Mobile Multimedia Blogging
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Posted by Alex Yang (pen name of Yang-May Ooi) on Saturday, July 26th, 2008 at 8:10pm
Mobile post sent by yangmayooi using Utterz. Replies.
Posted by Alex Yang (pen name of Yang-May Ooi) on Saturday, July 26th, 2008 at 8:10pm
I love the contrast of the ancient medieval streets and the trendy boutiques along them, sparking with the latest lifestyle "objets" for the 21st century shopper - including a PC shop and a Mac shop. I also love the grandiose Roman buildings that that ancient imperial power left behind here, as they did throughout much of Europe. The arena that used to host gladiatorial combats and Christians being fed to the lions is one of the best preserved in the world - and now hosts concerts (we just missed French pop singer Vanessa Paradis) and bull fights. The remaining central section of a Roman temple built around 2000 years ago is now an air-conditioned cinema. I can never get my head round how old some of these still-functional Roman edifices are, with their intricate hand carved decorative motifs that are so alive and fresh.
A few years ago I would be browsing through postcards and sitting down at cafes to write notes about all these sights to post to friends back home. But technology has changed all that. I’m texting my family little snippets every day: what we refer to as "blow by blow" accounts. I’m snapping photos on my phone to email to a few friends and to my Flickr account. And I’m writing this blog post on my phone, too - as an email to my Utterz account which should automatically upload to my two blogs.
Now all I need to do is find a free wireless hotspot so I can despatch these "wireless postcards" - which shouldn’t be too difficult as the whole city seems to be flooded with wireless networks, according to my phone.
Mobile post sent by yangmayooi using Utterz. Replies.
Posted by Alex Yang (pen name of Yang-May Ooi) on Thursday, July 24th, 2008 at 10:30am
We city dwellers live in filthy cities. Our pavements, calls and buildings are covered in grime and filth.
The proof of that is that reverse graffitti artist Paul Curtis aka Moose can create intricately detailed black and white graffitti art by cleaning the dirt away from the concrete. Watch this video of him and his team at work and see for yourself.
You can also find out more about Moose via an NPR (National Public Radio’s) programme on his reverse graffitti and how some jobsworth bureacrats have seen that as vandalism…
Posted by Alex Yang (pen name of Yang-May Ooi) on Monday, June 23rd, 2008 at 1:00am
I am always enchanted by anything “typically English” even though I’ve lived in the UK for over 30 years.
This afternoon, we visited a neighbour’s garden in the London suburbs, open to the public under the National Gardens Scheme. We pottered about looking at their shrubbery, roses and vegetabls while being entertained by the Swingtime Sweethearts singing WW2 favourites. We had cake and tea along with chaps in white panamas and ladies in sundresses - and a toddler waving the Union Jack.
Marvellous.
Posted by Alex Yang (pen name of Yang-May Ooi) on Sunday, June 8th, 2008 at 10:41pm

Unfortunately, what greeted me was six months worth of unmowed lawn.
Two hours of sweaty labour later, my back garden looks lovely - as you
can see. Aah, I can relax now, I thought. The problem is - as I
trudged up and down with tbe mower I kept spotting things that need
doing in the flower beds, along the borders and in the shrubbery.
It must be something to do with my Methodist upbringing. My mother
can’t relax by just sitting in the garden and staring into space.
She’ll be wandering around weeding, nipping buds or picking up dead
leaves. I suddenly felt like doing exactly that.
Oh my god. I’ve became my mother! That thought kept spinning in my mind.
There was only one way that I could see to snap out of it. I decided I
had a much more pressing task: attending to my blog. So here I sit on
the patio beneath a clear blue sky - artfully positioned so that I
can’t see the weeds and shrubs that need pruning, tapping this out on
my PDA and enjoying a cup of tea.
Aah, it’s nice to relax….
Mobile post sent by yangmayooi using Utterz. Replies.
Posted by Alex Yang (pen name of Yang-May Ooi) on Saturday, April 26th, 2008 at 4:43pm
# The Guardian’s blog post > "Is writing this blog killing me?" - http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/…ing_m.html
# The New York Times articles "In Web World of 24/7 Stress, Writers Blog Till They Drop" - http://www.nytimes.com/…sweat.html shaw&st=nyt&oref=slogin&oref=slogin
Mobile post sent by yangmayooi using Utterz. Replies. mp3
Posted by Alex Yang (pen name of Yang-May Ooi) on Monday, April 7th, 2008 at 7:55pm
Posted by Alex Yang (pen name of Yang-May Ooi) on Wednesday, February 27th, 2008 at 11:23pm
Every girl’s fantasy?
(You’ll need the sound enabled on your PC to enjoy this one)
Posted by Alex Yang (pen name of Yang-May Ooi) on Monday, February 25th, 2008 at 1:00am
The National Geographic have a channel on YouTube and this is one of their intriguing videos.
I certainly wouldn’t have thought of that technique…
Posted by Alex Yang (pen name of Yang-May Ooi) on Monday, February 18th, 2008 at 1:00am
I featured unicycle rambling awhile back as part of my Extreme Sports series. Here are some people playing hockey on unicycles - in Hong Kong of all places..
Posted by Alex Yang (pen name of Yang-May Ooi) on Monday, February 11th, 2008 at 1:00am
Fusion View is created by Yang-May Ooi, author of The Flame Tree and Mindgame, legal thrillers set in Malaysia and London, first published by Hodder & Stoughton.