Friday, June 23, 2006

Amazing Downtown & Public Library of Seattle, Washington State

Space Needle of Seattle














Public market, souvernir goods and fresh air of waterfront














Waterfront of Seattle City, main industrial and economical mobilization













Fast wireless internet network in Seattle Library













Look from the East, the whold shape of Library














Look from the Front, across the street















Look from the Front, across the street














Inside Library, second floor, west wing

Friday, June 16, 2006

Life Perspectives from Niagara Fall of Canada

World largest waterfall: Niagara Fall, Canada

Look Within
“There is no fire like greed, no crime like hatred, no sorrow like separation, no sickness like hunger of heart, and no joy like the joy of freedom. Health, contenment and trust are your greatest possessions and freedom is your greatest joy. Look within. Be still. Free from fear and attachment, know the joy of living in the way.”
The Buddha, Translated by Thomas Byrom, Dhammapada






Harmlessness
“All beings tremble before violence. All fear death. All love life. See yourself in others. Then whom can you hurt?. What harm can you do?. He who seeks happiness by hurting those who seek happiness will never find happiness. For your brother is like you. He wants to be happy. Never harm him. And when you leave this life, you too will find happiness.”
The Buddha, Dhammapada






Eternal Law
“Hatred is never appeased by hatred in this world; it is appeased by compassion. This is an eternal law”.
- The Buddha, Dhammapada










Middle Path: the path leading to Enlightenment
Two extremes should be avoided by a recluse: indulgence in sensual pleasures and addiction to self-mortification. Abandoning both these extremes the Tathagata has comprehended the Middle Path promoting sight and knowledge and tends to peace, higher wisdom, enlightenment and Nibbana.
- Lord Buddha







Our Commitment
"By Endeavor, Diligence, Discipline and Self-Mastery, let the wise man make (of himself) as an island that no flood can overwhelm."
- Dhammapada










Boundless Compassion
"Love and compassion are necessities, not luxuries. Without them, humanity cannot survive".
- Buddha

Monday, June 12, 2006

Ancient city comes to life

Ancient city comes to life
May 2006

It's a long way from the 13th century Khmer empire to modern-day Australia, but a researcher in Monash's IT faculty is bringing the two worlds together.

Report: Melissa Marino
Photography: Paul Philipson

History on parade: One of Mr Chandler's computer-generated 3D animations of life in ancient Angkor.

Eight centuries ago, the ancient city of Angkor was one of the largest in the world. Today, it is an archaeological and tourist site in north-west Cambodia that is survived only by its famous stone temple -- Angkor Wat.

Now, using the latest technology, Monash IT lecturer Mr Tom Chandler is breathing new life into the ancient city from his office at the university's Berwick campus.

His PhD research has seen him recreate swathes of Angkor's landscape using sophisticated visualisation and simulation IT technologies. The results may help social science researchers and the general public visualise abstract processes such as the pattern of settlement through time.

Angkor, the capital of the ancient Khmer empire, was founded around the ninth century AD, but the city reached its peak in the 12th century, when Angkor Wat was built. Covering about 81 hectares, the temple complex consists of five towers, which are represented on the Cambodian national flag. In 1992, the UNESCO World Heritage Committee declared the monument and the city of Angkor a World Heritage site.

With a click of Mr Chandler's computer mouse, hundreds of ancient Khmers come to life and march with their elephants across his computer screen, past intact villages in a long royal procession.

The 3D animation lasts little more than 20 seconds but took six months to create. Everything in the picture was 'built' from scratch -- the colour and light, the layout of the houses and temples, the lumbering roll of the elephants' gait and the Khmers themselves.

This animation was created with the help of Mr Chandler's multimedia students. Their reconstruction of ancient cultures -- including elephant battles and other special effects -- promises to have a very real impact for researchers both in Cambodia and worldwide.

Ancient animator: Mr Tom Chandler.
"This is potentially something very powerful for helping people understand, interpret and experiment with historical theories, particularly for a town such as Angkor, whose tropical climate has ensured old texts and wooden houses have long since decayed," Mr Chandler says.

"Basically, the animation is in two layers. You have a graphical front-end that people can interact with, but underneath there is another layer of simulated mechanics driving what you see on the screen."

One of the technologies used to simulate these landscapes is the cellular automaton model -- a simulation tool resembling a grid of thousands of squares or cells, often used in mathematics and theoretical biology, where each cell possesses a finite number of states and can influence the cells around it.

The cellular automaton cells used in Mr Chandler's simulation each contain properties that represent elements of the ancient landscape, be they a canal, a rice field or a house.
By changing properties within the cells, originally drawn from archaeological maps, excavation data and satellite images, he hopes to open up the study of history like never before.

"Hopefully, it is a tool that archaeologists can use to test theories," he says. "In a simulated space, people can hypothesise freely and experiment with parameters."

Those parameters may describe the society itself where, through the simulation, it may be possible to see what the breaking point of an event or issue was, which could inform what might have brought about a society's demise.

Mr Chandler's fascination with Cambodia began in 2001, when the archaeology and fine arts graduate tired of the successful career he had carved in advertising agencies in New York and London and 'dropped in' on Cambodia on his way home to Australia.

