• Restricted Movements

    Hey! How are you friends doing? Things have been pretty weird and surreal due to the COVID-19 outbreak and all of us (I would say “most” since clearly some people don’t care about social distancing which could cause potential escalated cases, but heh, I’m too tired of getting angry) have been doing our best to take care of ourselves and others. More power to you and to us! We can do this!

    There is this meme that I really like about how we do our social distancing:

    And there’s even a passing analysis about that meme on NY Times related to how folks react to “fight the virus”-attitude.

    Anyway! So yeah, back on March 16, Malaysian government announced order for restricted movement. Not an actual lockdown lockdown, but we do have restricted access to public places and it’s expected for us to stay at home from March 18 to March 30/31. So… Lockdown-ish…?

    Schools and offices are closed during that time (except for some vital institutions or offices that need to open through this kind of times such as hospitals, security services, cleaning services, and some government offices) — for school closure, thankfully, this is during school break. However, some schools do open during the break for some extracurricular activities. Some schools also provide daycare functions for children with working parents/double incomes. Due to the Restricted Movements, those schools need to close.

    On March 18, things feel quite surreal. The picture above is Jalan Tun Razak (Tun Razak street), one of the main roads in Kuala Lumpur and I took the pic on 7 AM; when it’s expected to have traffic jam on daily basis — yet it’s really empty at that time. Not many people around either (usually the pedestrian walkways are pretty crowded with office workers and people living in the apartment building nearby.) Food trucks that usually operate during breakfast and lunch times are nowhere to be seen. I really hope the pakciks and makciks who operate the food trucks are okay, heathy, and in a good condition. Selling food is one of their main source of income, and they couldn’t do it due to the outbreak.

    Both my husband and I are working from home (a default condition on my side ?) along with the mini Godzillas whom we affectionately called as our children.

    That picture is not taken yesterday, but yeah, that’s the… Tidiest situation of our home when the kids are around and stuck at home for more than 2 hours.

    My super-not-parent-friendly suggestion when folks asked me how I cope with everything while kids at home are:

    “I told my kids: Please don’t call me when I’m working except for these three conditions:

    • Somebody is dying
    • Somebody is bleeding
    • Something, or somebody, caught on fire

    Other than that, Netflix, Youtube Kids, and potato chips at your disposal.”

    Anyway, if this is your first experience in working from home/remote working, hello and welcome! Me myself is not an expert on this (I just started remote working a shy 1 year ago) so, yeah, we are in this together. Feel free to share or chat about your experiences! Did you find it enjoyable? Lonely? Stressful? Calming?

    If you want to read some tips or cool articles about remote working, you can check these links:

  • Wedang Jahe

    I have been having sinusitis infection for the past 3-4 days, and “annoyed” would be an understatement. I really hate sinusitis because unlike common cold virus, it refuses to go after 3 days. Sure, sinusitis is not contagious. But in this kind of situation? Try to blow your nose without people looking at you with alarmed look.

    (Although the good side is, at least people will keep their distance from me so yay social distancing.)

    I decided to make myself a wedang jahe (ginger tea). I smashed a couple of big-sized old ginger, three stalk of lemongrass, a quarter cup of rock sugar, and two big chunks of palm sugar. I got myself a cup of hot wedang jahe and keep the rest in the fridge. It was pretty nice, though. You can taste the ginger’s heat on your throat.

    This has been a really trying and worrying moment. Stay healthy, all. We can go through this together. We can do this.

  • Day-off Friday

    … And an excuse to play around with Fujifilm X-A3 and the lenses (standard 16-50mm and, newly purchased, 35mm.)

    Chatting buddy (standard 16-50mm lens)

    Italian dinner to close Friday at Porto Romano (35mm lens)

  • Many months ago, I wrote about Cookie Jar Analogy to explain the connection between domain name(s) and website in Indonesian. I wanted to continue with what domain mapping/connecting is and how it works; but I decided to re-start it with The Cookie Jar Analogy again in English. I hope it’s okay with you ?

    As Happiness Engineers, one of the most common questions we receive is about domain name’s effect with websites. Sometimes, folks contacted us and inquired something like, “I just realized I made a typo on my website! Can I change it? Will it delete my website too? Do I have to restart again building my website from scratch?”

