Friday, February 20, 2009
Learning Mandarin Chinese - 2
Recently I got a native Chinese language tutor and I am following something like an official program as taught in the Chinese language university classes around the world. The tutor confirmed the books I recommended before are very good and that she knows personally the author to be a very good teacher.

I also enjoy the free KT-Dict CE application for IPod/IPhone realised by Klaus Thul that also have a very good page on why and how to learn Chinese language at http://www.klausthul.com. As you may already know, IPod Touch is a great tool to exercise writing in Chinese, still the paper and the pen are the fundamental tools.

Will be back on this subject.


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Saturday, February 21, 2009 3:54:33 AM (GTB Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #  Comments [1] 
 Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Living a wide life
After changing my blog theme I found some bug on the new template and I attempted to fix it. Then I was thinking what to write to have some global significance. Then I came up with "Living a wide life".

I want to make my life very wide. As some wisdom man told me once, we must search to live a wide life. What is a wide life? Well everybody has a personal life. Here you may have or not a family and you may have a poor or a rich personal life. Then we should widen this life with our social life (friends, profession, etc) and with our spiritual life (create space for your own spiritual being). We should struggle to widen all of these three lives. In many cases our destiny only permits to reach a certain level of life width. We should not be angry with it but use whatever we can get in it.

I recently saw the "Yes man" comedy. Indeed we should be able to reach to the extent of our destiny.

And a big secret is this: if you make your life very wide, it also becomes very long.

I wish a very wide and long life to you.



Wednesday, February 11, 2009 8:52:32 PM (GTB Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Monday, January 19, 2009
Thai expulsion - follow up
During my stay in Bangkok airport I was scarred that I was told even if I buy a new ticket to return home, the airline can refuse my boarding since I am not anymore a normal passenger. I wrote a notice to European Commison, Directorate General for Energy and Transport via web page and I received recently an answer not very well targeted, but here it is for anyone refference:


Dear Mr Richard Adrian Vencu,
 
I apologise for our late answer which is due to a temporary restrain of human resources in our unit. I realise that this reply reaches you belatedly and I apologise for any inconvenience this may have caused you.

Under the EU Regulation on air passenger rights [EC]261/2004 http://europa.eu/eur-lex/pri/en/oj/dat/2004/l_046/l_04620040217en00010007.pdf, Member States are responsible for monitoring and enforcing Regulation 261/2004 in individual cases between passengers and airlines, which means that the Commission is not competent to deal with passenger complaints. 

With regard to your case, from the little information you provided, it seems that you attempted to travel without a valid visa and you were probably denied boarding. On this, I regret to inform you that in case of inadequate travel documentation (such as visa), the airline is in principle considered to have reasonable ground of refuse boarding to passengers.
Reference can be made to Article 2 of the above-mentioned Regulation, which sets out a definition as follows:

"'Denied boarding' means a refusal to carry passengers on a flight, although they have presented themselves for boarding under the conditions laid down in Article 3(2), except where there are reasonable grounds to deny them boarding, such as reasons of health, safety or security, or inadequate travel documentation".



Monday, January 19, 2009 8:19:52 PM (GTB Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Monday, January 12, 2009
Scoala de schi
Recomand tuturor sa urmeze scoala de schi in Austria. Au si baza materiala perfecta si instructorii cei mai buni. Schiatul haotic oricit de rapid si plin de adrenalina ar fi nu se compara in cele din urma cu un schiat cu stil. Puteti cistiga acest stil in Austria. Eu merg anual la scoala de schi la Seefeld in Tirol, puteti vedea aici detalii http://www.schi-seefeld.at/ehtml/skischule.htm

Si aici sunt postate rezultatele concursului de slalom din ultima zi: http://www.schi-seefeld.at/sieger/20090109.htm

Nota 09.02.2008

Constatind ca exista internauti interesati sa aleaga un loc bun pentru schi, si cum unii chiar acceseaza si acest blog, va ofer citeva rute de a ajunge usor la Seefeld:

