Archive for the 'Travel' Category

Providence, RI

After Taipei, I spent a couple of days in Providence to catch up on what was happening in the home office. The weather was beautiful, so I got to walk around and take some photos. What is good about Providence is that its quite photogenic and I am there about once a month, so I can see things throughout the seasons and in different weather. Spring is nice.

I also got to drive a new Mustang for a couple of days. It turned out to be a love/hate relationship, as usual. Mustangs have huge blind spots, plasticy interiors and the rentals have tiny engines with no power. It’s all flash. My old Volvo station wagon is faster than this thing. However, this one looked so nice that I couldn’t help liking it.

In downtown, I found an interesting tunnel underneath a freeway which had a skylight up in the middle of the road.

Taipei, more of a good thing!

I am finally catching up from my second trip to Taipei in April. This trip involved a lot more jet lag than the first for some reason, so I didn’t get to go to night markets as much as before.

I did get to spend a lot of time walking around and exploring the city. There is a section of town which is nothing but camera shops. However, the prices are slightly higher in the US and the Nikon international warranty isn’t easy to deal with in the US.

I also got to spend an afternoon at NOVA, a huge computer mall full of everything you could ever want related to computers. What was interesting is the amount of customization present in computers and cell phones. There are many, many cell phone models, in a rainbow of colors. There are also computers, phones and peripherals marketed specifically to women. Much more variety than in the US.

While at the Taipei central railway station, it was very special to see the new government’s courage in showing the UN banner. Many people in Taiwan are serious about independence from China, while others are in favor of a more balanced approach. This issue has split the country politically and is a defining belief in people’s lives. It’s much more serious than Republican versus Democrat. A couple of years ago it would not have been possible to show a sign like this in public.

I got to spend some memorable time at the top of Taipei 101 at night. The wind was quite strong and I didn’t have a tripod. However, I did manage to get a few good photos. What is hard to comprehend is that all of the small buildings in the photos are actually tall from the ground!

On the way home I got to spend some time in the China Air lounge, which is a great experience. There is some incredible interior design going on and a free noodle bar!

Taipei: Arrival

I arrived in Taipei a couple of days ago. Business class makes a real difference when flying for 19 hours!

Taipei is great, and I was able to spend the past two days walking around checking out the city. It is Spring here and is cool and rainy. The city is remarkably safe, friendly and walkable. If they do speak any English, people are willing to stop and talk for a bit. Everywhere you go, you are overshadowed by Taipei 101, the tallest building in the world.

The Lantern Festival is in full swing and after dark (on the rare evening that it is not raining), families come out to walk along sidewalks overhung with tiny colored lights and large lanterns. The center of the festival is the Chiang Kai-shek Palace.

The Year of the Rat is everywhere, from the side of the TP 101 skyscraper to the tiny charms being sold in the Jade Market.

I spent some time at the Jade Market, the Flower Market and the Government Handi-crafts store. Taipei 101 is close to where I am staying and its basement food court is packed, both with good food and people. Next to it is the New York New York department store, whose basement is also a food court.

The people here have high standards for food and there are endless tiny noodle and food shops tucked into side streets and alleys. The Taiwanese love Japanese food, so many of the restaurants are Japanese.

The best part of the weekend was walking along the side streets of downtown among the aging condominiums and apartment buildings. Potted plants and trees create a green jungle covering entrances and tiny courtyards. The mass of vegetation often grows into a tunnel leading to the doors of the building. The sounds of the city are muted, except for the occasional kamikaze taxi, driving the wrong way down a one-way alley. From the apartment kitchens overhead, you can hear the chop of cleavers and smell frying garlic and chili peppers.

In a city dominated by scooters, the sidewalks are endless parking lots. Rather than gas stations, there is a 7-11 on every corner.

The 20 minute walk to and from the data center for work is the highlight of the day, offering the chance to look into an endless variety of shops.

The night market is the most fun for me. There are an endless variety of small shops and stalls selling clothes, food, shoes, more food, cell phones, teapots, and still more food.

I walk around watching people cook and, if they understand any English, asking questions. I get an amazing amount of free food samples along the way!

Mountain View, CA

I just got back from 2 weeks in Mountain View, CA to move 18 cabinets of servers across town. It wasn’t fun. 7am until 11pm most days with no time off except for a few hours of sleep after an all-nighter.

We did get to eat a ton of good food and I have a lot of reviews to write up.

