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Monday, November 22

W is for war it s*cks but Kevin Sites's blog doesn't
by
Roland Tanglao
on Mon 22 Nov 2004 02:37 PM PST
Wow! I really don't know how I would deal with this ethical and moral tightrope but I think Kevin did a great job here. War s*ks and to be a reporter and to watch it and not being able to do anything about it except to publish and to get backlash from all sides s*cks too!
From Open Letter to Devil Dogs of the 3.1 - Kevin Sites Blog.:
QUOTE In war, as in life, there are plenty of opportunities to see the full spectrum of good and evil that people are capable of. As journalists, it is our job is to report both -- though neither may be fully representative of those people on whom we're reporting. For example, acts of selfless heroism are likely to be as unique to a group as the darker deeds. But our coverage of these unique events, combined with the larger perspective - will allow the truth of that situation, in all of its complexities, to begin to emerge. That doesn't make the decision to report events like this one any easier. It has, for me, led to an agonizing struggle -- the proverbial long, dark night of the soul.
I knew NBC would be responsible with the footage. But there were complications. We were part of a video "pool" in Falluja, and that obligated us to share all of our footage with other networks. I had no idea how our other "pool" partners might use the footage. I considered not feeding the tape to the pool -- or even, for a moment, destroying it. But that thought created the same pit in my stomach that witnessing the shooting had. It felt wrong. Hiding this wouldn't make it go away. There were other people in that room. What happened in that mosque would eventually come out. I would be faced with the fact that I had betrayed truth as well as a life supposedly spent in pursuit of it.
When NBC aired the story 48-hours later, we did so in a way that attempted to highlight every possible mitigating issue for that Marine's actions. We wanted viewers to have a very clear understanding of the circumstances surrounding the fighting on that frontline. Many of our colleagues were just as responsible. Other foreign networks made different decisions, and because of that, I have become the conflicted conduit who has brought this to the world.
The Marines have built their proud reputation on fighting for freedoms like the one that allows me to do my job, a job that in some cases may appear to discredit them. But both the leaders and the grunts in the field like you understand that if you lower your standards, if you accept less, than less is what you'll become.
There are people in our own country that would weaken your institution and our nation --by telling you it's okay to betray our guiding principles by not making the tough decisions, by letting difficult circumstances turns us into victims or worse-villains.
I interviewed your Commanding Officer, Lieutenant Colonel Willy Buhl, before the battle for Falluja began. He said something very powerful at the time-something that now seems prophetic. It was this:
"We're the good guys. We are Americans. We are fighting a gentleman's war here -- because we don't behead people, we don't come down to the same level of the people we're combating. That's a very difficult thing for a young 18-year-old Marine who's been trained to locate, close with and destroy the enemy with fire and close combat. That's a very difficult thing for a 42-year-old lieutenant colonel with 23 years experience in the service who was trained to do the same thing once upon a time, and who now has a thousand-plus men to lead, guide, coach, mentor -- and ensure we remain the good guys and keep the moral high ground."
I listened carefully when he said those words. I believed them.
So here, ultimately, is how it all plays out: when the Iraqi man in the mosque posed a threat, he was your enemy; when he was subdued he was your responsibility; when he was killed in front of my eyes and my camera -- the story of his death became my responsibility.
The burdens of war, as you so well know, are unforgiving for all of us.
I pray for your soon and safe return. -
UNQUOTE
Friday, November 19

Tod Maffin's miraculous blog conversion, is there hope for the rest of the Vancouver media ? - Dogma Radio - Friday 19 November 2004
by
Roland Tanglao
on Fri 19 Nov 2004 01:49 AM PST
- Tod Maffin's miraculous blog
conversion, is there hope for the rest of the Vancouver media ? - Dogma
Radio - Friday 19 November 2004
- all pretension, all the time
- no production values
- 3 minutes, 800K, mp3
- Back in October
- astounded to find out that Tod Maffin has had a miraculous blog conversion
- Because Back in May
- Whatever
- Belated welcome Tod to the podosphere and the blogosphere. Your audio and radio expertise and the stuff you share is awesome!
- Could
whoever converted Tod, apply their reality distortion field and magic
fairy dust to the rest of the Vancouver media (both old and new)
community?
- Vancouver is sorely lacking in blog savvy media!
- For Example
- Vancouver Sun
- blogs for readers and journalists with local advertising to make up for their somewhat lacking current web presence
- Vancouver Province
- Zed.cbc.ca
- Ultra cool site but impossible to follow unless you love spending 8 million hours a week surfing their site
- Add
a blog as a complement to their excellent site. Wouldn't it be great if
there was an RSS feed with enclosures of the latest, audio and video
from Zed? Or if there was an RSS feed and blog for each registered
user? This is easy to do with Bryght, Drupal, Blogware and other modern content management and blogging systems.
- Georgia Straight
- Give Angela Murrills and the rest of the journalists a blog, Give the readers blogs (again with localized ads)
- Vancouver Courier
- Give Tim Pawsey and the rest of the journalists a blog, Give the readers blogs
1 Attachments
Tuesday, November 2

