Jan 31

Fleet Bank is heavily invested in Argentina—where the economy has collapsed, and Fleet is having to restrict customers to withdrawing less than $1000 a month.

Meanwhile, Fleet has taken a hit of $1.8 billion to cover the money it’s lost in South America, with an overall loss of $507m in 4Q2001. That’s half a billion dollars worse than they predicted. Profits for the full year were down 75%.

Still, your account is FDIC insured, so if the bank goes belly-up the federal government will bail you out. Eventually.

Jan 29

From NorthWest News Channel 8:

A Zen Buddhist group’s plan to remodel a former Clatskanie elementary school into a monastery and seminary is upsetting some people in this fishing and logging town.

A meeting sponsored by the Buddhists this week drew more than 200 people, many of whom objected to the proposal.

“Do you not see the darkness?” Linda Fischer, a Christian, asked of others in the audience. “The aura of Satan is taking a foothold. We do not want Buddhism in here.”

[…]

Loren Dummer, pastor of the Gateway Worship Center, the Assembly of God congregation, said the Buddhists pose a clear spiritual threat to the community.

His main concern is for the city’s youth, who he thinks are targets of the Buddhists.

“Our goal is to protect those that have not yet accepted Christ,” he said.

Yes, folks. Buddhists walk among us, undetected. And they are preying on our children!

Jan 25

I’m back. Still got the cold, but I’m determined to make it through some of my mail. Like the 800 messages from the skunk mailing list.

It seems that 0.8% of Salon readers think it’s worth paying for. As many as that?

Jan 24

I do indeed have a cold, but I’m just about fighting it off.

One more day to go, then I’ll be back in Boston. I’m so looking forward to getting home, cold and rainy or not.

Jan 23

I feel like I’m coming down with a cold. A slight rawness in the lungs, tiredness around the eyes, and so on. I’m going to get an early night and late morning and see if I can shake it off. It’s one of the hazards of attending a conference with about ten thousand other people and working fourteen hour days—exhaustion sets in, and it’s a safe bet someone you shake hands with will have some common cold variant you haven’t experienced yet. One of my colleagues has been in bed for a couple of days with a viral infection, so maybe it’s that. Or maybe it’s all just exhaustion and hypochondria.

Made it to the breakfast tent by 07:50, with Ryan in tow, then chatted with colleagues before attending the first of the day’s technical sessions. All the tech stuff is at a different hotel, the Hilton. Sad to say, you could tell it was where all the tech staff had gathered because of the smell. I wish that particular stereotype wasn’t true, but there you have it.

Today was officially Diversity Day. The lunch table was pretty diverse without anyone even trying—a broad mix of skin colors, nationalities, religions and sexualities. (I attended a vendor presentation once where it seemed really freaky that they were all straight white males, because no internal meeting I’ve been to has ever been like that.)

After a couple of technical sessions and some lunch, it was time to head back and help man our team’s pedestal in the “Productivity Café”. I got a cool denim shirt with the new Lotus logo tastefully embroidered on it, and got energized (and tired out) by talking to our customers.

Jan 22

Again Ryan has woken me up with his snoring. It’s quieter today, but not quiet enough. I’m going to go have an early breakfast, then when I get back I’ll wake him up in an annoyingly cheery and unsympathetic manner, upload a couple of LJ entries, then wander off to the 08:00 kick-off presentation—four hours of morale-building talk from senior executives. Kill me now.

Last night was the opening beach party, on the fake Disney beach near the hotel. Free food, and it wasn’t bad either. Afterwards I played pool with Stephanie. She has been having lessons, apparently, but we ended up quite evenly matched. In other words, I was a lot better at it than I remember being last time I tried. Maybe I had just the right caffeine levels, or maybe it was because the table was in poor condition, equalizing our abilities.

Jan 21

This morning it seemed almost sacreligious to dose up on antidepressants in Disney World.

I discovered that Ryan snores when he’s drunk. Worse than sara. It was like Darth Vader trying to fix a sqeaking door with WD-40: there was a deep breathing, a high pitched nasal hiss, and a bizarre squeaking noise that didn’t sound like it was made by a human being. At around 06:30 I had to yank the pillow to make him roll over.

Jan 20

Well, here I am in Disney World.

I’m here for an IBM internal conference. Pretty much the whole of the IBM software group sales organization for the USA is here, along with Canadians and some Latin American folks. Tomorrow I have the first of many long meetings filled with information that could be communicated by e-mail much more effectively if you could trust sales people to read their e-mail.

