Tag: me

The Thai Banking System

Well, yesterday was one of these days where I seriously doubted that Thailand has made it beyond being a developing country. For the second time in 4 days, my visa card was suckered into an ATM, claiming an invalid pin code. While I got my card back the first time around, this time they tell me it will be destroyed by visa? This left me cash-strapped and somewhat worried. Since Oliver was in a similar position (ie having no money), we had a somewhat funny situation where we were financed by Oliver’s Thai girlfriend (usually it’s the other way around.)

Apparently, Thailand does not have a world-class ATM backbone, despite silly stickers on ATMs claiming to be e-commerce outlets?! Anyways, when I reverted to the old fashioned way of withdrawing money at the counter, it magically worked. Thais love paperwork and clerks are being subsidized in massive numbers. For instance, Thai companies in Bangkok do not use public post despite its good and timely service. Instead, they employ some fool whose job is to run errands all day. Some days, one of these guys shows up every 30 minutes, usually to bring in a single check for sign-off? A network analogy would be if the Internet consisted only of point-to-point links. Imagine the number of links needed, and the horrendous inefficiency. No wonder Bangkok traffic is so bad if it is clogged by all these jerks.

Cambodia

Just back from the awe-inspiring kingdom of the khmer. This is the most impressive historic site I have seen in my lifetime. 3 days chock full with the most amazing temples, partly overgrown by the jungle, partly towering proudly over an immense temple area (several km2 for the bigger temples). I took 500 pictures. It will take some time to sift through them, but they can’t all be bad.

The cambodians are a clever bunch. They speak english a lot better than the thais across the board. While they live in primitive conditions, they will go far if they can keep up this determination.

Angkor Wat

well, i heard today that by paying 15k baht (600 SFr), you can rent 2 police officers with motorbikes that will keep traffic clear for you. sounds like a bargain, and could only happen here.

on a different note, i will likely spend the weekend in cambodia, to visit the great ruins at angkor wat i hope the trip won’t be too rough, one has heard tales of harassed tourists lately.

My Bangkok Apartment

it’s been like 5 days since i moved into my new apartment. while its not in any way up to european standards re: cleanliness etc, i don’t mind.

its situated in a building full of thais, so i get to experience the thai way of life up close. first night i slept there, my roommate came back from a party at 5:00, quite drunk.. i was somewhat surprised 🙂

the following night, someone in the building thought it a good idea to do some home improvement at 3:00 one morning, no water in the shower.. so i applied a renaissance level of perfume to cover the sweat stench. 🙂

the other night, the owner of the building had his birthday. he is running a spa just opposite the apartment. naturally, all his employees were there partying with him. that meant an enormously loud sound system on the street in front of the building, and some 30 thais dancing all night like crazy. it was great fun, or sanook as they say around here. (yes, i finally got around to buying an english-thai dictionary which helps me to make major inroads into the thai language)

Weblogs & jabber

jogger is a new service by jabber.org that lets you update a weblog from within a jabber client. it will be interesting to watch as they release their XML-RPC API. with some work, it could probably be adapted to my favorite weblog system, postnuke it would be great if the different weblogs would align their API.

Getting settled in Bangkok

well, i lost track of the days. so what. yesterday i moved into the apartment of khun nut, a friend who offered to sub-rent me her apartment for my stay. while its not so big, its easy, and its cheap. like 120 swiss francs a month cheap. i will find ways to spend the saved money somehow, i am sure. as a consequence, i hang around with thais a lot, and am picking up quite a few words. its very charming how these guys go out of their way to help you out.

Business proposition

i came up with an idea what i may do when i come back to switzerland in october.. read on to see my mail i sent to etg (the team i lead at kpmg consulting)
working in thailand has opened my eyes to some things we might consider doing in switzerland.

i lead a team of 4 young thais (all 24) that have finished their it studies. their skill set varies greatly, the best of the bunch is like 3 times more productive than the others. furthermore, while they are all quite dedicated to their work, they need some help in the architecture, structure and organization departments.in other words, they need guidance. providing guidance and technological insight is something where etg is quite strong already, and where etg has a lot of potential for the future. i think you would agree with me that all of us have a far better understanding of technical issues than most consultants. this enables us to leverage in projects like the cs project, with great success.

in an ideal world, every project would be well designed from the onset. there would be specifications, a good architecture,coding standards, reuse of code and patterns, to name but a few.unfortunately, these important goals always come second or third in priority. the first and second priorities are usually cost and time to market (or vice versa). this is why we often get bullied to develop using a quick & dirty approach. this always turns out to be dirty only, but never quicker than with a rational approach.

