a Free Bag of Chips

After a quick breakfast, I brushed my teeth, and then came to the buzzing hostel lobby. While unobtrusively sitting here and working on my computer, a mid-age man came to refill the big vending machine, which happens to be next to the couch I’m sitting on. He began to load the 34.5-gram bags of “Walkers” chips out of boxes and into the machine. At this time, I noticed that there’s a large door behind him that reads “LOUNGE” in bold, colorful letters. I got up, taking my MacBook with me, to see if I could move to the lounge instead.

As I walked from the couch to the door, the man took one of the bags of chips from the box, and offered it to me, saying that it’s free. I hesitated. What’s the deal here? A free bag of chips?

After a moment, I decided he was just being kind, and took the bag of chips. He offered another– of a different flavor– but I refused, saying that just one bag is fine. The one he gave me is “Prawn Cocktail Flavor Potato Chips.”

I read a sign on the door that says the lounge is closed for renovations, and returned to my seat on the couch. While I sat there, I wondered: who was paying for the “free” bag of chips that this man gave me? It probably wasn’t him, which is why he offered me a free bag. It’s likely the company that hired him. Do they know that they have an employee giving out free bags of chips to random strangers, who happen to be sitting near the vending machine at the time of refill?

Was it ethical for me to accept his offer of a free bag of chips?

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Eiffel Tower shows the French are Protoss

Tuesday, Aug 23 – Day 15

I mostly stayed home and worked. I went to the Louvre and discovered they are closed on Tuesdays.

Wednesday, Aug 24 – Day 16

I went to the Eiffel Tower in the morning. I discovered that the French are Protoss.

Now I’m at the Apple Store in the Louvre. Nicholas from Pismo Beach, California helped me out. He swapped out my defective iPhone for a new French one. Awesome.

Apparently, the issue where the person on the other end can’t hear me during a phone call is a common one. Nicholas had seen it before. No need to waste time testing the phone; they can take action based on my word.

Apple support continues to impress. Keep it up, Apple.

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Château de Versailles

Friday, Aug 19 – Day 11

I took a train from Cologne, Germany to Paris, France. Caleb met me at the train station. I went to Andy’s apartment. Andy is graciously hosting me for the week.

Saturday, Aug 20 – Day 12

Caleb and I went to the Château de Versailles. There were long lines. We bought tickets form the automatic, electronic ticket machine. Caleb received ten 2€ coins in change, quite a handful, but quite useful.

In the afternoon, we visited the white-domed Basilica of the Sacré Cœur, located on the Montmartre. Here’s a photo taken from that spot, looking out on the city:

In the evening, we went to a French brasserie where I had salmon and noodles.

Sunday, Aug 21 – Day 13

Caleb and I went to The American Church in Paris.

In the evening, Andy and I got Chinese take-out from a place right across the street. The egg rolls weren’t very fresh.

Monday, Aug 22 – Day 14

I visited Google Paris with Andy. I met Prakash, who knows some of the Picasa Web Albums team that I worked with: Fern, Ryan, Kevin, etc.

I spent most of the afternoon reading about Apple rumors, webOS, and the mobile app industry.

I ate leftovers from yesterday’s dinner.

Andy, Caleb, and I had dinner at a kebab restaurant across the street. Not bad, but no couscous, despite its appearance on the menu.

####

Wow. The Ron Paul of 2008 is back.

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Vodaphone.de Check Balance

check balance *100#

top up credit *100*(top up code)#
costs of last call *102#

Source

Wednesday, Aug 17 – Day 9

Explored the city with Cefalon, then rice and veggies for dinner.

Thursday, Aug 18 – Day 10

Gamescom in the day, then “pancakes” for dinner.

Tomorrow I’ll go to France. Still not sure where I’m going after that. Spain? UK?

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German Schnitzel reminds me of Japanese Tonkatsu

Sunday, Aug 14 – Day 6

We left CCCamp, and I spent the evening and night at C4 (CCCC: Chaos Computer Club Cologne).

Monday, Aug 15 – Day 7

We explored Cologne (German: Koeln), especially the famous cathedral. Cefalon is a superb and enthusiastic tour guide ;)

I helped with cooking a tasty home-made dinner; Cefalon showed me how to properly prepare a crispy German schnitzel with pork, a traditional German/Austrian dish which is not so different from tonkatsu. It was delicious.

Tuesday, Aug 16 – Day 8

Spending a lot of time just working. Will go out for a run now. My computer is perpetually low on disk space.

I’ll update this post with photos and details later on.

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Germany: First Impressions

Aug 9 – Day 1

While in LHR (London), I picked up 20 GBP from an ATM. I arrived in Berlin via Tegel airport (TXL), where I picked up 20 EUR from an ATM. In both cases, I used my ANZ ATM card from Vietnam, so of course it was converted from VND. The transactions finally showed up in online banking a few days later. Based on the exchange rate from Google at that time (a few days later), the effective fee applied by the bank was about 14-15%.

I’m here to attend Chaos Communication Camp 2011, but I haven’t planned out how to get there. I slept in a hostel in Berlin; it was about 12 EUR. Sheets would have cost an additional 3 EUR, but I didn’t need them; I used my sleeping bag.

Aug 10 – Day 2

I went to a Japanese restaurant in Berlin, and pleasantly discovered that the owners are Vietnamese. We spoke Vietnamese a bit. I still feel that my Vietnamese skills are lacking. They thought I was Vietnamese, but I clarified that I’m actually American. A year in Vietnam has changed my appearance, giving me the look of a Vietnamese native.

I made it to CCCamp. Here’s a video to give you an overall impression of the event. I didn’t make this video, but I did see pretty much everything in it :)

I slept in Nick Farr’s rental car. I had initially phone-reserved a room at Central-Hotel Eberswalde, but I ended up being a no-show on that.

Aug 11 – Day 3

On this day I went to the Hackcenter to work for most of the day.

Here’s a random pic that I took this day:


These guys are taking apart optical drives, I think. I don’t know what for :)

Here’s how the camp’s awesome network infrastructure works, in part:

I booked a hotel room when it was nearly 11pm. I felt better about the no-show the previous night because I did end up staying with that hotel. They had vacancy.

I was glad to stay in a hotel, because I needed a nice shower, and I was feeling a bit sick. I’m recovering, but still not 100%.

Aug 12 – Day 4

In the morning, I had breakfast at the hotel, just 3.50 EUR. It’s a decent breakfast, with bread, various spreads (including quite a few different meat ones), hard-boiled eggs, yogurt, orange juice, tea.

For lunch, I had a bratwurst:


That was my second bratwurst in Germany. I also had one the day before, which was greasier, and on a larger piece of bread. That one was from a different vendor. Both were the same price: 2 EUR.

I went to visit Metalab, where I watched their Makerbot print a case for the r0ket badge:


You can’t see it much in the picture, but outside the tent they have their signature phone booth.

In the evening, I watched a talk here at CCCamp called “Financing the Revolution.” I stayed up well past 2 AM to chat about Bitcoin. I bought a silver coin for 5.20 BTC.

Aug 13 – Day 5

Today we have pleasant weather, and I’m enjoying myself with my new German friends, including Cefalon, who lives in Cologne. I might join him to Cologne, where I may attend Gamescom, and then go to France to meet Caleb and Andrew.

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How do you kill procrastination?

I’m hoping that the reason for my procrastination is my illness.

If it is, then when I recover, I’ll be a wonderfully productive individual again.

Yes, I’m ill. I’ve been ill for a few days now. It’s some kind of contagious illness, involving a fever, sore throat, and cough. I’m hoping to use this time as an opportunity to get in touch with my feelings.

There are a lot of things I want to improve in my life, but it’s hard to remember them, and even harder to act on them. Here’s a few of them:

1. I wish I blogged more.

Reading old blog posts is really awesome. Unfortunately, so many things didn’t get blogged: my trip in Taiwan, my time in Vietnam with my family, some outings with friends.

2. I wish I had a better memory.

I need to read The Memory Book. I bought it once. I think it’s still at home in California. Unfortunately, I don’t have it with me, and it doesn’t exist anywhere online. It’s surprising how many books still don’t exist on the Internet.

3. I wish I had some kindred spirits.

There are some people who seem similar to me, and I think we’d get along well, but we don’t talk much. Some I’ve never communicated with, like Tim Ferriss. Others I’ve only “talked” with over email, like Derek Sivers. Others I’ve met, like Tynan. And others are old friends who I’ve just fallen out of touch with, like Nick Shum. I’d like to put more effort into reaching out to these people. I don’t want to be burden on them. If I can, I’d love to help them.

4. I wish I didn’t procrastinate.

I’ve been reading a lot of articles online. Maybe what I need is to organize my time. Why read articles when I could be reading a genuinely good book, like The Memory Book I mentioned above? I still have a long attention span for programming, but the last time I did any serious reading was years ago, while a freshman or sophomore in college.

