Sunday, January 29, 2006
Australian Open 2006 Men's Finals - Federer vs. Baghdatis
Saturday, January 28, 2006
Australian Open 2006 Women's Finals - Mauresmo vs. Henin-Hardene
It's a good thing I watched the match at home. I would've demanded a refund if I had been in the Rod Laver Arena.
Friday, January 27, 2006
Nigel Kennedy Plays Vivaldi
The last time Nigel Kennedy was in Sydney was in December 2003. I missed him then, but I'm not about to miss him now. By the time I called the Opera House box office, all the good seats are gone. That's in spite of the two extra playdates they opened due to popular demand. I managed to get a seat called A35. Must be the worst seat in the house because it's the first row right in front (actually below) the stage, and to the extreme left.
I had no idea what's the programme for tonight. I sort of assumed it's going to be Four Seasons. Apparently not. Kennedy and the Sydney Symphony will be playing six of Vivaldi's concertos:
- Concerto in A minor for violin, strings and harpsichord RV356
- Concerto in D major for violin, strings and harpsichord RV230
- Concerto in B flat major for violin, oboe, strings and harpsichord RV548
- Interval
- Concerto in D major for 2 violins, strings and harpsichord RV507
- Concerto in C major for 2 violins, strings and harpsichord RV511
- Concerto in G minor (Summer from The Four Seasons) for violin, strings and harpsichord RV315
He talks in a Cockney accent, and his sense of humour is very different. This is his spiel before playing the 8th:
Kennedy: Now we have a very difficult one, where Cat normally hates me after this because like I play it too fast for particularly the purist type of Cat. (Audience laughter.) What is a purist anyway? (Turns to Cat.) What do you think?
Catherine: I don't think it's me. (Audience laughter.)
Kennedy: I also can't say it in public, particularly there's children here. (Audience laughter.) Let's try to play number eight, which is a phenomenally fast number, even by Bach's standard. Thirty children in a lifetime is fast.
In another spiel:
Ladies, this next movement is really, particularly for you because it comes from a romantic episode in Vivaldi's life, which unfortunately, is unrequited love. On one of those mornings, when he was writing one of his concertos, ... he looked out of the window onto one of the canals in Venice, and he saw this gondola going by, which was not an uncommon sight, and still isn't. (Audience laughter.) Sitting in this gondola was just the most beautiful lady that he'd ever seen, and he fell in love immediately, which can happen, even to a man. (Audience laughter.) So he thought, "Man." Well I was just gonna say something I shouldn't then; but like he said, "Man." to himself 'coz he was a man. (Audience laughter.) He said maybe I should open the window and get the number of this lady's gondola. (Audience laughter.) So he made a deft bit lunge at the windows in order to open it and say, "Hi, baby. Would to come and have a look at my manuscript or something? Would you like some fine cappucino?" And unfortunately, he then noticed that it was one of those old-fashioned lead latticework windows which don't open. (Audience laughter.) So the lady just passed on by, and he never saw here again. It's a sad, sad scenario. (Audience laughter.) So he decided to, like instead of love, he needed to fill this space, so he decided to make model gondolas... (Audience laughter.) But this song that we're going to play was actually written for this lady, who I think has been reincarnated here tonight because she looked just like you, baby, in there. (Audience laughter.) Beautiful. Yeah, you. (Points to a lady.) So this is for you, baby. (Audience laughter.)
(So how did I get all this down? Well, I still don't know shorthand, and I don't have photographic memory. What I have is an MP3 player with a voice recording feature. The only problem is that it's optimized for near-field recording, and it's so sensitive that it recorded clearly all my clothes- and paper-rustling, but Kennedy's spiels and playing came out muffled.)
Michael Dauth the Concertmaster, who plays second violin tonight, is no slouch either. Add to the fact that he can balance his violin on his nose, which I'm pretty sure Kennedy can't. When they play the part for two violins, it's like they're dueling. The playing got too intense at one point, and Kennedy broke the string on his violin. The orchestra stopped while Kennedy swapped violins with the closest one he can find. Now the true test of a master, even with an unfamiliar violin without prior tuning, he played as well as before. Also accompanying Kennedy are Monika Raczynska (harpsichord) and Taro Takeuchi (baroque guitar/lute).
Thursday, January 26, 2006
Australian Open 2006 Men's Semi-Finals - Baghdatis vs. Nalbandian
Baghdatis is getting quite comfortable with his game in the crucial 4th set. No sign of fatigue or apprehension.
