Although this will expose me as a techno-geek, I think it’s pretty significant that Gartner – one of the world’s most respected consultancy groups – has issued a recommendation that people give Microsoft the flick for their web server platform, given the trouble that’s been seen across the world with virus alerts. They say people should look at other alternatives, which is a BIG kick in the teeth for Bill Gates, because their web server is so important to their future plans for other technologies. Stay tuned for more of this. :-)
Category: Life
This is my own life, in which I hold a masters degree.
Gotta Go?
The National Public Toilet Map is now online, and its usefulness is obvious to all of us. Of greater import, is the fact it’s apparently a project of the National Continence Management Strategy. I wasn’t aware a government organisation had existed for this sort of thing. Brings a whole new meaning to the term ‘whitepaper’.
New York: The Final Chapter
I’m finally back home, and it’s the only place in the world I’d like to be at the moment.
I did successfully get on the first flight out of the U.S. since the events of September 11, after negotiating the security at JFK airport. It flew via Los Angeles and then on to Sydney where there was a large contingent of Sydney media to interview people about the situation over there. I was running madly late for a connecting flight to Perth, so I managed to run the gauntlet of the cameras and grab a few minutes with Mum while she ferried me across to the domestic terminal. Granted, most of that time was spent trying to contact Qantas and say ‘hold the plane!’ because there’s one thing I didn’t want, and that’s to delay my return home by anything more than a few minutes.
The Ansett terminals at Sydney and Perth were eerily inactive as we passed through (Ansett, one of australia’s two domestic airlines, went broke while I was away). Normally, it’s a hive of activity, but every jet was sitting there unattended. It was a little sad to see the Big Birds sleeping so soundly.
I hadn’t expected to meet Ainslie at the airport, but she sucessfully managed to delay a lecture to meet me off the plane. It was such a great surprise (I had been expecting another hour lining up for a taxi and riding it home) that I felt like jumping around the airport and shouting “I’m *Really Home*!” but there’s only so much your legs can achieve after more than 34 hours travel time.
Now that I’ve had a chance to hug everyone, have a good shower and take a breath, the U.S. does seem like half a world away. Now that the situation is starting to get confusing and nasty, I appreciate whatever distance I can get from it, and the less air travel that is involved, the better. And you can’t get further away from stuff than Perth :-)
I’ve reviewed the videos I took of the trip, most notably the view of the twin towers from atop the Empire State Buiding which are stamped with ‘9/9/01’; somewhat of a collectors item nowadays. I took special note of the paraphernalia in the tourist stores in JFK, and more than half the trinkets have the WTC in them. Even a Visa ad at Sydney Airport has the WTC featuring prominently. What happens now? Can you produce a New York souvenir – especially with the New York skyline – and have it easily identified s New York any more? Is the ‘trademark’ dead?
So, here endeth this chapter. I now get the privilege of watching from a distance.
I hope.
This is where it starts to hit home
Microsoft will be releasing Flight Simulator without the World Trade Center in its latest version, according to CNN.com. Although I agree that it migh be distressing to people who lost friends and family in the latest disaster, isn’t this going a little over the top? They’re even going to release a patch for current versions so the WTC can be removed. So what happens to structures like the Berlin Wall, eh? Aparrently you can alter the scenery according to date in the game, so why not just remove the WTC from any game played after September 11, 2001? With respect to those who have been directly affected by the tragedy, this is getting a little silly. I think it’s more damaging to start acting like the WTC never existed – why diminish the tragedy by erasing the memory of the structure, eh?
How Airport Security Works
“How Airport Security Works” is a great article worth reading these days, from the brilliant ‘HowStuffWorks’ site.
More WTC and Pentagon Links
CNET.com has built a good collection of links which have information about the events in the U.S.
New York: The Long Way Home Part Two
I ‘m sitting in JFK Airport with a boarding pass, but from what I’ve heard, that’s not a guarantee of a flight.