Some of the junk I’m reading these days:

- Hunting for great programmers using puzzles
When you write your essays in programming languages
- Stuff about the US’s credit downgrade

To change subjects for a bit, I’d like to ponder on the future of the US economy. Economics has long been an intense passion of mine, and I’m sure I’ve stated many times that microeconomics was one of my favorite classes in college.

Fiat currencies are destined for failure

“It seems the world has spent the years since 2008 stumbling from one debt crisis to another. In fact, if we count the Third World debt crisis, which did after all affect most human beings on the planet, the world has been in a continual series of debt crises since the ‘70s. The difference is that until very recently, the U.S. was the ultimate arbiter of who owed what to whom, and on what terms. 2008 marked the moment when that began to change. Yesterday’s downgrade of T-bonds that had long been treated as literally as good as gold by the world’s central bankers marks the first full, public admission that this is no longer the case.”

History shows that fiat currencies don’t last long. It has been tried many times in the past. We’re not doing much more than repeating the mistakes of the past.

“Since 1971, when the U.S. abandoned the gold standard, and the world has been moving to a system of virtual credit money, we have been entering a new period of history. But it’s not entirely unprecedented.”

Yep. It’s not at all unprecedented.

Why we can’t have a dog

To change the subject once again, I’d like to ponder a bit about why I’m strongly opposed to having a dog at our house in Vietnam. Thuy and Trang have asked me more than once for permission to bring a dog here, but unless they’re willing to take 100% responsibility for all aspects of the dog’s presence, I must remain firmly opposed.

“I would never get a dog. I like dogs, but the limits it would put on my life would be too extreme. I would have to be home frequently to feed it. I would have to live in a house or apartment that could accommodate the thing. If I wanted to travel I’d have to find someone to take care of the dog.

I’m not saying not to get a dog – I’m saying to consider what you give up by getting one. The same goes for girlfriends, children, houses, cars, jobs, or just about anything. If you’re going to have an attachment, make sure that you know what you’re giving up by taking it, and make sure that it’s worth it to you.

One overlooked attachment is the habit of collecting stuff. People make a whole lot of decisions based on how much stuff they have. TVs, DVD collections, computers, art, etc. You might be surprised how happy you’d be with very little stuff, and you’d certainly be amazed at the freedom getting rid of it gives you.

I don’t know a ton of people who have gotten rid of their possessions, but none of them have ever gone back.” – Tynan on Opportunity Windows

Very well said.

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Getting out of the Vincom Center

Tonight I read EJ’s horrifying Airbnb story, and then moved on to read the other posts on her blog. She’s a surprisingly talented writer, and I’m quite engaged by her prose.

One experience I can relate to comes from a post titled It’s not all beautiful:

Multiple levels, directional signs leading to nowhere… enter the great labyrinth at your own risk, and be prepared to fight for your escape. After-hours is particularly complicated, when the shops close, the teenagers go home, escalators and exits are sealed off, and the lost and confused (like me) get trapped inside. More than a few times, I have inadvertently exited the Metro into this underground horror, and have spent upwards of 20 minutes desperately trying to get out. I wish I were joking.

Well, there’s a similar situation here in Vietnam, at the Vincom Center, a shopping mall built not too long ago. Quite a few times, I found myself trapped inside the building, with only one hard-to-reach exit as the sole way out. When the mall closes, they shut down the elevators and escalators, lock most of the doors, and have security guards refusing passage through some other routes. There’s just one (or maybe two) predefined exits that late-stayers can take, and finding that exit (and walking to it) takes a bit of effort.

It has been months since I last got trapped in the Vincom Center, so perhaps things are different now.

Still, it always struck me as a very strange state of affairs. Guess it’s not so uncommon– it even happens on the other side of the world (in France). Then again, Vietnam was a French colony in the past…

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Taiwan Mobile Check Balance

With Taiwan Mobile, call *867# to check your current balance.

This page on TaiwanMobile.com has info about how to get info about your account, but it doesn’t reveal the *867# trick.

Today was the first full day of my second trip to Taiwan. We went to the Taipei Toy Festival 2011, the Shilin Night Market, and a good Japanese restaurant near the Yomi Hotel, where we’re staying for 3 nights.

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TradeHill Coupon Code

Use promo code:   TH-R110149

– at TradeHill to get a discount on all trades for the lifetime of your account.

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