1. Cu avionul este usor daca nu trebuie sa transportatischiurile personale. Booking se face cu Austrian Arrows cu escala la Viena, destinatia finala Innsbruck. La Innsbruck in fata aeroportului vine periodic un autobuz care va duce la gara cam pentru 1 euro de persoana. La gara cumparati bilet pentru Seefeld la clasa a II-a cu 4.50 Euro si calatoriti cei 25km in aproximativ 20 minute. Trenuri sunt foarte dese si nu exista vagon de clasa I. In Seefled puteti inchiria bocanci si schiuri functie de nivelul la care sunteti. Ba chiar puteti sa le schimbati cu unele mai bune daca dupa citeva zile de scoala constatati ca echipamentul nu mai este adecvat pentru nivelul dobindit.

2. Cu masina daca trebuie sa transportati echipament de schi personal. Nu merita doar o vacanta de 7 zile pentru ca veti mai face 4 pe drum mai ales daca mergeti cu copii. Recomand o noapte de odihna la Mosonmagyarosvar, hotel Corvina, chiar inainte de granita cu Austria. Confortul este bun si pretul nu va afecteaza mult bugetul excursiei.

3. Cu trenul (eu vreau sa experimentez la anul) faceti cam 27 de ore, prin urmare trebuie sa cumparati bilet pina la Munich. Acolo schimbati trenul cu un rapid regional catre Innsbruck. Evident primul segment il faceti la vagonul de dormit ceea ce va asigura relaxare si confort. Practic nu mai dormiti pe drum o noapte decit in tren (inclus in pret) si aveti si libertate de miscare cu echipament cu tot mai ales ca mai nou in trenuri exista loc special pentru schiuri si biciclete.



Tuesday, January 13, 2009 3:29:00 AM (GTB Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #  Comments [1] 
 Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Persona non grata

Perhaps the title is exaggerated and only show my ignorance about external affairs vocabulary. But the newspapers just do the same and I could say a word or two to the one who pushed me into that trouble... The fact is quite simple to describe: I just got expulsed from Thailand.

Well, I really did nothing illegal to my understanding of the term but I was made to feel like I was a bad guy. Not by thai authorities but by the airlines. What matter most is what I did not do: I failed to ask for a thai visa at home. More precisely, I failed to ask the Thai embassy if the information in local newspapers and internet are true - they all claimed Romanians are eligible to buy Thai visa on arrival at BKK airport.

Well, it is not true, or maybe not yet... But enough to get expulsed out of the country. So first lesson is that even if you do not pass immigration control and stay in the so called international area of an airport, in fact you are tolerated there and considered on the state soil. Second thing is that if you get an expulsion decision then several things happen - at least in Thailand: 1. you lose your passport that remains at all times with immigration authorities; 2. you do not have access at your checked bags, but maybe to extract some small things out for personal use; 3. some guard is appointed to follow you, or you are appointed to follow the guard at all times; 4. you lose your normal passenger rights (details later); 5. you are normally embarked in the first flight to your home country.

Now all the actions immigration service is taking have only one end, to take you out of the country as soon as possible. But the financial side rest on the airline you used for the inbound flight. Therefore I was put China Southern's hands because i flew to Bangkok from Guangzhou with this airline.

All people treat you well there but there is some continuous suspicion behind the scene that you start feeling shortly. First sign is that nobody really take any time to explain what is happening to you. You have to figure it out by yourself. For instance very soon you are moved to some underground room. I was allowed to stay in the office next to the interrogation room perhaps because I was European. Therefore I could spend some 90 minutes trying to extract information from the office walls. So I could understand myself what is happening just looking to the report tables written with markers on the walls. Apparently I was number 11 to be added to the list. Just after 2 nigerians and one Cameroon guy. On the list were most Nigerians but I could also see one Canadian. On another list were written some statistics. The row with the label VISA was totally empty. Therefore the conclusion: Thai immigration was working on my expulsion file. They simply refused the entry without asking a single question.

