Archive for May, 2006

Historical Prague

Wednesday, May 31st, 2006

There’s a kooky (in a good way) retired history professor staying at this hostel. He offers a tour around Prague and donates the proceeds to fund a documentary about WWII survivors. Though it’s not a tour — it’s a “history class” (this allows him to take groups off of the legally regulated tour path).

The tour took about five hours, including a break for lunch, and was fantastic! Steven knows the typical history of Prague - of which there is quite a bit - and also knows a lot of stories, most of which were pretty hilarious.

Later, I went with three other people up to the castle. It’s lit at night, and the entire place is almost empty. I’m going to upload some of those photos now…

travel day

Monday, May 29th, 2006

I flew to Prague, got rained on, and am happily ensconced in a hostel with free wifi. And free coffee. Woo!

Mary King’s Close

Sunday, May 28th, 2006

My major adventure for today was visiting “The Real Mary King’s Close”. Apparently, in the late 1800s, the government decided to build a national building right on top of an occupied city block. The buildings were on a very steep hill, so rather than filling them in, they just shaved a layer off the top to create a flat surface. This left up to three stories of buildings underground, beneath the foundation of the building.

The tour is a little cheesy, complete with ghost story and plastic models of people with the plague (illuminated in flickering, faint light, of course). But the building itself is really cool. In some places, you can see the original prints on the walls, and some of the plaster, which was apparently made with human ashes. I really enjoyed it.

 I also found a cafe with free wifi. It’s across the street from the convention center, and it’s called the ‘All Good’ cafe. Cheap food, coffee, and wifi… go there. :)

A day of exploration, and cows

Saturday, May 27th, 2006

I’ll post the rest of my conference (work) notes soon, but now for some fun…

The conference ended last night, and after watching an insane British kinky mystery on TV, I fell asleep. I deliberately didn’t set an alarm and slept until 11am, which tells me that I am finally adjusted to this time zone.

I had no goals for today other than to explore, perhaps learn something, and relax, so I packed up my camera, umbrella (this was very smart), and notebook, and set off. I wandered from the hotel/convention center toward Edinburgh Castle, and eventually found myself in Hunter Square, where I discovered the Best Coffee Shop Ever. It’s called “Chocolate Soup”, and they specialize in chocolate-based hot drinks. They also have a savory hot soup bar, where I had a very nice spinach and brocolli soup with fresh onion bread (along with a very, very decadent mocha). I want one of these in downtown Providence!

I picked up some postcards and wrote them out, then I walked the entire Royal Mile. There was a wedding at one of the churches, and I caught a few great photos of the procession. I also visited the Museum of Childhood (there were lots of live, modern children in here, too), and the Museum of Edinburgh (history of the city since the 1700s, which was fascinating). At some point, I got rained on for about ten minutes.

Finally, I went shopping on Princes St. Everyone reading this ought to know that for me, shopping means either computer bits (I went to two stores, but neither had a CF card reader) or books (I picked up three British scifi books that aren’t available at home yet).

Oh, and the cows! Edinburgh has its own collection of fiberglass cows, pseudorandomly distributed around the city. I have photos of cows alone, cows with children on them, cows with teenagers on them, cows with spiky-haired bikers hugging them, cows ignoring crowds of people with cameras, and cows getting things thrown at them. Overall, my feelings about them are mixed. They are a bit odd and don’t fit with the atmosphere of the city at all, but they do provide a continually source of amusement. And I can’t stop taking photos of them.

I’m off to find some fish and chips for dinner. Cheers!

www2006 - day 2

Friday, May 26th, 2006

This morning opened the technical conference, and the session chairs highlighted some of the papers and new paper categories. The trends this year were:

  • Web for the People - social networks, developing regions, pervasive access, security
  • People Powered Web - social tagging, user-behavior search

The plenary panel discussed the promise of the semantic web. There were several very interesting points made, but one was about the repesentation of concepts; with the flickr API, you can put in a term, and have an image of that concept automatically returned to you.

After that I attended a presentation from the w3c track on Rich Internet Applications. The presenters briefly reviewed the specs for XMLHTTPRequest, DOM level 3 events, Remote Events for XML (REX), Selectors, etc.

The session concluded with a presentation on “The Power of Declarative Thinking”, which brought up the interesting point that spreadsheets are one of the only ‘programs’ routinely written by non-programmers. Spreadsheets, of course, are declarative. Why aren’t there more such languages?

