Search Results: "ueno"

12 June 2008

Aurelien Jarno: Flight booked (aka crazy prices)

As I am one of those who have read “able” instead of “unable”, I had to find a really cheap flight. This may sound crazy, but an Iberia flight to Buenos Aires from Berlin costs far less than from Lyon (where I live) or even from Madrid: 781.12 EUR from Berlin instead over 1,200.00 EUR from Madrid and over 1,300.00 EUR from Lyon (in both cases with a change in Madrid Barajas). I wonder if Iberia pays you 420,00 EUR if you flight from Berlin to Madrid… Now I have to find a cheap way to go to Berlin from Lyon (probably an EasyJet flight). I plan to spend a few days of holiday in Berlin before flying to Argentina.

7 June 2008

Gregor Herrmann: booked

I'm going to DebConf8, edition 2008 of the annual Debian 
          developers meeting

finally I managed to book my flight to DebConf8.
2008-08-03 IB3537
7:45 / Munich, Franz Josef Strauss, Terminal 1
10:25 / Madrid, Barajas, Terminal 4


2008-08-03 IB6845 12:25 / Madrid, Barajas, Terminal 4S 19:40 / Buenos Aires, Pistarini, Terminal A

2008-08-25 IB6844 21:45 / Buenos Aires, Pistarini, Terminal A 14:30 day +1 / Madrid, Barajas, Terminal 4S

2008-08-26 IB3564 16:30 / Madrid, Barajas, Terminal 4 18:55 / Munich, Franz Josef Strauss, Terminal 1
& I'm still surprised how frequently the prices for the same flights change ...

29 May 2008

Jacobo Tarrío Barreiro: I m going to Debconf

I'm going to DebConf8, edition 2008 of the annual Debian developers meeting I’m so going to Debconf 8… Here are my travel details to and from Buenos Aires, in case someone wants to fly with me: All for 783 euros, bought 1 week ago. I’m arriving 1 day early and 4 days late, but I’ll take the chance to help the organization after my arrival and visit Buenos Aires after Debconf :) And I’d also like to apologize in advance to anyone I ask to fetch me something, because, being Spanish, it is possible I’ll say something obscene instead ;)

28 May 2008

Michal Čihař: Time for change, time for DebConf?

Okay I did thing I considered already for several months - I decided to quit my current job at SYSGO, make one month holidays in summer and find some new job meanwhile. So I'm looking forward to free August, which I will probably spend travelling somewhere :-). This brought up again question whether to go or not to go to this year DebConf. The only problem with this is distance - flight to Buenos Aires will be something around 2000 USD and it means lot of money for me. I applied for sponsorship for half of the price (well I'm not sure if I can really pay the other half, but I would feel really bad for asking that much money) and let's see how it turns out. On the other side, I'd love to visit Argentina, but that would probably require much more time and money. Let's see how it all turns out, there is still time to decision... PS: If you have some interesting job offer, just contact me at michal@cihar.com.

14 April 2008

Evan Prodromou: 25 Germinal CCXVI

I got my FON router delivered to my house about 2-3 months ago, but I didn't realize what it was until I was cleaning up my office to leave for Buenos Aires. Glad to have a project, I set it up on my home network while I was waiting for the taxi to the airport. I've only really started playing with it since we got back. FON is an international effort, originally based in Spain, to share extra network capacity with roaming wireless users. You set up a router in your home (or wherever), and any other FON user can connect to the Internet through your network. Conversely, you can connect on any other FON network. There is a lot of grass-rootsiness to FON, but it's a commercial project, which turns some people off. I originally heard of FON at Wikimania 2007, where FON provided wireless routers for each attendee's room. It was a nice service, although the doubled-up ESSIDs were kind of confusing at the time. They make a lot more sense for home use. I was impressed by how many FON spots there are on the Montreal/Plateau (see http://maps.fon.com/ for details); about one ever 2-6 blocks in any direction. I think there's an opportunity here to see a higher concentration, though. I'd love to see co peration between FON and, say, le Sans Fil, possibly involving the Ville de Montr al. Apparently there are already FON cities in different parts of Europe, so it's not impossible. I think FON is an interested development for WiFi -- a hybrid between community-based initiatives and a commercial venture. I'm not sure if it will be successful, but I think it's a step in the right direction. tags:

