White Rabbit Candy is Chemical Rabbit Candy???

Singapore July 19th, 2007

Read in the news that the White Rabbit candy is currently being tested by the AVA for formaldehyde - a chemical that is being used to embalm the dead. Personally, this is quite a shock because this had been my favourite sweet and is something I still enjoy now.

White Rabbit Candy (TheCoffee, Wiki)

Photo courtesy of TheCoffee @ Wikipedia

Come to think of it, it does taste a little funny recently, but I thought it was just because my tongue is too sensitive.

Apparently the presence of this chemical was first detected from the Philippines and the AVA is acting on factual claims. The factory in Shanghai has also refuted all claims and it’s possible that it had been externally comtaminated. News from straitstimes.com reproduced below:

WHITE Rabbit Creamy Candy - a name instantly recognisable to most adults and children - has come under scrutiny.

The milky candy with its characteristic white wrapper and translucent edible rice-paper is being tested by the Agri-food and Veterinary Authority (AVA) for a chemical it should not contain - Formaldehyde.

This preservative is commonly used to embalm the dead.

The tests follow reports of the presence of this banned substance by the Philippine authorities, which has asked shops to take the product off their shelves within a month.

Importer Hock Lam, which has been bringing the sweet in from Shanghai for 50 years, said AVA officials had dropped by on Wednesday to take several packets for ‘testing purposes’.

AVA confirmed this.

AVA said it will only send out alerts when they are certain this is not a false alarm. It says testing is being carried out in its laboratories now for possible contamination.

White Rabbit’s manufacturer, Shanghai Guan Sheng Yuan Group, has refuted all allegations by the Philippine government.

It said it has run its own tests for the chemical, but found no traces of formaldehyde. It has asked Manila for the relevant test results and samples.

***
Update: The AVA has confirmed that the candy contains only minute amounts of formaldehyde and is safe for consumption. However, on a personal opinion, I’m not too sure if eating too much of it would be hazardous. :(

The Sony Vaio TZ series

Technology July 19th, 2007

It’s official! The TZ will be release later this year, somewhere in August. Sources here, here and here.

Sony Vaio TZ series

Two models were listed, VAIO TZ11MN/N and VAIO TZ11XN/B, seemingly differentiated only by basic hardware choices such as RAM, hard-drive and lid colour (1GB, 80GB and silver, respectively, on the N; 2GB, 100GB and black on the B). Otherwise it’s niceties such as the 11.1-inch X-black LED-backlit display (running at WXGA 1366 x 768), built in DVD re-writer, gigabit ethernet, a/b/g WiFi and Bluetooth 2.0

No release date has been established yet, nor prices, but they’re expected to be released at some point in the Summer.

I had been contemplating on getting either a Fujitsu or Sony lightweight laptop because my current Fujitsu P7120 had been burning my laps and crawling like a snail. The latest addition to the problem is a batter that dies out after 7 mins. Now, I am at the mercy of an external battery that dies off without notice. Sigh.

Apparently, the Wireless-n which is expected to coming along is sorely missing in the specifications. However, at 2.62 lbs which is approximately 1.2 kg, with an 11.1 inch screen and 7.5 hours of batter life with everything else built-in, it’s still a good set of configuration. I am not sure of the price though. Gizmostuffs mentioned that it costs $2,299, which I suspect is in USD. While this translates to S$3,699 with an exchange rate of about S$1.6 = US$1, I suspect that it might jolly well retail for S$3,999, just a dollar shy of S$4,000.

For the record, I paid S$3,699 for mine, over a period of 2 years. Yes, I am still paying for it.

And oh, did I mention that the CSO at Fujitsu Service Center force shutdown my laptop and effectively erasing everything that was in hibernation? Yes, I will rant about that soon. I thought they were rather irresponsible. I hope someone from Fujitsu is reading this - that because of that incident, I am switching over to Sony.

