Celebrating a Legend: The Boeing 747 (40th anniversary)

Ajeet February 1st, 2010

Arguably the best passenger aircraft ever, the first Boeing 747 was delivered to Pan Am 40 years ago. It was the largest airliner flying until the Airbus 380.  ‘Jumbo Jet’, ‘Super Jet’, ’Mega Top’ and ‘Mega Ark’ were some of the superlatives used to describe this revolutionary jet. Since the first flight in January 1970, it has transported thousands of tonnes of passenger and cargo loads all over the world. The latest variant, the B747-400 is still widely in use today, and offers one of the most comfortable of flying experiences.

Here’s a classic video covering the first flight of this legend (the video is in 2 parts). Enjoy!

 

 

I must be careful with using too much past tense in this story, coz its not over yet! Even as i write, the good folks at Boeing are already embarking on the next chapter -- the B747-800. You can immerse in the whole saga from the beginning at Flight Global’s coverage of the 40th anniversary at this link:

http://www.flightglobal.com/page/747-40th-Anniversary/747-40th-Anniversary-Evolution/

 

I had the honour of visiting the very first B747-100, at Seattle’s Museum of Flight. Here’s a picture of RA001:

RA001

Happy New Year!

Ajeet January 2nd, 2010

2009 was an eventful year, like every other! We moved back to Singapore from Shanghai, celebrated an Egyptian-Singaporean wedding in the family (my sis-in-law), travelled to Guilin, Yanghshuo, India, South West Australia and Bali. Work-wise, I got trained onto a new aircraft type – the Airbus 330, and Ping has been teaching part-time. I will miss the freighter-runs out of Shanghai, and especially miss flying the B747(the queen of the skies!). Some good friends got married, some added to their families, and a few good souls made the transition into the Great Unkown.

The world witnessed the passing of a legend – Michael Jackson, and the Nobel crowning of another. Descending from his almost perfect pedestal, Tiger Woods proved that he was human afterall. Roger Federer and Kim Cloisters showed what true Champions are made of – with truly amazing comebacks. An AirFrance A330 disappeared over the high seas, while the skill and good fortune of the Hudson river crew ensured a happy ending for a bunch of A320 passengers. Earthquake in Sumatra & Snowstorms in europe and the US, wrapped up another year of natural disasters – although none were equal in magnitude  to the tragic 2008 sichuan earthquake. H1N1 almost brought the panic to SARS levels, before making a quiet exit – at least for now. World economies and stock markets which were tumbling down a seemingly bottomless crevasse, hit the brakes and pleasantly surprised with a sharp turn-around.

Back home in Singapore, the AWARE saga, SPUR schemes, recession heroes, the Mas Selamat re-capture, foreigner-influx debates, citizenship privilege upgrades and the SEA games took most of the headlines.

—————————————————————————————————————-

2010, the end of a decade & the year of the tiger, promises new adventures, hopes, dreams and the occasional setbacks. Both my sisters-in-law(my brother’s wife in India &  Ming in singapore) are due to deliver their bundles of joy sometime this year. We have a few trips lined up to explore the world and make the best of our annual leave. Big sporting event of the year - the FIFA world cup. More A330s in the pipeline means more new destinations for me. Although we hear of green shoots everywhere, not all is well with the world economy, and i expect a few more shocks to the downside for the western world, and thus – to a limited extent – for asia as well.

 

As we mark yet another milestone, build on our past and stride into the future, we wish you safe takeoffs and landings on your personal journeys towards your date with destiny.

Keep in touch, thank you very much!

 

Here’s wishing everyone a Happy, Healthy and Meaningful 2010!

 

1392573
Au Revoir B747-400, Great Wall Airlines and 2009!

 

“Children Growing Up in a Different World”

Ajeet October 26th, 2009

Here’s an article by author cum investment-newsletter-writer, Bill Bonner. His personal observations of life over the years, and of the different spoons(silver or not…) we’re all born with. Enjoy!

(Source)
—————————————————————————————————————————————-

We sat in a cab yesterday, stuck in traffic in central London. We watched people walk by and wondered. What are they thinking about? What do they want out of life? What do they think of themselves?

There were hundreds of them…different shapes…different sizes. A businessman in a pin-striped suit, briefcase in hand, concentrating on his sales report; he almost stepped in front of a motorcycle. A salesgirl, grotesquely overweight…yellow hair streaked with brown…wishing she hadn’t had so much to drink the night before. A lawyer daydreaming about his secretary. A man who would have rather been fishing…still in his waxed coat. A woman annoyed about something. A heavy construction worker, his legs splayed outward as he walked. A tense young woman who dared not look up. A woman worrying about her son. A man thinking about buying a new car. One man trying to remember a line from a song he learned 30 years ago. Another talking to herself. One looked like a doctor taking an afternoon stroll. Another was stark raving mad.

All of them walking along…from one place to another…shuffling along…the living towards the dead.

We were thinking of our children. What a different world they grow up in. And yet, it is still the same too. A man might have been stuck on a London street 50 years ago…and hundreds of years ago he might have watched the same shopkeepers and carpenters walk by, each caught in his own thoughts like a fly in a spider’s web.

Our old friend John Mauldin wrote to say that his mother’s experience was not much different than ours. She joined the WACs during the war…met John’s father…and then nature took her course.

But both John and your editor had a big advantage in life. We both caught the upswing.

