{"id":3017,"date":"2004-09-27T17:20:00","date_gmt":"2004-09-27T07:20:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/new.radio-active.net.au\/web3\/3017\/"},"modified":"2014-10-10T13:13:11","modified_gmt":"2014-10-10T02:13:11","slug":"3017","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.radio-active.net.au\/web3\/3017","title":{"rendered":""},"content":{"rendered":"<p>I have finally worked out where I neglected to go in London &#8211; The British<br \/>Library. I forgot that they often have cool stuff. Next time. The same next<br \/>time when I go to Bletchley Park. Turns out that the person who picked me up<br \/>to go to the funeral had worked there at one stage too. <\/p>\n<p>Also, and please don&#8217;t laugh at this &#8211; At the London Science Museum, there<br \/>was a computer based test to determine if you are male or female. Mostly<br \/>with shape and colour tests. Anyway I took this test and got 5 out of 5.<br \/>Saying that I am a female. And I really was trying.<\/p>\n<p>Terminal Two &#8211; Heathrow. <\/p>\n<p>This airport will never cease to amaze. No wireless access as far as I can<br \/>tell anywhere. Very Strange. I would have thought that a modern airport<br \/>would have wireless everywhere. But not Heathrow. Then again who said<br \/>Heathrow was a modern airport. But then again it is not as bad as Washington<br \/>Dulles. There they have spaces for payphones where it looks as if the<br \/>payphones have been ripped out by a thief leaving bare wires &#8211; but this was<br \/>in the secure zone. <\/p>\n<p>In London, I have finally seen a bigger road. The A4 from London to the<br \/>airport is often three lanes each way. I think this is the widest road in<br \/>Brittain. I am not sure what the road toll is in Brittain, but whatever it<br \/>is, it should be worse. I cannot believe how the people drive, and I have<br \/>yet to see a single accident. <\/p>\n<p>The roads are not wide, and seem to really be a rabbit&#8217;s warren. You  need<br \/>to know where you need to go, and need to be aggressive with turns. Yet no<br \/>accidents. I have seen so many occasions where the vehicle missed another<br \/>vehicle on the side by inches. <\/p>\n<p>But having written that I am now in Italy, and I feel that the Italian<br \/>drivers are worse. They also stop in strange places and then do weird<br \/>things. I think I would be happier closing my eyes than traveling with them<br \/>opened. Thankfully I was in a vehicle with air bags and a seat belt, meaning<br \/>that I would most likely survive any crash. It also helps that the guy<br \/>driving me was appeared a better driver than most on the road &#8211; he would<br \/>actually use his indicators. With all this, very few Italians actually wear<br \/>a seat belt. So Strange. <\/p>\n<p>Flying to Italy, I had my first experience with an Airbus plane &#8211; an A321. I<br \/>must say that I am impressed although I have definite reservations about the<br \/>avionics. I have no real problems with the airframe, just the avionics. In<br \/>fact I think the A321 is quieter than most similar planes, and is quite<br \/>comfortable. [If you want to ask my why I don&#8217;t like these planes, I will<br \/>send you a report on one incident.]<\/p>\n<p>The Alitalia plane is what I imagine a plane would be if it was decorated by<br \/>the NSW Department of Education. The floor carpeting and the seats have that<br \/>brilliant green color popular in schools. The headrests are the most<br \/>comfortable I have every felt.  The armrests were about 5-6 inches wide and<br \/>seem to be leather. <\/p>\n<p>I believe that there was a video program on board. There was certainly<br \/>something on ceiling mount LCD panels, but there was no instruction that<br \/>said that I could listen to it on my own headphones. Then again I did not<br \/>have an inflight magazine so that might have been what I missed. <\/p>\n<p>I was surprised flying in. I thought I needed to fly in over the<br \/>Mediterranean. Actually the route is almost purely south-east, and apart<br \/>from the English channel is all over land. <\/p>\n<p>The best way to describe Leonardo Da Vinci (FCO) airport is to compare it to<br \/>Orlando. Very similar thanks to the train from the outlying terminal. Having<br \/>said that it is MUCH smaller. <\/p>\n<p>On getting to Passport control I went into one of the lines for non-EU<br \/>people. The person before me needed about 3-4 minutes. When he saw my<br \/>Australian passport he stamped it without even looking at it further, or<br \/>doing any data entry. I am sure that I could have got into the country with<br \/>a woman&#8217;s Australian passport. <\/p>\n<p>Baggage collection was a bit slow but it could have been FAR worse. Maybe 15<br \/>minutes after I got off the plane I picked up my bags. And they were among<br \/>the first off. Alitalia refuses to believe that I can earn Qantas Frequent<br \/>Flyer points on an Alitalia flight. The speedy bags may be compensation for<br \/>them being wrong.  <\/p>\n<p>I was picked up at the airport by Nicola and his girlfriend Michol. They<br \/>took me to lunch\/dinner by the ocean near the airport. As far as I could<br \/>work out by looking at the map this was Bastianelli al Molo restraunt on the<br \/>northern inlet to the Tiber River. There were lots of fishing boats moored<br \/>on the river. The restaurant had what I would call classical al fresco<br \/>dining, with a beautiful view of The Mediterranean. <\/p>\n<p>The food was apparently up-market, and I have no doubt that it was. To start<br \/>we had a seafood platter which I tried &#8211; although it mainly included<br \/>calamari. There was some white fish there, as well as some orange prawns<br \/>which were not too bad. <\/p>\n<p>More enjoyable was the main course which was spaghetti with some prawns &#8211;<br \/>which was quite nice. I had the option of having it also with clams which I<br \/>declined. Following the main meal we all had a desert platter. This was<br \/>really nice, although I have no idea what I had. <\/p>\n<p>Nicola then took my to the Hotel. This is a nice place called Hotel Degli<br \/>Imperatori on the Tivoli side of the city just inside the ring road. This is<br \/>really modern with lots of what is probably Italian styling. Low voltage<br \/>down lights. Well layed out. Most everything you would expect. Well, except<br \/>for a hotel directory in any language that is. They expect you to know what<br \/>services are available. Internet will probably need to be dialup. It never<br \/>ceases to amaze me that hotels do not offer internet access in this day and<br \/>age. <\/p>\n<p>On checking in they needed my passport. This is a requirement in Italy for<br \/>some reason, so I was expecting it. Still it is strange. They returned it<br \/>the next day.<\/p>\n<p>One thing I do need to point out. The front desk had clocks for various<br \/>international cities. The Sydney clock was off by an hour. I suspect that<br \/>they had the version with Daylight Saving. <\/p>\n<p>As you might expect there is not much in English available on the TV. Right<br \/>now on the TV is what I believe is the movie Kate and Leopold, staring Meg<br \/>Ryan. Not much use with me watching it though since it is dubbed in Italian.<br \/>Which brings up another issue &#8211; language. I am starting to pick up the<br \/>occasional word&#8230; It is hard to work out which words I know &#8211; it is much<br \/>easier for me to read Italian than to hear it &#8211; with reading I can generally<br \/>understand the meaning. Not bad since I do not know the language at all. I<br \/>think my vocab at the moment is <br \/> Si, Bambino, Arivaderchi, Bonjourno, Ciao, Sinester<\/p>\n<p>Italian TV never ceases to amaze me. They just advertised a Philips CT<br \/>scanner. I am sure that this is something that every house needs. Seriously<br \/>if I was given one I am sure I could find a use for it, but not for what<br \/>they charge for one [They can be used to basically do a 3D scan of a<br \/>physical object&#8230; which is sometimes useful] <\/p>\n<p>[Now a few hours later there is another travesty on Italian TV &#8211; StarTrek<br \/>&#8216;Enterprise&#8217; is on in Italian. Or should I say mostly Italian as some of the<br \/>sound effects have voices in them. Some TV should only ever be in the<br \/>original language. Enterprise is like that. So is &#8216;Life is Beautiful&#8217; &#8211;<br \/>although the original language for it is of course Italian. They also killed<br \/>the closing credits, playing about 1 \u00bd seconds of the theme song before<br \/>about a second of the translation credits before the adverts started]<\/p>\n<p>I was trying to decide if I needed something for dinner. So I went down to<br \/>the front desk to ask about Internet access. Dialup is the only option.<br \/>Argh. Wireless routers are cheap these days, even in Italy&#8230; And almost in<br \/>passing I asked where the restraunt was, and I was told that it was closed<br \/>on the weekends. He offered to call me a taxi to go to a local pizzeria,<br \/>which I declined. <\/p>\n<p>OK, So I am passing the chance to eat one of the five major food groups<br \/>[Pizza]. But I did not have any cash on me, and I would prefer to explore<br \/>during daylight. [Now that I have seen the place, I am glad I did not<br \/>venture out. I would have died of fright]<\/p>\n<p>Monday morning now and I have just had breakfast. I suspect that apart from<br \/>the Coffee, the breakfast is more French than Italian, with the main fare<br \/>being croissants. Not that I am complaining, it is just that I never viewed<br \/>that as being an Italian staple food.<\/p>\n<p>The hotel has Muzak piped throughout many of the public areas. OK, so it is<br \/>not really Muzak but that is the impression that I get of it. During<br \/>breakfast it mostly had people speaking in what I assume is Italian, until a<br \/>Lionel Ritchie song came on, followed by a new version of the classic Bob<br \/>Dylan song &#8220;Knockin&#8217; on Heavens Door&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>Thinking more about the hotel I would call this place non-classical Italian<br \/>architecture. Apparently it is not normal to have carpets in hotel rooms.