My first morning in Auckland, April 17th, was met with a nice view of Sky Tower from my room at the Latham:

Sky Tower

This was also Day 1 of Web’09, one of the most enjoyable conferences I’ve ever attended. With about 200 attendees, conferences for me are all about the people and the hallway track, and this conference was great both for that and for some of the talks. I had the chance to have meaningful discussions with about 50% of the people in attendance which is exceptionally high. The kiwi web development community is very cool and tightly knit relative to other countries.

Waiting for Web'09 to start

The morning began with a very impressive video of very cool introductions to the speakers, and nice kick off talks by John Ballinger and Rod Drury, who gave a kiwi-centric overview of the web today:

John Ballinger, Web'09 Host

John Ballinger, Web'09 Host

A few talks in, I felt a bit of vendor overload and had acquired some nice fodder for my talk on Day 2, so I headed back to my room to get some work done before lunch. At lunch I met a number of interesting people, including Rob O’Neill of Computerworld who would later write the follow-up article, Pushing the limits of Flash

I quick sidebar to clarify his comment that referenced me, which was:

At the Web 09 conference in Auckland last month, Flash was still getting some brickbats, most notably from Dojo toolkit co-founder Dylan Schiemann, an open source advocate and HTML and JavaScript fan.

It’s not that Flash and Flex were isolated in criticism by me on Day 2 (I bashed Silverlight and the Open Web as appropriate), but the point of my talk was about freedom (not in the Stallman way) to do what you want with the things you create, to not be stuck with a single vendor as your only choice, and to use it in environments that can easily be migrated or deconstructed, on your own terms. The reason I say not in the Stallman or GPL way is that I want to be able to do what I want with the things I create, and I do not believe that people building on free and open source software necessarily need to give back to the community, as it is their choice to be open or not. In general, I don’t like organizations that waffle frequently on their terms as it confuses people. Also, specifically with regards to Flash, I argued that Flex should have just extended HTML rather than creating an XML syntax from scratch, like we did with Dojo. Why force developers to learn a completely new grammar?

Back to the general part of this story… I had a number of good chats today with people, enjoyed Pamela Fox’s talk about Maps APIs (she’s from Google, but gave a nice overview of other services as well):

Pamela Fox Speaking at Web'09

I also called Jarrod out during his talk for mentioning every other Ajax toolkit except Dojo, even when talking about Bespin is developed in part with Dojo. He made up for this omission on Day 2 in a big way (Thanks Jarrod!):

Jarrod at Web'09, sporting a Dojo Shirt

If there’s a favorite talk from the conference that I attended (note, I generally only make it to a few talks at any particular conference), it would be Pamela’s talk about maps… it was informative and unconventional.

Prior to dinner, there was a good reception in the foyer of the conference and again I met and chatted with a bunch of great people. After that died down a bit, we headed to the Grand Central bar and had food from the next door restaurant, Murder Burger. While no Fergberger, it was a great burger. A bunch of us sat outside (John B., Morgan, Karl, Pamela, Mike Forbest and about 12 or so more including significant others) and continued our conference conversations for several hours, with only a slight interruption from a guy telling me conspiracy theories that I already know and that perhaps aren’t conspiracies but he was crazy enough to make anyone not believe a word he said. I then headed back to the hotel to finish up some work and make a few minor adjustments to my slides for my talk on Day 2.

As I slip further and further behind on my blog posts on my trip, I will note that I’m having a great time and still plan to blog everything eventually. I visited Warwick Castle in England today.

On April 16th, I left Queenstown for Auckland where I gave a talk at the Web’09 conference. An interesting thing about Air New Zealand is that they have their Koru Lounges even in tiny little airports like Queenstown. I wish I could have stayed longer in Queenstown, enjoying the natural beauty of the area.

Queenstown to Auckland

Alas, I took a short flight from Queenstown to Auckland where I was met with long-time Dojo Contributor Rob Coup. It’s always fun to meet people for the first time in real life. Rob and I had a quick pint at the Langham Hotel after a couple of mishaps (they couldn’t find my record, and then gave me the key card for someone else’s room). The Langham Hotel was nice, but the service was subpar compared to any of the hotels I’ve stayed at up to this point.

