29 March, 2007

Made It!!

Ok everyone, I'm sure you've wanted to hear from me. I did a little writing along the way, and so now I present to you - Trip: a tale of my travels.

I love air travel. However...

Heh... interesting start to the morning. Made it to the airport on time, and had an emotional goodbye to my family. I met a nurse on her way to New Orleans as my first seat partner. We took off about 10 minutes later than expected, because of weather conditions up near Chicago. While in the air, we circled O'Hare Int'l for about 30 minutes, before we got clearance to land. I'm sure you can see where this is going...

Yep. Missed my connection to San Francisco. Made it into O'Hare at around 7:57, at gate B22. That left me 3 minutes to get to gate C22 about a quarter-mile away. Needless to say... Nope.

Oh well, I was worried that I wouldn't get any pictures from O'Hare anyway.

My flight path has now changed a bit, and hopefully I can get ahold of someone in the JASIN program to let them know about the issue. Half-panicked, I ran around the B concourse at O'Hare, trying to get a rebooked flight. Thanks to a magically wonderful group of people from both United Airlines and Air Nippon for All (ANA), I was able to get this flight path instead: From O'Hare, I have a _direct_ flight to Tokyo Narita. I have a 6 hour layover, but I also have to make it to Tokyo Haneda, for a flight to Fukuoka. I'll arrive about an hour later than what I thought, and about 3000 yen less rich due to a bus ride between the two airports (which, from what I was told, takes about two hours). We'll see how things progress.

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Currently sitting on my rescheduled flight from O'Hare to Narita. It's been a bit boring on here, and I've got just about 5 hours left. It's been a quiet trip; most of the time, I'll talk to the people around me, and see what their story is, and then just make conversation to pass the time. However, when there is no one around you that speaks any English... well, that makes it a bit harder now, doesn't it?

For some reason, I'm having an issue with my camera and Sabayon 3.3. I'll check to see if it's Sabayon specifically when I stop at Tokyo Haneda (after the bus ride between airports...). That way, I'll be able to at least get some pictures up onto the blog as well; I've taken a few, but haven't been able to upload them yet. I wish my card reader on the laptop would work - that would make this a lot simpler.

I watched a Japanese movie in-flight. It was called Nada Sou Sou (Tears For Each of Us). Such an emotional storyline! If you can find a copy off of amazon.com that's subbed, get it. It's about sticking together with your family, no matter what kind of family it may be: brother and sister, father and daughter, or guardian to child. Also, I've kept myself entertained with the provided games and music that comes in the seat panel in front of me. Unfortunately, cheap games and a limited selection of music don't last too long.

So, I've taken out my laptop, hoping to catch some eyes with Sabayon. I'll pitch my F/OSS sound byte when I can :)

Well, I've looked at a map, and it's officially tomorrow now - I've crossed the International Date Line. Tokyo Narita is about 4.5 hours away, and looking ever closer. I can't wait to finally land. I'll keep everyone informed of the situation as it continues.

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Well, I made it to Tokyo Narita at around 2:15 PM Thursday afternoon. Quite a trip that was. The entry to Tokyo, although a bit rough on a 777, was absolutely gorgeous. I think the guys next to me were bemused at my repetetive "sugoi...". However, although I made it to Narita, my luggage unfortunately didn't. As far as I can tell, it is being routed through to Nagoya to Fukuoka, as it should, albeit a plane or two late. Oh well, they have the info for where I'm going to be staying, and they have Mark Tiedemann's number - they'll be able to let me know if anything comes up.

Currently, I'm sitting on a bus headed towards Tokyo Haneda airport. Picture Tokyo like Chicago. You have the huge airport for all of the international flights (Narita == O'Hare), and then you have the smaller city airport that maintains most of the domestic flights (Haneda == Midway). It's about a two-hour bus ride, and amazingly, my airline paid for the transportation! I was shocked. Further proof that I will be taking United for all of my flights from now on. :)

Well, I better get off so I can get a couple snapshots of downtown Tokyo. How many times do you get to do that, anyway?