<br \/>But there is a huge amount of marble and similar stone in the hotel. If only<br \/>they had a hotel directory, and Internet Access. <\/p>\n<p>News this morning is that Alitalia have agreements with the unions, so in<br \/>all likelihood I will be able to fly home starting Friday. Italy is<br \/>certainly not what I expected. I am glad that I do not have to live here. I<br \/>cannot believe the traffic&#8230; It is just chaotic.<\/p>\n<p>The best way to describe things? Well, imagine the worst rude traffic<br \/>behavior you can imagine. The sort that causes road rage. The type of road<br \/>rage where the judge lets the aggressive person off because the person was<br \/>so inconsiderate. Well, that type of driving is accepted driving practice<br \/>here. Not just accepted but required. Without a toot of a horn.<\/p>\n<p>Tee intersections are considered to be places where traffic merges. I could<br \/>not believe it. <\/p>\n<p>I have a new love for Sydney traffic. I just love it so much&#8230; I am staying<br \/>in a hotel on the eastern side of the city, just near the ring road, near<br \/>the road to Tivoli. <\/p>\n<p>So today I spent most of the day in an office in a residential district<br \/>under a house built just after the war without permits on land gifted by the<br \/>pope to people from his home district in the south of Italy. Lunch was at a<br \/>caf\u00e9 with luke warm Lasagna with vegetables, and dinner was at a restraunt<br \/>and consisted of Pizza&#8230; Italian Pizza is different &#8211; they just put slabs<br \/>of the topping on the Pizza&#8230;<\/p>\n<p>The caf\u00e9 reminded me of a milkbar in some country town but with more people,<br \/>and without all the normal milkbar foods. <\/p>\n<p>On the way home from the restraunt, my host needed to stop off to buy<br \/>himself some cigarettes. Anyway he purchased them from a vending machine<br \/>outside a supermarket. Next to a condom vending machine. I am not sure yet<br \/>if this is exactly what I expected, or exactly what I didn&#8217;t expect. Hard to<br \/>tell. <\/p>\n<p>Overnight I had a few phone calls to deal with&#8230; The first two were very<br \/>important and expected so I left the ringer on so the phone rang at 12:30AM.<br \/>Fortunately the person who rang thought that it was only 10:30 PM. After<br \/>those calls I turned the ringer off, since I wanted to know if I got a call<br \/>and I was awake. So I got a call at 4:30AM, and I must have been very<br \/>lightly sleeping since the sound of the phone vibrate motor woke me. Then<br \/>another call at 7:00 AM and another at 8:10AM. This is the busiest my phone<br \/>has been for a while. <\/p>\n<p>The call at 4:30AM basically started &#8220;Hi, It&#8217;s Tom Here&#8230; Where are you?&#8221;. He<br \/>worked out I was not in Oz since the phone had a different ring to it, and<br \/>knew I was somewhere in Europe from that but was not quite sure where.<\/p>\n<p>Italian Coffee is nice but takes some getting used to. It is served in<br \/>glasses about the size of whiskey shot glasses, and is rather concentrated.<br \/>Sugar is not an option since it is so concentrated. It takes some getting<br \/>used to &#8211; since coffee is a diuretic &#8211; meaning that it causes you to loose<br \/>fluid. And when I normally drink coffee I reduce my other fluid intake<br \/>accordingly. But you cannot do that with Italian coffee, and must drink more<br \/>fluids to compensate. Strangely you cannot get a regular cup of coffee most<br \/>places, except on Alitalia. There you cannot get a cup of the concentrated<br \/>stuff. <\/p>\n<p>Lunch Tuesday was salami from the local market with Philadelphia cream<br \/>cheese on a roll. This was really nice. The best way to describe the shop<br \/>was a bit larger than the Corner Store of old. Maybe about the size of a<br \/>convenience store, but without the modern show fittings, and the brutal<br \/>fluorescent lighting. <\/p>\n<p>Simpson&#8217;s Fans will be impressed to know that Italy has copied one of the<br \/>strange ideas from one of the episodes. There is an episode that has Homer<br \/>Simpson as the head of the Stone Cutters. Homer is told the &#8216;Real&#8217; emergency<br \/>number is 912, and not 911. Seems that Italy has two numbers &#8211; 112 and 113 I<br \/>think. <\/p>\n<p>The 112 number is for the calibari, or the military police. 113 is for the<br \/>normal police. But it is not that easy. Not all places have the 113 police,<br \/>but all have the 112 police. The 112 police have military discipline, and<br \/>are likely to greet  you before arresting you. The 113 are more likely to<br \/>arrest you before asking a question, and will then proceed to steal your<br \/>wallet. Well, maybe not, buy you get the general idea. Another way to think<br \/>of it is that 112 keeps Order, and 113 keeps the Law.