We got back to Montreal yesterday morning just after midnight. Maj got us upgrades on United to business class, which was really a life-saver. There's a direct flight from San Francisco to Montreal, but it's 5 hours one way and 6 hours on another. This time traveling to California, we decided to split up the flight, stopping in Chicago about halfway between.
Returning was a good flight. We were comfortable, there was room, Amita had enough space to play on the ground and sleep comfortably on our laps. Maj: "Business class isn't anything fancy; it's just enough space, good service and quality food that you feel like a human rather than like livestock."
The only downside was that Chicago O'Hare is a half-ass airport. For one of the most (the most?) visited and transited airports in the world, it's really skimpy on services inside the security area. There aren't any big restaurants or nice bars or stores inside the B and C concourse; just stand-up kiosks. We walked halfway across the airport to find a pub to eat at.
Probably the best thing about the airport is the giant brachiosaurus skeleton in B concourse. Amita June couldn't stop looking at it; she ran from foot to foot banging it with her hand. Good for her; it's a pretty neat thing to see in a boring airport.
tags: airport travel ohare brachiosaurus amitajune maj
Ebjo
Another Maj quote: "It's just a coincidence that we use the term blog as a cutesy contraction for 'Web log'. It could have easily have been a 'Web journal' people were contracting, and then we'd call it an ebjo."
Goethe
One of the things that I've found as a participant in Open Source software and Open Content is that there are a lot of different people involved. And today, in 2007, Germany and France have become important loci of new developments in Free Culture.
I've been working on my French for a while, and I think I'm getting pretty good, but I've never learned any German. At all.
But German Wikitravel is one of the largest and most popular versions of the project. And I want to be more of a participant -- or, at least, have some better relationships with our German users.
So, today I signed up for German lessons at the Montreal Goethe Institute. The Goethe Institute promotes German language and culture world-wide, including high-quality lessons in German. Montreal's is in a beautiful old building right at the corner of Sherbrooke and St. Denis. It's got a nice office and a friendly warm bookstore, "Das Buch".
I'm going to take the intensive beginner's course -- mornings Tuesday and Thursday for 6 weeks. I hope at the end of that time I'll be better able to meet German-speaking Free Software advocates, Open Content participants, and most of all Wikitravellers a little more towards halfway.
tags: goethe institute german wikitravel classes montreal
Laïka
I went to Laïka this afternoon again to meet a couple of people. It was my first two-meeting day at Laïka, which I think is a bad sign I'm turning into a serious maven. But like they say, it's really where the hipsters are doing business on this Île lately.
The nice thing was that I got to introduce two Montrealers that I like a lot. Hugh Macguire of, among other things, the Librivox public-domain audiobook project, is really interesting and passionate about communities and free content. Nicolas Ritoux is one of the most clued-in tech journalists I've met. It was nice to introduce them, and it was good that they seemed to get along.
Depressing, on the other hand, was walking around the Plateau in January with 12C weather. This has gotten beyond funny into scary -- we just haven't had any serious snow in Montreal this winter. I'm worried that it's going to get worse, too, and I don't know what that will mean for Quebec's culture. Mon pays, c'est l'hiver, goes the song, and I'm not sure I get what a city without winter would mean here.
tags: winter laika hugh macguire nicolas ritoux librivox montreal snow
House
Maj and I have been watching House on DVD. It's really good, although a little formulaic. Everybody's always running around and bleeding and vomiting, and people get an average of 3.8 different rare diseases per episode. There's also a lot of cheating and sneakiness. It's great.
Mantini
One nice thing about New Year's Eve this year was that Baron Earl served a refreshing -- nay, energizing -- spocktail called a mantini. I was especially pleased to find out that the first ingredient was not, in fact, a praying mantis. With the Baron, you never know.
tags: mantini spocktail baron earl




