Author Archive for ugo

Nikon D60 kit up for grabs

Update: The D60 has now been sold, and the 55-200mm will be sold soon.

I am breaking a long silence on this blog for a short announcement. Activity on the blog will resume as soon as I have made up my mind about the direction it should go. I am considering abandoning all geeky topics and turning it into a photo blog or portfolio site, but I have more pressing things to do at the moment.

My Used Nikon D60 FOR SALE

In the meantime, due to my recent upgrade to a D90, I am selling my old D60 kit, with accessories.

This camera was bought in May, 2008 and is in near-perfect conditions. It has taken less than 10,000 photos, including most of those in my photostream.

It comes with the AF-S DX NIKKOR 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6G VR kit lens, which is in near-perfect conditions as well.

I have the original packaging and all of the original accessories (battery, battery charger, lens caps, strap holder, cables, manuals, software, etc.).

I am adding the following bonus accessories to the pack:

  • 1 extra, original Nikon EL-EN9 battery
  • 1 2GB SanDisk Extreme III SDHC card
  • 1 Nikon ML-L3 remote
  • 1 Tiffen 52mm clear UV filter
  • 1 Hama shoulder bag
  • 1 mini tripod

The product is sold AS IS, with no warranties.

The price I am asking for the whole package is 350€/300£/450$ plus shipping. Payment via PayPal is appreciated.

In case anyone is interested, I might add a Nikkor AF-S DX VR 55-200mm f/4-5.6 G ED lens to the package.

Mail me if you need more information. More pictures here

Bullshit Graphs

This is bullshit. You can tell it is bullshit by the fact that there is no unit declared for the Y axis and there is no credible source for all the data that is shown in this graph.

graph.jpg

This is bullshit too. for exactly the same reasons.

graph.jpg

Actually, the second is even more bullshit than the first. It’s been drawn by Vic Gundotra of Google and what does it show at the top of the curve of browser innovation? Google Chrome, how strange!

Alfresco Tech Talk Live @ 12pm EST, Friday May 15st, 2009

Tomorrow I will be presenting our CMIS Explorer Portlet during this week’s episode of Alfresco Tech Talk Live. This is going to be a fairly technical talk, with lots of code thrown in for the developers’ benefit. If you want to know more about CMIS and how to leverage it in your Java applications, you should definitely listen.

To attend, please visit http://alfresco.acrobat.com/live and enter the meeting room as a Guest. The talk will start at 12PM EST. I know, it’s 6PM on a Friday for us Central European folks, but I hope you won’t be all heading for the sea-side already.

You can find more information about TTL here.

Job-related updates

Sourcesense LogoSince it’s been a while since I’ve posted anything about job-related events, here’s a recap of a number of things that made—or should have made—the news in the last few weeks.

First of all, we made a big splash by being named EMEA JBoss Partner of the Year at the Red Hat Summit in Malta, last April. Quite an achievement, I’d say, fueled in a not so small part by the dedication of our colleagues Luca and Piergiorgio, who have been named committers for the JBoss Portal project.

We are also ramping up our contributions to various Open Source communities. Let me just mention our OpenSSO connector for Alfresco, a project started by Gustavo that has just gone officially live on our new “forge”: opensource.sourcesense.com.

Finally, we are investing a lot of effort into this CMIS stuff that has everybody in the content management world interested. I personally got my feet wet with a 2-day “plug fest” that was held at Day Software’s headquarters, in Basel last week. Watching all those CMS vendors getting together to test the interoperability of their systems has been invigorating. Too bad nobody from either Microsoft or Oracle was there, but I guess getting approval for travel these days is not easy, so we will probably see them at a similar event in the US soon.

We are also going to get involved a lot in the new Apache Chemistry project that has just started its incubation phase at Apache. Stay tuned!

The ASF is 10 years old

OK, this is old news, as the official birthday was yesterday, but yesterday I was too busy to write anything here. Actually I was busy having lunch with the person who personally signed the letter of incorporation, Roy T. Fielding. Curiously, neither of us was in Amsterdam, that’s how life goes sometimes. This would have been my first ApacheCon as an ASF member, so I’m a bit sad about not having been able to join the celebrations, but Happy Birthday Apache! anyway.