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Well, I've made it to Haneda. The bus ride was around an hour and a half - a bit better than the two hours that everyone was predicting. I went to check in (about 2 hours early... I'm finally somewhere at a time when I can feel comfortable) and they wanted to move me to an earlier flight. Unfortunately, I had already called Mark Tiedemann and told him about my time difference, and I didn't want to have to bother him again, so I left it be. Haneda is very, VERY sleek. Both airports are well designed, and look and feel both advanced, hi-tech, and functional. I was surprised by Narita, but Haneda just blew me away. I was not expecting an airport to have a 4-floor shopping district built into it. :)

There are a whole bunch of shops, from clothing to food, to computer accessories, to food, to bathroom items, to food... seeing a pattern here? It's worse than Chicago and a Starbucks on every block! Even now, I'm sitting next to an ANA Festa stand, which sells items from the ANA plane line, as well as a lot of different types of traditional Japanese airport food. I'd go and get something, but ordering food is harrowing. I know only a little bit of Japanese (enough to get me by - the most common word I've used so far: "Sumimasen."), so going through tasks like ordering food and drink are a bit shocking still. I guess the best way is to get comfortable by doing it and seeing how it goes... but I'm chicken. :)

Hopefully, there's a secure Wi-Fi spot in Fukuoka (or at the hotel) that I can hit to post all of this. There's one here at Haneda, but I'm not too sure if I can trust it, especially since the SSID is "BIGBIRD." So I'll wait. I've got plenty to post, and Thursday will certainly show more. Even with all of the changes, and exploring of Tokyo that wasn't really scheduled (hehe...), it's still been a blast. Like I said earlier... I love airport travel.

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So there you go. So far, the only thing that I've noticed that will cause me a problem, is that I can't charge my laptop. I need to find a 3-prong to 2-prong adapter, or I'm sunk. Oh well, it'l 11:15 here. Good night.

27 March, 2007

Pre-flight Check

Hey everyone. I'm here, about 15 hours away from leaving the airport in Moline, and heading off. It's crazy! I'm gonna change a couple things on here, in hopes that more people from around the globe might take part in what is going on here. That includes a recent linkup to Technorati, a huge social networking site. I'll also try to start posting more regularly. I'm looking at a Tuesday/Thursday/Weekend posting schedule, with more in between as needed. We'll see what happens.

Well, back to my life, pre-trip. I went bowling over the weekend with some of my friends to celebrate the fact that I'm leaving. We arranged the bowling party for 5 o'clock. I was the first to show up, at around 4:35. After telling the person at the desk that there would be a group of about 6 of us coming in at 5, I went out and listened to some music in my car. About 20 minutes later, another couple people show up: Blake and Garrin, two of my friends and fellow D&D players from this area (yeah, I know. We're all a bunch of geeks. :P) Another 10 minutes pass, and the last group shows up: Laura (my ex-girlfriend, but we're still close friends), and her entourage of people she brought home from Luther College: Steve, Elin, and Sonja.
By the time that we were all there, the bowling alley had become full, and so, without any open lanes, we decided to order pizzas at the Happy Joe's that was in the other part of the building. About the time that our pizzas were ordered and we had made ourselves comfortable at some tables, however, someone came by to tell us that, yes, now are lanes are open. Go figure. We let someone know that we'd take the pizzas over by the bowling lanes, and set off to bowl. Blake, as predicted, won both games. Elin and I posted second and third once each. That's as much as I can remember. If someone kept the scoresheet, I'll make sure to get the rest up here.

After our hearty games of bowling, I went over to see my sister and her fianceé for dinner. She had come down to the Quad Cities from South Bend, IN, to say goodbye, and this was her way of doing it. We all ate a delicious meal, and we talked about Japan, how their culture and methods of doing things were different than ours. After dinner, I headed home, and, as I typically do, played on the computer for a couple hours, and went to bed.

Sunday morning was a bit emotional. Since it was the last time I'd see any of the people in the church choir for a long time, everyone got a chance to give me wishes of good luck, handshakes and hugs, and prayers. It felt good to have everyone caring so much about me. Fortunately, I know that everyone has a link to this blog, so they can all see what's exactly going on with me as I go. I asked my pastor, Fr. Jack, to place something into our church bulletin about my trip, so I know everyone has a link here.

Monday, I went over to the airport to get some last-minute details ironed out (is this bag too big for a carry-on? Can I get my ticket printed yet? etc.). Everything about my trip, which had kinda been sitting in the back of my mind as a superficial thing, suddenly became very concrete. I realized, "Hey. I'm actually leaving in 2 days." It was awesome - such a rush of excitement and power.
My mom arrived home around 5:30, bringing home a copy of Casino Royale; I hadn't seen the movie yet, and so we spent the evening watching that. It was enjoyable - and Daniel Craig makes a good Bond (he reminds me of how Roger Moore portrayed the character).
After watching the movie, we got everything packed up into my suitcases - all the clothes I'll be taking, all of my extra gadgets (Camera, Laptop, Magazines to read, etc.). After packing, sleep kinda failed me, and so I didn't make it to sleep until about 1:15 in the morning.

