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Bridge the World

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Lost in translation

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It is incredible how fast can time pass. It is already been 4 months of the 6 I should be in Japan...

I have been thinking about posting to this blog for a while but, it has proven to be so difficult! Most probably because I have immersed myself into my work as well as the routine of everyday’s life that made time vanish between the always crowded subway ride-to/from-work and the every weekend city escape. But before I go into more excuses, I will write something actually interesting about my experience in Japan.

In Oslo, work is something that happens between 8 or 9 am and finishes at 5, 6 or even 4 pm (for those more fortunate that can actually wake up and arrive to work at 8am). As Oslo is a small city, you complain if you have to take a bus or a train to get to work.. the preferred solution is to live in bike / walking distance to the office.

In Tokyo, work starts at 8 or 9 am for most people. In many companies, employees have to wait until their boss leaves the office for them to go home (even if they are not doing anything productive) so they may even work until midnight... and not just in exceptional cases, but more as a rule. Someone (reliable source whose identity I want to protect ) told me that it is normal to do overtime because it is the only way to raise a normal salary into something decent. Living within walking distance from work is consider as luxury. For example, Atsuko whom is a very nice and funny girl from the office, has to travel 2 hours in the morning to the office AND 2 hours to go back home. Some other people is fortunate enough to travel only for 30 mins. but it anyway includes at least one potentially crowded train ride!

Transportation in Tokyo is quite complicated. In many big cities, it is enough to look at the map of trains to know which is your best connection. Tokyo is not that simple! any map you find won’t show all lines available because trains are run by two or three different companies with very complicated lines and schedules. Your best bet is to use a mobile phone ...-yipppee!! for mobile Internet use in Japan- Anyway, you can use a couple of sites that work well if you cannot enter Japanese station names, for example: http://www.jorudan.co.jp/english/index.html
Type the start destination and the end destination and it will give you a couple of options ranked mainly in price and time. If you don't know any stations, try "ikejiri-ohashi" in one field and "shinjuku" in the other, it will tell you the available trains from the Opera Japan office to the mega-station of Shinjuku.

And, here you have some pictures that are worth mentioning:

A kestrel stole my lunch

One of these guys stole my lunch in Kamakura! I had a chicken filled bread in my hands and was about to bite it when I felt a big rounded shaped shade and the sound of wings on my right side. In the time I could understand what was happening, a pretty big eagle stole my bread leaving only the aluminium wrapping and taking away what I had brought for lunch... needless to say I was hungry afterwards; surprised about seeing such a beautiful animal so close.. but still hungry.


Unknown robot cleaner from Norway sells in Japan

In Loft, a very cool store in Tokyo, I found a "robot house cleaner" that it is claimed to be invented in Norway.
did anyone know about this in Norway? How have I lived 6 years in Norway and have never seen it?









Prince Torkjel´s big give away

Torkjel felt like giving things away, including some house appliances... I hope his girlfriend be OK about his generosity.
More pictures of the same label on the coffee machine, the microwave, the fridge, the drinking water, a laptop and the stereo system my flickr account.





Taking the sun in Japan

No, that lady is not saving her life while attacked by the killer white towel. She is actually taking the sun... but everyone here has a big fear of getting any color as being white is considered beautiful, this creates a complete fashion of hats, jackets, gloves and clothes that deserves its own blog post later..





Opera logo in subliminal adds

Btw, we found the Opera logo in this store ... maybe it is one secret marketing strategy to get more people familiar with the Opera logo? (as absolut does with the bottle?)









Norske Opera

Found also this great "Norwegian Opera" poster: "I die, I die, I die... Opera, the art of overdoing it" :smile:









Mobile internet reinvented

This guy is showing us his own version of the mobile Internet... what he had in his phone was clearly not enough for him?
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Weekend in Kyoto

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One of the "must do" activities for anyone visiting Japan is to see Kyoto, and that is what I did two weeks ago.

To get there, you can take the very famous Shinkansen, which I took from the Tokyo Station. Finding my way around in the Tokyo metro is getting much easier and the Shinkansen has big english signs so it is too hard to get lost. The trains are very nice inside, with comfortable chairs and super polite candy-selling ladies who bow every time they leave the train car...


In Kyoto, I got to see how navitime works and it is great! It is a GPS powered application that shows your location in real time. It has this little green guy that moves with you and shows the path you have taken.. quite cool right? Why cant GPS be same as simple in Europe? Why do we need to buy super heavy and expensive GPS devices when it is here included in all phones since 5 years ago?


