Jump to content

The_King

Members
  • Posts

    35724
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    552

Everything posted by The_King

  1. SINGAPORE — Foreign travellers departing Singapore will no longer have their travel documents stamped with departure dates from 22 April, the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority (ICA) said in a media release on Wednesday (17 April). The ICA said that the move to cease the issuance of such departure immigration endorsements is part of its ongoing efforts to streamline procedures at the checkpoints, and to facilitate more efficient clearance. Previously, all foreigners departing Singapore would have their passports stamped with the date of their departure by immigration officers at manned counters. This process will cease on 22 April. Since September 2016, those whose fingerprints have been enrolled via the BioScreen system upon arrival into Singapore are eligible to use automated lanes when they leave Singapore. They do not receive departure immigration endorsements when they use the automated lanes. The ICA will inform foreign authorities on the cessation of the departure immigration endorsement. More information is available at ICA’s website. https://sg.news.yahoo.com/no-date-stamping-passports-departing-foreign-travellers-22-apr-ica-040349814.html
  2. my new series will be Urban exploration, places of interest, or any places that public access is allowed, if not allow then i request permission from the relevant authority to enter : places like: Fort Serapong (it at sentosa, hopefully travel to the island is free, if not it out) Seah Im Bunker Bukit Gombak trail Tampines Quarry ruins of Syonan Jinja at MacRitchie Reservoir Shinto shrine Old Bukit Timah Railway Station remnants of an old Hainanese village Marsiling Tunnels Kay Siang Bunkers Pasir Panjang’s Labrador Battery Tiong Bahru’s Air Raid Shelter Sembawang’s Malta Crescent Bunkers
  3. pm you as i cant share link of another forums
  4. you can go to free places like my quiet com area series, which going to places you nv set foot on before. And my new series coming soon, in 6 months time as my quiet com area series is officially ending , but will still update and post picture if i saw quiet area i nv been to
  5. yea but got bacon to make it tasty. i wonder how shake shack : smoke shack taste like
  6. yuo can try, squeeze your own lemon + tea + sugar + ice = lemon tea or try cola + squeeze your own lemon or other drink type
  7. taste normal, i go there cause got bacon and free flow of drink and real lemon
  8. Singapore — Singapore Flyer is announcing a new attraction today (16 April) – Time Capsule – which will be open to members of the public in the fourth quarter of 2019. The Time Capsule will present a multi-sensory experience of the Singapore story from the past to present, with a glimpse of the future. Using immersive media like feature projection mapping, holographic technology and interactive multi-touch screens, the Time Capsule will highlight some of the nation’s inspiring moments to well-known legends. Mr Ringo Leung, General Manager of the Singapore Flyer said, “The Singapore Flyer maintains its commitment to be an active player in Marina Bay’s continual development and to be an iconic Singapore attraction. The debut of Time Capsule is the first milestone of this commitment in the years to come.” https://sg.style.yahoo.com/singapore-flyer-announces-new-attraction-time-capsule-031054376.html
  9. lemon tree song. got 2 differet type another singer also lemon tree but another version . same titles but totally different era song
  10. those fan boy must be avoiding social media these 11days
  11. here a few of my favorites : whenever i listen to those song, i feel time slow down, everything was peaceful, like i am back to the 80s
  12. atalie Kunicki, a paramedic in London, suffered a stroke after cracking her neck while stretching. Kunicki, 23, put off calling the paramedics because she didn't want her colleagues to think she was "tipsy." Kunicki ended up rupturing her vertebral artery, a major artery in the neck, which led to the stroke. Cracking your neck seems pretty harmless-but for one U.K. woman, it caused a stroke that left her partially paralyzed. Natalie Kunicki, who works as a paramedic for London Ambulance Service, was watching movies in bed with a friend after a night out on March 4, when she stretched her neck and heard a loud cracking sound, according to the Daily Mail. At first, the 23-year-old didn’t think much of the noise, but when she got up to use the bathroom 15 minutes later, she collapsed and wasn't able to move her