All posts by Mark

I'm a full-stack Linux consultant from the UK specializing in high performance systems, DNS and databases. I have also written and lead teams producing a number of web/mobile apps. I'm fluent in English and Turkish.

Work today

I’ve spent quite a productive day in the Divinity Faculty library with about 20 books trying to finalize what I’m going to be doing my dissertation on. I met up with my supervisor earlier and we decided to do it about the word group based on “righteous” in a set of Psalms written about 80-40BC and how the usage in that compares to that of Paul in the New Testament. I’ve got lots and lots of books out of the library to allow me to start work, including the latest critical edition of the text of the Psalms of Solomon which was published in 1895… Not much work has been done on this book of late!

Tonight, myself and Patrick will be going to grad hall at Jesus College which should be good fun. We met up with some people from Holy Trinity and Toby and studies 1 Peter today at lunch time in Greek which was quite scary because it reminded me how little Greek I know. Oh well! I should be coming home on Thursday but I’m not sure at what time.

Sausages and pseudepigraphical works

χαÏ?ις Ï€Ï?ος τον βλογον ΜαÏ?κου

Decided to change my blog title to something a little more Biblical and Greek after Patrick’s influence of the last few days. We spent a while this evening looking at the league of reformed bloggers which is rather strange and in some places disturbing. One of the sites had a list of “‘Pelagian’ links” down the side including YWAM for example.

Last night we had Yumi over for some dinner which was really good fun. I made a stir-fry with anything we could find in sainsbury’s on special offer. Today we had sausages with some weird curry source and some weird brown rice. By lunchtime tomorrow myself and Patrick will have eaten 15 slices of ham and 8 large sausages each in the space of 24 hours.

I spent today in the library looking at various Jewish writings from between the end of the Old Testament and the beginning of the New to decide what to do my dissertation on. Probably something to do with some Psalms attributed to Solomon but written about 50bc, but hopefully I’ll work out what tomorrow or in the next few days. ttfn!

Back to Cambridge

Sorry for the general slowness of updates the past few days but I’ve not really been doing much of note. I’ve read a few Terry Pratchett books and I read a wonderful book by Tony Anthony called “Taming the Tiger”. Basically; he was a kung fu world champion but did some bad things and got put into a Turkish prison. While he was there, he came to know about Jesus and became a Christian and helped many other people in the prison become Christians too. After he got out he returned to England, but was put in prison again for accidentally killing a lady in a car crash. It’s good to see that he is honest about the things he still struggles with and about how life is not all roses when you’re a Christian. Not that other books hide that but they don’t tend to show it quite as well as he does.

On Saturday I went up to London to Ellie’s party. It was really good fun; the main party finished about 1am but we stayed up watching some films after that. I went to bed about 3:30am but some people stayed up until 5 or 6 I think. I went to her church in the morning which was the local Anglican church. It was really good to see the work it’s doing out there in London and it was a really nice service about how God will be challenging people who claim to be “religious” but aren’t following him (reading from John 3:1-16). After that, we had a BBQ in her garden with a few people who remained from the party and also her parents, and then I headed up to Cambridge to stay with Patrick. I went to Eden in the evening and it was another really good service.

Today I’ve started work on my dissertation reading. I’m still not too sure what I’ll be doing it on, however I think it might be something to do with looking at righteousness and justification in Paul and comparing it with its use in some literature written a bit before that in Greek. I’ll be staying up in Cambridge until Wednesday or Thursday, so if you’re in Cambridge at the moment and would like to see me just give me a ring or an email and we’ll see if we can meet up.

Cycling

Had a wonderful time yesterday afternoon cycling around Greenham Common with Jim. It’s such a large place – used to be a US airforce base until the troops left in the early 90’s and since then it’s been demolished and they’ve put in nature reserves and gravel footpaths. We had a nice long cycle around the place on our mountain bikes just playing around on the piles of gravel and things like that and stopping every few minutes to have a chat or change bikes.