11 April 2008

Evan Prodromou: 22 Germinal CCXVI

It's been a long time since I've written on my blog; longer than I'd like. I really want to get back in the swing of it, if only to keep this entire site from bitrotting interminably. My Alexa ranking has dropped to like >1M, which in my Web-addled state means that my personal worth has dropped, too. I know, I know. tags:

Conference of the Americas: Cancelled I was sorry to see that the Wikimedia Conference of the Americas, scheduled for mid-May, has been canceled. There was some controversy when this conference was announced last fall; it partly originated from a bid by the Atlanta Wikimedia community to host Wikimania. I'm kind of sad to see that it's not going to happen. I like Atlanta a lot, and I think there is a really good case to be made for regional (or at least continental) Wikimedia conferences. I hope this isn't a nail in the coffin for such a regional event in North America. On the flip side, it'd be really nice to see a more detailed explanation of what happened; of what future plans for the COTA are; and just generally a little more communication. tags:

Elsewhere in wikidom That all said, things are looking really cool for Wikimania over the next 12 months. I'm really glad to see that my South American home-away-from-home, Buenos Aires, won the chance to host the 2009 Wikimania event. With 2008's event in Alexandria, Egypt, I think we've got some seriously interesting ground to cover Wikimedia-wise. Also of importance: if you haven't received an invite yet, get yourself over to RecentChangesCamp 2008. The wiki unconference will be happening for the first time in the Bay Area (California). We'll be meeting over May 9-11 in the offices of SocialText in Palo Alto. I can't say enough good things about RecentChangesCamp. It has been instrumental in my understanding of wikis and my connection with the worldwide wiki community. If you are at all interested in wikis or related concepts, you should think hard about coming to this conference. tags:

Brain bits
  • I think microrevie.ws is pretty cool. I got the 100th review today! Yay for me.
  • Speaking of twitter stuff, I dig twittermap, but I don't always remember to update. IWBNI there was a portal to/from Fire Eagle.
tags:

27 February 2008

Neil Williams: Debconf8 flights

Noting comments by bubulle and Debian-uk preparations, I've started looking at flights for Debconf8 with an eye to actually making a booking.
There appears that there will be a variety of Debian-ites hanging around Madrid airport and catching an apparently very limited number of flights to Buenos Aires as I seem to only be able to find 2 flights a day between Madrid and Buenos Aires.
Bubulle notes a connection from Paris to Madrid, I (and most of the UK team) would need a connection from London to Madrid. For some bizarre reason, leaving from Gatwick is more expensive than leaving from Heathrow. That's a PITA for me because my return flight home leaves from Gatwick.
More annoying is that the evening flight is much more expensive than the (very) early morning flight. So much so that it comes out at almost double the cost of even a relatively expensive hotel for the night.
My current ruminations revolve around:
flight  780.62   	- Expedia Special Fare
07:25 Depart London (LHR)
Arrive Buenos Aires (EZE) 19:25 Fri 1-Aug

13:25 Depart Buenos Aires (EZE)
Arrive London (LHR) 10:05 tip+1 day Sun 17-Aug

The arrival back in London is good for me because it provides plenty of time to get between Heathrow and Gatwick, even on a Sunday. :-)
I guess London is a little further from Madrid than Paris - my trip comes out at over 1,000 compared to 900 from Paris. Can't really justify a return Eurostar for that difference.
(Yes, I'm travelling out for DebCamp too.)

