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Showing content with the highest reputation on 01/21/24 in all areas

  1. Cook using Convection oven will make girls wet. Use Air Fryer like for noob that try to up level from Instant Noodles.
    6 points
  2. @noobmaster @ExTreMisTxxx @CannotTahanLiao @classyNfabulous @canot_lidat_lah
    5 points
  3. 5 points
  4. Personally I would look at those models with buttons to press i feel those touchscreen ones , once the screen spoil then hard to repair
    4 points
  5. As I've said before many of her content is more obscene than hardcore gangbang porn...here she is getting anal fucked by bicycle lol
    4 points
  6. @ManOfTheHour @classyNfabulous @CannotTahanLiao @canot_lidat_lah @ExTreMisTxxx
    4 points
  7. Maybe they hired someone from Disney, just keep rebooting franchises
    4 points
  8. She's one of the few TW AV actress who really put in effort, the rest like
    4 points
  9. @ManOfTheHour @classyNfabulous @CannotTahanLiao @canot_lidat_lah @ExTreMisTxxx
    4 points
  10. @ManOfTheHour @classyNfabulous @CannotTahanLiao @canot_lidat_lah @ExTreMisTxxx @coffeenut @pigpigoink
    4 points
  11. think its more of the insecurity wif less makeup which is not a bad thing many apply makeup like using crayons to color? 🤔
    3 points
  12. kumgong sinkies again donate to someone who can't take care of her belongings, and an LV purse at that and the vietbu is rich enough to hire a domestic helper fucking stupid
    3 points
  13. SINGAPORE - Several StarHub users said they faced a host of log-in issues late on Jan 20, which meant they could not access the telco’s TV services. Speaking to The Straits Times, one user said she faced issues that stretched until the early hours of Jan 21, which meant her husband could not watch English Premier League (EPL) games. The two EPL matches scheduled for broadcast on Jan 20 on StarHub channels were between Arsenal and Crystal Palace at 8.30pm, and on Jan 21 between Brentford and Nottingham Forest at 1.30am. The user, who wanted to be known only as Ms Lim, said she called the StarHub hotline for help when her husband had experienced issues logging in to watch the EPL games. She said: “In the meantime, we tried to change our password, but the link to do so was not working. I waited at least 20 minutes to get technical assistance. Then, when I finally got through, I was told there was an overall problem.” “So we didn’t bother to try again after we were told it was an overall issue.” Ms Lim added that she asked the StarHub representative if EPL subscribers would be compensated, but he was unable to provide an answer. A screengrab from monitoring site Downdetector taken on Jan 21, 4.30pm showing StarHub outage reports. Reports of outages on monitoring site Downdetector reached a peak of 180 reports at 10.53pm on Jan 20 before easing to about six reports at 1.23am. However, the site registered another small spike of about 19 reports of outages at 1.53am, with about 10 reports at 2.53am before stopping at about 3.08am. The Downdetector portal said it “monitors and analyses signals from platforms in real-time to automatically detect incidents and service disruptions in their very early stages.” Other StarHub users who faced similar problems flooded a StarHub Facebook post with complaints about not being able to log in to their StarHub TV accounts through their TV boxes and apps. On Facebook, user Zack Lim on Jan 21 at 1.29am said: “Wasted 30 minutes of my life reconnecting all the hardware, restarting, trying to log in, again and again. Then took me more than 30 minutes waiting on the phone line to confirm the server is down!” A screengrab from a post on Starhub’s Facebook page with a customer’s complaint about the login issues. PHOTO: SCREENGRAB FROM STARHUB/FACEBOOK Another user Kakao Cheng, posting at 1.09am on Jan 21, said: “At least post to inform your users that TV services are down. Called StarHub customer care, waited for 30 minutes, then your agent tells me that there is an issue and to try logging into my TV box tomorrow.” Other users who aired their disappointment on the StarHub Facebook page said they were eventually told by a StarHub representative that there was an issue with the servers, after multiple attempts to rectify their log-in issues via restarting their devices and logging in again as instructed by the telco. A screengrab from a post on Starhub’s Facebook page with a customer’s complaint about the login issues. PHOTO: SCREENGRAB FROM STARHUB/FACEBOOK In response to queries, a StarHub spokeswoman said “some users faced intermittent log-in issues” and its team had “provided assistance promptly”. “There was no disruption to last night’s Premier League match. If there are anticipated network issues or scheduled maintenance, we do inform our users in advance”, she added.
