One-week trip to Taipeh, visiting FIC.
On rather short notice I am now on my way to Taipeh, Taiwan. As the interested
reader of this journal will have noticed, OpenMoko and the Neo1973 are the
seemingly endless story of delays and mishaps throughout the last nine months.
So the purpose of this trip is to discuss various options on how to make sure
that we all learn the neccessary lessons out of this past experience, and
ensure that OpenMoko eventually can at least keep up to some of its schedule
promises.
So this will be a week full of meetings and discussions mostly with various managers
and particularly the hardware team at FIC, our
generous sponsor.
What is at least equally exciting are the planned meetings with various WiFi
chipset vendors to discuss our requirements of a mobile-phone compatible
low-size, low-power WiFi chipset with a fully GPL licensed Linux kernel driver.
The downside of all this is that I'm once again held back from writing some of
the most important infrastructure code that OpenMoko still needs. Anyway,
this compromise has to be made - after all, of what use is software without a
high-quality, reliable, performant and available handset hardware :)
Since Werner doesn't have a blog,
old-fashioned as he is, let me mention that he'll be there for the whole week,
too. I think it's a 34-hour trip for him to get from Buenos Aires to Taipeh.
I wonder how well he'll survive that...
Dor
On my China Airways flight from Frankfurt to Taipeh, I have continued my
tradition of watching the [usually] only Bollywood movie that the in-flight
entertainment system offers. In this particular case, it was Dor
I had not yet heared/read anything about that movie, and not even the name
sounded familiar. So I was a bit skeptically if this was one of those cheap
superficial "B-class" movies that I try to avoid.
To the contrary. What seems like a low-budget production without any major
actors [that I would recognize], is actually a masterpiece. Very unlike the
cliche Bollyowood, it is not "overdone". Nothing is exaggerrated into self-irony.
Everything feels real, down-to-earth. No princess-like costumes, no palaces
and no super-rich Indians in their mega-cities. This impression is further
substantiated by the somewhat simplistic editing. Scenes end abruptly, and the
audio track does not spawn such 'hard cuts' smoothly either.
Dor is a sincere and honest movie about two women who have nothing in common,
and come from completely different cultural backgrounds of Indias diversity.
However, both of their husbands go abroad to work in Saudi Arabia very soon after
marriage. A terrible accident involving those two Indian workers sets the stage
for the remainder of the plot.
The whole movie is shot at various locations on the country side. The only
remnescent of modern india is a cell phone with SIM card, and the mainstream
bollywood songs that are sometimes playing on some squeaky radio.
It seems like this is the next DVD on my 'to-buy' list. Let's see if I manage
to pick it up during my trip to Bangalore in early April.