Angkor dreaming: A typical Angkor house from eight centuries ago.
Five months later he left but was so taken by the place that he returned the following year and worked on an excavation of the Greater Angkor Project -- a study into the size and demise of the city by the University of Sydney, which is now co-supervising his PhD.

With a bit of tweaking, Mr Chandler hopes his research may have other practical applications, such as providing information about modern infrastructure and sustainability.

"Ideally, we could adapt the model to visualise what Cambodia is like today with modern roads and power grids, similar to the landscape you see when flying in a plane," he says. Cambodian organisations have already shown interest in visualising rural areas to assist with land mine clearance.

Mr Chandler also sees possibilities for the technology to be used as virtual heritage to give people an opportunity to experience fragile or inaccessible locations or areas where only fragments of the original structures survive.

Already, he says, the technology can help illuminate people's experience of Angkor, a booming tourist destination and one of the most frequently visited archaeological sites in Asia.

"For tourists who visit Angkor or for the general public, it's a great tool. People are shown countless stone ruins, but a consideration for the city that created these monuments is often overlooked," he says. "It is a great way to bring history to life."

Tuesday, June 06, 2006

Some immortal words offering us the sense of peace, wisdom and hope!

Mother of Peace, Truth of Life
They are the mother of the world: the earth, the air, the fire and the wind. These four important elements are called the nature. They have been composed of three natural rules: the impermanence, the deterioration and the non-substantiality. There are three characteristics working as a flux, dynamism, moving and gravitating...etc Today the mother of our world grants us the greenary grasses and trees, the unreturning-flowed river, the birds and the exotic atmosphere. This beauty of nature entertains us by the babbling brook, the chirbing birds, the humming wind and dancing leaves, the quietness, the peacefulness and the meditating mind....he is calm with this peaceful fresh air...his mind is focusing on breathing which insights the concept of understanding the energy, continuum, changing, decaying and non-essence of nature and lives...this led him to understand well the truth of life. (Vodano)


Love is Needed
Love and Campassion are important for beings. Individuals hate loneliness and conflict. Individuals need companion and understanding. But when they have approached this need, they are always blocked by seperation and retaliation. Why?. Do individuals need true love?. If so, how could they pursue it?. The answer has already engraved in individual's heart. Learn from these peaceful couple of duck.
They are swimming toward boundless water frontier
They are commiting to live together unless death appears
They are content and quiet with this natural atmosphere
They are the gear, the sample model of human beings.
(Vodano)


Streamline of Realization
Like the stream of water flows consistently and has never reversed. Our life is the same. We are moving forward, no backward and no glue of past becomes future. Birth, old, sick and death are the reality of our life. Have we ever realized this truth? And how are we going to deal with it?. We have no power or ability to ban this reality. We are flowing foward like this stream of water. Absolutely, this streamline teaches us the meaning of life which is idealistic optional. Someone chooses to be an evil through their tainted mind, speech and action. But someone efforts to adjust and enhance their mind in a positive way. Nature of mind is pure, but it is gradually tainted by carelessness and heedlessness of human beings. Subjects to constant changes are accurate to all things, so strive on with our heedfulness to achieve our individual sublime destination. As well as, this stream of water is heading foward to the sea and bringing along with all floating things. (Vodano)


Moving for Life
Good health is important for life. It is concerned with both physical and mental well-being. Body and mind are inter-connected, inter-related and inter-dependent. When we eat good, sleep well, regular exercises and fit up..etc can provide us wellness and sustainability of our body. But when we have peace in mind, we can eradicate stress, fear, frustration, depression and mental illness...etc Most people interest only in promoting the sustainability of body, and pay less attention to develop the sustainability of mind. Life is moving foward like this group of Tai Chi practitioners are forwarding their body and mind toward Enlightenment.(Vodano)


Words of Love and Compassion
This is what should be done
By one who is skilled in goodness,
And who knows the path of peace:
Let them be able and upright,
Straightforward and gentle in speech.
Humble and not conceited,
Contented and easily satisfied.
Unburdened with duties and frugal in their ways.
Peaceful and calm, and wise and skillful,
Not proud and demanding in nature.
Let them not do the slightest thing
That the wise would later reprove.

Wishing:
In gladness and in saftey,
May all beings be at ease.
Whatever living beings there may be;
Whether they are weak or strong, omitting none,
The great or the mighty, medium, short or small,
The seen and the unseen,
Those living near and far away,
Those born and to-be-born,
May all beings be at ease!
Let none deceive another,

Or despise any being in any state.
Let none through anger or ill-will
Wish harm upon another.
Even as a mother protects with her life
Her child, her only child,
So with a boundless heart

Should one cherish all living beings:
Radiating kindness over the entire world
Spreading upwards to the skies,
And downwards to the depths;
Outwards and unbounded,
Freed from hatred and ill-will.
Whether standing or walking, seated or lying down
Free from drowsiness,
One should sustain this recollection.
This is said to be the sublime abiding.
By not holding to fixed views,
The pure-hearted one, having clarity of vision,
Being freed from all sense desires,
Is not born again into this world.
The Buddha's Words on Kindness (Metta Sutta)