By Catherine Ling, Michelle Bong, Alisa Chopard, Christa Yeo, Hatta Aziz, Yuen Yi Ying and Larry Loh, CNNGo Singapore City Editor.
The little red dot heard round the world proves that size doesn't matter.
Singapore = Food. The city-state dominates the 'net with food blogs where hungry netizens compare, dissect, argue and swap foodie fodder, scouring the island for new tastes. And nearly every conceivable victual from every earthly corner has a home here. Fancy authentic Egyptian Baba Ghanoush? Arab Street's got you covered. Crave something Nigerian besides a scam e-mail? Find it on Verdun Road in Little India. If it's edible and fits on a plate, bowl, banana leaf or sheet of paper, we'll wolf it with zeal. But if you truly want to sample Singapore's food culture, head to any of the hawker centers in the heartlands -- there's a huge variety of stalls there at dirt-cheap prices.
Which is the greatest city in the world? See who Singapore is up against on CNNGo.
Singapore's a Garden City, literally. Amid the concrete jungle we call home, there's the Botanical Gardens, HortPark, MacRitchie Reservoir, Bukit Timah Nature Reserve -- each claiming myriad varieties of flora and fauna. But the most common impression left visitors to Singapore concerns the rows of trees that line roads everywhere, from expressways to suburban streets. It's not just a green facade -- Singapore's a champion of environmental initiatives, from the world's largest CNG refueling station to its first Solar Greenlots for electric vehicles.
Find out how CNNGo made 'Emerald City - the sustainable eco-lopolis of the future
No one in Singapore, regardless of political stripe, has anything but a healthy respect -- perhaps even awe -- for Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew. He led Singapore to independence in 1965 and served as its first Prime Minister for 31 years, setting the record as the world's longest-serving Prime Minister. He's the architect of Singapore's present prosperity, laying a foundation of nation-building which has taken Singapore from a sleepy little island to one of Asia's most developed states, despite its small population, limited space and lack of natural resources.
Singapore has one of the best health care infrastructures in the world, with various dignitaries and royals from the region patronizing local hospitals -- Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe even slipped in quietly for a 'secret cancer check-up' in 2008. The health care provision system is also one of the world's best, so good that some say it beats the proposed ObamaCare model.
Singapore is the first F1 venue to host a night race on its streets, and will do so for several years to come. The inaugural race in 2008 also earned the city-state an unfortunate distinction for being the one in which Team Renault boss Flavio Briatore ordered Nelson Piquet to crash, giving teammate Fernando Alonso the win. It's now known as the Singapore 'Crashgate' scandal -- which might lend some cred to Singapore's squeaky-clean image.
Time magazine called Singapore the global paragon of water conservation. Through sheer effort, and more than a little desperation (Singapore imports less than half the population's water from neighboring Malaysia with agreements set to expire in 2011 and 2061), the island turned to desalination technologies to provide for thirsty citizens. The result is NeWater, which is non-potable wastewater filtered into high-purity H2O that can be used for industrial development and even drinking.
The Singapore chili crab is famous. Despite what the Malaysian Tourism Ministry claims, the dish is distinctly Singaporean, as evidenced by the Singapore Chilli Crab Festivals staged all across Europe. Madam Cher Yam Tian created the succulent recipe in 1950 and it's now the unofficial national dish of a food-loving nation, with restaurants and coffee shops serving it by the ton nightly.
It's the unofficial 'first language' of most Singaporeans and one that would bewilder the remaining English-speaking world. Singlish is the creole of choice for citizens, cobbled together from various influences including Queen's English, Bahasa Melayu, Tamil, dialects such as Hokkien, Teochew, Cantonese, Bengali, Punjabi and even a smattering of various other European, Indic and Sinitic languages. Word of warning -- if you don't know it, don't try it. It'll make you sound sillier than we already do. Eh, dun pray pray ah ...
Curious about white boy Singlish and how to speak it. Read more on CNNGo
Thanks to its minuscule size, Singapore has the infrastructure to support island-wide 3.5G mobile and wireless internet access. According to Singapore's Infocomm Development Authority (IDA), there are 6.5 million mobile subscribers (as of July 2009), making for a staggering 140-plus-percent mobile phone penetration rate, and over four million in wireless broadband subscriptions. This is why you'll see Singaporeans with their attentions dedicated to their phones, rather than their environment.
