Saturday, April 3, 2010

Cleveland is a whole new place


It is Saturday now and I have been in Cleveland since Tuesday night and I am happy to say it fits like a glove. I arrived to an apartment which was exactly the same as my previous one but 2 levels higher. The furnishings are all the same (although there is a suspect package of frozen sausages in the freezer that I don't remember from last time). You can see by the photo that at least one thing has changed here, and that is the weather. Cleveland is a whole new town now - there are more people on the street, there are more smiles on faces and you need only one layer of clothing. It is quite spectacular but more on that later.

My travels were as pleasant as they could be. I left at 11am on Tuesday, and remembering the events of last time, I thought I was prepared for 30 hours of travel. That was until I arrived in LA where I wanted to stop this ridiculousness and move Cleveland to the West Coast rather than continue. Apparently we do not have the technology (and the GFC would have prevented it anyway) so I had to continue to my connecting flight. On the 13 hour trip to LA I did get in "The Blind Side" and "Up in the air" which were both good (the Blind Side was great). The breakfast of Corn Flakes was not so much (of all the cereals, Corn Flakes?).

Then it was LA to Chicago (in a middle seat - heads will roll for that) and a walk across the whole Chicago airport to my connection to Cleveland (I highlight that it was across the WHOLE airport as Chicago airport is a city in a city). I bought an overpriced and underwhelming sandwich and waited to board the third flight in the trilogy. God had decided he'd played with me enough and I had a seat with no neighbours (the planes to Cleveland are small and are only 3 seats to a row, 1 + 2).

This flight was short and I got stuck into Esquire magazine to pass the time. I did find myself re-reading lines a hell of a lot as I was now very tired (about 28 hours of travel). I did get sleep on each flight before so I was not a total zombie but I was approaching this state (and thanks to the Coasties for the travel pillow - I would not have known the joy of air sleep without it). Below is a photo I took of Cleveland from above while I had all electronic devices switched off (if anyone asks). There was low level cloud enveloping the city and it looked really cool.


We arrived in Cleveland and all of the bags from the flight filled only half the baggage carousel - unfortunately without mine. After 5 minutes of staring at the motionless bags (the carousel was stopped after all of the bags had come out of the magical window), a representative of United airlines (now my least favourite airline eva) came out and told us that that it folks, and that our bags must not have made it to Cleveland.

Well god, you set me up good and proper for this one, didn't you. I was lulled into a false sense of security and you smacked me over the head while I was not looking. To be honest, it was not all that bad in the end. They took my details and asked a few questions (which included "did you have the bags labeled?" to which I had to answer "No" - which will be the last time I answer no to that question). My bags were delivered to my apartment sometime that night / early morning as they were at the front desk when I woke in the morning. If everyone has to experience lost bags once in their life, that would have to be the best way (although I had to use the Qantas toothbrush for far too many times for my liking- it is clearly designed as a one use personal hygiene device).

Now I am here and loving it and apparently the weather has just turned in Cleveland. Just over a week ago there was snow, and now it is hovering around 25C (80F) and the sun sets at about 8pm. I arrived on the day that it went from cold to hot (Melbourne style) and people were not trusting of the change as they were still walking around in winter coats. By the second day, it was being embraced and everyone was finding ways to use this sunshine and heat. There is a great alley called East 4th in Downtown (the city) that connects two main streets. It is full of restaurants and which have outdoor seating, which was up to this point, idle. Luis and I went out for a drink and there were locals everywhere showing off their white skin and smiles (seriously, I could have been a native of an outdoor race standing next to a Clevelander). We enjoyed a pint or two at a couple of places and chatted about what I had missed out on.


That was a pic of the Sam Adams seasonal (the Nobel Pils) from an Irish pub at the end of E4th, overlooking Q arena (where the Cavaliers play). We ended up leaving there as all they played was bad 80's music.

The project team is much smaller now as it is supposedly near the end but delays outside of our control have extended some of the time frames. That suits me as I got this special guest starring role out of it. The room is much, MUCH quieter now and we tend to get more work done (which will be a function of our familiarity with the materials we are working with and the fact there are fewer people - which is code fro interruptions).

A part of what we are doing now is upgrading GAMx engagements and I was lucky enough to meet another GAMx tragic on a phone call who holds a key position in the EY GAMx world. We consulted with her to get some ideas on our approach. We are going to get to meet her as she is going to join the project and I hope she does not mind if I get her autograph. On a sad note, the GAMx system analysts have been moved away from outside our project room- I hope it was not anything I said (although I am going out to drinks with them next week).

So I have settled in straight away and am really glad to be back. The people are great and the city is even better than before. Watch this space for more details on my US sequel - Return of the ACC Developer.

P.S. Good luck to Jennifer Kurtz who is a very talented ID heading to South America on a professional exchange program. With her energy, Jen is going to have a great time. We will miss you on the ACC project (but you will not miss chasing me up).

P.P.S. Happy Birthday David. I sent a message but fear these are not getting across borders (maybe caught in customs). I know it was a day worth celebrating and I wish I was there.

1 comment:

  1. The message arrived, though I was offline. The blog post has answered all of the questions I shot back to you, glad to see you've settled back in.

    What else is there to say, but let's sit back and wait for LeBron to bring the trophy back to Ohio =]

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