GUADEC 2006
Weeks go by way too quickly lately, and
GUADEC was suddenly here. So I
finally got permission from work to attend, after managing to complete our
milestone the required one week in advance.
So far, my first GUADEC has been fantastic. While I've tried to come here
with my most "just relax" mentality and it's working pretty well, I've also
tried to be around the conference for most of the day, as meeting people is,
I believe, the best way to enjoy this kind of conferences. I'm staying
with Josep and Jesús in one of the
bungalows at the GNOME Village, which is a very nice place, althought it's
a bit too far from the GUADEC site. There's a public bus service, but some
days it's quite unreliable; luckily Fabrice is staying with us at the
bungalow and he has a car which we can use.
An unplanned attendee was mako, who after
being around the great CDG airport for the Ubuntu Conference in Paris, had
a few spare days before returning to Boston and came down to Vilanova i la
Geltrú for the warmup weekend and half of the first core day. Of course, having
him around has introduced the usual randomness to those days.
Just after arriving in Vilanova, toniher
drove us to the lighthouse area, where there were some big Sant Joan parties
going in the middle of the beach. At 4AM, and after checking our flirting
techniques are not too effective, we wandered off back to Vilanova
Park, seeking some good sleep. In the meantime, Danilo Segan, from the
Serbian team, apparently had a hard time finding a way to open his bungalow,
and ended sleeping in ours as yet another guest.
Saturday morning was spent sleeping, and while we had breakfast, I put on
my Komando CT training t-shirt. When
mako saw it, he said "hey I have one of those!", which made me discover how
kiko traded my other
Komando t-shirt with mako during the Montréal conference. WTF! We headed back
to Vilanova to get lunch and my talk about the Catalan GNOME localisation
project. At 16:00 it's hard to get food in some places, and when we finally
managed, my talk was so close we had no time at all to prepare.
Jordi Mas, Toni Hermoso
and I spoke about our experience to a great audience of about 12 persons.
Having decided what would each talk about two minutes before starting, I
found myself with little to say at some points, but I guess the talk ended up
being interesting, and we got a few interested people in assisting us with
further translations.
After the conference we met with Bastien and several Debian UK people in one
of the bars in the beach area, where we, just after getting in, could see how
Argentina scored a fantastic goal against Mexico in extra time. A few beers
later, it was time to sleep, but we still had to go through the transportation
odyssey. I think we managed to get a taxi one and a half hours later.
Sunday has been the most intense day so far. Up at a reasonable time, mako,
danilo and I planned going to spend the day at Sitges, one of the most
famous towns in the Catalan coast which is just one train stop away. Mako was
thrilled about the idea of visiting the Gay Capital of Southern Europe, and we
set off for the train station.
Visiting Sitges was not meant to be too funny for me, but mostly
quite emotional. My initial plan was to go alone during the week, but I
figured that mako and others would really enjoy being in such a beautiful
town as this one. Sitges is where my Catalan grandmother was born, and where
she lived for much of her life. Some will remember that wrote about how
important she was for me when she died one year ago. I hadn't been in Sitges
for years already, and I feared my emotions when I went back to her house in
the middle of the town.
We walked from the train station down to the Santiago Rusinyol street, while
I tried to show them some of the details I always enjoy about Sitges, including
the No embruteu les parets
tiles which are all over the place. We arrived at my grandparent's place and
we entered the house. Having danilo and mako with me probably helped to not
get too many memories back, and also, seeing the house so dismantled, and
empty of life made it hard to feel "at home".
“Don't dirty the walls. Cleanness is a great signal of civilisation”
When we went down to the Platja de Sant Sebastià and I spoke to my cousin
Bego on the phone I was unable to stop the tears when my grandma appeared in
the conversation, though. That beach was her favourite, and I remember how she
would take us to spend the day there when we were little more than babies.
I took danilo and mako around the town's center and enchanting corners, and
after having lunch, we headed to the beach going through the “gay streets”.
At the beach, we had our share of sunbathing and swimming, and around 18:00
I told them we should probably head back to Vilanova, as I had to be ready to
play football at 19:00.
