Saturday, October 5, 2013

Mash-Up Experiment with Google Street View

Here is an interactive streetview experiment:

Taipei, Shanghai, Zurich Day 3 – Site Seeing

“Taiwan is the bastard rape child of China and Japan.”

On Saturday I was up very early and worked online until my daughter woke up around 9:30.  I walked over to pick her up and saw her apartment, where she lives with four other students, including their Italian landlord.

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We went out for breakfast at the “Dante Coffee” restaurant that serves Western style brunch and coffee.  I had eggs and salad; Elisheva ate carbs.

 

 

 

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Then we headed towards the tourist attractions down town, including

  • the Taiwan city hall,
  • the convention center,
  • Sun Yat-Sen memorial,
  • Taipai-101 building, and
  • The parks / gardens

Rain from the typhoon was quite heavy all day long but at the same time it was warm and muggy so I was constantly putting on and taking off my rain poncho.  Elisheva and the locals carry big umbrellas.  We took the subway, which was quite crowded in the afternoon but was relatively light on commuters in the morning as we set out.

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There is a nice mall below the Sun Yat-Sen memorial complex where we went shopping to avoid the rain and walk indoors.

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The shops had very interesting wares that reflect the tastes, sensibilities, and culture of the locals.  There are many Japanese elements and influences in the fashion and culture.  There are also, of course, mainland Chinese themes.  And Taiwan maintains its unique elements of Western (Dutch/European/US) culture as well.  The mixture of cultures, moirés, customs, attitudes, art, style, fashion is fascinating.  I am very happy I came.

 

They had cool golf-umbrellas that have Japanese Katana handles and I was very tempted to get the “Tanto” style (smaller) one; however they are expensive and poor quality so I decided to order one online instead.

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Eventually we left the mall and went to the Sun Yat-Sen memorial and gardens.  We walked the grounds outside first since it was not raining as badly, then went inside to see the exhibits.

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2013-10-05 12.22.20 More pictures here.

Then we headed over to the the Taiwan-101 tower, which was the tallest building in the world in 1985 and had the fastest elevator in the world until recently.

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We took the tour, which is disappointing because they hype, market, and hard-sell to the tourists so much.  But the views were pretty good.  See photos here.

Then we had a “hot pot” (spicy!) big vegan lunch, after which we strolled around a little and then headed home.

Next up: Dinner and the Taipei night life.

Friday, October 4, 2013

Taipei, Shanghai, Zurich Day 2 – The apartment

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The apartment has this odd combination of an open shower where the bathroom itself is a shower stall.  So everything (sink, bidet) get all wet when you shower.  I think you’re supposed to use a bucket of soapy water, sponge, and use the shower only to rinse.  Still a curtain would be useful.  The worst part of the apartment is that he plumbing stops up from toilet paper so one must use the shower as a bidet each time, which is cleaner but inconvenient.

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The apartment is a single room studio with tiny kitchen area including cooker, microwave, big fridge, two huge dressers and drawers, and a big bed.  The apartment is completely empty.  There are no cups, glasses, dishes, pans.  I bought some prepared food and am re-using their containers.

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My flat is less than two blocks from my daughter’s place.  It could not be more convenient!

Here is an interactive map of my daughter's apartment (map mash-ups are surprisingly easy!):

Taipei, Shanghai, Zurich Day 2

Tokyo Narita has awesome Internet and great facilities.  It is one of the most comfortable airports through which to transit.

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Buddhist monk in saffron robes, Goth, suit-and-tie, tourists al shopping duty free at Tokyo Narita Airport 10/3/2013.  I have added the 6-mile back-alley all-day walking tour of Kyoto with a private docent to my “bucket list” of things I want to see before I die.

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The weather flying into Taipei was very bumpy since there is another “typhoon” (hurricane) system hitting South Asia.  The food was not as good as the trans-pacific fare but not bad. 

The word “serviceable” keeps coming to mind for this Taipei chapter.  The food was serviceable.  Taiwan natives’ English is “serviceable.”  The transportation is “serviceable.”  The airport terminal is Spartan but serviceable.  My apartment is inconvenient but serviceable.  The toilet+shower bathroom is odd but serviceable.

At the Taipei airport, I:

  • took local Taiwan money out of a cash machine,
  • bought a “far east-tone” pre-paid SIM card for my phone,
  • called / texted my daughter,
  • called my airbnb landlord to meet me at the Tai-Power metro stop, and
  • hopped in a taxi

fareastone  Taipei_Songshan_Airport_1st_Terminal_Building_1st_Floor_Concourse

Everything went as smoothly as I had planned and hoped!  Fortune favors the prepared. 

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It took about an hour; the area where my daughter lives is very far from the Airport.  The taxi driver and my airbnb landlord were most helpful.  I checked into my room and called my daughter.  Again:  Everything went swimmingly!

2013-10-04 22.03.58 My daughter and I met at the metro stop, went shopping for essentials for my apartment, ate, chatted, then I had to bathe and sleep!

Next up – my airbnb apartment in Taipei

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Taipei, Shanghai, Zurich day 1

East side for hire taxi was perfectly on time.  Great deal from a great service.

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The government shutdown did not cause a labor shortage at TSA and the lines moved quickly.  The flight to Taipei was also smooth and uneventful.  I read the papers, then watched some movies.

  • At Any Price:” a powerful US heartland farm story.  Lots of drama, a little suspense, not bad *** (3 out of 5 stars).
  • Before Midnight,” the third installment of the “Midnight” trilogy.  The film has many long shots, lengthy, talky, intellectual conversations, and Woody Allen style intellectual, whiney dialog.  The mediocre acting could not carry the well-written script.  Miss it  **.
  • Man of Steel:” Big budget, big stars, great special effects, powerful cinematography, huge heart.  It’s a little formulaic and unoriginal. Rent or stream this one, ***.
  • Monsters University” Not good, *.

It is very warm, windy, and humid here in Tokyo. The food was pretty good on the United flight.

Sunday, September 22, 2013

www.snotr.com videos are funny

Watch this one and then watch it again from 4' 30" after the start.

Saturday, September 21, 2013

Mashing up with blogger -- google map?



The test seems to work.

Movie Review: “Fill the Void” 2013 (החל‎ למלא את)

Fill the Void (2012 film).jpg I usually like artful chick flicks with good acting and well-scripted dialog.  The slices of Haredi life are well-presented and the theme of mourning and family is universal.  There is almost no religious context to the story other than the background in which it is set.  Still I didn’t like this film and do not recommend it.  I just did not care enough about Shira to get caught up in her drama.

Unless you are a big fan of chick flicks, consider missing this one.

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Can Google Blogger have an iFrame with CORPnet content?

Tribes by Seth Godin



Now that I walk to and from work every day I have more time to listen to space opera (audio books). Every so often I break up the monotony of science fiction with a business book.  Technical books are easier to read (audio does not work) since I code examples and vary the pace.  So this week I listened to the audio version of Seth Godin's Tribes (ebay listings).  It's a short, light, fun read.  I always pick up some serendipitous information from Seth Godin's books.

Interestingly, the last thing he says in the audio version is that the listener should give away their copy to a friend. Here is mine.