Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Getting screen capture to work on your Android Phone

Using Android SDK , DDMS

1. Install android sdk from the developer site

2. Assume that it is installed in the default position:
C:\Program Files\Android\android-sdk-windows\tools\ddms.bat
(DDMS = Dalvik Debug Monitor)

3. Click on on "Device -> Screen Capture ... "





4. Here's the screen shot, you can hit refresh or save the screen capture as a ".PNG" file.



















































Have fun with more professional screen shots of your android phone.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Getting Android on RMIT University (City Campus) to work

As you all may know, RMIT has no official support for Android devices on the network.

Btw I am using a Huawei Ideos X5 with Android 2.2 Installed. Even if you can get the Wifi going, because you don't have access to change the proxy configurations.

Step 1. Allow installation of non-Market applications

Click on "home" button, click on settings. Go to Applications and check the box for "Unknown sources"

Step 2. Get "z4root"

Find a PC and email the "z4root.1.3.0.apk" package to yourself. I used Gmail to retrieve and install the attachment from the phone.

This will use some bandwidth to download this using your mobile connection.

Step 3. Installing z4root

During installation you may be asked to set the USB to debugging mode.
This can be set @ Settings -> Applications -> Development -> USB debugging
Once the program is running, use either temporary or permanent rooting.

Step 4. Get ProxyDroid

Go to Android Marketplace and install ProxyDroid.

Step 5. Setting up wifi RMIT-WPA

Goto Settings -> Wireless & Network Settings, Check the Wi-fi box to "on" state,
Enter Wi-fi settings.

Press "RMIT-WPA", you should see Security type as 802.1x EAP.

Set EAP method as : TTLS

Phase 2 Authentication as : PAP

CA certificate : (unspecified)

User certificate: (unspecified)

Identity : #this is where you key in your rmit student or staff log on username

Anonymous identity : # leave it blank

Password : #key in your rmit staff or student password

Press Connect

Step 6 : Setting up ProxyDroid


In Profile 1:

Account Information
Host: aproxy.rmit.edu.au
Port: 8080
Proxy Type: HTTP
Auto Connect: On
Binded SSID: RMIT-WPA

Account Authentication
Enable Authentication: On
User: # RMIT student or staff ID
Password # RMIT student or staff password
NTLM Authentication: Disabled
Domain: Not setup

Feature Settings
Global Proxy : On

Go back to the top of the screen.
Service Controller -> Proxy Switch : On

This should get you up and running on the RMIT Network

Now turn off your Mobile Data, and cruise on the RMIT's Internet.

It's a wonder that Android did not consider this as a product feature in the beginning.

Warning, I am not liable for any non-reversible changes. Z4root can provide temporary root and can un-root.

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Hi Guys,

Just for people who are not aware, the Internet is full of people that would like to scam you of your money and personal information.

Attached is an email recently sent to me at random.

Please try not to fall into the trap. If it is too good to be true, then take a step back and reflect on it.

See you guys soon guys.

Cheers,
Hoh Yun

Dear Sir/Madam,

This mail is to bring to your notice that your email emerged as one of
our
winning email address in our last British And America Tobacco Programme
that made you automatically a winner of the sum of 1,000,000.00(G.B.P).

In order to claim your prize from the lottery board, you are required
to fill out
the claim's processing form and send it to our claims officer
here in the UK with the details below:

Name Of Claims Officer:John Carrick
Email address: mrjohncarrick24@9.cn
Tel: +44 703 5986 245

Below is the claims form you are required to fill:

PAYMENT PROCESSING FORM
1.FULL NAMES:
2.ADDRESS:
3.SEX:
4.AGE:
5.MARITAL STATUS:
6.OCCUPATION
7.TELEPHONE NUMBER:
8. COUNTRY:

Sincerely,
Mrs Cindy Howard


Please check out the following for:
1. Internet Fraud
2. Scam-O-Rama

Sunday, August 02, 2009

Dislocated shoulder from Brazilian Jujitsu



Hi Guys,

I've tried out kungfu and TKD in RMIT University. And I've come away not very satisfied with my experiences. It wasn't exactly what i was looking for.

