Tuesday, March 4, 2008

jalan hidup seorang manusia

hari itu aku begitu penat. aku tak bisa melakukan apa-apa. ego dan pikirku tak sejalan. aku selalu mengeluh dengan keadaanku yang sekarang. aku merasa bosan dan terkungkung di dalam rumah mewah itu. hari-hariku harus dilewatkan disana. aku tidak pernah menemukan sebuah kebebasan.
aku marah dan meronta.aku iri dengan teman-teman usia sebayaku yang selalu diberi kebebasan untuk melakukan apa saja yang diinginkan.aku tidak dijinkan pergi ke mana-mana. apalagi kalau pergi ke tempat yang jauh. aku memandang sesuatu ini tidaklah adil bagiku padahal aku ini hidup di negara yang demokratis (apa hubungannya ya).
tapi aku juga menyadari kalau memang itu adalah yang terbaik bagiku.mereka melakukannya karena memang mereka benar-benar sayang. aku mengeluh pada yang Maha Kuasa. sebenarnya apa maksud dari ini semua? karena tuhan itu tidaklah menjadikan segala sesuatu ini dengan sia-sia....

Friday, January 4, 2008

Global Warming: How Do Scientists Know They're Not Wrong?

From catastrophic sea level rise to jarring changes in local weather, humanity faces a potentially dangerous threat from the changes our own pollution has wrought on Earth’s climate. But since nothing in science can ever be proven with 100 percent certainty, how is it that scientists can be so sure that we are the cause of global warming?
For years, there has been clear scientific consensus that Earth’s climate is heating up and that humans are the culprits behind the trend, says Naomi Oreskes, a historian of science at the University of California, San Diego.
A few years ago, she evaluated 928 scientific papers that dealt with global climate change and found that none disagreed about human-generated global warming. The results of her analysis were published in a 2004 essay in the journal Science.
And the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the National Academy of Sciences and numerous other noted scientific organizations have issued statements that unequivocally endorse the idea of global warming and attribute it to human activities.
“We’re confident about what’s going on,” said climate scientist Gavin Schmidt of NASA’s Goddard Institute of Space Science in New York.
But even if there is a consensus, how can scientists be so confident about a trend playing out over dozens of years in the grand scheme of the Earth's existence? How do they know they didn’t miss something, or that there is not some other explanation for the world’s warming? After all, there was once a scientific consensus that the Earth was flat. How can scientists prove their position?
Best predictor wins
Contrary to popular parlance, science can never truly “prove” a theory. Science simply arrives at the best explanation of how the world works. Global warming can no more be “proven” than the theory of continental drift, the theory of evolution or the concept that germs carry diseases.
“All science is fallible,” Oreskes told LiveScience. “Climate science shouldn’t be expected to stand up to some fantasy standard that no science can live up to.”
Instead, a variety of methods and standards are used to evaluate the viability of different scientific explanations and theories. One such standard is how well a theory predicts the outcome of an event, and climate change theory has proven to be a strong predictor.
The effects of putting massive amounts of carbon dioxide in the air were predicted as long ago as the early 20th century by Swedish chemist Svante Arrhenius.
Noted oceanographer Roger Revelle’s 1957 predictions that carbon dioxide would build up in the atmosphere and cause noticeable changes by the year 2000 have been borne out by numerous studies, as has Princeton climatologist Suki Manabe’s 1980 prediction that the Earth’s poles would be first to see the effects of global warming.
Also in the 1980s, NASA climatologist James Hansen predicted with high accuracy what the global average temperature would be in 30 years time (now the present day).
Hansen's model predictions are “a shining example of a successful prediction in climate science,” said climatologist Michael Mann of Pennsylvania State University.
Schmidt says that predictions by those who doubted global warming have failed to come true.
“Why don’t you trust a psychic? Because their predictions are wrong,” he told LiveScience. “The credibility goes to the side that gets these predictions right.”
Mounting evidence
Besides their successful predictions, climate scientists have been assembling a “body of evidence that has been growing significantly with each year,” Mann said.
Data from tree rings, ice cores and coral reefs taken with instrumental observations of air and ocean temperatures, sea ice melt and greenhouse gas concentrations have all emerged in support of climate change theory.
“There are 20 different lines of evidence that the planet is warming,” and the same goes for evidence that greenhouse gases are increasing in the atmosphere, Schmidt said. “All of these things are very incontrovertible.”
But skeptics have often raised the question of whether these observations and effects attributed to global warming may in fact be explained by natural variation or changes in solar radiation hitting the Earth.
Hurricane expert William Gray, of Colorado State University, told Discover magazine in a 2005 interview, "I'm not disputing that there has been global warming. There was a lot of global warming in the 1930s and '40s, and then there was a slight global cooling from the middle '40s to the early '70s. And there has been warming since the middle '70s, especially in the last 10 years. But this is natural, due to ocean circulation changes and other factors. It is not human induced.”
Isaac Newton had something to say about all this: In his seminal “Principia Mathematica,” he noted that if separate data sets are best explained by one theory or idea, that explanation is most likely the true explanation.
And studies have overwhelmingly shown that climate change scenarios in which greenhouse gases emitted from human activities cause global warming best explain the observed changes in Earth’s climate, Mann said—models that use only natural variation can’t account for the significant warming that has occurred in the last few decades.
Mythic ice age
One argument commonly used to cast doubt on the idea of global warming is the supposed predictions of an impending ice age by scientists in the 1970s. One might say: First the Earth was supposed to be getting colder; now scientists say it’s getting hotter—how can we trust scientists if they’re predictions are so wishy-washy?
Because the first prediction was never actually made. Rather, it’s something of an urban climate myth.
Mann says that this myth started from a “tiny grain of truth around which so much distortion and misinformation has been placed.”
Scientists were well aware of the warming that could be caused by increasing greenhouse gases, both Mann and Schmidt explained, but in the decades preceding the 1970s, aerosols, or air pollution, had been steadily increasing. These tiny particles tended to have a cooling effect in the atmosphere, and at the time, scientists were unsure who would win the climate-changing battle, aerosols or greenhouse gases.
“It was unclear what direction the climate was going,” Mann said.
But several popular media, such as Newsweek, ran articles that exaggerated what scientists had said about the potential of aerosols to cool the Earth.
But the battle is now over, and greenhouse gases have won.
“Human society has made a clear decision as to which direction [the climate] is going to go,” Mann said.
Future predictions
One of the remaining skeptics, is MIT meteorologist Richard Lindzen. While he acknowledges the trends of rising temperatures and greenhouse gases, Lindzen expressed his doubt on man’s culpability in the case and casts doubt on the dire predictions made by some climate models, in an April 2006 editorial for The Wall Street Journal.
“What the public fails to grasp is that the claims neither constitute support for alarm nor establish man's responsibility for the small amount of warming that has occurred,” Lindzen wrote.
To be sure, there is a certain degree of uncertainty involved in modeling and predicting future changes in the climate, but “you don’t need to have a climate model to know that climate change is a problem,” Oreskes said.
Climate scientists have clearly met the burden of proof with the mounting evidence they’ve assembled and the strong predictive power of global warming theory, Oreskes said-- global warming is something to pay attention to.
Schmidt agrees. “All of these little things just reinforce the big picture,” he said. “And the big picture is very worrying.”