Nalbandian gets aggressive at the start of the 5th set. Baghdatis started losing his powerful first serves and lots of unforced errors. Nalbandian broke Baghdatis' serve for 2-0. Now in control. The crowd is getting too rowdy, and the umpire had to remind them (again and again) to be silent during the service. Terrific atmosphere - the kind of game you'd want to watch live.
The game goes to 40-30, matchpoint for Baghdatis. Baghdatis makes a great shot, but was declared wide by the umpire. Hawk-eye says it's in by 22cm. Games goes to deuce. Advantage Baghdatis thanks to a forehand into the net from Nalbandian. And a sizzling ace down the middle from crazy Baghdatis seals the deal. Score 3-6, 5-7, 6-3, 6-4, 6-4.
Wednesday, January 25, 2006
Nybble 2006.01.25
N Y B B L E B I - W E E K L Y N E W S L E T T E R
A Free Ezine about Anything Tech and Everything Else
2006.01.25 Issue No. 172
Sorry about the late Nybble (again). With the Australian Open on, I
can't seem to get any work done (office or personal). I have the
laptop on the table, the TV a few meters in front of me. The only time
I touch the keyboard is when the advertisement or screensaver comes
on, whichever comes first.
To be on-topic, let's talk about technology in tennis. If you watch
the game, you've probably already heard the sharp beeping/buzzing
sound that precedes a let or service fault call. That's the Cyclops in
action. The Cyclops is a 5-infrared-beam electronic system that
determines whether a serve is in or not. The infrared beams run
parallel to the service line, 10mm above the ground, with the
transmitters and receivers on opposite sides of the court. One master
beam is positioned over the service line, while the four others are
outside the service line. When the ball misses the master beam, and
cuts any of the fault beams, an audible sound is generated.
You might have also heard the commentators talk about "hawk-eye".
Hawk-Eye employs a full-blown system comprising of 5 or more
high-speed video cameras positioned around the court and a back-end
computer. The cameras track the trajectory of the ball, and send the
recordings wirelessly to the computer, where special software combines
the separate views and generated an accurate 3D representation of the
ball's flight path, accurate to 3-4mm. Aside from resolving
controversial line calls, the Hawk-Eye gives some pretty cool visual
stats: whether the ball was in or out (by how many millimeters), the
speed and trajectory of every ball in every rally, how a player places
his or her serves around the court, etc.
Have an answer, comment, suggestion, or violent reaction? Send them my
way by clicking on Reply or join nybbletalk@yahoogroups.com to
discuss a topic. If you think Nybble is good enough, do tell the
tennis fans about it. Thanks.
_________TABLE OF CONTENTS_________
* World's First Maglev Elevator
* Robotic Sign Language Translator
* Sex.com Sold
* Doomsday Seed Bank in Norway
* No More Konica Minolta Cameras
* Likeable Links
* Questionable Question
* Quotable Quote
* Trivial Trivia
* Laughable Laugh
_________WORLD'S FIRST MAGLEV ELEVATOR_________
http://www.cnn.com/2006/TECH/01/17/maglev.lift.ap/index.html
We've heard of maglev trains before. Now Tokyo is set to get the
world's first elevators controlled by magnetic levitation as soon as 2008.
Toshiba Elevator and Building Systems Corp. will employ so-called
maglev technology -- capable of suspending objects in mid-air through
the combination of magnetic attraction and repulsion -- to control the
lifts. The maglev elevators will be quieter and more comfortable and
will travel 300 meters (984 feet) per minute -- not as fast as the
company's conventional lifts that can move up to 1,010 meters (3,314
feet) a minute.
Maglev technology has already been used to develop high-speed trains.
The only passenger-carrying maglev train in the world links Pudong
International Airport in Shanghai, China, to the city center at speeds
of 430 kilometers (267 miles) per hour. A maglev shuttle in
Birmingham, U.K. was abandoned in 1995 after 11 years in operation
because of technical glitches.
_________ROBOTIC SIGN LANGUAGE TRANSLATOR_________
http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/features/culture/20060116TDY19003.htm
An 80-centimeter robotic hand that can covert spoken words and simple
phrases into sign language has been developed in the Sasagurimachi
town in Fukuoka Prefecture. The aluminum robot was developed by a team
led by the Fukuoka Prefecture Education Center's head instructor Keita
Matsuo, 39, and Hirotsugu Sakai, 38.
