Cybernetics

May 11, 2010

7 wonders of the world

Filed under: statistics, travelling — Tags: , , — palec @ 12:25 pm

Maybe it is because I am approching 30 and need to start thinking of acheiving great things in my life that I am currently drawn to great acheivements that some people have done.

And I never really seemed to remember what were the real 7 wonders, so thanks I thought I would have a quick check at my facts, and I was very surprised to discover on my first search that the eurostars was concidered one of them.

That is of course since many different lists exist.

And this was the list of the American society of civil engineering. The original being refered to nowdays as the 7 wonders of antic world. Other interestings lists include the 7 wonders of midle ages of of the modern world.

Here are a few interesting lists anyway:

7 wonders of ancient world:

One interesting one is definitly the Colossus of Rhodes, since I have also been very interested in the sea recently. And I would be very interested I like the idea of boats having to go under a statue to go in a Port.

Here is a list of 7 wonders of the American society of Civil Engineers:

Wonder Date Started Date Finished Location
Channel Tunnel December 1, 1987 May 6, 1994 Strait of Dover, between the United Kingdom and France
CN Tower February 6, 1973 June 26, 1976, tallest freestanding structure in the world 1976–2007. TorontoOntarioCanada
Empire State Building January 22, 1930 May 1, 1931, Tallest structure in the world 1931–1967. First building with 100+ stories. New YorkNYU.S.
Golden Gate Bridge January 5, 1933 May 27, 1937 Golden Gate Strait, north of San FranciscoCaliforniaU.S.
Itaipu Dam January 1970 May 5, 1984 Paraná River, between Brazil andParaguay
Delta Works/Zuiderzee Works 1950 May 10, 1997 Netherlands
Panama Canal January 1, 1880 January 7, 1914 Isthmus of Panama

Interesting to see read about the CN Tower and the Panama chanel, although this list will most likely be the first to be outdated, since most of these buildings have since already been shadowed by others such as the incredible Burj Khalifa.

But the following list would seem to be the list which most people would remember, since it includes the great wall of china, Machu Pichu, the Pyramids and the Colosseum.

Wonder Date of construction Location
Great Wall of China 5th century BCE – 16th century CE China
Petra c.100 BCE Jordan
Christ the Redeemer Opened 12 October 1931 Brazil
Machu Picchu c.1450 CE Peru
Chichen Itza c.600 CE Mexico
Colosseum Completed 80 CE Italy
Taj Mahal Completed c.1648 CE India
Great Pyramid of Giza (Honorary Candidate) Completed c.2560 BCE Egypt

I still find it facinating how peoples ideas can transform in some great projects. And therefore create great positive things.

March 16, 2010

Cerda the engineer

Filed under: travelling — Tags: , , — palec @ 2:41 am

2010 is the year of Cerda in Barcelona.

And this is the second time this year, I go and see an exhibition about him. After the CCCB in January, this time it is at the Museum del historia de Barcelona, next to the town hall.

I was already very impressed by the previous one. Cerda and the Exiemple. Which really showed, how he created the famously square looking town which everyone can know. Which really helps you understand Barcelona. Which shows you how it works, how people move in it. How it grows, how people interract. Statics about the best blocks to live in. The most dense, the most mixed. Comparison with many other grided towns. I came out of the previous exhibition very impressed by the analysis of the town. The ghost underground stations. And this gave me a true new vision of Barcelona.

But I was suprised to learn much more once again in this exhibition.

This exhibition was much less focused on todays Barcelona. But really focused on Cerda himself, his time, the motives behind creating this town, the 1850s to 1890s. A true understanding, not on todays Barcelona, but more on how a few good men. Engineer, Mayor and the people in power, but to totally transform a town. Go against the authority of the military and decide to cut open and reshape an entire town.

The original plans to create the “Road Princesse”, which cuts the Barrio Gotic in 2. Was a true revelation for me.

How could a few good men, change, plan, convince, enginneer, a plan which would knock out half the town. This is probably very similar to what Haussman must have done in Paris.

But for me I think it ment much more. Maybe it is the time in my life, the fact the my brother is a town planner, and that I am an enginner with little power, and doing projects with little impact.

But I do feel that there always needs to be some people who need to get in there and convince to do the great changes which are necessary. And that if you have the right arguments, that you know that you are right then you need to convince.

I was very impressed by the atmosphere created in this exhibition. Because it really showed the time in which the decisions were taken. That even nearly 200 years ago, before electricity, before trains, before cinema, and a huge amount of other things which feel which are part of todays world and our own history, which hasn’t happend yet for them, the first world war, before bombs, tv, cars. Some people really knew what was necessary, some politician could still really make impressive decisions and change and reshape not only the distant future in which we now are. But they very near future in which they lived, their present.

When you look at that huge pannoramic photo of the town in 1860, the maps, the old pictures animated in the film. You could really see the way the town must have looked, and felt like to live in, not today like in the previous exhibition but in those days. With the walls surounding the town, with the life expectancy stats, the air they must have been breathing.

