Any Singapore Ferrari owners? | Page 593 | FerrariChat

Any Singapore Ferrari owners?

Discussion in 'Asia' started by DouglasNg, Jun 7, 2004.

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?

Should we end it?

  1. Lung will Break

  2. MP will Break

  3. The Singapore Thread will Break...END IT!

Multiple votes are allowed.
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  1. lung7707

    lung7707 F1 World Champ

    Jan 13, 2002
    15,967
    Honolulu, Hawaii
    Full Name:
    Rupert 9.0
    Was at Autobahn earlier... saw a nice yellow Murcielago w quad pipe...and also the 2.5mth old white Gallardo.
     
  2. coupe1

    coupe1 Formula 3

    Jan 15, 2007
    1,469
    Singapore
    2.5mth old white G? any more details u can tell on this car Lung?
     
  3. lung7707

    lung7707 F1 World Champ

    Jan 13, 2002
    15,967
    Honolulu, Hawaii
    Full Name:
    Rupert 9.0
    It wasn't balloon white looks very clean. I didn't ask for details as I am off Lambo these days. U have to call Autobahn for the rest of the details.
     
  4. SFchallenge

    SFchallenge F1 World Champ

    Jun 28, 2004
    11,945
    Sgp, KL, HK & London
    Full Name:
    Jon Wijaya
    What's wrong with us here? I was walking home & heard tires screeched & bang. Turned back & saw a bike went down some 50m behind me. It happened right in front of a bus-stop with at least half a dozen people there & nobody did anything but stared. The worst was the white Jap car that was less than a few feet behind decided to just drive away with his family on board. I didn't get to see his no plate & not sure if that's a hit & run.

    The only person who rushed over to help was another motorcyclist while the rest of the heavy traffic simply drove off.

    I went over & helped to remove the bike that was pinning down the rider & the old man laid motionless. I guess people thought he was gone as a lot of blood was over his head. The next person that came to help was a caucasian lady while another filipino maid dialed for ambulance. What made me fumed was a few gawkers who decided to be journalist started to gather & used their hp to shoot away..... :(

    After a few mins, the victim woke & struggled. By then, a doc from a nearby clinic came over to help him.

    I don't understand why people here just don't have compassion or a least bit of conscience. How can the driver involved with the accident simply drive away & @ a busy section. (good that someone witnessed it & gave details to the TP) Then the crowd that won't do anything right in front of this accident & to top it off, those idiots that do nothing but take pics with their hp @ every opportunity. Some citizens we have here.
     
  5. khips

    khips Formula Junior

    Apr 17, 2007
    848
    NeverNeverLand
    Full Name:
    Kevin T

    bro, chill lah. we live in singapore...thats the best excuse i can drum up.
     
  6. ESJ

    ESJ Rookie

    Jul 22, 2007
    24
    Singapore
    Full Name:
    Eugene

    Have to agree with khips. It's usually the foreigners who will not hesitate to lend a helping hand while quite a no. of locals, oblivious to what has happened.
     
  7. K.D.K

    K.D.K F1 Rookie

    Jan 26, 2007
    3,287
    Destiny
    Full Name:
    Fruit Cake

    Aiyoh relax lah, this island is like that la...most times people fail to react due to

    1) Fear- exploding gas tank or sharpenel
    2) Ignorance- Do what man, i aint no doctor
    3) Liability- what if i help and its a compund fracture?
    4) Blame- Why should i help the idiot who caused it should be responsible
    5) Blood- Hep A B, Aids, STD, lots of exposure there you see
    6) Sued- potential to get sued or worsen an injury that will forever haunt the samitarian

    But this is all different if it was Angelina Jolie on that bike. Then whatever the injury, it calls for immediate CPR.
     
  8. Spaing77

    Spaing77 F1 Rookie

    Jan 22, 2004
    3,693
    Johore..
    Full Name:
    War Zone Developer
    yeah lor, traffic is esp bad during this period of the night...when some need to get their daily fix for the day....
     
  9. vex

    vex Formula Junior

    Apr 15, 2007
    722
    600 acre dairy farm
    Full Name:
    The Cincinnati Kid
    #14809 vex, Sep 17, 2007
    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 7, 2017
    my script for such situations, "baby those were my ex-students." i didn’t teach weekends for charity.

    okie... some foreplay (attached) before moi hit the former portugese colony, again :D
    Image Unavailable, Please Login
     
  10. RedDevil77

    RedDevil77 Formula 3

    Sep 23, 2006
    1,970
    Singapore/L.A.
    Full Name:
    Michael
    I'm not surprised at all. It's very sad, but I've come to accept that most Singaporeans are selfish, inconsiderate and apathetic. This is evident by the behaviour of road users, be they drivers or pedestrians. Everyday I see the same things - cars cutting in from the outer lane while others are waiting to turn at traffic light junctions, indiscriminate parking/stopping, using handphone while driving, roadhogging, tailgating, no signalling (they must think that I have ESP), driving against the flow of traffic, pedestrians taking their own sweet time to cross the road, jaywalking, etc. It's always about doing things at their own convenience at the expense of others. We have a mighty long way to go to be a First World country. Sigh......
     
