Khaos

Short Tempered

I realised that my infection was affecting my mood when I found myself yelling at the screen, “come on Lewis, get out of the gravel, your granny could qualify better than that!”.

Marty came to my rescue with a cold compress for my swollen face, steam and olbas oil to help clear my sinuses, hot tea and dark chocolate for some chemicals they contain, and paracetamol for my fever.

YAPC::NA - Morning 1

Having to speak at YAPC::NA first thing in the morning meant that I was completely stressed out for the start of the conference. I don’t remember much about the registration process but it must have been really straight forward or I would remember. (Actually I’ve just remembered something about being given a glass which I no longer seem to have…).

I really like the venue so far – though I have only seen the main auditorium. It’s an easy room to speak in and the mikes and projectors work really well.

The only good thing about giving the first talk is that I can now enjoy the conference. It did mean that I didn’t attend the pre-conference dinner last night because I didn’t think I would be able to cope with meeting people. The people I did meet up with for breakfast and before the conference were all great and did help to calm me down.

Narita - My Favourite Airport?

Flying from the North Wing of Terminal 1 in Narita airport can be incredibly hassle free. Today I managed to get off the train, check in, and go through security and immigration in under half an hour. The airport is clean, spacious and air conditioned. Sitting at the gate is so comfortable that I haven’t bothered to try and find the airport lounge I can use. If only all airports could be like this.

9 Responses to “Narita – My Favourite Airport?”

  1. Tatsuhiko Miyagawa Says:

    If only Narita is a bit closer to the central Tokyo, not having to do 2 hour short trip to there 🙂

  2. Leon Brocard Says:

    What makes such a big difference to me is that it is so quiet – no security guards shouting orders at you, only people thanking you politely for going through security etc.

  3. Around the world in 80 airports : Understanding Nothing Says:

    […] thinks that Narita might be her favourite airport. Personally, I hated it. I’ve had a few bad […]

  4. karen Says:

    It would be good if it didn’t take quite so long to get there 🙂

    I’ve just gotten a bus from London Heathrow to Gatwick and I think Heathrow is probaby my least favourite airport.

  5. Tatsuhiko Miyagawa Says:

    I agree that Narita is very good when you leave Japan, but recently I find it somewhat clumsy when you arrive at Japan, especially if you’re an alien.

    The security guards are actually shouting at you to keep the line for the immigration (in Japanese!) that requires fingerprinting and face photos against the horribly long line for foreigners.

    That made me feel bad.

  6. Geoff! Says:

    I think that Heathrow might just possibly, excluding sections of Paris, be the rudest place on Earth. When I returned from Japan last year, I landed and was immediately “greeted” by a screaming security woman, encouraging us at great volume to present only one bag.

    After nearly three week’s politeness, it was more than I could take, and my first thought was to turn back to the plane and see if they would take me back! 🙂

  7. Tatsuhiko Miyagawa Says:

    OH by the way my least favorite airport is IAD (Washington DC Dulles) with probably the same reason you hate Heathrow.

  8. karen Says:

    I have also had the pleasure of listening to Heathrow’s screaming security staff when in transit. I was horrified by how they were treating people who couldn’t understand why they having bags taken off them (because they had been allowed to leave their home country with two pieces of hand luggage that would not fit into one bag).

    The new immigration procedure in Japan does seem much more chaotic than the old one. I am very lucky as I fall into the smallest category of people entering the country – those with a re-entry permit – and I haven’t even had to queue at immigration recently.

    Heathrow is always a bit of a culture shock for me now. The other airports I find hard to cope with are American. All my experiences at Houston have been horrific. Last year when I arrived for YAPC off a 13 and half hour flight I had to stand for longer than 2 hours at immigration. I was exhausted.

    The last time I flew into Washington my onward flight to the UK was cancelled…

  9. Yuval Kogman Says:

    The worst I’ve had is Frankfurt, but this is a bit special. Because Germans are pretty uptight about stuff in general, and with the Munich thing at the olympics and then a few attempted and one successful kidnapping the flights to Israel are apeshit. These flights essentially have their own terminal. Once you go through security (while you are not shouted at, getting prodded like cattle with the metal scanners, having a mandatory pat down, etc is probably worse) you are also completely isolated. There is nothing but the gate, and you can’t get out without going through the security again. Oh, and in Munich they even have a little duty free shop for the little terminal.

    What is especially odd is that the security flying from Israel feels almost lax. The people are relaxed and friendly (at least to Israelis), you are allowed to carry liquids etc. Speaking of which, the tube of moisturizer which I had taken on 3 flights already was confiscated today. Urgh.

