Red

Dust storm over Sydney @ University of New South Wales

Sydney’s cov­ered in a dust storm this morn­ing and everyone’s talk­ing about it. It’s pretty funky coloured and unprece­dented in recorded his­tory. Tori says Thank God in her new blog (at least, that’s the blog’s focus :)) — oth­ers say more amus­ing things. Here’s a sample.

““UFO?” — my brother, “no, dust storm” — me. He looked upset.”

“[name] proudly wel­comes you to Syd­ney Ranga Day. You can’t see us, but you know we’re out there.”

“[name] would hate to be hold­ing a cli­mate change deniers press con­fer­ence in Syd­ney today.”

“Appar­ently you shouldnt go out­side if u have asthma” [sic] — stat­ing the obvi­ous award

“[name] won­ders if, due to global warm­ing, jesus will return on a cloud of orange dust?”

“[name] is won­der­ing how he got inside a sepia photo?!”

“[name] wants it to rain so she can make a mud pie on her car”

Hey guys i had this big bag of red dust that i left out­side, but how [sic] can’t find it. Would any­one know where it is?”

# by Josh Street on September 23rd, 2009 Tags: , , , , , , , , ,
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Reflections on an exciting and terrifying letter

This evening I received a let­ter of nom­i­na­tion from my uni­ver­sity sup­port­ing my exchange appli­ca­tion. My heart is greatly torn at this news. God is not with­out a sense of irony! Tori and I both pray for a future serv­ing God together, but the process to attain­ing this is not, it seems, one with­out pain or dif­fi­culty. We antic­i­pate more long months apart, and I face leav­ing Syd­ney, its com­forts and securities.

In Syd­ney, there is secu­rity in so many things. I trust in fam­ily, in friends, in per­sonal and pro­fes­sional net­works, in job secu­rity and my own abil­i­ties. I trust in credit cards, Inter­net providers, news­pa­pers and mobile phones. All of these things come to noth­ing, dis­solv­ing in the face of study­ing a lan­guage so rad­i­cally dif­fer­ent from my own first lan­guage. Yet, were I to achieve any degree of com­fort­able­ness in this lan­guage, at least some of the things in which I falsely find secu­rity would, with­out sound rea­son, assume that posi­tion of trust in my life once more.

The one true thing to trust in is com­mon to all lan­guages, all peo­ple, and every place on earth. There’s just one sure and cer­tain hope that is unfail­ing. When every thing and per­son on earth gives way, Jesus alone is our hope and stay. (So thank­ful to God for Tori’s reminder of that in the midst of my freak­ing out about all of this tonight — you are a wise and godly woman Tori!)

Busi­ness strat­egy, inter­net devel­op­ment, and the excit­ing insan­ity of startup work in an amaz­ing indus­try with the best col­leagues will trans­form into, near-exclusively, the well-trodden path of labo­ri­ous lan­guage study, learn­ing through hum­bling fail­ure and the neces­sity of con­stant cor­rec­tion by even the clos­est of friends. Yet lan­guage learn­ing opens doors, com­mu­ni­cates truths, and, sim­i­larly to the insan­ity of star­tups, is spurred along by neces­sity and an urgent need for improvement.

For my part, I’m learn­ing to trust God more and hav­ing the false objects of my hope called out in front of me by even the sug­ges­tion of hav­ing to leave them behind. It’s funny, because I thought I’d thought about this — I guess as things become con­crete prob­lems get harder to ignore! Strangely, the things I had thought will be dif­fi­cult to let go and live with­out — a car, a great IT setup, books, pur­chas­ing power due to con­strained exchange bud­get, etc. — hadn’t even come up in my mind yet (though they may later).