The two men came up with the idea when they visited a school for the
hearing-impaired and communicated with students through an interpreter
who signed for them. Why not use a robot to communicate? They studied
a book on sign language, and spent about two months creating the
system. A microchip in the robot recognizes the 50-character hiragana
syllabary and about 10 simple phrases such as "ohayo" (good morning)
and sends the information to a central computer, which sends commands
to 18 micromotors in the joints of the robotic hand, translating the
sound it hears into sign language. In the future, hundreds of
thousands of words could be programmed into the voice recognition unit
and the robotic hand could function as a receptionist.
_________SEX.COM SOLD________
http://xbiz.com/news_piece.php?id=12847
The infamous and controversial domain Sex.com has officially been sold
to Boston-based Escom LLC for a reported $14 million.
Prior to learning of the sale of Sex.com, numerous adult industry
message board postings had already begun speculating on the sale after
noticing the radical change in the appearance of the Sex.com website.
On the homepage of the updated website, the new owners refer to the
site as "the new Sex.com," and the appearance is radically different
from the former site. The site is copyrighted by Escom.
The Sex.net domain is still registered under Kremen's Grant Media company.
_________DOOMSDAY SEED BANK IN NORWAY_________
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4605398.stm
Norway is planning to build a "doomsday vault" inside a mountain on an
Arctic island to hold a seed bank of all known varieties of the
world's crops.
The Norwegian government is planning to drill into a sandstone
mountain on Spitsbergen, part of the Svalbard archipelago, about 966km
(600 miles) from the North Pole. Hollow out a cave for the seed bank.
Permafrost will keep the vault below freezing point and the seeds will
further be protected by metre-thick walls of reinforced concrete, two
airlocks and high security blast-proof doors. It will be designed to
withstand global catastrophes like nuclear war or natural disasters
that would destroy the planet's sources of food. While there are
currently about 1,400 seed banks around the world, a large number of
these were located in countries that are either politically unstable
or that faced threats from the natural environment.
The number of seeds and types of plants in the bank would be
determined by the countries wishing to use it. Seed collection is
being organised by the Global Crop Diversity Trust.
_________NO MORE KONICA MINOLTA CAMERAS_________
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/4627002.stm
Japanese photographic equipment maker Konica Minolta has announced
plans to withdraw from the camera business because it had become too
competitive. It warned last year November that it was on course to
post a full-year net loss of 47bn yen (US$408m; £232.5m). It's also
planning to cut 3,700 jobs, or 11% of its workforce, by 2007 as part
of a restructuring drive.
Its decision to ditch the camera business altogether includes the
cessation of its colour film and photo paper business, in which it has
trailed Eastman Kodak of the US and Japan's Fuji Photo Film. Instead,
it plans to focus on products such as colour office photocopiers and
medical imaging equipment.
It would sell its digital camera business to Japanese electronics
giant Sony. Earlier in January, fellow Japanese cameramaker Nikon said
it would stop making most of its film camera line, and focus most of
its effort on digital cameras. As well as Nikon's decision, Eastman
Kodak has said for some time that digital is to be its priority in the
future.
_________LIKEABLE LINKS_________
The Longest List of the Longest Stuff at the Longest Domain Name
http://thelongestlistofthelongeststuffatthelongestdomainnameatlonglast.com/
IP Spotting
http://www.ipspotting.com/
How interesting is your IP address?
_________QUESTIONABLE QUESTION_________
Where does the blue urine used in diaper commercials come from?
_________QUOTABLE QUOTE_________
"If you have a garden and a library, you have everything you need."
~ Marcus Tullius Cicero, Roman statesman, scholar, orator
_________TRIVIAL TRIVIA_________
Is coral a rock or a plant?
Neither. Coral are actually minute animals called polyps (only a few
millimeters long) living together in massive colonies. When you look
at hard coral, you're seeing the outer skeleton of the polyps. Only
the outermost part of coral is alive. Underlying layers are the
skeletons of dead polyps.
Source: Arcamax Trivia
_________LAUGHABLE LAUGH_________
A college graduate applied for a job at the Central Intelligence
Agency. Together with several other applicants, he was given a sealed
envelope and told to take it to the fourth floor.
As soon as the young man was alone, he stepped into an empty hallway
and opened the packet. Inside, a message read: "You're our kind of
person. Report to the fifth floor."