Christian Perrier: More about flights to Debconf

Some more information about my current research for flights to Debconf. First of all, the conditions: All this is non negotiable The best quote is still EUR902, which I obtained for an Air Europa flight (Paris-Madrid-Buenos Aires) on www.expedia.fr. The same flight is quoted higher is many other booking sites...including www.aireuropa.com. Moray Alan pointed me to www.checkfelix.at which is indeed one of the most convenient search engines around...but it misses my EUR902 quote... Don't ask why the very same flight booked from Madrid, thus direct is much more expensive: that's the joy of air transportation where nothing is logical (except in terms of getting the most out of your pocket, of course). Probably more random results to come in my blog in the next days/weeks. I hope that all this is already useful for some of you.

26 February 2008

Christian Perrier: Crazyness of flight prices

Here comes this time of the year where I try booking a flight to go to Debconf. That roughly means finding the cheapest way to go from CDG to EZE (Buenos Aires airport code). And, as usual, that means finding the crazyness of flight prices: the cheapest I found as of now is EUR902 with Air Europa through Madrid. The funniest is that the very same flight, *from Madrid*, costs EUR1407. Air France, which has a daily direct flight from Paris to Buenos Aires, is very expensive for me (EUR1150) and I bet that it could be as low as EUR900 for people coming.....from outside France, with a connection. That seems to be the interesting effect of airline companies trying to attract passengers to their long distance hubs. In short, I would bet that at least for all European people around, the cheapest route to Buenos Aires will be a route with a connection somewhere lese in Europe. So, even if one lives close to one of the biggest hubs in Europe, you nearly have no chance to use the direct flights it has to many places around...unless you're ready to pay for it.

7 February 2008

Martin F. Krafft: Leaving LCA

I am 10 000 metres above sea level, on my way from Melbourne to Wellington. I am looking back at a very enjoyable week of conferencing, with LCA 2008 ending yesterday, followed by today s Open Day. The purpose of this final day is to invite the general public to learn about open-source. Individual projects present their work at booths and field questions by bypassers. Jacinta Richardson and the other organisers and helpers of the Open Day have done an amazing job. The place was buzzing and the selection of projects broad and interesting, even to me. Two talks and a series of lightning talks, as well as catered food for everyone rounded it off. I will try to have this event in mind as we organise a similar event in Buenos Aires after the forthcoming DebConf8 in Argentina. I had a splendid time at the conference and probably can t thank Donna Benjamin and her army of mignons enough for organising it. Compared to the other open-source conferences I previously attended, this one was the most professional. Good job, everyone!!! Here are the highlights: Apart from the busy programme, I particularly enjoyed the hallway track , which is usually the reason why I attend these events. I really ought to practice remembering names and faces a bit better. I am not paying enough tribute to this week with this report, but I shall conclude it regardless. Unless something very unexpected comes up, I will attend next year s LCA in Tasmania. NP: Porcupine Tree: Futile

1 February 2008

Evan Prodromou: 12 Pluvi se CCXVI

I'm really pleased to announce here that one of the projects Maj and I have been working on for a long time has finally come to fruition. Today Wikitravel Press launched its first two Open Content printed guidebooks -- Wikitravel Chicago and Wikitravel Singapore. When we started Wikitravel back in 2003 (!), our sincere hope was that at some point in the future, people would be able to carry Wikitravel guidebooks with them on a trip. I think that mobile technology is excellent, and it's amazing how much you can read on a cell phone or PDA these days. But there's still something so convenient about a printed guidebook: it never runs out of batteries; you don't need an uplink to read it; you don't have to worry about it getting stolen because you flashed it out in the wrong caf or restaurant. To be honest, I thought that one of the "traditional" guidebook publishers would step in and use Wikitravel content in their guides. But that didn't happen, and along with our partner Jani Patokallio, Maj and I decided to start a publishing company ourselves. Thus Wikitravel Press, and our first two books. We have a number of other books in the pipeline, and our hope is to have a few dozen available by the end of the year, and a few hundred by the end of the following year. I'm working on the Wikitravel guide to Montreal, and Maj and I are collaborating on Buenos Aires. We're taking a 6-week trip to Argentina in February/March, so this should be a great time for research. I heartily encourage any writers or editors who are interested in working on travel books to contact Wikitravel Press about your ideas of bringing Wikitravel content to print. I think this is a great opportunity for people who want to encourage Open Content, or who want to get into the travel writing field, or who just love the idea of wikis-to-books. tags:

13 January 2008

Biella Coleman: On Losing a Mother, on Losing Memories

For the last four years, I have left my life and home to return to my mother’s far more precarious and fragile life in Puerto Rico. I do so to visit. But I also do so to give her caretaker, Milagro, a much needed break. I returned on December 18th and found my mother nearly in the same state as she was in October. Far worse than a year ago, but she still struck me as my mother, if nothing else because she knew I was her daughter. Over the course of a week, all of that changed. After a series of howling fits, by the end of my first week there, she no longer knew she was my mother. While I knew this would eventually happen, I was still caught off guard. You see, prior to my arrival, and since my last visit in late October, she asked me on the phone, and my sister and Milagro in PR, *nearly everyday,* when I was coming back. So even though she asked when her daughter, who she knew lived and worked in the city of New York, was coming back over and over again for 8 weeks, this seemingly hard-wired thought quickly vaporized thanks to what is a disease of the brain, but what strikes experientially as a cruel disease of the soul and personality. So while 2007 was overall a pretty good year, it is also the year when in certain respects my mother died, at least for me in so far she has morphed into someone remarkably different from the person I once knew. Now she only remembers small scraps of her life. She knows she is from Russia, she knows that she lives in the Casa de Vera (which she thinks is her bed), she knows she loves the dog, she knows that she had parents (and she would like to return to them but does not know where they are), she knows she has a good friend who is a painter (I think she had a massive crush on him if she still remembers him and not me ;-) but otherwise, everything is so twisted, so jumbled or so gone, it is beyond stunning. She certainly knew I was around and helping for she got upset when she knew I was leaving, often bursting in tears, asking me to take her to New York. But she just knew me as Gabriella from Nueva York who brought her novio bueno to PR and not as anyone else. It is certainly not easy to see this, to experience it day in and out but it is what it is and there is no running from it. Logistically it is also beyond hard to take care of my mom. To get her to eat, to calm down after one of her morning fits (she always, always, always had a raging fit in the morning, the afternoon and evenings being far more calm periods), to convince her to wear her dentures (which is the only remedy to stop her from spitting all over the place), to dress her, to deal with her in the middle of the night, often twice, are all extraordinarily challenging. Very quickly, your waking hours fill up with seemingly endless tasks and this I guess is, in some respects, a hidden blessing; there is just a lot less time to ruminate over how all of this, frankly, sucks. It is only later, late at night, early in the morning, or on the plane ride home where the darkness of her life would set deeply into my own. It may be obvious why this state and experience is tough but there are two parts that I find particularly rough. If my mother’s state is one of near total chaos and entropy, there is one thing that is utterly clear. She knows she is suffering and she wants out. On particularly bad days, she would mutter or sometimes yell loudly that she wants to die and would ask for the medicine that would accomplish this. She would even sometimes call me mala for not giving her this medicine. It is certainly not the case that everyone with Alzheimers goes through what my mother does. Apparently, some experience the illness quietly and peacefully. This is so not the case for my mother, who lived a particularly hard yet vibrant life. Donning a difficult personality, she lived lived as fully as she could and it is clear that as life leaves her, she would rather not be around to experience what is a cruel exorcism of self. Thankfully, she is not constantly or not even mostly in a suicidal state. I think she at times forgets how lousy she feels and rather enjoys the rather limited life she has. And at this point, I just hope that she continues to have calm or even happy moments. The second surprise concerns my own memories. My mother has had this rare form of Alzheimers, Posterior Cortical Atrophy, for at least 6, possible 7 years now, though we only received the official diagnosis 2003, which is the year when when I first started to write the occasional post about my experiences with her. In 2003 and 2004, she was pretty functionally in tact and it has only been the last 2.5 years when the persistent decline has set in, whittling her capacities and memories to what seems to be a bare minimum. But because her presence and reality is nothing short of totally enveloping and drowning, I am starting to lose my own memory of my mother prior to her illness. If Alzheimers robs people of their memories, I have come to realize, that if you are not careful, it is a thief that can also rob your own memories. I think it is for this reason that I have become so attached to my mother’s stuff her furniture, her paintings some of which I have taken back with me. They are material vehicles that transport me back to the past when my mother was in a different state and place. Now it is clear that if the challenge is to deal with the emotional toll this illness causes, it as much summoning the will and performing the labor to retain and recall my older memories of her.

