Thursday, March 31, 2005

A bad week

This week has so far been one of the worst since I came here. It started on Tuesday when bad supervisor didn't come and pick me up for lunch as he promised. Maybe not the worst things that came happen, since I could go alone to eat lunch. Yesterday I was suppose to meet a girl, which with whom I studied together with in Vienna, but after waiting 40 minutes I reckon she wouldn't show up. Since I didn't have enough sleep the previous nights of the week I decided to go to bed early (around 11 p.m.), but my neighbour stayed up chatting with a friend until four o'clock in the morning, so I didn't manage to sleep that well, however since I could sleep a little longer today, till 9 a.m. I thought I still would get some sleep. But then, this morning they started to drill in the street for the tramway at 7.
This morning I managed to move out of the American house (something good at least), but I was not allowed to move into my new room in the Swedish house, since the old room owner didn't move out yet.
Also I finally manage to get my bank card this morning. I tested it and it worked :), which was been proved to be a good thing it would show later. Because getting off the underground station nearby work, I was stop by the underground staff. I thought it would be no problem since I got a valid ticket for March. But no. It showed up that I didn't have the valid ID card for the underground !? Luckily, since I just withdraw some money I could pay the 35 € directly, otherwise it would have been much more expensive.
Well on work, my tests that I am running still runs on the computer and until they are ready I can't do that much at the moment. The computer is really slow; they tried to put in more RAM memory on Tuesday, but the computer seemed to old, so the RAM memory they have, don't seem to fit in the slops on it.

Sunday, March 27, 2005

Different things – things that are different

When you first come to a country, you might be very impressed by all the new things, but then before you start to enjoy the new country fully, you feel slightly disturbed on all things that are different. I am in that kind of period right now, weather I want it or not. My only comfort is that I know that it will pass.

What I thought was something that almost all have within, was that when you meet someone on the street, you’re suppose to pass them on the right side. This seems that it doesn’t work in Paris. Maybe the inhabitants have get use to behaviour of the tourists that invade the city during the summer and spring. Anyway it is quite unpractical. Only today, I almost bumped into four or five people on the street. Maybe there is a system how to pass someone, but I haven’t found it yet.

Another thing, what I discovered already in Austria, is how people act when going on the bus or the underground. People getting on the bus do not wait for the people that want to go off. When going off the bus your really have to fight. Normally the off going passengers win, but I wouldn’t be surprised if there is on every train stop at least one passenger who isn’t able to get off.

One of the most difficult things to learn in France is not the language, it is the computer keyboard. During my travels in Europe, I have had the opportunity to deal with a lot of different keyboards, but I have to say: the French one is the hardest to learn so far. Obviously do not French think that the letters A, M, the signs . and , are important as well as the numbers. It is impossible to write something right.

At last I want to complain on the 1 and 2 cent coins. Please, get ride of them, they don’t make anyone happy.

Thursday, March 10, 2005

Paris March 10 – The Strike

Today was they day I just was waiting for to come. No, it wasn't the French National Day (it occurs on July 14). No, it wasn't the snail eating day (I don't expect there is one, but if there is of course it would be in France). It was the first striking day since I have arrived. It took me more than a week too experience it, I would expecting just a three or four days ;)
No one seems to know they are striking, but almost all buses, all underground lines and trains are cut of by this. Not all bus/train drivers are striking, which I don't understand, but since I don't understand the reason why there is strike, I don't bother too much, and take it is as a Parisian: an extra day of experience and than just complaint about it all together with the colleagues.
The biggest irony however about this day however, is that this is the second day when the Olympic committee is in Paris, to see how suitable Paris would be as host of the Olympics 2012, where Paris is one of the candidate cities. Paris has made great effort for this, invested a lot of money on commercial ads on the buses. Buses that aren't running today, and showing the commercial. On tonight there will be a spectacular show along the Seine, however it will be very hard for people to get there and see the show. It is to "throwing money in the lake" as the Swedish saying is, or maybe they say throwing money in the Seine here… I will ask ;)
By the way this week there is a Japanese-Swedish film festival at the Cité U. So if I get home in time I will watch "Mitt liv som hund/Ma vie du chien".

Tuesday, March 08, 2005

Paris Day 6 – Overcast - My birthdayDay 6 – Overcast - My birthday

Hm. It maybe wasn’t the best birthday I ever have had…

Yesterday it was a fairly nice day; sunny but very cold still. I took a walk around the area. It is very nice here actually, at least the exterior. I also discover the restaurant, where I can eat for €2.75 as a student. And of course I am student... ;) Now I can actually eat for less the €7 a day. This is a great country :D. And the food is great.

