SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Pogeu Mahone who wrote (182119)12/29/2021 9:58:52 AM
From: THE ANT  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217795
 
At this moment no cough no stuffy nose minimal headache. I’m bored and want to go to work



To: Pogeu Mahone who wrote (182119)12/29/2021 9:59:26 AM
From: THE ANT  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217795
 
All gone in 6 months



To: Pogeu Mahone who wrote (182119)12/29/2021 12:04:14 PM
From: jazzlover27 Recommendations

Recommended By
3bar
Arran Yuan
Haim R. Branisteanu
maceng2
Pogeu Mahone

and 2 more members

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217795
 
Ontario reports 10,436 new cases, including 1514 who are unvaccinated, of which perhaps half are children and babies, if anyone is keeping score.

Vaccination status is now 50 cases per 100,000 unvaccinated, 64 cases per 100,000 vaccinated, and the gap is widening. It appears the vaccines in Ontario offers no protection other than perhaps to lower the rate of entering the ICU ward. We were told the contrary. Imho governments were betting there would be no new wave. They must be getting nervous that the most observant among us will realize we were all duped.



To: Pogeu Mahone who wrote (182119)12/29/2021 5:18:39 PM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
marcher

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217795
 
Re <<Omicron is as bad as Delta>>

... now that you mentioned the signs compiled, certainly seems very bad on a macro level and by looks of the trending hospital vacancy rates.

Do not know what to make of it all as the financial market appears to pivot on omicron 'optimism'.

Dunno. something not right.

Either <<Delta>> was horrible or not as horrible as we were told, or both.

Perhaps the governmental reaction functions were bad, as in unhelpful to counterproductive; that I can easily believe.

Did a flash-perusal of google search on 'covid' and a bunch of geography names, and general impression be that new cases up, hospitalisations steady or up, deaths steady or down, however the situations in USA and EU seems more alarming, if alarming, then elsewhere.

I cannot tell what if anything is happening at street level, except that China has locked down a city of some size (Xi'an, 8M, plus surrounding buffer of perhaps another 5M) but smaller and less 'central / industrial / commercial' than Wuhan.

All eyes on Olympics, February 4 - 20, intersecting Chinese lunar new year Feb 1 - 16. Lots of people movement if tradition holds, but am agnostic on whether tradition shall be held.

Nothing much happening in HK except Omicron seems more infectious, and we do not wish to be sent to Penny Bay just because we appeared at the wrong place at the wrong time by our phone location-tracking app.

I like my home, and uncharacteristic for Hong Kong, our backyard garden. I enjoy my neighbourhood with its cliffside walks and gentrified fishing village ambiance. I love our collection of multi-ethnic eateries ranging from high tea at the Repulse Bay Verandah repulse bay verandah to Stanley waterfront delights stanley waterfront restaurants , and Shoku shoku repulse bay on the beach to Ocean Rock tapas in heritage building ocean rock tapas murray house.



scmp.com

Penny’s Bay diary: a practical guide for your week-long stay in ‘The Suites’ at Hong Kong’s government quarantine centre | South China Morning Post

Provided a week’s battery of testing proves negative, I’ll eventually be off to my original planned destination, a hotel on the south side of Hong Kong Island for two more weeks of isolation.

Having caught up with Australian friends who spent just three days in “iso” (as they call their confinement) when returning home, three weeks feels excessive. Then again, Hong Kong has kept community infections to zero or near there, and the strict controls do appear to be working.



The Penny’s Bay mattresses are thin. Our managing editor’s suggestion? Use two. Photo: Brian Rhoads

In today’s dispatch, I’ll aim to offer more of a practical guide to negotiating life in the 13-square-metre chamber that features daily PCR tests, three meals per day, and not much else in the way of entertainment. Some school-of-hard knocks advice will hopefully ease the journey for those who follow me into Penny’s Bay.

Hong Kong Update Newsletter

First, a very Hong Kong comparison with similarly sized spaces in this hugely expensive city. At roughly 16 feet by 8 feet, these rooms clock in at about 128 sq ft – that’s slightly smaller than the 134.5 square foot parking space on opulent Mt Nicholson that recently sold for a cool HK$10 million (US$1.3 million).

