By 07:00 it's mainly tourists. I got the seasonal sake. First time in my life I liked sake. Fruity, cleansed the palate even better than the pickled ginger, and generally very pleasant. Walking in the intense sun (at 0745!!!) I feel regret about drinking alcohol

So, on how the bus payments work..

In Osaka you have to get on in the back and pay while leaving in the front. Tokyo is the other way around. Kyoto is a mixed bag. This seems almost as random as when you're supposed to walk on the left, the right, or a wild mix which changes every few hundred meters.

In #Osaka, there are two fares posted in the bus: 210 (or 230?) yen for adults, 110 for children. Other rates are not posted, but as everyone sees both how much someone pays and how much balance is remaining it's easy to deduce.

Seniors pay 50 yen.

Disabled seniors pay 0 yen. There's a bright green line around the display to signal this.

Some people flash a card or something to the bus driver or simply put both hands together and bow and do not pay at all.

#traveltales

I am a somewhat frequent traveler for work reasons. If I have leg space, I always sit on the window, away from the sunny side. This is one of the tricks to a calmer flight and night.

Flying back from #Tokyo #Haneda to #Munich, only the right side was free. Good if we fly under Russia, OK if we fly over the Artic. Decent enough sun activity to have a chance at #Northernlights. It's a night flight. Or so I thought...

The #boeing787 has dimmable windows, not physical shades. It's summer solstice.

It's noon in Alaska where I am currently North of. ANA217 if you want to track me.

The sun is burning with the intensity of one thousand^W suns... It's summer solstice so the sun will not even set on the geographical North Pole today. The window is doing its best, but it has to absorb the energy. No off-grey plastic to reflect light. It's so hot it's unpleasant to touch and is radiating so much heat I am sweating in my normal "slightly too cool for most people" travel sleep set-up.

Science...!

The Japanese guy next to me entered the plane masked. Medical mask as ~usual with men in Asia (women tend to wear FFP2 / [K]N95 maybe 66% of the time). I always appreciate people masking.

He started coughing shortly before food. Now he's sleeping with the mask off for several hours already.

I'm masked with FFP3 / N99 so whatever, but...

And also I am still (rather successfully) staying on top of an infection I got during a badly-ventilated KubeCon. Two coworkers coughed, I should have masked...

But for anyone who doesn't know them: Laryngomedin and Ocentident are near magic for viral infections of the respiratory system. You can feel your throat getting better because your immune system noticeably gets the upper hand for a few hours. Absolute game changer.

Not available in the US though, so people there need to get creative.

If you can't taste the salt,
and aceto tastes bald,
that's the cove...
that's the cove...

Second time in my life I have a positive #COVID #COVID19 test.

And I _THOUGHT I SHOULD HAVE MASKED AND I DIDN'T_

Oh well. At least I have a prescription for #paxlovid this time, but I don't think I can get it filled before Monday...

Continuing my #traveltales #travelnotes, and staying on the topic of #masks

I'm in #Hyderabad for #KubeCon #India and forced myself out of the hotel on my arrival day at least once. Even walking to the ATM around the corner, I already put on my mask against all the dust and smog. Taking a tuktuk across town, I was immediately forced to put it back on and keep it on.

I love the buzzing and chaos on the streets, but I am also quite happy about my place with quiet and good air..

I always take tuktuks (called auto, here) where feasible. Cheaper, quicker, and generally more fun. In a real car now, because other than one time in Iceland and one time in Moab, I've never driven through as much and deep water in my life.

We're stuck at an intersection trying to turn. The waves from the car passing by are rocking the car back and forth

#traveltales #travelnotes #hyderabad #india

One fascinating aspect is how, being with six Indian coworkers for food, when one of them chooses a restaurant serving their home food, none of the others know the dishes. I know #India is large etc pp. Still, this drives it home even more.

#traveltales #travelnotes

#India was way too short, as always. I love the bustle, the colors, the smells, the spices, all the chaos which somehow just chugs along.

On the negative side, I don't think I will be able to not wear a mask outdoors in any major Indian city for the foreseeable future.

Even a few hours after landing in #Taiwan for #COSCUP, it was clear that it's the most.. deliberate.. of all the Asian countries I've ever been to. Very orderly and structured, with clear long term planning shining through everywhere. Maintenance and upkeep are being taken seriously. While it's obviously different in many ways, it reminds me of Germany in a way.

One small and almost invisible aspect of Asian countries is how even low quality goods will have high quality cases, lanyards, etc. in Western country, you regularly need to buy expensive stuff to get nice auxiliary goods; in east Asian countries you will get nice auxiliary goods even for giveaways.

I received a battery powered fan someone got for free and didn't need; and the lanyard it came with is nicer than most lanyards I recently got with any but the most quality goods.

At scale, the unit prices from the factory door can't be impacted beyond cents, and yet we're just used to getting throwaway lanyards, cases, etc with stuff in Western countries.
Maybe it's the general state of upkeep seen everywhere else, but this has left me somewhat unimpressed. Right next to Taipei Arena, there's a manhole without a cover. Just some cones and a blinky light. There's not construction work on Sunday, so this has been that way for at least ~30 hours by the time I saw it. If concrete settles, I'd expect a steel plate to cover everything...