Anyway, the specifications are below… and it’s making me drool…

VAIO VGN-TZ11MN/N

# Processor: Intel Core 2 Duo U7500, 1.06 GHz
# OS: Windows® Vista Professional
# Memory: 1GB DDR2 SDRAM (max 2GB)
# Hard Drive: 80 GB Ultra ATA (4200 rpm)
# Optical Drive: DVD+-RW/+-R DL/RAM
# Screen: 11,1” X-black LCD with LED backlight, WXGA (1366 x 768)
# Graphics: Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 950
# Ethernet (1000Base-T / 100 BASE-TX / 10 BASE-T);
# Modem: V.92/V.90
# Wireless: Wi-Fi IEEE 802.11 a/b/g, Bluetooth 2.0 + EDR support
# Microphone integrated
# Protection: Shock protection G-Sensor Hard Drive
# Instant On technology
# Ports:

* 1 i.LINK (IEEE1394, 4 Pin), 400 Mbps port
* 1 DC in
* 1 Audio out
* 1 RJ-11 Modem
* 1 RJ-45 Direct Port (Network)
* 2 USB 2.0 Port
* Fingerprint reader
* 1 VGA port connection
* 1 Microphone
* 1 SD card Slot
* 1 Express Card 34mm
* Memory Stick Reader (Duo, Memory Stick PRO duo, MagicGate)
* “Motion Eye” Camera ( 20 Images per second), 0.3 Mega Pixels, max video resolution VGA (640×480)

VAIO VGN-TZ11XN/B
# Dimensions: 7.8-in x .89-in - 1.17in x 10.9-in (198 ,2 mm x 22.5-29.8 mm x 277 mm)
# Weight: 2.62lbs
# Processor: Intel Core 2 Duo U7500, 1.06 GHz
# OS: Windows Vista Professional
# Memory: 2GB DDR2 SDRAM (max 2GB)
# Hard Drive: 100 GB Ultra ATA (4200 rpm)
# Optical Drive: DVD+-RW/+-R DL/RAM
# Screen: 11.1” X-black LCD with LED backlight, WXGA (1366 x 768)
# Graphics: Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 950
# Ethernet (1000Base-T / 100 BASE-TX / 10 BASE-T);
# Modem intégré V.92/V.90
# Wireless: Wi-Fi IEEE 802.11 a/b/g, Bluetooth 2.0 + EDR support
# Microphone integrated
# Protection: Shock protection G-Sensor Hard Drive
# Instant On technology
# Ports:

* 1 i.LINK (IEEE1394, 4 Pin), 400 Mbps port
* 1 DC in
* 1 Audio out
* 1 RJ-11 Modem
* 1 RJ-45 Direct Port (Network)
* 2 USB 2.0 Port
* Fingerprint reader
* 1 VGA port connection
* 1 Microphone
* 1 SD card Slot
* 1 Express Card 34mm
* Memory Stick Reader (Duo, Memory Stick PRO duo, MagicGate)
* “Motion Eye” Camera ( 20 Images per second), 0.3 Mega Pixels, max video resolution VGA (640×480)

# Dimensions: 7.8-in x .89-in - 1.17in x 10.9-in (198 ,2 mm x 22.5-29.8 mm x 277 mm)
# Weight: 2.62lbs

ST: Firms still shy of offering work-life balance perks

Singapore July 19th, 2007

Having worked in a few places, including an internship at a government agency, I realised that the only place (out of the few places that I have worked in, that is) that seemed to promote work-life balance is at the government agency. It wasn’t that there were any perks that came along with it, but rather, the place that I worked at switched off all their air-con at 7pm and lights at 8pm, hence that’s about the latest that you can stay to. Any later, we’d have to write in.

Of course, some people would say that this is red tape. For me, it’s a good way to make sure everyone goes home at a reasonable time. I seldom had to go home later than 7pm and I was quite glad for them. Why so? It’s because I’d worked in a private company before and stayed in office for more than 72 hours working - that’s 3 days for you.