Just so happens I met a friend that has learnt Brazilian Ju-Jitsu(BJJ):

"Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu is a martial art and combat sport that focuses on grappling and especially ground fighting. It is a derivative of early 20th century Kodokan Judo, which was itself then a recently-developed system (founded in 1882), based on multiple schools (or Ryu) of Japanese jujutsu.

It promotes the principle that a smaller, weaker person can successfully defend themselves against a bigger, stronger assailant using leverage and proper technique; most notably, by applying joint-locks and chokeholds to defeat them. BJJ can be trained for self defense, sport grappling tournaments (gi and no-gi) and mixed martial arts (MMA) competition. Sparring (commonly referred to as 'rolling') and live drilling play a major role in training, and a premium is placed on performance, especially in competition."

Excerpts taken from wiki's Brazilian_Jiu-Jitsu page.

Class 1 consists of the 4 basic positions: guard, top mount, side mount, back mount. Basic skills learnt include the paint brush from top mount, arm bar from guard position, escaping the guard and choke out from back mount. Then practise sparring.

Class 2 consists of a revision of the first class, shrimping, gi chokes from guard position, gi choke from side mount, gi choke from top mount. Again continue with sparring.

Here's what happened:

Kevin: Would you like me to go 100% intensity? There could be a lot gained from me going full intensity.

Me: Ok, why not?

Kevin: (breaks out from guard position to side mount, and pushes my left shoulder down , looks like a paintbrush.... and then CRACK....)

Me: (tap out, tap out)

Kevin: What happened?
Me: I think my shoulder is injured.

True enough, Antonio, a visiting plastic surgeon gives me a check up in the morning and confirms that my shoulder is injured. I shouldn't move it shoulder for 20 day and I'm on 6 days on Ibuprofen (oral analgesic/painkiller).

Yes I should chill out. So it looks like I'll be doing a lot of crunches, squat kicks and stretching until this heals.

That's the update for know.

Cheers,
Hoh Yun

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Excerpts from Fractal Time by Gregg Braden

We’re living the end of time.

Not the end of the world, but the end of a world age—a 5,125-year cycle of time—and the way we’ve known the world throughout that time. The present world age began in 3114 b.c. and will end in a.d. 2012. Because the end of anything also marks the beginning of what comes next, we’re also living the start of what follows the end of time: the next world age, which ancient traditions called the great cycle.

From the epic poems of India’s Mahabharata to the oral traditions of indigenous Americans and the biblical story of Revelation, those who have come before us knew that the end of time was coming. They knew, because it always does. Every 5,125 years, the earth and our solar system reach a place in their journey through the heavens that marks the end of precisely such a cycle. With that end, a new world age begins. Apparently it’s always been this way.

For at least four such cycles (or five, according to the Mesoamerican traditions of the Aztec and the Maya peoples), our ancestors endured the changes in global magnetic fields, climate, diminishing resources, and rising sea levels that come with the end of time. They did so without satellites and the Internet or computer models to help them prepare for such a radical shift.

The fact that they lived to tell the story stands as a powerful testament to an undeniable truth: it tells us beyond any reasonable doubt that the inhabitants of our planet have survived the end of world ages in the past. Beyond simply surviving, our ancestors learned from the difficulties that can accompany the change. In the words of their day, they did their best to tell us what it means to live such a rare moment in history. It’s a good thing they did, because such events are few and far between. Only five generations in the last 26,000 years have experienced the shift of world ages. We will be the sixth.

The present world age isn’t something that will simply fade away into the sunset of a time that seems to perpetually linger somewhere “out there” in our future. Just the opposite: our world age has an expiration date. It ends at a specific time, with a specific event, on a day that was marked on a calendar more than 2,000 years ago. There is no secret about that date. The Maya who calculated it also inscribed it as a permanent record for future generations. The date is etched into stone monuments that were built to last until the end of time.

When the date is translated to our familiar system of time, the message becomes clear. It tells us that our present world cycle will conclude with the winter solstice that takes place on December 21 in the year 2012. It’s on this date that the mysterious Maya identified the astonishing astronomical events that will mark the end of our age … and they did so more than two millennia ago.

The reason: Physically, our solar system is moving through the shortest part of an orbit that looks like a flattened circle, an ellipsis whose far end carries us to the most distant point from the core of our home galaxy, the Milky Way.