That's all for this week. Nybble is and will always be a work in
progress. Please do send me your comments and suggestions on how to
improve Nybble. Just hit the reply button to you know, reply.
A Free Ezine about Anything Tech and Everything Else
2006.01.25 Issue No. 172
Sorry about the late Nybble (again). With the Australian Open on, I
can't seem to get any work done (office or personal). I have the
laptop on the table, the TV a few meters in front of me. The only time
I touch the keyboard is when the advertisement or screensaver comes
on, whichever comes first.
To be on-topic, let's talk about technology in tennis. If you watch
the game, you've probably already heard the sharp beeping/buzzing
sound that precedes a let or service fault call. That's the Cyclops in
action. The Cyclops is a 5-infrared-beam electronic system that
determines whether a serve is in or not. The infrared beams run
parallel to the service line, 10mm above the ground, with the
transmitters and receivers on opposite sides of the court. One master
beam is positioned over the service line, while the four others are
outside the service line. When the ball misses the master beam, and
cuts any of the fault beams, an audible sound is generated.
You might have also heard the commentators talk about "hawk-eye".
Hawk-Eye employs a full-blown system comprising of 5 or more
high-speed video cameras positioned around the court and a back-end
computer. The cameras track the trajectory of the ball, and send the
recordings wirelessly to the computer, where special software combines
the separate views and generated an accurate 3D representation of the
ball's flight path, accurate to 3-4mm. Aside from resolving
controversial line calls, the Hawk-Eye gives some pretty cool visual
stats: whether the ball was in or out (by how many millimeters), the
speed and trajectory of every ball in every rally, how a player places
his or her serves around the court, etc.
Have an answer, comment, suggestion, or violent reaction? Send them my
way by clicking on Reply or join nybbletalk@yahoogroups.com to
discuss a topic. If you think Nybble is good enough, do tell the
tennis fans about it. Thanks.
_________TABLE OF CONTENTS_________
* World's First Maglev Elevator
* Robotic Sign Language Translator
* Sex.com Sold
* Doomsday Seed Bank in Norway
* No More Konica Minolta Cameras
* Likeable Links
* Questionable Question
* Quotable Quote
* Trivial Trivia
* Laughable Laugh
_________WORLD'S FIRST MAGLEV ELEVATOR_________
http://www.cnn.com/2006/TECH/01/17/maglev.lift.ap/index.html
We've heard of maglev trains before. Now Tokyo is set to get the
world's first elevators controlled by magnetic levitation as soon as 2008.
Toshiba Elevator and Building Systems Corp. will employ so-called
maglev technology -- capable of suspending objects in mid-air through
the combination of magnetic attraction and repulsion -- to control the
lifts. The maglev elevators will be quieter and more comfortable and
will travel 300 meters (984 feet) per minute -- not as fast as the
company's conventional lifts that can move up to 1,010 meters (3,314
feet) a minute.
Maglev technology has already been used to develop high-speed trains.
The only passenger-carrying maglev train in the world links Pudong
International Airport in Shanghai, China, to the city center at speeds
of 430 kilometers (267 miles) per hour. A maglev shuttle in
Birmingham, U.K. was abandoned in 1995 after 11 years in operation
because of technical glitches.
_________ROBOTIC SIGN LANGUAGE TRANSLATOR_________
http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/features/culture/20060116TDY19003.htm
An 80-centimeter robotic hand that can covert spoken words and simple
phrases into sign language has been developed in the Sasagurimachi
town in Fukuoka Prefecture. The aluminum robot was developed by a team
led by the Fukuoka Prefecture Education Center's head instructor Keita
Matsuo, 39, and Hirotsugu Sakai, 38.
The two men came up with the idea when they visited a school for the
hearing-impaired and communicated with students through an interpreter
who signed for them. Why not use a robot to communicate? They studied
a book on sign language, and spent about two months creating the
system. A microchip in the robot recognizes the 50-character hiragana
syllabary and about 10 simple phrases such as "ohayo" (good morning)
and sends the information to a central computer, which sends commands
to 18 micromotors in the joints of the robotic hand, translating the
sound it hears into sign language. In the future, hundreds of
thousands of words could be programmed into the voice recognition unit
and the robotic hand could function as a receptionist.
_________SEX.COM SOLD________
http://xbiz.com/news_piece.php?id=12847
The infamous and controversial domain Sex.com has officially been sold
to Boston-based Escom LLC for a reported $14 million.
Prior to learning of the sale of Sex.com, numerous adult industry
message board postings had already begun speculating on the sale after
noticing the radical change in the appearance of the Sex.com website.
On the homepage of the updated website, the new owners refer to the
site as "the new Sex.com," and the appearance is radically different
from the former site. The site is copyrighted by Escom.
The Sex.net domain is still registered under Kremen's Grant Media company.
_________DOOMSDAY SEED BANK IN NORWAY_________
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4605398.stm
Norway is planning to build a "doomsday vault" inside a mountain on an
Arctic island to hold a seed bank of all known varieties of the
world's crops.
The Norwegian government is planning to drill into a sandstone
mountain on Spitsbergen, part of the Svalbard archipelago, about 966km
(600 miles) from the North Pole. Hollow out a cave for the seed bank.
Permafrost will keep the vault below freezing point and the seeds will
further be protected by metre-thick walls of reinforced concrete, two
airlocks and high security blast-proof doors. It will be designed to
withstand global catastrophes like nuclear war or natural disasters
that would destroy the planet's sources of food. While there are
currently about 1,400 seed banks around the world, a large number of
these were located in countries that are either politically unstable
or that faced threats from the natural environment.
The number of seeds and types of plants in the bank would be
determined by the countries wishing to use it. Seed collection is
being organised by the Global Crop Diversity Trust.
_________NO MORE KONICA MINOLTA CAMERAS_________
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/4627002.stm
Japanese photographic equipment maker Konica Minolta has announced
plans to withdraw from the camera business because it had become too
competitive. It warned last year November that it was on course to
post a full-year net loss of 47bn yen (US$408m; £232.5m). It's also
planning to cut 3,700 jobs, or 11% of its workforce, by 2007 as part
of a restructuring drive.
Its decision to ditch the camera business altogether includes the
cessation of its colour film and photo paper business, in which it has
trailed Eastman Kodak of the US and Japan's Fuji Photo Film. Instead,
it plans to focus on products such as colour office photocopiers and
medical imaging equipment.
It would sell its digital camera business to Japanese electronics
giant Sony. Earlier in January, fellow Japanese cameramaker Nikon said
it would stop making most of its film camera line, and focus most of
its effort on digital cameras. As well as Nikon's decision, Eastman
Kodak has said for some time that digital is to be its priority in the
future.
_________LIKEABLE LINKS_________
The Longest List of the Longest Stuff at the Longest Domain Name
http://thelongestlistofthelongeststuffatthelongestdomainnameatlonglast.com/
IP Spotting
http://www.ipspotting.com/
How interesting is your IP address?
_________QUESTIONABLE QUESTION_________
Where does the blue urine used in diaper commercials come from?
_________QUOTABLE QUOTE_________
"If you have a garden and a library, you have everything you need."
~ Marcus Tullius Cicero, Roman statesman, scholar, orator
_________TRIVIAL TRIVIA_________
Is coral a rock or a plant?
Neither. Coral are actually minute animals called polyps (only a few
millimeters long) living together in massive colonies. When you look
at hard coral, you're seeing the outer skeleton of the polyps. Only
the outermost part of coral is alive. Underlying layers are the
skeletons of dead polyps.
Source: Arcamax Trivia
_________LAUGHABLE LAUGH_________
A college graduate applied for a job at the Central Intelligence
Agency. Together with several other applicants, he was given a sealed
envelope and told to take it to the fourth floor.
As soon as the young man was alone, he stepped into an empty hallway
and opened the packet. Inside, a message read: "You're our kind of
person. Report to the fifth floor."
That's all for this week. Nybble is and will always be a work in
progress. Please do send me your comments and suggestions on how to
improve Nybble. Just hit the reply button to you know, reply.
Friday, January 20, 2006
Australian Open 2006 - Roddick vs. PONG
Not about to lose the match to an Atari game, Roddick puts on his thinking cap and goes, "My life is about finding a way to win." He then serves the ball short. Since PONG can only move in one dimension (horizontally), Roddick wins.
Fancy a game with PONG?
Thursday, January 19, 2006
Movie 2006.01.19 - Rushmore
Later in the movie, Max realizes the futility of it all and the two patch things up. Max writes and produces another play in his new school to critical acclaim, the three of them become friends again, and Max gets a girlfriend named Margaret, who is infatuated with him.
Ah, if things were only so simple in the real world.