In the hotel, close to the Kyoto station, I found something that reminded me of my teenager years. In the reception, the first thing you see when you enter the building is this plastic movable band shaking by the rhythm of "wav" songs and dancing in a totally different beat than the music. This could so much have been taken out of a "Sam and Max hit the road" game! I was just waiting for the rabbit to enter the door and ask a random question to the super-extra-polite guy (that seemed like he had never seen foreigners before)... Ohh, good old times when computer games were more about the story and the funny adventures than about graphics or repetitive shooting/jumping combinations!


First thing to do in the morning was to get some breakfast and it was very interesting to find a store where it is forbidden to wear helmets. Is it to make sure people has the correct head size when they pay? Is it to make sure nobody steals the cashier and goes without being recognized? I cannot imagine something like that happening in such a seamlessly safe place!


The temples in Kyoto are very beautiful! Kyumizudera was the first one I visited and it was amazingly pretty, all surrounded by almost bloomed sakura trees. Even more important than weather forecasts, daily forecast of sakura tree blooming is displayed in the receptions of big hotels. This is part of the sakura madness that I briefly explained in my last post.. (note the sakura == cherry blossom ice cream)


I find it so interesting how through Asia, gates are guarded by two lions. In China it is usually a male which plays with a ball and a female who keeps a baby lion under her paws. In Thailand they are more decorated, with sharper teeth and hair or more expressive. Here in Japan, the guarding lion had nothing under his paws but seemed to be smiling.. almost like if he was laughing.... maybe of all the tourists and the have-to-take-picture-of-sakura madness, who knows?


Palaces and shrines are amazing. Very cute to see a place where you make a wish, write it on a wooden block and hang it. I found this one that was just adorable " I wish that there will be no more animal testings ... I wish for wisdom and insight into the human conditions. And peace for all ... I wish for lollipops!! ". We found it! The secret for world peace is to find happiness in lollipops :wink:


Something else I found was the famous (?) love stone! I didnt really get how it worked but seems like in that place you could get a wooden plate for everything: "More chance for love, ¥1000", "Bind your love tightly, ¥2000", "For conception, ¥1000" and "For against disaster" and "For passing examination" ¥500. The explanation of the love stone was not very convincing either, neither make much sense but well...
In the other hand, I also found stones with carved idols that had some small red clothes, like dresses. I have never seen a stone idol dressed and that was just looks so cute!


The tradition tells that, every time you travel, you should bring some of the traditional food from that place home. The thing to get in Kyoto seems to be the goma (sesame) sweets which are delicious. You can find them in different colors but my absolute favorite was the kuro goma (black sesame).

Something really handy is that you can use a carrier company to transport anything, anytime for a great deal of money. I have heard stories of people arriving to the Tokyo airport and sending the luggage by post because they dont want to carry it in the subway madness. One of the companies doing that has a yellow logo with two cats, and they had adds even between the food shells.


And between the small charming alleys, the tourist traps and the beautiful temples, there was something colorful running around the place. For some of those girls with kimonos you could really see they have never worn one before and they were just foreigners renting one to take pictures. Some others were even elder ladies that carried their kimono with elegance and were going to an afternoon tea with friends.


It seems like there has been a design contest from google and they had the winners displayed in paper lamps between the Kyoto temples, very unexpected to see Google between the temples of beautiful Kyoto... very interesting way of promoting what they stand for :smile:


And about food, that weekend I discovered my -so far- favorite food in Japan. Is called yakiniku and it it a grill where you can make meat and other things yourself ... really yummi!!

More pictures here
http://www.flickr.com/photos/24849304@N00/sets/72157604503316857/

Next time I will write about how "A kestrel stole my lunch".
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Friday beer in Opera Tokyo

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Have you ever wondered how is a friday beer in other Opera office? I can tell you a bit about friday beer here in the Tokyo branch.

Ref: If you dont know what a friday beer is, please refer to Friday beer, Øverdahl, Espen Andre 2008.

Friday started as a relaxing day since lunch time. It was such a beautiful day in Tokyo so we decided to eat in the park. It was beautiful to walk next to the river and see all the cherry trees around.

Cherry trees are called "sakura" in japanese. When the spring starts announcing its arrival, sakura trees blossom with pink leaves that look like made from pink cotton. This is when sakura madness starts and everything has to do with "sakura". You will find sakura cakes, sakura lunch boxes, sakura ice cream, sakura hand cream, sakura perfume, sakura residences and even romantic songs about sakura. Something I dont yet understand, is why everyone needs to take a picture of the sakura trees every year and put it as a background on the keitai (mobile phone)... wasn't it good enough with pictures from last year?


