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Posts Tagged ‘ internet ’

I’m not really a city girl. But I’ve known that all along about myself. Serene wrote about how she felt at home in Saigon since she’s used to the hustle and bustle of the metropolis back in the US, but it’s never sat well with me. I come from a town where you can get most places by bicycle and where it’s easy enough to get out of the city to places where you are completely alone, so understandably, living in Saigon has been a bit of a shock for me.

Today, I awoke to the sounds of birds chirping. I can’t remember the last time that happened. In the past few months I’ve been opening my eyes to the sounds of traffic, horns, construction, street vendors, etc. I hadn’t realized what an abrupt awakening that was until this morning.

Right now we’re in Sapa, which is just about as far north in Vietnam as you can get, very close to the Chinese border. Prior to that, we were on Cat Ba Island, located in the stunningly beautiful Halong Bay. In addition to a lack of people and noise, it is pretty difficult to find a reliable internet connection (or one at all).  So my apologies for the halt in posts – I’d like to blame it all on the lack of internet but we’ve also been having a blast hiking, kayaking and exploring the area. It’s really refreshing to put the technology away and fully enjoy the natural world around you, even if it’s forced upon you. Regrettably, we will be leaving this pocket of paradise to return to the city tomorrow (this time, it’s Hanoi). While I will be happy to have access to the World Wide Web again, I would give it all up for the beauty and solitude that we have found in the far reaches of Northern Vietnam. Back to the city it is.

Overlooking Butterfly Valley in Cat Ba National Park, in Halong Bay.

One of the first things we have to do each time we hit the ground in a new country is try to re-establish connections with the world. The two most critical components of that are getting reliable internet access and local cellphones. In Seoul, the cellphones were the easy part, and while we never really did figure out the ‘reliable’ thing, the wireless in the guest house served us reasonably well. Istanbul has been much more of a clusterfuck.

We’d hoped that upon moving into our new flat we’d find a plethora of open wireless access points, but to our dismay we only see a handful of weak signals from locked networks. Through a series of gestures, grunts, some really awful German on my part and some equally bad English on our landlords part, we concluded that:

  1. We don’t have internet.
  2. If we had internet it would be DSL; Having DSL set up requires a Turkish passport.
  3. We don’t have a Turkish passport.
  4. There may or may not need to be some cables run somewhere, or there is now or will be wireless in the building?
  5. Someone will come Tuesday Wednesday Saturday and set up DSL. have us sign papers? give us a pin code?? send us on a quest to slay a dragon??!

If that wasn’t bad enough, mobile phones in Turkey are also rediculiously complex.
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