    Think… Cookies in a jar. The cookies inside the jar is your website’s contents. Your posts, pages, themes, plugins, database, everything.

    Then, the cookie jar needs a label to identify it. It can be your name, or it can be a label written with bold letter “COOKIES”, or anything. That label is your domain name.

    Generally, when you create a website, the cookie jar has its default label — we call this, “website address.” It can be something like temp0245.website.net, or if you are hosting the website in WordPress.com, the website address usually look like this:

    WEBSITENAME.wordpress.com

    The website address itself can vary, depending on the website host company. In WordPress, it can be .wordpress.com, .home.blog, or anything. For WordPress.com websites with Business plan and customized plugins/themes without custom domain name yet (we will talk about custom domain name soon), the website address is .wpcomstaging.com.

    Why is that? It’s like how we human beings created naming system, really. When a person is born, they will automatically given a name. Even when the individual is unidentified, the police force usually provide name such as ‘John Doe’ or ‘Jane Doe’.

    Now! What is custom domain name? Custom domain name is some kind of “vanity” name. This is a domain name that you can choose (as long as it’s available on the market), register, and renew regularly. People purchasing custom domain name for business purpose, professional image, or for folks to remember it easily.

    Is it compulsory to purchase a custom domain name? Not really, no. Some hosting providers provide free website address which easy to remember (like .wordpress.com, .blogger.com, .tumblr.com, and many more.) Some hosting providers might require the users to purchase custom domain name with discounts; but all in all, purchasing custom domain name is based on your needs and preferences.

    In some cases, and this is actually pretty common, there are cookie jars with multiple labels on it (one website with multiple domain names.) Some people choose to do that to ensure the domain name is “correct”, for the sake of presence, and reducing phishing risk. For example, a company A has this company website with domain name companyA.com. Then they wanted another domain, companyA.co, to open the same website with companyA.com. They can put two domain names on one website and the whole thing will still work (I kind of forgot the term, is it “domain layering”?)

    So it’s like how folks with nicknames. For example, me. My name is Retno Nindya, and people can call me “Retno”, “Nindya”, and some call me “Kap” or “Kapkap”. And all of those names are pointing to the same person: me.

    We talked about multiple domain names on one website and how the whole thing works, and should work, smoothly. However, there’s a caveat on this.

    A website needs a primary domain name.

    A primary domain name is, no matter how the website is accessed — whichever domain name was used to access — the domain name that will be displayed in the browser address bar is the domain name.

    So, for example, if you have a WordPress.com website address: awesomeblog.wordpress.com — then you purchased a custom domain name awesomeblog.com, make sure you set the custom domain name awesomeblog.com as the primary domain name to ensure your website visitors to see awesomeblog.com on their browser address bar when they visited your website. They will still able to access awesomeblog.wordpress.com, but they will see the custom domain name on their browser address bar.

    The same goes if you have more than one custom domain name. Taking example from the companyA.com and companyA.co above; if the primary domain name is set to companyA.com, visitors will still able to access companyA.co, but they will see companyA.com on the browser bar.

    What will happen if the custom domain name is canceled? Then the address will whirr back to its default website address.

    I hope this post able to provide a glimpse of understanding on how domain name affects website’s contents ?

    In case you want to read more about custom domain name in WordPress.com, feel free to check this article: https://en.support.wordpress.com/domains/

  • A Friendly Visit (2020)

    When people told you that “your drawing looks childish and cartoonish” and I’d say go ahead and post that masterpiece because you do you.

    A Friendly Visit (2020)
  • I rarely saved post drafts when writing a blog post because I usually able to ramble in a short period of time, until today, I decided to write about how I designed this blog (sidebar, cute background, pixel-thingy, and the likes.) Suffice to say, it’s, uh, long. My dormant Happiness Engineer-soul came back in full force, hahahah!

    I’m still working on it. Hopefully, I can publish it by this evening (Malaysia timezone).

Nindya. Kapkap. she/her. Indonesian in Malaysia. Millennial. Lo-fi. Animal Crossing: New Horizons. Murder mystery genre.

Currently feeling:

The current mood of retnonindya at www.imood.com

Part of blogroll.org

  • April in pictures
  • Red onions
  • Urban rainbow
  • “Abdijiwo” by Retno Widya
  • “The Maid” by Nita Prose
  • The Liebermann Papers on BBCPlayer