Monthly Archives: August 2007
80’s nostalgia & fantasy storylines
I watched the Transformers movie (mecha porn!) during the week and both that and my recent acquisition of a Nintendo Wii (I've already bought online Super Mario Bros. and Punch Out) have convinced me that we're ongoing a serious case of 80's nostagia.
Furthermore, I'm surprised by the amount of fantasy movies currently either on cinemas or on the way. Given that some of the most famous fantasy storylines are product of the escapism needed in times of crisis (Lord of the Rings is a product of the II World War, whereas Star Wars was written during the aftershock of the Vietnam War), I wonder how this offering reflects on the times we're living.
Wii love it
It has been a long time since I have been so enthusiastic about a gadget as it is currently the case with the Wii. Bought it yesterday and have to say that the overall off & online experience is very well thought through.
Technology specs are nothing if you don't deliver your promise.
Sports tracker
I went skating yesterday. Not any kind of skating, but one special modality called nordic blading, which is done with poles as if you were skiing. I am now the proud owner of an N95 and was using the Sports Tracker application, which is able to calculate the kind of route I took, how many kilometres I did and my speed and altitude. You can even export your workouts to Google Earth! Quite a nice thing, I should say.
P.S. For those interested, I skated 15.4 km at an average speed of 10 km/h and a maximum speed of 49 km/h.
Different ways to see the news
I have wrote before that the news you see determine your reality. there was no clearer example of that than a quote I read in the Financial Times a couple of weeks ago: "CNN films the launch of the missile. Al-Jazeera films what happens where it lands."
Of sunsets and sunrises
It better be good. If it isn't, just smile, it makes it easier.
Summer in Finland
If you ever come to this place in the far north, try to make it in summer and try to go to a summer cottage with sauna next to a lake. You will understand more about this country and its people than if you visit their cities. I have to say that the peace you find is very endearing.
It helps if it is warm too, as is currently the case.
Lunch with the “Mexicans”
Today I had lunch with the "Mexicans" at work. They are under quotation marks since many of them weren't actually Mexican, but people who have for some reason or another spent some of their time in Mexico and not only speak proper Mexican Spanish, but also behaved as Mexican as any chilango, regio or yucateco would. Even though we were an Italian, 3 Mexicans and 2 Finns, the table sounded as having 6 Mexicans.
Globalisation and acculturisation go both ways, I've seen.
Over 20,000 views
A big thank you to all the visitors to my Flickr photostream, as it has now achieved over 20,000 views. I didn't expect to see this number just yet.
The border guard
As frequent readers of this blog and anyone who has seen my Flickr profile know, I do my fair share of travelling, both for leisure and due to my job. Therefore, I do have my own personal and very subjective "ranking" of border officials, as not all my trips are within the Schengen area. The story I want to share with you happened last Saturday, when we were coming back from our honeymoon.
Since the Czech Republic is outside Schengen, we had to go through normal border procedures when we returned. As I don't have a European passport, I can't go through the fast line, but I'm used to answer a couple of questions from the guards, who after all are just doing their job. The problem this time was, as often is when I come home, that I had another overzealous guard. Even though the conversation was in Finnish (which should be enough indication about what follows), I had to answer plenty of questions about my life in Finland, the length of my stay, my employment, my ties to the country and so on (regardless of the fact that, of course, all my papers are perfectly in order and all my personal information is available to said individual through the government's databases).
The straw that broke the camel's back, as they say, was when said individual said "So, if you have so good Finnish-language skills and you've been living here that long, why don't you have a Finnish passport?". Which is simply because I don't fulfill the requirements just yet (which is another long, sad story). I understand that these people are doing their job, but I I usually have less problems entering Germany or even the UK, where they should be much more worried about security threats than in Finland.
I love my wife, I really like my job, and I also deeply appreciate the house we have, so it is ridiculuous that I have so many hurdles every time I'm returning to Finland, which at the moment is where home is. If this is the way the country wants to attract a highly educated, tax-paying immigrant workforce, it is in trouble.