Not so with our children. They inherit a different world. America was the world’s leading nation in the ’50s and ’60s. And it was growing in power and wealth – rapidly. We grew up with it. Things were getting better and better…we were sure we’d live much grander, richer, and more exciting lives than our parents. The sky was always the limit!

Now, America is in decline. China’s economy grows while hers declines. The Far East has savings, while she has none. The Asia nations are net exporters, making huge profits…while American industries are judged too old, too expensive, and too highly regulated to compete. Americans have debt up the kazoo, while their competitors have little. A young person in America has to look forward to supporting 70 million retired baby boomers…and paying for their drugs, their food, their wars, and their bailouts.

For our children – ours and John’s – the situation on a personal level is different too. Coming from poor families, we could look forward to much more wealth and material success than our parents ever knew.

We came back to Ireland this week for a reason that our parents would never have dreamed of. Your editor has set up a family office. It is a very modest affair by family office standards. The typical family office manages a fortune of $100 million, according to The New York Times. We may not even be on the same planet with these rich families; but we are in the same universe. That is, we try to think about…and manage…our wealth as rich people do…as a family legacy or an endowment, not as a retirement fund.

What wealth we have accumulated – even if it is paltry – will be held by a family-owned corporation. Then, the corporation, run largely by the adult children, manages the assets – from our base in Ireland.

Your editor, freed from the responsibility of managing his own money will be free to wander and think…like a vagabond, a gypsy, a refugee, an itinerant mendicant…forced to sup on whatever is at hand and take lodging wherever he can find it – but favoring the Four Seasons and Chateau Margot when they are available.

Whatever else this does, it puts the children in a very different situation from their parents. Instead of starting out with nothing, they’re starting out with something. While this would seem to be a big advantage to them, it has huge hidden disadvantages. Like America itself, they are in danger of finding themselves slipping downhill. Instead of expecting things to get better, they may find it hard even to hold onto what they’ve got. Instead of the “Morning in America” that Ronald Reagan promised, they may find that it seems more like evening, both in their personal as well as their national lives.

“From shirtsleeves to shirtsleeves in three generations,” say the French. The grandfather begins without a coat. His grandson ends that way.

But what to do? Spend it all now…so the children begin with the same clean slate we had? Move to Brazil or India – countries with more obvious upside?

In the deep, cosmic end, it probably doesn’t matter. The advantage to starting out on an upper rung of the ladder may be about equal to the disadvantage of having to worry about falling off. Who can know?

Every man has to play the cards he’s been dealt. What else can he do? He may have a humpback or a beautiful voice. He may have had a hard upbringing or a soft head. He may have a fortune worth of poetry in his soul but not dime in his pocket. As far as we can tell, every young man starts out even. Each one begins life in the same place – where he is. And every generation takes what it is given, and makes the best of it.

The real advantage in life is having the gumption to get on with it; no one knows where that comes from.

Until next time,

Bill Bonner
for The Daily Reckoning Australia

Remembering MJ

Ping July 2nd, 2009

We weren’t great fans of him though we liked many of his songs. We did not purchase any album that he released, just enjoyed his music played on the radio. However, on the day I learnt that King of Pop, Michael Jackson passed way, Ajeet and I felt a certain loss within us -- that small part which we grew up with listening and grooving to his music.

Feeling the urge to listen to his music again, we sat down in front of the computer and heard his songs on youtube. Despite having watched him on television perfoming several times , those original and classic cool moves of his fascinated the both of us again. He was such an interesting and captivating performer. Watching these videos made me wish I had gone for at least one of his concerts.

I personally prefer his soft ballads. He is able to touch the heart and soul with his soft, clear and unique voice quality. Even at a tender age, Michael Jackson’s powerful yet endearing vocals captured the hearts of many. This ability to connect with listeners makes him, in my opinion, one of the best singers I have ever known.

As a child in the Bahai Children’s Choir, we used to sing  the songs ‘We are the world’ and ‘Heal the World’. These songs till today, hold so much meaning to me and I’m sure to many others around the world.

I remembered hearing on a television interview with Michael Jackson that one of the most honest songs he had written about himself was the song ‘Childhood’. We listened to it and were very moved by the song. I could not control the tears that kept flowing. I can only imagine what kind of a childhood he had -- that which revolved around rehearsals, performances and recordings.

If you have never listened to the song ‘Childhood’, here is a link you can go to and see some pictures of Michael Jackson as a young boy.

Michael Jackson’s life was definitely far from perfect but his music and his person, as a great performer, has left an indelible impression on all his listeners. Whether we know it or not, I feel he has to an extent not only made the world a better place, but also influenced others to this ideal -- through his music and thus his life on earth. 

Settling back in Singapore

Ping April 13th, 2009

A month has passed since our return to Singapore and we’re well-adjusted to the warmth and humidty here. We spent the first 2 and a half weeks settling into our home and helping with my sister’s (Thing Ming) wedding. The wedding was both a joyous and heart-warming event for the family. I thought that my sister looked really beautiful and blissful that day. It was great meeting new relatives and catching up with those whom we’ve not met for quite a while.

For the last week and a half, we made a 10 day trip to Guilin and Yangshuo, both of which are in the Guangxi Province of China. We will write more about our travels to these 2 places in our next post. As for now, Ajeet will be moving from the B747 to the Airbus 330 and will be undergoing training for the next 2 months. It will be very intensive but I’m sure it will be pretty exciting too. As for me, I will be looking around and researching my options.

Here are some pictures that we took at the wedding:

3 sisters at the Chinese dinner

3 sisters at the Chinese dinner

The happy couple

The happy couple

Next »