We were lucky and the train arrived as soon as we got to the station, and
also when Fabrice gave us a lift to the stadium with his car. The
GNOME World Cup
had already started, and someone had taken the last red shirt to substitute
me, so I quickly neglected my ex-team and joined the Blue Team. We found
ourselves in the final after a dramatic penalty kickout, to play against the
mighty Black Team led by Bastien Nocera, who had *destroyed* the White Team
with 16 goals or something equally insane.
It was a very even final, though, and after 40 minutes of non-stop running,
our team scored the decisive goal just three minutes before the end.
Champions!
The day would not end up there, as I had to meet my cousin Laia and her
boyfriend Marc in Barcelona, to have dinner with them. So off I went, with a
hurt calf and dressed like a tramp, to fetch yet another train. I had dinner
at a nice place near the Plaça de Catalunya, and after that we were all so
sleepy that we went straight to bed at my cousin's place, at 2AM or so. Then,
there was the fight against the mosquitos at 4AM, and an early wake up to go
back to Vilanova, in time for the grand opening of the Core GUADEC.
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Sevilla
I arrived in Sevilla this morning to attend
tecnimap 2006, and I will be staying
in the city until Friday evening. I'd love to hook up with the Sevillan
Free Software community after the show ends during the week, so if you're
in the area, please contact me by phone (there's plenty of Debian people
who know my number) or by email and
we can try to make up some plans.
I'm staying in the Sevilla Congresos hotel in the outskirts, so going out
to the city involves taxis, busses or other non-trivial means of
transportation, so have that in mind!
Getting here has been quite stressful, but that's no news anymore. At 00:00
last night, not only I had not packed at all, but all my clothes were scattered
around thre different flats in the city, and I had no car to go pick the stuff
up. Luckily, this morning my sister could give me a lift to pick things up and
then took me to the airport.
The flight revealed a very dry landscape as we headed south, and some
irrigated areas in the middle of pure desert. There are also some very
characteristic circular fields that show very cool patterns when looked from
the heights. It's pretty hot in here, but still bearable. I don't want to
imagine August around the place.
Anyway, if you're in Sevilla, I hope to be able to meet you any of the four
evenings or nights I'll be around. I need some natives to walk me around the
place, and in some cases, translate the very special
Andalusian spoken
here. :) Momona people, I also mean
you!
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The difference between Oaxtepec and Seville
So, I'm not going to Debconf.
I suspected this long ago, when the dates were changed to early May, but you
never know. During the last month, I've been finding daily pink notification
alerts on my irssi window, with different people asking me to start
swimming to Mexico, to book a last minute flight, to work overhours
so I can justify leaving office for a whole week. In short, to POP THE
TRUNK.
But unfortunately, it doesn't look like I'll make it, being Thursday, and
when I was planning a hypothetical departure on Saturday in the same flight
as other Spanish Debian people. So, I've spent some time reading the blog
entries that start flooding Planet Debian from people who are already
attending Debcamp. NO NO NO! I can't believe there are even 10m diving
platforms.
There's talk at the office about me maybe having to go to some conference
in Seville. jacobo and ana had an
opinion on that.
12:06 < ana> jordi: dude, mexico es mucho mas interesante que sevilla
12:07 < jacobo> en vez de decirte "quillo" te dicen "cuate"
I still have 1 and a half days to take some wild decision and get there by
surprise. That would be fair with azeem. :)
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London
I'm miraculously on my way back from London, after spending a week with
daf, mvo and two guests, abel
and thep, from Hong Kong and Thailand, working on improving some l10n aspects
of the upcoming Ubuntu release,
dapper.
The most visible result of the stuff that we've been doing is that if all
goes well, users of the Chinese, Japanese, Thai, Bengali, Lao or Korean
languages will get their required input methods, fonts and dictionaries
Just Working as soon as their drives spit their dapper install CDs. We've
learned quite a bit about the state of many of the Asian languages in the
Free Software world today. Daf and I can certainly tell when an app renders
Bengali or Thai correctly and when it doesn't, after closely comparing how
different browsers do the job on various websites and font test pages.