    3 points
  14. Otters are pests especially when they enroach into urban areas Only kumgong sinkies think they are cute and use them as some mascot for apps
    3 points
  15. @noobmaster @ExTreMisTxxx @CannotTahanLiao @classyNfabulous @canot_lidat_lah
    3 points
  16. At 41, Nazib Saptu is living the less-spoken-of Singaporean dream. Not the one with the car and the condo; the other one, where he escapes the pressure cooker, packs his things, and moves 8,000km away to Auckland, New Zealand. Four years on, he has bought his first home: a three-bedroom house that he shares with his wife and two step-kids. He works four days a week, around 40-45 hours, and rests for the other three. While he declines to share his exact income, he earns "above NZD$70k" a year. (That's around S$58,000, or roughly S$4,800 a month. In case you were wondering.) It's a respectable, comfortable life. But the truth is that most of this would've been unthinkable in Singapore. After all, he was just 10 years old when he dropped out of school. Photo courtesy of Nazib Saptu A hard upbringing One of seven children raised by a single mum, Nazib was in primary school when he "felt that [he] needed to drop out of school and earn money". By 11, he'd started doing odd jobs. He delivered newspapers, cleaned swimming pools, and worked in F&B. "I didn't look back by going back to school again." While he worked, he trained in hopes of becoming a professional footballer. But his soccer career eventually ended due to a ligament tear. Photo courtesy of Nazib Saptu With his limited education and money, Nazib once again found himself cycling through a series of jobs: a pump attendant at Shell, a mailroom specialist at Singapore Press Holdings, a baggage handler at Changi Airport. But in 2020, he made the decision to whisk his wife and three kids off to a fresh start: over 8,000km away in Auckland, New Zealand. Driving trucks Starting over in a new country proved more difficult than he imagined. Finding work wasn't easy. He spent months searching and sent out "hundreds of emails" in search of a new job. "I waited maybe three to six months," he recalls. He eventually found a job as a tow truck driver, following in the footsteps of his brother, who taught him how to drive back in Singapore. Photo courtesy of Nazib Saptu But it was a mentally and physically draining job, made worse by the racism he'd face. "Sometime my life would get threatened by the gang members here. I would get bullied as well because of being Asian...you know, we're not big-sized," he explains. "But luckily I am strong mentally due to my hardship growing up since I was 10 years old." Furthermore, his then-wife was a homemaker. Nazib struggled to feed the family of five on one person's income. They eventually got divorced. And Nazib found himself alone in a foreign country, far from home. Settling down Fortunately, he has since settled down. He now works for a major transportation company, Northchill, driving "the nicest truck in Auckland". Photo courtesy of Nazib Saptu He also has benefits: union protections, a car, free petrol. "My boss, he loves me so much and whatever I want, he gives it to me," Nazib quips. All this he attributes to the different work culture in New Zealand, which he says is more flexible and respectful as compared to Singapore. "[In Singapore] they don't give you opportunities. They like to judge you. But in New Zealand, it's all about experience, it's about knowledge. It's not about like, oh, you got a diploma. If you got paper and no knowledge, they're gonna kick you out of the door." Photo courtesy of Nazib Saptu Apart from his success at work, he has also gotten remarried to a half-Singaporean local. "She fully supported me on my career as a truck driver even though I got no education...she believes in me," he said. "I myself couldn’t believe that without education, [she] agreed to marry me...she's my dream girl." Between Singapore and New Zealand While he is content with his life in New Zealand, Nazib is not blind to the difficulties of living here. Rent isn't cheap — around NZD$640 a week for a three-bedroom house — and eating out is expensive. "Nasi lemak here costs around NZD$18, chicken rice NZD$20," he elaborates. Furthermore, while the country has a laid-back culture, the crime rate is decidedly higher. "I'll be honest, you walk alone at night, sometimes you can get robbed," he says. And though New Zealand has become home, Nazib admits that he does miss Singapore. "We Singapore lah. So we miss the food, the friends...the football." (He added he still supports Singapore in football.) Neither has he ruled out the possibility of relocating back to Singapore. "I still keep my Singapore passport," he admits. "I'll be honest, my mum's still alive, and I have family there. So it's quite hard."
