Showing posts with label Weblog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weblog. Show all posts

Monday, November 24, 2008

Monday, November 17, 2008

Friday, October 24, 2008

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

chatting robot

http://alicebot.blogspot.com/

although it turns out to be stupid in terms of the ability of human being. It's really an gorgeous advance of Artificial Intelligence. And it's quit interesting to try chatting with her, ALICE.

qualifying exams passed

Cong. to myself! But with low score ... It seems to be quit rigorous on reading our exams. Anyway, I have to work still hard on courses and research.

Monday, September 29, 2008

Raining today ...

Finally ...

I think it is reasonable for South California to pass a law stating that every raining day is holiday ~~~

BTW, Calif recently passed a law to enforce no cellphone when driving, no phone-call, no messaging. And others? It's really good for safe driving.

new quarter is on its way ...

tomorrow is the first instruction day of 2008 fall quarter ...

several stuff to report here:
Last Sunday, I visited UCLA. Pictures will be put in my picture albums when procession is completed.

Always remember to drive safe.

Starting working hard ...

Thursday, September 18, 2008

step by step

acm 101abc done ....

F acm104,105,116

cheering on ....

wish a happy end ...

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

new racket strung

NS 8000. It costed me so much to string it, $11 without any string. In China, only 25 RMB with a string ... However, it looks beautiful and seems to be easy to play with. Most important, some professional player confirmed that it is a authentic one. Here are some pictures. I will try it tonight ....









step by step

acm 106abc done ...
Th acm101abc
F acm104,105,116

cheering on ...

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

OS upgraded

to SP3...

Also, itune has been upgraded to ver. 8. But I've no time to explore it...

Last, bless myself for the coming quals ...

Here is the schedule:

W  106abc
Th 101abc
F    104,105,116

Good luck ~~~ 

Friday, August 29, 2008

Six Flags!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Pictures can be find here.

A really really fantastic and crazy place to visit and a place full of screaming and . They introduce a new roller coaster, X2. So crazy... We took this first. When boarded, I felt even a little exited. But when we started, first, I felt I was falling into to hell, then, suddenly, flying into the heaven again. In one word, my soul seemed to flee away from my body. The only thing I can did was screaming, screaming, and screaming ... But I have to say, it's really really exciting and worthy of taking. After X2, we immediately took the Viper, which, I thought, maybe is the first roller coaster in six flags, because it is a classic one. After the extreme X2, Viper was nothing to us. So easy, haha ~~~ Then we also took Déjà Vu, Tatsu and Goliath. Below are their specific features:

X2: backward sitting, but seats are on the wings
Viper: Classic, sitting in the carts
Déjà Vu: forward standing
Tatsu: prostrating, flying like a bird
Goliath: forward sitting, highest roller coaster

Of course, we also took others, such as tidal waves.

In a word, we really had a lot of fun there.

Tips: the food inside 6 flags is terrible and expensive. So I will suggest bringing your food.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Lenovo Thinkpad upgraded

2G memory received, and successfully installed. But, it's quit inconvenient to put the memory in the laptop for Lenovo Thinkpad. I had to open the front board so as to plug the memory in. But for IBM Thinkpad, I only have to open a little cover which is specially designed for installing an extra memory. However, at least, I can see what's indeed inside. So the following are the structure inside the Lenovo Thinkpad laptop. 






  

Monday, August 25, 2008

What's Parkways or PKWY

cited from wikipedia.

Parkway

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Harden Parkway in Salinas, California.
Harden Parkway in Salinas, California.

In the United States, Parkways are defined as follows:

  1. A type of road
    1. A broad landscaped thoroughfare; especially : one from which trucks and other heavy vehicles are excluded.
    2. A roadway in a park : a landscaped thoroughfare connecting parks
    3. An expressway located on a strip of land legally constituting a public park and therefore not open to heavy vehicles
  2. A landscaped strip of land paralleling or running in the center of a thoroughfare

Parkways are fairly common in New York City and its environs, and rarer in most of the USA.

SInce the late 20th century, many places have added buses, taxis, and limousines to the list of vehicles authorized to use parkways in order to promote the use of public transportation. These exceptions to the commercial or heavy traffic rule tended to blur the distinction between parkways and freeways.

Contents

[hide]

[edit] History

Over the years, many different types of roads have been labeled parkways. The first parkways in America were developed in the 19th Century by Frederick Law Olmsted as segregated roads for pedestrians, bicyclists, equestrians, and carriages, with the most famous of this group being Eastern Parkway and Ocean Parkway in Brooklyn, NY. Roads such as Commonwealth Avenue in Boston, MA and Bidwell and Lincoln Parkways in Buffalo, New York are broad, divided roads with large landscaped central medians. These older parkways often act as the approach to a large city park such as the Boston Common in Boston or Delaware Park in Buffalo. They are lined with houses. Some separated express lanes from local lanes, though this was not always the case.