Anyway, we went to a near park and in the way we stopped by a small store called "Creative Mama" where they specialize in food on the box.
Ordering food in Japan is a bit of a challenge because all menus are in Japanese (they could be in binary and it would be same as hard). Sometimes, even the prices are in japanese which makes it even more difficult to tell apart a main dish from a drink or half an hour of music.
So, my strategy to order food is to let everyone else order first and go for a recommendation or the best looking dish. When there is no one around, I fallback to the "I feel lucky" strategy which is to point and hope for something good to come... yes, life is exciting in Japan!!


After the hour lunch break (yes, that is the rule) it was nice to go back to work and wait for friday beer to start. Contrary to Oslo where friday beer religiously starts at 5 sharp (and there is even a countdown widget for it http://widgets.opera.com/widget/6640/), here it starts getting interesting at around 5:30 or 6pm and the consumption of alcohol is definitely lower.

To start, we needed something to place the snacks but, as we did not find the bowls, Hironobu-san showed his ability for origami and teached us how to make snack bowls out of sheets of paper and the peanuts had a new home. Then, we had interesting snacks as dried green peas or these cheese-bars looking sausages that tasted just like fiskeboller (not so yummi... ).


When the beer was over we went to the closest karaoke bar. I was super excited because it was going to be my first time in a real japanese karaoke bar! As expected (or as seen on Lost in Translation), they gave us a private room with a TV and a remote controlled system to select the songs... all songs were in a different tone and version than the original (at least the songs I could recognize) and they all had crappy homemade videos in the background.

Something I was not expecting was the huge selection of english songs that come in yellow pages-like books... they even had "Malagueña" (the same one as in Kill Bill ) or the latest hits of Juanes :smile:. Singing "La camisa negra" felt almost like singing the Colombian national anthem... as close from home as I can get from the other side of the globe.

I was also surprised by the "all you can drink" strategy of karaoke bars. Maybe I should have expected it because of the entry fee (2500 yen) but I am still thinking of alcohol in nok, and I am not so sure they could keep the business running if they had to pay Norwegian prices for alcohol.






Differences from "friday beer" in Oslo
* Starts more at 5:30 than at 5 pm
* The ratio beer/employees is lower
* There are more unknown snacks in tokyo and more popcorn in Oslo
* There is music being played from an ipod
* There might be people playing with the Wii
* There are more girls
* If people get hungry, pizza may come. But beware, everything falls down from this pizza
* If people still hungry, they have dozens of small restaurants where you can get a complete meal for about 50nok (beer included)
* Tom may fall sleep
* You would see your colleagues sing. And some of them, as Tsukasa, can even sing well!
* You may see prince Torkjel singing "barbie girl" with Kaori... amazing!
* Conversations and jokes happen in Japanese and English at the same time

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Survival Report from Tokyo

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Two weeks have already passed and I cannot believe time goes so fast.
Before the trip there was so much work to finish in Oslo but, since the week of the departure, it has been about getting ready for the work in Tokyo, packing, moving, traveling, starting in a new office and getting a bit settled in the new place I call "home"... its said that "time goes fast when you have fun" and this is the feeling I have..

Picts from my first 2 weeks here:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/24849304@N00/sets/72157604213698381/


I only realized that I was leaving while looking by the window in that plane from Helsinki. With so bad weather outside, I could not be happier of the spring time that waited for me in Japan.
If you ever decide to make such a long trip, it might be a good idea to avoid sleeping the day before so you have to sleep in the plane. If you cant, enjoy the stoning view of snow pikes from the window while you are reminded
"not to grab" the wing
, wonder why they give you metallic knives on board while you could not bring them from outside or enjoy a movie in "Castilian" while trying to figure out which one is the "Port of disembarkation".


When finally arriving to the Narita airport, it was very interesting to see how people respect more the "forbidden to smoke" sign than the "do not use mobile phones". I would have enjoy this more if I would have known that from now on, every restaurant or hotel room has the potential problem of stinking of smoke... God bless the one who passed the law forbidding to smoke indoors in Norway!


After the train/bus from the airport, it is all about finding your way in this net of train lines. Someone tried to explain me why there were so many private subway companies are and why they cannot agree in having a one common map but, I cannot still understand why hasn't someone realized it is a problem and make a common system (apart from the one in the mobile phones which unfortunately only works if you speak japanese...).
Something else I do not understand is why it is so hard to accept VISA cards for ATMs with the "VISA" logo.. I can only get money in post offices, citibanks or 7/11 stores.