No Control

I’m having one of those days when nothing goes as planned. To make matters worse I’ve also become really clumsy. I’m managed to whack my foot of the wooden under-bed drawers, headbutt the kitchen cabinet and trip over my own feet. I also keep dropping things – but only one has landed on my foot so far.

I’m behind in more than my blogging and early tomorrow morning I will be flying to Europe. Hopefully I don’t become a health hazard at the Portuguese Perl Workshop!

Website Woes

I tried to make an online payment to my UK pay-as-you-go phone. As I haven’t used this in a while and my credit card had expired. I followed the link to amend payment, put in the new details are was told that something had gone wrong, they didn’t know what, but maybe I could try again in a few days!

I then tried to check my seat assignment with Virgin Atlantic as I occurred to me that Marty and I may not have seats together. But I can only do this up to 24 hours before the flight. I can’t actually think of a good reason why I can’t still update my seat but at least they could have shown me what seat I have been assigned.

I then thought I would have a quick look at the website for the Portuguese Perl Workshop but this wouldn’t load for me. I would find it hard to live without the Internet but sometimes it drives me mad.

(I’m only blogging because the sink has blocked up and I can’t finish washing the dishes. I had thought that using the computer for a bit would help me feel less stressed. It hasn’t worked.)

YAPC::Asia - Registration

The registration process at YAPC::Asia made use of QR codes that Japanese mobile phones can scan and read. The attendees were supposed to print their unique QR code from the website and bring it with them in place of tickets. Last year tickets for the conference could be bought at a Lawson convenience store. I have never needed a ticket for the European or American YAPCs. I usually give my name to the person at the registration desk and they check this off a list or find a badge that contains this name. But YAPC::Asia makes good use of technologies that are common in Japan. I have bought tickets at Lawson for everything from flights to concerts. And QR codes are found even on the wrappers that McDonalds use for their burgers.

Although the registration process was very well organised I do think it should be possible to improve it as I thought it was a bit slow. Not because of the QR codes but because the codes related to a name badge that was filed by number in a box. You would get to the desk and someone would scan the code and then find your badge. This was done in a small area limiting the number of people who could help with registration. And even if the area had been bigger only so many people can look through a couple of boxes of badges at any one time.

One way to speed up the registration process would be to limit that number of things that need to be given to a specific person. If attendees printed their own badges with QR codes on them then these could have been scanned but no badge search would have been required. The conference bags were generic so handing these out was easy. The badges, however, were not the only things tied to a specific attendee. Each attendee was given details of how to access the wifi system and because of security reasons the wifi access accounts and passwords were connected to the userid of the person registering. They also were the property of the university and this information could not have been given to attendees via the web-site.

There was enough space, however, to allow more people to help with registration. And there were certainly enough people on the conference crew to do this. It should be possible to find a way to split up registration. For example speaker registration could have been done separately. Sometimes registration of a large number of people is set up alphabetically. This would have been hard to do though because the attendees queuing at the door wouldn’t have been able to see these signs and it could have caused quite a bit of confusion in the entrance hall – to say nothing about the fact that the attendees names wouldn’t all use the same alphabet…

As well as registration on the first morning a pre-conference registration took place the night before. I suppose I’m just worried about what would have happened if 400 people had all turned up 15 minutes before the conference started. Mind you, there is probably no fast way to deal with that.

YAPC::Asia - The Venue

One of the most important things about running a successful conference is the suitability of the venue. This year YAPC::Asia was held at the Tokyo Institute of Technology. I believe that this was the best venue that has been used for a Japanese YAPC::Asia – and not just because it’s within walking distance of my apartment!

The venue was easy to get to as it was beside a train station. I always prefer conference venues that can be reached by public transport. I don’t drive and I have had to use taxis in America to get to conferences that were held in hotels that weren’t close to anything. Last year at YAPC::NA I didn’t get to see any of Houston as the venue was outside the city and it wasn’t obvious how to get to anywhere without calling for a taxi. I understand that at the American YAPCs it’s important to have access to University Halls for cheap accommodation and that this restricts where a conference can be held. This doesn’t seem to be an option in Tokyo nor does it seem to be a requirement. As Tokyo has such an amazing public transport system YAPC attendees can stay in most parts of the city and given that so many of them come from Tokyo they probably just go home in the evenings.