During the early 20th century, the meaning of the word was expanded to include limited-access highways designed for recreational driving of automobiles. New parkways provided scenic places to race motor cars outside the city without stopping for pedestrian traffic and slower vehicles. These parkways led to more development outside the city, which eventually limited their usefulness for recreation.

Some of these parkways have become major local or interstate traffic routes, however they retained the name parkway. These parkways have been designed particularly for through traffic, and many can be classified generally as freeways or toll highways.

Historically, the term "parkway" has often implied that the road was designed specifically with a naturalistic or manicured landscaping of the median and adjacent land areas meant to suggest a pastoral driving experience, isolated from the manifestations of commerce and advertising, even when the road passes through populated areas; for this reason commercial traffic is excluded.

Many parkways have signature road signs with special emblems that suggest a thematic driving experience and increase the sense of isolation from civilization in the vicinity of the road.

The system of parkways in the U.S. predate such later limited-access highways as the Pennsylvania Turnpike, the German autobahn system, and the United States Interstate highway system.

Beginnings: New York City

Sign reminding truckers it is illegal for them to use parkways in New York City.
Sign reminding truckers it is illegal for them to use parkways in New York City.

The terminology "parkway" to define a type of road was coined by Calvert Vaux and Frederick Law Olmsted, designers of New York City's Central Park, in their proposal to link city and suburban parks with pleasure roads. Eastern Parkway and Ocean Parkway (Brooklyn) were actually built at this time. Soon after, similar "parkways" were built in and around Boston, as coordinated parts of an extensive park and road system; see for example the Mystic Valley Parkway (1895). The New York City area continued to set trends with a new 20th century type featuring off-grade crossings and other features that foreshadowed later freeway designs. Construction on the Bronx River Parkway began in 1907, and on the Long Island Motor Parkway (also known as the Vanderbilt Parkway) in 1906. In the 1920s, the parkway system around New York City grew extensively under the direction of Robert Moses, President of the Long Island State Park Commission, who saw parkways as an active means to transfer population from crowded urban areas onto undeveloped areas.

One of the most famous parkways in the New York area is the Merritt Parkway in Fairfield County, Connecticut, which opened in the 1930s. The road is an example of parkway aesthetics, as it runs through the forests of southern Connecticut, but also each bridge on the parkway was designed uniquely and enhances the beauty of the parkway.

Across the United States

In the 1930s, the concept of the parkway was extended to the federal government, which constructed several national parkways designed for recreational driving and to commemorate historic routes. Such two-lane parkways typically have a relatively low speed limit and are maintained by the National Park Service. Examples include the CCC-built Blue Ridge Parkway / Skyline Drive in North Carolina and Virginia, the Natchez Trace Parkway in Mississippi, Alabama, and Tennessee, and the Colonial Parkway in eastern Virginia's Historic Triangle area. A number of additional parkways were proposed and unbuilt during this era.

Parkways in modern times

In Kentucky, "parkway" is used to designate a controlled-access highway built as a toll road. Nine such roads were built in Kentucky in the 1960s and 1970s. Kentucky law requires that once the bonds that finance the construction of a toll road are paid off, the road must be turned into a freeway. All nine roads are now freeways, with the last toll facilities removed in 2006, but have retained their "Parkway" designation.

The Arroyo Seco Parkway from Pasadena to Los Angeles, built in 1940, became the first segment of the vast Southern California freeway system. It is now called the Pasadena Freeway and is part of California Route 110.

In the Greater New York City region, parkways are generally (but not always) controlled-access highways restricted to non-commercial traffic.

In the Pittsburgh region, three of the major interstates are referred to informally as parkways. The Parkway East (formally the Penn-Lincoln Parkway), designated I-376, spans Downtown Pittsburgh to Monroeville, Pennsylvania. The Parkway West, designated as I-279, US Route 22/30, and Pennsylvania Route 60, as well as Future I-376 along its entire length, goes from Downtown Pittsburgh to Pittsburgh International Airport. The Parkway North, designated I-279, spans Downtown Pittsburgh to Franklin Park, Pennsylvania.