Today I went back to work again, but I left at 2:30 p.m. since I wanted to managing open a bank account… But in the meantime I manage to delete all programming files I will work with for the next six months, restore them again, and develop a much more effective programme.

So in the afternoon I went to Maison des Étudiants Suédois, to register as a resident there, so I could get the proper documents for opening a bank account. However registering as a resident was much harder than I thought, a lot of documents only in French (once again I have to learn the language), that I had to fill in. However, I managed to get the documents for the bank before handing in the residence registration, which I intend to take to work tomorrow, in order to get help from one of my colleagues. At the bank, however I wasn’t allowed to open a bank account today. I have to come back tomorrow, although I had all the required documents. I more and more believe in the rumour of France being the burocratic country on earth (although I heared Belgium is even worse).

Paris Day 6 – Overcast - My birthdayDay 6 – Overcast - My birthday

Hm. It maybe wasn’t the best birthday I ever have had…

Yesterday it was a fairly nice day; sunny but very cold still. I took a walk around the area. It is very nice here actually, at least the exterior. I also discover the restaurant, where I can eat for €2.75 as a student. And of course I am student... ;) Now I can actually eat for less the €7 a day. This is a great country :D. And the food is great.

Today I went back to work again, but I left at 2:30 p.m. since I wanted to managing open a bank account… But in the meantime I manage to delete all programming files I will work with for the next six months, restore them again, and develop a much more effective programme.

So in the afternoon I went to Maison des Étudiants Suédois, to register as a resident there, so I could get the proper documents for opening a bank account. However registering as a resident was much harder than I thought, a lot of documents only in French (once again I have to learn the language), that I had to fill in. However, I managed to get the documents for the bank before handing in the residence registration, which I intend to take to work tomorrow, in order to get help from one of my colleagues. At the bank, however I wasn’t allowed to open a bank account today. I have to come back tomorrow, although I had all the required documents. I more and more believe in the rumour of France being the burocratic country on earth (although I heared Belgium is even worse).

Saturday, March 05, 2005

Paris Day 4 – just a little snow – first day of the weekend

I tried to sleep quite long this morning. Unfortunately it did not work out. In the last complaint about noises I forgot to mention the neighbours. Although the walls seem to be made of concrete, I am sure they are just made of paper. You can hear load and clear right through them. With other words there is no problem to hear the alarm clock in the morning, even when you don’t want to hear it.

Since my arrival I couldn’t use internet yet (the former days’ reviews were uploaded just today). This ‘cause internet at work didn’t work yet, and in the dormitory it is just supported in the library, and their you got to have a wlan-card (a card for using wireless internet). So I went in to the city to buy the card. I found a fnac-store where I find one for roughly €50. I hope it was a good deal, since I don’t know what they otherwise costs.

Anyway, well at home, eager to install my new “access-point-to-the-world-product”, I discovered that I got the wrong installation cd!? I ignored the sign on the card, “install cd first”, attached the card to my laptop, but of course it didn’t work. So back to the city, entering fnac. At first the cashier told me to go to the computer department, the computer department asked me to go to the information desk, the information desk asked me to go to the retail desk, the retail desk ask me to go the the service office. At the service office I finally managed to get some help, although the service clerk did not believe for a long time. I get a refunding receipt for a new product from the service clerk, I went back to the computer department, got a new product, to the cashier and back home. And “voila”, it works! And here I am online on internet.

Friday, March 04, 2005

Paris Day 3 sun in the morning then even more snow in the afternoon.s

Paris in snow is like Slush Puppy – the flavoured ice drink that existed in the middle of the 80s – it maybe still exists? When the snow reach the ground it turns in to a mix of ice, snow, water, and dirt – not the best ice drink one can imagine.

The day went on without any dramatic happenings. Neither Laurence nor Cedric were at the job today. I started of researching the computer programme I am going to work on, until it stopped working anymore. So the rest of the day I read, some papers that I was given. During lunch I meet Adam and a Greek guy, who both have been working with Robust Optimization, as I will do. They both seem very nice. What I like best with France so far are the French people. All I meet so far has been very friendly, interested about me, helpful and they seem to funny to be with; making jokes with each other. The only problem is that they speak French with each other; however that’s understandable, and it also motivates me to learn more French.

Paris Day 2 – more snow – First day at work

Getting out of the US student housing was harder then getting in. Isn’t it what I always have meant - the Americans do let people enter their country; they just don’t want to get out them selves. The door was looked, and I could find any way to open it. A woman came entering towards me, I asked her if she could help me, but she started speaking to me in French, I had real problem understanding here, but at last she had got the information from me, that my name was Calle (why did she so desperately want to know that?) and that I was new in the building (as if she didn’t already knew that). Then there came an American girl who knew where the door opener was located at – the French woman turned to me again: Voila!

