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For the love of economy rice

Nothing is more typically Malaysian than the “economy rice” store. These places sell “chap fun” (a Cantonese word for “mixed rice”), vegetable & meat dishes which you eat with your rice.
Chap fun stalls are usually found in restaurant corner, often run by an uncle or aunty who calculates the price of your meal in mysterious ways. All you hope for is a fair deal.
These days, chap fun shops are very modern & sophisticated, serving up to 20+ dishes!
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Twitter misleads
How Twitter misleads us about how many people have left — and what to do about it
Social feeds are engines for distorting social understanding. Here’s how to push back against the algorithm.
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Algorithms and creativity
“In the absence of an algorithm there is only your own creative compass.”
In the #Fediverse I discovered people like @ewen who understood the impacts algorithms had on creativity. I felt the same sense of suffocation as a writer.
In other spaces besides #Mastodon such as #Twitter nobody really understood my angst against it and thought I was strange. “It doesn’t matter what you think. Suck it up,” said an SEO guru to me once.
Great article 😍 I felt seen.
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Solarpunk fiction
Learned about a new science fiction genre today – Solar Punk
“Solarpunk stories take place in futures where humanity, technology, and nature live in harmony rather than in conflict.”
TBH, it sounds a lot like Star Trek which makes me think I will love this genre!
Who are the authors in this genre?
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ChatGPT and tech writers
Are tech writers going to lose their jobs? How can they adapt?
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Disconnecting from the electric grid
“On May 22, 2022, I began an experiment. I unplugged everything in my apartment, with the goal of drawing zero power from the electric grid for one month. I had no idea how I would make it past a few days… As I type these words in January, I’m in my eighth month.”
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Third party apps cut off from Twitter
“It feels like the time is right for a truly universal timeline.”
– @chockenberry (the creator of Twitterrific) -
January 2023: Digital gardening
Towards the tail end of the year, I had an awakening of sorts when it came to digital spaces. After Elon’s takeover of Twitter, I realised that I’ve been producing content for platforms I don’t own – free. And that despite all that free labour, my reward is to be data mined and to have access to people restricted. I said enough and did a series of things:
- I quit Twitter.
- Learned how to use Astro, a static website generator, and created Front Matter, a new website where I will write about work things.
- Started migrating my content from Squarespace to this wordpress.com by painstakingly copying one post at a time. It’s a long story. Will eventually go on a paid plan.
- Turning my “personal brand” website into a digital garden and personal blog, which is more my jam than “building a brand”.
I’m also embarking on a Depth Year – to read unfinished books, to complete writing uncompleted stories. Read two books from my very long TBR shelf: Elantris and Ugly Truth.
I continue to love my job as a technical writer.
Read what I’ve been up to in the last few months in the Now Archive.
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Let’s have a depth year
In 2023, I’m going deep.
To be more specific, I’m going to have a “depth year”.
Raptitude blogger David Cain originally coined this term in his post, Go Deeper, Not Wider. It unexpectedly sparked a “world-wide movement”.
The mechanics or rules of the Depth Year is simple. For one year, don’t acquire new hobbies, skills, books, clothes etc. Instead, look around your house and in your life, see what you have, and “go deep” by exploring them further instead.
Build on existing projects. Heck, complete them. That long-abandoned online course you purchased? Go finish it. That fantasy series yellowing in your bookshelves? Read them! Those unfinished short stories? Complete and publish them!
“Drill down for value and enrichment instead of fanning out. You turn to the wealth of options already in your house, literally and figuratively.” — David Cain
We tend to start new projects and never complete them. This leaves us feeling bad, said David.
And it does. I confess, I often wake up in the morning with anxiety, thinking about the loose threads fluttering in my life, telling myself I’ll “get to it” but get promptly distracted by the next Shiny New Thing in my life.
So this year I’m going to tie as many of them as I can. I want to wake up to hope rather than anxiety. I want to say, “This year, I compelted things.”
“By taking a whole year to go deeper instead of wider, you end up with a rich but carefully curated collection of personal interests, rather than the hoard of mostly-dormant infatuations that happens so easily in post-industrial society” — David Cain
That’s great, you say, but does it work?
Fortunately, David returned a year later and in his post, he explained Why the Depth Year Was My Best. Not only did he reap expected benefits such as completing abandoned projects and read long-igored books, he found many psychological benefits from going deep. For example, he:
- Understood or gained epiphanies on why he stopped them
- Experienced several other epiphanies
- Untangled several personal issues
A depth year could mean different things for different people. It’s a mindset, says David.
For me, a Depth Year translates into “tying up loose ends”. Finally putting to rest that voice in the morning lamenting about lost opportunities.
I have online courses I’ve bought sitting in the cloud, untouched and unwatched. I’ve spent thousands on them but … have not completed them.
My beautiful apartment has patches that are incomplete. My living room has no couch because I couldn’t decide on what to get after disposing of the day bed that gave me lower back and hip pain, my back balcony’s floors are begging to be spruced up, my broken guest bed is literally standing on its side, waiting to be fixed!
Most of all, I have far too many writing projects uncompleted. It’s time to dust off my unfinished novels and short stories and put it out into the world. Perhaps 2023 is the year I hold a physical book in my hands.
Rather than move on with new shiny things in 2023 I’m tying up loose ends.
Latest Newsletter: My 2023 Depth Year framework

I write about how I’m going to go about my Depth Year in my latest newsletter.
Subscribe to my newsletter, Tai Tales, and get notified of new blog posts or videos I’ve made, and access to exclusive essays and fiction.
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October 2022: I’m a Tech Writer
Not gonna lie, I’m both excited and nervous about my latest career transition. It’s a dream come true after all — I thought I wouldn’t have this chance because this is a role that is relatively tough to break into.
I started my Tech Writing job in September and I’m enjoying it so far. The chance to combine my passion for writing and fascination for software and tech was a rare opportunity.
It’s quite different from content marketing, terribly refreshing, and The community is also one of the most supportive and passionate I’ve seen. I’m looking forward to years of connecting with other tech writers and learning more about the profession.
On hold: Productivity at Work series
Thanks to Google’s recent SEO updates, I’m rethinking my blog strategy. Google doesn’t like nicheless websites, so I’ll be forced to choose my focus for this blog. And Squarespace’s price hike, my reluctance to migrate to Squarespace 7.1 and the fact that there’s no easy way to do so is making me think twice about making this website as a base for all my content.
Squarespace blogs are notoriously difficult to export to other platforms, so I need a more flexible content management system … and a cheaper one.
With all this going on, I’ve decided to put my Productivity at Work series on hold as I figure things out.
Should I just create another blog to house the content I had planned to write about being a fiction writer and technical writer? Should I move my more personal posts to Substack like writers Tsh Oxenreider and Nat Eliason are doing? So many questions.
As a content marketer, the answer is easy — just create a different website. Niche it.
As a lover of personal websites and a free-spirited creator, I rebel against such a regimented approach; a crave simplicity — one website to rule them all. Perhaps I will say to hell with it all and create a website that will make Google annoyed. Yay!
But then there’s Squarespace … ugh.
My reading list
My reading is picking up! Currently enjoying my historical romances, detective novels and non-fiction and hoping to make a dent at my ever-growing TBR.