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Korea runs on Dunkin

Posted by Jeff on Nov 11, 2009 in Travel, food

I arrived at the gate at the airport for my flight to Shanghai, and what I’d I find? Dunkin Donuts! Unfortunately the girl did not understand my order so I have coffee with cream and sugar instead of just cream. So, while it really does taste like Dunkin Donuts Coffee, my run of bad coffee incidents on foreign soil continues!

Dunkin Donuts at Seoul Airport

Things on Asia are smaller. I’m tall out here, and the large coffee is not so large :(

Prior to finding the gate I stopped off for a bite to eat. 6000 won which is less then $5 and I got a nice serving of steamed dumplings. American airports could learn a little about food service from Asian airports!

Steamed Dumplings for Breakfast

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Arrival in Seoul

Posted by Jeff on Nov 8, 2009 in Travel

The long flight finally ended. While I was in the air, I didn’t want to write about the fact that I was in a middle seat between two huge men. They weren’t fat, but they each could have played linebacker on an NFL team I think. There were a lot of American military on the flight, and I remember thinking that I could easily imagine them in uniform with a machine gun, and they’d be exactly what I’d want as a US Marine. Turns out, I noticed one of them filling in his immigration paperwork and he wrote “military” as his occupation, and “official business” as his reason for travel.

During the latter half of the flight, I frequently checked the onboard video system for the flight status. It has an interactive map that will display where the plane is, how much distance has been traveled, how much is left to go, etc. I knew this already, but the maps were very illustrative of how this flight was over land almost the entire time. The flat maps we use most of the time when we look at the Earth do us a disservice by creating a false concept of the world…one where the shortest distance between two points is a straight line. That is true, just not a straight line on a flat map.

Flight mapping system on the plane - our final approach to Seoul

Flight mapping system on the plane - our final approach to Seoul


Of course, when flying, you don’t always take the shortest path. For along time, coming down through Siberia, the computer was drawing a nice straight line from the plane’s position to Seoul which sliced right through North Korea. As we got closer, we ended up carving a nice wide arc around North Korea.

In the airport, I was being rushed about by two fellows from the host organization KERIS to be able to take some photos…but one of the first things I saw was Baskin Robbins and Dunkin Donuts. So far, it appears that US commercial interests, and global commercialism is alive and well here in Seoul. Lots of familiar fast food places like 7-11, Dunkin Donuts, Baskin Robbins, McDonalds…and car dealerships of all sorts, clothing, eletronics…its all here. I guess I didn’t really expect anything other than that given Korea is working hard itself to become a player in that game.

The hotel is like any modern hotel except it shares a couple things with some of the Chinese hotels I stayed in last year. There are tons of electrical outlets. There are 3 different outlets at the desk I’m sitting at now. Once is the Korean standard 220. Another is for everyone else who wants 220 as it has way more holes in it in varying shapes and sizes then any single plug could have. I think even a standard two and three prong US plug will slide in if you rotate it right. And, there’s a standard US 110 three prong outlet. In addition, the bathroom is raised by about 4 inches. So, remember that when you are jet lagged, wandering in the dark in your room to the bathroom at night…or you just might stub your toe as you walk through the doorway of the bathroom! And finally, the bed is very firm.

What is different here is that I think I’ve found the hotel that MLTI can’t break. Those of you who travel with me to MLTI training events know that we often suffer from the reality that there isn’t a hotel network that we can’t take down when we arrive with dozens and sometimes hundreds of people with laptops. I haven’t been in the conference space, but if the room connection is any indication, this network is a screamer. Prior to arrival, I knew the South Korea is the fastest place on earth along with Japan. I hear reports of 100Mbps to the home for Internet connection speeds as compared to the luxury speeds of Time Warner Business Class, 10Mbps. The room has wireless and a wire. I plugged in just to “feel it”. Visited iTunes to pull some content. While I was flying I remembered that among other things I lost way back when was an Enya CD I bought once. So, I decided to re-buy it on iTunes. I downloaded the whole album in less then 45 seconds. OMG that is fast.