There was a speaker’s pre-event scheduled. I quickly met a bunch of people: John Ballinger, the host of this great conference, as well as fellow speakers Philip Fierlinger, John Casasanta, Tim Heuer, Jarrod Bishop, Pamela Fox, and many more. We headed to Cactuslab where I got to learn all about the Google Maps API from Pamela, learned to enjoy a few great cocktails provided by the hosts (), and I got to meet Karl von Randow, who I knew because of his work on Charles, but that I didn’t know was that person until about 20 minutes into the conversation. I also got to learn about Robert Songsmith!

Cactuslab Party in Auckland

Cactuslab Party in Auckland

Cactuslab Party in Auckland

We then headed to dinner at Rocco, where I had the chance to meet David Karp of Tumblr (and his girlfriend), and a number of other speakers from the event. All in all, it was a great kickoff to Web’09.

Day 17: The Milford Sound

I slept for a brief amount of time, and then had a very early breakfast again at the Dairy on April 15th with an incredible sunrise:

Queenstown Sunrise

Queenstown Sunrise

The BBQ Milford Sound tour bus picked me up at 7:15… the tour guide rocked, knew all the best places to stop along the way to the Milford Sound, told dry meat-eater friendly jokes that I think I only got (e.g. check out the hamburgers up on the right, when pointing to a large field of cows). Well, he was much funnier in his rendition than I am in repeating it. And he prepared a mean BBQ!

The bus was mostly filled with Japanese and Korean tourists, and a few people from the UK. I sat near a German high school student spending a year in New Zealand learning English, and a girl from Scotland spending many months in New Zealand as her Mom is kiwi.

The Incredible Milford Sound

I’ll let the scenery along the way speak for itself:

Queenstown to Te Anau

Queenstown to Te Anau

Te Anau to Milfound Sound

Te Anau to Milfound Sound

Te Anau to Milfound Sound

Finally, we arrived at the Milford Sound, which I think is probably the most beautifully preserved place I’ve ever seen. We took a two hour boat cruise which got a bit rough near the ocean side. It rained a bit near the end, which caused the waterfalls to come to life. I can’t really go this place justice, so here are some pictures and videos that attempt to capture the essence of this incredible place.

The Incredible Milford Sound

The Incredible Milford Sound

The Incredible Milford Sound

The Incredible Milford Sound

The Incredible Milford Sound

The Incredible Milford Sound

The Incredible Milford Sound

I basically never wanted to leave, but I had a 4-hour bus ride back ahead of me. I considered taking a helicopter or small plane back (there’s no view on the bus at night), but the storm that arrived eliminated that option. Instead, I got to watch a movie on board, “The Fastest Indian”, which was a great story about an old school kiwi engineer that set the speed record for a motorcycle… it did an outstanding job of capturing the essence of Los Angeles in the 1960s.

When I arrived back in Queenstown, I braved the 30-minute take away wait for the legendary Fergberger, and it was worth it. It’s one of the best burgers I’ve ever had, and a great way to end my Queenstown experience. Today was an incredible day.

And finally, a couple more pictures of Lake Wakatipu in Queenstown:

Around Queenstown and Lake Wakatipu

Around Queenstown and Lake Wakatipu

Goodbye Queenstown

Up next, the start of Auckland.

Day 16: Queenstown

Queenstown and the surrounding area rocks and is ridiculously beautiful. The entire area feels like one massive national park. It is a bit trendier than I expected, with lots of people straight out of high school or college tramping around New Zealand.

I began my first full-day (April 14, 2009) in Queenstown with a great breakfast cooked by the owner at the wonderful Dairy Private Luxury Hotel . I then embarked on a bike ride through Queenstown and along the lake. Riding a bike on the opposite side of the road is even more unnatural than driving on the wrong side, because every time you hear a car coming, your natural instinct is to veer right, which of course is right into traffic when riding on the left side!