There's a Singapore-wide campaign for everything -- Be Courteous, Speak English, Speak Mandarin, Stop Dengue, Save Water, Stop Littering, Be Kind, Don't Spit, and Stop At Two are just a warm-up. We'd go on, but that would violate the current Stop Prattling campaign. -Fri Apr 16 13:08pm
10 reasons only. 40 more plz.
+1... We got teh shingz and teh boomz~
No we are not the food capital of the world. I am not proud that we drink our own pee. And other big cities like shanghai, beijing and tokyo have a lot more greenery than us.
I like the chilli crabs though lol
pepper crabs.....cheap engineering materials from europe.....
Originally posted by Rock^Star:No we are not the food capital of the world. I am not proud that we drink our own pee. And other big cities like shanghai, beijing and tokyo have a lot more greenery than us.
I like the chilli crabs though lol
Then you shoul be proud of drinking sperm then.
For sure i don't. Unless u mean to say u do.
sorry
not Sg is no 1
is PaP no 1!!!!
Clap Clap!!
CNNgo?
isn't that the rubbish listing came from where fann wong was the most influential / famous asian?
Originally posted by kopiosatu:CNNgo?
isn't that the rubbish listing came from where fann wong was the most influential / famous asian?
Originally posted by kopiosatu:CNNgo?
isn't that the rubbish listing came from where fann wong was the most influential / famous asian?
Originally posted by BanguIzai:
World's Greatest City: 50 reasons why Singapore is No. 1
By Catherine Ling, Michelle Bong, Alisa Chopard, Christa Yeo, Hatta Aziz, Yuen Yi Ying and Larry Loh, CNNGo Singapore City Editor.
The little red dot heard round the world proves that size doesn't matter.
1. Food capital of the world
Singapore = Food. The city-state dominates the 'net with food blogs where hungry netizens compare, dissect, argue and swap foodie fodder, scouring the island for new tastes. And nearly every conceivable victual from every earthly corner has a home here. Fancy authentic Egyptian Baba Ghanoush? Arab Street's got you covered. Crave something Nigerian besides a scam e-mail? Find it on Verdun Road in Little India. If it's edible and fits on a plate, bowl, banana leaf or sheet of paper, we'll wolf it with zeal. But if you truly want to sample Singapore's food culture, head to any of the hawker centers in the heartlands -- there's a huge variety of stalls there at dirt-cheap prices.
Which is the greatest city in the world? See who Singapore is up against on CNNGo.
2. Green thrives in the big gray city
Singapore's a Garden City, literally. Amid the concrete jungle we call home, there's the Botanical Gardens, HortPark, MacRitchie Reservoir, Bukit Timah Nature Reserve -- each claiming myriad varieties of flora and fauna. But the most common impression left visitors to Singapore concerns the rows of trees that line roads everywhere, from expressways to suburban streets. It's not just a green facade -- Singapore's a champion of environmental initiatives, from the world's largest CNG refueling station to its first Solar Greenlots for electric vehicles.
Find out how CNNGo made 'Emerald City - the sustainable eco-lopolis of the future
3. Greatest living politician
No one in Singapore, regardless of political stripe, has anything but a healthy respect -- perhaps even awe -- for Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew. He led Singapore to independence in 1965 and served as its first Prime Minister for 31 years, setting the record as the world's longest-serving Prime Minister. He's the architect of Singapore's present prosperity, laying a foundation of nation-building which has taken Singapore from a sleepy little island to one of Asia's most developed states, despite its small population, limited space and lack of natural resources.
4. Dedicated to keeping us alive forever
Singapore has one of the best health care infrastructures in the world, with various dignitaries and royals from the region patronizing local hospitals -- Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe even slipped in quietly for a 'secret cancer check-up' in 2008. The health care provision system is also one of the world's best, so good that some say it beats the proposed ObamaCare model.
5. First and only Night Race in the world
Singapore is the first F1 venue to host a night race on its streets, and will do so for several years to come. The inaugural race in 2008 also earned the city-state an unfortunate distinction for being the one in which Team Renault boss Flavio Briatore ordered Nelson Piquet to crash, giving teammate Fernando Alonso the win. It's now known as the Singapore 'Crashgate' scandal -- which might lend some cred to Singapore's squeaky-clean image.