  11. khips

    khips Formula Junior

    Apr 17, 2007
    848
    NeverNeverLand
    Full Name:
    Kevin T
    going for nite drive....who ever wanna come along, call or sms me. leaving open car park next to borders in 20 mins, going yishun fr nasi lemak.
     
  12. vex

    vex Formula Junior

    Apr 15, 2007
    722
    600 acre dairy farm
    Full Name:
    The Cincinnati Kid
    those b*stards need flogging. might be stompers
     
  13. khips

    khips Formula Junior

    Apr 17, 2007
    848
    NeverNeverLand
    Full Name:
    Kevin T
    yalor...somemore got people exos too loud and trigger others car alarm......
     
  14. Spaing77

    Spaing77 F1 Rookie

    Jan 22, 2004
    3,693
    Johore..
    Full Name:
    War Zone Developer
    "true mobile"
     
  15. RedDevil77

    RedDevil77 Formula 3

    Sep 23, 2006
    1,970
    Singapore/L.A.
    Full Name:
    Michael
    In other words, kiasu and kiasi, so best to bo chap.
     
  16. RedDevil77

    RedDevil77 Formula 3

    Sep 23, 2006
    1,970
    Singapore/L.A.
    Full Name:
    Michael
    And I've not touched on some Singapore homebuyers yet... there are some who behave as if they've just bought the Buckingham Palace!
     
  17. Spaing77

    Spaing77 F1 Rookie

    Jan 22, 2004
    3,693
    Johore..
    Full Name:
    War Zone Developer
    "what do you mean we dont have sea view? All East Coast properties have sea view ok!...and where is the standard issue money tree...my friend told me about his friend who lives in the east coast who has a standard issue one...you know..like OEM equipment!"
     
  18. RedDevil77

    RedDevil77 Formula 3

    Sep 23, 2006
    1,970
    Singapore/L.A.
    Full Name:
    Michael
    When I was a kid growing up in the east, always thought that the money tree was just an urban legend.... till NOW! Heard it churns out lire as well...
     
  19. lung7707

    lung7707 F1 World Champ

    Jan 13, 2002
    15,967
    Honolulu, Hawaii
    Full Name:
    Rupert 9.0
    errrr.. is there still a Lire?
     
  20. Spaing77

    Spaing77 F1 Rookie

    Jan 22, 2004
    3,693
    Johore..
    Full Name:
    War Zone Developer
    strangly but true..my invoices/pro forma stuff still comes in Lire, but they total it up and its Euros
     
  21. tiong

    tiong Formula 3

    Dec 30, 2006
    1,471
    sin city
    Full Name:
    tiong
    too much lah u all! want to stay away from the forum also cannot, kena suan until like that how to not respond?

    want to relax, meet with jon/ian/fong/rara etc all cannot, damn under pressure. kdk, forget everything all the brudders here tell u. want to make money, very simple. just work like a dog! when i left the house this morning, my family all asleep. now i come home, all also already asleep. what i wouldn't give for some nasi lemak now, sigh...
     
  22. Spaing77

    Spaing77 F1 Rookie

    Jan 22, 2004
    3,693
    Johore..
    Full Name:
    War Zone Developer
    u know the saying la...if we say nasty things abt you, means we still think of you in a loving way...when we stop talking about you..thats when you know its all over...

    I also want to meet meet mah, but sunday morning rain at 6am, bo bian...I went riding at 5pm, with my mentor...kena tekan until leg cramp...
     
  23. lung7707

    lung7707 F1 World Champ

    Jan 13, 2002
    15,967
    Honolulu, Hawaii
    Full Name:
    Rupert 9.0
    An article I read in the WSJ a few mins ago...for those who are interested... skip long post.
    As the competition gets more intense, recruiting companies get more creative
    By RONALD ALSOP
    September 17, 2007; Page R1
    The heat is on for corporate recruiters.

    With demand growing for M.B.A. graduates, it is a seller's market out there, making it tough for many companies to meet hiring quotas using old tried-and-true recruiting methods. At a time when career opportunities are so plentiful that students can afford to turn down even six-figure offers from investment banks, it is especially difficult for traditional manufacturers to make an impression.

    So to improve their odds, recruiters are visiting business schools earlier and more often, raising starting salaries and touting their company's dedication to work-family balance.