The plane trip down was uneventful. I was surprisingly calm about the whole thing, said goodbye to Richard and told him he really needs to write more LJ entries, and got the T to Logan. As the train passed over the salt and pepper bridge, I suddenly thought to myself: why am I on a train? Why did I drag my suitcase through the snow when IBM could have paid for a taxi? Ah well, I could use the exercise.

Then I realized that I turned off the heating in the house, because I didn’t want to reprogram the thermostat and leave poor sara to work it out when she got home. Except now she’ll get home and the house will be freezing, and I’ll be down here in Florida basking in 25 celcius sunshine. I’m not sure what I should have done, as the “Hold Temperature” feature didn’t seem to be working.

At Logan I actually made it through the metal detector without setting it off, in spite of forgetting to remove my watch. I can’t work out why sometimes it beeps and sometimes it doesn’t. (Maybe titanium doesn’t trigger it? Except then, surely people would make guns and knives out of titanium?) I didn’t get wanded either, and they didn’t search or drug-test my bag. Nor did they ask me to turn the laptop on to prove it was a genuine laptop.

Discussing random logistical issues with the rest of the team, I suddenly realized I hadn’t thought to cross-check that they’d booked me to check in at the hotel on the same day they’d asked me to fly down to Florida. You’d think that would be the sort of detail you could leave to the travel planners, but of course you’d be sadly mistaken. A quick phone call to the hotel sorted things out, luckily, or I could have been pulling an all-nighter.

My seat was in the last row of the plane. It was narrower than I remember airline seats being, and since the plane was heading to Florida, naturally there was a large late-middle-aged woman wedged in next to me. The flight attendant came back just before takeoff and asked if I’d mind being moved to the front of the plane. I asked if there were any small children at the front. He said no, he was trying to move them back here. I said in that case, I would very much like to move to the front of the plane.

So I found myself sitting next to a cute guy who does something relating to DB2 that I probably would have known what the job title meant if I’d been at IBM for long enough. He was mostly interested in talking to the guy to his right, though, so whatever.

Once again, no food or coffee for security reasons. Since I’d had to be at the departure gate at noon, and there wasn’t any food past the security checkpoint, I basically didn’t get any lunch.

Got to the hotel, checked in, Ryan fell asleep watching American football on TV and I didn’t have the heart to wake him. Rested for a while, then played Nethack a bit. Then we all went out and I finally got my first proper meal of the day.

The hotel room is about what you’d expect an $80 Holiday Inn hotel room to be like. Unfortunately, since it’s a Disney hotel, it’s $270 a night. If you’ve never been to Disney World, the most surreal part of it isn’t the amazing and pervasive fakeness of the surroundings—rather, it’s the prices. I’ll admit I’m no gourmet, but food is easily double what I’d normally pay in Boston. Anyone visiting from a cheaper part of the USA must get major sticker shock. You can easily end up paying $8 for a burger and fries.

Don’t bother looking for me online. I didn’t know it was legal to charge by the minute for calls to toll-free numbers, but apparently it is. I’ll be writing offline then quickly uploading.

Jan 18

The INS Vermont “Service” Center is unreachable by phone. The line is constantly busy, I’ve been trying for three days, hitting the redial button maybe a hundred times. I tried *66, but that’s disabled for toll-free numbers, and the INS carefully doesn’t publish a toll number.

So I called the national service center. They told me that it typically takes four months for the INS to send out a receipt saying that they actually received your application. The receipt gives a date even more months away when they’ll actually look at it, and acts as a visa extension. Of course, you’re not allowed to send the application in until 90 days before the expiry date on your card. Hmmm…

So I asked what to do about the fact that my resident alien card expires on February 8th. They said that I would need to go to my local INS office and apply for an extension.

So in summary, I need to go to the INS offices in Boston to apply for a visa extension to cover me until I get my visa extension which will let me wait for my permanent visa to be made permanent, because the INS wouldn’t let me send in my application until they were sure they wouldn’t be able to get me the visa extension in time.

I’m always amused that Americans hate and fear the IRS so much. The IRS are pussycats compared to the INS.

Jan 18

The chest pain mystery was solved yesterday. The pain was an effect of spider venom.

My left torso and back are covered in spider bites. Hundreds. There’s a huge red welt of multiple bites under my left arm, and another smaller one on my left shoulderblade.

I don’t normally squash spiders. I catch them and let them out outside. Well, the next spider I see is going to be ruthlessly squashed. Probably the one after that too. Hey, they made it personal.

And yes, I’m still in slight pain.