4-Node NSM Upgrade
Can't remember the last time I was awake for 33 hours straight. There were four servers to be upgraded - two of them I have already pre-built, and another two to be built from scratch. Pre-configuring the first two servers saved me a couple of hours, but still I have to migrate 3.5 million subscribers to an LDAP directory, and that takes time. After the migration, there are still little pieces of configuration here and there that needs to be remembered and done: change of IPs, add some static routes, crontabs, etc.
The other two servers are supposed to go in the next night (actually, tonight already), but no way am I going home to take a couple of hours' sleep, then come back to work again, so I pressed on. That's another two rounds of OS installation, package installation, patch installation, LDAP synchronization, configuration, etc. Finished everything by 3pm. Disconnect console cable. Close rack doors. Sign out. Drive home. Sleep.
The other two servers are supposed to go in the next night (actually, tonight already), but no way am I going home to take a couple of hours' sleep, then come back to work again, so I pressed on. That's another two rounds of OS installation, package installation, patch installation, LDAP synchronization, configuration, etc. Finished everything by 3pm. Disconnect console cable. Close rack doors. Sign out. Drive home. Sleep.
Sunday, January 15, 2006
Movie 2006.01.15 - Cidade de Deus
Basically, the movie chronicles the life and times of two kids living in Rio de Janeiro's City of God slums. One grew up to become a newspaper photographer, while the other became a feared gang leader. Even though Buscape's brother is part of the dreaded Tender Trio gang who robs motels and gas trucks, he wants no part in the violence - content to just go to school, hang around with his classmates at the beach, and take pictures. Li'l Ze on the other hand, goes on a rampage and took over all the drug dealerships in the city, leaving only Carrot's territory intact because he is a friend. He would've killed off Carrot sooner, if not for Bene who keeps him in check.
On Bene's farewell party, Li'l Ze was turned down by a woman on his invitation to dance, and he just goes raving mad. He picks a fight with Carrot, then picks on the woman's boyfriend (Knockout Ned) to strip and dance. An assassination attempt on Li'l Ze goes horribly wrong, and Bene got killed instead. And it's all-out war in the City of God. Every man and kid is either with Li'l Ze or Carrot and Knockout Ned. Everyone has a gun, and doesn't hesitate to use it. Things get pretty out of hand with the daily raids and killings. Arms dealers came in to sell bigger and bigger guns to the gangs. Police kept out of City of God, figuring the hoodlums will kill each other off, and they'll just come in and pick up the spoils.
Things didn't work out for everyone as each one of them died like flies. Fortunately for Buscape (a.k.a. Rocket), he was in the thick of the action when the police decided to come in and wipe out the gangs once and for all. Like an embedded journalist, he managed to take pictures of the police taking a huge bribe from Li'l Ze, and Li'l Ze being murdered by the Runts, a bunch of kid gangster-wannabes who later grew up to become to most notorious gang in Rio, the Comando Vermelho or Red Command.
A wonderful, breathtaking film from Fernando Meirelles.
Thursday, January 12, 2006
Movies in the Overflow - Triplets of Belleville
Sunday, January 8, 2006
The Princess Bride (the Movie)
If you're interested in The Princess Bride, I strongly suggest you read the book. Get to know the characters up close and personal, and get the full story.
Friday, January 6, 2006
Gold Coast Tour Day 5
Thursday, January 5, 2006
Gold Coast Tour Day 4
Wednesday, January 4, 2006
Gold Coast Tour Day 3
Tuesday, January 3, 2006
Gold Coast Tour Day 2
Since we missed the Aerobics Looney Tunes Style Show at 10:30am while lining up for the Police Academy Stunt Show, we made sure we didn't miss the Looney Tunes Musical Revue at 12:40pm.
Monday, January 2, 2006
Gold Coast Tour Day 1
Stopped for lunch at McDonald's Port Macquarie. I believe this is one of first few Maccas with the new store design being rolled out globally. Gone are the bright red-and-yellow signages in favor of muted, earthy colors. The staff uniform is also different, and there are more common tables and benches to maximize space.
It was already nightfall when we got to Gold Coast. Stopped at Victoria Square for a quick dinner at Ming Palace. From there, it's a quick drive to our hotel for the night, the International Beach Resort. The room and facilities are nothing to write home about, but its location is wonderful. Cross the Esplanade in front of it, and you're already on the beach. Since it's already dark, my brother and I went to the Adrenalin Park instead.
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