Without a Traceroute

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Caving in Budapest

September 18th, 2008 · Hungary, Travel

Budapest seems like a really cool city. There’s a lot of pretty architecture and the Danube is beautiful. Unfortunately, my attempt to escape cold, grey, rainy weather has failed. It does rain differently here, though. Whereas the Netherlands was prone to long downpours interspersed with periods of not-rain (I wouldn’t exactly call it ‘dry’ since the trees would be dripping and the streets damp) at entirely unpredictable intervals, Budapest seems to have very long spells of extremely light sprinkling with only the occasional serious rain. Also, the umbrellas are dirt cheap. I picked one up for 500 Hungarian Forints (about $3).

I went on a caving trip yesterday, along with my friend Rachel from Pomona, who’s also here in Budapest. I thought it was a pretty cool trip. We went into the raw, undeveloped part of some of the many kilometers of limestone caves which lie underneath Budapest. We had to do a fair deal of scrambling over rocks and squeezing through small spaces. One particularly tricky one was called the “vinklie” (spelling?), which according to our guide means “90 degrees” (right angle?). Basically, the passageway was shaped roughly like an isosceles triangle (with the narrow angle facing downwards), and about large enough for your shoulders and hips. To quote our guide, “You have to lift your hips up, or you will get stuck…not forever, but maybe you leave a shoe behind.” So you wiggle along lying on your left side, using your left arm and one leg to try keep your hips and shoulders elevated in the wider part of the passageway. Then, about 2 or 3 meters along the passage, it turns abruptly to the right (hence the name) and you have to sort of worm your way around the corner.

Our guide was pretty amusing in his own right. He was apparently a very avid caver, and spent a lot of time bragging about the really cool caves he had explored. At the same time, he was critical of boastful show-offs in the caving/mountaineering community who walk around the street wearing carabiners and talk about their adventures constantly. In his defense, we were in a very cave-oriented situation, so it made some sense for him to regale us with stories of his travels.

He also wins the award for the most inadvertently profound-sounding statement of the trip. When we turned off all our headlamps in one of the rooms, our guide was heard to remark, “Without the light, the people can see nothing.”

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At the data retention conference

September 19th, 2008 · Hungary, Politics, Technology

My biggest impression so far is that the EU legal and bureaucratic apparatus is positively labyrinthine. I pity the poor internet service providers trying to make sense of ambiguous, poorly written directives. It seems like the EU imposed these requirements without much reflection and with only a very minimal amount of input from the public or members of industry.

The directives seem to be written with the mistaken idea that the ISP market looks like the mobile phone market, with only a few, large providers. Of course, if small ISPs are driven out by the costs of trying to comply with the directive, then that’s what the ISP market will look like.

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Bathing in Budapest

September 20th, 2008 · Hacker culture, Hungary, Travel

So the data retention workshop was really cool and interesting. I’ll write more about it later, but I’m pretty tired right now. Most of the conference participants went out to dinner afterwards, at a fairly fancy restaurant. I didn’t have a lot of money, so I basically ordered the cheapest thing on the menu (some sort of cabbage and noodles dish, which wasn’t bad). Little did I realize that Central European University was picking up the tab. I should’ve gone to town! They also provided an excellent catered lunch for the conference, so kudos all around to CEU for being such fine hosts.

Anyway, because I’m lazy about writing right now, here’s some photos of the Széchenyi Baths I went to yesterday. It was a pretty neat experience, kind of like a cross between a public pool and a water park. One thing that isn’t very obvious from the photos was the fact that it was actually really cold out, but the water is extremely warm (25-40°C depending on which pool).

This might be the best photo I've taken

This might be the best photo I've taken

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Sorry for not updating

September 24th, 2008 · Hungary, Linux, Travel

I’ve actually got a bunch of stuff to write about. Unfortunately, my laptop’s hard drive seems to be in the process of dying a slow, painful death. It tends to flake out completely at inopportune times. During these “bad periods” the BIOS acts like it can’t even find any bootable media, but then it will randomly come back and work perfectly fine (minus some data corruption from improperly disconnecting without unmounting the drive).

If nothing else, these experiences have put the fear of God in me with regard to data backups and I’ve been burning CDs, uploading to servers and saving to flash drives like crazy during the good periods. The all-or-nothing nature of the issue leads me to suspect the problem might be as simple as a loose cable connecting the drive. I don’t have the necessary tools (a very small screwdriver, basically) with me to open up the computer and take a look, but I’m going to try to borrow one.

In the meantime, I did manage to download and burn a copy of the Ubuntu LiveCD, so at least I’ll be able to have a functional system, even without a hard drive. The worst/most annoying part about this is just not having any confidence in the hardware. It’s not fun playing roulette to see if your computer will work when you need it to. This goes for other pieces of tempremental, but vital equipment, too: cars that only start half the time, bikes that frequently get flat tires. In some ways, it would almost be better if they didn’t work at all. That way, you’d know where you stand.

Anyway, I’ve got a bunch of notes (mostly on paper) from the Budapest conference and the last couple of days, so I’ll try to get up to date when I get a chance. I’m flying to Palermo, Italy in a few hours for another hacker conference, but I’ve got a 10-hour layover in a small regional airport outside of Milan. I’m debating whether it’s worth going into town for lunch. Right now, I have to go pack.

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Why Context Matters…

September 25th, 2008 · Hungary, Politics, Travel

OR When the Stormtroopers Are the Good Guys

Last Saturday in Budapest, there were at least three significant political demonstrations. The first was organized by the Hungarian Democratic Charter (HDC), theoretically a non-partisan group, but one that was founded by the Prime Minister, Ferenc Gyurcsany, head of the Hungarian Socialist Party. It was a large, peaceful demonstration against extremism and fascism, and several thousand people showed up (one source I read said 4,500, which seems plausible after being there).

There were nice old people wearing red hats

There were nice old people wearing red hats

Hey! It's the Prime Minister! (kidding...somebody pointed him out to me)

Hey! It's the prime minister! (somebody pointed him out to me)

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