9 January 2008

Joey Hess: Mar del Plata

Porte os greeted the new year by fleeing the city as fast as gridlocked roads could take them. January is the month Buenos Aires takes its summer vacation, and the destination of choice is Mar del Plata, a seaside resort I have never visited. Given my love for crowds, heat and strangers' children it sounds it would be my own personal Mordor. "You can't even see the sand for all the people! It's an absolute madhouse!" Argentine friends tell me in horror, as they pack up their cars to head down there.
-- from Idle Words Makes me glad that I'll be there in the August chill for DebConf 8. I hope.

30 November 2007

Evan Prodromou: 8 Frimaire CCXVI

A few days ago I installed the Flock browser, version 1.0, on my notebook computer. I've been using it as my default browser for that time, and I have to say that I find it very slick and useful. I'd used the early beta versions of Flock and I thought it was a good idea, but I wasn't able to use most of the features. The blog posting tool, for example, doesn't work with my hacked-together WikiBlog system. Also, a lot of my must-have Firefox extensions, like SearchStatus, wouldn't install on Flock. But version 1.0 now installs all my Firefox extensions, and it also has lots of neat features that I find really useful. The feed reader, for example, is very slick, complete, and useful. The integration with social software sites like Facebook and Twitter is amazing, and the People View -- which tracks your friends on different systems -- is huge. The "My World" generated home page has replaced Netvibes for me. All good things. I'm a little disappointed with the narrow range of sites that are integrated into the browser, though. It'd be great to see more and better documentation on writing integration plugins on the Flock Developer site. I'd love to work on ways to make it easier to post to MediaWiki sites, upload files, get notifications, etc. I think getting site owners to make their own Flock plug-ins, or making it easy for users or third parties to do the plug-ins themselves, is going to be key to the success of these features. One other thing I found annoying was the indexer. This is a background task that indexes your browsing history so you can search for stuff you've recently seen ("Where did I read about that new version of JavaScript...?") Although this seems really useful, I found that the indexer was pegging the CPU on my Linux box -- possibly a threading problem? -- and I found the program increasingly unresponsive. Eventually I found the toggle in about:config to turn off the indexer ("flock.service.indexer.enabled"), and once I switched it off my browsing experience has been much less frustrating. I'd like to see Flock succeed -- it's a nice piece of work, and I think it's going down the right path. Getting more contributions from the world Web community will go a long way towards making it more useful for users. tags:

Yo Gamma Gamma Last night I dropped by the SAT for a great games event here in Montreal. Gamma 256 was a fun party, associated with the MIGS game summit. The event showcases submitted games based on a theme -- this year's theme was 256x256 pixel games (or smaller) -- thus the name. There were a ton of Montreal tech people there. The games were fun to play, especially the insanely violent Bloody Zombies, where your chainsaw-wielding alter ego slaughters the undead and then swims in their blood to reach the next level. Great fun, and a good example of Gamma's concentration on art in games. The music was good too -- lots of bleeps and boops and gamety fun. Congratulations to Heather Kelley and Damien DiFede and the rest of the Kokoromi Collective on their great job with this event. I'm already looking forward to next year. tags:

One-liners Some more things going on with me: tags:

26 November 2007

Evan Prodromou: 4 Frimaire CCXVI

Long weekend of travel and family, and now we're back on our way to Montreal. I spent most of Thanksgiving weekend with my father's family in New Jersey, where he and my mom both grew up and where 4 of his brothers and sisters still live (and their kids, and so on). We left Montreal on Tuesday afternoon, had dinner in Albany, and got down to Newburg (New York) in the early evening. The next morning we spent several hours at the nearby Woodbury Common Premium Outlets, which was about as crass and consumeristic as it sounds. But the loonie is still strong, and it's nice to buy some clothes. I especially like buying things a few sizes smaller than what I had to get a few months ago. Wednesday night we got into Hillsborough, NJ, where my Aunt Barbara lives, and visited with her and her family. Barb has four great kids -- Phillip (16?), Maddy and Vicky (14?), and Nick (13?), who are all my cousins despite being at least 20 years younger than me. When Amita June was too tired to move we hit the hay for the night, and in the morning we all hung around playing Wii sports (even AJ!), and had a hearty dinner in the early afternoon. Then we went to my Uncle Paul's for dessert, coffee, and a nice 2003 Ramos Pinto Vintage Port that we brought along. Friday and Saturday we spent at my Aunt Helen and Uncle Marty's house in Highland Park (New Jersey). They have a great 100-year-old house right by the Raritan River, and it was really nice seeing them. We had dinner with Paul and his wife Eileen on Friday night, and we saw the lighting of the Christmas tree in Princeton. Today we started the two-day trip home. It's not really that long a drive -- about 6-10 hours, depending on the route and kind of weather -- but we like to split it up into two days, since we have a 2-year-old aboard. We stopped in New York (city)/Queens to see our friend Jen for brunch at a nice place called Quaint, where I got a good house-cured salmon and Maj had an excellent bowl of granola. Amita got some nice challah french toast, which she wolfed down with the help of her kind parents. Tonight we stopped in the Pioneer Valley in Massachusetts to sleep over. I like this part of MA, and the New York Times had a recent article about its bookish culture, called In the Valley of the Literate. We had a nice quick dinner at Bueno Y Sano in Northampton, and we'll stick around tomorrow for more shopping (books! Whole Foods!) and a little site-seeing before we head home. It'll be good to be back in MTL, though. I miss my bed, and we only have a few weeks there before we're off again to California for Christmas time. tags:

Montreal SantaCon Speaking of Christmas, one of the things we'll be shopping for tomorrow is santa costumes. Friday, November 30th is SantaCon Montreal 2007. SantaCon is a world-wide anarchic cluster-together of goofballs and lunatics who go rampaging around their town from bar to mall to bar in full Santa costume (or Mrs. Santa, or elves, or reindeer, or something similar). Everyone's invited, nobody's in charge, and a fun time is had by all. SantaCon started in the 90s in San Francisco (like everything), but I never managed to go. I finally went to SantaCon in Austin in 2001, and had an amazingly good time. My pals at The Ministry of Truth have photo evidence here and here and here. There's nothing like overflowing a bar with 100 of your new best friends, all dressed like Santa, dancing and goofing off and having a good time. It brightens up everyone's day. Anyways, we'll be picking up Maj the beginnings of an outfit here on the US side of the border, so she'll be able to accessorize with her own bits and pieces. I'll probably pick up a couple of spares for friends in Montreal, too. I'm really looking forward to the event -- it should be a good time. There's a Facebook event for people who go for that kind of thing. tags:

le Sans Fil to go municipal I was excited to read (via Steve Faguy) that our beloved local community wireless group, le Sans Fil will be providing wireless to many parks and open spaces around Montreal. This is great news for Montrealers -- the city had previous vowed up the street and back that it would never have a municipal wireless program of any sort. So good deal. It sounds like it's going to be a tough job -- I don't think wiring up outdoor spaces for wireless is anywhere near as easy as doing caf s or homes. And I think it's going to be tough to show value -- after all, people are only outdoors in parks in great numbers during the few warm months of the year here. And when people are out in parks, they're not usually checking their email -- they tend to do more outdoorsy things. But my guess is that park culture will adapt to the new resource pretty well. Congrats to SF -- I think they're a great organization that's up to this new challenge. tags:

15 October 2007

DebConf team: DebConf8 dates decided! (Posted by Mart n Ferrari)

After a very short meeting, the DebConf team agreed on having the next DebConf the first two weeks of August. That will be August, 2nd to August, 17th. Also, the Debian Day will be held after DebConf in Buenos Aires, just before the eigth edition of the Regional Free Software Conference, a very big event with people coming from different countries in South America. This way, we expect to reach much more people.

3 May 2007

Martín Ferrari: Feisty Fawn

Last Saturday, I went with many friends to the local installment of FLISOL, a big install fest done across Latin America on the same day. It was a nice event, seeing a lot of people from the local community helping newbies to install their first GNU/Linux. Most of the installations were -not surprisingly- Ubuntus. I was very surprised of Feisty: the installer is really simple and powerful for desktop users, and once installed, there are a lot of things that I'd really like to see in Debian. But, everything cames with a price. Don't ever try to install it without enough RAM (the site says 256MiB). The graphical installer won't even boot (OOM killer kills the machine for you). If you download the alternate CD, which uses d-i, it will seem to work, but you'll notice a system which is a trashing hell: for starters, the restricted modules are kept in a tmpfs, eating over 30MiB of RAM! I tried unsuccessfully to trim it a little to make it work on a old laptop of a friend (only 64MiB of RAM), removing the tmpfs, killing daemons and stuff... But not even xfce will run on it: when I opened a terminal the whole X session will crash instantly. So now, I'm starting a etch install on it. It will involve some work to make a end-user-friendly desktop, but I'm confident there is a way of making it work. Ubuntu just works in most cases, but when it doesn't, it's much more difficult to tweak. YMMV.

17 January 2007

Clint Adams: Vuenol macau

A reader informs me that she witnessed some guy hanging brain in a Virgin Megastore. The implications are myriad.