10 Years of Apache

On a related note, today’s meme is “my first message to an Apache list”. Mine was on Jul 7, 2000 (as documented here). This means that next year will mark the 10th birthday of my first participation (however minor) to an Apache project.

Ultra-wide zoom shoot-out

I am looking for an ultra-wide angle lens for my Nikon D60 to complement my current collection of lenses. I currently own the 18-55mm VR kit lens and the 55-200mm VR as well, so I am pretty well covered above 18mm. I also have a collection of old, pre-AI, prime lenses, including a 50mm f/1.4 which is great for low-light situations, despite being fully manual and no metering.

I wouldn’t mind also getting the just announced 35mm f/1.8 AF-S lens. At a list price of $200 (or a little more than 200€) it’s going to be the best choice for D40/D40x/D60 owners wanting a fast prime which auto-focuses on their bodies. I will buy it, eventually, but not now.

What I want now is wide, very wide. I want something that goes much wider than the 18 mm of the kit lens to take some extreme shots meant to totally draw the viewer into the picture. Also, I don’t want a fisheye.

Sigma_10-20.jpgFor a while, I was eyeing the venerable Sigma 10-20mm. This has long been the default choice for people looking for an ultra-wide angle zoom to put on their low-range DSLRs. It was until recently the only one going down to 10 mm, it has an internal focusing motor, decent image quality, and an affordable price. Therefore I started saving pennies and planning to buy one as a Christmas or birthday present to myself.

Tokina_11-16.jpgBut just when I was about to grab it from a shelf or order it online, there came the Tokina ATX 116 PRO onto my radar. This lens has got some truly excellent reviews. Looks like its sharpness and image quality are top-notch and its maximum aperture is 2.8 all over the range, which is unmatched and great for low-light situations.

Its main drawbacks are the lack of an on-board focusing motor (but depth of field is so large at these focal lengths that this should not be a problem in practice) and its slightly higher price compared to the Sigma. Anyway, after reading reviews like Ken Rockwell’s, the decision was made, but I soon discovered that this lens is very hard to find, unless you are prepared to spend much more than the price it would have if it weren’t in such a demand. To put it bluntly, I don’t want to spend more than 500€ on it and I have a couple of local shops who would sell it to me at less than that…if only they had one in stock!

Tamron_10-24.jpgSo, while I am here hoping a Tokina turns up on a nearby shelf soon, I notice a review of the Tamron 10-24mm on dpreview.com. This looks like a sweet lens also, it has a focusing motor, the largest zoom range of them all, a decent price and shouldn’t be hard to procure. The reviewer points out that it’s a bit too soft in the corners and maximum aperture is only f/3.5-4.5, but it’s a step above the Sigma anyway. On the other hand, the luminosity and sharpness of the Tokina still make it my preferred choice, but if I have to wait too much, the pendulum might swing once again.

What would you do, dear readers, if you were me?


Apache OFBiz Development (book review)

Book cover
Apache OFBiz Development: The Beginner’s Tutorial, by Jonathon Wong and Rupert Howell, aims to fill a niche that was completely empty until this book was published. The Apache OFBiz project is an Open Source framework for building enterprise automation applications on the Java platform. OFBiz has been used to build many business applications, but until now there wasn’t a comprehensive beginner’s tutorial for developers wanting to use the platform. As with many Open Source projects, freely available OFBiz documentation tends to be incomplete and not very well organized, so a book that can be read cover-to-cover and provides a good developer’s tutorial is certainly welcome.

Unfortunately, this book fulfills this promise only partially. As a disclaimer, let me start by saying that I am not an OFBiz expert, having only had a passing acquaintance with its Persistence Engine, so I am not equipped to judge whether the content of this book is accurate and reasonably complete. I am indeed a beginner with respect to OFBiz, so I should be exactly the right kind of public for this book.

As the beginner that I am, I started reading the book, but soon found it very hard to keep on reading. For one thing, the text does not seem to follow a smooth, linear narrative. Its flow is continuously broken up by the use of very short sections with a big, bold title. Personally, I’d have saved on the ink and paper and coalesced small sections into bigger ones.