Today in History

Today is Friday, Jan. 4, the fourth day of 2008. There are 362 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Jan. 4, 1965, President Johnson outlined the goals of his Great Society in his State of the Union Address.
On this date:
In 1821, the woman who would be named America's first native-born saint, Elizabeth Ann Seton, died in Emmitsburg, Md.
In 1896, Utah was admitted as the 45th state.
In 1904, the Supreme Court, in Gonzalez v. Williams, ruled that Puerto Ricans were not aliens and could enter the United States freely; however, the court stopped short of declaring them U.S. citizens.
In 1948, Burma (now called Myanmar) became independent of British rule.
In 1951, during the Korean War, North Korean and Communist Chinese forces captured the city of Seoul.
In 1960, French author Albert Camus died in an automobile accident at age 46.
In 1965, poet T.S. Eliot died in London at age 76.
In 1974, President Nixon refused to hand over tape recordings and documents subpoenaed by the Senate Watergate Committee.
In 1987, 16 people were killed when an Amtrak train bound from Washington to Boston collided with Conrail locomotives that had crossed into its path from a side track in Chase, Md.
In 1995, the 104th Congress convened, the first entirely under Republican control since the Eisenhower era.
Ten years ago: Israeli Foreign Minister David Levy resigned, accusing the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of abandoning the peace process with the Arabs. Actress Mae Questel, who had supplied the voices of cartoon characters Betty Boop and Olive Oyl, died in New York at age 89.
Five years ago: As President Bush put the finishing touches on an economic growth package costing $674 billion over 10 years, Democrats who wanted his job pledged to scuttle what they characterized as a plan that would help the wealthy without reviving the economy. Oscar-winning cinematographer Conrad L. Hall died in Santa Monica, Calif., at age 76.
One year ago: Nancy Pelosi was elected the first female speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives; Keith Ellison of Minnesota's 5th District became the first Muslim member of Congress. Harriet Miers resigned as White House counsel. Vincent Sardi Jr., owner of Sardi's restaurant, the legendary Broadway watering hole, died in Berlin, Vt., at age 91.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Barbara Rush is 81. Football Hall-of-Fame coach Don Shula is 78. Actress Dyan Cannon is 71. Opera singer Grace Bumbry is 71. Country singer Kathy Forester (The Forester Sisters) is 53. Actress Ann Magnuson is 52. Rock musician Bernard Sumner (New Order, Joy Division) is 52. Country singer Patty Loveless is 51. Rock singer Michael Stipe (R.E.M.) is 48. Actor Patrick Cassidy is 46. Actor Dave Foley is 45. Singer-musician Cait O'Riordan is 43. Actress Julia Ormond is 43. Tennis player Guy Forget is 43. Country singer Deana Carter is 42. Rock musician Benjamin Darvill (Crash Test Dummies) is 41. Actor Jeremy Licht is 37. Actress-singer Jill Marie Jones is 33.
Thought for Today: "Our civilization is still in a middle stage, no longer wholly guided by instinct, not yet wholly guided by reason."