Well, after this I was informed I should leave Thailand with first opportunity and stay only in transit area until such event. So I got myself a nice guardian that slept all night on a chair in front of my hourly hotel room in the terminal. Next day she followed me until changed places with a fresh colleague. I tried to change my Singapore Airlines ticket for that day, easy thing to do but finally when I reached the gate they refused to embark me. Then I decided to buy a new ticket directly to home, from Air France, a company that I am frequent flier with. After this I was informed that apparently any company may refuse to embark me even if I paid for the ticket. The flight was due for take off at 11pm, so I needed to wait all day in the transit area first to see if Air France will accept me, second for boarding and leave.

Interesting that the new guardian watched me from 8am to 11pm continuously. Of course I could eat and go to toilets but never got my passport until boarding was started.

Later on I heard that in Thailand in this situation people must not argue with immigration. If so, one may never be allowed to enter this country. So I think I am lucky as I never argue...




Wednesday, September 17, 2008 2:54:15 PM (GTB Daylight Time, UTC+03:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Tuesday, September 09, 2008
China trip 8

Why 8? I am not sure if 8 is right but I am sure I already did at least 8 trips in China. Being lazy to post an entry every time, I decided to leave it like this and try to update some feelings about China. Now that Olympic Games are over (paralympics not yet) here is some pride to take by Chinese for the very nice and well organized games. Chinese took a lot of trouble to keep everyone safe and happy and also marked a good score on competitions. Congratulations to China!


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Tuesday, September 09, 2008 2:03:37 PM (GTB Daylight Time, UTC+03:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Monday, August 18, 2008
Home Automation - decision
I am close to finish the house construction. I went to a KNX basic course and got KNX certification last month. I think going to KNX world was a good decision because:
  • it is an open standard (apparently the only one to be European - CELENEC, international - ISO and recently adopted as national standard by China). It means the technology will survive no matter what happens with any manufacturer
  • it is based on technology with some experience. Maybe it is 8 or so years old but the principles are there for around 30 years...
  • it offers a range of products and applications to satisfy even the most pretending end users
  • it is possible to link it with other systems such as EnOcean or DALI
On the dark side, I need to mention that most of it is used inside Germany where the most product range can be found and also sold. As a consequence the English documentation is less developed than German one. Another problem is that even if the devices follow similar principles they embody a vast range of functionality that require profound study of each one. This means the end user will need a specialist to receive advice from or be prepared to pay the similar price in order to discover the best solution alone.

My KNX system will cover a vast area of systems such as:
  • heating/cooling management that involves automation of valves, A/C units and solar blinds. A weather station and various in house sensors are to be used as well
  • lighting, with dimmers, stairs lights, presence detectors
  • security, by using same sensors as security sensors or action devices when the security system is armed
  • communication, shortly said, the ability to receive messages from the house and control it remotely (SMS, web, phone extensions)
  • door entry system, it is not pure KNX but can be easily integrated. For both pedestrians and auto
  • automatic gardening: measure the precipitation level and add necessary water by pumps...
The beauty is that in time more can be done with same or little additional devices.

Some of the manufacturers involved in my system: Gira, Siemens, Zennio, Theben, Agfeo, ABB, Hager

As a matter of last minute solution, check this link for multiroom audio. It is not KNX (yet) but I think it can be easily integrated via Gira HomeServer if the manufacturer will agree to offer an API toolkit: Sonos

After my 1 month vacation I believe I will be able to finish everything in another month. I already cabled and programmed the upper floor in several days. The basic things will be done very quickly. More time will require imagining and developing the smart functions.



Tuesday, August 19, 2008 3:45:16 AM (GTB Daylight Time, UTC+03:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Saturday, May 31, 2008
China trip 3

This time I decided to visit as many cities in China as possible in a short period of time.