    THE JOB MARKET FOR M.B.A. TALENT


    PODCAST: The Journal's Ron Alsop sizes up how competitive the M.B.A. job market is for companies right now, and talks about how business-school students can make the most of employers' current scramble for talent -- and how they can go wrong.
    • Listen Now | iTunes Archive | RSS Feed | More Info
    What's more, some also are breaking from the traditional routine of on-campus presentations and cocktail receptions and trying something new: virtual recruiting. They are mining for résumés online, arranging video interviews and using instant messaging to cast a wider net and connect more effectively with today's tech-savvy students.

    "M.B.A. recruiting is a dinosaur," says Greg Ruf, chief executive officer of MBA Focus, a consulting firm that promotes an online résumé database to corporate recruiters. "To be successful in the future, recruiters will need a different skill set. Rather than being event planners who are transaction-oriented, they'll need to become more adept and comfortable with technology and the online world."

    Consider appliance maker Whirlpool Corp., of Benton Harbor, Mich. The company continues to do on-campus recruiting at its "core schools" -- Duke University, Harvard University, Indiana University, the University of Notre Dame, Michigan State University, Ohio State University, Northwestern University, the University of Michigan and the University of Chicago.

    RECRUITERS' SCORECARD


    • See the complete ranking of top schools in the survey. Plus, see Who's recruiting where.
    • Search the data and compare the top schools, plus see a pay-off calculator at CareerJournal.com.
    • See the complete Journal Report on Business Schools: The Recruiters' Picks.
    But the company recently extended its reach to schools such as Dartmouth College, the University of California at Los Angeles and Berkeley, the University of Texas, the University of Southern California, the University of North Carolina and Clark Atlanta University by reviewing résumés online and conducting 45-minute telephone screenings of the most promising candidates. It brought its top picks to Whirlpool's offices for formal interviews.

    Whirlpool also is experimenting with a technology in which students answer a set of questions via a remote PC-based video camera. The recorded interviews are stored on a secure Web site that only a Whirlpool recruiter can access.

    "I believe recruiting will become more and more virtual," says the company's recruiting manager, Tiffany Voglewede. "We cannot afford to recruit only from our core schools because other schools, including some small schools, have amazing students."

    While the new recruiting techniques expanded Whirlpool's pool of M.B.A. prospects, the company still fell "a few short" of its goal of 30 to 35 full-time hires this year, according to Ms. Voglewede.

    Whirlpool isn't alone. More than half of the respondents in a Wall Street Journal/Harris Interactive survey of recruiters conducted online between December and March said they were less successful in hiring their top M.B.A. picks this year.


    Troy Eggers, associate dean for executive education at Columbia Business School, talks with WSJ's Ron Alsop about the increased investment in executive education and what kinds of programs companies want for their future leaders.
    Make It Engaging

    Mr. Ruf says that while "millennial-generation students want to be contacted virtually," online recruiting needs to be personal and engaging to work. Given the deluge of information students receive daily, they may consider a generic corporate pitch to be nothing more than spam. He suggests that corporate recruiters reach out to top prospects with a personalized email that might include a link to the company's career Web site. The best career Web sites, Mr. Ruf says, provide a sense of the corporate culture and a look at specific jobs, often through video interviews with employees, alumni profiles, case studies, virtual tours and podcasts.

    Some companies are updating their career Web sites to get more in tune with today's students. Whirlpool, for example, is launching a chat feature on its site, assigning employees from different departments to answer questions at designated times. "Today's college graduates want someone right there when they have a question," says Ms. Voglewede. "Many college students have expressed their preference to communicate interactively with someone rather than just read someone's observations about the company."

    Technology companies, not surprisingly, are among the most active online recruiters. International Business Machines Corp., which recruits at more than 100 U.S. universities, is planning to increase its online efforts, particularly for its Extreme Blue internship program. The company is setting up meeting spaces and islands in a virtual community called Second Life, where it plans to hold events such as recruiter question-and-answer sessions, educational lectures and online interviews. Students can log on, create avatars to physically represent themselves and visit IBM island. Senior business leaders, engineers and inventors, who often can't travel to campuses and job fairs because of work demands, will be able to participate in such virtual events.

    "Technology is part of the DNA of today's younger generation," says Karen Calo, IBM's vice president for global talent. "They're naturally attracted to things like Second Life and expect IBM as an innovative company to be there."


    But IBM, of Armonk, N.Y., also is increasing its physical presence on campuses. At certain schools, it is organizing "power panels," where IBM executives join with local companies, government officials and business partners to discuss job skills and opportunities.

    "I'm not sure Second Life and other new technologies will ever totally replace traditional recruiting," Ms. Calo says. "You can only see students' intellectual curiosity, excitement and body language in a face-to-face situation."