In the less complaining-ish side of the story, the office here is great! It is located in a really cool neighborhood next to the river, bordered by many sakura trees (those that get pink at this time of the year), there are also so many nice small restaurants around where we get great lunch for around 1000 yen (aprox 50 nok). The office is a large space divided in two, one side for engineering and the other for sales and marketing and everyone has been super nice and friendly. After some days working, I felt something next to my leg and I was surprised to find the cutest robot dog ever, he likes it when I scratch under his head and I actually think he is learning to like me because he constantly comes next to me asking for attention (yes, machines are getting better in training their humans :smile: )


It is also very nice living close to the office, specially considering that my line is usually very crowded. It has been fascinating to see how many people can you still fit in an already crowded place if someone is pushing hard enough.

And I could not be luckier about the weather, while it is again snowing in Oslo here we have some early spring and we actually managed to have our first spring lunch in the park last week... the weather felt just like early summer in Norway. I am spending this week in Kyoto so will be posting more picts soon with the Kansai update..
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Other ways to bridge the world

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There are not expensive way to travel and still bridging the world...
Go to the nearest supermarket and buy all the ingredients for a superb italian pasta, buy the best wine.
Before starting cooking open the bottle of wine and pure (bad speeling I know!) some in your finest wine glass. Close your eyes, smell the wine and imagine green and yellow hills, the sea as background together with the blue sky, no clouds, warm but not temperature and then imagine to be sitted sipping the wine you have in front of you.
Ok, you are ready for cooking and tasting a bit of nice wine and be in Italy with your imagination.
We (the italians @ Opera) are hoping to recreate this environment in one of the northest country in the world (Norway).
Follow us at:
http://my.opera.com/ItaliansAtOpera/blog/
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Another trip, another bridge

The new year just started and I had the possibility to visit another Opera's office, this time in Prague!
The office is brand new since we had just opened up!
Opera is staying in an historical building downtown, the office is on the last floor and it has wooden roof and floor, minimalistic for now but anyway quite stilish. I guess only a fireplace is missing to feel almost home :wink: (well I guess my girlish side is coming out again ehehe).

Regarding something a little bit on a more serious side, people are now preparing the IT environment (setting up computers, switches...) and working on several projects (Symbian, core...).
Personally, I continue to coordinate several projects and checking that the beer on Friday is good in every office around the world :wink:
Soon pictures of our hard work (and this time I am not referring to beers!) in Prague :smile:
That's all for now
Chiara in the roof (for now not in the pond)
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Good bye is the hardest word

I am not good at all in "good byes" and it's almost time.
I end up usually saying something pretty inconclusive and not really funny :frown:
It's very hard for me to say good bye after such a different and enriching experience.
So I'll keep this short and I'll end up with a better "see you soon" (GLUP! SIGH!)
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Visiting Tokyo office

Time again to jump to another country and visiting another Opera's office.
After having seen Oslo's (biggest and greatest!), Goteburg's (most cool, elegant), Beijing's (most warm welcoming) offices, it is time for me to sneak into the Nippon one! :smile:
I went there to know a bit more about Opera performance, so, taking with me a black and white flag as in Formula 1, I flew there.
After being shocked observing how much different can be Japan and China on my way, I finally arrived to my destination! We studied the best strategies and methodologies to do the misuraments and then we went to a very nice Japanese restaurant where I tried fish sashimi (sorry for the spelling) and horse meat. People were expecting me to be surprised about the last product, but I was not at all since we have in Italy as well :wink:.
The day after we set up the environment (the "pista" I'd say in Italian, or speed track) for misuring and we did a couple of ride.
At around 6 pm, tired to run around the office, we went under an authentic Japanese Xmass tree (with strange plastic lobsters just behind the tree) in the office and started singing while having some nice sparkling wine! Yes, it was really like home!
:smile:
Sayonara!
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A shopping aholic geek lost in China (ehm... Macau)

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Friday the 7th.
After a full day shopping I feel excited to start a new day in Guangzhou, south of China.
I finally decide to open my tired eyes at 10 and immidiately I start Opera as every morning on mobile....
What can I do today? My shopping excursion in Guangzhou is over and I need new destinations where to carry my HUGE backpack full of whatever brand new fashionable cheap clothes.
I google map with Opera Mobile on my Nokia E60 and.... hmmm what I see there!
Macau!! Not too far away...
Ok! Let's go! That's my destination for today :smile:. I grab all my staff and wear my cutest brand new shoes (that means with a bit of a high hill....not really practical but really fashionable). I do not care of taking dictionary, travel book or maps. I've 3 (Nokia E60, Nokia 2650, and yes, even iPhone) mobiles with me and I want to have a strong impact with what expects me there. To know the history, I'll get in contact with people, I'll look around, close my eyes, do a complete swing on myself while smelling, listening, wondering and.... PUF! Yes, I'll got an idea of where I'll be.
In case my imagination will not work, I can always check in wikipedia :wink:.