Therefore I arrived Hong Kong then entered China by train, to Guangzhou. This city I visited before, it is very convenient but pollution is a real big problem here. Shenzen is reachable by local fast intercity train. This train travel with up to 200km/h and it is very modern. Shenzen is closer to the sea, air is much better and it is full of IT industry.

Next I flew to Beijing to meet a friend coming also from Romania. After visiting the famous taoist temple "White Cloud" or Bai Yun Guan in chinese, we took a sleeping train to Shenyang, capital city of Liaoning province. Shenyang is a very important industrial and transportation city. The first impression is that the city is a bit crowded but one can find very nice food, especially at Korean style restaurants.

During the first weekend we took a short trip to Changchun, the capital city of Jilin, the province north of Liaoning. This city is an academic city, with more space and flexible architecture. Especially the parks are very nice.

After this next stop was in Dalian, main port of Liaoning province. A lot of industry appeared in this city that is more elegant than Shenyang, especially in downtown. Also the sea helps a lot with the air quality. However during this period of the year I encountered both in Beijing and Dalian the dust storms coming from Gobi desert. Sometime these dust storms reach as far as Japan.

After Dalian we arrived in Hangzhou, the capital city of Zhejiang province, the turism city of China, also one of the most important centres for silk. Here we visited the "Ling Yin" buddhist temple, a huge one, built in a scenic area. Ling Yin stands for Hidden Spirits. This city and the surroundings are worth for a full lenght vacation, 2 weeks minimum.

Next stop Fuzhou, capital city of Fujian province. This city is nicely placed between mountains and the sea, and seems to be very clean and carefully taken care of.

Well, seems that all cities in Fujian have something nice to show for the visitor. Next I visited Quanzhou, historically being the start (or end) of the silk road to Europe. Also Xiamen is a very beautyful city, an island city with tropical vegetation and nice environment.

At the end of the trip lies Shenzen, probably the most modern Chinese city up to date. Lifestyle tends to follow Hong Kong lifestyle and business is flourishing everywhere. Links to Hong Kong, my next destination can be by train, by metro (at the end of metro line in Shenzen there is Chinese custom, then a 300m long bridge, then the Hong Kong custom; after this one a train is available toghether with a combination of MTR for any destination in HK city), or by ferry. I will take the metro link this time to enlarge my experience. Maybe I will also post a short HD movie I will make with my camera as reference how to do it...

Below is a very interesting taoist stone from Bai Yun Guan wall, with unknown author, describing some advanced taoist practice. I suppose very few people really understand it's true meaning.


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Saturday, May 31, 2008 9:48:30 PM (GTB Daylight Time, UTC+03:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Tuesday, April 29, 2008
More home automation

I registered to a 5 days seminar in UK in order to learn KNX/EIB. It was the single seminar that gave me confidence upon my web research. The company name is Ivory Egg and they also operate a website with other KNX/EIB products: http://www.knxshop.co.uk

I will attend in July and hope will return home with KNX certification.


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Tuesday, April 29, 2008 6:08:06 PM (GTB Daylight Time, UTC+03:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Home automation
Back to the home automation project. The construction project itself is in delay due to lack of qualified workers in Romania. Therefore prices went up if you want to keep good quality. Otherwise you need to relay on personal connections and good friends to get things done well.

I was dropping the home automation project after I failed to find a reliable component supplier. However at some point it happened to find such a supplier so I am back with this project. The supplier is named Gewiss and comes from Italy. I found a full product range (namely Chorus) based on KNX/EIB bus as described into an earlier post. No more technicalities now but it has all I dreamed: the bus management tools, navigator panels, internet and GSM interfaces, receivers and actuators, burglar system, video entryphone, etc. It even has some less complicated devices such as wireless triggers and actuators that listen directly for the wireless command.

Now I found that in Romania there is no company today to offer services around this system therefore I am up to start learning this area and plan and install by myself all the system. If it will be a succes, I plan to include this activity as a part of my future business.



