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Nice Songs

Southeast Asia

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Taking a break from east-timor-studies.  A quiet weekend before the run-off in the Presidential elections there.  Hopefully, an opportunity for the Timorese people to change their government -- nay, change the regime.  Many of us wait patiently for these results and those from the consequent Parliamentary elections.

While doing this very challenging list moderating project on Timor (four languages, no joke), I often play music in the background.  From iTunes.  From Napster.  And now more and more, from my Nice Songs list, in the left sidebar of this page.  It relieves the gloom and tension.

In the past few days, I have removed all dead links in the Nice Songs list and switched the focus from audio to video, thanks to the miracle of You Tube which I had previously only used to get documentary videos on Timor.  I searched for song titles which are among my personal favorites.  Latecomer, I admit.  They're the type of songs you see mentioned in my Friendster profile. The You Tube videos generally stream very quickly.  Mouse over the list, and you'll see which ones are the videos.

Pack up your sorrows (that's a song) for while and enjoy the riches of the net.

Did I miss your favorites?  Send their titles by email to me at john.a.macdougall@gmail.com or johnmacdougall@comcast.net.

Thanks, all you good people.

Google Knows About Timor

In the latest Google Friends Newsletter, I was pointed to Google's 'zeitgeist' for yearend 2006.  That's where it reveals search patterns.  Interesting enough, but I discovered some new (to me) Google search tricks on that page's What's Hot tab.  I knew about typing define in the Google web search box followed by a any word.  For example, try typing define uma-lulik.  Not too bad.  But there are also other search conventions like who is, what is, where is, and how to (followed by keyword/s).  These simple queries turn out to be quite powerful.  Just to play around, try who is "xanana gusmao", then what is "tetun OR tetum", then what is "f-fdtl OR falintil", then where is "alfredo reinado",  then how to solve timor crisis.  Surprise after surprise.  Outstanding job, Google.  Happy holidays!

So Different, Too Often the Same

Just a few quick observations on doing net research on Timor-Leste (TL) compared with Indonesia.  It's harder for Timor-Leste.  The Timorese world online differs starkly from the Indonesian world online.  And this is only in part due to limited and unreliable net connections in TL.  Blogwise, there exist only a relatively handful of blogs written by Timorese.  And some appear to be run by Portuguese or Brazilians rather than Timorese.  Listwise, the situation is only minimally better.  There are several dozen Timorese lists, all with limited memberships.  Again, some of them seem run by non-Timorese writing in Portuguese.  On the other hand, Indonesian blogs and lists seem almost limitless.  It's a strange situation given the large number of Timorese studying and living abroad in countries with excellent net access (a disapora similar to that of Indonesians).

Timorese blogs and lists seldom mention current events except in short, sporadic postings.  When current politics is discussed, there is scant opposition sentiment.  Yet from private emails, donor reports, Timorese NGOs, and even skimpy UN summaries of the local press, it is clear Timorese society is highly politicized.  Some would say polarized -- I think multi-polarized is more accurate. 

Websites -- again, Timorese ones comprise an almost  infinitesimal fraction of the Indonesian total.  By far, Timorese government and Timorese NGO sites outnumber personal Timorese sites.  Government can better afford to make websites, but these are most often out-of-date or seldom updated.  TL is NGO-dense (lots of them), and despite smaller resources than government, TL's NGOs have created some excellent sites.

How can these patterns be best explained?  I'm not sure, but I think the main reasons are two.  First, many Timorese are afraid to voice their views online.  That was the way things were during the Soeharto period when almost every Timorese I dealt with asked that I anonymize his or her postings.

But the second reason is even more curious.  My preliminary reading of the situation is that a great number of Timorese abroad do not intend to return home permanently.  The sense of Timorese nationalism has diminished.  Self-interest assumes a higher profile.  This contrasts starkly with the Soeharto period when Timorese nationalism was perhaps at its highest point.  There were far fewer Timorese abroad then -- indeed for long periods the main options for living outside 'Timtim' were Java and Bali. 