leg. "My friend had to come and pick me up," she said. "He thought I was drunk but I knew something else was wrong,” she said. (At first, Kunicki thought she had been drugged.) Kunicki put off calling 999 (Britain’s version of 911) for 10 minutes because she didn’t want her coworkers to show up and find her "tipsy." "I thought it was too unlikely it would be a stroke when I should have known much better," she said. Kunicki tried to fall asleep but eventually decided to call for help. She was taken to the hospital in an ambulance and realized something was seriously wrong en route: her coordination was off and her heart rate and blood pressure were “sky high.” Doctors eventually discovered that she had burst her vertebral artery, a major artery in her neck. That rupture caused a blood clot to form in her brain, which then triggered a stroke, per the Daily Mail. "The doctors told me later that just that stretching of my neck had caused my vertebral artery to rupture," she said. "It was just spontaneous and there's a one in a million chance of it happening." Kunicki immediately underwent surgery, which lasted three hours, and while doctors were able to repair her artery, they couldn't clear the clot in her brain (though they say it will dissolve in time). The stroke left Kunicki's left side almost completey paralyzed, per the Daily Mail. "At the start, I couldn't move my thumb and forefinger," she said. "I could kind of move my wrist up and down. I couldn't lift my arm. I could bend my left leg but I couldn't wiggle my toes." Kunicki's slowly getting her mobility back and she can walk, but not for more than five minutes. Her doctors aren’t sure if and when she’ll ever make a full recovery. “I'm really clumsy. I can't do up buttons, I find it too difficult. I can feel hot and cold now but I still feel a bit numb,” she said. “People need to know that even if you're young something this simple can cause a stroke. I wasn't even trying to crack my neck. I just moved and it happened.”
  13. https://www.facebook.com/RTvids/videos/276805649923775/
  14. https://www.facebook.com/Formula1/videos/395004331331807/
  15. Four tobacco retailers have had their tobacco retail licenses suspended for selling cigarettes to persons under the Minimum Legal Age (MLA) of 19 years, said the Health Science Authority (HSA) in a media release today. The stores were caught via HSA’s ground surveillance and enforcement activities to deter the illegal sale of tobacco products to the underaged. The operators were caught selling to underaged individuals for the first time between January and March this year, and their licenses have been suspended for six months. These outlets included Ajmir Store on Woodlands Ave 7, 1588 Le Pte Ltd in Rivervale Crescent, a 7-Eleven branch in Geylang Bahru, and NH Mart Pte Ltd along Hougang Ave 8. HSA said it “takes a stern approach towards errant retailers” and “will not hesitate to take prosecution actions against them.” It reminded tobacco retail licensees that they were to be responsible for all transactions of tobacco products at their outlets, as well as their employees’ actions. Sellers run the risk of illegal sale if they assess the age of the buyer by mere physical appearance. The MLA to use, possess, or buy tobacco products has been raised to 19 years since Jan 1 this year, and will be raised again to 20 years from 1 Jan 2020 and 21 years from 1 Jan 2021. If convicted under the Tobacco (Control of Advertisements and Sale) Act, anyone caught selling tobacco products to underaged persons can be fined up to S$5,000 for the first offence and up to S$10,000 for subsequent offences. The tobacco retail license will also be suspended for six months for the first offence and revoked for the second offence. But, outlets caught selling tobacco goods to those in school uniform or below 12 years of age will get their license revoked, even if it’s the first offence. Since 2015, 87 tobacco retail licenses have been suspended and 13 were revoked by HSA. The updated list of outlets with suspended or revoked licenses can be viewed here. https://coconuts.co/singapore/news/4-retailers-including-one-7-eleven-outlet-get-their-licenses-suspended-for-selling-tobacco-to-underaged-persons/
