IN the local feng shui fraternity, Shion Lim is quite the odd one out. While many practitioners of the age-old tradition use instruments and techniques that have survived the test of time, Lim innovates with a little bit of tech.

With his software engineering background, Lim has created a feng shui app called iLiuFa S8, based on the traditional Chinese compass called Luo Pan, which is used by many feng shui masters to do analyses.

The feng shui technique that I use is called Liu Fa Feng Shui, which has been practised for hundreds of years. But I have given it a new life, in line with advancements in technology.

With the iLiuFa S8 app and feng shui calculations, Lim has enabled practitioners to work from a remote location, which is quite revolutionary in this particular field.

With the aid of Google Maps and compass, they can do feng shui scanning from anywhere, anytime, says Lim, adding that the app also allows people who are interested to do their own feng shui study.

Lim has designed the app specifically to identify whether a house is being affected by pernicious external energy in the surrounding environment that may bring diseases such as leukaemia, breast cancer or stroke.

The iLiuFa S8 app is a transparent Luo Pan that is placed on the Google Map satellite images to help identify whether ones house is being affected by harmful elements.

It can also be used to determine if the location of ones bed is the cause of certain illnesses, he claims.

With the iLiuFa S8, one can also determine the best placement of furniture for better feng shui, says Lim.

How it started Lim became a feng shui practitioner soon after his father died of lung cancer in 2009.

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App-plied feng shui

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February 4, 2013 at 7:55 pm by Mr HomeBuilder
Category: Feng Shui