Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Science is the engine of prosperity -- Ilmu pengetahuan adalah mesin kemakmuran

Science is the engine of prosperity -- 
Ilmu pengetahuan science adalah mesin kemakmuran sebuah bangsa

" Science is the engine prosperity everything we see around us wealth is a product of science. Take a look at physics alone, in the cinema, television, the embedded radio radar microwaves and GPS system. World-wide-web GPS, space program, MRI machines and testing machine so the product we bought for health are the accumulating wealth we see around us comes from science however politicians don't know this politicians are in the main former lawyers in law everything the zero-sum game of taking other people money. The policies lawyer and politician made are a zero-sum game  for protecting private investments. Politicians from the lawyers that lead our nations does not come from school of science but make policy and tax and planning the budget just to take other from the same pie of budget even the budget pie for science project become thinner. Just making policy for taxing richest who has the same pie budget. Science is looking for more bigger pie by creating wealth-ness, health-ness. I believe that science is the engine of prosperity, that if you look around at the wealth of civilization today, it's the wealth that comes from science." Michio Kaku 

For example Indonesian, Traffic Jam in Jakarta, contractor and local government in Jakarta did not create standard that involved hiring Traffic Engineer but using Polices and Pamong Praja to just give signs and wonders.  Road Repair Contractor are bending iron line and cutting the iron on the road and it takes times to repair roads so traffic are accumulated. 

Jakarta does not know how to use sign road and traffic engineer  to efficiency road users.

The Best American Science Writing 2012 is yet another endlessly fascinating and mind-expanding installment of the popular science series that Kirkus Reviews calls, “Superb braincandy.” Edited by renowned theoretical physicist and bestselling author Michio Kaku, co-founder of string field theory, this collection contains the most engaging and provocative science writing of the year—gathering in one volume enthralling and eye-opening essays about the latest developments in biochemistry, physics, astronomy, genetics, evolutionary theory, cognition, and more

Space elevators. Internet-enabled contact lenses. Cars that fly by floating on magnetic fields. This is the stuff of science fiction—it’s also daily life in the year 2100.

Renowned theoretical physicist Michio Kaku details the developments in computer technology, artificial intelligence, medicine, space travel, and more, that are poised to happen over the next hundred years. He also considers how these inventions will affect the world economy, addressing the key questions: Who will have jobs? Which nations will prosper? Kaku interviews three hundred of the world’s top scientists—working in their labs on astonishing prototypes. He also takes into account the rigorous scientific principles that regulate how quickly, how safely, and how far technologies can advance. In Physics of the Future, Kaku forecasts a century of earthshaking advances in technology that could make even the last centuries’ leaps and bounds seem insignificant
 
This work is the joint product of an academician and a business practitioner, both of whom share a concern about the inadequacy of current business models and practices. It examines the business environment and explores the underlying drivers - the "Engines of Prosperity" - that set the rules of competitive rivalry. It provides advice for managers on how to operate in a world characterized by Information Age technology, rapid change, deepening global linkages, increasing returns to sale, and the continuous unbundling of value chains.

Thursday, August 20, 2015

" ... Live like no one Else...." - Hiduplah Tak Seperti yang Lain (quoted DR)

Live like no one Else - "Hiduplah tak Seperti yang lain" quote (DR)

Umur-Ku, Uang-Ku: Kapan Habiskan, atau Kapan Simpankan, dan Kapan kah? "Bagikan tuk bertambah" sekarang juga.  

Kita mendengar dari waktu ke waktu di radio dan tv : Setiap orang bisa menjadi Miliaran dengan cara investasi. Apakah semudah itu?

Dengan  disiplin dan perhatian pada beberapa pikiran sederhana di bawah ini: memperhatikan budget, membayar hutang , menabung dan membagikan tuk bertambah tidak seperti orang lain.
Bila anda berusia 20 tahunan , 30 tahunan atau bahkan 60 tahunan, apa yang anda pikir dan lakukan?

Daftar tip-tip di bawah ini untuk tiap usia tambahan 10 tahun anda. Bila anda merasakan anda telat dalam umur, umur dan simpanan. Pakailah tip tip ini untuk mengisi bensin bekerja lebih giat dan pintar dimana anda berada. Tidaklah pernah telat memulainya.
Here’s our list of the best money moves 

a. Umur 20 an — Membangun Fondasi Kuat  
Pasangan baru atau calon ? Teruskan dan lihat laman buku dibawah ini 

b. Umur 30 an — Perhatian ke Keluarga baru anda
Bila anda memiliki anak, ulang keuangan budget, dari popok anak, daycare anak, dan tempat duduk anak anda di mobil. Anda akan memiliki sedikit uang simpanan tapi anda akan mencintai keluarga anda.  