    3 points
  17. Sticky then nice mah, you don’t like?
    3 points
  18. the armpit fats etc like sticky sticky 🤮🤢
    3 points
  19. @ManOfTheHour @classyNfabulous @CannotTahanLiao @canot_lidat_lah @ExTreMisTxxx @coffeenut @pigpigoink mmm will do lots of stretching with her
    3 points
  20. @noobmaster @ExTreMisTxxx @CannotTahanLiao @classyNfabulous @canot_lidat_lah
    3 points
  21. @noobmaster @ExTreMisTxxx @CannotTahanLiao @classyNfabulous @canot_lidat_lah
    3 points
  22. Way more ppl willing to pay to whack him with metal baseball bat
    3 points
  23. Get a 40L convection oven first. Yeah, steam oven makes some food nicer - but in a pinch, you can add a tray with water in your convection oven, or cover up the top of your baking pan with foil or lid to trap in some of the moisture for steaming - then remove foil towards the end to dry/brown the surface on high heat But should also have a large air fryer - it cooks some stuff faster. But if you're batch cooking larger amounts, then th 40L oven is easier to handle.
    3 points
  24. @ExTreMisTxxx fake siambus KYM? armpit sour with lemon grass taste
    3 points
  25. prostitute there are BTSS out there who will pay him
    3 points
  26. One Singaporean woman took her taste buds on an 'adventure' in Thailand, and landed herself in hospital. Taking to TikTok last Sunday (Jan 14), influencer Nicolette Wee said that she came across a stall selling freshly fried insects while walking around a night market in Bangkok. The 30-second video showed Wee buying a bag of grasshoppers - to try. "So thick, fat and juicy," she quipped. "Oh my gosh, the crunch and the legs were dangling out. I eat until shiok, legit." Wee said that she went back to the same stall for more creepy-crawly delights - this time a bag of silk worm larvae. "Why my office pantry don't have these kinds of snacks?" she added. But it turns out that Wee's digestive system might have had a "culture shock'. The Singaporean shared that she started having diarrhoea, and had to be admitted to a hospital. She later said that the hospital was in Singapore. Wee's video has since garnered over 290,000 views. In the comments, several netizens say that her trip to the hospital was not worth it. "Never eat their insects and seafood if you're travelling," a netizen said "Some of these insects have parasites," another added. AsiaOne has contacted Wee for more information. Raw food gave woman food poisoning In August 2022, a Singaporean woman had food poisoning in Phuket after eating some 'dancing shrimp' - a street dish consisting of fresh live shrimp marinated in spicy sauce and herbs. "The night after, we started vomiting continuously for six hours [and had] diarrhoea non-stop," she wrote in her TikTok video. To minimise the risk of getting food poisoning while on holiday, some tips include choosing thoroughly cooked food, sticking to boiled water or bottled drinks, as well as avoiding unpasteurised dairy products such as milk and cheese. Travellers can also consider packing anti-sickness medication, oral rehydration salts, anti-diarrhoea medication and antibiotics to self-medicate in the event of food poisoning.