6. Water technology so good, we drink our own pee
Time magazine called Singapore the global paragon of water conservation. Through sheer effort, and more than a little desperation (Singapore imports less than half the population's water from neighboring Malaysia with agreements set to expire in 2011 and 2061), the island turned to desalination technologies to provide for thirsty citizens. The result is NeWater, which is non-potable wastewater filtered into high-purity H2O that can be used for industrial development and even drinking.
7. Most awesome crustacean dish of all time
The Singapore chili crab is famous. Despite what the Malaysian Tourism Ministry claims, the dish is distinctly Singaporean, as evidenced by the Singapore Chilli Crab Festivals staged all across Europe. Madam Cher Yam Tian created the succulent recipe in 1950 and it's now the unofficial national dish of a food-loving nation, with restaurants and coffee shops serving it by the ton nightly.
8. English that no one else understands
It's the unofficial 'first language' of most Singaporeans and one that would bewilder the remaining English-speaking world. Singlish is the creole of choice for citizens, cobbled together from various influences including Queen's English, Bahasa Melayu, Tamil, dialects such as Hokkien, Teochew, Cantonese, Bengali, Punjabi and even a smattering of various other European, Indic and Sinitic languages. Word of warning -- if you don't know it, don't try it. It'll make you sound sillier than we already do. Eh, dun pray pray ah ...
Curious about white boy Singlish and how to speak it. Read more on CNNGo
9. Connected, mobile and most oblivious to the surroundings
Thanks to its minuscule size, Singapore has the infrastructure to support island-wide 3.5G mobile and wireless internet access. According to Singapore's Infocomm Development Authority (IDA), there are 6.5 million mobile subscribers (as of July 2009), making for a staggering 140-plus-percent mobile phone penetration rate, and over four million in wireless broadband subscriptions. This is why you'll see Singaporeans with their attentions dedicated to their phones, rather than their environment.
10. Campaign-craziest place on earth
There's a Singapore-wide campaign for everything -- Be Courteous, Speak English, Speak Mandarin, Stop Dengue, Save Water, Stop Littering, Be Kind, Don't Spit, and Stop At Two are just a warm-up. We'd go on, but that would violate the current Stop Prattling campaign. -Fri Apr 16 13:08pm
wat crap listing is this?? y is our country always self-loathing greatest this and that..number one this and that..and i see point num 3 i dunno wether to laff or cry..
No. 3 is the fix.
Love F1 night race.
Owing to our geographic location, Singapore is sheltered from most of the natural disasters that afflict neighboring countries and the rest of the world. Still, people get a kick each time a strong wind blows down from the north or our houses rumble from the aftershocks of Indonesian earthquakes.
Small children toting oversized backpacks crammed with books are common to our neighborhood streets. That would be due to our educational system, with streaming programs that start as early as primary four. This goes all the way up past secondary school, until you are able to choose your preferred subjects.
sounds pretty lame to me most of the reasons.
Best Airport for XX years (used to, I don't think this year got)
Best airport to sleep in
LKY: Longest PM held in the world
LKY: Top 100 person in the world, times magazine
PSA: Highest traffic in the world
Singapore ranked second in economic freedom. HK first, US third
Ranked the most competitive country in Asia, third in the world
First country to host the "dead body museum"
First country to host youth olympics
World's easiest place to start a business
Best city state in the world (role model)
Third least corruption in the world
First asian to attend grammys :Ho yao sun
Primary foundation country to set up :ASEAN
One of the world most expensive country to buy a car
bad:
Scored badly in economic freedom
starting to lose business lustre
Note: I didn't really search the internet to update my own knowledge, so data may be outdate for this yea's ranking.
add:
The cosiest parliament that even minister dozed off during debate.
add: year 1999, 2003, 2007 topped in TIMSS, both maths and science
@ Clivebenss: any link?? Please~ I wanna see the picture
Edit: Too anxious to see, so found the picture myself
Originally posted by Clivebenss:add:
The cosiest parliament that even minister dozed off during debate.
Joker lah you.
Originally posted by charlize:Joker lah you.
not really.
The Milo Dinosaur has made its way across the Malaysia border and has spawned new offspring in Singapore. The ultra-chocolatey drink, which is basically a cup of Milo topped with an extra spoonful of undissolved Milo powder, has the Milo Godzilla (added ice cream and whipped cream) trailing after, together with siblings "Horlicks Dinosaur" (a variant with the malt drink power) and "Neslo" (combined with Nescafe powdered coffee).
This one for Mr Milo.