<\/p>\n<p>Last night I was due to go into the centre of Rome for some sighting, but<br \/>thanks to a number of things, not the least was traffic gridlock we put it<br \/>off until this afternoon. My host has arranged a &#8216;Personal Guide&#8217; to show me<br \/>around Rome, in a large black Mercedes. I kid you not. I should note that<br \/>the guide is his brother-in-law, but still. <\/p>\n<p>One of the problems was that my host needed to take someone to an<br \/>underground. This was a 2-3 Km trip each way, and ended up taking about an<br \/>hour. Unfortunately this is not uncommon. It was so bad that he rang saying<br \/>he was one KM from the office on his way back, and estimated it would take<br \/>10-15 minutes since the traffic was improving. He was right. <\/p>\n<p>The person was actually an Italian Military Officer who had come from<br \/>Florence to meet with me, and hear what I had to say. At one stage my host<br \/>and he were having a conversation discussing things in Italian, being used<br \/>to more quickly exchange ideas. And they were only speaking in Italian. What<br \/>was bizarre was that I interrupted and said something like &#8216;No, what I was<br \/>saying was&#8230;&#8217;. And you need to remember I basically know zero Italian, but<br \/>thanks to body language and the occasional word that I did understand I<br \/>worked out what they were saying.<\/p>\n<p>This morning I saw the weather report for Australia. It is &#8220;Mostly Fine&#8221;<br \/>which is an interesting report given the size of the country. I am just<br \/>wondering if they describe Australians as &#8220;Mostly Harmless&#8221;. If you don&#8217;t<br \/>know what I am talking about there, then you need to re-read &#8220;The<br \/>Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy&#8221;. <\/p>\n<p>Last night I had dinner in the hotel restaurant. For starters I had a<br \/>platter of thinly sliced meat, on top of rock melon. I think the meat was<br \/>some type of smoked port. Main course was a pasta dish. Not sure exactly<br \/>what it was, but it was nice. Followed by tiramisu. Very nice. <\/p>\n<p>There are cultural differences in hotels here. In the USA if you go to a<br \/>restaurant, you will be asked to sign the bill after your meal, and asked if<br \/>you want to leave a tip. In Italy, they do not even show you the bill after<br \/>the meal if you are adding the meal to your room bill. <\/p>\n<p>Yesterday at the office we were talking about the various movies. I<br \/>suggested &#8220;Looking for Alibrandi&#8221; which of course is an Australian film<br \/>about a 17 year old schoolgirl, of Italian heritage. They had never heard of<br \/>it, even though it had been released in Italy. Part of the problem was that<br \/>it had been renamed for the Italian marker, to the equivalent of &#8220;Three<br \/>Generations&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>Oh, and in my honor, one of the guys in the office came to work wearing his<br \/>Wallaby&#8217;s jersey, signed by David Campese. This was fine until I pointed out<br \/>to everyone that this was normally work in Oz in Winter. And the temperature<br \/>yesterday was in the mid to high 20&#8217;s. <\/p>\n<p>Last Night (Wednesday Night) I got my tour of the center of Rome. I was<br \/>really impressed, and I finally see the attraction of this place. I don&#8217;t<br \/>know that I would want to live here but even so it is an interesting place<br \/>to visit. <\/p>\n<p>Rome was described as being like rings of a tree. As you get closer to the<br \/>center, the buildings get older and older. But like a tree there are spots<br \/>of newer activity in spots and radiating outwards &#8211; just like branches. <\/p>\n<p>Getting nearer the center the roads got narrower which really surprised me.<br \/>I didn&#8217;t think that they could. I was lucky. The vehicle I was in was<br \/>allowed to travel in Taxi lanes giving us the ability to bypass traffic at<br \/>times.<\/p>\n<p>What I did not realize was that Rome consists of seven hills. When they<br \/>built the city walls they enclosed the seven hills. Could it be that &#8220;Seven<br \/>Hills&#8221; In Sydney is named after the seven hills of Rome. Also what I did not<br \/>realize was that The Vatican is actually built on Vatican Hill. <\/p>\n<p>I found it a bit strange when we managed to drive through the wall of the<br \/>old city. The arches are large enough for cars to drive through, and are<br \/>strong enough to cope with the occasional car crash I guess. <\/p>\n<p>Much of the roads of Rome are actually cobble stone &#8211; either on the classic<br \/>semicircle pattern or more of a grid. This looks fantastic, and ancient, but<br \/>I am told that it gets more interesting when it rains. It is also a huge<br \/>effort to maintain. These days they put in a layer of concrete, and then lay<br \/>the stones on this. No quick resurfacing of the roads here. It takes a<br \/>while&#8230; <\/p>\n<p>At one stage we went past where the first emperor of Rome lived &#8211; a guy<br \/>called Romulus. My guide had a good laugh when I had to inform him that I<br \/>thought that Romulus was only the planet in Star Trek where the Romulans<br \/>live. <\/p>\n<p>The tour started with some of the hills of Rome. The hills provide amazing<br \/>lookouts over the city. The view is spectacular. Unfortunately the view is<br \/>better in the morning rather than the