Wednesday, January 30, 2008 9:16:00 PM (GTB Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Sunday, August 19, 2007
China trip 2

I visited this time more remote locations. I felt like going back in past when I lived as a child in a small town in Romania. Only that it was much crowded. I traveled from airport about 70km to my destination and it was all the way an inhabited terrain. Only later, when we went on the mountains, I have seen less population.

I was very impressed with the status of cultivated fields. Any parcel worthy for cultivation was filled with crops. Except river banks where vegetation was wilde and mountain forests themselves, I could not see any unattended land. It made me feel a bit sick as I realized how much desolation is in landscapes back home. I did not carried a camera this time due to some wrong assumptions, but I promise to come back with photos after a future visit.

People were very friendly and many mentioned they heard before about Romania (Luomania as chinese say). I was very impressed and though it will be very difficult to return the honor they did to us in full.


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Monday, August 20, 2007 4:46:38 AM (GTB Daylight Time, UTC+03:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Sunday, August 12, 2007
Learning Mandarin Chinese - tools and materials

Learning Chinese language seems not to be very difficult. But what one can do beside going to a Chinese class at home or even in China? Here is some of my experience so far BUT please keep in mind that I did not learn the language yet, only got a very good information about what I SHOULD do!

One thing is to get some Chinese language guides, materials and tools. I have, up to this moment, the following items:

- Rosetta Stone Mandarin Chinese Level 1 and 2 - it is PC/Mac based software that uses the "immersion" techniques toward comprehension and understanding the language. It is very good for learning Chinese at young ages.

- Fluenz Mandarin 1+2 DVD+CD is also a computer tool (you have to choose between Mac and PC) that uses innovative techniques to teach Chinese language for adults. It covers spoken Chinese and pinyin writing and is aimed to reach fluency in speaking Mandarin. Personally I think it is a great tool for myself.

- Sinolingua manuals published in China for English speakers. This is a written course that is very interesting and proposes a very clever approach of getting into Chinese language. It has some audio casettes as well but I was unable to find them so far. It is spitted in 3 parts that should be followed in this order:

  1. Intensive Spoken Chinese is dealing with building a Chinese vocabulary of about 1000 words
  2. The Most Common Chinese Radicals starts plunging into Chinese characters in a very smart way
  3. Rapid Literacy in Chinese is to be taken after completing first two stages and maybe in parallel to following an instructor led class of Chinese.

Intensive Spoken ChineseThe Most Common Chinese RadicalsRapid Literacy in Chinese

- Finally for taking an instructor led class in Chinese I would opt going to China for 1 month. There are special universities that sell short packages of intensive language learning. Just Google on "learn Chinese in china" and you will find many opportunities for any budget. As I decided to do a self paced study in the first place then go to China for a class, I cannot tell who I consider best at this moment. Anyway I will follow-up on this entry at the right moment.

Therefore for the time being I will combine Fluenz + Sinolingua book 1 to get up with a vocabulary and a way to create sentences with it. Then I will study the around 100 radicals (it seems fascinating after a first glance on the Sinolingua book 2). At the end I will combine Sinolingua book 3 and a Chinese language class somewhere in China.

Last but not least, the online resources might help very well. I am glad to use http://www.chinese-tools.com as a helper to my studies.

Making Chinese friends works and helps at any moment. It is a great way to plunge into a new language as well!



Sunday, August 12, 2007 11:40:52 PM (GTB Daylight Time, UTC+03:00)  #  Comments [0] 
House project - home automation

I come to a stage in house building where I intend to design and add some automation around the house. I've come searching many different solutions and seen that very few reliable solutions are available. A home automation can rely either on special data bus or PLC (power line communication) or even on both. Of course, one must search for simplicity in every aspect of life, therefore here PLC should be the winner...

