retro video/DOS games

saw this post on smashingmagazine, it’s a stroll down memory lane indeed. those of us who’s still playing games today, you’ll really noticed how far computer games had progressed over the past 20-30years. of the many games that appeared in the post, these are the games that i:

played before on my PC-AT 80286:

  • Prince of Persia
  • Lemmings
  • CD-Man
  • Prehistorik 2
  • SimCity
  • The Secret of Monkey Island
  • Pac-Man
  • Digger
  • Lemmings
  • Loom (special use of sound effects)
  • Soko-Ban
  • Duke Nukem II
  • Golden Axe (still remembered we used to play these 2-players on a keyboard!)
  • Commander Keen
  • Wolfenstein 3D (the first game to FPS, following this is Doom, Quake)
  • Civilization
  • Doom
  • F1
  • Mortal Kombat (dual fighting on a single keyboard)
  • Warcarft (the Dune II-styled game after Dune II)
  • Dune II (games that followed this style included Warcraft, C&C, Red Alert, Total annihilation)
  • Worms
  • Wing Commander (most favourite game, there’s WC, WC2, WC3, WC4 in the whole series)
  • Supaplex
  • Brix

knew its existence:

  • Leisure Suits Larry
  • Karateka
  • Mario Brothers

more than 90% huh? (:

western medicine and chinese medicine

正巧今天在家吃western medicine养病,在ST上看到一则由kishore mahbubani教授所写的一则名为”take holistic approach to public policy”的专栏,内容主要借western medicine来比喻我国在50年内取得骄人的成就,其实就是因为我们有各种措施能对症下药,同西药般的有效,能头痛医头,脚痛医脚(去除贬义)。但是国家若要更进步,或许是时候带入中医的方法,将整个行政体制视作一个共通holistic的系统进行,吃中药使各部分互相协调运作。

我觉得这段话是最一针见血的:

“when we do a holistic analysis (of our public policies), we have to factor in non-material considerations of ethics and values, as well as social considerations. simply relying on economic principles or on the forces of the market would be incomplete, if not downright wrong. hence, in our public policies, we must give increasing weight to the intangible.”

教育如同上述,西药的治法是头痛医头脚痛医脚药到病除;中药虽非能立竿见影,却或许是十年树木,百年树人之方也。

a meaningful saying

learnt this 2 days ago while i caught on juniors’ virus and turned seriously ill

“an empty mind makes a loose mouth; a weak mind makes a jealous heart”

reflected the emptiness and weakness of many pple around us. must always remind oneself not to become one such empty/weak vessel. oh btw, pm me if u’ll like to know the 智者 who said this (:

revival of Weblogs in Education – A Literature Review

was doing some random search and saw that someone has actually linked our literature review back in 2005 in wikipedia. though it’s extremely outdated by now, thought it’ll be good to revive it (cos the old link to edumall1.0 is now dead) in case anyone’s interested to revisit it (:

so here’s it: Weblogs in Education – A Literature Review
to cite: Tan, Y.H., Ow, E.G.J., & Ho, J.M.P.Y. (2005). Weblogs in Education – A Literature Review. Originally published online via the eduMall portal maintained by Educational Technology Division, Ministry of Education, Singapore.

enjoy (:

use computers for assessment of CL

i applaud dr lee wei ling for her article today in ST “Chinese: Easy to read, hard to write”. the title actually does not reflect fully the rich content within the article. for example, she introduced several key features of Chinese characters:

“a very common misconception about Chinese characters should be dispelled: They are not pictograms. They evolved to become logograms many centuries ago. A logogram is like the McDonald’s sign: it does not look like a burger, but it represents that concept”

“Most characters are made up of radicals, usually two radicals. One, termed the xingpang, indicates the category to which the character belongs … The second radical is the yinpang, the phonological radical. It hints at how the character is to be pronounced … There is a set of rules to determine the location of each radical in the character. The … xingpang are always on the left; the vegetation radical is always at the top of the character. The location of the yinpang is less strictly determined.”

“Chinese has many homophones. In addition, Mandarin has four tones … The tones are not usually represented in hanyu pinyin. Hence for each input of hanyu pinyin we make on a word processor, we can be presented with many possible characters. For example ‘jing’ has 41 characters corresponding to it with widely varying meanings.”

on comprehending chinese (text):

“A knowledge of a fairly limited number of characters can help us accurately guess the meaning of the words formed by a number of characters … So if a student of Chinese learns 1,500 to 2,000 characters, he can easily read a Chinese newspaper … The current Chinese curriculum in Singapore requires a Primary 6 student to know 1,500 to 2,000 characters.”

“Sometimes, a reader may be able to understand what he reads even if he cannot pronounce some of the component characters. … When I encounter a simplified character I do not know, I can guess its meaning from the context of the entire sentence.”

and sharing some of her research findings:

“I have tested more than 1,000 Chinese/English bilingual students from our primary and secondary schools. The ability to read Chinese, I found, was heavily dependent on the command of spoken Chinese.”

“In my research, I found that memory for aurally presented stories is an important independent predictor of Chinese reading ability.”

“I hypothesise that reading Chinese is a bit like fuzzy logic. There are many factors contributing to the ability to read Chinese; and in different contexts, each factor would carry a different weight.”

and here’s the part that pointed out the disparity between learning and assessment:

The irony is that students cannot use word processors in examinations and are required to write the characters. Hanyu pinyin and word processors are allowed in lessons and projects, but to be denied their use in exams makes the exams even more difficult. The Ministry of Education says it will take five or more years to revamp the Chinese curriculum. How many days does it take to change an illogical exam requirement?

“It is obvious that the burden of learning how to write in Chinese is overwhelming for many.”

i can hear many voices out there rejecting dr lee’s idea outright, for e.g. learning to write helps to recognise the characters, knowing the characters can only truly mean one really knows the chinese language; if our students don’t learn to write, they’re going to lose the culture. and the list can go on and on …

but if we take a look at the REAL world out there, how many pple still communicate without using word processors, newspapers, email, sms, etc. personally i have not seen a major newspaper that is printed with all the articles handwritten, have you? or a magazine, a journal article, or a business contract for that matter?

word processing (aka typing) is the current thing to represent the language. i recalled seeing research that had shown that typing helped in the mastery of chinese characters, and consequently helped to up the level of chinese mastery.

writing of chinese character will become an art form, just like the existing chinese calligraphy. if we were to deny and not encourage our young to express the language through typing, it’s as good as denying ourselves, the (slightly) older generaton, the pen, and we should go back to using the brush (or feather?).

let’s see how long it takes for the change that dr lee highlighted to take place. this would mean propelling 1-1 computing forward. and if that’s the case, learning of all subjects, not just CL, can potentially benefit from it (: