LEGO photos

June 7th, 2008

Great site over at 1dak.com/art/reflection-of-life-with-legos-32-pics/ that has LEGO recreations of a number of famous photos, including a couple by Capa, Cartier-Bresson and I believe one by Robert Doisneau

Well worth checking out!

Philip Jones Griffiths

May 26th, 2008

I’ve just found out that earlier this year (March 18) Philip Jones Griffiths died of cancer aged 72

Vietnam Inc. was his most famous collection and upon publication in the US it almost overnight shifted public opinion on the war in Vietnam

Regarded as being the only photographer to portray Vietnam as a country and not a war, he will be missed

Anti-French protests in China

April 19th, 2008

Following the recent pro-Tibet demonstrations during the Olympic torch’s visit to France, it seems that China are now having their own rally.

I am absolutely amazed that the Chinese government is letting this happen.

Can you say double-standard?

The BBC News website has more: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/7356107.stm

Stripped binaries

March 19th, 2008

Software vendors: please stop shipping stripped binaries.  How do you expect to support your customers without this valuable information when something goes wrong?

Chinese learning tools (new page)

March 8th, 2008

I’ve written a new page (not a blog entry) that I’ll update when necessary.

It’s a list of useful sites and applications to help learn Chinese.

In addition I’ve got almost complete spreadsheets with the ‘New words’ from the Hanyu Jiaocheng book 1 part 1 and Chinese Express Talk Chinese textbooks.

See the page at www.lewiz.org/chinese_learning_tools.

Weekly shop

February 18th, 2008

It’s been a couple of days since Quentin sailed into Qingdao and for the last few legs he and Rachel (another crew member) have been doing the shopping for the leg ahead.

Each boat has a 15-strong crew and the next leg will be around 24/25 days.  On top of this they need emergency rations for another five days.  Scale this up to ten boats, add the food you’ll find (or rather not find) in Chinese supermarkets and you’ll quickly have problems.

We’ve spent the last two days in two of the big supermarkets in Qingdao… the Jusco and the Carrefour.  We have more or less cleaned both of these places out of tinned meat, tinned fruit, pasta, tinned tomatoes, Frosties, etc.  The only thing they did have enough of was, surprise surprise, pot noodles!

While checking out our six trollies of foodstuffs we had to pay twice… the till wasn’t up to either the number of items we’d had, or the sum total!  In the end we’d still only spent about 300 pounds at the one shop… not a great deal more than two large families might spend for their big shop!

Our big advantage over the other teams was having Xiaoxiao on hand to help with translation… both of packets and to help ask the shop workers if they had more Frosties, pasta, etc.  In the end a lot of the things we ended up putting in our trolly had come straight from the back warehouse.

We had a tough time convincing the store staff to let us drive the shopping carts across the road to our hotel.  In the end they agreed but only on the condition that one of their workers came with us to ensure they got them back.


shopping.jpg


It’s not every day you get to drive into a five-star hotel lobby with supermarket trollies.  We got some great looks going past the check-in desks and heading into the lifts.


This evening we booked our flights to Seoul at 5.30PM, returning Friday evening.  It’s a very short trip, but we knew this in advance.  I’m looking forward to seeing some of the sights, but it’s a shame that some bloke torched the oldest structure in the city just a week ago.

Small fish mountain park

February 15th, 2008

First full day in China and I was woken up by housekeeping at 12PM.  I got dressed and headed to the Crowne Plaza to wake my Mum up at about 12:45.

As it was already quite late, we caught a taxi to xiaoyushangongyuan (xiao = small, yu = fish, shan = mountain, gong yuan = park) but were not terribly impressed with the pagodas.  We picked up four pairs of earmuffs, which cost us just over 25p/pair.

We’d planned to visit a big park nearby, but as it was already getting late (and cold!) we instead walked along the no. 1 bathing beach which was very enjoyable.  Due to season it was very quiet, but we saw some athletic training going on and surprisingly quite a few young couples on the beach (today being Valentine’s Day).