Another problem, at least in the early chapters, is the tendency to present simple concepts and examples, together with a promise to explain more in the rest of the chapters. I understand that you cannot present very detailed explanations right at the beginning, but this book goes just a bit overboard in leaving the reader hanging on.

The net effect of this approach is that it makes reading very difficult, after a while. This problem could be overcome by a reader with enough patience and determination, but in my case I soon started to skip sections and to peek ahead to see if there was something more interesting for me.

Sampling around, I came upon Chapter 9, “The Events” and was very perplexed. This s a short chapter which only uses the “event” word twice in the first page, without even explaining what an event is in the context of OFBiz, copies some text from page 117, then switches completely to the topics of security and access control, and of localization, none of which seems particularly event-driven to me. Maybe I am completely missing the meaning of “event” in OFBiz, but this is just one more reason to explain it properly in a beginner’s tutorial.

Another aspect of the book that I was uncomfortable with is that, most of the time, the reader is treated not just as an absolute beginner with OFBiz, but as a beginner with the whole concept of developing Java web applications, to the point of showing him how to download and install the JDK. I would just state that a certain level of knowledge and past experience with the whole platform is a requirement in the preface. Showing how to install the JDK is not going to help anyone here.

To sum it up, my opinion of this book is not very good. Still, all is not bad, and I think it can be a decent tutorial for most parts of OFBiz. Since such a tutorial was definitely needed, it’s a shame “Apache OFBiz Development” succeeds only partially.

Update: “Chapter 10: the Service Engine” is freely available from the publisher’s website.

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The Cthulhu Tract

By way of Charlie Stross, I came upon The Cthulhu Tract, which can be amusing if you are a fan of HPL and have ever seen a Jack Chick tract.

Why We’re Here

I wonder whether PZ Myers knows about it ;)

Alfresco Developer Guide (Book Review)

Alfresco Developer Guide by Jeff PottsAlfresco Developer Guide, by Jeff Potts, is the second title about Alfresco recently published by Packt Publishing, after Alfresco Enterprise Content Management Implementation, by Munwar Shariff, that was published almost two years ago.

For those who don’t know, Alfresco is the leading Open Source Enterprise Content Management system and is rapidly gaining acceptance in many enterprises, thanks to its rich feature set and ease of implementation.

Given the brisk pace of development of the product over the recent months, a new volume on Alfresco was eagerly awaited by many. This one mostly covers Alfresco 2.2, with some mentions about the new features introduced in version 3.0, whose official release happened shortly after the book was published. So it hit the shelves with a bit of unfortunate timing, but luckily none of the content of the book is to be considered obsolete, as all the APIs that used to work with 2.2 still work with 3.0. Still, a bit more coverage of 3.0 would have been great, but we can hope that maybe more will be added in a second edition.

Speaking of the content that is in this edition, readers will be able to find in-depth coverage of almost all aspects of the Alfresco platform, from a developer point of view. The target audience of the book is indeed developers who want to customize and extend Alfresco, and create new applications on top of it. Good overviews of content modeling, Web Client (Alfresco’s own web-based management console) customizations, behaviors, transformers and extractors, Web Scripts, advanced workflows, and security are provided, with plenty of detailed examples of configurations and API usage.

A long chapter is dedicated to the Web Content Management (WCM) add-on product and the book closes with appendixes containing a concise reference of APIs and configuration properties. Thankfully, the author and the publisher did not opt for including a complete reprint of the APIs in order to beef up the page count. Instead, a list of the main Java classes and Javascript root objects is provided, but developers will have to refer to the online documentation for a complete reference.

A section of this reference that many readers will find to be extremely useful is a detailed description of the Lucene search syntax. On the other hand, page 271 talks about a Surf API reference to be found in the appendix, but there isn’t one there. Surf is the new web application framework included in version 3, so they probably couldn’t find the time to provide some documentation for it in time for publishing. As I wrote above, this is understandable, given the timing, but let’s hope the second edition amends these shortcomings.

My overall judgment of the book is definitely positive, anyway. The author does an excellent job of maintaining a good balance between breadth and depth, and the narrative of each chapter manages to capture well the attention of the reader, guiding him from simple concepts to more complex scenarios in a very natural progression. Readers are expected to have a good working knowledge of Java, XML, and Java web application development. Some basic knowledge of Javascript will be useful too.