Per­haps the issue for me is less mate­ri­al­ism, as I had thought, and more pride and an overde­pen­dence on the things that don’t sat­isfy and give life to the full! The absur­dity of this sit­u­a­tion is per­haps best encap­su­lated in the obser­va­tion that I am torn at the spec­tac­u­lar breadth, depth and width of oppor­tu­ni­ties pro­vided. It is ridicu­lous to think that I, such a mediocre stu­dent, should be given the chance to study at a top-5 uni­ver­sity as well as the remark­ably well-regarded Uni­ver­sity of Syd­ney. The ridicu­lous­ness of this is, per­haps, only sur­passed by the fact that I then pro­ceed to com­plain about it!

And both these priv­i­leges are like rub­bish com­pared to the sur­pass­ing great­ness of know­ing the Lord Jesus Christ — this is the most absurd oppor­tu­nity of all. To be loved by the Cre­ator, whose cre­ation (of which I am part) destroyed Him, though death could not hold Him down, such that death promises eter­nal life through Christ’s vic­tory: it is beyond comprehension! 感谢主!

# by Josh Street on September 4th, 2009 Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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The view from TG office yesterday

Sunrise over Coogee @ TG HQ

Fri­day was a pretty insane day, but I snapped this photo (cam­er­a­phone, dunno what hap­pened top right!) arriv­ing at our office in the morn­ing before get­ting into it. We’ve got a pretty incred­i­ble view over Coogee, which is fan­tas­tic… except for when the sea and sky are such amaz­ing colours and you know there’s not a chance of actu­ally get­ting out­side to it!

There were some sheets of light rain and these incred­i­ble clouds that cleared off to per­fect skies and an ocean that even I, some­one who doesn’t par­tic­u­larly rate swim­ming and has never learnt to surf despite liv­ing within 5km of the coast his whole life, wished I was free to head over to.

It is good to give thanks to the Lord,
to sing praises to your name, O Most High;
to declare your stead­fast love in the morn­ing,
and your faith­ful­ness by night,
to the music of the lute and the harp,
to the melody of the lyre.
For you, O Lord, have made me glad by your work;
at the works of your hands I sing for joy.

Psalm 92

We were made to work even before sin entered the world, but I reckon work/time-outside-on-a-beautiful-day bal­ance would’ve been bet­ter then! For those trust Jesus, a future is com­ing where every day all are freed to give thanks to Him for­ever…  even those stuck in beige office towers!

# by Josh Street on August 1st, 2009 Tags: , , , , , , , ,
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Driscoll on Sydney evangelical Christians

If some­one feels called or led or like God spoke to them… no-one knows what to do.

– Mark Driscoll

I actu­ally laughed aloud hear­ing him say this. It’s really sad but so com­pletely upside down I find it kind of hilar­i­ous. Mad world.

# by Josh Street on September 8th, 2008 Tags: , ,
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China L visa post-May 2008

Regard­ing Chi­nese L class visas, which are sup­pos­edly (post-May 2008, even) still not that dif­fi­cult to get, at the Syd­ney embassy.

Some things that your aver­age travel agent and TRAVCOUR visa pro­cess­ing prob­a­bly either don’t know, or won’t tell you. Unless you’re book­ing through a China spe­cial­ist, but hey, more info out there can’t hurt. The few travel agents I’ve spo­ken to this time around were happy to admit they didn’t under­stand what was hap­pen­ing, so noth­ing too bad to report on that front!