the crucial question therefore is: how can we achieve goals 1 & 2 without sacrificing the other goals?

first, cost. while we are generally a lot cheaper than consultants, we are not that cheap, either. compared to thailand, where one developer can be had for 40 swiss francs per day, that is. compared to that, typical etg costs would be more like 320+ swiss francs per day (salary & some side costs) and, there is a (for our purposes) basically infinite supply of young thais with the necessary technical background.

second, time to market. having a 13 hour work day, instead of a 8 hour work day, would increase output by 50%. of course, nobody wants to work that long. he would not have to, because we would make use of the time difference between thailand and switzerland (5 hours during summer time, 6 hours during winter time). the 50% figure is way too optimistic, of course, but i made it more to make a point than to be accurate.

i could go on and on for many pages, but i think you’ll grasp the basic idea. outsourcing some work to thailand may do us a lot of good.

of course, to make something like this work, we would need a world-class virtual company. communication flow is crucial. it must be very easy to share work results with our partners in thailand, and there should be instant access to technical knowledge on the other side.

needless to say, we need such an infrastructure anyway to set us apart from old, inefficient, monolithic companies (like kpmg) read www.cluetrain.com for some good laughs on that topic..

what would our role be in such a deal? we would do what we do best, or rather, what we strive to do best:

giving technical advice, coming up with new ideas, creating good architectures. being somewhat relieved from priorities 1 & 2 would make it much easier to create REAL good software. and it would be a lot more interesting, too, because we would automatically source out the boring, repetitive work to our friends in thailand, and focus on adding value for the client.

Bangkok Day 15

today was a good day. i made a lot of progress, we completed a release ready to install at the customer site, and are now heavily into re-architecting the application (it needed that, seriously..) slowly, but surely, the thais around the office pick up my ideas and start to become more productive by being more organized. sooner or later i will explain them how to write a .NET application 🙂

also, my surfing got a lot faster when i installed the proximotron, a very cool local proxy that filters out all the crap that goes into websites these days.

in the evening, i went to emporium and met jam by chance. she is a friend of oliver and me and i know her from my last visit. afterwards, i went to see memento, a very special movie.

Bangkok Day 14

today i worked my butt off. no really, work is starting to pile up at the office. i seem to have found the tune around here, and am now heavily involved with re-architecting a project that is soon going live. so no time to scrap everything and begin anew. instead, retrofit the code to be more modular, while keeping it running at the same time.

it will be quite a challenge to install the application remotely on a server in zurich (the client happens to be a swiss trader).

besides that, i am in the process of writing up the icu survey. of course, i was asked to make a web form out of it. so be it.

the other pet project have to finish for a swiss company is also making good progress (it better should, given that the deadline is so near.)

Bangkok Days 8-13

august 1st
ok ok it’s been a while. but i have been rather busy.. on august 1st, well we skipped the swiss festivities, and went to an indian restaurant instead. after, we went bowling. then we got hit by the new tendency of the thai police to shut down everything at 1:00. very stupid i tell you.

august 2nd
well, i don’t remember what i did on that day.. other than being late in the office due to hardly any sleep. going out & working is hard to keep up. so i went to bed early.

august 3rd
visited a swiss client here, was very interesting (they do international wine trading). in the evening, finished cryptonomicon (great book.) then i got a call from laurent, and we went to see final fantasy. it was a great movie, although the story was strangely japanese in style. but the imagery made up for that.

august 4th
rose very early to go to river kwai with laurent. the trip was fun. learned about the houseboats. you can rent a houseboat, complete with a VERY large sound system, that holds 10-20 persons for 24 hours for 2000 baht. great deal. we’ll have to do that.. in the evening we went to see a typical thai boxing event. it was not that interesting. our expectations were way out of proportion (possibly due to having seen too many movies..)

august 5th
went shopping. it seems that everyone was there, blowing their salary on the first weekend (thais get their salary at the end of the month). i bought 9 shirts / tshirts for a grand total of 60 swiss francs. in the evening i started japanese lessons with a cd rom that oliver bought. great fun.

august 6th
contemplated going to kuala lumpur for 3 days. but the flight alone is like 600 swiss francs.. oliver, of course, makes heavy use of his fathers qualiflyer miles. i am not so lucky so i’ll stay in bangkok this time.