Many opponents of increased road construction in the United States claim that the use of the term "parkway" in any sense other than as a scenic route through parkland, is deceptive. It is claimed by such advocates that many existing and proposed parkways (such as the proposed West Eugene Parkway in Oregon) are functionally indistinguishable from freeways and/or expressways, and the "parkway" label is used to make construction of such routes seem more palatable to the public (who might otherwise stage a freeway revolt, especially if their neighborhood is affected). Others claim that this is splitting hairs; and that the use of the term "parkway" in conjunction with urban and suburban highways is a well-established practice. Furthermore, most routes designated with the "parkway" label do have scenic enhancements (making the route more attractive for both motorists and neighbors), and many such routes do exclude trucks. As truck traffic interferes with normal vehicle movement the congestion in the road can be reduced.

In Minneapolis, the Grand Rounds Scenic Byway system includes about 50 miles (80 km) of streets designated as parkways. These streets are not freeways, since they are signed with a 25 mile per hour speed limit and they have several pedestrian crossings and stop signs.

Freeway-drive and Belt-fish

On Friday, I drove on the freeway for the 1st time. The  process was the following: One of my friends slept in my apt at the night before he went to China. For his convenience, I gave him the key to my apt, and he promised to gave the key to the person who drove him to the airport. But in the end, he forgot to give the key back. So he called me, and told me that he would leave the key at the counter of the airline. So the aftermath was, I had to fetch it. Everybody was busy at that time, so I decided to drive there by myself. At the beginning on the freeway, I was indeed a little nervous, and a little excited  as well. Then gradually, when I got used to the speed on the freeway, it was totally fine. So my first freeway drive was not bad. I survived it.

The second thing is I cooked belt-fish for the first time yesterday. It looked nice, but not tasted good. I have to practice more. Below are the picture and the recipe. 



糖醋带鱼 
原料:带鱼500克,葱丝、姜丝、蒜片共20克,酱油2汤匙,醋2茶匙,绍酒1茶匙,糖1茶匙,花椒油1茶匙,鲜汤适量。 
制作: 
1、将带鱼去头、尾、内脏,洗净,剁成5公分左右的段,用盐略腌。 
2、锅中多放些油烧热,下带鱼段炸熟,两面呈金黄色时出锅,沥干油待用。 
3、锅中留底油,下葱丝、姜丝、蒜片煸炒,放入炸好的带鱼,烹入绍酒、醋、酱油,加少许汤,放糖,入味后淋花椒油,炒匀即成。 
注意事项: 花椒油可自制,在炒锅中加油,用文火炸花椒,出香味时断火,撇去花椒粒即成;鲜汤可用鸡粉加水代替。

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Accident

encountered this morning on the way to 6flags. It happed when we were almost there. We were pulling out of the freeway #5. At that time, we were so exited, and maybe Eric, the driver, lost his ability of judgment. He stepped on the break pedal very hard, but the car did not stop immediately as he and we thought. Then it hit the trunk of the car at the front of us. The collision was not so strong, but both air-bags popped out, and broke the front glass. Luckily, every one is OK. Eric and Denis got slightly hurt on their arms caused the pop of the air-bags. The car, branded Volvo, remains in good condition. It only has slight water leakage. After Eric filled out some forms for insurance, two policemen came. Not too bad. The accident is not severe. So we were asked for some situation of the accident, the policemen let us go. The car can still work, so we could drive back.

Below are some pictures of the accident. Keep in mind, always drive safe!!!







Sunday, August 17, 2008

Xiang quitted

in the eyes of hundreds of thousands of his fans, who are full of hope to witness another birth of Golden Medal of 110m hurdle running. It was reported that some people paid 80,000 RMB to get a ticket to the game of Xiang. Most of Chinese people may be disappointed. However, we should keep calm and respect him and his choice. He is a human being, not a machine. The fact is that he is being badly wounded. He held the piercing pain to walk into his lane. However, his pain is so seriously that he could not finish the second hurdle. In my opinion, even if he could hold the pain and finished the run, he could not won the prize. So, in the long term, his choice is completely right. On the other hand, he is the most grieved person in the world after the quit. A strong man is the person who can control himself. Xiang is a strong man. Comfort, Xiang! Keep practicing, you can surely win the golden prize in the future.

Huntington Library revisited

This afternoon. Pictures taken by myself can be found here. The European Art Gallery is reopened this May after renovation. The most exciting thing is that the Chinese Garden, named Garden of Flowing Fragrance, is newly opened for visitors this April. Below is the introduction of the Chinese Garden from the website of the Huntington Library.

