Bratpack Bag Giveaway

Bratpack bag giveaway.

Of course you’ve heard of Bratpack the bag shop, right? They carry some of the most popular brands like Jansport, Hedgren, and Timbuk2. This week, they will be opening a new branch in Greenbelt 5 and to coincide with this event, they’ve been running some online promotions. I was fortunate enough to be a part of it, so I’m giving away a free Bratpack bag! 🙂 Now read on to know what to do:

The Bratpack Bag Diaries

Readers may share their unique experiences that they have using their bags.

Their stories may be about the places that they’ve been to with their bags and how useful it was during their trips.

It could also be on how their bags served as their canvass and how it has been an expression for artistic freedom.

Aside from being a travel necessity and an outlet for artistic freedom, it is also a fashion accessory. Readers can also share on how their bags made them comfortable with their chosen styles.

The most unique and interesting answers will be given a Bratpack bag (Jansport, Timbuktu and Hedgren).

All you’ve got to do is leave a comment with your bag story, that’s it. The best story wins a bag. It doesn’t have to be as long as a novel, it just has to be worth every word. 😉 Considering the fact that I could count my readers with the fingers on my hands, your chances of winning wouldn’t be so bad.

You have two days until Friday (November 14) before we pick a winner. Now go on and comment. 🙂

Medical Mission for the Dumagats of Sierra Madre

View on the way to the Angat watershed.

It’s not everyday we get the chance to make a difference in other people’s lives. When our friends Mar and Mic pitched the idea of conducting a medical mission for the Dumagats of Sierra Madre, we were told it was going to be a lot different than similar activities. The Dumagat people basically thrived in the mountains and around the river system in the Sierra Madre mountain range. Part of this huge ecosystem is Angat river and the watershed named after it.

With the help of the UP Outdoor Recreation Group (UP ORG), volunteer doctors and other medical practitioners went all the way to Norzagaray, Bulacan and took a one–hour boat ride to the campsite of our beneficiary community. Two days worth of medical work and some make–shift out–of–the–classroom activities for the children — we all managed to do as planned with just a bit more, but we could only hope that to them it all makes a difference.

Doctor Yen at work.

We learned an important lesson in conducting such medical outreach endeavors: it is not easy to find available doctors. It’s not a question of desire or intent, almost every doctor we approached wanted to help. Unfortunately, as most of us know, these doctors have very irregular schedules that hardly allow them to set extra–curricular commitments. In fact, at the very last minute, some of them had to beg off due to other responsibilities. But it also meant we can keep in touch with a handful of them and hope that a favorable percentage would magically be free on the day of the medical mission itself.

Doctor Yen at work.

Another challenge was specific to our doctors: instructions regarding medications cannot be given as they normally would. They couldn’t say “at 8 in the morning” or “7 in the evening,” reference to time was better described in terms of sunrise and sunset. And they cannot use measurements such as “500 mg of X medicine,” it was going to be “half of this tablet,” or “one of that.”

And you couldn’t write a prescription, most of them can’t read. Besides, there’s no drugstore remotely close for them to procure their medicines nor do they have the capacity to purchase them regularly even if they wanted.

It had us thinking if these indigenous people are better left to how they’ve lived their lives for the past decades, or if they should be schooled to the norms of “modern civilized society” as we’ve come to know. Either way, we as a people had something to lose.

Our team of doctors for this medical mission.

Children of the Dumagat tribe.

Alternative classroom in the mountains.

I could start mentioning names who’ve helped make this huge project possible, but it would be unfair to others who were indirectly influential and effective in providing whatever they can. I wouldn’t be able to remember all the names anyway. Besides, this is not about tho ones who help, but those we have helped.

At the end of the day, that is what matters most.

5 minutes with WordPress 2.7 Beta 1

wordpress-27-beta1

The first time I heard from Matt about WordPress 2.7’s new interface in WordCamp Philippines, I was excited to see some new UI elements and concepts taking a more prominent role in the whole application. After all, blogs and web applications were supposed to be way ahead in adopting new approaches in designs and interfaces.

I waited for the trunk to finally hit 2.7 beta since I wasn’t into playing with nightly builds posting lorem ipsum entries on a non–public test blog. I wanted to use it in a real blog, with real content and data, used the way I would typically use WordPress. When I read about the availability of 2.7 Beta 1, I grabbed and installed it here on rebelpixel.com and my mobile devices blog.

I was initially unimpressed with the new sidebar–based navigation. After all, we’ve only had a top menu since the early days of WordPress. After a few minutes of tinkering, I realized the sidebar menu was actually collapsible to a narrow strip of icons, letting me focus on the task at hand. I was even surprised to discover that the icons were actually hover menus that made everything a lot easier to access.

Collapsible widgets are now back in the write screen; but what’s even cooler is that you can pick which widgets to display or hide, giving you a streamlined write interface that lets simply you get the work done. Media handling is now much better too; finally I’m using the built–in media manager instead of some dated old plugin to insert photos in my entries. It wins huge points from me as I use images in my entries more often than not.

WordPress 2.7 is looking good right now even in beta form. I can’t wait for the final release.