Satsueisha

Demon in the Water Photo Exhibition

November 20, 2008 · 1 Comment

posters3

You’re invited! See our Facebook page.

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Gifted, or hard work?

November 16, 2008 · 2 Comments

Malcolm Gladwell writes in the Guardian about pure genius versus hard work:

In the early 90s, the psychologist K Anders Ericsson and two colleagues set up shop at Berlin’s elite Academy of Music. With the help of the academy’s professors, they divided the school’s violinists into three groups. The first group were the stars, the students with the potential to become world-class soloists. The second were those judged to be merely “good”. The third were students who were unlikely ever to play professionally, and intended to be music teachers in the school system. All the violinists were then asked the same question. Over the course of your career, ever since you first picked up the violin, how many hours have you practised?

Everyone, from all three groups, started playing at roughly the same time - around the age of five. In those first few years, everyone practised roughly the same amount - about two or three hours a week. But around the age of eight real differences started to emerge. The students who would end up as the best in their class began to practise more than everyone else: six hours a week by age nine, eight by age 12, 16 a week by age 14, and up and up, until by the age of 20 they were practising well over 30 hours a week. By the age of 20, the elite performers had all totalled 10,000 hours of practice over the course of their lives. The merely good students had totalled, by contrast, 8,000 hours, and the future music teachers just over 4,000 hours.

The curious thing about Ericsson’s study is that he and his colleagues couldn’t find any “naturals” - musicians who could float effortlessly to the top while practising a fraction of the time that their peers did. Nor could they find “grinds”, people who worked harder than everyone else and yet just didn’t have what it takes to break into the top ranks. Their research suggested that once you have enough ability to get into a top music school, the thing that distinguishes one performer from another is how hard he or she works. That’s it. What’s more, the people at the very top don’t just work much harder than everyone else. They work much, much harder.

This idea - that excellence at a complex task requires a critical, minimum level of practice - surfaces again and again in studies of expertise. In fact, researchers have settled on what they believe is a magic number for true expertise: 10,000 hours.

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npTribune Editorial: Bus and train concessionary fares should be relooked

November 14, 2008 · 1 Comment

Transportation is expensive, with bus and train fares climbing steadily, but polytechnic students are still paying adult prices up to 89 percent more than what their pre-university counterparts pay.

Three years ago, a Ngee Ann student created an online petition calling for a fare reduction. More than 27,500 signatures have been collected since, but nothing has changed.

In 1977, students from Singapore Polytechnic and the then Ngee Ann Technical College petitioned Singapore Bus Services (SBS) to charge pre-university and polytechnic students the same fares.

SBS answered: “If we grant the concession to Poly and Ngee Ann students, we might have to extend this to the universities. This will mean a loss of $3 million to $4 million a year. Straightaway, we would run in the red.”

Last year, SBS Transit and SMRT Corporation posted a combined profit of more than $200 million. Can they still justify the price difference?

Concessionary fares should be standardised for all pre-university and tertiary students.

Written for npTribune.

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Iraq War Ends, screams “NYT” headline

November 13, 2008 · No Comments

New York Times spoof

New York Times spoof

The Yes Men spoofed the New York Times in an elaborate stunt today in New York City. Volunteers distributed thousands of copies of the 14-page spoof to surprised subway commuters.

Take a look for yourself with the PDFs. Also see the video report and the real Times’ reply.

Gawker tells how The Yes Men got their volunteers (via Boing-Boing).

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npTribune Vol. 40 Issue 1 offstones

November 13, 2008 · No Comments

npTribune Vol. 40 Issue 1 Cover

Finally after a month of work, chasing angles, re-writing stories and putting the 24-page news-magazine together, it’s off to the printers. Out Nov. 25.

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Today Fights Back… and other news

October 29, 2008 · 1 Comment

ST put out ads showing the decline of free TV. Mediacorp hit back on 29 October with their own ads on Today.

ST put out ads showing the decline of free TV. Mediacorp hit back on 29 October with their own ads on Today.

ST put out ads a few days ago showing how its stable of newspapers were enjoying an increase in reach (which takes into account total population), and how free TV was facing a slow decline. Rival media organisation Mediacorp responded via its Today newspaper with an anti-ST ad.

Elsewhere, the Christian Science Monitor is moving to a primarily web presence, and stopping its daily presses in favour of a weekly magazine (NYT). Just like what newspaper analysts said: Newspapers are dying, but paper will survive. People want viewspapers. Any newspaper which turns itself into an Economist, TIME or Newsweek will live.

Predictions

I predict npTribune will stop printing in a few years (and so will the Nanyang Chronicle). Student newspaper editors in Singapore will slowly realise that investing in the web is more important - and more timely then whatever they can do with print.

At npTribune, we have moved to a more search-engine friendly content management system, and digitised all our archives, got syndicated by ABC News, Omy.sg and got aggregated on Google News.


The true cost of war

Volumeone and Good Magazine discover the 10 steps to calculating the true cost of America’s wars in an animated video with excellent typography and presentation.

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Whirlwind at the Tribune

October 17, 2008 · 3 Comments

Reporters have been streaming in the past two days. It’s crazy how tight the deadlines are are, and I’m feeling it too. When nine different people come in discussing multiple ideas and story angles, things get kinda messy.

As a reporter, you know your job - think of ideas > think of how possible the angle is > think of potential interviewees > get your stories confirmed > quickly interview people and do detailed research > Write the story. It’s not easy, but hey, at most there are three, four stories bouncing around in your mind.

Five days into the new semester and I have 40 stories. Many of them are excellent, top-notch ideas. But the ideas ricohet in my head all the time. If I had to draw a pie chart to illustrate what goes into my brain these days, it would probably look like this:

Things I think about at work (which is taking up too much of my personal time - I have no relaxation time nowadays - ARRGGH

Things I think about at work (which is taking up too much of my personal time - I have no relaxation time nowadays - ARRGGH

I’ve been reading books on how to manage student newspapers, reading student newspapers, mainstream newspapers, books on newspapers, design books on editorial design, spoke to Editors of other student newspapers, read books like how to be an “Effective Editor”, and blogs like At the Alligator.

Which is all fine and dandy, but hey, I only have two weeks to go before we have to stop accepting stories, and less than three weeks to putting npTribune to bed.

And at the same time, juggle projects outside the scope of my work at the newspaper.

Things I learnt this week

  1. Google Alerts is your friend. I signed up for alerts on “Ngee Ann Poly”, and Google has been feeding me with lots of blogs
  2. Meet reporters with their file on hand. I keep a file for each reporter, and it has been a great system to keep track of everyone
  3. Print everything - Being flooded with emails is no fun. Organising everything on paper is far faster.
  4. Remind reporters about the morgue - Almost every new story idea has already been done. But how can we do better? So I’ve got to dig stuff out for reference.

Stay tuned.

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Students protest Nanyang Chronicle censorship

October 5, 2008 · 1 Comment

Students held a landmark protest against the Nanyang Technological University’s censorship of the Nanyang Chronicle Sunday afternoon at the Speakers’ Corner at Hong Lim Park.

Close to 100 students turned up to listen to the four students who organised the protest.

(Read a transcript of Thaddeus Wee’s speech at the protest.)

The Nanyang Chronicle had written an article about opposition party leader Dr Chee Soon Juan’s August visit to the university.

The story was spiked a day before the Chronicle went to press. Keep reading →

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Wish these were un-rejected

October 2, 2008 · 2 Comments

We (meaning not just me) thought of this series of banners for an npTribune advertising campaign that will be coming up when school reopens. Un-blah, Uncensored, Uncut tells a lot about what we want for the campus student newspaper. But unfortunately, Uncensored’s too provocative sensitive. Back to the drawing board.

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Ratcrobatics

October 1, 2008 · 4 Comments

Ratcrobatics

Ruiming said to photograph Snowball and Mudpie while he’s in HK. I just did. Snowball’s photographed here on a high stool, performing various balancing acts. Mudpie’s still scared of the reddish stool, so she refuses to come out of the cage. They both eat like dumpsters.

Meanwhile, the rabbits are feeling jealous. Keep reading →

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