If I have a specific complaint about the content is that the index is too thin and many concepts are not referenced there. This is a defect that does not compromise the overall usefulness of the book, however.

The author, Jeff Potts, is an accomplished ECM consultant and long-time Alfresco expert. You can read more from him at his website ecmarchitect.com.

I have been given permission by the publisher to make a PDF copy of Chapter 3, Working with Content Models available for download. Just click here if you want to read it.

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Better? NOT!

Vatican opposes de-criminalising same sex unions -Times Online: “The Vatican has said it opposes a European Union proposal for a United Nations declaration formally condemning discrimination against homosexuals, which it claims would ‘de-criminalise’ same sex unions.

Monsignor Celestino Migliore, the Holy See’s permanent observer at the UN, said the Catechism of the Roman Catholic Church forbade ‘unjust discrimination’ against homosexuals. However outlawing discrimination by means of a UN declaration meant that states which did not recognise same sex marriages would come under pressure to do so.

All countries of the European Union have signed a draft declaration drawn up by France, which currently holds the rotating EU Presidency, condemning “discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity”. France is due to submit the draft declaration at the UN General Assembly on 10 December, the sixtieth anniversary of the UN declaration of human rights.

Over 80 countries in the world currently outlaw same-sex relations, with punishments range from short prison sentences to life imprisonment and even death by execution.”

Let me see if I get this right: 80 countries discriminate unjustly against their citizens on the basis of their sexual orientation alone. The EU wants to stop this, at least verbally. The Vatican, on the other hand, opposes this resolution, basically because it thinks it would put pressure on some of the discriminators.

The point is that the proposed resolution does not endorse same-sex marriage in any way. So the Vatican does not want the UN to condemn states who harass, imprison, torture and kill homosexual, because it thinks doing so would put undue pressure on states who do not recognize gay marriage, including those states, such as Italy, who signed the declaration?

Are you fucking kidding me? Can there be an organization which is more abject, twisted and morally disgusting than the Catholic Church?

Well, I guess one could reply that any church or any form of organized religion is similarly despicable, and one would have a point, I’m afraid.

For those who do not speak Italian, the title is a bad pun on the name of Monsignor Migliore. “Migliore” is Italian for “better”.

Abdera Graduation

atom-logo75px.gifThe latest of a number of projects to graduate from the Apache Incubator is Abdera. I started using Abdera for client projects a while ago, did some contributions and was named a committer, so even though I haven’t been following it closely as of recent, I’, still happy to see that it reached that stage where it is deemed fit to walk on its own legs and not be a podling anymore.

I am sure I will find some project where I will be able to use it again, but for now just let me extend my best congratulations to everyone involved.

P.S.: We need a logo! Anyone interested in designing one?

Blame the atheists

Wow! I thought the WSJ was a serious, reputable journal, and that you had to have some intelligence, insight, and decency to be allowed to get your words published on it.

That seems not to be the case, if any idiot with an axe to grind, like Daniel Henninger, can simply write down a list of fallacies and non-sequiturs, depicting an alternative universe that has no basis in reality, and still get published.

Witness this column, where he can do no better than to blame atheists and secularists, and the war they are supposedly waging against Christmas, for the current financial meltdown. As if your poor, wrecked, fucked-up, war-mongering country, had not been run for the past eight years by a gang of corrupt, self-professed Christians, whose ideological pillars were evangelical faith and unbridled laissez-faire.

And now, when you are so deeply in shit because of these people and of the evangelical base that contributed to elect them, you Mr. Henninger have the gall to ask for more of the same? You are so completely out of your mind, Sir!

Also, you claim that “responsibility, restraint and remorse” were the ballast that stabilized free markets, and that somehow religious people possess these qualities in larger quantity than no-religious ones.

Bullshit! I say.

The only quality that the people governing financial institutions and big companies have ever exhibited is remorse. Naturally, some of them, show some form of remorse after the damage is done and exposed. Witness Ken Lay (a good Christian, by all accounts).

They seldom, if ever, demonstrated responsibility, and only the force of the law taught them some restraint.

