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  87% of Malaysian working here not interested in Citizenship of S'pore
Posted by: cfa - 17-01-2014, 07:46 PM - Forum: Others - Replies (11)

Thought they always find S'pore is a better place for them ?

http://news.omy.sg/News/Local-News/87Ben...Ren-232589

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  13-year-old student dies after PE lesson; second case this week
Posted by: pianist - 17-01-2014, 12:07 AM - Forum: Others - Replies (1)

didn't know these days so young 13yo already in junior college doing A level. a bit sad though

Thursday, Jan 16, 2014 The Straits TimesA 13-year-old student from Temasek Junior College died on Wednesday during a physical education (PE) lesson, after he reportedly had an asthma attack. Get the full story from The Straits Times . Translated from Lianhe Wanbao, Shin Min Daily: -

In a second such case in a single week, a 13-year-old student collapsed and died during a physical education (PE) class.According to Chinese daily Lianhe Wanbao, the incident happened yesterday morning outside Temasek Junior College. The paper identified him as Yan Jinfeng, an Integrated Programme student at the Junior College.A relative of the boy told Lianhe Wanbao that Jinfeng experienced dizziness during warm-up exercises, and had informed the teacher that he felt unwell. The relative said that soon after he informed the teacher, he fainted in front of his classmates.The teacher then immediately performed CPR on the boy. The school also quickly called for an ambulance to send him to the hospital.The Chinese daily reported that Jinfeng was taken to Changi General Hospital, where the doctors tried to save his life for two hours. Unfortunately, he did not respond to the doctors' efforts and passed away.According to the paper's understanding, the boy died from heart failure.Family members interviewed by the paper described Yan as a gifted student who had never let his parents worry about his studies."He scored well in last year's PSLE and was one of the outstanding students of his cohort at White Sands Primary School. He was a good and smart boy, who was a genius too. I can't believe he just left us like that," an unnamed relative said. - See more at: http://yourhealth.asiaone.com/content/12...mdVr3.dpuf

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  Merc beats BMW as best-selling brand here
Posted by: chialc88 - 15-01-2014, 08:54 AM - Forum: Others - Replies (25)

Merc beats BMW as best-selling brand here, followed by Toyota in 3rd place.

Self explanatory...


A Life not Reflected is a Life not Worth Living.

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  A foreigner's visit to a 'miracle' place called Singapore
Posted by: chialc88 - 15-01-2014, 08:43 AM - Forum: Others - Replies (2)

A foreigner's visit to a 'miracle' place called Singapore - ST Wang Tian

I have always wanted to visit Singapore. a predominantly Chinese city-style whose existence is unique in the world.

My daughter and I began our trip to Singapore on Christmas Eve after a long-time Singaporean friend Again invited me to visit.

Over the next few days, my daughter and I visited the Singapore Zoo, Night Safari, SEA aquarium and Jurong Bird Park.

These are world class zoos and aquarium. I never would have thought that a small country like Singapore could have such a big zoos.

Include Universal Studios, and you indeed have an entertainment paradise for children.

Before going to Singapore, I always thought that this international financial centre would be full of skycrapers.

I found on arrival there are different degree s of density. There are bustling streets, but they are spread out and it does not feel suffocating, thanks to the greenery.

Heart Love Compassion


A Life not Reflected is a Life not Worth Living.

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  SGX company disclosure
Posted by: Jacmar - 14-01-2014, 11:23 PM - Forum: Others - Replies (4)

Hi, need some technical help. Just happen lately that I am unable to access the company disclosure from the SGX website. Not sure if it is my computer or something wrong with the sgx website. When I get to the page for the drop down of announcement period or the company name, it wouldn't drop down and as a result I don't get any info when I click Go. Didn't do anything to my computer at all.

Pls help. Tks

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  Food centre re-opens to price hike grouses
Posted by: pianist - 14-01-2014, 11:16 PM - Forum: Others - Replies (6)

MyPaper
Monday, Jan 13, 2014
8 0 0

Food prices have gone up at the Tanjong Pagar Plaza Market & Food Centre since it re-opened this month, due to increases in rent and prices of ingredients.

Prices have gone up by about 50 cents at some stalls, and customers have taken their grouses online, Lianhe Wanbao reported yesterday.