I wanted to pick up some small pads for making notes of newly-learned Chinese words, or to remind myself to check some grammar/phrases out so we headed to the Carrefour where I was utterly amazed to discover that a fold-up bike sells for as little as 350RMB (about 25 pounds).  We both enjoyed the massage chairs, which again were at give-away prices (it looked like around 1000RMB for the top-of-the-line model… roughly 60 pounds!)

There are many nice touches to be found in China… when things get busy in KFC, walkabout sales people come up to you in the queue and take your order.  There’s no fancy electronic stuff going on here… she just wrote it down onto a piece of paper and handed it to us.  This did make things quicker when we were at the front as we just handed it over.  I guess this is what happens in a country where labour is a commodity.

Today I got a chance to flex my Chinese… on the whole it went very well.  I was glad to find that most people could understand my basic questions… my work on learning the tones and pronounciation is paying off, as past experiences did not go so well.  Only one ‘big’ mistake today was ordering in KFC… I asked for a red tea (as opposed to green tea) and a Coke with no ice.  I then pointed at the characters the girl had written for the tea and said ‘and milk’.  Somehow we ended up with three drinks: a red tea (no milk), a Coke (no ice) and a cup of hot milk!  Easily solved and next time I will remember to ask for red tea /with/ milk and not red tea /and/ milk!

Fatema Indian for dinner… a very very hot chicken vindaloo for me and the jalfrezi for my Mum.  Not the best Indian food I’ve ever had, but still good.  The naan was a little different to what I am used to, but this may just be because I’m set in my ‘English Indian’ ways.

We met a number of other Clipper people at the New York Club (more of an expat bar) after the meal, but as it was noisy and we’d only met three people before, this wasn’t an ideal location.

In many bars they play a skill/chance game that involves ten dice and two cups.  Each person gets five dice and a cup to shake them up.  Number one is a wildcard and can count for 1 through 6.  You make educated guesses at the total number of any given number (i.e. I think there are three fours in total) until eventually somebody calls their opponent and you reveal your dice.  If the number you came up with is less than or equal to the actual number then the person who called you up loses.  But if you said there were five fours and you said three… you lose.  The loser takes a swig of their drink and a new game begins.  Tough to explain without demonstration, but very good fun.

We were introduced to this game by two brothers, one of whom was called Angelo.  Angela is studying in Shanghai and hopes to visit either Australia or England to study marketing.

Due to worsening weather conditions the race was ended before the boats reached Qingdao.  The result is that Hull & Humber/Quentin came in forth, which is a good position.  H&H are due to arrive around 9AM on Saturday, so we’ll be on the pier with our St George’s flag to welcome them in.

Xiaoxiao should finally receive her Korean visa tomorrow morning, so she’s now booked onto a flight from Hangzhou to Qingdao in the afternoon.  She’ll have to get from her city (Taizhou) to Hangzhou, but this only takes around two hours by car.

It’s 3:30AM now and having caught up with my blog I think I should really try and get to sleep.  Need to be up at 9:30 tomorrow morning so we can head to the marina for a tour and certain other events.  New York (leg winners) are due to sail in at 2PM.

Arrival in Qingdao

February 15th, 2008

Yesterday we arrived in Qingdao.  In total we spent close to 36 hours travelling without sleep (well, one hour on the connection between Beijing and Qingdao).

Matt Johnson kindly gave me a lift from my place to Woking station where I caught the shuttle bus to Heathrow airport.  I met my Mum here (who had caught the train from Doncaster at 6AM the same day) and we had a bite to eat before catching the (delayed by one hour) flight to Beijing.

