Intercontinental Lounge Bar

On and off during the afternoon and evening this trio would turn up in the lounge bar at the Grand Intercontinental Hotel and play for a while. This shot was captured without the flash which has left the beautiful lounge area in sharp focus, and the two musicians close to the camera ever so slightly blurred as they moved with the music they were playing.

By the way, I swear that there was a green tea on the bar menu that was more expensive than the long island iced tea – guess which one I was ordering!

Reflections on Seoul, II

In retrospect, cleaning the large silver globe would have been a good idea, but I didn’t really have anything on me to do that with (I was heading back from the shopping mall with some souvenirs and Korean Tiger and Mac Mini leaflets – will post those once I’ve scanned them!).

Gyeongbokgung

Gyeongbokgung, historic site 117, was the primary palace of the Joseon Dynasty. This building is Gyeonghoeru and is where official banquets were held and foreign envoys entertained. The guide flyer I have says this:

There was a small pavillion when Gyeongbokgung was built. King Taejong dug the pond and rebuilt this pavilion to its grandeur in 1412. It was burnt down during the Japanese Invasion of 1592 and restored in the 4th year of King Gojong (1867). This is the best example of Joseon time’s pavillion which has 48 granite pillars. It shows [the] highly advanced architecture of [the] Joseon period.

There was some kind of cleaning work going on in the pond, so getting shots of the pavillion without plastic fences in the water was a little challenging.

Shaken Awake

Did the earth move for you to? Well, it did here… for real. OK, it wasn’t a big shake (3.4 on the Richter scale according to the USGS event report). It wasn’t the largest since I’ve been living here either, but it was the closest to my home and definitely felt as large as some of the others. Anyway, it was enough to wake me up (just after 3:30am) by rattling the blinds quite hard and shaking the bed. No damage though, just a disturbed night’s sleep.

Useless Parcel Service

I had hoped to be able to install Tiger on my PowerBook this weekend. The package from Amazon should have been delivered on Thursday according to the tracking information from the Useless Parcel Service.

First the box sat in San Pablo for two days without anything changing on the tracking info. Then, two days in a row they have managed to arrive at a time when there is nobody in the leasing office to sign for the box; today they even managed to miss the end of their own “approximate time of next attempt” window (10:30am to 2pm) by over 4 hours, not turning up until after 6pm! I actually wonder why people bother to use them for anything – they are over-priced and frequently unable to deliver (literally). This is not the first time I’ve had this problem. In fact, I usually end up having to collect packages from their facility at Oakland airport because they are unable to actually make a delivery.

The iLife box I ordered at the same time was sent out later, via the regular postal service. It arrived today, just two days after it was shipped, and was delivered without any problems on the first attempt. Amazon would do well to note that fact and drop the UPS option from their shipping.

Apple Experience Center, Seoul

Under the Grand Intercontinental Hotel here in Seoul is a shopping mall larger than any in the bay area. In that mall I found an Apple Store, called the Apple Experience Center.

Check out the Korean version of Tiger, the newly released Mac OS X 10.4, that was onsale in the store, and installed on all their machines as far as I could tell. My copy of the US version shipped from Amazon yesterday – hopefully it will arrive early next week.