Brompton Cemetery, London

While walking around Earl’s Court and Kensington one morning, we found a large old graveyard, Brompton Cemetery. All plans were laid aside and a frenzy of picture-taking ensued. This was the best part of the whole trip and I was able to finally take photos that I felt really meant something.

Windsor Castle

Here are some photos from Windsor Castle.

London, England

Here are some photos from London. Being that we had just gotten out of Saudi Arabia, it was great to be in London and back in civilization! The first Guinness was pretty amazing.

Some recommendations for staying in London:

Stay in Earl’s Court. It’s a comfortable, easy to walk community on the train line between Heathrow and downtown. There is a Comfort Inn about 2 minutes from the train station that we were able to get a double room for $100/night which was small as usual, had a great bathroom, hot water and was very comfortable given the price. A few blocks down the street is the Troubaudor, which is great to end up at night for some dinner and music. Downstairs there are 3 or 4 local bands most nights which are worth hearing, typically pretty good quality and not too crowded! This is where people like Jimi Hendrix and Bob Dylan played early in their careers, so it’s worth seeing.

Earl’s Court is fun to walk around, there is lots to see and it isn’t too overrun with tourists. Also, having lived in downtown Washington, DC where the population doubles in the summer from the tourists, London was great to be in during the fall! There were no crowds or lines to get into places and we could take our time.

Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

I flew over the Saudi Arabian desert last night on an Airbus a330. It was the most disconcertingly deep blackness I have ever seen. Looking out the window, there is nothing at all. Then, a small rectangle of lights which must be an oil well, oasis or way station. Then nothing. At one point, the entire visible desert was black, until a single light appeared. For a couple of minutes, until the light was out of sight, nothing else at all could be seen.

Finally, out of the blackness appeared an immense, perfect checkerboard of roads, lit up end to end with purple, green, violet and blue neon. It was like flying over Las Vegas, but bigger.

Riyadh at night is endless neon. In the city, the streets are brilliantly lit with huge neon store signs in Arabic, while the houses and compounds are windowless, walled and dark on the outside.

The architecture is quite modern, with endless buildings under construction lining the roads.

The lack of mass media, entertainment or things to do outside has turned shopping into an art form. The shopping malls are major social centers which outshine anything in the US and are open until midnight.

With little in the way of distraction and a much larger amount of time spent inside the home, compound-style living has also resulted in an enhanced emphasis on interior decoration, demanding that the insides of cavernous buildings be beautiful and small, windowless rooms light and airy. Home furniture, lighting and interior decoration stores are everywhere.

What is the most depressing are the Western franchises. Aunt Annie’s Pretzels somehow made it over here, in addition to immense Best Buy stores.

Of course, 12 hour work days aren’t helping to experience the local culture, and any real photography inside the city is not worth the risk.

The strict segregation of men and women, a very old religion and lots of money combine into a complex mass of self-contradictions and exceptions, making any real description impossible. There are seperate, screened checkout lines, seperate seating areas and immense shopping malls, devoid of windows, for “families” only (women escorted by a male family member). In fact, aside from relatives, there is little opportunity or reason for a man to ever come into any kind of contact at all with a Saudi woman in Riyadh.

It appears that a majority of the population in Riyadh is imported labor, both skilled and unskilled. Because of this, community areas and corporate compounds have been formed for foreign workers to live, mingle and hang out on their own terms. This helps to alleviate the strict segregation restrictions for people who are living here for years.

On the plus side, I am staying in probably the best Holiday Inn ever built for around $100/ night.

London

Flying from Dulles to London tonight the sky was perfectly clear and I happened to look out the window right as we went over Manhattan.I got to watch Mr. Bean’s Vacation and depsite usually enjoying everything Bean, it seemed like just a rehash of old material. There was very little originality or depth to the comedy compared to Rowan Atkinson’s older work.

The movie did have some good parts, such as when Bean was dancing for phone money, and Bean did not spend so much time bumbling around trying to function as a human being. But overall it was disappointing.

Heathrow Airport is a mess, it feels like a subway station. The new terminals look like they will be nice when they are finished, but there is a long way to go.

This trip I have been reading Sinclair Lewis’, Main Street, which it turning out to be pretty good.

Preparing for Saudi

I just got back from another trip to Providence and am spending the week preparing for a trip to Saudi Arabia for a couple of weeks of work. After Saudi Arabia, I’m taking a break in London to go on a pub crawl, look at old clocks and watches and end my quest for a real umbrella at James Smith & Sons.