Friday, April 06, 2007

电话

.......“他真的把家庭看的很重,有时即使是举行发布会的间隙,像在电梯里,或者休息室,他都会忍不住拨个电话给他的太太,说几句亲密的话!”接近邵亦波的人告诉记者.......

真的特别想嫁这样的人。

两个人朝夕相守一辈子的世纪早已过去。今天的我们也许只能在电话或电脑的两头轻声呼唤:亲爱的,你还好吗?

一、两个小时的长篇情话是一种奢侈。其实只要这样,能在工作的间歇,三言两语地甜蜜问候一下,知道你在惦记着我,那么,哪怕我们今生聚少离多,我都会觉得心里是踏实的。

Sunday, April 01, 2007

Sydney in climate change blackout

Bravo, Sydney!

I find it particularly amusing about a comment from Hong Kong. What a stereotypical Chinese way of thinking: more concerns are placed upon the "face", rather than the "core"; and they end up doing nothing but being caught up in a quandary set up by themselves.
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Sydney's famous skyline was shrouded in darknessLights have been turned off across Australia's largest city, Sydney, in a hour-long event aimed at raising awareness of global warming.

At 1930 (0930 GMT) the city's skyline dimmed and normally bright landmarks like the Opera House and the Harbour Bridge went dark.

The so-called Earth Hour is supported by the New South Wales government, environmental groups and businesses.

Sydney hopes the event will make a very big statement on climate change.

The city of four million people is aiming to become the first anywhere to achieve a blackout on this scale.

The BBC's Phil Mercer, in Sydney, says by and large Sydney had never been this dark.

He says lights were off in the majority of the central business district's office blocks and large parts of the suburbs were also in darkness.

Co-operation

Greg Bourne of environmental group WWF, one of the driving forces behind Earth Hour, said the big switch off took months to plan.

"The logistics is really quite amazing in the sense every tower block is owned by one company, maybe leased by another company, have 10 tenants in and a manager and working through all of these people has been fantastic."

Many restaurants signed up and planned to serve diners by candlelight.

The owner of the Newtown Hotel, which says it is Australia's oldest gay bar, told the BBC before the blackout that they would have fun while trying to send a serious message.

"Sometimes drag queens [female impersonators] do look better in the dark anyway," said Roger Zee.

"It's up to the patrons. They'll actually have their own torches so they'll be able to light up the drag queens on the stage themselves."

Organisers want to encourage Australians to conserve energy and to think carefully about what they can do to cut pollution.

Every day millions of lights and computers are left on in deserted office blocks as well as in apartments and houses.

Campaigners have said that simply switching them off could reduce Sydney's greenhouse gas emissions by 5% over the next year.

Australia is one of the world's largest per capita producers of carbon dioxide and other gases that many scientists believe are helping to warm the earth's atmosphere.

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A few interesting comments:

Why doesn't John Howard and his Premiers sign up to Kyoto instead of pulling off publicity stunts. Perhaps this will get the residents of Australia to think and put pressure on their 'leaders' to do so.
--Andrew, Brisbane (soon to be Edinburgh)

Kudos to Sydney! Hong Kong made a similar attempt last year but unlike its counterpart in New South Wales, the government refused to participate in the campaign, claiming that it would give "adverse publicity to Hong Kong as an international metropolis". Let's hope that the precedent set by Sydney will help persuade other cities, and their governments, to follow suit.
--C. Chan, Hong Kong