Kuala Lumpur & Penang

by | Sunday, May 11, 2008

I love Malaysia. I love its greenery, its up and down hilly landscape, the colors and designs of the houses, and yes the food.

Malaysians are food crazy. There are food stalls everywhere and the range and variety of food available is just amazing. My first night here Rajendran and his wife took me to a Hindu south Indian restaurant where food is served, traditional Indian style, on plantain leaves. The food was simple but tasty.

I spent the next half-day with Kurnia who drove me around KL and showed me the sights. We went for brunch to a little street-side restaurant and for 10 Ringat (which comes to around 3 dollars) we had a huge and tasty meal (and I mean huge). We also visited the Batu Caves in Kuala Lumpur, an immense Hindu temple situated in cavernous limestone caves. The huge golden statue of Murugan in the front draws people in but the caves are what impressed me the most. You reach the cave-temples by climbing a steep staircase (over 250 steps) and I was sweating profusely by the time we reached the top. But it was worth it. I hope some of the photographs I have taken do justice to this impressive natural geographical structure. Finally she dropped me off at the airport for my flight to Penang.

After a few hours in KL airport spent catching up on email and receiving “offensive and tasteless” error messages from my ISP, I arrived at Penang. Penang is the second largest city in Malaysia and is situated on a little island. This is location of the University Sains Malaysia, the second oldest university in Malaysia, where I will be presenting on Monday. I was received at the airport by Dr. Binti Rozinah Jamaludin, the person most responsible for making this entire trip happen, and it was great to meet with her finally (after more than an year of email interaction – my first email from her is dated February 2007!).

After checking into my hotel Dr. Rozinah took me on a drive around Penang – to a spot known as the end of the world. The drive is stunning, a series of hair-pin bends along a mountain-side, hanging over the edge of the ocean. I saw some interesting restaurants on the way (one called “End of the world cafe” and another was just called “The Tsunami”). We finally had dinner at some street stalls right near the hotel I am living in.

Today (Sunday) was a relatively slow day. I spent the morning (and evening) walking and taking photographs around the hotel and most of the day working on my talk. I have a better sense of the audience now, after talking with Dr. Rozinah, and am pulling together ideas from across a range of different presentations. I see a long night ahead of me, but again given my jet-lag, that’s not as bad as it sounds. Hopefully it will go well.

To seem all the photographs I have taken so far you can go here (on this website) or here (on flickr).

Topics related to this post: Fun | News | Personal | Photography | Travel

A few randomly selected blog posts…

World’s cheapest car (ever)

Story in Reason Online about the Tata Nano, the cheapest car the world, or actually as the article seeks to prove, the cheapest car of all time (once you adjust for inflation). The Nano, produced by Indian company Tata, "is about 10 feet long, 5 feet wide. The...

stealth assessment

Just heard this of stealth assessment idea (from Michael Spector at NTLS) that struck a chord. More here, [word document].

Technology & Education: A provocation

Technology & Education: A provocation

Jill Castek, at the University of Arizona, invited me to participate in an NSF funded workshop on developing "Principles for the equitable design of STEM learning environments." The event was being held at Bioshpere 2, which is this awesome place near Tucson. Because,...

Of raindrops and dying flowers

Of raindrops and dying flowers

The rainfall in June –the poems I’ve pasted to wallspeel off, but leave traces.~ Basho All photos taken with my iPhone8©punyamishra

Keep TPACK clean 🙂

I came across this sign when I was in India recently and I just HAD to take a picture of it. Click on the picture for a larger version Of course, much of the effect comes from the inadvertent yet appropriate peeling of the paint from the letter "R." But fun...

Walking in a straight line

Determining the shape of the earth is something I have written about previously. For instance, see this post on seeing the shape of the earth using eclipses. (A somewhat similar effect could be seen in my photo of the moon during a lunar eclipse). On the web, I found...

Arthur C. Clarke, RIP

Arthur C. Clarke, popularizer of science and science fiction writer died today. He was 90. Clarke was one of my favorite authors growing up though I haven't read him in a while. I still remember the thrill I felt when I read the last sentence of "Rendezvous with Rama"...

Algebra, version 2

I had posted yesterday a new ambigram for the word "algebra." It was a mirror-reflection design i.e. it reads the same when reflected in a mirror. What I liked about the design was the fact that it actually looks like an algebraic equation with a left-hand-side and a...

TPACK Newsletter #41, May 2019

TPACK Newsletter #41, May 2019

Here is the latest pdf version of the TPACK Newsletter (#41, May 2019), as curated and shared by Judi Harris and her team. (Previous issues are archived here.) This issue includes 59 articles, 4 book chapters, and 20 dissertations that have not appeared...

1 Comment

  1. Ben

    Hi, nice post 🙂

    Penang is really a wonderful place to visit in Malaysia. I visited once and feel like visiting again 🙂

    I compiled Penang Travel Guide recently. Please visit and have some comments .. Hopefully I will visit Penang soon 🙂

    cheers Ö

    Reply

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *