Archive for the 'US' Category

Trains in America? Amtrak to LA!

Saturday, December 31st, 2005

I always loved trains, and I have taken my share of them, whether it’s the beautiful and comfortable intercity from my homecity Hamar to Oslo, the Norwegian capital, or doing the transsiberian from Moscow down to Beijing. In China I spent a lot of time on trains, and they are awesome; the train stations look [...]

Voices from the Edge: Americans with Disabilities Act

Wednesday, December 14th, 2005

Voices from the Edge, by Ruth O’Brien, is one of the books I picked up by random while studying in Robart’s Library. Although I have a few friends involved in accessability for people with disabilities, and I volunteered for three months at a community of people with disabilities in Mexico, I did not know much [...]

Why did outsourcing to India take off?

Thursday, November 10th, 2005

I just finished reading “The World is Flat” by Thomas Friedman. He makes many arguments in the book, many of which I agree to, although I think he is quite a little bit too optimistic about technodeterminism and the whole world becoming equal and happy. One of his starting thoughts, which I quite liked, is [...]

Ivy League admissions

Tuesday, October 11th, 2005

In an interesting article in the New Yorker, Malcolm Gladwell discusses the history of the admission systems for the Ivy League schools in the US, especially focusing on Harvard. One of his points is that the admissions procedure was changed from one focusing purely on academic merit to one focusing more on “the whole person” [...]

SUV sales down!

Tuesday, October 4th, 2005

Two of Canada’s three leading national newspapers had the following news on their front page: SUV sales down because of high gas prices. That made me very happy. I remember discussing high gas prices with a friend I was staying over with in Arkansas (this was before Hurricane Katrina, but gas prices were still high [...]

Subway maps and IP

Sunday, October 2nd, 2005

One of the reasons the iPod family has been so successful, apart from their sleek design and shrewd marketing, has to the whole ecosystem of services and gear that has grown up around the players. You can buy bags, belts, microphones, radio transmitters - you can put linux on them, use the notes function [...]

The Art Haus hostel in Asheville, NC

Monday, August 29th, 2005

I spent about a day walking around in New Orleans, checking out the French Quarter and downtown. (It feels very strange watching scenes of devastation from New Orleans today on TV, when I was there only a few days ago.) I then made my way to Gainesville, GA., where I would stay at an ecological [...]

Thank you, Memphis!

Thursday, August 25th, 2005

As some of you might know, I had very ambitious plans for yesterday. I was scheduled to leave Fayetteville at 8:15 in the morning, spend a few hours on the bus to get to Little Rock, visit Bill Clinton’s Presidential Library for a few hours, go on to Memphis, spend all evening walking around there, [...]

Frosh nostalgia

Thursday, August 25th, 2005

After having left my luggage safely in the hands of the kind populace of Fayetteville, I trudged into town to explore. I quickly found the main drag, Dickson street, got a free deodorant as a gift to incoming freshman in the bookstore, and chanced upon the university. Not only did they have a very kind [...]

People don’t steal in Fayetteville

Monday, August 22nd, 2005

So I just got off the bus in Fayetteville, Arkansas, a little town half an hour from the Wal-Mart world headquarters, and two hours from Bill Clinton’s presidential library in Little Rock. It’s a tiny bus station, not Greyhound like I’m used to, but Jefferson Lines. I am not meeting my hosts for a few [...]