We've learned more than we probably like about
fontconfig, and thanks to mvo,
there is now a mechanism to get custom fonts.conf snippets depending on
the default language of the system set by language-selector, so users get the
right fonts installed and used by default. Thep's and Abel's help to get this
straight is invaluable.
On Friday, daf and I went to the ExCel Novotel where the
Launchpad team is having a sprint, in
order to lend a hand with the dapper translation import that is going on
right now, but for a series of reasons we ended up working on l10n sprint
stuff. At least I got to see the team again, and specially kiko, who greeted
me with a "Qué pasa, hijo de puta!"
The real life side of this sprint has been less exciting than on other
occasions, as due to being few in number and being quite tired, we haven't
gone out of Earl's Court area until today. Still, our exploring around the
hotel has yield some nice discoveries.
On Sunday, mvo and I were looking for a place to have dinner, and stumbled
uppon the Troubadour a place which
can either be a pub, a restaurant, a social club or a theatre, depending on
your mood. The food was excellent, and the staff was really friendly. I found
a Dictionary of Slang in one of the book shelves, and learned a few
funny phrases.
Other days we've been to good Italian, Indian or Chinese restaurants, but
we couldn't resist to go back to Trobadour again. On our last night,
Mark took us to a place in the
South Kesington area, with again was very good.
Abel left just after dinner as his flight was at 5AM from Stansted, and we
hope he made it OK to the Netherlands, as at 00:30 or so he phoned us and
seemed to be pretty lost somewhere. mvo left early in the morning, so daf,
thep and I went to visit some bits of the city. My plane was at 16:45GMT,
and we calculated that I should be leaving the K&K at 15:00 to be well on
track for my flight. We went to Monument to see the tower, went up and enjoyed
both the great views over London and the Thames river, as well as the really
cold wind which made me swear once again about the %*@!# lack of Spring in
the UK.
It was getting quite late for me, so we went to China Town for lunch.
Despite the restaurant people being really quick, I only managed to leave the
place at 14:50, but given my travel plan was pretty conservative, I was
supposed to be safe still. Daf left me at the tube station entrance, and there
I started my way too stressful journey back to València. If on our way to
London Carlos and were quite close to
find our flight closed, this time, I think I hit the limits.
I really don't know how daf and I arrived to the conclusion that leaving
Earl's Court at 15:20 was acceptable to get in Heathrow on time. I ran up
and down the tube stations, grabbed by luggage, and rushed back to the station,
but I had just missed a train to Heathrow and that made me lose some precious
10 minutes. As stations passed by, it became clearer that we had fucked up
somewhere when deciding at what time I needed to leave. At 15:35 I was
still in the Hammersmith station, with half of the Picadilly line ahead
before arriving to the aiport. I sent a message to daf, so he started to
get prepared about me staying to sleep somewhere in London.
As soon as the train's doors opened, a number of people rushed out.
Someone ahead of me fell when climbing the automatic staircase and I somehow
managed to jump over him, with luggage and all. After a run that seemed like
half an hour, I arrived at the Iberia desk and, panting, I could only
articulate "Tarde para València?". The guy at the counter looked at me, and
with a "this can't be true" expression in his face, he picked up a phone and
asked "Is it already closed? [...] Can you open it for one more piece of
luggage? Thanks."
In the meanwhile, I had been busy removing a 500 ml yoghourt from my bag,
fearing having all my clothes smelling like strawberry back in València. The
guy handed me a boarding pass, and gave me instructions about the "Iberia Room"
near my gate. I asked him what that was about, and he says "oh, of course,
you're in Business Class". For a second, I was reminded of
stargirl's tricks
to get free upgrades when flying, and immediately I was reminded that I was
still in a hurry, and I should rush to my gate. And so I did, forgetting to
thank the guy for being so kind. I left my yoghourt there
though, so at least he could get some food if he was hungry.
The long line before the security check was exasperating, and when I finally
went past it, I had to run all over terminal two to my gate, where everyone
appeared to be waiting just for me. The doors closed as soon as I entered
the aircraft, and I sat in the first row, got a free newspaper and a free
meal. I couldn't believe my luck.
