Archive for the ‘Gripes’ Category

Siem Reap, Cambodia

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

When we landed I was immediately in love with this little city in Cambodia. The airport is extremely small and from the outside looks more like a buddhist temple than an airport. I didn’t mind paying $25 dollars for the landing visa, after all it was $140 for the privilege to enter China.

When we got to Motherhome guesthouse, I found that we had pretty much gotten a palace for $18 dollars a night. They had free wireless (EXTREMELY SLOW), breakfast included, and a wonderfully kind staff that all knew English. With the exception of the  slow internet I really enjoyed my time there. They even have a restaurant attached to the guest home where occupants get free breakfast. If you are too lazy to go out they serve lunch and dinner as well. We were able to have a feast for only $9 USD and the food was good too! I highly recommend their Stir fried noodles mmm mmmm good!

But as we were walking to meet up with our friends we ran into the bad part of Siem Reap. It seems that there are a lot of extremely poor people here. As we were walking two little girls started asking us for money. They would not give up, one was perhaps 7 years old and the other around 10. After they followed us for between 3 and 5 minutes saying “only a dollar, only a dollar to buy a meal" over and over again while crying I gave in. Since I happen to have no joy in my soul I gave them a dollar so that I could be left in peace. We then went to a touristy restaurant and saw the prices. one entree can cost as little as $2.50 at a touristy place! So with the prices for Cambodian natives who knows how long 1 USD will last.

It seems that I got ahead of myself. When you get to the airport here DO NOT exchange your USD into Riel (Cambodian currency). I think this is a scam to get people to buy riel which is pretty useless in Siem Reap. Every single place in Siem Reap takes USD and quotes prices in USD. In fact if you go to any ATM you can only get USD there is no way to get Riel. The only time riel is used is when giving change that is less than a dollar. So unless you are going someplace way off the beaten path don’t exchange your money, just use USD or if you are not from the US go to any atm in the city or at the airport and you will get USD. I can’t even get my head around the economic implications of a large portion of a country using a foreign currency exclusively but there it is. Well, actually exclusively is not exactly true, they will also take Thai Baht over their own currency. Supposedly this all stems from a time when the Riel was made illegal so people actually still believe it is worthless. So it is what it is. Don’t exchange your money for Riel at the airport!

The only reason why anyone ever comes to Siem Reap, other than the extremely cheap prices on food and clothing, are the Temples. We saw a few of them, Angkor Thom, Ta Prahm, Angkor Wat, and Banteay Kdei. I found that the temples were cool looking I guess, but I was expecting a lot more.

Angkor Wat at what we believe is Sunrise, it was too cloudy to tell exactly when the sun came up.

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Angkor Waht from the back!

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This is either from the Gallery of the Churning of the Milk or from the gallery that depicts the 37 heavens and hells.

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but perhaps the coolest picture comes from Ta Prahm

 

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Yeah, that’s a tree growing out of a temple

Without exception at every temple there were little girls trying REALLY hard to sell you stuff. At Angkor Thom a little girl followed us for 10 minutes trying to get us to buy 5 bracelets for a $1. She finally gave up when she found some other tourists to latch onto. it got pretty old by the time we got to Angkor Wat, but what can you do, the people are poor.

But after seeing all this we found that there wasn’t much to do in Siem Reap. I bought an iPood shirt and some Angkor Wat shirts and then we basically chilled at the hotel.

Perhaps the only truly annoying thing is the passenger service fee. This is my one real gripe about Siem Reap. You have to pay $25 dollars in order to leave the country. This is quite ridiculous in my opinion. But we were forced into it. I will try to post more pictures of the temples and junk later but here is one more I will leave you with hehe.

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Alright dudes I gotta get on the plain to Ho Chi Minh City/Saigon. Peace out!

Edit:
Internet was so slow in the Cambodia airport that this didn’t actually get to my blog haha. I am now in Ho Chi Minh city posting this entry on Cambodia!

Thailand! finally!

Thursday, September 16th, 2010

last night, well really this morning we landed in Thailand. we paid the equivalent of 30 dollars for a hostel and what we got was basically our own little house that was 2 km from the phuket airport. Tamaras Guest House I believe it was called. For 30 bucks it was an AMAZING deal, it wasn’t one of those hostels with the bunk beds that I imagine when I think of backpacking though europe, it was just like an actual hotel room. It was way better than the room that I paid 73 USD for in Tukwila near the Seatac airport. AND they even have free wifi something that the Royal View Hotel was lacking, big disappointment there. I had to pay an extra 60 USD on top of the 70 USD for that hotel in Hong Kong. But whatever.

Now we are here in Pa Tong which is on the southern part of Phuket, which is an island in the south of Thailand. Once again we are in a hostel, oops I mean guest house that we found on hostelworld.com. Anyways this place is $20 a night and it is just a smallish hotel room and once again free wifi which I am using to post this blog entry. I feel that I should mention that I just checked expedia.com again to make sure I wasn’t stupid, and I found that according to Expedia the Royal View Hotel has free high speed internet which I know from experience to be FALSE and my bank account agrees. But that’s enough griping about the Royal View Hotel.