Around Queenstown and Lake Wakatipu

Queenstown is the adventure capital of the world, including the place where Bungee Jumping was invented. As part of this trip, I’ve been trying new things and in general trying to break myself out of stubborn ways. For example, in Japan and China and Korea, I pretty much ate anything that was presented to me and wasn’t horribly cruel to animals. I found for example that I do like well-prepared sushi. So, I didn’t want to freak anyone out, but I tried the bungee jump since it was invented in Queenstown. Sadly, it was pretty anti-climactic. I wasn’t particularly nervous, and it was over pretty quickly. The free-falling was an interesting sensation, but it’s not something I’d likely do again as it’s just way overrated in my opinion.

Given the relaxing beauty of Queenstown, for the rest of the day, I mostly caught up on work and explored the cafes of Queenstown, prior to an excellent Dojo Beer and dinner event:

Dojo Beer Queenstown

We have several attendees from the Dunedin that made the drive over, and a couple of local web developers as well. In typical New Zealand style, we started with a drink or two at a tapas pub with a waterfront view, then had a nice dinner, and then crawled to a few bars and pubs for the rest of the evening. It was really great to meet people with an interest in Dojo and just great people all around.

In Deutschland

A quick real-time update. I’m traveling around Germany and the Czech Republic for the next 12 days or so… heading to the Rhine River today:


View 2009 Trip in a larger map

Day 15: Tokyo to Queenstown

On April 12th, I left Tokyo for New Zealand. My lack of understanding of the size of the Pacific surprised me when I learned that the travel time from Tokyo to New Zealand is approximately the same as Los Angeles to New Zealand.

Anyways, after my final hours in Tokyo, I rode to Narita airport and took a 10+ hour red-eye flight to Auckland on an older Air New Zealand 767 with business class service that should really be classified as premium economy. After my awesome experience on Asiana Air, I was a bit underwhelmed with everything about this flight except for the friendliness of the staff which was great.

Random places from the hotel to the Tokyo Narita airport

Tokyo Narita Airport

Tokyo Narita Airport

Arriving in New Zealand was interesting due to the very strong warnings about bringing anything in through customs that might harm the ecological purity of the kiwi nation. After a layover for a few hours in the Koru Lounge, I was on my way to Queenstown. For the non-cloudy portions of this flight, the views were breathtaking.

Auckland Airport

Flying from Auckland to Queenstown

Flying from Auckland to Queenstown

Flying from Auckland to Queenstown

The landing was particularly surprising as our 737 landed right between two hills on a single runway. At the end of the runway, the plane stops and turns around to head to the terminal. It’s an oddly small airport for such large planes. Air New Zealand did serve veggie chips, my new favorite short flight snack.

Queenstown is simply astonishing in beauty.

Arriving at Queenstown

I checked into the lovely Dairy Private Luxury Hotel with a nice view of Queenstown and Lake Wakatipu and then headed down to the lake for a quick hand-make fish and chips dinner. I met a few people from Germany and China that were there for a few months studying English and learned more about the town. I’ve been meeting my fair share of randomly interesting people throughout my trip. I then walked around Queenstown, and realized that it also has the requisite Starbucks, before crashing early after the long red-eye the night before.

Arriving at Queenstown

Arriving at Queenstown

Arriving at Queenstown

Arriving at Queenstown

Arriving at Queenstown

Around Queenstown and Lake Wakatipu

The weekend of April 11th was my final two days in Tokyo, so I packed them full with things to see and do. Bill Keese and I met up with Floyd and Werner from QCon and we set out to find the cherry blossoms.

We started out in a pair of parks with temples and cherry trees that were mostly past their blossoming prime, but we did find a few remaining, mostly those trees that live in the shade.

Cool Temple and Gardens in Tokyo

I actually found better blossoms that night on the streets of Ginza:

Cherry Blossoms at night in Ginza

We ate some great street vendor food in the park (bento boxes, yakitori, rice sandwiches, etc.). The parks were was both serene and entertaining depending on the section and crowd level. We witnessed a couple of very traditional wedding proceedings, and written prayer boxes.