As I write this, we've gone over the Pyrenees, which are not as snowy as a
month ago, but they still look beautiful from up here. I'm glad to be back
in València.
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FOSDEM 2006
I'm so glad I finally
decided to attend
FOSDEM this year, as last weekend in
Bruxelles was so cool it reminded me of the unforgettable week in Helsinki for
DebConf 5 last summer.
I travelled early on Friday with
Ivan Vilata, the dude who dragged me into
the Catalan translations world, and about 12:30 we were finding our way
through Bruxelles airport. We had barely no problems getting to Raül's place
in Boulevard Louis Schmidt, thanks to the detailed HOWTO he provided a few
days before.
We dropped our bags in his appartment and went out with him and Virginia
after a well deserved mini-nap. On our way to the Grand' Place, where we'd
hook up with the Softcatalà crowd
and the rest of FOSDEM people, we stopped in A la Morte Subite,
where we Ivan and I started our personal training on Belgian beers.
The Roy d'Espagne is an excellent name for a place where to meet our
friends from Catalunya. I didn't know that was a formal meeting point that
kickstarts FOSDEM, so I was really impressed when I got to the second floor
and found the place was packed with Free Software people, many of them I
already knew in person. Reaching Softcatala's table near the window took about
15 minutes, and after saying hi to most people, we decided we could use a
quieter place to have dinner, and then go back.
The Grand' Place was bombed by seb128 in 1695
Raül and Virginia, our official guides during the weekend, chose a
Vietnamese restaurant in the Stock Exchange area they frequent, and for
little money we got an enormous meal. Back at the Roy d'Espagne, I tried to
say hello to most Debian people I saw around, while at the same time I tried
to be with my hosts and the Catalan people. A while after, I spotted tbm and
azeem downstairs, who I finally met. I talked to Michael for a long while,
and at some point we left as we didn't want to miss the last tram.
Ivan, luckily, only snores rarely, so we slept for a while, and then took
the tram to the Université Libre du Bruxelles. The main room was already
packed for RMS's keynote, which was pretty good. After that, we went to
several talks here and there, while I kept meeting some people around the
place. Ivan and I left when the show ended and we met with Virginia and Raül
at the centre.
This time, we hooked up with Xevi and
Jesús Corrius from Softcatalà,
as Toni Hermoso had abandoned us for
a cheap dinner with the Mozilla.org people. We were taken to a packed
bar/restaurant (don't remember the name right now), which had a few
interesting features: they wouldn't sell any Coca-Cola, would not accept
credit cards in protest for the high fees Visa charges on small businesses,
and something I wouldn't expect to see in 2006, their chart of prices hadn't
been rounded up when they switched to the Euro. So some plate would be 9.72,
others 12.43, etc. After dinner we had a few beers at the
Théatre de Toone, located in some tiny alley in
the centre and being pretty tired, we went back home at 23:30 or so.
Sunday was a busy days, due to the number of interesting Debian and GNOME
talks going on. I'd highlight liw's
talk on Piuparts, Enrico's on
debtags and fjp's on Debian Installer in the Debian room, and
kris' on the future of
GTK+. There was also a cool demo of Novell's XGL.
During a dead slot, I approached
Little Daniel and keithp to see
if he could point me at some mapping between UTF-8 and XKB symbol names.
But Daniel was cool enough to solve a problem a lot simpler than expected.
:)
jdub's closing talk was just
fantastic, and after telling him "See you in
Vilanova", we left the University, for
our last dinner around Bruxelles.
jdub clues the audience about some basic acronyms
We managed to rescue madduck
from the Debian UK beer trap and went to an Italian for dinner, this time
with Josep and Mia, from Softcatalà, making a nice mix of German,
Valencian/Catalan, and Swedish at our table.
Mia, Josep, Raül, Ivan, Martin and Jordi after pizza
Raül took us around the city centre and told us about the underground
river, the remaining city wall's tower, and the church that leaned against it.