For starter, X10 technology pops-up from any web search. The upside is that one can use power cabling to send commands to devices and there is no need for special cabling or routing. There is a filter to be installed at the power entrance so to reject any X10 command from or to outside the house and from here you can use any kind of device like bulb adapter, socket adapter or switch adapter to regulate light, appliances, etc. Moreover, there are security systems, doors, garage doors, blinders etc that can communicate over X10. The solution is appealing also for low cost involved over great flexibility. Intelligent devices can even run scripts. Also a wireless adapter can be used to collect commands from wireless remote controls.

The downside of X10 is it's communication protocol that does not exceed 50bps and often is not reliable, generating such problems as lag times, missed commands, etc. For more info look at http://www.x10europe.com.

I also found a local company building devices for home automation but they lack 2 things: the design of the products is not eye catching at all and they require a 4 wire phone cable to be deployed along the electrical circuits. Check them at http://www.ibs.ro

While searching more I could find better automation solutions such as KNX (http://www.knx.org/) standard that is based on use of actuators. Now the installation of this kind of home automation is more professional as all executing devices (actuators) reside in the power panel and it is more easy to connect all with a single bus that can reach higer speeds such as 9600bps. The catch is that one needs to do separate cabling for every circuit likely to be an automation candidate. So if you have more than one lighting system in a room, you need to design and execute separate cabling from power panel to that room. Therefore simplicity is lost and costs are boosted even more. You can really think this would be a solution only for new houses not for old ones. Even me, as I am building a new house, I am not convinced to redo the cabling system based mainly on 2 reasons: first the team of electricians installing the cabling will not understand what to do and second, I am not able to make a design to such an system by myself and there is no company or provider here to help me in a professional way.

Another solution is based on a standard named Lonworks (http://www.echelon.com/solutions/home/default.htm) and I found a solution provider near me able to assist. It supports communication over power line as X10 does (and KNX to be fair) but looks for me this is a better standard for what I am looking for. I will submit more comments after I meet this company and reach a decision.



Sunday, August 12, 2007 10:04:29 PM (GTB Daylight Time, UTC+03:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Saturday, June 16, 2007
Bicycle workouts with tools

I got my first Garmin GPS that is not a map navigator in any way but a bicycle computer. It is an EDGE 305 model and has a cadence sensor (mounted on bike) to tell how fast you spin the pedal and a heart monitor to check and record the heart beat rate. See https://buy.garmin.com/shop/shop.do?cID=160&pID=331 for more info.

Unlike normal bike computers, this one asks to input user profile, bike weight, tire perimeter lenght and calculates all aspects of your workout as a premium fitness equipment should do.

The package comes with software tools to record and analyze your workouts. This software works well if you buy also a map of the region you are cycling. It can be aquired also from Garmin, or - for Romania - from http://www.romaniadigitala.ro you can buy the R.O.A.D.2006 map.

Also a more performant analisys can be made with another software tool from Cycling Peaks - see http://www.cycligpeaks.com



Saturday, June 16, 2007 7:06:31 PM (GTB Daylight Time, UTC+03:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Thursday, May 31, 2007
China trip

Travelling in China is very interesting. I only was to Guangzhou, Hong Kong and Macau so far. At Guangzhou you get the sensation of early 1990s when Bucharest was still a poor city, however the chinese government invested wisely in very good infrastructure. Driving is very crowded, poeple in Bucharest must not complain if they can experience this one. However in Guangzhou there are many expressways built suspended on top of old roads that carry out the tranzit traffic. City center is very cosmopolite with fancy and quite expensive restaurants. We liked an italian one, Antipasto. Here there is a picture of me with the Antipasto manager, Lily.

Hong Kong looks very much like London, only they have a strong taste for vertical development. Indeed is a good location for electronics shopping, prices are nearly half of those in Europe. 

Macau is the Asia's Las Vegas, in a very real competition for world's gambling capital fame. Even if we won some money at the casino we spent them all at bar and we got even with the resort... 

I spent only few days there, I will add more after the next visit.