  1. Only tick the bare min­i­mum. If you’re going for sight­see­ing, just tick that box. If you tick the rel­a­tives box you’ll have to prove they exist. You need to prove every­thing exists. The whole process is an exis­ten­tial nightmare!
  2. A cer­tain secu­rity guard at cer­tain con­sulate (hint: I haven’t been out­side of Syd­ney since Feb­ru­ary and have been told in the last month to do this, which cer­tainly nar­rows it down a bit!) will not let you in with­out per­fect doc­u­men­ta­tion. He’s not Chi­nese (they use a pri­vate secu­rity firm at least for pub­lic areas), and not very under­stand­ing. If you’ve filled in a form before you get there, pre­tend you haven’t. If you need to go inside and try to talk to some­one this is prob­a­bly the best strat­egy. Call me naive, but this is prefer­able to fak­ing doc­u­ments using a travel agent, which was the course of action he rec­om­mended. I kid not. Let it be noted: The other secu­rity guard at the embassy is fan­tas­tic and nice and help­ful… but only speaks Eng­lish. Must be hell­ish for Hua Ren (with not-great-English) try­ing to get in!
  3. Don’t actu­ally fake your papers if you can avoid it. I was (again, prob­a­bly naively) shocked at being essen­tially instructed to lie as a mat­ter of process, and obvi­ously this isn’t a course of action that actu­ally should be rec­om­mended by any­one. The process is dif­fi­cult enough with­out added com­pli­ca­tion brought about by fraud!
  4. If your travel plans are uncer­tain, don’t worry about doc­u­ment­ing other cities too much.
  5. If you need double-entry, for exam­ple because you’re trav­el­ing to Hong Kong and back into China, be aware that you will need to doc­u­ment a des­ti­na­tion back inside China. Again, the specifics of this don’t mat­ter too much — but you are meant to pro­duce tick­ets for travel along with your visa appli­ca­tion. Specif­i­cally speak­ing of Hong Kong, you can cir­cum­vent this require­ment by writ­ing in the itin­er­ary field “Des­ti­na­tion (by train)” or sim­i­lar method of trans­port that is very unlikely to be doc­u­mented months in advance. You will need proof of accom­mo­da­tion at your first des­ti­na­tion, but beyond this it doesn’t seem to much matter.
  6. If you’re stay­ing with family/friends that may com­pli­cate mat­ters. You may or may not need booked accom­mo­da­tion for the dura­tion of your stay… I didn’t test this one out!
  7. Hong Kong SAR isn’t a prob­lem at all re: accom­mo­da­tion or any­thing else if you’re an Aussie. So don’t bother with this for your visa appli­ca­tion… it’s part of China, sure, but not for the pur­poses of com­pli­cated bureaucracy!
  8. The actual Chi­nese staff at the embassy are really nice and really help­ful, once you get past the troll­ish secu­rity guard and fig­ure out at least roughly what paper­work you need! If in doubt, fig­ure out a way to get inside and stand in the visa queue and ask them, and they’ll prob­a­bly be able to help you with what­ever ques­tion. That’s how I dis­cov­ered the (by train) itin­er­ary flexibility!

Finally, this is just my expe­ri­ence in one place in Aus­tralia, and will prob­a­bly change. Even in 悉尼 :P

Road tripping

From Syd­ney to Jind­abyne and back a car in 19 hours. Good fun, but not likely to be attempted again in a hurry.

Rainbow

With Tim & Selo. We left at about 10.30pm after Ellen’s and got back by 5.30pm the next day. APEC traf­fic had noth­ing on us ;-)

# by Josh Street on September 9th, 2007 Tags: ,
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whisper power consumption & emissions

Now, I’m not sold on this whole green­house thing just yet (The Great Global Warm­ing Swin­dle had at least as much sway over my opin­ion as that Pow­er­point pre­sen­ta­tion to which it was, per­haps, a coun­ter­point), but as a mat­ter of mere con­sump­tion (and intel­lec­tual curios­ity) I was keen to learn just how much power one of my com­put­ers, in par­tic­u­lar, was using annually.

This one sits in a cup­board, answers to the name of ‘whis­per’, reaches obscene tem­per­a­tures in sum­mer (yet does not crash), and, at its heart, fea­tures a low-power-consumption proces­sor and moth­er­board by VIA. It also has two hard dri­ves and a sin­gle 512MB (8-chip double-sided (16 total)) DDR-400 DIMM.

And that is all.

Most of the time, it’s rel­a­tively untaxed… it acts as file stor­age, a web server for mis­cel­la­neous stuff I want to share quickly, and a devel­op­ment box for more adven­tur­ous things. At one stage it was host­ing stream­ing media (and, very very briefly, a Counter-Strike server… it is hor­ri­bly under-specc’d for such duties). It’s also use­ful for SSH’ing into and bypass­ing prox­ies when you really need to get to some­thing (entirely legit­i­mate, mind), but increas­ingly less so as a cer­tain work­place of mine blocked SSH out access when we moved floors. No mat­ter — I’ve iden­ti­fied a HTTPS-SSH solu­tion to that par­tic­u­lar prob­lem, but haven’t been moti­vated to imple­ment it just yet!