That night's beer lesson happened in the "2000 beer bar". We all had a 7€
Trappist Westvleteren Bleu 8, apparently "the best beer of the world". It was
pretty good, actually.
Our weekend in Bruxelles was about to end. After not that much sleep,
Ivan and I took a tram and a bus to the Airport, arriving in València
around 10AM, and after seeing the best view of the Pyrenees ever, which were
absolutely covered with snow, as well as many other places in the
País Valencià and Teruel due to massive snows during the two days we were
out.
FOSDEM is probably a "can't miss" yearly event now. Thanks to all the
organisers for their hard work to make it happen. You rock.
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Charles de Gaulle, worse than the NYC Stock Exchange
Yesterday we did meet zufus and gravity for lunch, then mika joined us for
bubbles tea. There also was a somewhat unexpected couple joining the group at
that point: kiko and his sister. gravity and zufus had to go back to work
though, so it was mika, micah, kiko, zuzi and I who went for some Freedom Trail
discovery.
The weather wasn't that good, and I didn't have too much time either, but we
did manage to see a few things around the centre, like the memorial grave yard
and a park with tons of fearless squirrels.
We headed back to the Acetarium, I quickly took a shower and packed, and we
left to the metro, a bit behind on my planned schedule. mika left me two stops
before the one I needed to get down in, and instructions to get to the airport
from there, using the shuttle.
It's not amusing how slow something can appear to be when you're in
a hurry. The driver of the bus said it took 5 minutes, but I had to go to the
very last stop at terminal E, and it was like an eternity. In the end, I
arrived at the terminal at 18:40, when my idea was 18:00, and I ran and ran
until I found Air France's desk. There was no queue or anything, only me.
During the flight, I tried killing time with
War of the Worlds, which was a
timekiller but nothing more, and
The Island, which I wouldn't
recommend unless you care too much about hot female characters.
After 6 hours of flight, I was in Paris, apparently on time. But the doors
opened much later that when we landed, so my connection started to be
endangered. Again, I ran and ran, from one terminal to the other, around the
chaos that is CDG. In vain, as my checkin was closed after arriving only 20
minutes before the departure.
Much annoyed, I went to the transfer desk, to discover the next flight to
València was cancelled, so the next one was the next morning. The quick
alternative via Madrid was full, so I now have tickets for CDG-BCN-VLC, which
is extending my travel plan in 7 very nice hours.
I have no idea of where my luggage is, but at this point I don't care. I
only wonder at what time I'll get sleep. What I do know, is that these fucking
idiots claim there is free wireless in this spot of Terminal 2F, but it's not
true at all.
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Not that Cambridge
As predicted, the morning was not productive at all. At one point I slightly
became concious and saw sladen fetching his bike, opening the door and telling
me "Back in two hours!". We didn't know anything about him until 24 hours
later. As we started waking up, we tried to think of a plan for the day. The
morning was gone, though.
Clint took us to a restaurant two blocks away for breakfast, or actually
brunch, because that was the only food in many hours. I ate some "pancakes"
with banana in them, and barely could finish them; they are very filling. We
went to the promenade for a last look at the Manhattan skyline and took some
pictures while we tried to figure out what to do.
A last view over Manhattan
Mako was developing a plan in secret, though, which involved micah and his
car. Micah found out soon after. We went back to Clint's, expecting to find
sladen somewhere, but we didn't. I packed my things, and when we really needed
to go, we resolved to put his things in the entrance so he could find then and
do whatever he wanted on his return.
We went on the Metro to Union Square, where, hear this helix, I saw TONS of
raperos doing their break-dance thing (ok, maybe not tons, but I did see them).
And two blocks away, we arrived to the most incredible book store.
Mako has blogged many times about buying very rare books at the Strand for
ridiculous prices, but this was totally unexpected. The Strand is
huge. On the outside, there's carts with hundreds of second-hand
books, all for one dollar. Mako used to go there and browse the books to find
interesting stuff. The Acetarium is full of them! Most of the dollar books are
total crap though. A very high percent talk about god, religion, "our troops"
and stuff like that. Mentally filtering what might be good and what is not is
not easy when you haven't done it before.