H is for Habseligkeiten
by
Roland Tanglao
on Tue 02 Nov 2004 12:17 AM PST
From Darren and Djun, I learned that the Deutscher Sprachrat ran a contest to determine the most beautiful German word and that Habseligkeiten won.
Habseligkeiten is not the most beautiful German word! How about
gemuetlich or how about Mohnkuchen or how about Weissbeer or
Schweinhaxen? In my opinion these are all more beautiful. Listen
to my short podcast for why.
1 Attachments
Sunday, October 24

F is for Flickr LIVE!
by
Roland Tanglao
on Sun 24 Oct 2004 04:03 PM PDT
If you are interested in what's happening our lives, check out Flickr LIVE! This is an ever expanding set of photos that I take with my Nokia 7610 cameraphone that is posted immediately to Flickr with a 6-10 minute delay. For power users, there is also a Flickr LIVE! RSS feed.
The photos are low res (640x480), crude and pixelated but there's something about the real time nature of it that I like. I like the ability to give people an almost real-time glimpse into my life of the things *I* choose to expose them to.
Eventually, Simon (the developer of the software) will release the code for free! All you will need to have your own Flickr Live photo stream is a free Flickr account and a Series 60 Nokia mobile phone (e.g. 6600, 7610, etc.). and mobile Internet access (e.g. in Canada: GPRS from Fido or Rogers or 1xRTT from Bell).
If you need more technical details, check out my post about this on rolandtanglao.com.
Thursday, October 21

C is for Cancer
by
Roland Tanglao
on Thu 21 Oct 2004 11:38 AM PDT
For whatever reason whether it's environmental or something else, I
really believe cancer is the 'western plague' especially on our women
in Western Europe, Canada and the United States. I have no direct
experience with cancer in my family but I have known three women who
have died of cancer in the last five years. All were full time mothers
with two jobs: parenting and a full time job outside the home. All were
great people universally respected by their colleagues and loved by
their families. All of them didn't smoke and led healthy lifestyles and
were fit. All left behind children.
I don't cry much but when the last two died, I really couldn't help it, I cried at their funerals. Cancer sucks.
So when I heard Adam's moving announcement on the Daily Source Code,
I felt like somebody had knocked the wind out of me. I know it won't
help too much, but I am beaming positive thoughts towards Julie (whom I've never met but will hopefully at BloggerCon) and Adam today .
From Julie Leung: Seedlings & Sprouts: Connecting...and crying...:
QUOTE
Adam described how his mom has been diagnosed with lung cancer. My
brother was diagnosed with cancer almost exactly five years ago today.
I had forgotten the date, but as I listened to Adam, the memories
returned immediately to mind. I still remember the phone call from my
mom, telling me the news. I screamed loud, a scream of pain, a scream
of denial, anger and sorrow. NO!
I'm so sorry for Adam's mother and his family. As I listened to the
rest of the podcast, I tried to do my duties at my desk and balance my
checkbook but it was hard to pay attention to the numbers and push away
the tears.
UNQUOTE
Monday, October 11