evening thanks to the fact that the<br \/>lookouts point towards the setting sun. <\/p>\n<p>Around this time we saw a famous fountain. The idea is that when you come to<br \/>Rome you throw a coin over your shoulder into the fountain to ensure that<br \/>you come back. Whilst I visited, my driver double parked his car, and<br \/>therefore needed to stay with it. <\/p>\n<p>We then visited the tomb of the emperors. This was a mound of brick with a<br \/>moat. At the time it was built the moat was actually ground level. The level<br \/>of the city has risen 2-3 meters since then. This did not look all that<br \/>impressive thanks to theft by the rich and the Christians to build other<br \/>buildings. <\/p>\n<p>My guide also told me about a court house built nearby recently (2-300 years<br \/>ago) where the architect decided to use roman building techniques with huge<br \/>blocks. He did not realize about the weight of the blocks, and the four<br \/>story building became 2.5 stories, and has been sinking ever since. Recently<br \/>the government has been putting a lot of money into improving the<br \/>foundations as it has been sinking.<\/p>\n<p>We then went to what is now a huge square. It was a huge stadium seating<br \/>300,000 people. I believe that the guide said that they used to have naval<br \/>events in the center when they flooded the area. The infrastructure must<br \/>have been amazing there. Like everywhere in Rome, there are a lots of<br \/>fountains, statues and churches in the area.<\/p>\n<p>Next we made our way to the square in front of what I believe is Capitoline<br \/>Hill. My Italian is not what it used to be&#8230; actually it is better. Anyway<br \/>this area is a HUGE round-about. What makes it more interesting is that<br \/>there are traffic islands in the middle, and no lane markings. If you look<br \/>at chaos in the dictionary, I think you will find a picture of this. Such a<br \/>weird design does allow some advantages though. We were able to stop in the<br \/>middle without interrupting traffic one bit. <\/p>\n<p>What made this stop important was the building in front &#8211; with a balcony.<br \/>This is THE balcony where Mussolini used to give his speeches to the crowd<br \/>below. About this point I found out more about the person. It seems that<br \/>much of what remains of ancient Rome exists because he recognized the value<br \/>of things. Sure he did some bad things, but not everything he did was bad. <\/p>\n<p>[Having said that, you might want to ask a local what they feel about a 10KM<br \/>commute that takes 1-2 hours because new roads cannot be built quickly<br \/>because of the roman monuments.]<\/p>\n<p>Then I went to the Capitoline Hill. In classic roman architecture there is a<br \/>huge step of stairs leading up to a church just on the side of the hill. I<br \/>am told that the stairs are actually the seats from the coliseum. The stairs<br \/>just seem to go on. Next to it is an urban redevelopment project on the top<br \/>of the hill that Leonardo Da Vinci was commissioned to work on. <\/p>\n<p>Like most good projects he was not given the budget to do the project<br \/>properly so he cheated. Instead of building new buildings, he just built<br \/>facades around the existing buildings. But this was not a case of simply. He<br \/>cheated all the time on this project. Firstly, for the stairs leading up, he<br \/>only used about \u00bc of the stairs he should have, and used a ramp between the<br \/>steps. This creates the optical illusion of not being as many stairs. <\/p>\n<p>Then the square at the top has geometric patterns on it. It is assumed that<br \/>the patterns are circles, but are in fact ovals creating a strange<br \/>perspective. The buildings are not built straight up, but come in to further<br \/>increase the sense of size. <\/p>\n<p>In the centre of the courtyard is the top of a brass stake. This is the<br \/>centre of Rome. When it is said that all roads lead to Rome, they all lead<br \/>to this stake. <\/p>\n<p>I was instructed to take a path to the side of two of the buildings, and<br \/>meet my driver at the bottom of the path. What he did not say was that I<br \/>would see so much more on the other side. You see behind this building are<br \/>roman ruins that were uncovered by mousilini when he was in power. So many<br \/>important buildings are here, one of the most important being the Roman<br \/>Senate,. I was really blown away. <\/p>\n<p>My driver then picked me up and took me past Constantine&#8217;s arch, and the<br \/>coliseum. This took us under a roman aqua duct that still took pride of<br \/>place in the city. The Coliseum really is a marvel of modern engineering. It<br \/>is so large. Looked at from above it really is amazing. <\/p>\n<p>I then walked up close and personal, touching it and the like. Unlike<br \/>Constantine&#8217;s Arch nearby you were actually able to touch some of it. Wow,<br \/>the history. This whole area had cobble stones, like much of Rome. <\/p>\n<p>At one stage my driver took my down some back streets. They were actually<br \/>back streets. I would have called them paths. They were