Manajemen Waktu

Manajemen Waktu
Apa yang dimaksud dengan manajemen waktu? Pernahkah kita dikejar-kejar dengan waktu,misalnya saja deadline pengumpulan tugas, atau sedang ujian masa kuliah yang waktunya kurang cukup?Ataukah kita sedang mengerjakan suatu project yang waktunya sangat mepet? Pasti kita semua pernah mengalami hal-hal seperti itu, termasuk juga dengan saya tentunya. Saya sendiri merasa belum bisa mengatur jadwal sesuai dengan apa yang akan kita lakukan.Misalnya saja memakai agenda, sudah tertulis pada hari senin misalnya kita harus mengerjakan sesuatu & harus selesai pada sore harinya ternyata saya sering lelet untuk mencapai target tersebut.Kurang disiplin, kurang motivasi, & kurang gigih untuk mencapainya.Sebetulnya hal-hal tersebutlah pemicu kegagalan untuk mencapai target-target tersebut.Seringnya kita menganggap remeh suatu persoalan atau menunda-nunda pekerjaan tersebut.Sampai kita terlena hingga pada akhirnya pada waktu yang ditentukan kita selalu mengerjakan dengan terburu-buru & hasilnya pasti menjadi tidak maksimal. :( Saya sendiri berpikir bahwa kita kadang-kadang tahu apa yang membuat kita gagal mencapai target waktu yang ditentukan,memang sulit sekali untuk mendisiplinkan diri bagi orang-orang yang sudah terbiasa dengan ritme kerja yang lamban.Ada upaya dari dalam diri kita yang mengatakan kita harus mengerjakan sesuatu dengan cepat tetapi betapa lebih besarnya godaan dari bisikan-bisikan dari dalam diri yang negatif mengatakan sebaliknya :(. Hal-hal itulah yang harus kita hilangkan!! Dan melalui manajemen waktulah kita harus dapat mengatur segala macam hal yang akan kita lakukan & belajar berencana jangka pendek maupun jangka panjang. Jadi sementara ini saya berkesimpulan dalam manajemen waktu yang harus dilakukan adalah : 1. Mengatur jadwal kerja (apalagi orang yang bekerja secara freelance harus lebih kuat usahanya) 2. Displin dengan jadwal kerja tersebut 3. Memompa, memotivasi diri, & selalu bersemangat dalam menjalankan segala sesuatu 4. Walaupun dikejar deadline namun isi otak kita harus tetap relaks 5. Jangan panik, harus tetap tenang & fokus agar dapat selalu terarah apa target yang akan kita capai 6. Berusahalah sebaik mungkin & jangan menyerah sampai dengan saat-saat akhir "Do the best but not prepare for the worst". Kita harus siap dengan segala kemungkinan, namun keberhasilan akan lebih mudah diterima dibandingkan dengan kegagalan. Optimislah!setelah berusaha sekuat tenaga kita baru boleh pasrah atas apapun hasil yang terjadi.Semoga tulisan ini menjadi motivasi saya & teman-teman semua dalam mencapai cita-citanya.