Inspired by the centuries-old Chinese tradition of private gardens designed for scholarly pursuits, Liu Fang Yuan , or the Garden of Flowing Fragrance, combines the scenic beauty of nature with the expressiveness of literature to give deeper meaning to the landscape. A walk through its paths enriches the mind and spirit alike. The Huntington—with its renowned collections of art, rare books, manuscripts, and plants—was founded on this same philosophy by Henry E. Huntington in 1919.

True to the authentic nature of a Chinese garden, the design respects the site. Sheltering woods were left undisturbed to create a sylvan backdrop. A man-made lake shimmers in the same deep spot where water naturally collected on the Huntington property after heavy rains. Chinese architecture and rocks from China’s Lake Tai, placed around the water’s edge, are balanced with native features such as California oaks. Respect for the site also extends to adapting some of the traditional elements of Chinese garden design to meet local needs for seismic safety and wheelchair accessibility.

The garden’s name, Liu Fang Yuan, has both literal and symbolic meanings. The words liu fang, or “flowing fragrance,” refer to the scent of flowers and trees, including the pine, lotus, plum, and other native Chinese plants found here. The Chinese poet Cao Zhi (192–232) first used the words in his “Rhapsody on the Luo River Goddess” to describe how the fragrance of flowers trailed in the goddess’s wake as she walked among the scented flora. And liu fang echoes the name of famed Ming dynasty painter Li Liufang (1575–1629), known for his refined landscapes.

Layers of meaning and symbolism like these add to the enjoyment of a Chinese garden’s beauty. As you explore Liu Fang Yuan, you’ll discover that there is much more to this beautiful landscape than meets the eye.

ELEMENTS OF A CHINESE GARDEN

A Chinese garden often is compared to a work of art: a scroll painting composed of carefully arranged scenes. As you stroll through its pathways and pavilions, new vistas are revealed as if a scroll were being slowly unrolled. In the garden, as in a painting, several key elements play an important part in creating balance and harmony in the composition.

Architecture

Pavilions, bridges, covered walkways, and windows are places from which to view the landscape, as well as objects to be admired for their own beauty. An intricately crafted lattice window may artfully frame an object or a scene. Bridges lead to small islands where pavilions on the opposite shore can be viewed in new ways from afar. Botanical motifs ornament many of the structures. Camellias are carved in the wood of the teahouse, the “Hall of the Jade Camellia,” to represent the plant’s importance as the source of tea leaves. Carvings of bamboo, pine, and plum blossoms adorn the ceiling of the “Pavilion of the Three Friends” near a grove where those three plants grow. In Chinese literature and art, these three plants came to represent unity in perseverance, courage, and endurance because they flourish in the cold season. The plum blossoms in early spring when snow is still on the ground, and pine and bamboo stay evergreen through the winter.

Water, Rocks, and Plants

Water (symbolizing the ever-changing) and rocks (the eternal) create harmony in the garden, balancing nature’s yin and yang. Weathered limestone rocks from Lake Tai line the water’s edge, evoking the craggy mountains of a Chinese landscape painting. Water creates an added visual dimension to the garden by reflecting the changing moods of the light, clouds, and sky. Plants and flowers, too, serve a symbolic purpose in a Chinese garden, as well as a decorative one. Certain plants may represent the seasons (peach blossoms for spring, pine for winter), while others stand for attributes such as purity (lotus) or uprightness (bamboo). While form and color appeal to the eye, other senses are engaged by a fragrance wafting in the air, the sound of water falling over stones, or raindrops striking broad leaves.

Literature and the Arts

Many of China’s great garden-builders were wealthy merchants with scholarly interests, and their gardens were places for literary and artistic activities such as poetry, painting, and calligraphy. Giving poetic names to gardens, and to various views within them, was a favorite intellectual pursuit. That tradition continues in Liu Fang Yuan. Notice how the round gates in the “Terrace of the Jade Mirror” are shaped like the full moon; the name is inspired by Chinese literature, which compares the moon to a round mirror of highly prized white jade. The “Love for the Lotus Pavilion” takes its name from an essay by the Chinese scholar Zhou Dunyi (1017–1073) describing his admiration for the purity and simplicity of the lotus. Look out across the lake from the “Terrace that Invites the Mountains” and see how the distant San Gabriel Mountains have been welcomed into the garden to complete the scene.

Throughout Liu Fang Yuan you’ll see poetic names and inscribed calligraphy accompanying different scenic views. Let them open your eyes to a new way of experiencing the pleasures of a walk through the garden.

Saturday, August 16, 2008

早起看比赛

发现现在的新闻联播快成体育新闻了,可见国家对奥运重视之程度。。。anyway,祝福马上要比赛的男双男儿,蔡赟付海峰加油!