about the size of<br \/>walkways in housing estates. Things are so tight that the people flip in<br \/>both their side mirrors in order to get as close to the wall as they can. I<br \/>believe that 10cm is the acceptable distance from the wall. Driving a car<br \/>down these streets appears fun. <\/p>\n<p>They are so tight that they appear to be a dead end at the end, but might be<br \/>a right angle or a T intersection. What is more fun is the occasional<br \/>restaurant with outdoor dining. Diners are suggested that they do not lean<br \/>back on their chairs, as they are likely to come into contact with a car. <\/p>\n<p>Onwards and upwards we then decided to cross the Tiber river to the western<br \/>side where I was able to visit the eighth country I had every been in. That<br \/>was the Holy See, commonly known as The Vatican. Nothing can prepare you for<br \/>St Paul&#8217;s. Not being a Catholic, I had not recently seen a photo of the<br \/>place, so I really was not expecting anything.<\/p>\n<p>And I was certainly impressed. St Paul&#8217;s is on the top of Vatican Hill,<br \/>meaning that as you look up the road leading to it, you are struck by the<br \/>scale. Some of this is real, and some is an optical illusion. <\/p>\n<p>St Paul&#8217;s is fronted by a huge square. Well it is actually a circle, but it<br \/>is a square. The front quarter of the circumference to the square is open.<br \/>The far side is bordered by St Peters. And the right hand side is bordered<br \/>by the Papal Apartments. Apart from that, the square is surrounded by a<br \/>double row of huge columns connected with a roof. To top the effect off,<br \/>large chandeliers light the columns. <\/p>\n<p>Once again the area is entirely cobble stones. Also in the square is a<br \/>statue of St Peter, and from memory also an Obelisk. Since this is an area<br \/>that is very popular for open-air services, the area in front of St Paul&#8217;s<br \/>contains a roped off area for chairs. I guess this is for invited guests.<br \/>Off to one side is a &#8216;box&#8217; that is obviously a video screen attempting to<br \/>look innocuous. Many of the pillars around the edge also contain speakers<br \/>allowing those without the good seats to participate.<\/p>\n<p>I would have loved to visited the Papal Museum, but I did not get a chance<br \/>on this trip. Hopefully on my next one too. Then I would also get a chance<br \/>to see inside St Paul&#8217;s and also The Sistine Chapel. <\/p>\n<p>I asked about what happens when the current pope dies. Apparently he is<br \/>entitled to be buried in the Vatican, but that is his choice. What I was<br \/>more interested in was the voting for the new one. I was told that this was<br \/>commonly done in the Sistine Chapel. By commonly done, I mean it has been<br \/>done that way for about 500 years or so. But there are rumors that the next<br \/>time it may be done somewhere else &#8211; I did not hear why but I suspect that<br \/>it might be so that the faithful could still access the Sistine chapel. <\/p>\n<p>For the uninitiated, the cardinals are locked up to come to a decision on<br \/>the new pope. They get to vote once a day, and spend the rest of the time<br \/>praying and talking. No one is allowed in or out. Food is delivered but that<br \/>is all. Once the decision is made the voting slips are burned creating a<br \/>special colored smoke indicating that there is a new Bishop of Rome [The<br \/>actual post].<\/p>\n<p>On leaving the Holy Sea, it was time for dinner. My host took me back into<br \/>the center of town and after a while we found a parking spot. The driver<br \/>seemed to be an expert at reversing the car &#8211; able to drive it as well in<br \/>reverse as forward. I was impressed. In searching for a spot we went down<br \/>some streets that would have been hard enough for me to drive down myself.<br \/>He was able to reverse out of them. <\/p>\n<p>Once we found a spot we found that the restaurant was actually closed. The<br \/>owner apparently was just recovering from an operation we found out later.<br \/>But to get there we needed to walk from the car, and passed a few police<br \/>officers obviously on special duty. The sub machine guns were a tiny bit of<br \/>a give away. <\/p>\n<p>My host then took me somewhere else &#8211; I have no idea where it was. When the<br \/>menu came I was told &#8220;there is no need for that if you trust me&#8217;, which I<br \/>did. We ended up having Bresheta, a platter of meat and rock melon,<br \/>anchovies and a Pizza. All were really nice.<\/p>\n<p>At one stage a woman in hospital blues comes in and collects some food. When<br \/>she leaves I comment that there must be a hospital nearby. He said yes, it<br \/>was called (I believe) St Lukes, and was opened in 1525. I was impressed. <\/p>\n<p>Following dinner it was about time for me to get some sleep so my driver<br \/>took me back to my hotel. He then needed to drive about 30 minutes further<br \/>south towards Naples. <\/p>\n<p>Thursday I did not have much to do, so once I grabbed my email I was offered<br \/>the chance to go back into Rome. Nicola and his girlfriend took me shopping<br \/>&#8211; and I finally got a chance to see the Rome traffic up close and personal.