    3 points
  27. Good friend of the duck?
    3 points
  28. Air fryer is convection oven, just smaller and air movement higher relative to size and amount of food. You can use convection to air fry but have to stir the food more frequently and take longer to cook. If whatever you want to bake in convection oven fits in air fryer, you can get similar effect but need to control the temp and heating time by intervals. Basically it's controlling how much heat for how long.
    3 points
  29. @noobmaster @ExTreMisTxxx @CannotTahanLiao @classyNfabulous @canot_lidat_lah
    3 points
  30. 2 points
  31. Fucking stupid indeed for the points you mentioned. Must be white knight loser
    2 points
  32. SINGAPORE – There was a spate of mpox cases in Singapore in the last four months of 2023, with 25 of the total 32 cases last year diagnosed from September to December. Twenty of all the cases were locally transmitted, although not all sources of infection are known, said a Ministry of Health (MOH) spokesman. He said the “majority” of the 12 imported cases were local residents who had travelled to countries in South America and South-east Asia. Of the known local transmissions, one case was linked to an imported case, and two cases were linked to an earlier local unlinked case. Both clusters are now closed, as there have been no new cases linked to them for the last 42 days, or two incubation periods. There were no family clusters, and the rest of the cases were unlinked. Monkeypox was renamed mpox in Singapore in February 2023, in line with World Health Organisation guidelines that aim to avoid the stigma linked to the original name. The MOH spokesman said: “Globally, there has been an increase in mpox cases, and Singapore is also seeing an increase in cases locally.” Professor Paul Tambyah, a senior consultant in infectious diseases at the National University Hospital, speaking in his capacity as president of the International Society for Infectious Diseases, said: “We are in line with the rest of East and South-east Asia in that the mpox peak is a bit later than in Europe and the Americas, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO) data available.” In October 2023, WHO recorded 668 cases from 29 countries; the following month, there were 906 cases from 26 countries. Professor Hsu Li Yang, vice-dean for global health at the NUS Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, said that although the mpox case count is still very low, the number of local transmissions with unknown sources “certainly could represent low-level endemicity in Singapore”. If that is the case, mpox infections will continue to emerge. Singapore made the viral disease a reportable disease in mid-2022 following a global outbreak when the disease appeared in many countries where it is not endemic, including Europe, the United States and Australia, unlike in Africa where it originated. Singapore recorded 18 cases in 2022 since reporting of the disease started at the end of June that year. On July 23, 2022, WHO declared the outbreak of mpox to be a public health emergency of international concern, its highest available alarm. This is the seventh outbreak so designated by WHO since 2005. The one before this was Covid-19. Although usually mild, mpox can prove fatal for some. There are two clades, or groups of organisms. According to the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, mortality rate for Clade I (from Congo) is 10 per cent, while that for Clade II (from West Africa) is less than 1 per cent. MOH said all the reported cases in Singapore were Clade II. The disease can spread through exposure to respiratory droplets or direct physical contact with the blood, body fluid or lesion material from infected individuals or contaminated materials. So it can be transmitted when people talk to each other, or through any form of kissing or sex. Mpox typically starts with a fever, muscle aches and sore throat, followed by a rash that begins on the face and spreads over the body, extending to the palms of the hands and soles of the feet, and evolves over two to four weeks in stages – macules, papules, vesicles, pustules. “Lesions dip in the centre before crusting over,” WHO said. The rash can be both itchy and painful. Treatment is usually to alleviate symptoms, as the disease is often self-limiting. Antiviral medication may be used in more serious cases. According to WHO, complications from mpox can cause serious illness and include pneumonia; corneal infection with loss of vision; pain or difficulty swallowing, vomiting and diarrhoea causing severe dehydration or malnutrition; sepsis (infection of the blood with a widespread inflammatory response in the body); inflammation of the brain, heart, rectum, genital organs or urinary passages; or death. The MOH spokesman said that anyone who has mpox symptoms should seek medical care early. He added that the risk of mpox infection to the public remains low, “as the predominant route of disease transmission is through close physical contact, including intimate or sexual contact, with an infected person or contaminated materials”.