Private companies tend to be more aware of their bottomline and it becomes imperative that their target milestones be met regardless of anything - and that meant you sacrificing your sleep. At the end of the day, they will just give you a pat on your back and that’s it. No further benefits, not even time off. In fact, asking for time off is a taboo. If you are rushing to finish some stuffs or to meet a milestone, the company thinks that you are slow.

You don’t have to stay back if you can complete your work in time everyday.

Yes, that’s what they always say. What the company doesn’t know is that the project manager is usually at fault for underestimating the timeline so that the company objectives can be met. I am not saying that the project manager should go against company objectives, but rather, I felt that he should have raised awareness that there is really insufficient time or that more resources are needed instead of forcing the team members to finish in 2 days things that normally need 5.

I simply can’t stand PMs who thinks their team members are robots. At the end of the day, we get pressurized, scolded, ill-treated and cold-shouldered when we can’t meet their targets. This is really ridiculous.

While the government agency didn’t provide perks as per se, the “red tapes” in place for applying for extension of working hours (in terms of air-con and lights) with a notification period somehow ensures that you will not be greeted with sudden OT. Of course, if you are working on computer-based projects, this doesn’t stop you from bringing work home, but at least you get to go home. :P

But why would people subject themselves to such sadistic treatments? Pay. Companies compensate by offering a better pay package. However, better pay is relative and it’s really up to the individual to weight his priorities between work-life balance and fatter pay checks. So it does seem that you either have more time with less pay or less time with more pay. You can’t have the cake and eat it. News article reproduced from straitstimes.com below:

HELPING employees strike a balance between work and having a life outside the office has yet to catch on in a big way here.

Less than half the 627 executives polled recently by human resource consultancy Hudson said their companies offered perks such as flexible working hours, sabbaticals or gym membership.

Fewer executives also appear to be enjoying such benefits compared to two years ago: 46 per cent of those surveyed this year against 48 per cent in 2005.

This picture emerged in Hudson’s survey which was conducted in May to gauge employment outlook for the July to September period.

Explaining the dip in executives benefiting from work-life balance perks, Hudson’s country manager Mark Sparrow said: ‘It’s not that companies are discarding this concept. But it’s difficult to measure its effectiveness.’

With most firms engaged in a war for talent - which he said is becoming quite ‘mercenary’ - they prefer to attract and retain employees in more tangible ways like offering higher salaries.

Hudson found that the proportion of firms intending to hire employees from July to September remains high: 54 per cent.

Taking the lead is the consumer sector, with 58 per cent of firms having such plans. This is up from 51 per cent in the previous quarter.

The hiring boost is due to growth in areas such as entertainment, leisure and tourism.

But firms find it tough to hire suitable staff, with 38 per cent believing that a shortage of skilled workers is the most pressing challenge.

Thus, higher salaries are seen as the most important measure to attract top talent, with 27 per cent of firms saying so.

But it may surprise these employers that high pay is not what matters most to Singaporeans when they look for a job.

A recent survey by global recruitment firm Robert Walters found that 35 per cent of those polled said work-life balance was the main reason to join or stay on with an employer. Only about 15 per cent looked out for a great salary and benefits package.

The Hudson survey found that the most common work-life balance benefit is flexible working hours. The proportion of executives who enjoy this perk almost tripled, from 25 per cent in 2005 to 70 per cent this year.

Work-life balance programmes were most prevalent in the banking sector. Swiss bank UBS has a range of benefits, such as allowing employees to work from home and giving female staff 15 weeks of maternity leave - three weeks more than what the law provides for.

‘We believe that beyond the tangible compensations of work, our employees need to have a balanced, healthy and fun lifestyle in order to find fulfilment in their professional and personal lives,’ said its chief operating officer Teo Lay Sie.

OCBC Bank also offers staff flexible hours like part-time work and set up a recreational clubhouse and an in-house childcare centre.