So, here’s the run-down:

			Load	Idle
VIA EPIA PD10000	23W	15W
Generic 512MB		2W	1.5W
ST380011A		12W	8W
ST380011A		12W	8W
			49W	32.5W

Most of those have been rounded a lit­tle bit, but… let’s just say it only uses 49W at the most.

Then, there’s the 65%-efficiency-at-full-load (230W) power sup­ply to con­sider. We’re no-where near full load, but let’s just say it’s con­sis­tently effi­cient (or, in-efficient) regard­less of load. In prac­tice, it’d prob­a­bly be slightly bet­ter for lower loads due to reduced heat production.

So, our 49W sud­denly becomes (49x1.35) 66.15W

That’s 579.47kWh/year, which (appar­ently) equates to about 400KG of emis­sions. This, friends, is absolute worst-case sce­nario. More real­is­ti­cally, the sys­tem will be idle most of the time, using 384.3kWh/year, and pump­ing out around 260KG of carbon.

I’d be inter­ested to see how this would com­pare to a typ­i­cal lap­top computer.

For this par­tic­u­lar com­puter, there’s only a lit­tle that can be done to improve effi­ciency. The obvi­ous tar­get is the two hard dri­ves, which, com­bined, draw nearly as much power as the rest of the sys­tem! Con­sid­er­ing there’s not a dra­matic amount of stor­age presently in use, I could almost jus­tify replac­ing these with a solid-state device (in the form of an IDE-card reader bridge, because real SSD dri­ves remain pro­hib­i­tively expen­sive and dif­fi­cult to obtain in this coun­try) if the need were really there.

And what would cre­ate such a need? Well, part of the rea­son I wanted to find out was to see how many hours this thing could live off a fairly cheap UPS for. Turns out it’s prob­a­bly got at least an hour’s worth of life in it, which is mod­er­ately incred­i­ble com­pared to the typ­i­cal ten-minute-or-it’s-fsck-time expected para­chute expectancy!

The only prob­lem in adding a UPS is that they’re not the world’s most energy effi­cient devices them­selves, with an APC 500VA model chew­ing 24BTU (82.02W, since we’ve been work­ing in that thus far) per hour when “online”. BTU is a mea­sure of ther­mal energy dis­si­pa­tion, by the way, so prob­a­bly it’s also less-than-ideal for stick­ing in a cup­board in which the next-largest heat source is prob­a­bly the power sup­ply at a mea­gre 17.15W (assum­ing its inef­fi­ciency is purely ther­mal, which, of course, it won’t be — other non-thermal radi­a­tion must account for at least some of its loss).

So, there we go. A fairly use­less exer­cise that will become mar­gin­ally less use­less if ever there are rolling brownouts in Syd­ney and I need some­thing to be able to weather the power storm. The other great thing about UPS is they pro­vide fairly decent power con­di­tion­ing, too. Given you can pay about $50 for a decent 6-way surge pro­tected board, or only $140 for a 500VA (300W) APC UPS these days, it’s really not that bad a deal afterall.

Sources:

VIA EPIA-PD10000 power usage: http://www.via.com.tw/download/mainboards/3/4/OG_EPIA-PD_111804.pdf
Generic 512MB DDR-400 mem­ory power usage:
My mem­ory, from prior read­ing and specs of higher-quality mem­ory that actu­ally pub­lish such data.
Sea­gate ST380011A power usage:
http://www.seagate.com/support/disc/manuals/ata/cuda7200pm.pdf

SFX-230M2 switch­ing power sup­ply (used by a lot of big OEMs like Dell and HP, it turns out) spec­i­fi­ca­tions:
http://www.sirtec.com.tw/photot2/10205/210205R11.pdf