The conclusions on the advantages of declarative development:

  • Accessible applications
  • Device independance
  • Re-use
  • Less coding

The main conference reception was held at Edinburgh Castle, which was closed to the public. I took some wonderful photos on my walk up and around. The light was wonderful!

There were canapes and lots (and lots) of wine, and some fascinating conversation. I managed to end up in a room that was sparsely populated, which created an opportunity to actually talk. I heard later on that the other rooms were crammed full, so I’m glad I missed that.

After the event I attended the Tresky.com “pub crawl”, though only two of the three places were real pubs. There was a rather entertaining trivia quiz, and my team only got one wrong (but we lost to a group that got them all right). Not bad, considering the questions were about Scottish history, and none of us were Scottish.

Cool Coffee Device

Thursday, May 25th, 2006

My hotel room in Edinburgh has an electric kettle, and is stocked with tea, creamers, and little tubes of instant coffee. Unfortunately, I really don’t care for the instant coffee. They also don’t serve coffee before the opening presentation at this conference, which presents a real problem - I can either buy a cup for two pounds (which is way too many dollars), or go without.

I was determined to find something suitable, so I stopped at a Sainsbury’s (small grocery store) and checked out their coffee selection. Among the stardards and instant things, they had these neat little single-cup, no-machine-necessary coffee packets!

The idea is simple - there’s some ground coffee in a filter, with a cardbord tab on top. When you squish this device into a mug, the tab opens to allow you to pour hot water directly onto the coffee grounds. It runs through the coffee and filter, and creates a cup right there.

I’ve seen similar things that involve pieces of plastic, but this is neat and completely disposable. I’ll have photos as soon as I manage to download them from my camera (I left my cable at home).

www2006 - day 1

Wednesday, May 24th, 2006

I know what most of you are interested in, so without any digression, here is the list of free stuff I have gathered so far:

  • A Microsoft Live T-shirt (size P - it might actually fit!)
  • A cute little stuffed Tresky goat
  • A ‘free drink token’ for the Tresky pub crawl tonight
  • A bag from Ask
  • A mug from the National e-Science Centre
  • A foam thingie obviously intended to be thrown around from Microsoft
  • A bunch of pens - Ask, BCS, NEC, etc.

CS conferences always have the best stuff. And now, onto the academic content (it’s okay to stop reading here):

The program was opened by the conference organizers, and a few words from the First Minister of Scotland. The keynote was delivered by Sir David Brown, chairman of Motorola, Ltd. He was an excellent speaker, and I think he was a daring choice for a tech conference. He spoke with an engineer’s perspective about the future of the web, with a strong emphasis on mobility and “seamless experience”. He had a fabulous image of the “disruptive spiral” of business and technology innovation (one following the other following the other).

He did repeat the phrase “the devices formerly known as mobile phones” just a few too many times. It was at least double digits, which makes it mockable, and a few of the afternoon’s presenters made a point of using it. Of course, that could be what Sir David was after in the first place.

After the keynote and coffee break, I attended the Current Best Practices in Web Development and Design. This long workshop was a series of presentations by David Leib, CTO of IBM.com, and David Schrimpton, a professor at the University of Canterbury. The main topics were:

  • Web 2.0 - hype or not? What does it mean? What makes something “web 2.0-ish”?
  • Web services in the context of web standards
  • Expreme programming and agile development practices in the content of web application development

All three topics were related but different, and I enjoyed all three segments of the presentation. It gave me some good ideas for future work. I also got to hear about WOW, and the WOW tech minute, which seems like a great podcast.

Overall, I’m really enjoying it so far, learning a lot, and meeting a ton of interesting people!

I have arrived!

Monday, May 22nd, 2006

It’s anticlimactic, but I’m safely in Edinburgh. I flew from Boston through Amsterdam, then up to Edinburgh. I sat next to a chatty older Greek lady, and despite an ongoing conversation, I managed to sleep for a few hours.

I just registered for the conference. The bag and pen is nice (ha, Stew), and I’m having trouble choosing the sessions that I’m going to attend.

I’m off to dinner with some Americans I met at the check-in desk… :)

Welcome to ‘where in the world…’

Wednesday, May 17th, 2006

Welcome to my travel blog! I will be documenting my adventures as I travel abroad this summer.

My general itinerary will be available soon from the sidebar, and watch the flickr widget for my latest photos.

Please feel free to comment on any post, and do keep in touch! I’m always looking for recommendations (hotels, restaurants, museums, activities) for any of my destinations, and news from home.

Thanks for visiting,

Hilary


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