So far, Tuesday's been not too bad. We're planning a dinner cookout at my house this evening as a going away party, with my neighbors and a couple of family friends. I've been cooking this potato-cheese casserole thing in the crock-pot, and we've got a couple loaves of bread out that I'll throw in the oven around 5:30. It should be tasty, and a good way to say goodbye to everyone.

Before leaving, I'd like to say thanks to everyone who's helped me out so far. Without all of your care and interest, I wouldn't be going at all. Thanks to all of my Clarke friends - you guys make Dubuque like a second home to me. Thanks to my family - without you, I wouldn't even be here. Now look at what I'm going to be able to do! And thank you to everyone out there who has been taking the time to actually read all of this - you are the ones that make it fun to post here, and let me see what you guys have to think by commenting.

さよなら!

17 March, 2007

The 28th Fast approaches!

Hey everyone. Just figure I'd let you know what's been going on lately.

I headed up to Dubuque on Monday for a concert. I've waited almost 12 years to see Rockapella live, and I finally had the option to. I had work off on Monday and Tuesday, so I made a nice stay out of the trip too. The concert was amazing - all of them were wonderful musicians, and most of them were genuinely interested in what was going on around them. One was a bit hasty, trying to get me through as quickly as possible through the autograph line, but I can understand that. The one tenor, Kevin Wright, was very nice, and we had a good conversation about everything. He even took a written link to here (I had an extra scrap of paper handy, and wrote it down.)
Here's a picture of me with some of my friends with Rockapella behind us.From Top to Bottom, Left to Right, we have Kevin Wright, Stephanie Goedkin, George Baldi, moi, Scott Leonard, Kristin Purcell, Jeff Thatcher, Megan Mooney, and John K. Brown.

It was an awesome concert. Sean (Megan's brother, and one of the best people you will ever meet [just don't touch him, he's contact - ophobic]) had said that it's all right: he can die happy now. Spent the night over in Sean's room. He's got a comfy couch, but it's a bit short. Can't complain though, since I was randomly crashing there anyway.

Tuesday came and went, it was pretty uneventful. Got my Deposit slips for my bank ordered, and they arrived here today with no problem. Now if it's needed, my mom can send money to my bank, and I can pull it out with my atm card in Japan. All will be well. I keep feeling that I'm going to run short on money, though. Something will never really add up, but that's inevitable. You always have some things that will nag at you. My personal ones are finances, and forgetting to bring something. I'll pack and repack everything probably 5 times before my trip, just to make sure that there isn't a chance that I'll forget anything while I'm over there.

I leave in 10 days and 7 hours... It's getting interesting. The nervousness that I felt a couple weeks ago left and came back again, but it's left again. It's kinda back and forth on a lot of things.

Info: I found out some things about my home-stay. I'll be staying with 多田 由美子 (Tada Yumiko, for those without Eastern language support). She is a landlady at the building that I'll be staying at, and lives with her daughter, 森 裕子 (Mori Yuko), her daughter's husband, 森 春樹 (Mori Haruki), and their 22-month-old triplets, 森 しゅんたろ (Mori Shuntaro), 森 せいらん (Mori Seiran), and 森 水練 (Mori Suiren). It's about 20 minutes away from the college, by bus.

Oh, if you couldn't tell, I figured out a way to do my kanji/kana on my laptop. Kyoya-kun has been very helpful. :)

PS: Yumiko-san, if you are reading this, my apologies to the first two children - the Kanji didn't look right for their names, and so I used the hiragana instead. ごめん なさい。 Hopefully I got everyone else's name right.

08 March, 2007

A changing of the guard

Well, yesterday was quite the experience. I had to say goodbye to one of my closest and dearest friends - my laptop. It stuck by me for a long time, and it did a wonderful job in all it did. I had gone to turn it on Sunday night to play a game of the Battle for Wesnoth(a turn-based strategy game, quite fun), and as the laptop powered on, I noticed something odd... The screen would not turn on. I had a blank screen. I power cycled it again, to see if it was just a fluke thing, and it wasn't. I had no visual on the LCD. Monday, in a fit of experimentation, I decided to hook it up to the monitor to see if I could switch displays, and get it to work like that. The monitor came up fine, and when I hit FN+F5 to switch displays, the LCD came up again! Monday and Tuesday I left the system running, just to make sure nothing was going to die again. I finally turned it off yesterday, to see whether or not it was going to happen again, and it did. No screen. I tried hooking it back up to the monitor, and this time, the monitor worked, but switching the display did nothing. So I have a working laptop without an LCD screen, that will work when plugged in. That would be fine, except that I leave for japan in three weeks (Exact date: March 28th, 6AM). So, I called Toshiba tech support, to see what they could do. Turns out, I'm over my warranty. They gave me a referral to a company to try out and see what they could do. I talked to them about it; to take it in to be looked at is a flat rate of $100. In order to replace the screen, it was $650. Grand total, plus labor: around $800. To which I thought, "that's more than the laptop is worth, and I could probably get a new one for that much.

