Sunday, April 6, 2008

First day in Dubai - Doing the tourist thing

Sunday, March 30

This is the day to be a tourist and get the lay of the land. I normally first take the city tour in any new city, but the time is compressed, so I have to do my own. I take a hotel shuttle to the three destinations it offers. The beach, the mall, and the modern Souk (bazaar).

The Jumeira Beach Park

For 5 Dhs. (less than $1.50) you get access to crystal clear, white sand beach. The beach is very well maintained and quite busy. There are fast food restaurants and a small shop to accommodate your beach essentials including your favorite ice cold drinks. To my surprise I hear a lot of people speaking Farsi. Which reminds me that Persian new year was just last week and they are here on holidays.

I decided not to wait for the shuttle and took the taxi to the mall. Toyota Camry seems to be a popular taxi cab around here. The cost is reasonable and the air conditioners are a must!




Mall of the Emirates

This mall reminds me of the Dallas Galeria Mall and then some. The stock photo below from the website best shows how the mall is attached to the "L" shaped indoor ski slope. The only one indoor ski slope in the world. More on that later.

Source: http://www.skidxb.com/English/facts_eng.htm?mid=1&sid=2

Driving back from the Mall to the hotel you realize the amount of construction going on around the city. It is mega construction on steroids. Tower cranes in 100s is no exaggeration. Apparently the mall above is not big enough and they are working on a new "Dubai Mall" where at the center of the mall sits Burj Dubai, the tallest man made structure in the world.

Source:http://www.dubaicityguide.com

Here are more construction sites along the way back to the hotel:


And in case you are interested, here is a real estate ad for the Burj Dubai. One bedroom 741 sqft, real cheap ;-)

Now, here is the big picture of what they are developing in Dubai. The islands are developed by filling and piling rocks in the Persian Gulf to construct man-made islands such as the Palm Island resort and the World Islands.

I went back to the hotel and setup Internet in my room (wired) at the cost of 24 Dhs. per night. I answered some email and decided to upload the pictures to my blog. Normally that is not an issue, unless there is a language barrier.

Souk Madinat, Jumeirah
After a short nap, I took the shuttle to the Souk. Traditionally, souks are the hub of trade, but this one is a modern design capturing the feel of the old.





and walkin gfurther around the Palace hotel from the beach there is the incredible view of the Burj Al Arab, acknowledged as the best hotel in the world. Of course if you wish to visit you would have to spend minimum $1,000 per night , or drop by to have a cup of cofee for $50, but you better have prior reservations weeks in advance, because we could not even get in. check out this month's specials;-)



Final thought of the day
I returned back to the hotel, crawled in bed exhausted; my mind was racing and I could not sleep. It is amazing how far this country has come in such a short period of time!! First thought might be, "Well, they have oil", but so do many other nations in the region. Later on I learned that only 10% of their income is generated from oil. Another interesting fact is that only 10% of the population is made of natives. The rest are expatriates from around the world. Corporations and finance is what makes things happen around here, such as Halliburton that just moved their headquarters to this area. While corporations save on taxes, locals benefit from the wealth at hand and finance what might attractive to people and the region. People get excited and come to visit this destination and the circle repeats itself.

While New York moves about its normal fast pace, Hamburg considers building a harbor to attract new businesses, but Dubai is moving at the speed of sound.

Saturday, April 5, 2008

First impression upon arrival to Dubai







Oh my god!!!!



I had been in this region many decades ago in 1970s, but my eyes could not believe the amount of growth this city has taken in such a short period of time. I let the picture from the airport speak for itself. Maybe I should buy that Porche right from the airport to save money on taxi fees.

But first thing is first. Go to an ATM and get some cash. Local ATMs are my prefered way of exchanging money. ATMs converse in English, or the local language and at the same time you exchange money automatically at a bank rather than an exchange rate office. The "Derham" is the UAE curency and the exchange rate is $1 to 3.6 Dhs. Make a note of this because I'll make some references about how much things cost in the future.

Now, testing the phone for data, then signal. Everthing works!!! :-)

There is opportunity to swap the SIM card for your phone with a local SIM card to allow the local company to take over the communication process.