NEver Insult Anyone


An American and a Japanese were sitting on the plane on the way to LA when the American turned to the Japanese and asked,
“What kind of -ese are you?”
The Japanese confused, replied, “Sorry but I don’t understand what you mean.”
The American repeated, “What kind of -ese are you?”
Again, the Japanese was confused over the question.
The American, now irritated, then yelled, “What kind of -ese are you… Are you a Chinese, Japanese, Vietnamese! Etc…??? ”
The Japanese then replied, “Oh, I am Japanese.”
A while later the Japanese turned to the American and asked what kind of ‘key’ was he.
The American, frustrated, yelled, “What do you mean what kind of -kee’ am I?!”
The Japanese said, “Are you a Yankee, donkee, or monkee?”
MORAL: “NEVER INSULT ANYONE”
Blue Water"(Air biru)
lagu pembuka anime "Fushigi no umi no Nadia"(Nadia di laut misterius)
penyanyi: MORIKAWA Miho
Ima kimi no me ni ippai no mirai
(Sekarang di matamu terbentang masa depan)
Subete wo kagayakasu
(menerangi semua)
Yowaki na hito ha kirai,
Aozora uragiranai
(Aku tidak suka orang yang kurang semangat, langit biru tidak pernah mengkhianati)
Yume miru mae ni watashi tonde ikitai
(Sebelum bermimpi aku ingin pergi terbang)
Yume miru mae ni watashi tonde ikitai
(Sebelum bermimpi aku ingin pergi terbang)
kokoro no orgel ga hiraiteku hibiiteku
(Kotak musik dalam hati mulai dibuka dan mulai bergaung)
Sukoshi zutsu no shiawase, yuuki mo kanade dasu no
(Mulai muncul kebahagiaan dan keberanian sedikit demi sedikit)
Ima kimi no me ni ippai no mirai
(Sekarang di matamu terbentang masa depan)
kotoba ha eien no signal
(Kata-kata itu adalah sesuatu tanda yang senantiasa)
DON'T FORGET TO TRY IN MIND ai ha jewel yori subete wo kagayakasu(Jangan lupa mencoba dalam hati, cinta itu menerangi semua lebih dari batu mulia.)-------------------------------------------------Anime "Fushigi no umi no Nadia" (Nadia di laut misterius) ini karya GAINAX, distradarai oleh ANNO Hideaki, disiarkan oleh NHK (salah satu stasiun televisi Jepang seperti TVRI di Indonesia) dari bulan April tahun 1990 sampai April 1991. Ceritanya, seorang gadis Nadia, dia sebetulnya putri orang Atlantis (keturunnan manusia luarangkasa). Dia mewarisi permata "blue watar" yang mempunyai kekuatan sangat hebat. Kelompok yang bertujuan menguasai seluruh dunia, Neo Atlantis mengejar Nadia untuk merebut "blue watar".Nadia bisa menjaga batu mulia ini ? Pengisi suara Nadia adalah TAKAMORI Yoshino. Di anime ini sudah terdapat unsur-unsur Evangelion, Misalnya konsep "Adam", caracter design Electra (sepertinya Dr. AKAGI memakai plug suits AYANAMI).
http://jp.youtube.com/watch?v=TuX7ab_j9CwNadia: The Secret of Blue Water - opening and ending

Australian Development Scholarship (ADS)


Australian Development Scholarship (ADS) are funded by the Government of Australia for postgraduate study at Australian universities. The main goal of ADS is to promote Indonesia's human resource capacity to contribute to:
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Improving economic management;
Strengthening democratic institutions and practice;
Increasing the accessibility and quality of basic social services; and
Enhancing security and stability.
Scholarships have played a significant role in Australia's development cooperation program in Indonesia, with around 11,000 scholarships provided over more than 50 years. ADS continues to be a major component of the program with up to 270 scholarships offered in 2007/2008.
Please note that the ADS scholarship program is a different program to the Australian Partnership Scholarship (APS) Program. For full details on APS go to http://www.apsprogram.or.id/

The off-shore component of the ADS Program is managed by IDP through an IDP established ADS Project Office in Jakarta to ensure efficient end effective administration of the ADS scheme in Indonesia.
Each year, the Australian Government sponsors people from some developing countries to study in Australia through Australian Development Scholarships (ADS). The Australian Development Scholarship program in Indonesia aims to promote private and public sector human resource development in areas of agreed development priority.
This will be achieved by providing post-graduate scholarships for Indonesians to study in Australia and by working in close cooperation with the Indonesian Government to deliver a program which is flexible to Indonesia's human resource development needs.
Consistent with the principles of AusAID's education and training policy (August 1996), the ADS program will be implemented to ensure : quality (of project personnel, fellows and procedures); transparency (of selection); equity and merit (in the awarding of fellowships); access (of beneficiaries to scholarship documentation and information); and consistency (in award administration).