<br \/>It was not too bad, really. But this was not peak hour either. <\/p>\n<p>They took me to a district near the Vatican, and it was really interesting<br \/>to see all the different clothes and other things on display. I actually<br \/>found what I was after just outside the walls to the Vatican &#8211; some souvenir<br \/>shops. Following shopping I did some more work at the office meeting with<br \/>some of my clients clients. Not much more to say about this. <\/p>\n<p>Checking in at Rome was strange. The woman found it strange that I had a<br \/>ticket to London, and then a separate one to Singapore. Once she realized<br \/>that it was because of ticket types and schedule problems she was able to<br \/>check my bags through. Until then it was going to be an issue. <\/p>\n<p>Rome is an airport that seems to be locked in the dark ages. It has machines<br \/>to wrap your baggage in plastic wrap. This is despite the fact that it is<br \/>probably the latest country in &#8216;western&#8217; Europe to have a terrorist incident<br \/>&#8211; although to be fair it was an attempt to blow up their prime minister,<br \/>Belisconi, so probably 75% of the population would be supporting the<br \/>terrorists. <\/p>\n<p>Arriving in London Heathrow I found the transfer system intelligent.<br \/>International arrivals transferring from one of the EU flights get shunted<br \/>into an area with a security check, and then a chance to check in to get a<br \/>boarding pass. You then take a bus to the right terminal. Very quick and<br \/>civilized. The security people even let a child see his Teddy Bear on the<br \/>X-Ray machine. <\/p>\n<p>Flying from London we flew back over several interesting places. We came<br \/>went about 100km south of Kiev, and then flew over Afghanistan. We also flew<br \/>about 100km south of Kandaha I think it was. I tried to get the pilot to<br \/>make a short detour for sight seeing and refueling, but he did not take me<br \/>up on the offer ?<\/p>\n<p>I found this flight a whole lot better than the one from Rome to Italy. Part<br \/>of that was that I fell asleep for a few minutes during taxi-ing before<br \/>taking off, but I think the pilot was better, and most of the flight was<br \/>over land. As an example the landing at Singapore was the best I felt for a<br \/>while. I was impressed.<\/p>\n<p>Changi Airport impressed me too. There was no-one in front of me in the lane<br \/>I chose to go through passport control. Very quick. Then my bags came off<br \/>the carousel about 2 minutes after I arrived there. And there was no delay<br \/>getting out with any sort of customs issues. <\/p>\n<p>I am not sure how much sleep I got on the journey, but it was not enough. I<br \/>think I slept maybe two hours on the plan, and the flight got in about 1AM<br \/>Rome time, and I had woken up at 4AM. One long day. <\/p>\n<p>I have worked out how you can tell you have been on too many flights and<br \/>have had too little sleep. Basically if you feel that the world is spinning<br \/>in time with turbulence, God is probably telling me that it is a good time<br \/>for a sleep. <\/p>\n<p>My hotel is next to probably my idea of heaven&#8230; It is a shopping centre<br \/>called &#8220;The IT Shopping Center&#8221;, and is about double the size of the MLC<br \/>Center shopping centre in Sydney. It also has food and some other stores,<br \/>including a decent Christian bookstore. And did I mention that there is<br \/>wireless access there too.<\/p>\n<p>Well, the wireless access is supposed to be free. There are at least 10<br \/>access points set up there. Most are private for the shops. The one provided<br \/>by the centre for free does not actually work, so I need to use the SingTel<br \/>access point. This comes out about $8 per hour. This is not cheap but the<br \/>connection is fast, and you can pay that much for dialup with a roaming<br \/>account. And I know of a whole lot more expensive internet access methods. <\/p>\n<p>Sunday I did a bit of walking around in the morning. Firstly down to<br \/>Chinatown, and this is what I expected. More of the Singapore of old. I went<br \/>back to my room about 11:00 to have a shower before checking out. This was<br \/>essential considering I had been walking and Singapore is on the equator. <\/p>\n<p>Then I went to the Suntec Shopping center and found the local Cinema. They<br \/>proudly pronounce that they have Digital projectors. So I decided to see the<br \/>only movie that was in English and suited my timeslot &#8211; A Cinderella Story<br \/>starring Hillary Duff. This was not a bad movie. I think I would see it<br \/>again. Strangely the cinema assigns seats even though it was less than 25%<br \/>full. <\/p>\n<p>I could tell that either the projectors were not digital or they were<br \/>scanned from the edit marks. In a film there are marks &#8211; circles- on the<br \/>film in the top left corner when they need to change reels. I learned about<br \/>this on the TV show Columbo. Anyway, films that are delivered