Archive for November, 2005

Thai Neuroses

Wednesday, November 30th, 2005

Thais, in common with Vietnamese and some other South-East Asian peoples, have decided that white skin is attractive. Their favorite pop stars and actors are ghostly pale, as are all their models. Most of the mannequins in clothing stores are western. And Nivea’s range of skin care products for men in Thailand includes this ‘Whitening Cream’, which guarantees to whiten your skin in five - yes, five! - different ways.

Meanwhile most of the western visitors who come here go directly to the beach resorts of Phuket, Ko Tao, or Ko Phi Phi in search of a deep tan.

Skin transplants anyone?

TTDWYH3MOINY#2: Plan a round-the-world trip

Sunday, November 27th, 2005

In the taxonomy of travel, I have been a road warrior, a tourist (touristus sunworshippus, t. hikerus, and t. culturus, but not t. scenicus driverus), an ex-pat (an Irishman living and working in London and then New York), but never until now a traveller.

Rolf Potts, the Thoreau of Generation X, prefers the term ‘vagabond’ for someone who sets out with no particular destination in mind and no set time limit, with a loaded backpack and an open mind. That seems too kind for those who wander up and down the squalid Khao San road in Bangkok in search of cheap beer, and too rakish for the earnest types that are here looking for a spiritual experience or material for their first novel.

Summer and I are just curious. It’s a big world, we’ve seen very little of it, and as recently as our trip to Turkey in August we were reminded that you can’t learn anything about a country in ten days. Selling Vindigo has given us the time and the money to satisfy some of that curiosity, without having to fret about a daily budget.

So we have packed two carry-on sized bags with everything we need for about nine months (that we can’t easily buy on the road). We have given up our apartments in New York; donated twenty boxes of random stuff to Goodwill; sold more on Craigslist; and put the rest of what we own into storage. We bought two one-way tickets to Bangkok and on to Ho Chi Minh city in Vietnam. We know where we are sleeping for the next seven days. Are we now vagabonds?

Posted at N 13 deg 45.553 min E 100 deg. 29.809 min

Fashion Statement

Thursday, November 10th, 2005

We’re in the basement of Tent and Trails, New York’s finest purveyor of outdoor equipment. I have found a pair of shoes that I think will take me through the next nine months of travel, but Summer and the salesman Will are surrounded by open boxes of hiking boots, trail shoes, and trail runners. She’s narrowed it down to two pairs. She turns to Will.

“Which do you think is cuter?”

“Get out of my store.”

“Seriously, which?”

“Look in the mirror.”

Half-hidden behind a row of mountain-climbing boots is a 12 inch square mirror, Tent and Trails’ one concession to fashion.

“I can’t really tell from that.”

“Look closer.”

Summer bends down. In very small letters taped to the center of the mirror are the words ‘You Look Fabulous.’

Peer-to-peer Location

Sunday, November 6th, 2005

For a long, long time we’ve been waiting for carriers to launch automatic location-detection for phones. In 1996, the government mandated that carriers roll out this technology for 911 calls. The commercial possibilities were fascinating; entrepreneurs and investors and analysts talked up the potential for a whole new category called ‘location-based services’, and Vindigo was one of dozens of companies founded in the last 10 years in anticipation of LBS.

The technology is ready. In most parts of the country, emergency
services can locate a wireless 911 caller. And if they can’t, it’s
probably because the local authorities haven’t got the funds to link their
systems to the carriers. But we’re still waiting for commercial services … 1997. 2001. 2005.

To cut a 10-year-long story short, with the exception of Nextel, the carriers just haven’t gotten around to LBS. There’s always been something more important to do: WAP, or Java, or ringtones, or push-to-talk, or 3G. And unfortunately, because the wireless Internet in its current form is closed and proprietary, the rest of us have to sit tight and wait for the carriers to decide when this application is important enough to bring to market.

Which makes Navizon very interesting. Navizon offers a small app for wireless (Wi-Fi or cellular) Pocket PCs. Download their app and in many places in the US they can provide you with a good estimate of your location, based on the co-ordinates of the Wi-Fi nodes or cell towers that you are within range of. But how do they know those co-ordinates? That’s the interesting part. A small number of their users are GPS enthusiasts; people who have a GPS attachment for their Pocket PC. Navizon’s app runs in the background on their machines and as they walk around it records the latitude and longitude of all the nodes and towers they pass. Given enough users in the right places, Navizon can collect and maintain this information for the whole planet - for free. In Web 2.0 speak this is called peer-produced content; folksonomic location-finding.

It’s fun to think of the other data that could be collected this way. Volunteers with the right attachment for their phone could build up global maps of air pollution, air temperature, noise levels, or traffic, just by walking around. They could monitor biohazards or radioactivity. They could collect prices in stores (from their RFID labels), or sample music played in public. Or maybe they could just cheat at hipster bingo.

I don’t know whether Navizon will be a successful business, but it’s
a great example of what will be possible once consumers are carrying
true smartphones: devices with open operating systems and an IP stack. Most importantly, we won’t have to wait for the carriers to decide which
applications to prioritize, and which ones we have to wait 10 years for. 

Things to do when you have three months off in New York: #1 Get Married

Wednesday, November 2nd, 2005

I have been married for ten days, and I am a happy man. Thanks to Padraig, my best man, for this first photo and for much else besides.

I have not written anything here for two months, because weddings expand to fill the time allocated to them. Every time I thought about posting, some nuptial emergency called me away. A relative who needs to change hotel rooms; the caterer balking at the design of the cake; ties that need to be bought for the groomsmen; a CD that has to be burned. Now. Now. Now.

But it was worth it. Thanks to everyone for a wonderful day, especially our celebrant Andra Miller, everyone at the Yale Club, the Park Avenue Band, our friends and families, and most of all my beautiful wife.