Sunday, December 20, 2009

Well, dad bought a new PC:

Windows Vista Home Premium(prob gonna upgrade it to windows 7)
1.8GHz, 4GB Memory RAM
64-bit operating system
and total of 685GB space in C: drive

Ok wth......685GB.......i only used up to 100GB max, and my dad uses up to 50GB
what are we suppose to do with the other 535GB........
prob gonna download drama and movies on it, and all the 15+ online games I play =/

and Glenny if you are reading this, I got my Battleon Character to lvl 96(97 soon) and got about 2.9mil gold (turn it into the best class ever: assassin) so go back and try out the new stuff i got on it

Saturday, December 12, 2009

FINALLY!

after 2 weeks, i finally got internet back on my home. and i moved, to a home with 3 floors. 1 thing i know here, the service in NJ SUCKED at most places. I called them 4months ago about transfer the internet line, they only did it today >_>

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Wow W.T.H, my mom ban me from computer just for not switching on my phone......
I didn't even know it was off >_> (how in the world am I suppose to know how my phone turned off by itself)
This is so unfair.....didn't even listen/believe what I say
No wonder I''m not close to my mom.......(rather than say close, I think we're like half way around the world apart form understanding each other)

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Alright......

First of all, congratulations to myself for reaching lvl 130 in Maplestory >_> (goal reached)

Next, a pretty good job i did getting myself a fever for sweeping leaves during work in a cold night with only a T-shirt on (headache, 1 that can kill u + pain in throat + messed up taste buds)

Third, got a pretty lousy score on SAT test, 1600/2400 (the english section test is nothing like Singapore's, memorized over 300+ vocab words n only like 10 appeared on the test. All other vocab i think it's like college lvl)

Finally, a very !@#$$%#@ congratulations to my ****ing laptop for breaking down on Halloween night. Now i have to use my dad's laptop.....

So no laptop+ bad score + a really bad fever + waking up from a 16hrs sleep = REALLY REALLY REALLY REALLY REALLY REALLY REALLY REALLY x 10000 bad mood

thats all for today, im done venting out my anger......

btw anyone who have facebook go add me, search my name and look for the guy with a "L" picture at profile pic

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Ok, today first day of school, started as senior, got senior privilege like leaving school early can go anywhere you like, pretty awesome.
then after school have to go to my part time job boss's house to cut grass, first time(and yes i get paid still). and i can only say one thing about it, really really(x100) tiring+tough+hard. lucky the weather is not hot otherwise i might die. i have to cut all the weeds with the weed wacker(if dunno what it is go google it)
imagine your bedroom, time that by about 10, thats how much grass i must cut. its not easy, soemtimes you get tiny rocks, sticks,dirt and grass whipped on to u and ur face with u cut too low, and i tell u , it HURTS.
o well thats all for now, got some pretty nice classes for my last year in high school xD

Monday, August 10, 2009

HEY GUYS, HAPPY NATIONAL DAY
ya i know its late xD but i only just remembered and i was working yesterday
so what am i up to lately? nothing xD
just killing/owning/ksing around in maplestory,
for those who challenged me in crossfire ghost mode, i really didn't hack god dam it, i've been playing it for half a year owning in that mode, THERE ARE FREAKING BREATH HEARING SKILL ITS NOT FAKE IM USING IT
i did trade in my PSP for a nintendo DS recently, now i need to get a memory card+card adaptor so i can store music and videos in it

o ya think you guys are clever? try this http://www.amnesya.com/ a riddle game that test your brain and all(wait for trailer to end to start game)
if you are stuck just email me, i'll give u hints(remember to use what you learn in tutorial)
some people didn't get pass turtorial, some can't even get pass lvl 10 xD, non have finish it

I'm at the 4 gates lvl(a.k.a lvl 61) good luck for those who are trying!

Monday, July 13, 2009

One hella of a strong laptop.....

No joke....read the article and see the pictures...it's funny too in the end....(lets hope panasonic doesn't cry over the $3000+ laptop....

Video Link(if you wanna watch it): http://video.forbes.com/fvn/tech/tiger-versus-laptop?partner=slide_laptop%3f

The Tiger-Resistant Laptop

The Tiger-Resistant Laptop

BURLINGAME - Call it the James Bond of laptops.

We dropped the Panasonic CF-30 "Toughbook," kicked it, stood on it and tried to back over it with a Volkswagen JettaTDi-its a type of car. (That left a mark--on the pavement.)

In Pictures: Insane Laptop Toughness Tests

We poured Diet Coke on the keyboard. Then we used the lid(laptop's lid) to crush the can.

You might think this is unnecessary testing for a laptop. Advertising is always brimming with over-the-top claims. We've heard about "durable" notebooks before. But the ones we lug to press conferences seem to be as touchy as a bunch of squirrels. Surely, Panasonic's claims of toughness are, well, over-the-top.