Thailand has been really great so far, we came to Patong, sat on the beach and relaxed, ate some chicken from a street cart, got ripped off by some merchants, then hand washed our clothes, and finally we walked around in search of food and decided to eat at the Patong Food Park on Rat-u-thit road. Rat-u-thit is the 2nd most important road in Patong, which is not saying much seeing as Patong only has two major streets. The other main street is called Beach St. and this street is how we knew for sure that we got ripped off.

I have learned two very valuable lesson from my experiences today:

  1. The people here can be extremely pushy when it comes to trying to convince you to buy something, it could be food, sandals, or obviously counterfeit Addidas track jackets (I’m pretty sure I am going to go back and try to get one of those jackets haha).
  2. There is no point in bargaining unless you understand how much the object that you are bargaining over is worth.

The second one is what got us. We walked away thinking that we got a little ripped off but then when we saw the store on Beach Rd. selling the same exact things for a fraction of the cost we, we knew we had gotten the shaft. This is the last thing on the bargaining, for some reason people here love to quote 550 baht(baht is Thai currency) for lots of things (550 baht is the equivalent of 18 USD). They will say that they are giving you a discount but what they are really doing is trying to get you to start bargaining. You will inevitably cut the price in half. Next the merchant will say something along the lines of “I can’t live off of that!” or “work with me!” or maybe “I have kids to feed!”, all of these are false. then you go from 275 right up to 300 and you have your item, thinking you got a deal. But really he probably would have sold that thing for as little as 100 baht.  But anyways, that’s enough about that.

The food at the Patong Food Park was AMAZING for 280 baht (less than 9 USD), we got Chicken and fried noodles, Chicken fried rice, some thai veggie dish that I can’t pronounce, and a fresh cocunut. for 9 dollars both my girlfriend and I got extremely full stomachs and one of the best coconuts we have ever had. The problem is that if you want to eat on the beach the prices are pretty much quintupled. But the food was really amazing.

I hope tomorrow will be as great as today was. I’m sure it will, we’re going canoeing or something.

Gmail VOIP… I’m done with Skype!

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

I wonder how many people cancelled their Skype subscriptions today. I know mine is gone. After hearing about Google’s announcement of free calls to US numbers straight from Gmail I finally had an excuse to cancel it.

There have been a few reasons why I have been annoyed with Skype over the past few months.

First, I purchased a phone number through them and was under the impression that it was a subscription but then I found out that they cancelled my phone number. It seems that I received some sort of random email from them about it but since I assumed it was automatically deducted from my Paypal account so I ignored it. OK, I’ll admit this one is sort of my fault. Anyways on to the second reason!

Second, the other day (2 weeks ago or so) I opened up my Fring application, on my Nexus One, to find that Skype was mysteriously removed from it. As it turns out there was some sort of law suit, or something, that stopped Fring from using Skype in their application.

This brings me to my third and final gripe. Since I could no longer use Skype on Fring I figured ok well I can at least get the Skype application. Because why would they stop Fring from using their services if there was no alternative. I searched around and found that there is a Skype Android application. I go to the Skype website to download it and it says my phone is not supported. After that I looked at the supported phones and I was shocked to find out that only Verizon Android phones are allowed to download the Skype app. I was so pissed off.

I had no other real option though, Google bought Gizmo5 in November of last year so I couldn’t use that. So I was forced to just stuck with skype and figured I would use it on my netbook (Asus 1005HA) when I am in Asia in the fall. But then Google came to my rescue with this new FREE feature in Gmail. So I said F*** to you Skype and cancelled my subscription.

Now just so you don’t get the wrong idea, this is an experimental phase for the service. Google has promised that the feature will remain free until the end of the year while they evaluate whether they are able to profit on the long distance calls made with this service. So it is possible that this may not be free forever. But I was willing to pay for Skype, so I am also willing to pay for this new Gmail VOIP service.

I know that this still does not solve my problem of not being able to use Skype on my cell phone. But since Skype has become such an annoyance I have decided to stop using it and use the Gmail VOIP. A lot of the reason, other than the fact that is is currently free, is that all I need to do is open up my Gmail account instead of downloading some annoying application that turns every string of 7 numbers in my browser into a god damn clickable phone number. So the Gmail VOIP is much more convenient, also I used it twice today and found that it actually seems to work with less lag than Skype, but we shall see if that is still true when I am on a slower internet connection.

Anyways, it is time for me to pass out. I’ll have another post soon hopefully, I’ve been kind of busy moving out of my apartment and with other projects. But nobody reads this blog anyways so I guess it doesn’t really matter haha.

Peace out ya’ll!