Blaming the descent of secular values from the North onto the good, old religious values of the South for this situation is blaming the victim for the crime, which just adds insult to injury. The reason why restraint was lost is not because of a supposed decadence in moral values fostered by the “war on Christmas”. It’s because the gang of thugs you elected for governing your country, Mr. Henninger, lifted all forms of regulation in order to benefit their cronies, creating the biggest example of a privately-run socialist state in the process. A state where profits are private and losses are public.

And all of this while lighting up Christmas trees and going to church every Sunday.

Have Lunch with Sourcesense and JBoss

If you are in Milan next week, don’t miss the event Sourcesense is hosting together with JBoss at the Ristorante Santini, Via S.Marco 3.

We are going to be talking about JBoss solutions, of course, and about our approach to Agile methodologies. All while enjoying a nice meal in one of Milan’s best restaurants.

I’m sure you don’t want to miss this opportunity, so register early to ensure you can have one of the few available seats.

Sourcesense Day 2008

The last two days have been the most rewarding, fun, and tiresome days since I’ve joined Sourcesense almost three years ago. We had our first company-wide meeting in Milan, which, seeing as we are more than forty people now, was something that was really needed for a company that, while still comparatively small, has offices in three cities (Milan, Rome and Amsterdam).

Mad, Sad, GladThus we managed to see some new faces and refresh the memory of old ones. These two days were also filled with enthusiasm, friendship, and community spirit. Overall a very positive balance, as you can see from the number of stickers that were put on the “glad” side of the “Mad, Sad, Glad” wall we put up at the end. Most of the “sad” and “mad” cards actually had to do with the weather and general lack of time for doing all the things we wanted to do tigether. So we all agreed that we should probably repeat this event soon, like maybe six months from now, in Amsterdam.

Joost v2

I haven’t been working for Joost for quite a while, more than one year actually. But I knew already then that they were working on a new web version of their player, one that runs in-browser instead of requiring users to download and run a dedicated software program.

Today’s announcement from CEO Mike Volpi marks an important milestone towards this elusive goal: you can now watch Joost in your browser, even though it still requires the download and installation of a plugin, so this is not yet the promised Flash-based version. I understand it will eventually come, but this version at least gives you a first impression of things to come. Better than nothing, I guess.

This is good, and I sincerely hope it will really make Joost popular, at last. What is less good is that the choice of programs is still quite anemic, at least in Europe (but I know it’s much wider in the US, blame the majors and their being anal retentive with rights).

Another sore point is that, even after all this time, navigation among channels still sucks. Is it really hard to present shows according to the series they belong to? Channels usually contain several series, but I might be interested in just one of them, so why is it that I can’t get, say, all episodes of Total Recall 2070 on a single page?

I hope they’re reading this and will correct this oversight soon. As for the rest, keep up the good work, as I think the idea is still cool and sound.

Freedom means…

frog.jpg… putting up with things that annoy you, as someone said. It’s easy to be tolerant of things that do not offend you or your most cherished beliefs, but the real litmus test of tolerance is being able to suffer others mocking something that you hold as sacred.

Sadly, Roman Catholics and their bozo-in-a-funny-hat jefe supremo, El Papa Ratzo, usually fail this test, as exemplified once again by the recent brouhaha raised around an art exhibit held in Italy, where a statue of a crucified frog is on display. The silly Pope itself wrote a letter calling for censorship of the frog and the head of the local council even started a hunger strike. Too bad for them, I guess, as the museum board voted to keep the frog on display until the end of the exhibit and not bend over backwards to please the would-be censors, as too often happens in Italy and elsewhere. Kudos to them!

I think I should petition the Italian government to prohibit the display of crucifixes in public places: seeing an image of a man tortured and killed in the most horrible way deeply offends my sentiments, so it’s my right to demand that it be censored, right?

I also would like certain vignettes that appeared in a certain Danish newspaper to be censored as well, not to mention the display of beef in supermarkets, as it deeply offends Hindu religious sentiments.

You can read more about the whole affair on Pharyngula. Minor nit: Bolzano (Bözen in German) is actually in Italy, not Germany, though in a region where the majority speaks German, so the confusion is understandable.

Lonely Planet Cover Contest

Would you like to have one of your pictures on the cover of one of Lonely Planet’s “Encounter” guides? If you have pictures of London, Paris, Barcelona or Istanbul, you can go to the competition website and enter your best pictures in the contest. Technically, this means subscribing to Pikeo, uploading your pictures and adding up to 5 of them to the appropriate group.