The Chinese paper said that rents for the food stalls have gone up by about 20 per cent on average. The prices of prawns, cooking oil and other foodstuff have also risen in the 10 months the centre was under renovation.

A stall assistant, Ms Liu, who sells Hakka thunder-tea rice, said that prices have been upped because the rent has increased by $200 to more than $1,100.

Mr Liu Jin Cheng, 50, who runs the prawn-noodle stall, said his rent increased only from $180 to $192 as he is a first-generation hawker, but he now has to pay more for food ingredients.

"Compared to a year ago, the price of 1kg of prawns has doubled from around $8 to $16. Two kilogrammes of cooking oil cost $3, now it's $6; the cleaning fees rose from $300 to $400, so we had to raise prices," he said.

But there were also stall owners who kept their old prices.

Lor-mee stall owner Cai Lan Ying, 60, said costs have gone up, but she will adjust the amount of ingredients served in her dish according to price fluctuations.

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  2 arrested in rare case of kidnapping in Singapore
Posted by: CityFarmer - 09-01-2014, 04:47 PM - Forum: Others - Replies (22)

The mother of Sheng Song's boss was kidnapped. She was released and safe now...

2 arrested in rare case of kidnapping in Singapore

SINGAPORE — Police today (Jan 9) arrested two Chinese men, aged 41 and 50, in a rare kidnapping case in Singapore.

The police were notified of the case at around 2pm yesterday when Mr Lim Hock Chee reported that an unknown person had demanded a S$20 million for the return of his 79-year-old mother, who was last seen in the vicinity of Hougang yesterday morning.

The victim was abducted from the roadside and was alone at the time.

Mr Lim, 52, is the CEO of supermarket chain Sheng Siong.
...
http://www.todayonline.com/singapore/2-a...-singapore

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  Singapore scientists devise sensor to recreate flavours on the tongue
Posted by: rogerwilco - 09-01-2014, 12:37 PM - Forum: Others - No Replies

http://www.foodnavigator-asia.com/conten...int/864543

By RJ Whitehead, 08-Jan-2014
Related topics: Policy, Asian tastes

Researchers at the National University of Singapore have found a way to replicate food and drink flavours on the tongue with a virtual simulator.
The brainchild of Dr Nimesha Ranasinghe, who headed the project, the digital device is non-invasive and uses an electric probe to generate signals that are then transmitted through a silver electrode.

Tip of the tongue

Salty, sweet, sour and bitter sensations are produced by touching a probe to the tip of the tongue to produce a simulation of different tastes. By varying the levels of electrical current and the temperature of the electrode, these sensations can reproduce the tastes of different foods and drinks. Sour, salty and bitter sensations were reported by subjects from electrical stimulation, while minty, spicy and sweet sensations were shown through thermal stimulation. The latter group represented minor sensations, which means that further work is needed to intensify these
tastes. The responses also varied between individuals.

Ranasinghe said the team’s work consisted of three aspects. “First, there is the study of electronic simulation and control of taste sensations that can be achieved through the digital taste interface against the properties of current and change in temperature. “Then there is the method of actuating taste sensations by electrical and thermal stimulation methods, either individually or in combination. And finally the aim of introducing a practical solution to implement virtual taste interactions in interactive computing systems.”

The researcher began his project as a graduate student at the NUS Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, and then continued the work to develop a taste-over-Internet protocol for taste messaging—a data format that facilitates the delivery of information on recreating the different tastes via the electrode.

Gaming and healthcare

Ranasinghe, a Sri Lankan who also has a research interest in the digital simulation of smell sensations, said that the gaming industry could be an early adopter of the simulator as a new reward system based on taste
sensations in a gaming environment. “If a gamer completes a task or level successfully, a sweet or minty dose will be rewarded,” he said. “However,
failure is delivered with a bitter taste.” The simulator could also have healthcare applications. For instance, diabetics could use the device to mimic sweet tastes without affecting their blood sugar levels. Cancer patients might also be able to improve their dulled sense of taste during chemotherapy with the electrode.

However, Ranasinghe said the four major tastes form only part of the flavour equation. Smell and texture play
key roles too, and the researchers want to add these to the sensor in the future to provide a full tasting experience.