‘We look at work-life balance as an increasingly important business component to attract and retain talent,’ said Ms Jacinta Low, head of planning and employee communications.

‘Our experience has shown that the promotion of a work-life balance culture helps to improve employees’ engagement, reduce staff turnover and improve customers’ satisfaction.’

sueann@sph.com.sg

Medisave for sole proprietors in Singapore

Singapore July 19th, 2007

Claudia was asking about how to register a business in Singapore, and like her initially, isn’t S$65 all you have to pay to start a sole proprietory business? (S$68 if you take the Business Profile offer @ S$3 instead of the usual $5). Then reality strikes.

I found out that:

  • you have to top up your own Medisave if you earn more than $6000 as a sole proprietor - there is some formula at the CPF website that gives you an estimate of how much you’d have to fork out
  • you have to top it up before you are allowed to renew your licence
  • the actual amount to top up can be obtained from the CPF website (just your NRIC and birthdate is needed)
  • IRAS will send you reminders anyway
  • you will be given an estimate (or exempted) for your first year’s top up figure
  • you can veto the estimate for the first year :P

Most of the information can be obtained from http://www.acra.gov.sg/company/business.html too. Now I know what to do next time when I register my own business. :P

ST: Mindef explains its decisions over Li Hongyi affair

Singapore July 18th, 2007

Read in straitstimes.com again on Mindef’s stand over 2Lt Li’s case. After reading the article twice, I thought they really didn’t say anything much and it’s really not that newsworthy. I mean, everyone can see with their own eyes that Mindef is trying to be partial… but I guess people are more concerned with… who is the world is LTA X? Article from straitstimes.com reproduced below.

THE Defence Ministry (Mindef) has given a more detailed account of why it acted the way it did against Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s son, who had broadcast a letter of complaint about a colleague to several other servicemen.

The act by Second-Lieutenant Li Hongyi, 20, had created much chatter on the Internet.

Readers have also sent letters to The Straits Times Forum and posted their comments on ST’s online discussion board.

In his letter, 2LT Li had alleged that another officer from his unit had been absent without leave or AWOL on two occasions.

He added that although he had reported the matter to the officer’s supervisors, no disciplinary action was taken.

While the officer will be court-martialled, 2LT Li was reprimanded for the way he had disseminated his complaint.

Mindef’s spokesman said in a statement on Wednesday that 2LT Li’s actions in broadcasting his complaint to many other officers and servicemen ‘contravened the General Orders of the Ministry of Defence which require complaints to be brought up through the proper channels and procedures.’

So 2LT Li was formally charged and reprimanded in a summary trial earlier this month.

The spokesman added that any serviceman who wants to seek redress ‘can raise the matter up to his chain of command, and up to the Armed Forces Council, chaired by the Defence Minister, if the serviceman is dissatisfied with the action that has been taken by his commanders’.

This is a procedure set out in the Recruit’s Handbook, a copy of which is given to all enlistees.

This case, the spokesman said, also shows ‘the fair and equitable way in which the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) treats all its servicemen, with each one receiving nothing more, nor less, than what any serviceman is entitled to.’

He added: ‘The SAF investigates all complaints that are not anonymous and takes action against any serviceman who has breached its regulations, regardless of who the complainant and the servicemen involved are.’

The SAF, the spokesman said, expects all its servicemen to carry out their duties faithfully, acting with integrity and observing the highest standards of discipline.’

They include reporting any instances of misconduct and breaches of regulations.

But the spokesman stressed: ‘There are established procedures and channels for servicemen to do so. Such procedures are needed in a military organisation to maintain discipline, uphold morale and to protect confidential information.’

As per forumer weehing69, I can’t help but agree with his statement:

This is another typical civil service reply. “We have this and that options, this and that help. If you still face problems, that’s too bad. Thank you and have a nice day.”