Well done to them, and I hope I get to do something usefull in my life time, like all the people who worked on this managed to do.

I will never look at the center of Barcelona in the same way again.

March 7, 2010

Catalan

Filed under: travelling — Tags: , , , — palec @ 3:27 pm

Nearly 4 months already in Barcelona, and What can I say.

Well one important thing for the people here is the Catalan thing…

I have to say when I first arrived in Barcelona, I had no idea that people here talked Catalan. I had heard of the language, but couldn’t have said where it was spoken. It could have been spoken in Greece, South America or Estonia for all I knew (and cared). I must have been told though many times during my spanish lessons. People who had been here must have told me, that “Spanish” is in fact Castillan. I had even been to Barcelona without realizing that people actually talked another language than spanish. I guess it just never ticked.

The plain idea of people talking another language than spanish in spain was therefore a bit of a surprise.

It was simple arithemetics for me: France = French, England = English, Germany = German, Spain = Spanish.

But I was wrong, spain is in fact a multi language country a bit like Switzerland, with multiple languages. Which makes everything here, just slightly more complicated.

So here I was in Spain. Hoping to freshen up my language skills a little, since one of my prime objective here was really to get pretty fluent in another language.

I was initially really happy. That is such an opportunity for me. Not only can I learn 1, but 2 languages, during my stay here. I will become not trilingual but quadrilingual.

Well 4 months later, and my frustration really starts kicking in, since I still cannot communicate in spanish very well. So let alone Catalan. I have learnt to my expense that the learning curve, is in fact really pretty steep.

I have to say my spanish is getting better, and I do feel like I understand a lot more. I have gone from nearly nothing to a reasonable understanding level. And do hope to become pretty fluent in the next few months if I keep working hard on it.

But learning spanish is already pretty hard work by itself. So how about the Catalan. I have been here for 4 month and have hardly had time to learn the local language.

It seems here that in Barcelona, over 80% of the people have Catalan as they mother tongue. And as long as you stick to Spanish, you will never really be fully accepted. Simple things really, you can’t read the sign posts, you can’t read a menu, news papers, when people here talk between each other. Which means that it is always that little bit more difficult to get yourself understood, and to understand what is going on around you.

Spanish in Barcelona is a bit like talking English in a none English speaking country. It will be the language people use for work, but by no means the local language. It is already an effort for most people to talk Spanish, so let alone English or French.

So this is my own experience about this. But what does it really show about the Catalan situation in general. Well from my foreign point of view, it feels like it is much more difficult to adapt in this area than a Spanish talking Area such as Madrid. And that therefore a much less welcoming area to foreigners. And the more foreign people move in, the more the Catalan people seem to use the Catalan language to protect themself against ‘us’, the none Catalan talking people.

Is it very much the ‘us’ thing. Those who talk it, and those who don’t.

Spanish people, will learn it pretty quickly, so will be more easily accepted, than those who first need to learn Spanish, and then Catalan.

It is just an extra step to make, in order to be accepted here.

Of course, you don’t really need Catalan to live here. If the people here, have an interest in you or in a skill you have, they will adapt to you. It is probably a similar thing in all places in the world. In order to be part of a group, you need them to need you, or else you need to be able to communicate easily with them and they will easily find a use in you. It is the first thing really, if you make that effort, then they may try and do the same with you. And if you talk they language, then they will need you to communicate with the others, since they wont be able to talk the other languages.

And this really shows the importance of language in all conflicts around the world. And of all conflicts in general. The ones who can communicate with the one in power will then become the middle man, and will be the one which everyone needs.

This got me researching a little and I found interresting facts about languages:

By far the most spoken would be chinese mandari, although I thought it was english [1].

For French, though it really depends on how you count the number of people who can talk the language. Since a lot more people use French as they working language than as they mother tongue [2].

Catalan is spolen by over 11 million, which is more than Swidish, and nearly as much as Greek, and is placed 75th in the list of most spoken native mother tongue according to [3]

All this is pretty interresting and new to me. There are many other things which come into account when arriving in a country, and trying to adapt. And much more to the Catalan issue and politics than the language. But as far as I am concerned, and for now I will just have to put my head down, and study as much as I can, and as quickly as I can, and as many languages as I can. And maybe if others did the same then this would change a lot in the way people see things, and communicate.

July 6, 2008

Back from Argentina

Filed under: life in paris, travelling — Tags: — admin @ 11:24 pm

Argentina was lovely. Met wonderfull people learnt a bit of spanish, and fell in love with the country.

I finaly understand those people who go off, and can never come back to Europe. Some people may find them unsettled. But how if they have found something there which will make them mre settled than we ever will be in our own country.

I think I have also learnt a lot. As we say in french ‘les voyages forme la jeunesse’, basicly “you learn a lot through what you experience while travelling young.

Pictures of the trip will follow soon.

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