1. Mulai dari Budgeting Lama dan Arahkan Goal Lebih Besar  

2. Ambil Jalan Simpanan Pensiun yang jarak panjang  

3. Bertanyalah dan Dengar Jawaban sebelum terglambat karena gensi dan terus kebodohan.  


c. Umur 40 an — Gali Simpanan  anda 
Saat di puncak karir, anak anda sudah lewati daycare (Jadi tambahan uang dengan bagikan tuk tambah. Dari uang di bank ke stok dan mutual fund dan persentase untuk simpanan hari tua anda.  

d. Umur 50 an  — Teruskan dan Tetap Fokus 

Anda memulai kehidupan tidak terlalu banyak berpindah pindah. dan nikmatilah and Jangan mencairkan simpanan pensiun anda atau tambah persentasenya.

e. Umur 60 - 70 an - Nikmati Hasil Upaya Anda  

Pikirkan untuk membeli asuransi pensiun atau  long term care.   siap bila saat itu anda dalam keadaan darurat perlu perawatan intensif sehingga simpanan anda menguap dengan cepat.  Bersiap siap

Menang bersama uang adalah sebuah maraton bukan sebuah jalan cepat. Perlu kerja keras seumur hidup. Jadi tempatkan dan berlarilah sehingga hari hari bayaran miliaran anda bisa terwujud.  

Thursday, July 16, 2015

Selamat Hari Raya Idul Fitri -- 开斋节快乐

Selamat Hari Raya Idul Fitri 
开斋节快乐 --kāizhāi jié kuàilè

  

Ramadan adalah bulan yang paling diharapkan umatnya makmur dan Eid Al fitr adalah tahun yan baru kata " Ma Yucheng.
Di mesjid Tengri Urumqi jam 6.30 pagi, berburu mendapatkan tempat duduk untuk berdoa merayakan nya
Setelah doa bersama, 34 tahun Ma Yucheng, mengunjungi makam untuk memberikan hormat kepada saudara saudara yang telah meninggal.
Saudara muslim membersihkan makam yang telah mendahului dan meninggalkan sedikit makanan kegemaran mereka yang telah meninggal pulang ke rumah untuk merayakan sisa hari dengan keluarga.
Ma telah mempersiapkan Eid Al Fitr,  membuat jenis makanan lezat, seperti kacangan dan buah segar, roti dan daging kambing yang baru dipotong. Kelaurganya akan menikmati sebuah perayaan untuk merayakan makan pertama pada siang hari di bulan berikutnya.
Pemerintah daerah menyebutnya Eid al-Fitr, 3 hari libur untuk penganut muslim menghadiri perayaan agama dan mengunjugi  kerabat keluarga.
Untuk imam Hebayan, 3 hari ini sebuah hari yang sibut, mengunjungi penatua, yang cacat dan sakit di komunitas dan membawa persembahan dan mengulang Al Quran untuk mereka.
 Mesjid di Jalan Sutera kota Kashgar, adalah yang terbesar di Tiongkok, di sini sekitar 5000 muslimah menghadiri perayaan doa pagi bersama. 
Xinjiang berpenduduk lebih dari  21 juta penduduk, lebih dari setengah adalah muslim dari 10 suku bangsa tiongko seperti  UygurKirgizKazak and Uzbek.   Total mesjid ada sekitar   24,000 .
Selama Ramadan, muslim menahan makan, minum dan merokok dan sex dari pagi sampai sore. supaya devosi iman bisa tumbuh, orang tua dan anak anak dan yang sakit tidak diharuskan berpuasa.  
Ramadan tahun ini mulai tanggal 18 Juni 2015   Mesjid termasuk yang berwarna putih lebih dikunjungi dari hari biasanya, setengaah pengunjungnya adalah dari tempat lain.
Di  mesjid mesjid ramai ini, penjaga pintu mengawalik dari pengunjung yang datang dan pergi dengan selamat. 
Bila jalanan dipenuhi dan mengganggu jalan dari macet, Imam Abdushukur  mengaturnya. Pengunjung yang berdoa di jalan tidak diizinkan.
Sehingga Ramadan dapat berjalan damai dan harmoni, warga dari suku berbeda latar belakang, berbagi makanan di Suhoor sebelum malam tiba. 