17 December 2006

Andrew Pollock: [life] On departing the home of the Spanish Inquisition

I'm currently in (the really lovely) Philadelphia airport again, waiting for my connecting flight to San Francisco. I'm rapidly arriving at the conclusion that it is easier to enter the US once you've landed on US soil, than it is to depart from the country bound for the US. I had the most harrowing experience of my life this morning, trying to check in for my return flight. Due to the way various people's itineraries worked out, I ended up having to share a taxi from Badajoz to Madrid Airport at 12:30am. My flight didn't depart until something like 12:20pm, but the bus with the bulk of the people on it wasn't going to get me to the airport with less than 2 hours before departure, and I didn't want to risk missing my flight, especially given I'm feeling under the weather. So I got to the airport at about 4am, having had little sleep in the taxi. Terminal 1 has a real dearth of seating for people waiting to check in. I spent 4 hours trying to make myself as comfortable as possible on the hard floor, and didn't get a lot of sleep then either. For the record, check-ins (at least for US Airways) seem to open around 4 hours before the scheduled departure time. So I went to check in, and the way they were working it was there was a bunch of podiums out the front of what I would consider a conventional check-in counter. The people at these podiums then proceeded to give you your first Spanish Inquisition. I'd previously remarked to myself at how trivial it was to get into Spain... I was asked the purpose of my trip to Spain. I told the woman it was for a business meeting. She then asked where I'd spent my time I Spain. I told her Badajoz. She asked if I had a hotel receipt to show for it. I told her the accommodation was paid for my someone else. She then asked if I had any business cards to show for the business meeting. Sheesh, I thought. Luckily I still had all the copies of people's keys leftover from the keysigning we did, and some of them were in a business card format, so I pulled out a fistful of them and gave them to her. Oh, and she wanted to see a copy of my itinerary, and seemed satisfied that the flights were a reversal of what got me there in the first place. She wandered off with my passport, itinerary and the fistful of "business cards" and came back, seemingly satisfied that everything was in order. She stuck little blue stickers on my luggage and passport (the size of an Australian convenience-store price tag) and I was allowed to wait for the next check-in person. The rest of the checking-in process was fairly normal. I can appreciate the airline wanting to avoid having to deal with passengers being refused entry to the US, but I had a valid US visa in my passport, so that should make all of that a moot point. I don't know why I had to prove my trip's legitimacy to the airline. So I thought that was the end of it. Hardly. Terminal 1 of Madrid Airport seems to have heaps of gates, with a letter/number combination. Mine was in the B series, and I went through the security screening, and it became apparent that I had to go through another guard post looking thing to get from the A series to the B series. The signage looked like it said "Police". Anyway, the guy there had so-so English, and he initially was a little unhappy that I had an Australian passport and was flying to the US and not Australia. I pointed out the US visa, and he seemed less concerned. Then he asked me to say something in Spanish. I don't know if he was trying to be conversational, or I had to be able to speak some Spanish to get past or what the story was, but by this stage I was pretty tired, and this caught me totally off guard. I think I stammered out a Buenos d as or something. He then wanted to know how many hours it took to fly from Australia to Spain. I told him I had no idea, because I'd only flown from the US to Spain. He then begrudgingly gave me an exit stamp in my passport, and I was allowed on my way. I think the whole thing was made the more harrowing by the fact I was deadly tired, the Police guy didn't speak terribly fantastic English, and I wasn't expecting a second Spanish Inquisition (let alone the first). Oh, and closer to boarding time, they chucked everyone out of the lounge area closest to the gate, and rechecked everyone's passports and boarding passes. That was fair enough, and not unlike what happens in Sydney going to the US, but they don't even let you into the lounge area in the first place. That departure process was more what I would have expected an entry process to be like, and has put me off returning to Spain a little bit. The entry process was a joke. The guy barely looked at my passport long enough to give me the entry stamp. Fortunately I slept for the bulk of the flight from Madrid to Philly, and now I'm feeling a bit more human.

19 October 2006

Kai Hendry: Where was I?


School children learning about Free software
I feel a little stupid for my last post about my unstable machine. It was the hardware to blame and my hard drive finally crashed during a Linux conference in Mendoza, Argentina. Typical. At the conference there wasn´t much new for me and I regret that I didn´t get organised enough to give a talk about the Web and WHATWG stuff. Though I did manage to meet good people and talk about some topics that are of interest to me. As usual the fabulous friendly CafeLUG geeks from Buenos Aires were there, led by the wonderful DD Marcela. I also met an inspiring guy from Cordoba who founded a successful software company that works with free software. His brother gave a great talk about it at the conference. I really love to see Free software power people to start a business. Oh and about my thinkpad X40 hard drive replacement. With the help of another new friend Fredrico from Mendoza, we called up IBM in Buenos Aires and arranged a new hard drive and a battery within 5 days! I didn´t know if my machine was under warranty still, phew. Unfortunately IBM called the next day saying they didn´t have any stock and the wait from the US is about 2 weeks. Since I have no idea where I will be in two weeks (ok, probably Sao Paulo, Brazil) I cancelled that request and now I have found a free Windoze (hopefully not trojaned) terminal just over the Andes, in Santiago Chile. Tough life!

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