Kõrvemaa Nature Park, Estonia
AnnexeThis post originally appeared on the Annexe.
Tarvasjõgi at Kõrvemaa Nature Park in Estonia, by Ireen Trummer.
Adding to my “destressing” desktop background rotation :)
This post originally appeared on the Annexe.
Tarvasjõgi at Kõrvemaa Nature Park in Estonia, by Ireen Trummer.
Adding to my “destressing” desktop background rotation :)
Yesterday, Lucy Carroll ran a story in the Sydney Morning Herald about the recently opened Wet’n’Wild amusement park. It’s been plagued with issues, culminating in the cancellation of New Year’s Eve events.
What caught my eye was this tidbit towards the end:
[Blacktown councillor Edmond Atalla] said while the venue provided transport from Parramatta railway station, the lack of buses from Blacktown was forcing customers to walk along a dangerous stretch of the Great Western Highway to reach the entrance.
In Australia, cars always come first. Huge complexes are routinely built with little regard for supporting infrastructure, not least public transport. It reminds me a lot of Malaysia, and dealing with their own systems for the time we lived there.
Back in Singapore, they would have diverted roads, extended an MRT line, built a new station or two and factored it into their decades–long urban planning scheme.

I saw on Wikipedia this morning that Latvia is joining Estonia in adopting the Euro. While I've long since stopped studying economics, I love coins and decided to check them out. They're pretty swish, while still keeping some of the classy elements of the previous mintage. Most fittingly, the 1€ and 2€ coins include The Maiden, arguably one of the most well know symbols of modern Latvia to those of us from the outside.
Which brings me to the country in general. Given its remote location compared to anywhere I grew up, this tiny Baltic nation has had a surprising influence on my family. Our dearest family friends whom Elke and I consider family are Latvian and German. When I was a vexillologically obsessed kid, I wanted a Latvian flag for my room given it did away with the predictable colours most flags used. I had a Baltic map from a National Geographic magazine on my wall for years. To give the markers a break from reading about Australia and Singapore, I wrote my year 10–12 commerce and economics papers on Latvia and Lithuania. Mr. Webb and Mr. Rogers at the AIS are my witnesses!
Since moving back to Sydney, the Latvian influence has only intensified. Half my networking gear now comes from their world–renowned engineers. One of my best friends, the first I made at UTS, and the reason why I'm in Anime@UTS, is a Latvian. When I lived in Earlwood and commuted on the Airport Line, I helped not one but two groups of Latvian tourists at different times, more than any other group of Europeans.
One day Clara and I will go there, and spend us some Latvian Euro with our official tour guide :).

TL;DR If you have a MacBook Air and really need the expansion, this dock will make your life so much easier. Otherwise, it’s probably too expensive to justify.
Since this time last year, I've been the happy owner of an 11" MacBook Air. I have a Mac Pro networked in the other room to provide raw grunt and storage, but my Air has long since become my primary machine. It's rigid and lightweight, has excellent battery life even after a year of heavy usage, and the keyboard is decent. For those who claim you can't get any serious work done on such a computer, I point to my use of Final Cut Pro and running several VMware vSphere private clouds on it as proof to the contrary.
I could get something more souped up (I do admit to lusting over those retina screens), but this machine suits my use case as a mobile IT professional and student so damn well, for the time being I see no need to upgrade. I'm thoroughly thankful for what I have.
Unsurprisingly, the one area where I've struggled with it is ports. Until a few days ago, I couldn't have Gigabit Ethernet or my external display plugged in concurrently, given they both use the lone Thunderbolt port. A powered USB 2.0 hub offered some respite for the lack of those ports, but that still took up one of the two ports. I could get a Gigabit Ethernet USB 2.0 adaptor from Apple, but they operate at much lower theoretical speeds. Third party USB 3.0 Gigabit Ethernet adaptors are available, but seem to be flaky for many people and it would take up my last remaining USB port.
There had to be a better way for me to keep using this otherwise excellent machine, but with the external expansion I need. You can see where this is going.
Over Christmas, I was super excited to have been gifted a Belkin Thunderbolt Dock by my very generous sister Elke. I hadn't been able to justify the expense myself initially, but now that I've been using it for a couple of days I can't believe I struggled for a whole year before deciding to get one!
The Belkin Thunderbolt Dock is a gorgeous, heavy slab of anodized aluminium (aluminum for my fine American friends) and polished black plastic that sits on your desk and gives you all the ports Apple couldn't on the svelte MacBook Air. These include:
I'm using all these ports right now for networking, my Thunderbolt to DVI adaptor for my display, an external FireWire 800 drive, my keyboard and mouse, my speakers and my USB headset.
Whereas previously coming home entailed plugging in a spaghetti mess of cables and deciding which devices to leave out, now I can have a full buffet by just plugging in one Thunderbolt cable. This fact alone has had such a profound effect on the quality of my life, I'm almost ashamed to admit it. But I'm not, because it's made me happy, so there.
For my use case, it works perfectly. When I'm on the go for most of the day, I have a tiny MacBook Air. When I get home, I have everything else. Its as if my laptop has two parts, with the components not needed for mobile work never contributing to the weight of the primary device.