Mako started scanning the shelves as soon as we arrived, and every now and
them he'd pick some totally stupid title. I was on my own shelf, missing many
good stuff, while mika, Clint and mako did their own. Clint found quite a few
titles, but mako didn't find anything good. I got lucky though, and found the
precious book of the day: The Spanish Anarchists. The heroic years
1868-1936, by Murray Bookchin. Although old, it was in very good condition,
and mako immediately asked if I was taking it. :) I won!
The inside of the Strand was incredible too. Three very big floors packed
with books, plus the half-priced "reviewer's copies" at the basement. I was
totally overwhelmed by the amount of books I'd be interested in buying, and the
limited weight I should be carrying back, so I did my best not to look too
carefully.
For a few hours, I didn't have a too clear idea of what mako's plans were.
At some point, micah phoned him and we rushed to the PATH, the train that goes
to New Jersey. Apparently we were meeting micah at Newark, but I still didn't
know why we had to go there. During our ride, I could see how pleasant New
Jersey is to the human eye. Miles and miles of heavy industries. I'm pretty
sure it's the ugliest place I've ever seen. What I couldn't see, and I'm still
disappointed, is any of the viciously arrogant rats of the New York metro
system. Mako had told me about how they look at you, like saying "if you come
down here, you'll be left with 9 fingers", and the incredible number of them on
the tracks. Unfortunately I couldn't see any. I blame Michael Bloomberg.
At Newark, micah appeared in his car, and we all hopped into it. We
apparently were going by car to Boston... including Clint. I was puzzled, as he
had to work on Monday, but he'd said that he'd simply "come back". There was a
problem though, mako had dilinger's keys, and he was going back to NYC from
Boston, and we didn't have time to get to Boston before he left, so we had to
find a way of leaving the keys in NYC so he could get into his appartment.
Finally, mako resolved that Clint would be left in a cold street, in a rough
area of NYC, and he would handle the keys problem. I still didn't understand
what was going on.
We headed North, and I quickly fell asleep on mika's lap. I'm getting old.
When the car stopped again and I suddenly woke up, I looked ahead and...
HORROR! We were at the door of a McDonads. WTF WAS GOING ON? So it seems that
when you're on the road, there's no much other choice than shit food. After a
quick discussion with mako about how badly those burgers taste, I quickly went
back to sleep, until we were in Boston. It took a while to find a parking spot,
because all of them "permit only". It's impossible to park if you come from
somewhere else.
I was finally at the Acetarium, a
very cool flat in Cambridge, 15 minutes away from the MIT. It was 3:30 in the morning.
The day after, we woke up pretty late, and as I opened my laptop and found a
privmsg from sladen, he was was knocking at the door. This man has an
incredible ability to disappear and reappear when he's most unexpected.
Apparently he managed to grab his stuff in NYC, fetch the bus and arrive at 2AM
in Boston, meeting dilinger at the station, and mako as he went out to MIT.
micah and I went to explore Boston, but never managed. We consumed a few
hours when trying to ship some equipment to micah's colo, and then trying to
find food. When we were ready to go, micah got a very badly timed call, which
made him go back to the Acetarium: a server at work was dying or dead. At one
point, it was late enough that going to Boston wasn't worth it, so we went to
visit the Media Lab instead.
On our way there, micah and I kept chatting about this and that, and found
out how small the internet is. We both know a bunch of common people from
uncommon places like Perú, from our involvement in social projects in the net
like Indymedia and Sindominio.net.
The MIT is incredible, specially the Stata Center by Frank Gehry. We
wandered around as we only got voice mail from mako, until an hour later we
found we was like 20 metres away from us. He gave us a tour through the Media
lab, and it was incredible. I had never seen something like that. Every lab was
colourful and fun, and very cool developments were going on everywhere. I also
saw the coolest mame box ever, with an arcade case and everything.
