personal life
Video: Tell Me Why - By Declan Galbraith
Submitted by jmarki on 9 March 2010 - 12:54amWhat a beautiful voice! I'm inspired! He's has grown up now though, around 19 years old.
- jmarki's blog
- Add new comment
- 2 reads
Video: Transformers Dancing Nobody!
Submitted by jmarki on 14 November 2009 - 4:57amFirst found on Facebook.
- jmarki's blog
- Add new comment
- 145 reads
Blog Action Day '09
Submitted by jmarki on 16 October 2009 - 2:43am
Today (yesterday?) is Blog Action Day '09, and the topic is "Climate Change". What a depressing, yet uplifting topic to blog about!
When you were just small kiddos, did you ever imagined how Earth would look like from space? Guess it would look like this:
And we are absolutely dwarfed by the immerse size of Earth!
What a wonderful world we live in!
Yet, we thoughtlessly pollute the environment. We create things that last forever and throw them away in an instant.
We breed animals in inhumane conditions, stacked up high like packed boxes. We clear acres of forests to grow lots of crops, and feed these animals for months. Just to slaughter them for a single meal.
And scoff when someone remarks about the sheer waste of energy producing so much food for so little gain.
Sigh...
How egoistic can we be? Somewhere between all the debate about global warming, we lost sight of the forest for the trees. The key issue is not about whether global warming is a natural phenomenon. It is about sustainable development.
We want our next generations to have a decent quality of life. We want them to see how beautiful this world is. We want them to experience snow falling softly around them. We want them to see the beautiful corals in the deep blue sea. We want them to be able to see the stars, and imagine how small they are if they look down to Earth.
Eat less meat. Dispose less garbage. Waste less paper. Waste less electricity. Recycle, reuse, reduce. Just live in moderation. Is that really so difficult?
- jmarki's blog
- 1 comment
- 180 reads
Vegetarian Spider!
Submitted by jmarki on 13 October 2009 - 11:01pmI can't help but post this: ∃ vegetarian spiders!
Wired News: Kinder, Gentler Spider Eats Veggies, Cares for Kids
Each of the world’s 40,000 spider species survives by hunting and killing — except, that is, for Bagheera kiplingi, the world’s first vegetarian arachnid.
Found in Central America, the order-defying jumping spider eats nutrient-rich structures called Beltian bodies, which are found on the tips of Acacia trees. Trees produce the bodies to feed ants that defend them, which is a textbook example of what’s called co-evolutionary mutalism, and one that B. kiplingi has evolved to exploit.
In a paper published Monday in Current Biology, researchers describe the spider’s ant-evading habits and provide a molecular analysis of its body composition, proving that B. kiplingi is indeed what it eats: plants, with a few larval ants on the side. (After all, 400 million years of evolutionary habits die hard.)
A few other spiders have been documented consuming nectar, but only as a snack. No other spider is so predominantly vegetarian. And that’s not all: It looks like B. kiplingi males help care for eggs and young — something entirely unprecedented in the spider world.
The researchers are now studying whether there’s a link between B. kiplingi’s predilection for plants and parental concern. Maybe going veggie softened its heart.
Image: Current Biology
Citation: “Herbivory in a spider through exploitation of an ant-plant mutualism.” By Christopher J. Meehan, Eric J. Olson, Matthew W. Reudink, T. Kurt Kyser, and Robert L. Curry. Current Biology, Vol. 19, Issue 19, October 13, 2009.
See? I told you I'm kind. 
- jmarki's blog
- 1 comment
- 159 reads
Howto Wake Up and Goto Work in 5 mins!
Submitted by jmarki on 4 October 2009 - 10:08pmThis is so cool! And looks more traumatising than $WORK!
Hmm, where's the coffee though...
- jmarki's blog
- Add new comment
- 182 reads
Vacation: Stress VS Time
Submitted by jmarki on 1 October 2009 - 12:52am- jmarki's blog
- Add new comment
- 178 reads
I'm on twitter
Submitted by jmarki on 23 February 2009 - 10:06pm- jmarki's blog
- 1 comment
- 284 reads
Foxtrot Classics: Quantum Love
Submitted by jmarki on 21 February 2009 - 11:34pm- jmarki's blog
- Add new comment
- 381 reads
Thanks for your help!
Submitted by jmarki on 9 February 2009 - 12:54amI suddenly have the urge to thank my family and friends for all the help and advice they have given me throughout the years. Putting up with my idiosyncrasies is no easy thing, I know. The guidance each of you have given me every time I got confused is really appreciated too.
Thank you, thank you! May Buddha bless you, always. May Buddha be a shining light to guide you through troubled times, just like He has guided me too. Amitabha.
- jmarki's blog
- Add new comment
- 251 reads
Melbourne Trip Dec 2008 - Part 6
Submitted by jmarki on 7 February 2009 - 3:13pm17 Dec 2008, 8am - On route from Grampians to Great Ocean Road
We started on the drive to the Great Ocean Road with some enthusiasm. Surviving Pinnacles should always make one feel relieved, no?
This drive to Apollo Bay on the Great Ocean Road will be the longest drive in our road trip. Approximately a stretch of 400km, we will head towards Dunkeld, then Hamilton before stopping for brunch. Then we will veer off the major highways, heading south towards the coast. If all goes well, we will reach Portland or Port Fairy around 3pm. Following the coast to Apollo Bay, we should reach Apollo Bay by 6pm.
Of course things did not go as planned. 
17 Dec 2008, 11am - Hamilton
We stopped for brunch here. After circling the town like a vulture, we descended on, of all things, a Chinese takeaway eatery. We should sample some "Asian" cuisine in a western country, right?
Anyway, judging from their accents, the owners came from China. I had vegetarian noodle soup (it tasted no different!) while EU had vegetarian Char Kuay Tiao. Well, a sweet version of Char Kuay Tiao. EU thinks it is undeliciously meatless. 
We also stopped at Hamilton Shopping Centre, supposedly a major highlight. A quick roam around later, we decided to get....
... 5 litres of water.
We are thirsty, okay? And the big, sturdy bottle can definitely withstand my clumsiness. Besides, we are in a desert!
17 Dec 2008, 5pm - Great Ocean Road
After driving for ages, and countless disagreements over whether to trust the GPS or me (me, OF COURSE!), we finally saw a big blue expense of water. Yeah!!!!
The Great Ocean Road is really nice. The ocean is really blue, and the waves are at least half a metre high. Big waves....
Strangely though, the vegetation along the coast is not doing well. Most are brown, half-dead, and wind-swept. Maybe the limestone formation they are growing on does not retain much water.
Wonder which will be the killing blow: the stoning from falling rocks, the impaling from rocks, the impact from the fall, or drowning?
The broken London Bridge. A couple making out got stranded there when it broke! How can they bash through a kilometre of shrubs and still feel like making out?!
The Blowhole (Port Campbell National Park) A howling tunnel, people once found bodies from a shipwreck there
Very long steep walk down to the Twelve Apostles lookout point. This lookout point is much more well-developed than the rest.
Right View of the Twelve Apostles. I only counted 8 though. See, one has fallen.
- jmarki's blog
- Add new comment
- 378 reads