T is for Thanksgiving
by
Roland Tanglao
on Mon 11 Oct 2004 10:09 PM PDT
Today is Thanksgiving in Canada, a time for thanks.
The things that I am thankful for in my life are my family (Barb and our six month old son, Simon) and my work (Bryght).
It's funny how things turn out. There seem to be three interconnected threads in my life:
First, I wouldn't be in Vancouver unless: a) I hadn't learned to snowboard in Austria at Lech when I lived in Germany b) I hadn't wanted to go to a place with mountains to snowboard c) Audi hadn't hired me (thanks) to work at the Nortel lab in Richmond, a suburb of Vancouver
Second, I wouldn't have met Barb without: a) about 1995, Simon, my friend in London, introducing me to Duke Ellington and Lindy Hop through Christian Batchelor's book
which lead to me b) becoming a huge jazz and swing fan which which led
me to c) wanting to learn Lindy Hop in 2000 so bad that I actively
searched for people so that our fledgling Lindy Hop class in Vancouver
would actually run which is d) where I met Barb
Third, there's this thing called the Internet :-) which a) led
me to scripting.com b) which led me to using Frontier 4.2.3 for my
first website which c) led me to my first Manila site, dreadnet,
in 1999 which d) led me to start VanEats in 2000 e) which was noticed
by the Vancouver based funders of Bryght and through a long chain of
circumstances led to the launch of StreamLine and Bryght
I am not religious but there definitely is something to be said for: a)
you make your own luck in life and b) everything happens for a reason
And for that I am thankful!

Having a baby is harder than running a startup?!?
by
Roland Tanglao
on Mon 11 Oct 2004 09:34 PM PDT
Judging from my limited experience with both :-), both are equally difficult!
From Jerry Yang, Closing Session at Web 2.0 (Jeremy Zawodny's blog):
QUOTE
Jerry had a baby recently. Having a baby is harder than running a startup.
UNQUOTE
Saturday, October 2

G is for Gene Johnson - highly recommended if you are selling or buying a Vancouver home
by
Roland Tanglao
on Sat 02 Oct 2004 12:56 PM PDT
If you are looking to buy or sell a home in Vancouver, we highly recommend Gene Johnson (604-263-1144, genejohnson@dexterrealty.com) of Dexter. He helped us to sell our condo in Kits and buy our new townhouse in East Van. Gene went above and beyond the call of duty for us many times and earned his full service commission several times over. This is the second time Gene has been my agent. In 1999, he helped me buy the condo in Kits. Needless to say, we will call upon him for any future property/real estate needs! Thanks again, Gene!
Tuesday, September 7

S is for Solids
by
barb
on Tue 07 Sep 2004 02:25 PM PDT
Simon ate "solid food" for the first time today!
At first he didn't quite know what to do with the spoon, so he pushed
the runny cereal out with his tongue. I then remembered reading
in the Baby Book to try giving some cereal from one of your
fingers. I did, and was able to deposit enough cereal on Simon's
tongue so he didn't expel all of it.
He seemed to like the flavour of the breastmilk fortified cereal but
just wasn't sure of the texture. After a few fingerfuls, I tried
using his baby spoon again and he gradually got the hang of it.
He would also suck on his lower lip to clean up some of the cereal that
dribbled onto his chin.
Incredibly, most of his first feed ended up in his mouth! I hope this is the beginning of the makings of a foodie!
Saturday, August 28

G is for Good Bye
by
barb
on Sat 28 Aug 2004 08:52 PM PDT
Roland and I are very sad that Tammie and her twins, Benjamin and Michaela, are moving back to Ontario.
Tammie and I have had special times commiserating through our
pregnancies and births, and sharing the joys of our babies.
I will miss seeing our kids grow up together and I'll miss growing as a
parent with Tammie.
So good bye for now. We love you all.
Thursday, August 19

G is for Good, B is for Bad?
by
barb
on Thu 19 Aug 2004 08:41 PM PDT
Since I've been working more closely with parenting programs and
babies, I've been very sensitive about using the word "good" to
describe babies. When I hear people ask if a baby is "good", my skin
crawls because it infers that a baby can also be "bad". Babies
can never be bad.
I understand that by using "good" people mean that a baby is quiet,
passive, undemanding, etc. But surely people can think of other
ways of asking or talking about a baby's personality, habits,
temperament or behaviour.
Perhaps I am even more sensitive about the issue because Simon does not
fit into the quiet, passive baby mold. He is very vocal, active and
animated. He seems to be able to clearly display his emotions when he
is happy, excited and content, and as well as when his needs are not
being met.
And that is not "bad" at all.
Wednesday, August 18