The comparison dies at the size. The “suites at Penny’s Bay” are not your typical Hong Kong hotel room. They are, despite being in a centre you cannot willingly leave, adequate. Clean, practical, functional, not terrible. These are college dorm rooms on the first day of moving in. They are a reminder of a very clean jiaodaisuo, or guest house, from China of the 1980s.



Big Brother is most definitely watching you. Photo: Brian Rhoads

Touring the room, we’ll start with the beds. Hat’s off to the Centre for Public Health official who bought my sheets for having a serious sense of humour. Festooned with huge pink hearts on black fabric, they suggest another name: “Penny’s Bay government quarantine centre and Love Shack.”

Practically speaking though, the sheet and thin blanket provided may not be enough for people who easily get cold, and as this is the middle of the Hong Kong winter, suggestion No 1 is to bring pyjamas, or layer sweaters or sweatshirts on your bed for added warmth.

There are two beds in this unit, each with razor-thin mattresses three to four inches thick. Overhearing someone suffering back pain from the beds at Penny’s Bay, I share their pro tip – suggestion No 2 – for solo travellers: place the mattress from one bed on top of the other and you can sleep pretty comfortably. Use the other bare bed frame as a luggage rack. For couples, it’s worth requesting that the authorities provide a second mattress apiece.



A Penny’s Bay quarantine room in all its glory. Photo: SCMP/ Brian Rhoads

For decor, there are two small tables – each roughly four-foot-square. One houses a small television, the other a hot water boiler. There is no microwave, and warning signs say “No Cooking”. So you’ll be able to boil water for coffee, tea or instant noodles and that’s about it. Suggestion 3: tea drinkers bring your favourite tea bags. Coffee drinkers, bring ground coffee plus filtering apparatus or instant coffee with you.

There are two folding plastic chairs to offer seating. They are not ergonomically sound, so get up and stretch.

A fabric cabinet at the back wall offers a place to hang some clothing. I was given five hangers on arrival, but since it’s just a week, I have left most things folded in the luggage on their bed rack.



Dinner is served. Photo: Brian Rhoads

A more pressing detail for anyone who expects to work – there is NO Wi-fi. Suggestion No 4: before you leave home, configure your mobile phone hotspot connection or you will wind up like me: with a laptop that connects to no network, furiously writing reports and handling email on your phone.

Beyond that, if you want to raise a glass if you are ensconced here for Christmas or New Year’s Eve, (Suggestion 5), best hit duty free before you leave. No alcohol or tobacco is delivered to Penny’s Bay.

Once you are here, the staff are very helpful and efficient. Send them a photograph of your front door placard and number to their central WhatsApp number, and workers in blue hazmat suits respond fairly quickly. For me, they provided towels for the bathroom, washing powder for laundry, disinfectant cleaner for mopping the floor, extra bottles of water, and a data card that I unfortunately can’t get to work for my computer.



A helpful note ensures you get on the correct number shuttle. Photo: Brian Rhoads

Deliveries are possible, if you prearrange them through the WhatsApp group and specify who is bringing them during which open time window. Your friends or office mates will need to drive, or take the lengthy MTR trek out to Hong Kong Disneyland and walk next door to the quarantine centre.

For laundry, understand that in the cool Hong Kong winter, nothing ever seems to dry, so even if you wring as though your life depended on it, laundry done on Day 1 is still hanging damp 48 hours later. The only suggestion here is to bring enough underwear for the move to the hotel, which may offer better ventilation for drying. The hot water heater seems to be nuclear powered, so take extreme care and always start off with the cold setting and adjust it to warm or you will scald yourself.

As there is no exercise yard in this camp, bring a yoga mat: the floors are diamond-hard linoleum.



Our intrepid managing editor is keeping a glass half full outlook on things. Photo: Brian Rhoads

Other features of life at Penny’s Bay offer reminders of why we are all here. The lights for the walkways outside the rooms never go off, and the curtains are not blackout, so bring some eye shades if you need that. Security cameras patrol these lit walkways, a reminder that a prison break will cost thousands in fines and up to six months in jail.

Flashes of Andy Dufrense’s (spoiler alert) successful but filthy escape in the Shawshank Redemption come to mind. Those thoughts are quickly squelched by the less optimistic atmosphere of Cool Hand Luke, where as the captain says: “What we’ve got here is failure to communicate.”

Perhaps I’ll just wait out the week.

Up next: After this extra-long weekend column, I’ll rest on Sunday, but be back on Monday with a review of the fine dining at Penny’s Bay.