Dubai – Will the Fantasy Last?

You must have seen this (Burj Al Arab Hotel),

Burj Al Arab Hotel

You probably also watched splendid fireworks of Atlandis the Palm Hotel‘s opening ceremony,

Atlandis the Palm

And supposely, you would see these in a few years,

Dubai, the most rapidly developing metropolis, is an ideal platform for architects experimenting their futuristic design. Most of these buildings bear the name, the tallest, the largest or most luxurious of the world.

However, Dubai is not immuned to the global economic slowdown, real-estate crashes and especially the credit crunch. Trump Tower project has been concelled. While Burj Dubai is still in construction, the rent of office space has dropped significantly. Constructors fleed away, and Dubai itself is on the verge of bankruptcy. After all, these spetacular building, resorts and shopping malls are built by the poor for the rich. When the bubble breaks, the fantacy is not going to sustain.

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Maui – West Maui

2009.4.19

Maui island is made by two volcanos, Halemahina (House of the Sun) and Haleakalā (House of the Moon). Today, we were going to circle the West Maui. Halemahina is the older volcano of the two. The mountain is covered by heavy forest. Although there are many drainage caused by erosion, there is no path to reach the peak, Pu’u Kukui, which receives more than 400 inches of rainfall every year.

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Maui – Wailea

2009.4.18We arrived at Maui at noon. It is not as hot as we thought. When we went to Oahu 4 years ago, the first impression once we got off the plane was it is very humid. Not here in Maui.

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Fresh from the Garden – Spring’s First Rose

rose_w_srose_y_srose_r_sAlthough it still feels chilly at night and it still rains occasionally, spring has indeed come to the Bay Area. Last weekend, I first noticed a red rose peaking through the greens in the backyard; then I saw the pink flower sprouted out in the front yard. There are tens of buds on the bushes, looks like a full bloom won’t be far away.

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Mt. Diablo Panorama

After having lunch at Koi Garden last weekend, we went to Mt. Diablo State Park. Mt. Diablo offers open mountain view and many choices of hiking trails. It is perfect for family activities.

At the summit’s view point, I took a series of pictures with my PowerShot A590. Came back home, I stitched them together using PTGui. The result looks satisfactory to me. Creating a panorama is pretty easy actually. Just make sure to overlap every successive frame with the previous frame by 20~30% when taking pictures. Then all you need to do is to drop these pictures to PTGui. Software can automatically put them together in the correct order and adjust brightness and contrast for you to make the stitched image looks smooth. Besides the typical image processing functions, PTGui also supports HDR (High Dynamic Range). But, I didn’t take tripod with me so I was not able to take pictures with different exposure settings. I will try next time.

The following is a 360-degree panorama I took at the summit.

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I Told You So – Randy Travis

In the latest episode of “American Idol“, Carrie Underwood and Randy Travis sang Randy’s No.1 hit “I told you so”. It brought back a lot memory of my undergraduate days. I heard this song in the most popular TV show of that time in China, ‘正大综艺’. Unfortunately, I couldn’t find the original MTV video online. I am not young and not any more the boy who tasted what love is for the first time, but it is still a very beautiful and touching song.

10/19/2014, I finally found the original video.

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ROI on IPS

Snort thread run an active discussion on topic “ROI on IDS/IPS products”. The one who initiated the discussion asked the question about how to measure the ROI (return of investment) on IDS/IPS products, by giving an example that a company removed their IPS deployment after 2-year of usage because the return didn’t justify the cost of maintenance and personnel.

It is interesting that someone compared the money spent on IPS with the car insurance. It is true that there is no quantitative way to calculate the ROI for either of these two models. But I also think that they are different in that, for car insurance, the insured pays a small amount of money to cover a potentially much bigger loss and the cost is shared by the community; in the case of IPS, the customers pay the price specifically for the device and service they buy and deserve to ask for the quality that the vendor claims.

Certainly, the customer should not expect IPS can solve all security issue in the network. IPS should be one building block of the whole defense-in-depth strategy. Other products like firewall, anti-virus, patch-management and identity-management system also play important roles in this strategy.

On the other hand, IPS has its own problems. It is an industry consensus that IPS is not a device that you can leave in the basement and never touch again. To make it really useful, continuous monitoring and updating are required. This is partly because IPS is dealing with applications which is way more complicated, flexible and dynamic than TCP/IP level protocols that router/switch works on.

On the positive side, IPS technology has reached the stage that, some products do provide great configurability, extensive reporting and analysis tools and, most important, much improved stability and quality. False-positives are greatly reduced through intensive research efforts. Fine-tuning the products has become much easier for the administrators, so that IPS can be relied on to play its role in the network.

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The Year 2008 in Photographs

2008 has been truly extraordinary, at least for me as a Chinese living in the United States. In China, the year started with the worst snow storm in decades, then the earthquake that killed almost 70000 people, then the unprecedented Olympic Games and China’s first time ever space walk. It is a year overwhelmed with glory and natural and man-made catastrophes. In the United States, the mortgage meltdown caused the worst economic recession in hundred years and took down Bear Stearns, Merrill Lynch, Lehman Brothers and Washington Mutual; at the same time, Americans elected the first Black president, who is supported by people of all demographic lines, with the big promise, HOPE!

As an effort to capture this eventful year, Boston.com runs a series of articles (part 1, 2, 3) that feature 120 photographs. It is not all wars, violent or fanfares. There are plenty of fun and inspiring moments.

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