That was certainly unexpected..

I've seen this a few times already, only on German cars.

Reduce, reuse, recycle etc

Not super impressed by this one to be honest. But that is very likely in part because everything else is well maintained
"relax please" says the tiny Thai lady who seems to be made solely of muscle and knuckles while she kneels on my upper legs, right before ramming both hands between my shoulderblades into the back of my neck

The food in #Taiwan is impressive. The night markets are really something for locals, and the density of food stalls is the highest I have ever seen in such places

Homeless (or very poor, I don't know) old people are markedly better dressed and smelling than in most other places I've been. Convenience store owners let them sit at the tables in peace and quiet to rest from the heat. The homeless often had impressively large sandwiches which I presume shopowners hand them when business slows down

I did see one man eat out of a trashcan, but other than that the social fabric seems to cushion the poor surprisingly well.

(I'm a simple man. I see you eating out of the trash, I give you enough cash to eat a few days if I can reach you and have some on me)

Overall, I didn't expect to be this impressed, but Taiwan did impress me. Seemingly solid social fabric, good maintenance, things are planned well. Quite efficient and effective.

There's an impressive level of non-predatory convenience built at least into Taipei. Stuff is where you need it, shops sprinkle the streets, pricing is reasonable.

And if you're a foody.. recommend.

#travelnotes #traveltales

Not saying where I am yet. Maybe a good #osint #geolocation #geoguessr challenge...

I am sleeping in the middle of nowhere. Bioluminescent algae randomly appeared.

NB: I can't easily verify on mobile if exif data is stripped. Fair have if it's not, just let me know.

Let's try an actually solvable #osint #geolocation #geoguessr challenge.

This image was taken a few minutes ago.

I am just going to post increasingly revealing photos for #osint #geolocation #geoguessr fun
Two surprising aspects about #Ireland:
* The roads are tiny, and half the country seems to be in a contest to cultivate the densest and most dangerous growth into the side of the roads. I'm a good driver, and this is one of the most stressful road systems I've ever been on
* Signs everywhere to not litter, and ~zero wastebins; roughly as many as in Japan. We always take all trash with us anyway, but trash bins would do more than signs for other people not to litter..
Re the roads, I don't have data, but I presume that this is due to the historically relative poverty of Ireland. It takes money over substantial amounts of time to widen, straighten, and generally improve infrastructure.
Randomly stopping on the side of the road, and realizing everything's thick with #blackberry bushes. 30 minutes later, no one is hungry any more.

Hiking around Gleniff Barytes Mill Site

So. Many. Blackberries.

With the possible exception of fresh #maracuja in #Brazil and #thai oranges, #blackberry is my favorite fruit by far.

For the first time in my life have I been sated with blackberries. Without breakfast, I've eaten so many that I started picking only the nicest ones. So many that I stopped eating them even though there were many, many more and almost every single one near perfect. And then started and stopped eating again several times.

(berries are fruit, no need to discuss in this thread)

@RichiH blackberries are not fruit they're murderous monsters that want to kill me and my whole team

(source: SAR ground pounder who constantly has to slog through swamps and forests overgrown with blackberry brambles looking for missing persons, crime scene evidence, etc)

@azonenberg (not super appropriate, but too fitting to ignore)

@RichiH Lol. You never know what the folks planning our search assignments will come up with.

Just the other day, in the middle of the PNW dry season (keep in mind it hasn't rained substantially in probably two months).

And they managed to find a special present for us! Not quite a swamp (our favorite), but close. On the same mission, in close proximity to each other:
* Mud
* Water up to knee deep
* Dense blackberries
* Swarms of bees
* Swarms of mosquitos
* Sketchy undermined bluffs that look like they'd collapse if you stood in the wrong spot

@azonenberg nice. I can understand the need to train hard and to be time efficient in a volunteer system that saves lives. But yeah, nice.

@RichiH That wasn't training that was an actual mission. But the folks in charge still have to decide where out of the infinity of possible search assignments to send us.

We mostly train in the winter since that's the worst weather the area has to offer (cold, rainy, occasional snow, prolonged darkness).

@RichiH Blackberries, however, know no season. They're out for blood, literally, any time of year.
@azonenberg I can see them being even more dangerous under enough snow to hold your weight for a short time..

@RichiH Luckily we don't get that around here much. At ground level the snow is usually only a light dusting, maybe 10-20cm after a very heavy storm.

Higher up in the mountains it's a different story but by the time you're that high up it's too cold for blackberries to grow.

Plus we don't normally go on missions in that terrain, at that point you're looking at avalanche hazards and potential high angle rope work so we pass the torch off to mountain rescue.

@azonenberg half my extended family was mountain rescue at some point, and yeah.. that can also be fun
@RichiH Yeah it's something i'd like to get into but i would need to do a lot more technical climbing in my off time to keep my skills sharp. It's been years since I've climbed on rock outside a gym and I haven't even done much of that lately.