And that is what I did. Ladies and gentlemen, I would like to intoduce you to: Kyoya.



Allow me to go into geek mode, for just a bit. Kyoya (named after the character seen here is an Acer Aspire 5610Z, which includes:
Intel Dual Core T2060 (Before the Core Duo series) @ 1.6Ghz apiece
80 GiB HDD
1 GiB RAM
DVD+ and DVD-RW, including dual layer
Intel GMA 950 integrated graphics (not bad, especially for my use)
Integrated WLAN (Atheros-based chipset)

Not too shabby. And, I picked it up for $150 less than what I would have paid for repairing my other system: $643.49, after sales tax.

Kyoya came with Windows Vista Home Premium preinstalled. I left it on there for the novelty. :) The real story came when I threw in my Sabayon Linux 3.2 LiveDVD to install Sabayon to my HDD. I think there's one thing that hasn't worked out of the box, out of the entire system. PCMCIA registered fine, Sound, Video (with help from 915resolution), AIGLX/Beryl working beautifully, and it suspends to RAM and disk! The only thing that wasn't working at this time, with no configuration, was the LCD does not change on an ACPI call. In other words, when you unplug it, the screen doesn't dim, and vice versa.

I was worried that I might not have a laptop to bring with me on my trip, but I'm glad I made this choice. Things couldn't be running better.

Have a good day everyone!

02 March, 2007

Chicago trip and Power problems

Hey everyone. Sorry to get this out so late, but we were out of power since Saturday night, until Tuesday. Wednesday and today I have work, but since I woke up early enough, I figured I might as well write.

Monday was my Chicago trip. We had quite a blast - I didn't know that it was the first time my mom was in downtown Chicago to enjoy herself in it. The ordeal at the consulate took an overwhelming minute-and-a-half. I basically dropped off everything that I needed to there, he took a look at it, said everything looked good, and said it'll be mailed back to me later. So, we had gone 3 hours to Chicago for a two minute meeting; now it was time to have fun. We ate at the Grand Lux Cafe, on N. Michigan. They had great food, and for being an up-class dining area, it was fairly inexpensive. Before you ask, yes - I got pictures. Here:Coming in to town - a bit foggy, so you can't see the buildings clearly.

A clock tower we passed while heading on this road:
Also known as N. Michigan Avenue.

My brother, Calvin, enjoying his complimentary bread and butter at the Grand Lux Cafe.

Well, I wonder who this handsome bloke could be? The statue's nice too.
Another shot from the Cafe.


Another couple shots from the Grand Lux Cafe.

Just a random shot of Saks Fifth Avenue across the street from the Consulate.

The past week hasn't all been fun and games though. As I said, from Saturday night (roughly 7:30) to Tuesday night (around the same time), our power had been out. Monday was a nice way to escape a cold house. Unfortunately for us, when our power goes, so do most of our supplies: water pumped from our shared well has an electric pump, so no water; our waste pump is electric, so no flushing toilets (yuck!); our heating goes out; and everything is just more than a bit uncomfortable. We made it through, though; we placed blankets on the floor and made a makeshift bed for everyone in the living room, and had the fireplace going strong.

Finally, I point out this last little bit of good news:

That's right, folks. No longer are we living in the stone age: we've moved from 56k to EV-DO-based broadband! It runs quite nicely, too. I did a couple of downloads to check out speeds on it: svn (subversion - a way to work with source code with other people and place it in the same area, for those less geekily inclined) ran at an average of 150 KiB/sec. Quite an improvement over 3 Kib/sec we were getting with dialup.

A quick connection test here [dslreports.com] shows that I have a 1005kbps (divide by 8 for KiB/sec) down/353kbps stream, with a latency of 192 ms. Not bad.

Well, have fun everyone. I'm gonna take a shower and head off to work.