To demonstrate how grateful you are that I notified this great opportunity to you, you can browse my London album or my Istanbul album: the more views a picture gets, the larger its chances of winning a runner-up prize, even if it doesn’t get on a guide cover.

Turkey Hotel Recommendations

Here’s a list of the hotels we stayed at during our recent trip to Turkey, together with some recommendations.

  • Faros Hotel, Istanbul. Conveniently located in the center of old Istanbul, a short walk from all major tourist attractions. Small and cozy, with newly renovated and elegant rooms. Can be a bit noisy, being situated on a very popular street, Divan Yolu Caddesi, so you need to keep windows closed if you like a quiet environment. We were initially not very happy with the quality of breakfast, but learned later that finding a good breakfast at a Turkish hotel is harder than we imagined. Recommended.
  • Uçhisar Kaya Hotel, Uçhisar. Location is simply incredible, sitting atop Cappadocia’s Pigeon Valley. All rooms have a valley view. It’s got a nice pool and a spa with sauna and turkish bath. Rooms are adequate for two people but become cramped from families who need a third bed for a child, like us. Having recently been bought by a Japanese company, it tends to be full of throngs of Japanese tourists, which is not a bad thing in itself, but is probably the reason why they only offer half boarding and not B&B. Given the mediocre quality of the buffet restaurant, if you can convince them to give you B&B accomodation, you’ll be able to find better and more varied food in one of the many restaurants in the area.
  • Ali’s Pension, Egirdir. We didn’t have many expectations about the hotel, but Egirdir looked like a nice place and it was just in the right place, allowing us to split a long transfer into two stages. It also had a good review on our Routard guide and was the only establishment who apparently offered a way to contact them via email, so we settled for it. Unfortunately, this turned out to be a big mistake as things started to turn sour upon our arrival, when the manager told us the pension was full and she had moved us to his brother’s pension (named “Choo Choo Pension”). Since Ali’s Pension is not exactly the Ritz, we only had a night to spend in Egirdir, and the other pension looked rather similar to Ali’s, we didn’t complain too much. The next surprise came when they told us they only had 4 rooms, instead of the 5 they had confirmed in writing, with a total of 14 beds instead of the 15 required. After some negotiations, they found a double room at Ali’s, so everything seemed to be more or less satisfactory for us, until we discovered that there was no running water in the bathrooms, but by then it was already after dinner and too late to scout the town, looking for accomodation. To add insult to injury, when we checked out the morning after, they asked us to pay for the fifth room, even though they had agreed in writing to the number of rooms and the total price. Unbelievable! They obviously knew there was no water at Choo Choo’s, as it had been missing for many hours already, so I suspect they moved people from there to our reserved rooms at Ali’s (which had running water) and then, instead of apologizing, they wanted us to pay more for the privilege! I’ve never experienced such a behavior, so I want to state it very clearly and loudly here, hoping that people looking for lodging in Egirdir via Google will take note: The owners of Ali’s Pension in Egirdir, Turkey are a bunch of dishonest, lying scumbags. Avoid Ali’s and Choo Choo pensions at all costs! You’ve been warned.
  • Venus Hotel, Pamukkale. After our bad experience in Egirdir, we were a bit suspicious about the Venus, but I must say that our fears were totally unfounded. To put it simply, what we found there was the best hospitality we had in all of Turkey. Katryn and Ibrahim, the owners, geve us a very warm welcome and were very friendly and kindly responded to all our requests. Katryn is Australian and is very cheerful and open, whereas Ibrahim, a Turkish guy with a burly face and mustache, can seem a bit shady at times, but it’s just a façade that hides a very friendly person. The hotel is pretty, rooms have recently been renovated, it’s got a pool and dinner is nice. On top of it, it cost us just 198€ for seven rooms (dinner aside), which is incredibly cheap. I would give it five stars, were it not for the fact that bathroom furniture in our room badly needed renewing, as it compared unfavorably to the rest of the room. Overall, I highly recommend Venus Hotel to anyone wanting to visit Pamukkale.
  • Kale Han Hotel, Selçuk. Conveniently located along Selçuk’s main road, it is a hotel which tries to have some kind of “country” style but ends just looking a bit dilapidated. Not despicable overall, with a garden and a swimming pool, but avoid its restaurant and have dinner at the Istanbul Pide Salonu just 100m farther down the road (recommended by Enrico).
  • Pirat Hotel, Kalkan. Shiny on the outside, rotten inside. Well, maybe not rotten but certainly disappointing. To start with, the location is splendid, right atop the marina of Kalkan, possibly the nicest seaside town in all of Turkey’s Lycian coast. It’s architecture is pretty, being made of an agglomerate of smallish, two-storey blocks all of which front the seaside (this refers to the so called “Pirat 2″, whereas the “Pirat 1″, just across the street, is an anonymous building). Unfortunately the room furniture is very cheap and there are no shades on the windows, just white cloths, which can be a problem in the morning, considering all the rooms face east. The pool is OK, aside from being infested, when we were there, by a group of British families with teen-age kids, who obviously thought that spending the day pool-side instead of going to one of the many splendid beaches along the coast was the right thing to do, and in any case it closes at 7PM because the restaurant has tables around it and it opens at that time. Speaking of the restaurant, breakfast was the worst we had and if you want fresh orange juice or an omelette, you have to shell out 3.5 YTL (about 2€). We didn’t try having dinner there, which seemed silly, as the town is full of restaurants, many of them quite good. I especially recommend the Aubergine Patlican: Absolutely excellent food at a decent price (just remember that portions are so large that you can feed two people on a single main course), though they should start presenting a real wine list.
  • Marina Residence, Antalya. Not much to say, as we came in late and checked out early in the morning. It’s got a lot of charme, and the breakfast is the best we had, so I can definitely recommend it, even though the A/C in our room was broken and they agreed to move us to another room only after I insisted a bit.