Thursday, June 18, 2015

Money - China Currency Historical - Way of Thinking

Money - Chinese Indonesia Way of Thinking - Historical view

Money - Historically
First recorded currency or barter is "kerang laut" or shell or pei dated 1100 BC, size about 3.4 cm during Shang Dinasty , the invention of barter from material "bone and stone" coins then continued. The most often quoted example of primitive money is shells - pei in chinese- The small cowrie shell, deriving from the Maldive Islands in the Indian Ocean, is a treasured item in the civilizations of China and India from very early times. From India these attractive objects are carried along the trade routes to Africa. 
 At the end of the Shang Dynasty, northerners civilization in China found it was hard to find enough shells from the south, so they used other materials like pottery, stone, bone, jade, bronze and gold to make shell-shaped money. The unit is peng, which has evolved to mean "friend". Friend is our fortune indeed! There is no agreement on how many clustered shells a peng include. A cluster of 10 shell makes one peng, the commonly held standard unit.
Shell (bei) is an important character component in Chinese Thinking. Almost all things or acts concerning money have the component of shell or pei, such as fortune, poverty, goods, trade, businessman, tribute, greed, expense, compensation, ransom, expensive (as well as noble), and cheap (as well as humble). People like to call their dear children or pets bao bei, or more sweetly bao bao or bei bei, which literally means treasure, and implies to honey or darling.



   

Customs gold units

Customs Gold Units (關金圓, pinyin: guānjīnyuán) were issued by the Central Bank of China to facilitate payment of duties on imported goods. Unlike the National Currency which suffered from hyperinflation, the CGUs were pegged to the U.S. Dollar at 1 CGU = US$0.40.
Unfortunately, the peg was removed in 1935 and the bank allowed CGUs to be released for general use. Already awash with excessive paper currency, the CGUs only added to rampant hyperinflation.

1945–1948

After the defeat of Japan in 1945, the Central Bank of China issued a separate currency in the northeast to replace those issued by puppet banks. Termed "東北九省流通券" (pinyin:Dōngběi jiǔ shěng liútōngquàn), it was worth approximately 10 times more than fǎbì circulating elsewhere. It was replaced in 1948 by the Gold Yuan. Northeastern Provinces Yuan was an attempt to isolate certain regions of China from the hyperinflation that plagued the fǎbì currency.

Gold Yuan

The onset of World War II saw a sharp devaluation of the fǎbì currency. This was largely due to unrestrained issuance of the currency to fund the war effort. After the defeat of Japan and the return of the Kuomintang Central Government, a further reform was instituted in August 1948 in response to hyperinflation. The Gold Yuan Certificate replaced the fǎbì at the rate of 1 Gold Yuan = 3 million Yuan fǎbì = US$0.25. The Gold Yuan was nominally set at 0.22217g of gold. However, the currency was never actually backed by gold and hyperinflation continued. Currently 19 June 2015, 1 Yuan = US$ 0.16

 

Paper money in China: 10th - 15th century
Paper money is first experimented with in China in about 910, during the Five Dynasties period. It is a familiar currency by the end of the century under the Song dynasty. Another three centuries later it is one of the things about China which most astonishes Marco Polo  

Chinese Invention of paper money

Paper fabrication during the Han Dynasty (206 BC - 220 AD)
Paper fabrication during the Han Dynasty (206 BC – 220 AD)
During the Tang Dynasty (618-907) there was a growing need of metallic currency, but thanks to the familiarity with the idea of credit the Chinese were ready to accept pieces of paper or paper drafts. This practice is derived from the credit notes used by merchants for their long-distance trade.
Due to this lack of coins, also the dead had to change their habits of taking a coin with them to pay their passage to the other world. About the 6th century notes replaced coins as burial money. May we consider this as a real means of payment? Of course not, but it is remarkable that also here paper replaces very smoothly the copper coins that were used before.
At the end of the Tang period, traders deposited their values with their corporations. In exchange, they received bearer notes or the so-called hequan. Those hequan were a real success and the idea was exploited by the Authorities. Merchants were invited to deposit henceforth their metallic money in the Government Treasury in exchange for official “compensation notes”, called Fey-thsian or flying money.
During the Song Dynasty (960-1276) booming business in the region of Tchetchuan likewise resulted in a shortage of copper money. Some merchants issued private drafts covered by a monetary reserve which initially consisted of coins and salt, later of gold and silver. Those notes are considered to be the first to circulate as legal tender. In 1024 the Authorities confer themselves the issuing monopoly and under Mongol government, during the Yuan Dynasty (1279-1367), paper money becomes the only legal tender. During the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) the issuing of notes is conferred to the Ministry of Finance.
On Sale Currency notes for Sale 
1000 Pieces of 1 Jiao Chinese Banknotes
$1,000 (50%), Bundles with 100 Banknotes
Original Bank Packaging, Guaranteed Authentic



 Chinese way of thinking about money 
Who doesn’t apply himself to business, won’t achieve much success "flow of money" 

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

First Ever Bilionare Are Willing to Run for President and Bilionare Make American Great Again

Donald Trump Running for President 2016 VIDEO "I'm Really Rich" | Donald Trump for President                                                   
  

Who better to give advice to aspiring leaders than Donald Trump, America’s best-known entrepreneur now is running for Ever Bilionare candidate for President? 
The aim is to make American Great again? 