Copyright - Unless otherwise stated all contents of this web site are © 2014 - William Reed Business Media SAS - All Rights Reserved - For permission toreproduce any contents of this web site, please email our Syndication department copyright@wrbm.com - Full details for the use of materials on this sitecan be found in the Terms & Conditions

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  Patients housed in 2 tents at CGH
Posted by: pianist - 08-01-2014, 11:19 PM - Forum: Others - Replies (3)

wow..what happened?

Wednesday, Jan 08, 2014 RazorTVSINGAPORE - Two large tents sit at the back of Changi General Hospital's Emergency Department, where patients wait eagerly for a hospital bed to be freed up.The tents were set up to help deal with the severe bed crunch at the hospital. These temporary quarters house up to a hundred patients.RazorTV reported that some of the patients have to wait up to two days to move to the wards. But CGH is not the only public hospital struggling with bed shortage.Others like Khoo Teck Huat Hospital and Tan Tock Seng Hospital are sending some of their more stable patients by ambulance to Alexandra Hopistal - which still has available beds.But it seems that the bed shortage will only be eased towards the end of the year, when the new Ng Teng Fong Hospital in Jurong and the 280 bed building - shared by CGH and St Andrew's Community Hospital - opens. - See more at: http://yourhealth.asiaone.com/content/pa...nrAiP.dpuf

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  Run Run Shaw, Movie Mogul Seen as Creator of Kung Fu Genre, Dies at 106
Posted by: rogerwilco - 08-01-2014, 10:04 AM - Forum: Others - Replies (6)

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/07/movies...nted=print

by JONATHAN KANDELL
Run Run Shaw, the colorful Hong Kong media mogul whose name was synonymous with low-budget Chinese action and horror films — and especially with the wildly successful kung fu genre, which he is largely credited with inventing — died on Tuesday at his home in Hong Kong. He was 106.

His company, Television Broadcasts Limited, announced his death in a statement.

Born in China, Mr. Shaw and his older brother, Run Me, were movie pioneers in Asia, producing and sometimes directing films and owning lucrative cinema chains. His companies are believed to have released more than 800 films worldwide.

After his brother’s death in 1985, Mr. Shaw expanded his interest in television and became a publishing and real estate magnate as well. For his philanthropy, much of it going to educational and medical causes, he was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II and showered with public expressions of gratitude by the Communist authorities in Beijing.

Mr. Shaw enjoyed the zany glamour of the Asian media world he helped create. He presided over his companies from a garish Art Deco palace in Hong Kong, a cross between a Hollywood mansion and a Hans Christian Andersen cookie castle. Well into his 90s he attended social gatherings with a movie actress on each arm. And he liked to be photographed in a tai chi exercise pose, wearing the black gown of a traditional mandarin.

Asked what his favorite films were, Mr. Shaw, a billionaire, once replied, “I particularly like movies that make money.”

Run Run Shaw was born Shao Yifu in Ningbo, Zhejiang Province, in 1907. As a child, he moved to Shanghai, where his father ran a profitable textile business. According to some Hong Kong news media accounts, Run Run and Run Me were English-sounding nicknames the father gave his sons as part of a family joke that played on the similarity of the family name to the word rickshaw.

Evincing little interest in the family business, Run Run and Run Me turned instead to entertainment. The first play they produced was called “Man From Shensi,” on a stage, as it turned out, of rotten planks. As the brothers often told the story, on opening night the lead actor plunged through the planks, and the audience laughed. The Shaws took note and rewrote the script to include the incident as a stunt. They had a hit, and in 1924 they turned it into their first film.

After producing several more movies, the brothers decided that their homeland, torn by fighting between Nationalists and Communists, was too unstable. In 1927 they moved to Singapore, which was then part of British colonial Malaya.

Besides producing their own films in Singapore, the brothers imported foreign movies and built up a string of theaters. Their business boomed until the Japanese invaded the Malay Peninsula in 1941 and stripped their theaters and confiscated their film equipment. But according to Run Run Shaw, he and his brother buried more than $4 million in gold, jewelry and currency in their backyard, which they dug up after World War II and used to resume their careers.

