Digi-Cameras: Pictures of the North Coast of Taiwan

My wife and I have always enjoyed taking pictures with our assorted cameras, though I would hardly consider myself decent as a photographer. In fact, as we speak, she is sorting through our thousands of photographs and adding them to some photo frames that we never used…

It reminded me of the hundreds of photos, negatives, and digi-images that I have taken over the years. And I’ve gone through a range of cameras including…

  • A Kodak 35mm camera;
  • A Practika SLR;
  • A Kodak Digital Camera C360 (my second).

There are three others that I can’t remember right now… including one Russian camera with a dual lens that I could never get to work properly.

Recently, we’ve spent a lot of time travelling around the North Coast of Taiwan exploring the bays, harbors, beaches and scenery. I’m attaching a few of my favorite images for you to enjoy.

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View of the Baishwan Bay Area North East Coast, Taiwan.

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Fuji Harbor – North East Coast Taiwan.

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Local seafood merchant at Fuji Harbor.

These pictures capture some of the spirit of the fishing areas of the North East Coast. Taken with a not too modest Kodak C360 Camera, the quality is great for blogging and web albums. It produces good quality pictures for home use, though I’m kind of hankering something with 7 or more megapixels, and a much larger LCD screen. So, thanks for sharing. Hope you enjoy the post. And quit drooling over the keyboard!

Sponsored Post.

Buying a house: saving for the deposit? It does have advantages…!

With the advent of 100%+ mortgages, borrowers these days find it easy to borrow the money they need to buy the house they want. It didn’t always use to be that way. In fact, up until the recent credit boom, borrowers were required to pay a deposit on the house from their own savings. In fact, in Taiwan, it is still this way. For new houses and pre-construction units, the deposit is actually between 10%-20%, but for second hand units, it is typically 30%-40% of the sale price.

When my wife and I first married, saving any kind of deposit was quite difficult, because we were starting from nothing. We had nothing in the bank after our wedding; so purchasing any property was simply out of the question. If we had been living in the UK or US, it would have been quite simple to go out and borrow the money for our house, our furnishings, and everything else we needed for the house.

Looking back, though, I realized that the fiscal discipline that we learned from saving for the deposit taught us much more about how (dare I say NOT) to manage our cash, cash flow, savings and credit cards. So, today when I was chatting with my good friend, Cindy, about buying a house. She had just moved into her own apartment, and was dreaming about buying a house. But it’s difficult when you are starting out to save money, because even renting a house requires quite a bit of cash.

After I got home, I realized that it was having to save for the deposit that helped us to manage our cash flow much better. It took us over 5 years to save up enough for a house, but we did it! And, at the beginning of the five years, only my wife had a proper job!

So why? Simply, because if you can save a cash deposit, then you have learned a number of important skills for a house-holder:

  1. you can manage your income/expenses carefully;
  2. you have budgeted properly;
  3. you have consistently saved up money;
  4. you know that it’s possible to manage your money without spending it all; and,
  5. by committing your own money to your house, you are making an emotional commitment that having a 100% mortgage may not allow because you are risking your OWN money.

Together, these qualities are more than enough to prepare your for the task of buying and managing your own house. More importantly, with these skills, you are setting your stage for managing your finances for the rest of your life (God willing!).

In addition, when you do purchase your house, you will have a ton of advantages that you didn’t reckon on in the first place:

  1. lower overall mortgage rate than 100% mortgage;
  2. lower overall mortgage payments vis-a-vis if you had paid for the house in a 100% mortage!
  3. a better credit record because you’re not overleveraged;
  4. you’re not overleveraged;
  5. in a tough seller’s market, you’ll have some more ‘protection’ against negative equity situations;
  6. you may even be able to use the savings habit to pay off your entire mortage much sooner saving a lot of interest payments over the term of your mortgage!

So, if you are forced by circumstances to save for a deposit for your house, look on it as an opportunity not a burden! We learned a lot… Seize the chance to save! No matter how hard it is for you to cut back, it will be worth it in the end.

Did you have to save for a deposit for your first house? How much was it? Was it difficult or easy for you to get it together? I’d love to hear how you

Four Corners: Australian Documentary TV at its best

We’ve been watching our local Broadband TV for more than a year now. One of the channels I really enjoy is ABC Australia Pacific or Australia Network as it is now called. There is one program that is particularly good and that is 4 Corners, which is a public affairs program that investigates economic matters, politics, religion, and business.

4corners

http://abc.net.au/4corners/specials.htm

Eyes Wide Open – Quentin McDermott reports on the high cost to society when we no longer value sleep. Also available in Windows Media video format.

*The Home Front – Jonathan Holmes explores practical, achievable ways for Australians to cut energy consumption. How do we improve the design of our homes and the products that we put inside them?

*You Only Live Twice – Four Corners takes you on an unusual trip – and asks, just how far can we all go in virtual worlds like Second Life?

*Peak Oil? – Jonathan Holmes investigates why oil prices are high and asks how long the world has left to prepare for a day when there is not enough oil to go around. This edition provides extended interviews and interactives exploring both sides of the peak oil debate.

*Who’s Afraid of Nuclear Power? – Is Australia’s aversion to nuclear power soundly based? Or are there lessons to be learned from other countries’ experience?

*The Kilwa Incident – Four Corners presents an online edition of “The Kilwa Incident” first broadcast on 20 June 2005, examing how an Australian mining company became implicated in a massacre.

*The High Frontier – Four Corners presents an extended edition of our program The High Frontier, we explore this little-known but booming industry high above our heads.

I’ve marked good programs for those interested in business news as well as financial issues! Happy viewing. BTW, some of the programs are deemed unsafe for U.S. Republicans who support Pat Robertson, and those on the right! Those on the other side might find the programs enlightening.

Watch them, and share which one you find interesting in the comments!