on film are<br \/>delivered on many reels and are edited into one. Digital films are usually<br \/>delivered through satellite or some other digital form. <\/p>\n<p>But this movie had the crop marks. Worse, it had grease pencil markings just<br \/>after the edit point. So easy to fix. And so much of an indicator that it<br \/>was not a digital feed. <\/p>\n<p>Following the movie I decided to visit another shop that I had not been to<br \/>before &#8211; &#8220;The Rock&#8221;. Turns out it is a christian bookstore. Wow. I am<br \/>impressed. I seriously thought about buying a teddy bear. This one was on<br \/>it&#8217;s knees praying. Wow. They had the complete collection of Hillsong CD&#8217;s<br \/>and DVD&#8217;s there it would appear. And a lot of Sermons on tape. Eh?<\/p>\n<p>Going out the other door I found out that this is actually attached to a<br \/>church here in the center of Singapore. Although I seriously considered it,<br \/>I declined to attend the service. Things would have been too tight with my<br \/>schedule. Besides they had a sign up saying that priority to get inside is<br \/>given to first time attendees. This is a sure sign that maybe they need all<br \/>the seats that they can get ?<\/p>\n<p>Anyway after some more window shopping I got my lift to the airport. Checkin<br \/>was strange. It must be the only place in the world where there is one queue<br \/>per checkin lane. Anyway I did not even need to wait so it must work. The<br \/>woman also put priority stickers on my bags which she should not have. I did<br \/>not complain ?<\/p>\n<p>Changi is a nice airport. They have a movie area, life music, free internet,<br \/>shops open 24\/7, and even a special hotel inside immigration called the<br \/>&#8220;Transit Hotel&#8221; where you can book a room by the hour. No, not for that. To<br \/>sleep and have a shower. They have thought about things. I was concerned<br \/>about security as only about 1% of the people were x-rayed before going<br \/>through immigration, but then I found that there were also x-rays at each<br \/>gate. <\/p>\n<p>Qantas Club beats the world in Singapore too. The showers are fantastic,<br \/>particularly when you have been out in the Singapore heat all day. And they<br \/>have attendants to clean the rooms between use. Wow.<\/p>\n<p>The flight home was quick. We got in at 5:05AM, and then I was straight<br \/>though immigration, collected my bags quickly, and then went though customs<br \/>without issue. The slowest thing was waiting 20 minutes for my train. Cest<br \/>La Vie.<\/p>\n<p>You know that you need to clean your wallet when there are notes in four<br \/>different currencies, and receipts in five currencies. And when none of them<br \/>are for the country you are actually in.<\/p>\n<p>Anyway this is being written on my way from the airport on the train. I am<br \/>looking forward to being home, but have enjoyed my time away. In closing I<br \/>will just quote Dido&#8230;<\/p>\n<p> Two weeks away<br \/>feels like the whole world should have changed<br \/> But I&#8217;m Home Now. <br \/>And things still look the same<\/p>\n<p>Darryl<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>I have finally worked out where I neglected to go in London &#8211; The BritishLibrary. I forgot that they often have cool stuff. Next time. The same nexttime when I go to Bletchley Park. Turns out that the person who &hellip;<\/p>\n<p class=\"read-more\"> <a class=\"more-link\" href=\"http:\/\/www.radio-active.net.au\/web3\/3017\">  Read More &raquo;<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"footnotes":"","jetpack_publicize_message":"","jetpack_publicize_feature_enabled":true,"jetpack_social_post_already_shared":true,"jetpack_social_options":{"image_generator_settings":{"template":"highway","enabled":false}}},"categories":[],"tags":[],"jetpack_publicize_connections":[],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"jetpack_shortlink":"https:\/\/wp.me\/s5cfmK-3017","_links":{"self":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.radio-active.net.au\/web3\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3017"}],"collection":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.radio-active.net.au\/web3\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.radio-active.net.au\/web3\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.radio-active.net.au\/web3\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.radio-active.net.au\/web3\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=3017"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"http:\/\/www.radio-active.net.au\/web3\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3017\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.radio-active.net.au\/web3\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=3017"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.radio-active.net.au\/web3\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=3017"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.radio-active.net.au\/web3\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=3017"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}