Now the Indonesian-educated Timorese live mainly in TL but many are jobless and alienated from the insistent older Portuguese-speaking governing elite.  Teten Dili, TL's lingua franca, is making strong gains (stronger than Portuguese) among this group of returnees and among Timorese generally, with only a few exceptional areas. 

Some Timorese remain in Indonesia, mostly factions who opposed independence in 1999 and several groups of militia leaders and followers whose crimes were serious enough that they can't go home again.  In the Indonesian press, and online, one seldom hears much from these Timorese, too. 

And the TL government is no longer (foolishly, in my view) sponsoring large number of Timorese to study in Indonesia.  This appears a political decision.  The TL government encourages study in Lusophone countries.  But it looks to me like more Timorese have made their way to countries where the medium of instruction is English. 

The Indonesian occupation of 24 years in the end did not win Timorese hearts and minds, despite the successful imposition of an Indonesian-medium educational system.  Now, with a Babel of media of instruction inside TL, with Portuguese the declared formal school medium (in theory only, phased in one year at a time), is the TL government also losing the confidence and loyalties of the current generation of Timorese youth in its own schools?

Timor-Leste -- No News Is No News

I started researching Timor (as locals call it) again about 2 1/2 months ago.  Earlier I had followed events there from 1974 till 2002.  The disastrous Indonesian occupation lasting 24 years has now been studied extensively.  But independent Timor got seriously neglected by scholars.  Most of us assumed all would go well with Timorese themselves in control (tutored by a beneficent United Nations and generous donors), though the road to recovery would be long.  It didn't go well.  Timor may never recover.

This is a long story.  You probably read some months ago about some disaffected Timorese soldiers (over a third of Timor's army) alleging discrimination, quitting their posts, holing up in the mountains, and languishing while their demands went unheeded and they were formally dismissed.  An unexpected proportion of Timor's divided police force supported them, despite bitter rivalries between the two, often ending in violence.  Other police deserted, stayed home, or fled.  Timor's police force subsequently ceased to function.  Gangs of youth roamed Dili, fought each other, burned houses, and terrified residents.  About 150,000 Timorese fled and became internally displaced persons (IDPs) and still fear returning to their former homes.  The Timorese government sought international armed intervention to restore order.  Australian, Portuguese, New Zealand and Malaysian troops and/or police responded.  The threat of civil war soon seemed contained.  But violence broke out again as a political campaign continued to oust an increasingly authoritarian, unresponsive, capricious and corrupt government, exemplified by the Prime Minister, Defense Minister, and Interior Minister.  The latter two were dismissed.  Finally, under great pressure from President Xanana Gusmao's office, Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri resigned.  He now faces trial on serious criminal charges.  A transitional Prime Minister, Jose Ramos-Horta (JRH), was installed, but the ruling party, Fretilin, remained in power after much wheeling and dealing.  Its own internal dissidents were purged from the party and from the very few Cabinet level posts they still occupied.  Violence still continued, the IDPs still feared returning home.  Finally, about a week or so ago, the United Nations agreed to an invitation from the JRH government to send in a new peacekeeping force  (UNMIT), mainly international police, now just beginning to arrive.

It would be good to write that Timorese and foreign observers know a lot about these recent events and what is happening.  Incredibly, neither does, and there are few ways to remedy this situation.