But I also respect the last statement given by the spokesman mentioned in the article that Mindef also has a responsibility to uphold confidentiality. As much as I would like to find out who LTA X is, I am also aware that there’s very little that I, as a commoner, can do.

Of course besides wanting to know who LTA X is, I am also curious why LTA X did such a stupid thing as AWOL from camp jolly well knowing that the other party is 龙的传人. Sigh… and oh, do go to mrbrown.com for a good laugh.

ST: Water spout seen off Changi

Singapore July 18th, 2007

Was reading through the straitstimes.com when I saw this article:

PEOPLE at Changi Airport Terminal 1 were treated to the sight of a water spout off the coast of Changi at 10am yesterday.

It ’stretched right up to the clouds’ and was ‘awesome’, said 33-year-old Rashedi Abdul Rahman.

The fire alarm technician was checking the airport’s system of alarms when he saw the funnel of water out at sea.

It was gone in two minutes, but it was time enough for him to point his cellphone at it to snapthis picture, which he sent to Stomp, The Straits Times’ interactive portal.

Water spouts appear when thunderstorm clouds create pockets of low pressure. A column of water is then sucked up towards the base of the cloud.

Fairly common in tropical waters, water spouts have appeared at least four times this year.

They can pose a threat to small boats out at sea, but usually weaken and vanish when they come nearer to shore.

Did anyone else see the water sprout? The last one was just about a month or so away. Sigh… I think this is the result of global warming and we really need to do something about it. However, with the death of Ang Sar Nah, Singapore has just moved 1 level down the list of eco-friend nations. :(

Changi Water Sprout

Pictures, anyone? Picture above.

Was officer who went AWOL a.. what?

Singapore July 17th, 2007

Princeling (太子), that’s what the author in the online forum called him. Personally, I found it strange that for someone to AWOL that often (2x), he’s still holding his rank and moving about. I am aware that these things happen within an organization, but I’d have thought that the SAF is rather regiment about such things and it’s a place where insubordination gets you charged before you are demoted or fired. In the private sector, you probably can just turn your back and leave. Hmm…

REPRIMAND FOR PM’S NS SON
Was officer who went AWOL a ‘princeling’?

I REFER to the article, ‘PM Lee’s son in NS reprimanded by SAF’ (ST, July 13).
The question some readers like me would want to ask is who is the officer from the same unit as Second Lieutenant Li Hongyi who went absent without leave, or AWOL, not once but twice, and yet his supervising officers did not take appropriate disciplinary action against him.

Reading the article, one is troubled by whether the officer is the son of some hotshot who thought he could get away with such a serious matter as AWOL. And were the supervising officers so concerned about their careers that they rendered ‘poor judgment in administering inappropriate action’? So much so that it took the Prime Minister’s son to stick his neck out and expose such goings-on, even though in the end he was himself ‘formally charged and administered a reprimand after a summary trial’.

While it is understandable that the Ministry of Defence (Mindef) would not want to divulge names, still it should say whether the AWOL officer is the son of some high-level politician, big-shot businessman or some other very important person - in other words, a ‘princeling’. This is so that the public can be satisfied, and senior officers in the SAF will take to heart, that no matter how privileged one’s background is, such a serious transgression as AWOL will not go unpunished, and that it shouldn’t take a prime minister’s son going to great lengths in order for such things to be exposed. If it were an ordinary soldier, he would have been charged and put under detention for AWOL without anyone batting an eyelid.

If indeed the AWOL officer is a ‘princeling’, I am sure readers will join me in commending 2nd Lt Li for taking a courageous stand in ensuring that justice is done, even though at much trouble to himself. If the officer had got away with AWOL twice, what else would he have tried getting away with in future?

So, even though 2nd Lt Li himself is from a privileged background, he has contributed significantly to ensuring that Singapore does not go the way of India and China, as well as other countries, where it is reported that the sons of big shots could get away with blatant abuses. He is the kind of people we need in Singapore’s next generation of political leaders.