Also if you decide to swap SIM cards, there is a need for the locals to "unlock" your phone system from your local providers control to accommodate the new SIM card. There is an additional fee for that process sometimes the cost is as much as $50.

but considering the cost and the short stay I decided against that. Even though it would save money on calls and data transfer. here is what I will pay thanks to ATT setup.
  • Phone calls from Dubai to US: monthly fee $5.00 and a roaming charge of 30 cents per minute. Ouch!!
  • Data communication such as text and email: $20 per month pro-rated for the time used. So one week of use should be just $5. That's a great deal.
Now I am ready to catch my ride to the hotel, but first I have to find my ride. No problem, there is 100s of folks waiting to great you to the shuttle bus for each given hotel. Provided you have made the prior arrangement before arrival. The airport is very busy and the trafic outside the airport puts New York to shame. Exhausted from the trip I checked in at Ibis Hotel and went straight to bed. Going rate for the hotel is 565 dh per night. I discovered later that hotels in Dubai are not cheap.



Monday, March 31, 2008

Last leg, on the way to Dubai

Saturday, March 29
1:45 pm Hamburg time.










To facilitate the last leg of the trip, there is plenty of digital gadgets on board to keep busy. From Movies, and videos, to destination information, music library of many genre, and a variety of video games. So I decided to watch a movie. How about North by Northwest (1959), a Hitchcock classic?

How about that!! A picture of New York central station!! Well that looks familiar ;-)

It has also been a lot of fun watching the GPS live-view to see where we are at any given time. I have captured some pictures aalong the way at 39,000 ft. that I'd like to add to Google Earth. Interestingly enough we'll pass by Baghdad and through Iran. Ironically, I was born in Iran nad have not been back for 30 years, and here I am just passing over the old neighborhood.


Here is a nice article on the airline magazine, Francis Ford Coppola is tired of comercial movie making and likes to focus on low-budget films. Now, that's our specialty in our schools. If it is good enough for the Godfather of film, it is good enough for us. Thanks to our Tech Coordinators' quick response, we have put a nice grant together for video editing capabilities at all Elem, MS, and HS to update existing systems. I am absolutely positive we will get this grant. So stay tuned, you are about to rub shoulders with Francis.



A couple of more music shuffles through clasics from ABBA and Bob Dylan and it is time to land and exit the plane. Over all it has been a very nice flight. I have adjustd to Dubai time and am tired and ready for a good night sleep. Wow, look at the 1st class!! they even get red roses. ... and here it is finally, the exit door. :-)


Sunday, March 30, 2008

Transit in Hamburg, Germany (2 hours)

Saturday 12:05 PM (7 hrs, 50 min. later)
Ouch, long flight:
Transit in Hamburg, Germany will just allow to hang around the airport transit, refresh, and get on board again. So let's checkout the airport:










The cellphone works, good sign!! Thanks to data upgrade just before the flight. $25 for one month, pro-rated, it should cost about $6 for the week. Phone upgrade to get phone calls overseas cost $5 per month, just a nice hook to get you to use it and pay roaming charge (30 cents per minute or so , ouch!!). There are other options such as buying a local card for international calls, or SIM cards locally. We'll see at the destination. Maybe I should have unlocked my phone by ATT before I left?? I guess they should be able to do that there also. Time will tell.









The airport is quiet, not lot of flights. I see an ad for Ford just above other fancy German cars. Cool, Detroit needs all the help it can get.









Even though the cigarette boxes are clearly labled with "Smoking will kill you", a step away there is a designated smoking area. Nothing but a sign, but this is Germany and everone follows the rules precisely!! Except the sign that "it will kill you", go figure!!


Speaking of killing, time that is, lets look at the paper. Notice the housing ads in the paper and future city plans for the new port (thanks to Google translation tool online). It looks like they are not too concerned about housing slow downs around here yet. Not many job offers on the paper, that's sad, but for sure they are looking for software engineers. They just need to spell it right ;-)


Let's check food prices. Well, here is what $6 gets you in Europe these days, a cup of fancy coffee:




Time to get back on-board heading toward Dubai.