Registration took place outside the main auditorium. This area was big enough to allow registration without blocking entry to the room. The auditorium comfortably held the full conference. It was a tiered room which I always like as I’m small and find it hard to see over hundreds of people in a room that isn’t tiered. Each chair had a small table though most people weren’t using these. I used mine as I needed somewhere better than my lap to balance my laptop when I was typing up the talks. The only problem that I can think of was that the seats were quite close together and I don’t know how comfortable they would have been if you had been quite large.

The other rooms were smaller but seemed adequate for the number of people going to them. The DeNA room did appear very packed at one point but not uncomfortably so. Additional chairs were brought in and more space could have been made by laying the room out without tables.

The venue was close to a variety of restaurants and coffee shops providing options if you didn’t want to eat the lunch provided. The beautiful weather probably also helped. The rooms for the talks were in three separate buildings and I don’t know what it would have been like to move between these in torrential rain – though umbrellas were provided in the conference bag. But as the weather was beautiful it was possible to sit under the trees and eat lunch in the sun. And the walk between buildings was really pleasant.

The conference dinner was also held at the venue. This did cause a problem as it couldn’t hold all the attendees. I’m not sure, however, if there is anywhere suitable in Tokyo to host a dinner for 500 people. In the end 300 people got to attend based on a variety of criteria such as how far you had travelled to get to the conference. I didn’t hear anyone complain about this but then given my limited Japanese this isn’t really surprising.

I suppose I should say something about the wifi. This was difficult to use and even though I have a Macbook I wasn’t able to set this up myself. Some of this was because the instructions were in Japanese and some of it was because of the security required by the university. It also didn’t appear to support the number of people trying to use it in the main auditorium. When I finally got connected on the first morning, after both Marty and Emerson had played around with my computer, I wasn’t able to stay connected for long. I needed to be connected as I wanted to help with transcribing and eventually the problem was fixed by asking people who didn’t need to be connected to log out. I didn’t have any problems using this on the second day of the conference.

One Response to “YAPC::Asia – The Venue”

  1. Marcel Grünauer Says:

    I agree with what you say; just wanted to comment on the size of the seats and tables in the auditorium. That is, I can confirm – since I’m quite big – that the seats were pretty cramped for me and the table was essentially unusable.

    However, given the average japanese build the it’s understandable. And no, I don’t think metro-like “priority seats” – in this case, not for the elderly, handicapped or mothers-with-children but for big gaijin – would be a solution; I don’t want to stand out there any more than I already do. 🙂

    I really enjoyed the conference and hope I can make it next year as well.

YAPC::Asia - Time to Actually Post Something

Marty has pointed out that since I am writing something that resembles a book more than a blog post about the YAPC::Asia conference that I should split my thoughts up into multiple posts. He believes that this will have two benefits: 1) I’ll actually post what I have already written; and 2) someone might actually read it!

One Response to “YAPC::Asia – Time to Actually Post Something”

  1. Tatsuhiko Miyagawa Says:

    Let’s publish the book (possibly with a Japanese translation) to fund next YAPC::Asia 🙂

    Thanks for your post(s). This will really help me sum up a variety of feedbacks in addition to the survey.

All Quiet

One of my friends pointed out that I haven’t blogged much recently. With YAPC::Asia, my house guests and not feeling well at the weekend blogging hasn’t been a priority. I have a couple of draft posts regarding YAPC::Asia that I am still working on and I really hope that I get these finished before I arrive in Portugal for the Portuguese Perl Workshop next week.

I also need to get the apartment ready for the next set of guests who arrive before I get back from Europe.

2 Responses to “All Quiet”

  1. Tatsuhiko Miyagawa Says:

    I’m writing a full report for YAPC::Asia as well. Your posts about it will be definitely inspiring, and I’m really looking forward to seeing it 🙂

  2. karen Says:

    Well I decided to split my report up in an attempt to actually get some of it written 🙂 I’m glad that at least one person wants to read it!

    Looking forward to reading your report 🙂

YAPC::Asia - Morning, Day 2

I haven’t finished writing up Day 1 of YAPC::Asia. Instead of blogging I spent last night eating, watching “The IT Crowd”, and chatting about all sorts of things from tree booze to local temples.

Even though we stayed up much too late Marty and I did manage to get here on time for the start of the staff meeting this morning. I was glad about this as I hate to be late and it means that we have an assigned task for today – we are going to keep time in the DeNA room. This means that I will probably hear more talks at this YAPC than I have at the last few I have been to.

At the YAPC::Europe and YAPC::NA conferences last year I spent quite a bit of time sitting around chatting to people and not actually attending that many talks. But here in Tokyo, even if I wanted to do that, it doesn’t seem to happen quite as much. And I have heard no-one talk about a bar track (not that I want to attend one).