    Wooing Candidates

    While some companies aren't ready to give virtual recruiting a try, most understand the need to go beyond formulaic techniques to succeed in today's hot job market.

    Nearly two-thirds of the respondents in The Wall Street Journal/Harris Interactive survey said their companies are trying new tactics to boost hiring rates. About 44% of the respondents said they are simply trekking to more schools. Others said they are recruiting earlier in the school year and staying on campuses longer, sending more senior managers to formal presentations and social events at the schools, and paying employees to refer promising M.B.A. students. Some companies are assigning "buddy" employees to top prospects to help woo them and making a bigger effort to convert summer interns into full-time hires. They also are emphasizing flexible work-life balance policies in interviews.

    Some companies are aiming to form stronger relationships with their top prospects through more intimate events -- dinners for 10 students, for example, rather than mass cocktail parties. They also are making a more concerted push to close the deal once a job offer has been extended.

    Opera Solutions, a boutique consulting firm, assigns each of its M.B.A. picks to a "cultivation team," a group of employees who offer the student advice and information about Opera and its projects and arrange visits to the company's office.

    "In a market with lots of job opportunities, we wanted to ensure that the students who are offered positions get intimately familiar with the firm and the culture to increase acceptance rates," says Dhiraj Nayar, a principal at Opera in New York. "This effort has helped recruit students who in some cases had offers from other top consulting companies."

    Money Matters

    Money, of course, always matters in the recruiting race, and companies are raising the stakes to land the most coveted M.B.A. students. About 69% of recruiters in the Journal survey said their companies increased starting pay this year. Nearly a third of the survey respondents said they offered salaries of more than $100,000, up from about 24% last year and 17% in 2005.

    But rich compensation packages don't guarantee success in a heated market. "I heard more companies talking about the number of reneges this year," says Maury Hanigan, president of MBA Scouting Report, which sends "talent scouts" to campuses to identify the best potential hires for clients. "It was a real surprise," she says, when a dozen M.B.A. students reneged on a major investment bank after having accepted its job offers.


    Harder hit are industries that lack the pizzazz of a Google Inc. or Apple Inc. and can't compete with banks and consulting firms on salary. "This year, we didn't have as many students applying for our M.B.A. internships," says Linda Breed, senior manager of employment programs for Pfizer Inc.'s world-wide pharmaceutical operations. "There is a lot of competition out there, and the pharmaceutical business is not the hot industry to go to. It is seen as more staid, old-school." Pfizer hired 13 interns for finance, short of its goal of 15 to 17, and it recruited only three marketing interns instead of the six to seven it had targeted.

    To fight back, Pfizer is reaching out to potential M.B.A. interns as early as possible. This summer, it took some of its interns to orientation programs and career fairs to interact with incoming M.B.A. students who might want internships next year. "We're establishing relationships very early and extending offers to incoming students to come in for an interview at Pfizer as soon as they're settled in school," says Ms. Breed. Pfizer recruiters even attended an event this summer for future minority M.B.A. students who won't start classes until fall 2008 and won't be available for internships until 2009.

    Finding Balance

    Some companies are using work-life flexibility to attract M.B.A. recruits. Before deciding where to place M.B.A. hires, Deloitte & Touche USA LLP asks them to list the top three cities where they'd like to work. "We're trying to accommodate them as much as possible, but the majority of the individuals want to go to big cities -- New York, Chicago and San Francisco," says Diane Borhani, U.S. national campus recruiting leader. This year the accounting and consulting firm hired almost 400 M.B.A. graduates for full-time jobs, about 20% more than in 2006.

    Deloitte also is experimenting with digital video approaches to recruiting, such as interactive simulations about working in teams on business cases. It also plans to incorporate into its campus recruiting efforts a series of short videos in which employees share stories about their experiences at Deloitte. Given the growth of sites like YouTube, Deloitte felt the videos could be useful in recruiting and retaining graduates.

    But Ms. Borhani believes there is no substitute for personal contact. Deloitte recruiters and executives are spending more time at their more than 40 target schools, getting to know students better.

    "There's a fine balance between how much you use technology and how much you do in person," she says. "Students still want to hear and talk to people directly."

    --Mr. Alsop, a Wall Street Journal news editor, served as contributing editor of this report.
     
  24. tiong

    tiong Formula 3

    Dec 30, 2006
    1,471
    sin city
    Full Name:
    tiong
    wah, damn smooth. very impressed...
     
  25. Spaing77

    Spaing77 F1 Rookie

    Jan 22, 2004
    3,693
    Johore..
    Full Name:
    War Zone Developer
    how, can fly? employ me as legal assistant, then I can add to my resume and go back to SF and do law...:)
     

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