When I checked in, I was told there was a reception for the conference up on the top floor of the hotel. I got myself cleaned up and presentable, and joined the group. I did catch up with my college classmate who invited me and met some of the other folks I had been exchanging emails with to arrange the trip. Overall, of the 30-40 people at the reception, most appeared to speak some English. They all spoke more English then I do their native languages, so hopefully my presentation will be understood. I’ll let you know if people laugh at the right times!

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Some things are the same

Posted by Jeff on Dec 8, 2008 in Travel

My father and I walked the Forbidden city today. It got cold so on the way home we stopped off at McDonalds because like in the US they have clean bathrooms and coffee.

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Random thoughts.

Posted by Jeff on Nov 30, 2008 in Travel

If I had good bandwidth, I’d upload a ton of photos. Alas, I’m in the airport, and this bandwidth is not so good. But,…speaking of bandwidth, things here in Australia are done differently than in the US. You don’t really pay for bandwidth (speed) but rather bandwidth (consumption). The 3G network here that iPhones and computers with mobile 3G USB receivers use runs at like 7 Mbps. Yes, 7 Mbps.

In one hotel, I had to pay for my connection as usual, but it was based on my consumption. 2GB of downloaded data and 20GB upload for $33 Australian (that’s about $21.45). Not really that bad, although I didn’t really bother going into Second Life because I didn’t want to consume that much data.

Makes you wonder…7Mbps on an iPhone…

More random things…aside from the coffee thing which I kinda figured out…when you order your dinner, be aware that an entree dish is not really a entree dish. Its an appetizer. If you want a dinner -size portion, order a “main”.

Fuel prices here are extremely high by my standards, but it seems to be the norm. It was noted to me that is would be half the cost in Europe and double what we pay in the US. I can’t speak for Europe pricing, but gasoline is about $1.43 per liter here now. That’s $5.72 per gallon. Phew…

Anyway, by morning I’ll be in China. Hopefully I’ll find unlimited bandwidth, and I can upload these photos…I’ve got a lot from this weekend’s jaunt through southeastern Australia.

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The 12 Apostles and more

Posted by Jeff on Nov 30, 2008 in Travel

Saturday was a busy day, but not like the previous days. I started out the day with walk down to the Yarra river that flows right through the heart of Melbourne. Took in a bit of the city, and made my way back to Geoff and Cecelia’s. Together we headed out again on foot to the Queen Victoria Market, and open air market where you can find a wide variety of stuff…food stuffs like resh produce, meats and fish, cheese and pastry to tourist souvenirs, hardware tools, clothing, and even the mankini (don’t ask!).

Had breakfast at one of the many cafes where I managed a “double shot latte” (I’m still not good at the coffee thing here, but I did learn that what we call “coffee” is refered to simply as “filtered coffee” but it not typically available. Further, when we say cream, they say milk…and really, they don’t use cream, they use milk.

Queen Victoria Market

Queen Victoria Market

We wandered about the market after breakfast. I was looking for things to purchase to bring home, Geoff was in need of some shorts, and Cecelia picked up some cherries and other fresh foods. Geoff did find a deal on some shorts, and I eventually did find some unique, hand-made things. I won’t tell you exactly what, because you never know what you might unwrap come Christmas :) Suffice to say, what I purchased was hand-made in Vietnam, but is also uniquely Australian at the same time, so I felt it was a better choice than the typical tourist trinkets.

After the market, we packed up the car, and took a road trip. I’ll let the photos speak for themselves. When I get a chance, I’ll post more on my mac gallery page, but here’s a sampling…I will note that one of our goals was to find kangaroos. We not only found kangaroos, but we also saw Cockatoo, a wallabee, koala bears, and an echidna.

kangaroo at the Angelsea Golf Course

kangaroo at the Angelsea Golf Course

Koala Bear we spotted along the side of the road

Koala Bear we spotted along the side of the road

The 12 Apostles

The 12 Apostles


Port Campbell at night

Port Campbell at night

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