Inside Timor, radio reaches more people than any other mass medium, but its Timor news content is very limited, its budget miniscule, its paltry staff poorly trained.  Local community radio functions in some districts, when electricity is available.  TV can be seen only in Dili and now occasionally in Baucau.  But only a handful of rich Timorese living in Dili and owning satellite dishes can receive foreign TV news broadcasts, mainly from Indonesia and Australia.  Timor Telecom, a private monopoly, controls Internet access and makes the country's 1,000 or so subscribers pay dearly.  As a result, few local Timorese create websites, post to lists, maintain blogs, or even use email.  SMS is a major means of communication even among the governing elite.  The very few remaining local newspapers have taken down their websites, and their limited print runs, sold in the streets to the few who can afford copies, do not circulate outside Dili.  Most foreign news agencies and news organizations maintain no presence at all in Timor.  Foreign reporters there suffer severe language, access to information, and transport constraints (to almost anywhere outside Dili, and even to many parts of Dili).  Local reporters now worry about writing candidly for fear of 'defaming' the government and getting charged in court.  UNMIT promises a new expanded website of its own, but past UN online performance in Timor arouses no great expectations.   Donor and consultant reports, some published eventually on the Internet, create often useful analysis, but are careful not to offend a now sovereign government and do not challenge highly problematic articles in Timor's Constitution, written to entrench Fretilin and its policies.  Hundreds of local NGOs thrive in Timor, but only a few get their messages to the outside world through the Internet or by any other means.

In short, the vast majority of Timorese do not know what is happening in their own country and have no control over events.  Foreigners are even more ignorant, not to mention uninterested. And this information gap is only the tip of the iceberg of Timor's crisis.  Stay tuned.


 

Timor-Leste

Sorry, away for quite a while.  I've been busy researching Timor-Leste (East Timor).  This has, and will continue to take most of my spare time.  I'll be placing a few paragraphs now and then on what I understand about TL's multiple crises in this blog.  Longer pieces will go elsewhere.  Meanwhile, anyone interested in following roughly what I am doing can visit or subscribe to my east-timor-studies list. 

If anyone reading this blog entry is interested in email exchanges of views, prime sources on contemporary TL, and the like (i.e., collegial research collaboration), I would be very happy to be in direct and frequent contact with you at johnmacdougall@comcast.net.  For easy reference, the blog messages on TL should get coded into a long-delayed new category called Current Affairs, though I'm sure some of you would consider the Screams category more appropriate.

Shifting Sidebars #18

Nice Friends - IndahJuggling a lot of balls in the air.  Still a journalist among other daily roles.  Say halo to her.

Searchrolls Plus - Portuguese News.  New searchroll on Portuguese press.  Timely in light of new crisis in Timor Leste (aka East Timor aka Timor Timur aka Timtim).

Arianna's Top Political Blogs - Confused about the rightward drift of the US?  Clear your mind by consulting this liberal searchroll compiled and arranged by Arianna Huffington.  It's sure easier than scanning all these massive blogs through bookmarks or your RSS feed.  You don't have one of those yet?  Shame on you. Go right to Bloglines and get started immediately.  Free.  Very flexible.  Use a tool like Google Blog Search to locate just the right blogs for your feed if Bloglines' own blog finder doesn't turn up the blogs you need.

Our Net - Google Spreadsheet.  Works right in your browser.  More chipping away at Microsoft.

Tabblo - Construct an interactive photo gallery.  Still beta.  Promising.

ajaxWrite -  Another good entirely web-based word processing program.

Nice Blogs - Sarwono Kusumaatmadja.  Still a voice of reason and reasonableness.

Language - Translators Workplace.   Vast site for interpreters and translators.  Huge number available for work in Indonesian.

Just in case you haven't noticed, many more announcements of new sites now appear on my internet-studies list than in this Shifting Sidebars series.  There are also practical limits on how many worthwhile new sites I can place in Simplicity's sidebars.  Sooooo ...

My New Lists on Yahoo! Groups

For several years now, those of you who follow indonesian-studies list have had to endure my non-insular view of the field.  That is, it should not just be interdisciplinary but also touch on (at least) several other specific subjects.  In yet another experiment, I set up a few days ago five new lists on Yahoo! Groups on precisely these specific subjects.  So those of you with less expansive views of Indonesian studies will no longer see so many 'extraneous' postings on indonesian-studies.  Instead, you can read them in their 'proper' places.  To wit, for those interested, there now exist

southeast-asian-studies
east-timor-studies
islamic-world-studies
american-society-studies
internet-studies

and any of you are welcome to join.

