guidelines will lead to legislative changes in 2012. So 3 years from now we will discover these guidelines to be inadequate and ineffective. Why?

Our structural unemployment problem is caused by our liberal foreign worker policy which brought hundreds of thouands of young workers from India, China, Phillipines etc. Our workforce demographics has been distorted by this high influx. With a large pool of young workers available why would employers try to retain or hire older Singaporean workers? Remember in the past we never had the structural unemployment problem because during the boomtime, employers will have a hard time find workers and they are 'forced' to hire older workers and give them a chance.

(Too busy to write a Chinese version today, maybe later.)

Sooner or later we're going to face this, I am just somehow closer to it than most of my readers.

So, is locking up the country to block younger foreign workers a solution to deal with this? I don't think so. Younger workers could replace domestic workers to cause "structural unemployment", but they could also displace certain kinds of domestic workers and enable the latter to engage more productive professions (from the domestic perspective, of course).

No, it doesn't mean I am supportive to the "liberal foreign worker policy", and I understand that the displacement effect is just theoretical; more often the domestic workers being displaced didn't opt for jobs with better GDP, they were forced to either go abroad, stay at home or school, or simply become unemployed.

In Taiwan, an island country lacking natural resources and markets of economic scale, we're facing the similar situation to Singapore, and we're also facing an aging population structure. Eventually the problem will emerge, and then it (and we, and yourself) would be your problem too, young fellows.

Filed under: singapore

Rusho says...

                 
Click here to download:
Christmas.zip (2407 KB)

Filed under: Singapore