Friday, January 16, 2009

To Che Det on Muslim Unity for an Economic War.



dear Tun,

firstly we must also blame ourselves for lacking in muslim unity.
because we muslim are not united, others are taking advantage of it.
perhaps, if you can advise our muslim brothers and sisters on how best to achieve this unity, it would be more effective than going to war with the USA/Israel ?.

However, with your connections and networks, am pretty sure many would listen and act for an economic war perhaps ?,,,,indeed would be more effective too !.
The Israelis, who once demanded that their enemies negotiate with them, now themselves refuse to negotiate. This is indeed a simple tactical ploy. They have no wish to make peace with the Palestinians because there are no concessions they are willing to offer. They will concede nothing, neither land nor political authority. On the contrary, they insist on the Jews' continued right to seize more land from the Arabs to build new settlements.

PirateKing

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Gaza bleeds and so should we.









The tragedy is not the brutality of evil but the silence of the good people.
It is a perplexing sign of sheer stupidity, blindness or massive collective amnesia among Israelis today that they cannot see the parallels between their Jewish liberation struggle in the historic land of Palestine and the current liberation struggle led almost solely by Hamas. They cannot crush, eliminate or decapitate Hamas; they can only come to terms with it and negotiate an end to violence by both sides. The Israeli invasion of Gaza, wreaking death and destruction, chalking up a death toll of more than 510 people, mostly civilian casualties including women and children, is a crime against humanity
Thank God that finally Malaysia has given the United Nations Security Council an ultimatum to come up with a resolution to condemn Israel on its brutal aggression against Palestine.

Gaza bleeds and so should we..... Might is not Right,,,,,STOP the Killings !!!!! for God's sake man.

The Malay Achipelago




MALAY ARCHIPELAGO' (variously called Malaysia, the Indian Archipelago, the East Indies, Indonesia, Insulinde), the largest group of islands in the world, lying south-east of Asia and north and north-west of Australia. It includes the Sunda Islands, the Moluccas, New Guinea, and the Philippine Islands, but excludes the Andaman-Nicobar group. The equator passes through the middle of the archipelago; it successively cuts Sumatra, Borneo, Celebes and Halmahera, four of the most important islands. A. R. Wallace (who includes the Solomon Islands as well as New Guinea in the group) points out that the archipelago "includes two islands larger than Great Britain; and in one of them, Borneo, the whole of the British Isles might be set down, and would be surrounded by a sea of forests. Sumatra is about equal in extent to Great Britain; Java, Luzon, and Celebes are each about the size of Ireland. Eighteen more islands are on the average as large as Jamaica; and more than a hundred are as large as the Isle of Wight." The islands of the archipelago nearly all present bold and picturesque profiles against the horizon, and at the same time the character of the scenery varies from island to island and even from district to district. The mountains are arranged for the most part in lines running either from north-west to south-east or from west to east. In Sumatra and in the islands between Sumatra and Borneo the former direction is distinctly marked, and the latter is equally noticeable in Java and the other southern islands. The mountains of Borneo, however, rise rather in short ridges and clusters. Nothing in the general physiognomy of the islands is more remarkable than the number and distribution of the volcanoes, active or extinct. Running south-east through Sumatra, east through Java and the southern islands to Timor, curving north through the Moluccas, and again north, from the end of Celebes through the whole line of the Philippines, they follow a line roughly resembling a horseshoe narrowed towards the point. The loftiest mountain in the archipelago would appear to be Kinabalu in Borneo (13,698 ft.). An important fact in the physical geography of the archipelago is that Java, Bali, Sumatra and Borneo, and the lesser islands between them 1 For more detailed information respecting the several islands and groups of the archipelago, see the separate articles Borneo; Java; Philippine Islands; Sumatra, &C.

The most notable fact in the geological history of the archipelago is the discovery in Java of the fossil remains of Pithecanthropus erectus, a form intermediate between the higher apes and man. In its structure and cranial capacity it is entitled to a higher place in the zoological scale than any anthropoid, for it almost certainly walked erect; and, on the other hand, in its intellectual powers it must have been much below the lowest of the human race at present known. The strata in which it was found belong to the Miocene or Upper Pliocene. Among the rocks of economic importance may be mentioned granite of numerous kinds, syenite, serpentine, porphyry, marble, sandstones and marls. Coal is worked in Sumatra, Borneo and Labuan. Diamonds are obtained in Borneo, garnets in Sumatra, Bachian and Timor, and topazes in Bachian, antimony in Borneo and the Philippines; lead in Sumatra, Borneo and the Philippines; copper and malachite in the Philippines, Timor, Borneo and Sumatra; and, most important of all, tin in Banka, Billiton and Singkep. Iron is pretty frequent in various forms. Gold is not uncommon in the older ranges of Sumatra, Banka, Celebes, Bachian, Timor and Borneo. Manganese could be readily worked in Timor, where it lies in the Carboniferous Limestone. Platinum is found in Landak and other parts of Borneo. Petroleum is a valuable product of Sumatra and Java, and is also found in Borneo.