  From REAGAN to TRUMP
Bilionare Make American Great Again



Trump’s most basic strategies, principles, and thoughts are abridged here for the perfect pocket-sized gift for a budding leader or boss.Donald Trump shares his thoughts on life, personal and professional, in essays that reveal his winning strategies and lofty goals. With a foreword by Robert Kiyosaki, author of Rich Dad Poor Dad, Trump covers “Learn to Think on Your Feet,” “Keep it Short, Fast, and Direct,” “There are Times When You Should Move On,” and “How to Get Rich.” This is an abridgment of the Vanguard hardcover, published in April 2009.


In this title, two entrepreneurial Icons share experiences and insights into creating and building successful businesses. What makes some business owners wildly successful? What separates the entrepreneurs who build businesses from ones who just seem to create more work for themselves? How, exactly do the world's most prominent business builders seem to hit home run after home run? The answer: They have the Midas Touch. Donald Trump and Robert Kiyosaki believe the world needs more entrepreneurs. For the first time, two of the world's most successful and influential entrepreneurs will share their own Midas Touch secrets. Secrets that will both inspire you to find and fulfill your passion as well as provide you with the hands-on guidance you need to be successful. Through their real life stories of success, failure, perseverance and purpose, you'll discover how they do it and whether or not you have what it takes to drive your own entrepreneurial success.

Saturday, June 13, 2015

China Dream - When China Rules the World, Is it benefited the World?

中国梦 (Chinese Dream)
Book party for "The China Dream


5 Category  Chinese Dream
1. National: Great Rejuvenation  of  Chinese nation, modern wealth society by 2020 and complete modernization by 2050
2.Personal: Wealth being of Chinese people, Material and necessity of life, and psychology life wealth fulfilled 
3. Historical: Culture and Civilization and change Chinese dream over time , need for stability and sovereignty
4. Global: benefit  the world  gets by china developed and multiple effect entire world can benefit of higher living of china ,  standard of concern the world of Chinese dream
5. Antithetical : Tension and contradiction inside Chinese dream, 
economic development vs social in balance, pollution  and corruption.
Rejuvenate China benefit the entire world
  
China Dream: Great Power Thinking and Strategic Power Posture in the Post-American Era examines the inherent conflict in U.S. China relations and the coming "duel of the century" for economic, military, and cultural dominance in the world. Written by a veteran Chinese military specialist, and scholar, it defines a national "grand goal" to restore China to its historical glory, and take the Unites States' place as world leader. First published in Beijing in 2010, The China Dream provoked international debate with its controversial vision of a world led by China. Now available in English, this is the definitive book for understanding the “hawk” version of China’s national destiny debate and is essential for understanding China’s strategic goals in the 21st century.

After celebrating their country's three decades of fantastic economic success, many Chinese are now asking, "What comes next?" How can China convert its growing economic power into political and cultural influence around the globe? 
-----------------------------------
William A. Callahan's China Dreams gives voice to China's many different futures by exploring the grand aspirations and deep anxieties of a broad group of public intellectuals. Stepping outside the narrow politics of officials vs. dissidents, Callahan examines what a third group--"citizen intellectuals"--think about China's future. China Dreams eavesdrops on fascinating conversations between officials, scholars, soldiers, bloggers, novelists, film-makers and artists to see how they describe China's different political, strategic, economic, social and cultural futures. Callahan also examines how the PRC's new generation of twenty- and thirty-somethings is creatively questioning "The China Model" of economic development. The personal stories of these citizen intellectuals illustrate China's zeitgeist and a complicated mix of hopes and fears about "The Chinese Century," providing a clearer sense of how the PRC's dramatic economic and cultural transitions will affect the rest of the world. 

China Dreams explores the transnational connections between American and Chinese people, providing a new approach to Sino-American relations. While many assume that 21st century global politics will be a battle of Confucian China vs. the democratic west, Callahan weaves Chinese and American ideals together to describe a new "Chimerican dream."