I was a little disappointed to see that the taxi service hadn’t given me a stretch limo, like on the way in, but it was a nice, black four-seater which weaved in and out of traffic nicely.
An hour’s wait in line for check-in, and another half-hour for the trainee to figure out the computer systems (!). There were big guards around, and for the second time (Orlando being my previous) my carry-on luggage was tested with a swab for signs of drugs. Do I *look* like I do drugs? Maybe *after* this trip, but not after I’ve just done my hair!
As I expected, Ainslie’s C-Pen in the luggage attracted a little attention. I think after I showed and explained what it was, I was in more danger of it being confiscated just because it was a cool toy.
In the end, I’m happily clutching enough boarding passes to get me all the way home to Perth. Next report, Perth, hopefully.
UPDATE: The flight has just been put off by half an hour. That can’t be good.
New York: The Long Way Home
Just time for a quick note; I’ve been told to get to the airport and get in line for the first flight back to Australia; leaving JFK tonight (Sunday 16th). This is my only chance today, so I hope I make it on. Otherwise, there’s a long night ahead!
New York: Saturday Night
Now that America’s day of Prayer and Remembrance has passed for the victims of the terrorist attacks, talk here is turning to war. It’s the next logical stage in the grieving process, of course. (I hope they can hold it off until I’m back home, because it just means more uncertainty in the air).
I have a tentative airline booking for Australia for tomorrow night, so I hope that pans out; Airlines are only just getting back up and running, but they say their schedules in the US will never get back to normal. There’s already talks of huge layoffs at the airlines, so I guess the ratbags have won this round.
America is building up to some sort of battle. I can’t imagine it will be anything like we’ve seen before, and I can’t imagine how it can be done in such a way to sate the growing rage of Americans. No one’s dared contemplate it, yet, but I can’t see how anything less than the public execution of the guy everyone thinks is responsible will be enough.
People are no longer gathering around TVs and absorbing every word of the broadcasts, like they used to. At least in this hotel, people are playing golf and attending wedding receptions, with a passing glance at the TV sets. There has been no news today; no survivors rescued, no new bad news, either. More flags line the streets and halls, and the weather is finally back to brilliant. The word ‘normalcy’ is bandied about on the news broadcasts a little more frequently. But there’s still smoke where the towers should be. Once that’s gone, and the space where the towers used to be is sky….
A slow day to report; other than washing. For once in my life I had programmed my business clothes baggage to perfection, and now I have an extra couple of days. My greatest fear is that I’ll be called to go to the airport before all my washing is dried!
It’s now more than 24 hours since I was supposed to be boarding a flight to Perth. My Palm Pilot keeps updating me on where I should be; I had programmed reminders for each of my flights, so each time it beeps, I’m reminded how far I am from home right now. I hope I get a final booking before it reminds me that I should be in Perth.
I wish I was. Ainslie has had some bad news about her sister’s health, so I should be at home to give her support.
Only a day late, but counting.
New York: Thursday Night
American flags and rosettes line the streets here, as the US prepares to observe a national day of Remembrance and Prayer.
The tide is also turning. People are turning off the TV and turning away from the sustained horror of the whole story. Sadness upon sadness; as people turn to the TV and the walls of New York to post pictures of their missing loved ones and make impassioned pleas for their return, they are all starting to blur together and people are turning to each other for support and comfort.
It’s starting to rain outside the hotel window now. That can’t be helping the rescue effort.
Our training course is complete here; people have wedged themselves into whatever vehicles they can find and planned a circuitous route out of New York, back to their homes and family in all corners of the US.
I’m still waiting for word of my return flight to Australia; I may not be getting out of the US on Friday evening as originally planned. I might have to find some ground transport to the other side of the country and try to find a flight in Los Angeles (suspect characters are still trying to use NY airport and getting arrested). As far as I know, they are still tightening security at the airport, but I’d prefer to be late than *late*, if you know what I mean. Maybe a road trip across the US might be interesting. I wish it was a sightseeing run, rather than an exodus.