This is the first public announcement of their existence.  I have also put links to them in the right sidebar under Nice Lists.  Well, they may indeed turn out to be 'nice' lists but in truth that remains to be seen.  The types of postings will be similar to those in indonesian-studies, i.e., scholarly documentation, major news developments, alternative viewpoints, and special resources.  I do not expect memberships to be large, but having these particular lists with the particular postings selected will make it easier to join (especially with me) in collaborative research projects and papers, using tools like wikis. 

Basically, I use as postings selections from materials I scan everyday.  So sending some prime choices doesn't involve all that much extra work, especially since in most postings I simply provide the URL for the source.  I would not even have considered trying to do new lists had not Yahoo! recently made very substantial improvements to its email and list configuration options.  Email is now much faster, so is display on the lists' homepages, and spam control is tight.  I have selected the same configuration for all the lists (and brought indonesian-studies into the new pattern, too). 

The key parts of the new lists' configuration are these --

  • anyone can read postings freely on the web, even if not a list member,
  • only those joining as list members can send me materials for possible posting,
  • all such postings should be emailed to me at johnmacdougall@comcast.net,
  • the lists are unmoderated but only the moderator/s can post (a great timesaver),
  • signing up as a list member occurs immediately, and anyone can join.

Shifting Sidebars #17

Searchrolls Plus - A bunch of new searchrolls.  Indonesian News in English by Elizabeth Coville aka Nice Friend LizBlogger Indonesia - Search a select list of Indonesian blogs.  You can also  find  other searchrolls of specific long-time Indonesian blogs (individual and aggregate) with almost no effort.  Beasiswa - Scholarships for the enterprsing.  Go to the basic search box on Rollyo, type keyword beasiswa, and the family of related lists produced by unnamed searchroller/s Beasiswa Scholarship.  Plus their Situs Pemerintah 1 and Situs Pemerintah 2.  And how can you pass up Chinese Cookery.  Available searchrolls have greatly expanded in variety and number now, though there are many total gaps and half-finished searchrolls.  Look around.  It's worth a few minutes to save hours of untargeted searching later. 

Mashups - Peter's Booklist.  For free, get book reviews from the fee service Booklist Online via
Amazon's licensing of Booklist (and other reviewers') content.  On the search page, hit Google
or Yahoo (Google yields slightly better results in this case), or both, then type your searchword, such as pramoedya, then read as many reviews as you wish.  Of course, Amazon would like you to buy any books you like from, guess who, Amazon. 

Shifting Sidebars #16

World Press - USA TodayMost widely read newspaper in US, followed closely by Wall Street Journal.  Everybody else is quite a ways behind.  Believe it or not.

Our Net - Yahoo! Search Guide.  How Yahoo! orders results on its various search services.  Another useful Yahoo! reference page is its Webmaster Resources and Yahoo! Search Feedback (last two not in sidebar).

Sphere.  New blog search engine which tries to do a little more.  After looking at the blog search results, try the newest (beta) add-on, Featured Blogs (on your search topic), and especially, Related Media (separately covers photos, news, books, and podcasts).

AlltheWeb LiveSearch - The venerable search engine AlltheWeb offers a new search interface which works magic.  Watch the screen after you enter your search term/s.  You get search suggestions and a GoTo drop-down menu option which, like Sphere, takes you quickly to other resources.  AlltheWeb is one of few major search engines with solid Indonesian-language holdings, so you're likely to find more such material here if your search term/s occur only in Indonesian.

Google Notebook.  If you don't yet have a webpage clipper/grabber add-on or standalone program, you might want to give Google's flexible new offering a try.  You must be signed in to your Google account to use it.  It works right in your browser.  Available for quick download as a Firefox or Explorer extension.  Myself, quite happy with ScrapBook.

Google Page Creator.  Yes, Google will let you create your very own website.  In minutes.  Only a slight exaggeration. 