Friday, June 12, 2015

China has invested in legal Maritime Law - Maritime Land Reclaimation

According to Dr. Sun Yen during Woodrow Wilson Center  Forum recently : "China has invested in legal Maritime Law" 
                                                                      
            The Philippines,  Vietnam, and Territorial Disputes in the South China Sea

As Beijing continues to trumpet its “New Type of Great Power Relationship” with the United States, and the United States attempts to buttress its “Re- balance to Asia”, Asia-Pacific nations keep a close eye on relations between the two giants.

New questions about China’s intentions and America’s commitments in the region seem to arise every week of late. Tensions are flaring over the Philippines’ arrest of Chinese poachers in its exclusive economic zone, over Chinese reconstruction of a reef in the Spratley Islands, and over Chinese drilling near the disputed Paracel Islands and the protests that ensued in Hanoi. Dr. Aileen Baviera of the University of the Philippines and Dr. Hoang Anh Tuan of the Institute for Foreign Policy and Strategic Studies of the Diplomatic Academy of Vietnam discussed their respective countries’ interests in the region and their perspectives on Sino-U.S. cooperation and competition in Asia-Pacific. 


This event was part of the Wilson Center’s Weighing the Re-balance Series, a joint effort of the Asia Program and the Kissinger Institute on China and the United States. This three-year series brings regional experts to Washington to analyze Chinese and American roles in Asia-Pacific from the viewpoints of countries affected by Sino-U.S. competition and cooperation. The Series will conclude with a multilateral conference and publication of policy-briefs for policymakers in Washington and Beijing.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------                                                                
This report from the Center for the Study of Chinese Military Affairs of the Institute for National Strategic Studies provides a thorough discussion of the use of the Chinese military in past and future confrontations, including historic information about previous signals of military intention and possible future military threats regarding disputed islands. Contents: The Record: Beijing's Use of Military Force * China's Crisis Decision making Process and Crisis Management * Signaling the Intent to Employ Military Force— China's Warnings Calculus * Signaling Case Studies—Taiwan * Analyzing Beijing's Signals—Things to Consider * Conclusion—A Hypothetical South China Sea Signaling Scenario * Appendix 1. Chronology of the 1978-1979 Sino-Vietnamese Border Crisis * Appendix 2. Chronology of the 1961-1962 Sino-Indian Border Crisis * Appendix 3. PRC Signaling Over Taiwan: 1991, 1995, 1999, 2003-2004 

Since its founding in 1949, the People's Republic of China (PRC) has employed military force in defense of China's security and territorial integrity. In many such instances, Beijing implemented a calculus of threat and retaliation signals intended first to deter an adversary from taking actions contrary to Chinese interests by threatening the use of military force and, if deterrence failed, to explain and justify Beijing's resort to military force. 

This deterrence calculus was applied in each of the major instances in which Beijing has resorted to military force—in Korea in 1950, in the Sino-Indian border dispute in 1961-1962, in the Sino-Soviet border dispute in 1968-1969, and in China's attack on northern Vietnam in 1979. It was also applied in instances in which Beijing's effort at deterrence apparently succeeded and China ultimately stopped short of using military force. Examples include China's responses to the intensifying American combat effort in Vietnam in 1965-1968 and to the 1991 debates in Taipei about delimiting the Republic of China's sovereignty claims. 

Beijing implements this deterrence calculus by a carefully calibrated hierarchy of official protests, authoritative press comment, and leadership statements. If the crisis persists and Beijing perceives its interests are not satisfactorily taken into account, its statements escalate in level and may include at first implicit and thereafter increasingly explicit warnings that it may use military force to achieve its goals. This approach has been employed consistently despite the sweeping changes in the PRC's place in the international order, the proliferation of foreign policy instruments at its disposal, the more complex crisis decision making process and domestic political environment, and the dramatic evolution in the Chinese media over the decades. The question for U.S. policymakers is whether improving military capabilities will lead Beijing to substitute sudden or surprise attack for the politically calibrated deterrence signaling it has employed prior to its past use of force. This study assesses the problem in four ways. 

In addition to the China paper, this unique collection of American military documents provides a special view of recent Chinese military and policy developments. Contents: China Shaping the Operational Environment - A Disciple on the Path of Deception and Influence * The "People" in the PLA: Recruitment, Training, and Education in China's 80-Year-Old Military * China's Maritime Quest * The PLA At Home and Abroad: Assessing The Operational Capabilities of China's Military * Arms Sales To Taiwan: Enjoy The Business While It Lasts * China's Role In The Stabilization Of Afghanistan * The Coming of Chinese Hawks * Turkey and China: Unlikely Strategic Partners. This ebook also includes the annual U.S. intelligence community worldwide threat assessment in Congressional testimony by Director of National Intelligence James R. Clapper Jr.