Next time we will visit some more remote locations, I am very curious about villages that I learned to have more inhabitants than Bucharest, our capital city...


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Thursday, May 31, 2007 10:38:07 PM (GTB Daylight Time, UTC+03:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Tuesday, May 22, 2007
House project - feng shui aspects

I am currently building a family house in Otopeni, near Bucharest, actually very close to main Romanian airports. Anyway, it is not so close that the construction will ever be endangered by planes or airport extension plans.

The place is quiet and currently at edge of Otopeni city.

The construction started in September 2006, however we faced big problem with the construction company that delayed a lot of work due to another interest they had on a separate construction project. In fact they worked for real only 3-4 months out of 9!

In the following picture there is the current stage of the construction:

Interesting enough for people preoccupied with Feng Shui analysis, the house has a facing direction of 61° Northeast (Yin). Below is the Flying Star Chart for the house:

As you can see there is a very nice symmetry (same groups of numbers appear in an orderly fashion). Below is the Flying Star Chart applied to the both floors:

 and

The best qi comes from SW sector, right through the back door which has to be maximized in terms of open surface. Also a fountain should be placed in the backyard as well as inside at the first floor. Some trees should be placed in same area to calm down the wind and back doors and windows should be left open as long as possible. Now this is the Feng Shui recommendation, I must see what security can be applied to accommodate it.

As a result of the house architecture, it has beneficial effects on inhabitants for the next 57 years to come, having in mind that the main entrance should be switched to another door after first 37 years.



Tuesday, May 22, 2007 9:36:17 PM (GTB Daylight Time, UTC+03:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Wednesday, May 09, 2007
Biking in Retezat mountains

On May 1st I had a day of biking at mountains. The scenery is great and the air is just fit for a good biking.

We left from Cheile Butii pension and we had three portions of road: stone road for 700m, asphalt for 7km and again stone road for the rest of the trip. Below is a map of the route.

And next is a picture of the vertical profile of the route.

Therefore you can see a very good route for refitting yourself - after some 20 minutes of going down and a good warming climbing the mountain was quite extorting. However the best scenery just came with the lake and the middle of the trip was extremely nice.

Returning home put some constant effort into the legs so the rest of the day was dedicated for a good relaxation.

Some photos with the scenery will follow in the next post.



Thursday, May 10, 2007 4:28:03 AM (GTB Daylight Time, UTC+03:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Monday, May 07, 2007
Building www.vencu.ro

Building www.vencu.ro was quite easy and enjoying experience.

I have an account with www.shanje.net for my business and I still can create 70 websites with no additional payment as far as disk space and monthly bandwidth is conserved.

Therefore the idea of vencu.ro family website. The hosting company supports ASP.NET 1.1 or 2.0 that is already familiar to me. However on the Internet one may find very good tools for free to fit such a need as mine: a website with simple CMS and a blog application. Based on recommendation from my friend and future neighbor Aurelian I discovered the 2 packages:

  1. My Web Pages Starter Kit from http://www.codeplex.com/MyWebPagesStarterKit based on ASP.NET 2.0 used to build www.vencu.ro
  2. dasBlog from www.dasblog.info based on ASP.NET 1.1 used to build the blog sites richardblog.vencu.ro and danblog.vencu.ro

Both kits reverted the usage of SQL server toward file system and XML structures which simplified a lot the setup. The blog application exposes RSS feeds that can be easily consumed by the main website via custom made .NET 2.0 user control.

The quality of the kits is great and the price is a very attractive zero. Learning how to deal with the applications and build the present state (12 pages and 2 blogs) took only 5 hours and main delay was caused by ftp upload speed. Finding a FTP client was included in the 5 hours and I ended-up with FileZilla, a free FTP community project at http://filezilla.sourceforge.net/. It has it's little problems with FTP site content cache but one can do it's job quite easily.



Tuesday, May 08, 2007 12:25:19 AM (GTB Daylight Time, UTC+03:00)  #  Comments [0]