Google Trends.  Lets you see what the world is searching for -- via Google's web search engine. One of the most fascinating tools Google has yet created.  Type your search word/s.  You get -- on the results page -- two search volume and news volume timeline graphs, then, in three tabs, the Cities, Regions (actually, countries), and Languages in which all this searching occurred.  As an experiment, try everything using keyword 'Indonesia,' then try 'Bantul' to see the power of this tool.
Very powerful instrument for net researchers.

Nice Blogs - Tajuk Radio68H.  Maintained by Nice Friend Air  on the sometimes erratic Blogger service.

Well, I tried to get you a legal copy of Celtic Woman's soaring The Soft Goodbye for Nice Songs, but failed.  Lyrics easily available. I got my much-played copy via the now fully legit Napster (endless music for a monthly subscription fee).  But ... you may be able to hear it five times for free if you go to the Napster homepage, search for The Soft Goodbye under Track in the drop-down menu, and then register (later paid download optional).  The free full-length sample songs are a new feature I've not tried, so, no guarantees.  If it works, you get a lot of high-quality streaming music free as an incentive to signup.  Is this note a Napster commercial?  Ahhhhhh, ya. :-)

 

Shifting Sidebars #15

Our Net - LegalDocs.  Downloadable legal documents and forms for many common situations encountered in the US.  Many free, many fee (discounted).  Similar to Nolo site (not in sidebar).

Google Suggest Explorer.  Not a Google product, but a handy knockoff of the 'suggest' search phrases function now available in Google web search.  Both make searching easier.  While Google suggests search phrases dynamically as you type in search terms, Explorer captures in static form the output (with links) for any search phrase.

Language - Polly Glotto.  Text-to-speech ('talking') translator.  Lots of fun.

UsingEnglish.  Excellent English as Second Language site.  Register to get more from it.

Shifting Sidebars #14

Nice Friends - Added Ichlasul.  Saya halo to him. Ask if he likes working on the web.

World Press - OhmyNews.  English version of highly regarded South Korean online news site with 80% of content contributed by freelance readers.

Our World - Fund for Peace.  Promotes practical solutions to end war and alleviate the conditions giving rise to it.

Language - French Pod Class.  Sebastien will help you brush up on your French through weekly podcasts.  You can start with his self-introduction (the link provided here), or move to anywhere else on the site you feel comfortable.

 

Shifting Sidebars #13

Nice Friends - Added Gerben.  Say halo to him in Madurese, Indonesian, English, and/or Dutch.

Added Firman.  Say halo to him.  Ask him about his economics post-doc.   

Southeast Asia - The Sun.  Web companion to The Sun and The Edge Financial Daily newspapers.  Free print version circulates mainly in Klang valley in peninsular Malaysia.

Our Net - GnuPG.  Open source software to encrypt your online communications if you're worried about the National Security Agency or lesser bodies reading them on the sly.  There is also the unfree Pretty Good Privacy.  Hey, nobody said this was going to be easy.  It's the NSA, people, the big enchilada.

TripStalker.  Download the software and let the robot constantly query travel sites to get you the best air, hotel, and car prices.  Works even while you sleep.

MoveOnThe major US liberal campaign site.  Highly influential.  And don't forget Meetup, much less political than it once was, but who knows about the future.  Has international coverage, including cities in Indonesia.

Nice Blogs - Ogle Earth.  An extremely current blog about Google Earth.  Very nice for the exponentially growing number of addicts.  Beware.  :-)

And three blogs from East Timor -- DillyDallying, Dili-gence, and Tumbleweed in Timor Lorosae.  Apart from nice posts, some spectacular sidebars here.

Daily Kos.  Leading liberal blog on American politics.

Informed Comment. University of Michigan history prof Juan Cole keep you very up-to-date on developments in the Middle East, especially Iraq.

Talking Points Memo.  Josh Marshall and journalist colleagues zero in on latest scandals in the Republican Party.

Huffington Post.  No good news here for King Gorge Bash and his lords and ladies.

 

Shifting Sidebars #12

Nice Blogs - Singabloodypore.  Oppositionist blog focused solidly on Singapore.