With the rise of Hong Kong as the primary market for Chinese films, Run Run Shaw moved there in 1959, while his brother stayed behind looking after their Singapore business.

In Hong Kong, Run Run Shaw created Shaw Movietown, a complex of studios and residential towers where his actors worked and lived. Until then, the local industry had turned out 60-minute films with budgets that rarely exceeded a few thousand dollars. Shaw productions ran up to two hours and cost as much as $50,000 — a lavish sum by Asian standards at the time.

Mr. Shaw went on to plumb the so-called dragon-lady genre with great commercial success. Movies like “Madame White Snake” (1963) and “The Lady General” (1965) offered sexy, combative, sometimes villainous heroines, loosely based on historical characters. And by the end of the 1960s, he had discovered that martial-arts films in modern settings could make even more money.

His “Five Fingers of Death” (1973), considered a kung fu classic, was followed by “Man of Iron” (1973), “Shaolin Avenger” (1976) and many others. Critics dismissed the films as artless and one-dimensional, but spectators crowded into the theaters to cheer, laugh or mockingly hiss at the action scenes. To ensure that his films were amply distributed, Mr. Shaw’s chain of cinemas grew to more than 200 houses in Asia and the United States. “We were like the Hollywood of the 1930s,” he said. “We controlled everything: the talent, the production, the distribution and the exhibition.”

Other Hong Kong producers, directors and actors called Mr. Shaw’s methods iron-fisted. In 1970, Raymond Chow, a producer with Mr. Shaw’s company, Shaw Brothers, left to form his own company, Golden Harvest, which gave more creative and financial independence to top directors and stars.

Mr. Chow’s biggest success, and Mr. Shaw’s most notable loss, was his decision to bankroll Bruce Lee. Mr. Lee initially approached Shaw Brothers, which turned down his demand for a long-term contract of $10,000 per film. Golden Harvest then offered Mr. Lee creative control and profit-sharing.

“The Big Boss,” better known as “Fists of Fury” (1971), was Mr. Lee’s first film with Golden Harvest, and it broke all Hong Kong box-office records. Other big-name actors and directors flocked to Golden Harvest, breaking Shaw Brothers’ virtual monopoly.

But Run Run Shaw had already expanded beyond the film industry. His investments in the new phenomenon of Asian television were to prove even more lucrative than his movie productions. In 1972 he began Television Broadcasts (TVB), and he soon gained control of 80 percent of the Hong Kong market. TVB churned out 12 hours of its own programming a day, much of it soap operas and costume dramas that riveted Chinese television viewers on the mainland and throughout Southeast Asia.

As his fortune grew, Mr. Shaw donated generously to hospitals, orphanages and colleges in Hong Kong, for which he was awarded the Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1974 and a knighthood in 1977. In 1990 he donated 10 million pounds to help establish the Run Run Shaw Institute of Chinese Affairs at Oxford University, where his four children had studied. In 2004 he established the Shaw Prize, an international award for research in astronomy, mathematics and medicine. As Hong Kong’s days as a British colony dwindled, Mr. Shaw stepped up his philanthropy in China. He contributed more than $100 million to scores of universities on the mainland and raised money in support of Chinese victims of floods and other natural disasters. Chinese leaders toasted him for his generosity at banquets in Beijing.

Mr. Shaw’s philanthropy did not extend to the United States, but he was once viewed as a white knight in New York. In 1991, when Macy’s was on the verge of bankruptcy, he bought 10 percent of its preferred shares for $50 million, becoming one of the largest shareholders in R. H. Macy & Company.

The investment had a personal aspect. Ten years earlier, Mitchell Finkelstein, the son of Macy’s chief executive, Edward S. Finkelstein, had married Hui Ling, a Shaw protégée who appeared in many of his movies. Mr. Shaw met the older Finkelstein at the wedding, and they became friends.

In later years, the aging mogul himself seemed in need of help to keep his media empire intact. Concerned with the rise of cable and satellite television, he sold a 22 percent stake in TVB to Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation in 1993.