    2 points
  33. fwah rans ehs nice views of her fatty armpit meat with her signature cfm wink!!!!!! rooks jin well maintained for the past few weeks mmmmm
    2 points
  34. @noobmaster @ExTreMisTxxx @CannotTahanLiao @classyNfabulous @canot_lidat_lah
    2 points
  35. color is ky but texture like broom
    2 points
  36. While he worked, he trained in hopes of becoming a professional footballer. But his soccer career eventually ended due to a ligament tear. Photo courtesy of Nazib Saptu With his limited education and money, Nazib once again found himself cycling through a series of jobs: a pump attendant at Shell, a mailroom specialist at Singapore Press Holdings, a baggage handler at Changi Airport. But in 2020, he made the decision to whisk his wife and three kids off to a fresh start: over 8,000km away in Auckland, New Zealand. Driving trucks Starting over in a new country proved more difficult than he imagined. Finding work wasn't easy. He spent months searching and sent out "hundreds of emails" in search of a new job. "I waited maybe three to six months," he recalls. He eventually found a job as a tow truck driver, following in the footsteps of his brother, who taught him how to drive back in Singapore. Photo courtesy of Nazib Saptu But it was a mentally and physically draining job, made worse by the racism he'd face. "Sometime my life would get threatened by the gang members here. I would get bullied as well because of being Asian...you know, we're not big-sized," he explains. "But luckily I am strong mentally due to my hardship growing up since I was 10 years old." Furthermore, his then-wife was a homemaker. Nazib struggled to feed the family of five on one person's income. They eventually got divorced. And Nazib found himself alone in a foreign country, far from home. Settling down Fortunately, he has since settled down. He now works for a major transportation company, Northchill, driving "the nicest truck in Auckland". Photo courtesy of Nazib Saptu He also has benefits: union protections, a car, free petrol. "My boss, he loves me so much and whatever I want, he gives it to me," Nazib quips. All this he attributes to the different work culture in New Zealand, which he says is more flexible and respectful as compared to Singapore. "[In Singapore] they don't give you opportunities. They like to judge you. But in New Zealand, it's all about experience, it's about knowledge. It's not about like, oh, you got a diploma. If you got paper and no knowledge, they're gonna kick you out of the door." Photo courtesy of Nazib Saptu Apart from his success at work, he has also gotten remarried to a half-Singaporean local. "She fully supported me on my career as a truck driver even though I got no education...she believes in me," he said. "I myself couldn’t believe that without education, [she] agreed to marry me...she's my dream girl." Between Singapore and New Zealand While he is content with his life in New Zealand, Nazib is not blind to the difficulties of living here. Rent isn't cheap — around NZD$640 a week for a three-bedroom house — and eating out is expensive. "Nasi lemak here costs around NZD$18, chicken rice NZD$20," he elaborates. Furthermore, while the country has a laid-back culture, the crime rate is decidedly higher. "I'll be honest, you walk alone at night, sometimes you can get robbed," he says. And though New Zealand has become home, Nazib admits that he does miss Singapore. "We Singapore lah. So we miss the food, the friends...the football." (He added he still supports Singapore in football.) Neither has he ruled out the possibility of relocating back to Singapore. "I still keep my Singapore passport," he admits. "I'll be honest, my mum's still alive, and I have family there. So it's quite hard." In sg, at most he can be a cleaner at a small kopitam.
    2 points
  37. Liang yunfei's face look better, but the physical acting skills a bit Maybe wu mengmeng is just moi's vegetable, or moi is has not done enough research.
    2 points
  38. i tot wat sai thingy
    2 points
  39. limpeh alrdy know smlj electric is actually more money burning and environmentally damaging than petrol car. never hear of net pollution meh?????? wahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha
    2 points
  40. got many i find prettier tho like liang yunfei...side by side compare, wu mengmeng is bky
    2 points
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