We found, however, that Panasonic's Toughbook performed as promised. Fair enough. So we came up with some tests that were decidedly unfair.

We used the Panasonic Toughbook to serve Doritos. Then we crushed the chips to dust between the keyboard and the screen, the same screen we used as a dartboard. The darts poked holes in the screen's protective coating, but the display underneath remained undamaged. Not a single dead pixel.

So we presented the $3,460 Toughbook to Nalin, a white tiger who lives at Six Flags Discovery Kingdom in Vallejo, Calif. Nalin treated it like a cat toy, knocking it to the ground, gnawing on the screen and licking every inch of its surface. He must have smelled those Doritos.

The tiger chewed off five keys, but that turned out to be just cosmetic. We could still type without them, and were able to glue four back on later (we made sure Nalin didn't swallow anything). The fifth just snapped back into place.

Next, Liz, a 10,000-pound Asian elephant, stepped on it, stood on it, dropped it onto a concrete slab, stood on it again--balanced on three legs--and then tossed it around some more. Liz put two small cracks in the laptop's magnesium alloy lid and popped the hard drive out.

The drive slid right back in to the Toughbook's chassis, which rebooted without a glitch. The screen was undamaged, although it was hard to see through the tiger hair and congealed drool.

That's when we remembered: We're allergic to cats.

Five days later, we turned from tests to something better described as execution: We took the laptop to the Jackson Arms firing range in South San Francisco to shoot it with a Ruger Mark III .22 pistol from 15 yards.

Dell declined to loan us a rugged laptop to shoot, saying they didn't have the “inventory excess to participate this time around.”

Panasonic, meanwhile, was about to have one less notebook. We removed the battery to minimize the mess, and aimed.

Goodbye, Mr. Toughbook.

Or so we thought. We put a bullet through the laptop. Then we booted it up. We were able to log in. Our test file was still there. The screen had a hole in it, but was still usable.

Spooky. Panasonic has built a laptop that was starting to look more like Grigori Rasputin than James Bond. It took cyanide, a stabbing, a beating and four bullets before the Russian mystic was finally drowned in the icy River Neva. Anyone got some holy water?

Don't call the Toughbook the anti-Christ, however; call it the anti-netbook. Panasonic's customers, typically cops and firefighters, the military and businesses want to keep their ownership costs low over the entire lifetime of their gear. No matter what.

As a result, the CF-30 is the product of a business model that's the opposite of that behind today's wave of cheap, disposable netbook computers. While the $300 machines you'll find for sale at Best Buy are available in a wide array of colors and styles, they all come from the same place: low-cost contract manufacturers.

Panasonic, by contrast, was an electronics manufacturer long before it got into the computer business. It builds many of the components you'll find in other companies' laptops, including displays and batteries, says Rance Poehler, who leads Panasonic's North American computer business.

So rather than outsourcing, Panasonic can put its factories to work building not just tough laptops, but tough parts for those laptops. The Toughbook 30's hard drive, for example, is itself a minor marvel of engineering: It's designed to withstand being ripped out at a moment's notice in the field and is encased in a padded metal shell all its own.

That kind of durability costs more, but customers say it pencils out well enough that they'd buy a Toughbook over a typical notebook. Morris Materials Handling, which sells and services overhead cranes for heavy industry, buys refurbished Panasonic 18s that have seen use in the military for a little more than half the price of new ones. The laptops aren't indestructible--a 50-foot drop from a crane did one in--but the technician was able to pop out the hard drive, slap it into a new unit, and get back to work.

Durability, however, is about more than taking a drop or a surviving an elephant attack. Henry King at ArborMetrics Solutions, which keeps trees and other foliage out of the way for utilities across the U.S., has deployed 70 Toughbooks. Just the road vibrations caused by putting a laptop in a car and driving 40,000 to 50,000 miles a year to service its customers' infrastructure has killed many laptops, King says. By contrast, Panasonic's hard drives can suck it up.

As for our test laptop, it had been through enough. It was time to put the beast down. The Toughbook CF-30 is elephant- and tiger-resistant. It can take a .22 at close range and continue working. We needed something that would leave a bigger hole.

So we borrowed a Springfield 1911 in .45 ACP. Most cops use comparatively dinky 9-millimeter pistols. This classic 39-ounce piece is more hand cannon than handgun.

A shot with the 1911 from 15 yards took the Toughbook down. To be sure it didn't stagger back up, we followed up with a .44 magnum revolver and a solid lead slug from a 12-gauge shotgun. Then we packed up the Toughbook and sent it back to Panasonic.

Oringinal Link: http://news.sg.msn.com/sci-tech/article.aspx?cp-documentid=3411433