Arrival time was around 9AM, outside temperature -11C!  At this point things took a turn for the worse…

In LHR we’d asked for our luggage to be checked right through to Qingdao.  As we’d arrived at 9AM and our connection to Qingdao wasn’t until 14:55 we quickly tried to arrange an earlier flight… everything looked set for a 9:50 flight up until it came to our luggage… we traipsed to and fro all over the airpot, speaking to different people with varying degrees of fluency in English until we were finally told that Beijing airport does not allow bags to be checked through to internal destinations.  By now we’d missed the 9:50 flight and headed back into the arrival area to collect our luggage which was now at lost and found!  Imagine if we had not tried to arrange an earlier flight—our bags would have stayed in Beijing while we flew to Qingdao!  Very disappointing service from BA when we checked our luggage in LHR!

As if this wasn’t bad enough, when we tried to check in for our 14:55 flight we discovered we DID NOT have e-tickets as lastminute.com had told us.  DHL lost our initial tickets and after three weeks of arguing with DHL/lastminute.com we were issued with e-tickets.  I had lastminute.com confirm three times that we didn’t need anything else for our flights.  Extremely poor service on behalf of lastminute.com and I will be making a formal complaint when I get back.  Had we not had such a long wait for our connection it is not inconceivable we would have missed the flight due to their incompetence.

Finally we were checked in.  Again, bad news… the alcohol my Mum had bought in LHR was not allowed as carry-on luggage on internal Chinese flights.  Why had we not been told this in LHR?  Why, when checking in for the connection, did the attendant not tell us then?  Only when we got to the security checks did we find out, and this meant another wait while we had to go and buy cardboard boxes (glass containers) and check in two more items of luggage!

The last mistake was our own… we believed we were departing from gate 37, and so waited there.  Only when we began to queue to get on did I spot in fact it was gate 47!  A quick walk to gate 47 and they were more or less waiting for us to show up.  Neither of us heard any boarding announcements for the flight, but as we thought we were sat opposite we weren’t paying a great deal of attention.

At around 5PM we’d got a taxi to the hotel (5-star Crowne Plaza near the marina where Quentin will sail into) and my Mum was very impressed with the room.  I decided that I could save myself some cash by staying at the Home Inns (a chain similar to Travelodge in the UK) which was a five-minute walk down the road.  I checked the room out and happy with it, agreed to pay 118RMB/night (about eight pounds)—this is roughly 1/10th of the cost of my Mum’s room… obviously nowhere near the same standard, but the Home Inns is clean and comfortable.  And I enjoy talking to the staff who don’t speak much English… there’s no challenge in a 5-star hotel!

In the evening we met the manager of the Hull & Humber boat Quentin is sailing on and we’ve arranged passes to gain us close access for when Quentin arrives.

Preparation

February 10th, 2008

This weekend I’ve been trying to get things in order for my flight on Tuesday.  I’ve covered just about everything I can at this late stage.

All that’s left now is to pack, sort my cameras out and get to the airport.  Oh, and hope my visa turns up on time.

I made the mistake of leaving my visa to the last minute… with Chinese New Year this means I am currently due to receive it on Monday before 9AM.  This is okay, except that I fly shortly after 1PM, which will make getting to the airport three hours before I set off a near impossibility.

In other news, I appear to have damaged my back… I can barely stand up straight, my side hurts and so far it isn’t getting any better.  The only positive side of this is that I can’t really tell there is anything wrong when sat down, so the flight should be too bad.

I guess we’ll see what happens.

Match Point

January 28th, 2008

I finally sat down to watch Match Point last night.

It’s been sat around unwatched for quite a while now, I had it figured as a fairly standard sport comedy film, but it’s far from that.

The first Woody Allen film I’ve ever seen, it will serve me as a good introduction to his films… if they hold their own against this film.

The film revolves around Chris Wilton, a retired tennis-pro turned instructor, who uses his charms to work his way into the upper echelons of society.  He has the house, the wife, the job… but ultimately he becomes involved with his friend’s fiancée, Nola Rice [Scarlett Johansson].

Over at IMDb it has a 7.8/10 rating, which is pretty good for any film, but really, I think this deserved a higher rating… I thought I knew what was going on all the way through, but I quickly found out I was way off the mark (not necessarily a difficult thing to achieve).

Definitely worth a watch.