The Stata Center, right next to the Media Lab
After the tour, micah and I headed back, while sladen stayed to have a look
at one of mako's projects. When we got back to the flat, there were a few
people already there for mika's sushi party, and I rolled my first sushi rolls,
which was fun. A bunch of Debian people joined us, including zufus and gravity,
and had a great chat with them. The party ended way too late and after too many
beers.
sladen used his secret disappearing abilities, and a few colleagues from
mako crashed, so there was a bit of overbooking. Mako's solution was simple.
mika, him and I could share their bed.
I can't say I have slept too much, because mako would keep pulling the
blanket and leave me out in the cold, and I was trying not to squish mika. But
it went ok, although we discovered too late that mika was hot while I was cold,
and we swapped our places just before we ended up waking up.
Today, we'll go find the Freedom Trail and walk a bit around it, meet
gravity and zufus for lunch, and I will sadly have to go back to Cambridge,
quickly pack and head to the airport to catch my plane. My hours in North
America are expiring.
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The source of all evil
Yesterday was a very, very intense day, and I had lots of fun.
Clint, sladen and I headed to Chinatown walking, with a few detours to be
able to checkout Manhattan's skyline. The view from the other shore is awesome,
even with the two towers missing. When I compare the current view with how it
was four years ago, I understand how much the city has changed without them.
They were so impressively big that I just can't picture them too well in my
mind.
The skyline of South Manhattan
We walked over the Brooklyn bridge, giving me other very cool views of
Manhattan, while I hammered Clint with questions about this and that. I saw
that since 9/11, you can't go past the Town Hall. "Security reasons", of
course. I was very surprised to see police cars in every single street. It's
like a Police State, and if you ask me, it didn't make me feel safer.
After some walk, we finally got in Chinatown, which is the craziest place
ever. People sell stuff on the sidewalks, and many streets are packed with
people. We had to meet with micah, biella, dilinger and his cat at some Chinese
place for breakfast/lunch. The place, as Chinatown itself, was crazy. As soon
as we sat down a few waitresses landed a few plates on the table, without
asking or anything. A few minutes later I could see that the way they serve you
is going around with carts with lost of food, and you either want it or
not.
We left dilinger at the metro station, and moved on to the SoHo. I wanted to
go to the SoHo Apple Store to see if they knew about replacement Spanish
keyboards for my Powerbook. My powerbook was bought in the US last year, so it
has a US keyboard. This is mostly ok, but only mostly as it's missing a
key.
After SoHo, we went back to Chinatown to pick up bubbles. It was nice to see
her after Debconf, and she made the effort to come just for a few hours even if
she was ill and had lots to do in Philly. We headed to South Street Port, where
I had a long chat about Cuba with micah while we sat on a bench looking at
Brooklyn bridge.
And then, we gathered all our braveness and headed to the heart of the
beast, to the kernel of the system. We walked into the Financial District, and
soon enough I was walking in Wall Street no less. If I breathed hard, I could
smell the money. The road was paved in gold, and there were skyscrapers
everywhere. I discovered the rulers of this world had opened a "public space"
in JP Morgan's building. To their despair, probably, it had been taken over by
the poor. I wonder what Bloomberg will do about it.
As I walked up the street, a strange feeling in my heart grew and grew,
until, behind a corner, I saw it. The source of all evil was ahead of me,
guarded by George Washington himself.
The New York Stock exchange and its black evil aura of Capitalism
I was standing ahead of this building where so many people behave like
bastards everyday, pushing millions to povery for a bit more profit margin. The
doors were closed and surrounded by security officers, which despite being
asked politely, didn't let us in for "security reasons".
Next to it was the Church of Capitalism, at the end of the street. It's
curious that such an old church still stands where it was build near the
harbour probably a century ago, now surrounded by some of the most modern and
tallest buildings in the planet. And then, we visited the bull, which I didn't
know is the "friendly" symbol of how Capitalism works.
I had Capitalism by the balls
We moved down to Battery Square, past the old US Customs building with the
four statues representing the four continents. We saw the damaged sculpture
which lived in the WTC, and sat down at the pier to watch a beautiful sunset
over the Statue of Liberty.