Tokyo Parks and Temples

Cool Temple and Gardens in Tokyo

Parks and Temples in Tokyo

Parks and Temples in Tokyo

I also had some time to people watch, including the owner of Pinky, a dog that weighs as most 2kg that took a huge liking to me.

Pinky, the 1kg dog

Then, for some nice contrast we went to the Akihabara Electronics district, where I believe that if it is electronic and has been made within the past 40 years, you can buy it:

Akihabara Electronics Town Tokyo

Akihabara Electronics Town Tokyo

One of the QCon reps then drove us to dinner. Driving in Tokyo is and insanely organized chaos. We even drove into a car elevator at one point while finding parking in Ginza. We had dinner at the most amazing Tofu House (梅の花, pronounced ume no hana) in what was probably a ten-course tofu meal. I have no idea tofu could taste this amazing or variant.

梅の花 (ume no hana) tofu in Ginza

I also got to see a number of familiar west sites, with the good being Apple and the bad being the proliferation of 7-11 and ampm everywhere. Notice the different selection of iPhone App Icons.

Apple Store Ginza Tokyo

Apple Store Ginza Tokyo

Apple Store Ginza

Dojo in Ginza

AM PM and Wendy's in Ginza

We found an excellent french cafe on a random floor of a non-interesting building in Ginza as well.

Random French Cafe in Ginza

On Sunday, while searching for food, we stumbled upon a random car show of old Datsuns. It was very cool as these were not cars you would normally find at US car shows:

Car Show at Shinagawa

Car Show at Shinagawa

I was determined to find good yakiniku or teppanyaki as my last meal in Tokyo, and it took us a while, but we finally found a place open for lunch on Sunday, and it turned out that it was the original teppan place, with a great view of the city (I forget the name, I’ll add that later). Teppan is much nicer in my opinion in Japan as it is not some cheeky gimmicky show, and it is much more efficient. The tables are very long so the chefs can quickly go between groups as needed:

Real Teppanyaki

Real Teppanyaki

Real Teppanyaki

Real Teppanyaki

It was then time to fly to Auckland and Queenstown which I will cover in my next post.

Meanwhile, fast forward two weeks, and today I’m heading to Amsterdam now from Sydney on Singapore Air’s A380… 30+ hours of transit including flights of ~9 and 13 and 2 hours, plus layovers. Luckily I’m in business class and the lounge in London, site of my nearly 5 hour layover, is supposed to have decent shower facilities. This was somewhat of a struggle as my segment from Singapore to London was just confirmed yesterday.


View 2009 Trip in a larger map

Overall, I love Tokyo and I would highly recommend a visit there to anyone!

I’m about 10 days behind on my travel blog… I had a extraordinary time in New Zealand and I’m enjoying Australia before heading to Amsterdam this weekend. Maybe I’ll catch up during the 30 or so hours, door-to-door, of travel from Sydney to Amsterdam. It’s going to be nice being on a time zone closer to that of the US, but I’m really going to miss this part of the world.

Dylan’s photos


View 2009 Trip in a larger map

April 10th was the final day of QCon Tokyo and the first ever dojo.sake event as well.

I began the day with a meeting at a large Japanese company that has an interest in Ajax. After that, I took Henrik up on his advice to walk around and pick a place somewhat at random and see what they offer. The first place I went to was already closed after lunch. The second place in a random basement on street outside the east exit of Shinagawa Station had some great choices, and I went with katsu pork which was phenomenal, and rather affordable.