Chan Hwa Loon

And oh, for some reasons, no comments were showed after this letter in the forums.

Sticky: 2Lt Li Hongyi and the order of the SAF

Singapore July 17th, 2007

I have de-stickified all the posts with regards to 2Lt Li and the SAF incident, if you would like to:

  • read about what happened to LTA X, please go here 
  • read about what the vineyards told me, please go here 
  • read about the ST Internet Buzz over PM Lee’s son, please go here
  • read about the Snap Poll: Do you think it’s fair for PM Lee’s son to be punished?, please go here
  • read about the article ST: PM Lee’s son reprimanded by SAF for misconduct and the email that was the talk of the town, please go here 
  • vote, please look at the snap poll on the right bar

Thank you! :)

SF’07: Day 9

Travelogue July 17th, 2007

Good morning SFO! I’m leaving on a jet plane… don’t know when I’ll be back again…

ST: Tough stand on passport abuse needed

Singapore July 17th, 2007

In the black market, the Singapore Passport is a very precious commodity (citation needed) and in view of this, the Singapore government decided to impose stricter penalties on the loss of passports. The article below was reproduced from straitstimes.com (consider getting a subscription? :P ):

STIFFER penalties await those who misuse the Singapore passport under a new law passed on Monday.

And a person who has lost two passports or more may be denied a new one by the Controller of Immigration.

Explaining the move, Deputy Prime Minister and Home Affairs Minister Wong Kan Seng said it was necessary to safeguard the security and integrity of the highly-regarded Singapore passport in today’s security environment.

‘As the Singapore passport provides easy visa-free access to many countries, it is also an attractive document for abuse,’ Mr Wong told Parliament.

He said criminals and terrorists have used altered or fake passports to travel: Suspected Bali bombing mastermind Hambali, caught in 2003, reportedly used a fake Spanish passport.

Current efforts against passport abuse have put a lid on the crime, with 74 cases last year against 116 in 2003, added Mr Wong.

But if such abuse was left unchecked, Singaporeans who travel could be inconvenienced as foreign authorities might doubt the authenticity of Singapore passports.

Singapore also had to minimise such abuse as a responsible member of the international community, he said.

Mr Wong cited a case to show existing penalties were ‘grossly inadequate’.

A Singaporean arrested last year for selling lost or stolen local and foreign passports to a syndicate was jailed for 15 months for fraudulent possession of property.

The law did not provide for the offence of selling passports.

With the new law, a jail term and fine is mandatory for a person who is in the business of selling Singapore passports.

The jail term is from two years up to 15 years and the fine, up to $20,000.

For other types of offences involving a Singapore passport, they can be jailed up to 10 years, fined up to $10,000 or given both penalities.

The offences include: improper use or possession of a Singapore passport, falsifying a Singapore passport, giving false information to get a passport and the unauthorised issuing of a passport by government officers.

Offenders caught tampering or misusing foreign passports here will also be taken to court.

Likewise, misuse of the Singapore passport abroad will be an offence.

There will also be tighter controls on passports: A passport can be denied to someone for law enforcement or national security reasons, to prevent him from doing harm overseas.

While I am aware of the severity of losing one’s passport, I am a little shocked (and to a certain extent, appalled) about the denial of issue of passport. It’s like a house arrest in your own country and there’s nowhere else that you can go to besides Sentosa or Pulau Tekong (for your ICT? :P ). But hey, it really isn’t that bad because your travel destination will still include exotic places like Chek Jawa @ Pulau Ubin, Tua Pekong Temple @ Kusu Island and diving spots @ Pulau Biola. Occasionally, you may still go to the breakwaters @ Lower Seletar Reservoir where you will be able to admire an smell the sea on one side and the reservoir on the other. Moreover, you may see some “fireworks” at JB on some nights. After enjoying the sea breeze, you can top that up with prata @ Jln Kayu!

Oh wait, wasn’t this entry about Singapore Passport?