There are some potential downsides though.
The device has a hulking huge power brick that weighs more than the power supply for any of my Mac laptops and takes up almost as much desk space. If you're intending to use it as a portable expansion device, it utterly negates any weight benefit to having a MacBook Air, and then some. It'll never be leaving my desk, so that point doesn't bother me.
Additionally, if you're intending to use this to modernise an older Mac, you'll also be limited by the half-speed of the USB 3.0 ports on the dock. Again for my needs, I'm using it as a docking station for my keyboard, mouse and headset so this also isn't an issue.
What was incredibly disappointing however was the lack of a necessary Thunderbolt cable. In a tip of the hat to toy makers who don't include batteries for Christmas, this meant I had to wait till we could go out to an Apple store to purchase a cable to use it. Regardless of whether licensing or marketing were issues, it's pretty poor form for a device that expensive to not come with the cable needed to even use it.
While we're on the subject, at around $300 some have said the device is overpriced. Granted, its easier for me to talk about this given I got this as a Christmas gift. Still, it comes down to a question of utility; if you intend to only use a subset of its ports, then perhaps for your use case it is overpriced. If on the other hand you're buying this to extend the usefulness of your primary workstation, I think it could be justified. Certainly having used this one for the last few days, I could see myself purchasing one for myself in an instant.
Overall, is a form of clothing. And I'm unreasonably happy to have this dock.

For your consideration, a decorated photo of Sydney Central Station taken this evening. That was a long link.
Given its been more than a week since Christmas, Clara and I theorise this is Sydney Trains making good for the fact the decorations went up so late. Earlier in December, we had already began to worry they were the latst victims of cost cutting; all that expensive rebranding had to be paid for with something.
Regardless, we're okay with seeing the pretty lights and decorations for a little longer :)

This afternoon, Clara and I headed to the University of Sydney Museum to check out their LEGO Acropolis exhibit. Hey floor, I heard you like jaw!
Following on from the extraordinary success of the LEGO Colosseum in 2012, the Brickman, Ryan McNaught,
has turned his hand to one of the most iconic architectural monuments of Ancient Greece – the Acropolis!The LEGO model displays the Acropolis both as it was in the fifth century BC and as it is today, as one of
Greece's most popular tourist attractions. Captured in LEGO are some of the Acropolis' more famous
visitors including Pericles, Lord Elgin, Dame Agatha Christie, and even Elton John.
Beside the stunning model were tables and chairs with LEGO bricks. Naturally, Clara and I proceeded to spend the early evening building. Clara built a flying house; and I attempted my own Greek building. You can view our efforts (and theirs!) in my Flickr gallery.


This originally appeared on PenguinCoffee, Clara’s and my old shared weblog.
My Japanese is so bad now, I was wondering what “ビビッドイエロー” was. It’s Vividyellow, from Vividred Operation. I was entranced.
By 竜崎いち on Pixiv.
This originally appeared on PenguinCoffee, Clara’s and my old shared weblog.
I am a fan of this crossover. By Rito on Pixiv.
This originally appeared on PenguinCoffee, Clara’s and my old shared weblog.
We haven’t quite managed to watch that episode yet, but it’s the one we’re up to! Now if only we could get around to watching it…
By Rito on Pixiv.