Time to go: my collegues and friends give to me a small card with written (in chinese characters) the bus station in guangzhou and a mysterious bus destination.
I'll not reach directly Macau but a chinese city on the borter with the little ex. colony.
With no clear idea of what expects me or any chinese communication skill, I leave!
I sort of manage to catch a bus and then .... what a wonderfull trip! Bananas trees, rice fields, coconuts trees, big rivers alternate continuously along the way. I cannot keep my lips closed for the wonder....
After 2 hours I arrive... Well, arrive.... the bus driver tells me that (somehow, no English spoken) ....
I can only see that I ended up in a huge mall (the bus just stopped in the mall's parking space), and that I am not in Macau yet.
Of course I end up to do some additional shopping (making my huge bag growing even more!), but that's the only way to ask people the way to Macau, isn't it :wink:.

I finally reach the ex. Portugese colony and I start looking around to understand where I ended up.
Everything is quite different.... No bicycle but lots and lots of scooters, no western people, very few turists, lots of old european buildings but no track of the old owners or their descendants...
And I walk, walk, walk, with my huge bag, my eyes looking into the buildings, people, cars, shops, streets.... But after a while, I can start feeling my legs tired and my backpack heaview and heavier so I decide to look for an hotel, a guest house, a pension, a hostel.... something to sleep on!!
But nothing!!!! While I was wondering around I got lost. :frown:
I am almost on the freeway, nearby the sea and no one to ask to...
But I have my 3 mobiles, my guts and after all I'm still a fully fashionable girl!

Anyway I need to take actions:
- I change shoes for more practical ones: not anymore high hills but fancy monkey shoes
- I take out the iPhone as I feel is great to listen songs: I need them to increase my mind strength!
- And now let's browse around! No, better not by walking since I'm already lost: let's take my Nokia E60, start Mini to have a quick idea of Macau's hotels and such... Hmm.... Impressivly fast!! But I still have no idea where I am
- Let's update facebook status to have help and (more than that) supports from friends! WOW! People are strangely supportive: they ask me more about my new shoes than where I ended up!!!
- Still LOST. Better to ask help to some more helpfull friend in this case: Opera Mobile (I did not do before to keep the phone bill down)... Ok now checking the maps I got an idea of where I am!!!!! :smile:


I follow the mobile map, the fresh sea, the wind and, more than that, my hotel hunting instinct!

Well... The result is: I end up in a Casino'! :O .... This becomes my very fashionable place to sleep for a nigth.
Of course, not before having made aware all my friends that I am safe, happy and... fashionable geeky via facebook :smile:

N.B. The picture was taken the day after when I decided to give up fashion (no more high hill shoes, no more fancy dress, and sleeping in extremly cheap hostel) for comphort and to avoid to be completly bankrupted!!!
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Chinese....

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I am so amazed about this country... And even more by people living here.
I am (almost) the only foreigner left in the office (only one for the "bridge the world" program).
I went in here trying to get rid of some pre assumptions. Trying to do "tabula rasa" in my brain to be ready for a full immersion in what it was expecting me.
But... but it's difficult to get rid of pre-assumptions.
I have been overwhelmed by the way people can take of you. Of the friendship and understanding they offer to you, even you are in all aspects a "stranger".
I've discovered chinese people are as close to their family as italians :O. They have strong sense of belonging to "la famiglia".
I have been able to go in so many wonderfull and amazing places, even just with my mind... And I am not speaking of the great wall or other turistic attractions. I speak about places where people live their own lives every day. I've seen them working, crying, smiling, laughing of the same things as I do and sometimes totally different. I tried to listen people even if we do not speak the same language.
We had quite a lot of laugh and then you understand, or, better, you feel, you are the same people and that there is really nothing important that divides cultures.
My experience in here is getting near the end. But I am keeping in my mind, a bit jelously, what it has given to me hoping to fully understand it and being able to transfer what I am learning