8 is for 80s
by
Roland Tanglao
on Wed 18 Aug 2004 09:23 PM PDT
Joey (the happiest geek on earth) is asking for fav Canadian 80s tunes that weren't a hit in the States for a CD he is making for Wendy (very cool Bostonian and Joey's partner).
Almost all of the ones mentioned in the 85 comments so far are favourites of mine, here are a few that haven't been mentioned so far:
Breeding Ground - Reunion
Teenage Head - Let's Shake, Teenage Beer Drinking Party
L'Etranger - geez, I can't remember any of their songs now, but I loved their stuff back in the day
Andrew Cash - Trail of Tears
Monday, August 16

J is for Jump
by
barb
on Mon 16 Aug 2004 08:50 PM PDT
A couple of weeks ago, Simon figured out that jumping is lots of fun.
So he insists on having a few jumping sessions a day: we hold him under
his armpits and let him jump on a padded surface like the carpet or his
lambskin.
I'm amazed at how strong he is and how he intuitively figured out how
to bend his knees, drop his weight, and push off. And he does it over
and over and over again. We usually tire of this new game before he
does.
The other day he had the opportunity to try out Ben and Michaela's (the
twins) jolly jumper....hot dog! He had a heyday! I guess a jumping
device of some sort is on our shopping list.
Sunday, August 8

M is for Mother Goose
by
barb
on Sun 08 Aug 2004 04:04 PM PDT
A couple of weeks ago, Simon and I attended a week long Parent-Infant Mother Goose camp and had an absolute riot!
The premise of Mother Goose is for parents to bond with their babies
through songs and rhymes. Young children develop preliteracy skills
while parents have a chance to meet other new parents.
So we've learned a number of new songs, stories and lap games to keep
Simon entertained. It's amazing how he recognizes certain songs and
reacts to them in certain ways. I can't wait until the fall when we can
enroll in a 10 week session.
Monday, August 2

R is for Roll, F is for Flip
by
barb
on Mon 02 Aug 2004 10:23 AM PDT
This week Simon has figured out how to roll. At first it took
quite a bit of effort to roll then prop himself on his elbows to look
around. There was a lot of determined grunting. But now he is
rolling from his back to his belly and back over, usually with a good
long pause propped on his elbows to survey his surroundings.
In fact, he's had so much practise that he now quickly flips from his
back to his belly. And he props himself up and looks around for
several minutes before he tries to scoot forward.
We are entertained by watching him look around and enjoy his surroundings and by discovering how determined he is.

E is for East Van
by
Roland Tanglao
on Mon 02 Aug 2004 12:27 AM PDT
It looks like we are moving to East Van. Real estate is ridiculously priced in the city of Vancouver and we don't have the over $500, 000 needed in our beloved Kitsilano for a townhouse.
Fortunately, there are lots of great neighbourhoods in East Van and it looks like we'll be living in a decent one close to Trout Lake (perfect for the East Van Farmers' Market) and close to Commercial drive (perfect for La Grotta del Formaggio and Santa Barbara Market).
More if/when the deal closes.
Sunday, July 25

G is for Good Enough
by
Roland Tanglao
on Sun 25 Jul 2004 04:40 PM PDT
Words to live by!
Don't waste time striving for perfection in things that don't matter; for these things accept the advice of experts you trust and/or take what's good enough.
From Commencement 2004 - Barry Schwartz:
QUOTE I don't believe that society, or individuals, automatically self-correct. I think acts of will are required. And I have tried to suggest several things that you should will for yourself and for others, and work to achieve. I wish each of you a life in which good enough is good enough - a life governed by reasonable expectations, and filled with love and with work that is a calling. A life as part of a community that listens to you just as you listen to it. UNQUOTE
Tuesday, July 20