The bad language experience with the woman in the morning, changed when entering a café ordering a breakfast without any problem at all. The only bad thing with that was the price for the breakfast: tea, juice, and bread with butter and jam for 8 euros!

So I find my way to French Telecom where I will spend the next six months. A huge building, but not that modern, that you would think that a R&D department building of telecom Company would be. Well at least the people seem really nice. Laurence who is my supervisor, is really pedagogic and she really has prepared all the information good. Also Cedric, which I am going to work with, is really helpful and friendly. I am in the same room as sweat Natalie and I guy who’s name I haven’t learnt yet – perhaps it is not a coincident that I learn the girl’s name first… The most conversation today was in French, however since my French isn’t that good yet, in the end it ended with that Natalie showed my pictures from France in snow, which I think her friends has sent her during the day. Snow in France must really be a big thing for the Frenchmen. And the comments from the guy, without a name, were a repeatedly “que la Suède”. Otherwise the day consisted of administrational things – however, relatively little for being France (but I think it will continue next week) – and studying some more about the problem I will deal with. I got a computer which I am going to work with, and as usual as coming to another country, learning the keyboard was harder then learning the menus in another language. I even think French keyboards are extra hard to learn, compared to other I have worked with (such as the Slovenian and German). Anyway the day working day ended at 7 p.m. quite tired I went back after buying a card for the month of March in the underground/metro, and then I bought a pizza – again very expensive food (however, the lunch was incredibly cheap). Back at the Cube I finally meet some of my neighbours. Actually I meet a neighbour already the first day. I heard a knock on the door, just before I was going to bed. Outside the door was a guy called David, I have no clue what he wanted me, since I was the one who mainly did the conversation, and he just answered: yes, no, David. Anyway the people I was talking to this evening seemed to be quite nice.

Thursday, March 03, 2005

Paris Day 1, snow, The Spartan Cube

After missing my flight at Arlanda/Stockholm airport to Charles de Gaulle/Paris airport, I managed to rebook the ticket to a later flight the same afternoon. I have to admit that the thought “nothing can stop me know” run threw my head; whatever will meet me in Paris, I will take it for what it is. This was proven to be easier said than done.

After getting my luggage – last of all as usual – I finally manage to find my self out of the Charles de Gaulle terminal 1 maze, but to find the commuter trains was even harder. As I arrived quite late, there wasn’t that much people left at the airport, but at last I found a French woman who could express her clear enough, that I had to take bus 2 in order to reach the train station. I went out in the heavy snowy weather, and after a while I fetched the bus. After a considerably long bus trip I arrived at the train station – between the lines I can admit that I had great difficulties to finding the trains even though the bus stopped just outside the train station, at last I found my way, due to the gigantic queue to the one and only open ticket counter (is that something typically French?). After queuing some 30 minutes, I had my ticket, and after some shivering in the coldness I sat on the commuter train. – zero degrees in Paris definitely feels colder than minus five degrees in Stockholm. One good thing with the train is that it goes directly from the airport to Cité Universitaire where I am living. Around 10 p.m. I arrived at the Foundation des Etats-Unis – the US student housing where I am going to spend my first month. At the reception it went very smoothly – too smoothly? – I just got the key to my room, without paying anything or registering or getting any kind of information. Stepping out of the elevator, full with expectation, I find to my joy my room rather quickly. It was just across the elevator. Now afterwards I cannot remember why, but I thought: Great! that’s a good thing being near to the elevator and the flight of stairs.

I opened the door and there it was: the Cube. I don’t know if you’ve seen the film with the same name – I am sure it was recorded in this room. Three meters wide, three meters broad and three meters high. The door was marked 442 – does this mean I can pass to this room? (You have to have seen the film in order to understand that joke!) Living in a cube is not a bad thing though. Living in a Cube with Spartan interior, with stone floor, ceiling and walls, warmed up to 31 degrees Celsius (without possibility to turn down the heating. Also I quite fast recognized that living near to the elevators and stairs is a really bad thing, when people starts to running outside, especially when people wear high heals, especially noisy it becomes if you have a 2 centimetres gap under your door. However, the worst thing was not the noise outside the door, even worse was the noise for traffic on the boulevard outside the window, and worst of all was the noise from the railway across the boulevard.

After opening the balcony doors for 2 minutes (no I don’t have a balcony, just balcony doors – a so called French balcony) letting in some colder air, I fell a sleep exhausted, and woke up five hours later again, when the train started moving again.