The Malay Pirate




The Malays of the coast are a maritime people, and were long famous for the daring character of their acts of piracy. They are now peaceable fisher-folk, who show considerable Mode of ingenuity in their calling. Inland the Malays live by M o e, o preference on the banks of rivers, building houses on piles some feet from the ground, and planting groves of coco-nut, betel-nut, sugar-palm and fruit-trees around their dwellings. Behind their villages the rice-fields usually spread, and rice, which is the staple food of the people, is the principal article of agriculture among them. Sugar-cane, maize, tapioca and other similar products are grown, however, in smaller quantities. In planting rice three methods are in use: the cultivation of swamp-rice in irrigated fields; the planting of ploughed areas; and the planting of hill-rice by sowing each grain separately in holes bored for the purpose. In the irrigated fields the rice plants are first grown in nurseries, and are subsequently transplanted when they have reached a certain stage of development. The Malays also work jungle produce, of which the most important are gutta, rattans, agila wood, camphor wood, and the beautiful kamuning wood which is used by the natives for the hilts of their weapons. The principal manufactures of the Malays are cotton and silk cloths, earthenware and silver vessels, mats and native weapons. The best cotton cloths are those manufactured by the Bugis people in Celebes, and the batek cloths which come from Java and are stamped with patterns. The best silks are produced by the natives of Pahang, Kelantan and Johor in the Malay Peninsula. Lord Leighton pronounced the silver ware from Malaya to be the most artistic of any exhibited at the Colonial Exhibition held in London in 1886. The pottery of the Malays is rude but curious. When the first Europeans visited the Malay Archipelago the Malays had already acquired the art of manufacturing gunpowder and forging canon. The art of writing also appears to have been independently invented by the Malayan races, since numerous alphabets are in use among the peoples of the archipelago, although for the writing of Malay itself the Arabic character has been adopted for some hundreds of years. The Malays are excellent boat-builders.

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Farewell from IBS and GLMS Implementation to-date.



Dearest Captain


Happy New Year.


Thank you very much for the wonderful wishes.
The global GLMS program is surely going to loose one of the ever best "TRUE visionary with a TRUE action plan".

However we are looking forward to work with you in future. I had conveyed your vision on the GLMS program after phase 111 to the IBS top management. I am sure that the IBS management will be capitalising your immense knowledge in promoting the iLogistics world wide and will be surely contacting you for the same.


As always mentioned to you personally, you are a true example to follow the foot steps. I always try to follow the advise & footsteps given/shown by you during my exposure with you as a TRUE professional (during the work life) and as a person (especially during the demise of my daddy).


I have read many books / articles on WIN-WIN strategies, and it is my pleasure to declare that I had seen the real practical WIN-WIN strategies from rare gurus like you. I am thankful to God for providing me with a wonderful person like you with whom I could approach as a person for any challenging phases in my life. I truly admire your humbleness to learn new things in every engagement / activity you do, with a sharp tool set of questionnaires to arrive at the best strategy / way forward for the undertaken engagement / activity.


Thank you very much for sending out the invitation to join the Gmail user group. Please find my gmail account [sandoshmanavalan@gmail.com]. I hope that you are still reachable via your mobile number [0060123770214]. We will keep in touch and will keep you updated with the latest.


About GLMS
We are really focusing on our material revamp release series (phase 111). We are currently on target / schedule with regard to this in-house release series. We are confident and hoping that your vision could be materialised with the completion of the entire material revamp release series.


As rightly mentioned by you, we are not focusing on the following, at the moment :-

(a) warehouse management (b) purchase and its payment
It will be really grateful if you could share those artefacts/points/vision which were shared with Steven / Chan.
Regarding the in-field transfer manifesting, we will be definitely talking to Chan / Rosli.


Thanks & Best Regards Sandosh 0091-9846066914