Mr. Shaw had intended to maintain control over his media business by balancing his one-third share in TVB against Mr. Murdoch’s 22 percent and the 24 percent held by Robert Kuok, one of Hong Kong’s richest entrepreneurs. But the balance of power shifted when Mr. Murdoch sold his equity to Mr. Kuok shortly afterward. Then, in 1996, in Hong Kong’s first case of a hostile takeover, Mr. Kuok forced Mr. Shaw to sell him his shares in TVE, the lucrative publishing, music and real estate subsidiary of TVB. The deal reduced Mr. Shaw’s TVB stake to 23 percent.

Mr. Shaw’s business situation was also hindered by his inability to groom credible successors. His sons, Vee Meng and Harold, were at one time heavily involved in the family enterprises, but their relationship with him had become strained.

Even after turning 90, Mr. Shaw maintained a powerful presence in the Hong Kong film world through his control of Shaw Studios. But a newer generation of independent producers came to dominate the Hong Kong market with their own violent brand of police and gangster films.

Quote:Lessons from Run Run Shaw's long, kung fu-fueled life
http://upstart.bizjournals.com/entrepren...j&page=all
Teresa Novellino
Upstart Business Journal Entrepreneurs & Enterprises Editor
January 7, 2014, 1:06pm EST

The UpTake:Run Run Shaw was a pioneer of the Asian film industry, running his businesses like a Hollywood movie mogul. The 106-year-old, who died today, leaves plenty of lessons for fellow entrepreneurs in other industries.

There are movie makers and then there are movie moguls. Run Run Shaw, a billionaire Chinese filmmaker who is credited with creating the kung fu film genre and who died today at age 106, was by all accounts the latter.

Born in Singapore, Shaw and his older brother, Run Me Shaw, were prolific businessmen who founded the Asia-based movie studio Shaw Brothers. The younger Shaw later became chairman of Hong Kong's Television Broadcasts in 1980. The stars in Shaw's orbit included award-winning actors such as Chow Yun-fat and Maggie Cheung, as well as John Woo, who later directed Mission Impossible 2.

With Run Run Shaw moving to Hong Kong in the 1950s to grow the business, the Shaw brothers released some 800 films altogether ranging from The One-Armed Swordsman, and The Five Fingers of Death to 1982 science fiction classic Blade Runner. At one point accounting for half of the movie Asian film industry's box-office receipts, Shaw's films have influenced younger filmmakers followed including Quentin Tarantino, who pays homage to his influence in the Kill Bill films.

What lessons can entrepreneurs glean from Shaw's long, long life? Here's what we gathered up:

Vertical ownership: In addition to producing and directing films themselves, Shaw had ownership in 200 cinema chains in Asia and the United States. It was a maneuver that unabashedly copied from Hollywood and one that allowed the company to control everything from the talent that appeared on the screen to the venue in which filmgoers watched their movies.

Business vs. losing Bruce Lee: Despite his proficiency in the magical aspects of filmmaking, Shaw very much considered the movie business a business. "Films are an art; they are also an industry," Shaw said, according to a 1981 interview in Signature magazine that was cited by Bloomberg. "Forget that a moment and you have a money loser in your hands." That said, one of his worst blunders involved his refusal to budge from his rule that he would pay newcomers only $2,000 per film. Bruce Lee, who went on to become a huge kung fu movie star, went with Golden Harvest Films, a rival company started by former Shaw Brothers executive Raymond Chow, which paid him $7,500 for a film.

Rainy-day fund: When Japan invaded the Malay Peninsula in 1941, soldiers stripped the Shaw brothers' theaters and confiscated their film equipment. But the two men had accumulated some liquid assets: $4 million in gold, jewelry and currency which they buried and then dug up post-war to pick up where they left off, according to an obituary in the New York Times.

Look the part: According to the Times, Shaw's headquarters was an art deco-inspired Hong Kong palace that resembled "a cross between a Hollywood mansion and a Hans Christian Andersen cookie castle." Well into his 90s, he would show up at movie events with an actress on either arm.

Don't alienate half the audience: Face it, men tend to enjoy movies with fight scenes more than women, perhaps because they identify with the male stars kicking butt. But, bring some female actors into the picture, and that ups the intrigue for all moviegoers. Shaw was credited with delving into the "dragon-lady genre" with films like Madame White Snake (1963) that featured sultry actresses playing the role of heroine or villain.

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