  16. SINGAPORE — The National Environment Agency (NEA) is calling a tender for the building of an ash scattering garden at Choa Chu Kang Cemetery. The site, located within an existing garden at the Choa Chu Kang Cemetery Complex, will be named “Garden of Peace”, said the NEA in a press release on Tuesday (16 April). The “open concept” garden will be designed as a secular facility open to all religious faiths and will feature designated lanes for walkways and ash scattering. Other features will include the planting of shrubs and vegetation to demarcate the garden’s boundaries; separate ash scattering lanes for privacy; a bed of pebbles on the lanes to allow ashes to naturally percolate into the soil underneath, and user-friendly facilities, such as wheelchair access and seating areas. No religious rites permitted The NEA added that religious ceremonies or rites – such as the burning of joss sticks, food offerings and playing of instruments or music – will not be permitted within the garden “to maintain a clean and serene environment” as well as its “secular nature”. “The awarded contractor for the tender will be required to integrate the ash scattering lanes and supporting facilities to the existing garden at Choa Chu Kang Cemetery Complex, as well as enhance the existing garden landscape,” said the NEA. More details about the various aspects of the inland ash scattering services, such as operational procedures and booking arrangements, will be shared at a later juncture, the agency added. The move comes after the NEA had announced in June last year that inland ash scattering services will be available at Choa Chu Kang Cemetery Complex in 2020, and at Mandai Crematorium and Columbarium Complex in 2021. This was in response to interest from members of the public for such services similar to those available in South Korea, Taiwan, China, the United States, and Australia. Consultations on the matter were held from August to December 2017 with the various religious groups, after-death care service providers and the general public. https://sg.news.yahoo.com/nea-calls-tender-building-ash-scattering-garden-choa-chu-kang-cemetery-095532424.html
  17. Most people go to the airport because they need to get on a plane. For that reason, we tend to view airports as infrastructural utilities, rather than attractions in their own right. But that’s changing (in countries other than the US, where airports still tend to offer little more than Cinnabon and Auntie Annie’s pretzels). Leading the charge is Singapore’s Changi Airport, which on Wednesday will open the Jewel, a “lifestyle hub” with a “multidimensional shopping and dining experience” that was built as an extension of Terminal 1. Courtesy/Changi Airport First day of Jewel Public Preview Changi was already known as one of the world’s top airports, but it’s notable that this latest expansion happens on the land-side of the airport, meaning that even visitors without boarding passes can enjoy the amenities (as can travelers who don’t take off until the next day). Following the trend of airports integrating plants and green spaces into their design, the Jewel features a “lush forest valley” with the largest collection of indoor plants in Singapore, and a massive waterfall known as a “rain vortex” which press materials are already predicting will be “one of the most Instagrammed spots in the world.” (Both bear the names of corporate sponsors including HSBC and Shiseido, of course). Courtesy/Changi Airport The HSBC Rain Vortex Courtesy/Changi Airport Shiseido Forest Valley Jewel will also boast 280 dining and retail establishments—in addition to the more than 400 that Changi already has—as well as more airport hotels and “facilities for early check-in counters and left baggage to support seamless airport operations.” In June, a connected attraction called Canopy Park will open, offering ticketed passengers a 164-foot-long bridge suspended 75 feet in the air with “breathtaking views, bouncing and walking nets, an integrated playscape.” Courtesy/Changi Airport Early check-in facilities at Changi Jewel Courtesy/Changi Airport Bouncing nets at Canopy Park So why would Changi so lavishly expand the amenities for travelers pre-security or check-in? As aviation historian Janet Bednarek told me last year, airports aren’t just trying to improve traveler experience, but also competing for international travelers who have options for how to route their itineraries and plan a layover. In effect, the airport is further transforming itself into an attraction in its own right, not a utility. While the claims that Changi Jewel will “rejuvenate [the traveler’s] soul” may be slightly overwrought, it’s not hard to see why someone might want to pay a visit to the Jewel (and by extension, Singapore itself). https://qz.com/quartzy/1595579/singapores-changi-airport-jewel-expansion-is-redefining-the-airport/
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Mugentech.net uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. By using this site you agree to Privacy Policy