La Compagnia del Relax

It’s been a few days since we’ve come back from our trip to Turkey and we still have our eyes filled with images from the wonderful places we’ve seen. It’s been a truly amazing vacation and I want to start collecting here some memories and some useful (hopefully) suggestions for my readers. More posts about Turkey will surely follow.

First of all, I want to thank a guy who has helped us make the most of our trip: Enrico Radrizzani (he’s the guy on the right in the picture below). We met Enrico on our first night in Uçhisar, in the center of Cappadocia and made friends immediately. He fell in love with Turkey years ago and has been spending long months there every year since then.

Enrico and one of his Turkish friendsWhat’s great about Enrico is that he knows a whole lot of stuff about Turkey, including plenty of useful information that is not usually found on travel guides. He will gladly advise you about places to visit, how to avoid big tourist flocks, which guides are the best, where to eat, and much more. If it weren’t for him, we would have never seen places like Maziköy, which wasn’t even on our map, or done a trek along the Rose Valley in the wee hours of the morning, when hot air balloons fill the sky in an eerie silence.

You will usually find Enrico in the main square of the village of Uçhisar. If you can’t locate him, ask Faruk, the owner of the carpet shop which opens on the same square, right below the “castle”.

You can also find him online, either at La Compagnia del Relax (Italian language only), a website which provides information about Turkey, with an accent on Cappadocia, suggestions about places to visit and things to do, and various other initiatives like a photography workshop. You can also read his blog (again in Italian) Il Gran Turco.

Thanks, Enrico, and see you some time in Italy this fall!

On Microsoft and the ASF

feather.gifIf you’ve read this, you should also read this:

ASF membership cannot be bought: people earn their individual membership by merit, and there’s no such thing as ASF member companies.

As with any other sponsor of the ASF, Microsoft’s sponsorship only means that they’re giving money to the ASF, money that the ASF can use freely, as the ASF does not accept directed donations.

Thanks to Bertrand for setting this straight, even though fighting sloppiness in news reporting is a losing battle.

But anyway, this is indeed great news. I’m not sure we can really get Microsoft’s love, after all, but the money is more than welcome ;)

And as a matter of corporate pride, let me congratulate Gianugo and Sally, who contributed quite a lot towards this agreement!

I am also happy to learn that all issues concerning Microsoft-funded contributions to POI made by Sourcesense have been resolved to the satisfaction of all parties.