Random Street near Shinagawa station

In the late afternoon, the conference ended with a panel discussion. It was a bit different than any panel I’ve been on before in that we all stood up for an hour and just talked and walked around a bit. It was a good discussion about the future of software development for the enterprise. I love how they simplify the panel voting process:

Conference Voting System at QCon Tokyo

It was then time to get going back to Shibuya for the Dojo Dinner. Because I did not have a printer, I hand sketched what I thought would be a good map (basically 3 lines) for when I left the station. Little did I realize that the station had exits on all sides. Shockingly though, in about 20 minutes, I ended up at the right building on my own which was pretty awesome given that I had no viable way to determine direction or magnitude of my map! I showed the map to Bill Keese and the other attendees, and they laughed and said, wow, you found it based on that map!

Bill Keese at Dojo Sake Tokyo

The beer and dinner at Gon-panchi was great. In a private room, it’s described as Japanese pub food, simply because they have all different types of Japanese cuisine, plus all different types of drinks. You might also think of it as being like Japanese pub tapas though as the quality was excellent. From sushi to yakitori to tempura, it was all great, even the cold sake.

Dojo Sake Tokyo

Dojo Sake Tokyo

After dinner, we walked around Shibuya for a bit and I took some pictures and a cool video where the traffic of people walking around sounds like waves which I thought was a pretty interesting effect. Turn on your sound to hear it:

Finally, what popular tourist attraction would exist without the requisite Starbucks and even a Krispy Kreme:

Huge Starbucks at Shibuya

Shibuya

Day 12: QCon Tokyo

I’m a bit behind on these posts due to imperfect hotel internet connections.

On April 9th, QCon Tokyo began. But first a few initial observations:

  • ATMs: hard to get cash, as most only work with Japanese cards, and many stores don’t take American credit cards. It also helps if you try to withdraw $300 instead of $3,000 when making the conversion from dollars to Yen.
  • Train stations, bridges, and multi-levels: Tokyo has tremendous infrastructure around pedestrian overpasses, expansive train stations, and effective use of multiple levels of tall buildings rather than just the bottom level or two for retail or restaurants.
  • Candy and beverages: the selection is an eclectic mix of Japanese, American and worldwide candy, and even some American brands I’ve never seen in the US. For bottled water, Tokyo seems obsessed with French sources.

QCon Tokyo was an excellent conference at an outstanding facility. When I first arrived, the team knew exactly who I was and had my badge ready before I arrived at the badge counter. I immediately ate an exquisite bento box before meeting with the translators to review my talk so they would understand the content in greater detail.

Authentic Bento Box

I then immediately proceeded to deliver my talk, and it was a better delivery of the talk than in Beijing, perhaps because I had a better sense from the translators about which expressions and slang would be acceptable with the locals.

After the talk, I chatted with a few Dojo users, and received a traditional Japanese pen as a gift. I gave our a few Dojo shirts and stickers as usual.

QCon Tokyo

On the way back to the hotel, I found a great bakery which, like all places in Tokyo it seems, took an amazingly detailed approach to the dessert I was going to eat:

Awesome Dessert in Tokyo

It was also interesting to learn that because Tokyo and Japan in general have such amazing digital and mobile networks, that wifi has not really become popular at all.

The conference hosted an evening reception which was well attended and which led to meeting a number of the conference attendees.

QCon Tokyo

I then found a cab and went to Amazon Japan near Shibuya for an Amazon Web Services event with Jeff Barr being the primary speaker. The talks where great, including a lightning talk about “AIR Yakiniku”. What was really interesting to me was that each of the Japanese talks followed a very similar format.

After the talks, I was lucky enough to be able to attend a nomikai event, which was a lot of fun, featured syabu syabu, sushi, a raw egg as the condiment for the meat, and less conventional options such as french fries and thin pizza bread.

Nomikai at Tengu in Shibuya

Nomikai at Tengu in Shibuya

Nomikai at Tengu in Shibuya

Nomikai at Tengu in Shibuya

I also had the opportunity to have conversations with a number of ex-pats from Europe and North America which was really interesting. I’m always surprised by the number of people that go and live in cities like Tokyo indefinitely.

Nomikai at Tengu in Shibuya

Finally, no first day would be complete without a subway ride, though I technically took the competing JR above ground line from Shibuya to Shinagawa Station and back to my hotel.

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