The Statue of Liberty seen from South Manhattan
At that point, biella and micah had to meet some friends at one cinema to
see the Wal-Mart documentary. We went to a funky place to have some tea,
decided to go see Times Square and then walk to Central Park. At the time, mako
was arriving to NYC on the Chinatown bus, so we agreed to meet in a restaurant
to have lunch. Paul Sladen finally managed to get lost, after many tries during
the day, and wasn't seen until we got back home.
Mako and Mika waited for us at the door of an... ethiopian restaurant in the
SoHo, despite Mako knows I can't stand spicy food. But in the end it wasn't so
bad, I just needed a few more glasses of water than average. And I finally got
to know mika, after lots of time of chatting over IRC. Greg, SPI's lawyer, also
appeared, and was a nice addition to the group.
Mako knew where to take us after that. The Belgian bar was packed, but there
was a private party in one of the spaces and we took over some of that space.
After a few rounds, we were ready to leave the pub and go for Falafel and some
tea. I was terribly falling asleep though, so instead of tea we took a cap back
to Brooklyn, where we found Paul waiting at the door.
After an hour of inflating a mattress, we were ready for sleep, at 4AM. It
didn't look like the morning after would be very productive...
11:51 |
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Good Morning New York!
After a not-so-easy ride with James Blackwell, and the last minute surprise
of Paul Sladen joining us, we arrived in New York. The sky was dark
already.
Instead of arriving at 15:00 or so as expected, we arrived at something like
20:00. Behind, we had left great perils like an empty gas tank and finding no
gas station, and noticing one tire could use some pumping; evil officials at
the US border not liking the fact that it was the first time I entered the
country, which involved fingerprints and a smily face at the customs offices
after a long wait; a great meal (after a long wait to get served) at probably
the best restaurant in the whole State of New York; the three of us becoming
terribly sleepy half an hour after resuming the drive, and having to stop for a
short nap and stopping for gas once again around 70 miles away from NYC.
When we did arrive, we managed to get lost a few times around the city. We
crossed four bridges on our way to Brooklyn, which accidentally let me admire
the Manhattan skyline by night, and finally, got to Clint's place.
When we were parking, I noticed the tire was mostly flat now. Surely not the
best way to land in the city. We also found out Clint and the rest had left for
dinner after a long wait, as neither they or us expected to arrive so late, and
we were way too freaked out with the crazy traffic and finding our way to phone
them.
After a while, both problems were sorted out; Clint appeared and James was
able to leave. James, thanks for all you did! I owe you a big one next time! We
spent some time with Clint, dilinger, biella and micah, saw the great view of
Manhattan from the roof of his appartment, and eventually went to bed.
Apparently, they are taking me to a place called "Dim Sum" for breakfast. I
wonder how dilinger's cat tastes.
15:56 |
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The East Coast Road Trip
Tomorrow I leave Montréal, Québec and Canada and will move down to the US,
on my way to New York City. This part of my stay in North America is a bit
(others would rather say "totally")
improvised, and the plans are not too accurate even now, 8 hours before our
departure.
The first idea for this was to travel on a night bus from Montréal to
Boston, meet mako and
mika and then move to New York City
during the weekend.
The unavailability of any buses that did this route in less than thirteen hours made me look for alternatives. Chatting with mdz, I found out he was flying
with Mark and Jane to NYC
very early on Friday night, on the private jet. Sounded like a plan.
Only it had a big flaw: non commercial flights entering the US require
visas for everyone aboard, apparently. If you don't have it, the reports
say you're really, really fucked up. So, having no visa as I don't need it
in normal conditions, this was discarded too.
Finally I learned that jblack was driving down to Pennsylvania after
the conference. I asked him if it was possible to go with him on his way
South, and he said yes. He could drop me in the nearest point to Boston, or
drive me straight to NYC. As NYC is the easiest for me and jblack and
Clint has no problem with hosting me
one extra day, that's what we're going to do.
(After having everything more or less clear, Paul Sladen came along and
proposed yet another plan involving a bicycle and hitch-hiking. I was able to
say no, though.)
Here starts this crazy road trip. Wish me luck, and see you in NYC!
07:26 |
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