Steven Berlin Johnson - There should be a national debate over how many innocent deaths we're willing to tolerate for the hope of planting democracy's seeds in the country
by
Roland Tanglao
on Tue 20 Jul 2004 12:48 PM PDT
Amen!
From stevenberlinjohnson.com: The Body Count:
QUOTE To make a decision as a country to unilaterally invade and overthrow another country without confronting these images, and weighing them in the moral balance, is pure escapism of the worst kind. The fact that the US media has not had a daily tally of estimated Iraqi civilians killed is shameful; how are we to gauge whether our humanitarian ends justify the violent means if we're sheltered from the violence at every turn? It is not propaganda to be subjected to these images; it is moral accountability. Sitting in that theater, trying not to avert my eyes, I thought of all the times Jeff has invoked his first-person experience of 9/11 in debating the war on terror: seeing the violence and the suffering up close clearly colors everything he has written about our response to the attacks since then -- as well it should. But the media and the government have studiously kept us from comparable images of the violence that we've initiated in Iraq. Has the Bush administration ever released an estimate of total civilian deaths in Iraq? Is this not a relevant number? Shouldn't there be a national debate over how many innocent deaths we're willing to tolerate for the hope of planting democracy's seeds in the country? Is it appropriate, for starters, to kill more innocents than Bin Laden did on 9/11? We don't know, because even raising questions like these might undermine morale. To that I say: if we're not grownup enough as a nation to confront these questions and still support our troops, then we're not grownup enough to be starting elective wars in the first place. UNQUOTE
Friday, July 2

H is for Herring
by
Roland Tanglao
on Fri 02 Jul 2004 02:05 AM PDT
The Dutch and the Germans love eating herring. And so does Barb. But I don't. It's definitely a matter of taste or Geschmacksache as the Germans say.
Here's two videos of Dutch eating the "new herring" in a Dutch stylee (raw, dipped in onions and eating in a rather graceful :-) style, oodles of fun for 1.50 Euros) and one of the Dutch vendors preparing the herring.
Tuesday, June 29

E is for Euro2004
by
Roland Tanglao
on Tue 29 Jun 2004 04:13 PM PDT
Holland has Euro2004 fever now that they made it into the semi finals.
I was lucky enough to be at a Rotterdam bar on the night (Saturday night? jet lag is making my memory hazy!) Holland beat Sweden to make it into the semi finals.
Here are some videos (warning, big files and dark videos, turn up your brightness!) :
Bonus video:
In a Mellow Tone at the Rotterdam Jazz Festival.
Also check out My Euro 2004 Holland Beats Sweden photos over at Flickr.
Sunday, June 27

R is for Rotterdam
by
Roland Tanglao
on Sun 27 Jun 2004 12:09 PM PDT
Friday, June 18

G is for Gas
by
barb
on Fri 18 Jun 2004 12:01 PM PDT
Gas...not exorbitantly priced petrol. I'm talking about gastrointestinal gas. Not mine, but Simon's.
A few weeks ago I finally figured out that gas has been causing Simon's early dawn
grunting and restlessness. Because he's been so miserable, I've
resorted to giving him a dose or two of Ovol (not without guilt!).
At the Kitsilano Parent-Infant group a few weeks ago, the topic was infant
massage and one of the benefits is to help relieve gas. I looked
up massage techniques in Infant Massage: a Handbook for Loving
Parents by Vimala Schnider McClure and tried them out of Simon. I
think the massage actually helped, as Grandma Sofia reported that Simon
tooted away while she held him after a massage session!
Wednesday, June 9

S is for Sudan
by
Roland Tanglao
on Wed 09 Jun 2004 04:24 PM PDT
Or should this be B is for Black Helicopters?
Anyways, we need to do something about Sudan and we need to do it quickly. And the real answer to prevent and fix the Sudans/Rwandas/fill in the ridiculous numbers of genocides perpetrated by humans against humans in every continent over the centuries, etc. of this world is to have a real world government. No borders here ; the concept of super powers and nation states are obsolete and need to be re-thought (and no, I don't have the answer).
Finally, the reality of today's UN is a joke. We need a UN, just not the UN we have today. What we need is a UN that is non corrupt and representative of the entire world and not caught up in red tape. A tall order to fill!
Friday, May 28

Simon's Chinese Name Part 2
by
barb
on Fri 28 May 2004 11:32 AM PDT
Here's my dad's more detailed explanation of Simon's Chinese name:
"His given name "LUP YUN" means "grown to be a person with kind heart
and love". LUP means "to establish" or "to grow or to
become". YUN means kindness, humanity, love, benevolence, and is
the most important merit of all merits/virtues. "
Saturday, May 22