The physical effect: Both ancient traditions and modern science tell us that our location in this cyclic orbit determines how we experience the powerful sources of energy, such as the “massive magnetic fields,” which radiate from our galaxy’s core. Recent studies suggest that it is precisely such cycles that may explain the mysterious patterns of biodiversity—the rise and fall of life on Earth, such as the mass extinctions that happened 250 and 450 million years ago. Additionally, modern discoveries confirm that Earth’s position throughout the journey (orbit, tilt, and wobble) create the ever-changing cycles that influence everything from temperature and climate to polar ice and the magnetic fields of the earth. Details of these effects are discussed throughout the book Fractal Time.

The emotional/spiritual effect: As we travel farther from our galaxy’s core, our distance from the energy located there was described by ancient traditions as the loss of a connection that we sense both spiritually and emotionally. Scientific links between the quality of Earth’s magnetic fields, how they’re affected by cosmic conditions, and our feeling of well-being seem to precisely support such ancient beliefs.
In the same way that Earth’s rotation makes the darkest part of the night appear just before the dawn, our position in the heavens is such that the darkest part of our world age appears right before our heavenly orbit begins the return that brings us closer to our galaxy’s core. With that return, we experience relief from the cataclysmic forces of the cycle’s darkness. And just as the night must pass in order to get to the new day, the only way to arrive at the light of the next cycle is to finish the darkness of this one.

We all know that dark experiences definitely exist in our world, and we don’t need to look far to find them; however, there’s also more to life than the suffering that the ancients foresaw—much more. Even in our time of great darkness, the polarities of peace, healing, love, and compassion are alive, well, and abundant.

Our ancestors had an amazingly deep grasp of just what our experience of cosmic cycles means on multiple levels. Somehow they knew that Earth’s position in the heavens would affect the physical conditions in our world, as well as the emotional and spiritual experiences that we need to embrace them. Through myth, analogy, and metaphor, they reminded us that the farther we travel away from the source of such powerful energy, the deeper we are in darkness and the more out of sync we find ourselves with the fields that influence life here on Earth. From the traditions of the Hopi to the ancient Vedas, it’s this experience of separateness that is credited with our sense of being lost as well.

Our ancestors cautioned that at the most distant point in our cycle, we would forget who we are—our connectedness to one another and the earth. They told us that we would forget our past. It’s precisely this disconnected feeling that seems to be the consequence of the cyclic journey that carries us to the far end of our galactic orbit. It’s also the fear that is spawned by such feelings that has led to the chaos, war, and destruction at the end of cycles past.

The key to 2012 and our time in history is to understand the language of nature’s cycles and to use that language today to prepare for the future. Ultimately we may discover that our ability to understand and apply the "rules" of fractal time holds the key to our deepest healing, our greatest joy, and our survival as a species.

Sunday, November 16, 2008

My New Place: Taman Desa

My new trading SOHO office has finally been set up in Taman Desa. I've been spending the past one week to equip it with furniture and computer equipment.

I so love the 6Mbit Netlynx connection, this country really needs a better quality of Internet speed. But really hate the disconnects that we get. Can't seem to reconnect until another half hour later. Have to work on that.

I got a great view from the 6th floor, access to a basketball court and swimming pool and loads of food shops near by.

Lets see what the markets will give me at the end of the year.

Cheers

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Hi guys,

It's been 2 years since I've last blogged. I believe that although it can sometimes be a chore, it also ensures that we're responsible or held accountable for something that belongs to us.

Of course the blog also is a good chronology of events throughout my life. Hopefully as you guys browse through my site historic blogs, I hope that there is a sense that i have matured with every postings.

At the moment I am also maintaining the methodtrader blog, a blog related to trading for those people that wonder what I do as a living and low angle productions blog, which is what I do on my weekends with my martial arts mates.

I hope this blog is a good way to update my friends and family on what is going on in my life.

Yours Sincerely,
William Foong

Tuesday, August 22, 2006


Mehran's Car with the top down

Friday, September 16, 2005

Mitsubishi Girl

This made my day today :)

Wednesday, September 14, 2005

Hot in pink


New Order
Originally uploaded by byte.
That's what i call hot....