Mythical Dude.  Expat photographer posting judiciously from inside Cambodia.

Life in Chiang Mai.  A farang's occasional observations of all matters Thai from northern Thailand.

Luis Teodoro.  Academic and political commentator Luis Teodoro dishes it out from Manila.

ExpectoRants.  Irreverent blogger in Manila rages about the world and the Philippines.

Inside PCIJ.  Official blog of the highly regarded Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (link in left sidebar under Southeast Asia).

Lim Kit Siang.  Extensive official blog of an old friend and a DAP leader who leads the opposition in Malaysia's Dewan Rakyat.  See his biodata in Wikipedia.

 

Shifting Sidebars #11

Our World - Reporters without Borders.  Network monitoring attacks on reporters worldwide.  Site in French, English, and Spanish.  Numerous annual reports, including restraints on net.

OpenNet Initiative.  Systematically studies and challenges net filtering worldwide.  Many studies on the site.

Electronic Frontier Foundation.  Protects all manner of digital rights.  Many court cases on site.

Our Net - Photobucket.  Put your images and videos  here and link to them from your blogs, websites, and other netplaces.  1 gig free storage (that's a heap) just for you!

Google Maps.  Once Google Local, now re-named Google Maps by popular demand.  Very, very flexible way of finding places and events in US.  Would you believe Rockville has a 'Chinatown?'

Nice Blogs - Blogger Indonesia.  By A. Fatih Syuhud, a dedicated and prolific  blogger writing from New Delhi.

Presiden SBY.  The President's team gets the news out.  Fresh every day.  It's really a syndicated website, but let's give SBY a little leeway.

Change.  New thoughtful blog by Martin Manurung, a young progressive Indonesian intellectual.

Direktif.  Consistently useful Indonesian aggregate blog with solid tech slant.

Sarapan Ekonomi.  Nice light blog on Indonesian economy by former journalist Rasyad A. Parinduri.

FP Passport.  Official blog of Foreign Policy magazine.

DetikInet.  Popular portal detikcom's tech blog. 

Satya Witoelar.  What's to say?  For those who love the net, this blog is consistently interesting.

Shifting Sidebars #10

Nice Friends - Added Antony.  Say halo to him.  Ask him about thriftiness and distance learning.

Our World - NDINational Democratic Institute, US non-profit working to promote democracy worldwide.  Substantial interest in Indonesia.  Also East Timor.

Minorities - Religion Maps. Detailed mapping of religions in US.  Includes Muslims.

Our Net - ZabboWabbo.  Searches a selection of very diverse sources on the net about whatever keyword you type.  Yes, it does get you thinking.  Nice for those who like to test the water without getting their feet too wet.

Google Cooking.  Googles searches selected recipe sites in categories you designate.  Better than an earlier version where you just typed in a list of ingredients and got a list of fanciful recipes.

Nice Blogs - Internet in Asia.  Restrained but useful commentary by Singapore Internet Research Center.

Bangkok Pundit.  Excellent blog on Thai politics.  See also the very long-running BurmaNet, a list, now a syndicated website, possibly the best net source on politics in Burma.  It's not a blog -- find it in the Southeast Asia section of the left sidebar.

Shifting Sidebars #9

Nice Friends - Added Icha.  Say halo to her.  Help her create peace.

Added Moris.  Say halo to him.  Will he fix Jakarta?

Our Net - Google Calendar.  Wonderful.  Lives up to all its glowing reviews.

Language - Orangoo.  Spell-check in 28 different languages.  Including Indonesian.  Sorry, only one language at a time.  :-)

Nice Blogs - Jakarta, Oh, Jakarta.  Nice photo blog.

Sampsa Daily.  Very, very selective pointers to creative sites.

Mashup - Stingy Scholar.  Free podcasts, webcasts and more from universities throughout the world.

Countries. Graphics comparing all countries in the world according to population, area, and pop density.  Lots of ways to arrange the display.  Helpful in making simple comparisons and contrasts.

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