C is for Cup size
by
Roland Tanglao
on Sat 22 May 2004 09:25 PM PDT
On my way back from buying a mattress for the baby's crib at Sears (25% off today and yesterday only!), I shared the elevator down to the parking lot with two young women of Asian heritage who were loudly gossiping about plastic surgery.
At first I didn't clue in or really listen to what they were talking about but then they started going on about how one person went to a B from a C (or was it from a C to a B?) and how it cost $6000 for one person and $6500 for another.
Hmmm, I must be getting old and pretentious (and I know that breast reduction can relieve back strain in many cases and is therefore essential rather than merely cosmetic) but all I could think was: O tempora o mores. If only the energy and money that devoted to needless plastic surgery was diverted to something more meaningful, what a wonderful world this could be.
Sunday, May 16

Simon's Chinese Name
by
barb
on Sun 16 May 2004 08:50 PM PDT
My parents picked out a couple of Chinese names for Simon before his
birth and we had decided on one soon after his birth. We couldn't
decide, however, how to transliterate it into English. As we were
nearing his birth certificate application deadline, we had to decide.
So Simon's Chinese name is Lup Yun, meaning "upholding kindness, compassion" and is based on the first Confucian virtue.
Thursday, May 13

G is for Glidehouse
by
Roland Tanglao
on Thu 13 May 2004 11:10 PM PDT
I want a Glidehouse in a Vancouver stylee. In other words, one designed for our sub-tropical gray, rainy weather rather than the sunny weather of Novato. And I don't mind if it's smaller. I think a family of four could live in 1200 or even 1100 square feet if the layout is right.
(Via Troy Angrignon) - From The Fab New World of Prefab Houses / SF architect brings eco-friendly, modernist design to the average home buyer:
QUOTE But for this native Iowan with an amazon's stature and a schoolgirl's expressivity, the solution was neither to resign herself to becoming a lifetime member of the Tenants Union or pack off for more affordable pastures. Instead, Kauffman and Cullen surveyed the ruinous real estate landscape and decided to build.
They found a half-acre lot in Novato and began designing a home for it, something ultra simple, modern, green. Something affordable. She called it the Glidehouse.
The house that emerged was a long, low-slung, understated dwelling -- a marriage of Californian warmth and Japanese precision -- with a slanted roof and a long wall with a series of 8-foot-wide sliding-glass doors that can open onto a view or close off the interior from the elements. Louvered panels slide into place over the glass to create protection from the sun while still letting the breeze in. With only 1,344 square feet, the home includes a long great room that includes a kitchen, an eating area and a living room, as well as two bedrooms and two baths -- one with his-and-her stainless steel basins and a giant slate shower.
In both its design and its use of materials, Kaufmann incorporated the latest ideas about energy efficiency. She used not only standard green products such as bamboo flooring but also more unusual ones like blown insulation and concrete countertops mixed with recycled paper and fly ash, a coal-waste product. Rows of clerestory windows (those set in the upper portion of a wall to maximize natural light) reduce the need for daytime electricity and function as a natural system for ventilation and temperature control. The metal roof, made of Galvalume, a sheet metal with a zinc-and aluminum alloy coating, is designed to easily accommodate solar panels.
The pièce de résistance was the exterior -- a shell of organically mottled, rusted Corten steel resembling the curving sculptures of Richard Serra. UNQUOTE
Tuesday, May 11

R is for Rationalism
by
Roland Tanglao
on Tue 11 May 2004 03:32 PM PDT
Much as I it pains me (a believer in The Enlightenment and Rationalism) to admit it, everything including rationalism has its limits and limitations.
From Lion's Den - Lion Kimbro's Personal Web Site - Trans-Rational:
QUOTE I had the priveledge of talking with Michael Erickson, a cartoonist, over on the Visual Wiki.
While we were talking about "old academic prejudice against pictures," he passed an idea on to me: That maybe rationalism isn't all it's cooked up to be.
Here are the main two paragraphs of it:
Prior to the renaissance, almost everything was driven by superstition or the "rules of thumb" that were known to work. Rationalism introduced the notion that logic and reason could help you figure things out (thus becoming the cornerstone to the scientific model), but it leaves out a lot.
Having seen the result of convoluted logic collapsing complex computing systems ought to convince anyone that a good thing can be taken too far, which is the case where it comes to the "logic" and "reason" that drove the "modern" mindeset of the 20th century.
If you grok that completely, especially about "Rationalism" being taken "too far," then you have no need to read the rest of this blog entry.
It took me a while to learn what he was teaching me.
I didn't think much of it, originally, but it sort of took to some of the good soil in my mind, and over the next week or two, grew quickly. I would be walking, or doing the dishes, or testing games, or whatever- and find my mind chinking out the pieces around this idea.
I started to see it. UNQUOTE
Sunday, May 9

H is for Homeless
by
Roland Tanglao
on Sun 09 May 2004 09:51 PM PDT

C is for Crying
by
Roland Tanglao
on Sun 09 May 2004 11:34 AM PDT
This is the sound of our baby crying. Even his crying is cute!

H is for Hay Fever
by
Roland Tanglao
on Sun 09 May 2004 11:22 AM PDT
Hello, hay fever is bad, hence the voice!
Sunday, May 2

When you have the opportunity to do something that's socially responsible, you have an obligation to do that.
by
Roland Tanglao
on Sun 02 May 2004 07:36 AM PDT
Words to live by!
From Fast Company Now - Tea for Truth:
QUOTE What really clicked was a study my business professor Barry Nalebuff had done of the tea industry in India. He said we could even call it Honest Tea. When you have the opportunity to do something that's socially responsible, you have an obligation to do that.
So we brewed up some tea and took it to Whole Foods, and the buyer said, OK, we'll take 15,000 bottles. Now we really had to make the tea. Slotting fees? I couldn't do that. The business was me and these thermoses. We still got into our first set of stores. We eventually became the best-selling tea in the mid-Atlantic region. Then we became the best-selling tea in the natural foods category. And now we're in the Inc. 500.
Why did we call it Honest Tea? It is a less sweet drink. There's a social and health benefit to this. Look at the rise of juvenile diabetes. I try not to sell you as much on the brand as on the business. But there are bottled drinks out there where one bottle exceeds the U.S. RDA for sugar. Our teas are organic. There are no pesticides or herbicides. That's important because tea is never washed. The first time tea is washed is when you add hot water to your tea. Those are nice benefits. Honest Tea is the first company to have a fair trade bottled tea. Every time we sell a bottle, we have a positive impact.
We also try to create an authentic, honest product. We don't oversell. We try not to. We try to let people see what's in the product. We disclose as much as we can. There's nothing in here you can't pronounce. We try to sell a product that is what it says it is. That really inspires me and our company, but it isn't easy. UNQUOTE
Sunday, April 18

C is for Consistency
by
Roland Tanglao
on Sun 18 Apr 2004 12:30 AM PDT
I am glad the Canucks won game 6 but I was not happy with the officiating. Totally inconsistent. In this game they basically didn't call any penalties unlike earlier games in the series.
As I said beforeL enforce all the rules all the time. That along with banning fighting would go a long way in helping NHL hockey eliminate its culture of violence.
Saturday, April 10

C is for Cantonese
by
Roland Tanglao
on Sat 10 Apr 2004 03:21 PM PDT
Our son will definitely learn Cantonese and English since Barb and her parents speak Cantonese all the time and have every intention of speaking it to him! I fully support this. I love Cantonese's earthy, rich, organic tones and flavour. Lots of great expressions; a wonderful street language. And the grammar is very similar to Mandarin should he ever decide to learn that. As the kid's knowledge of Cantonese grows, so too will mine albeit at a slower pace of course.
As for other languages that I have some knowledge of, hmmm. I don't really speak Filipino but I do know the food words. So he definitely will learn the Tagalog (and Pampagueno, our Filipino dialect) food words that I know. And it goes without saying that we will cook all of the Filipino dishes we know for him!
I do speak pretty good German and have a large passive French knowledge and Barb's Mom speaks Mandarin.
So at the risk of linguistically confusing the kid (which I doubt) I will try to speak German to him and get Grandma to speak Manadarin to him. Please leave a comment if you know about German speaking pre-schools etc. in Vancouver.
And I will contact other parents who have a similar knowledge of German and see if I can get the kid into some sort of German daycare/pre-school.
Since this is Canada, we will, put him in French immersion if he shows a desire and the temperament for such a thing. Way too early to think about that!
But in the end if he doesn't end up being a polyglot, no big deal. I think it's more important to expose him to the different languages and get some level of fluency than to worry and obssess about him being totally fluent in any of the languages. The only language that he must speak well is English!
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