Anyway, I was riding Jim’s bike on the way back to the car and I’m not too sure what happened, but I must have touched one of the breaks (on his bike they bite a lot more than on mine) and this caused the bike to stop with me carrying on going forwards. I flew over the handlebars, and fortunately put my hands out as I skidded a few meters along the gravel (last time Jim did this he didn’t put his hands out and ended up with gashes all down his chin). I cut my right elbow quite deeply, bashed my left wrist so I can’t really use it at the moment and have minor cuts on all my other limbs but other than that I’m fine. I managed to cycle the mile back to the car and drive the few miles back to the house. When my mother saw my right elbow she fainted and wanted to take me to the hospital/doctors but I just picked the bits of gravel out and we bandaged it ourselves. Oh well it was good fun biking while it lasted.

Reading, hacking, sleeping

Again a rather boring few days although I’ve been doing some interesting stuff. Read “Chasing the Dragon” which is a really awesome book about a Christian working with druggies in Hong Kong – a really recommended read. I’ve also just started re-reading “The fifth elephant” by Pratchett as I’ve not read anything by him in a while and I just love his books.

I also started writing a program to keep a list of friends I really ought to write a letter or email to – it stores a list of them and the last time I sent them something and the last time I received something from them and tells me who I should write to. Development with KDE is really easy and because of kabc I can integrate it with the photos and so on stored in the address book so the infomation retrieval is very simple… I’m actually starting to like C++ which is a very scary thought.

I spent yesterday fixing problems with the cluster at home. I built this last year and it worked reasonably throughout the year but broke recently. I’ve got dhcp with failover and dynamic dns updating running, and also failover samba, ldap syncing across the network and fixed a problem with zope that I couldn’t figure out last summer. Also been trying to fix some problems with drbd clustered disks. I found a really great tool for syncing my laptop to my computer called unison which seems to work very well. I’m always impressed by how easy it is to do such powerful things for free with linux. Now to start work on the office cluster I suppose.

Return

I’ve spent the past few days at home not really doing very much. On Sunday I got a laptop and I’ve been installing Gentoo Linux on it. Hopefully I’ll be able to use it a lot next year as I think I will have to spend a lot of time in Tyndale House library and the UL doing research for my dissertation.

I went to church on Sunday; it was very good to see lots of people again although strange to see how some of the young ones had grown since Easter when I was last at home. Not much to report other than that though – life has carried on without me. Met Jim on Saturday night and went down the pub for a catch up. We then went back to his and watched some Ali G – such a funny guy although some things go too far. His interview with Posh and Becks was hilarious though!

Safely home

Well I’m back home at last and have been spending the day trying to unpack, catch up on emails and msn and sort out my photos as well. I’ve just put about 40 more photos from China up in the gallery including some panoramas – more to come, especially some great wall ones but they’re not quite ready yet.

Anyway, several people have asked about the Korean family. It turns out after much negotiation that they actually wanted to sleep on the floor, so they just had two of the large spare rooms and slept on the floor whilst we slept in nice comfy beds. On the Monday, Ellie came to stay with us; it was really nice to see her again and she seemed to have had a good time in her travels around China.

We went into town about 11ish, met Jenny and then did the tourist thing around the forbidden city. It was really amazing, but I was feeling quite tired so I couldn’t really appreciate it too much. When I had had a 15 minute nap in the gardens however, I revived somewhat and we then went home and cooked dinner.

On Tuesday, we (myself, Ruth, Anna and Ellie) went to the great wall. We found the craziest driver in the world. We argued him down to a reasonable price of 90RMB/person unlike the 400RMB/person that many people seemed to pay. His people-carrier had one spare seat in it so he was forever picking up pretty Chinese ladies and taking them along with us to wherever they wanted to go. This, coupled with the heavy traffic meant that it took us three hours to get to the wall. His driving was seriously scary though, he would just go over the grass when there was a traffic jam and he had a siren and loud speaker fitted to his car so that he could scare all the other road users. Anyway, we eventually reached the Great Wall.

The first thing that strikes you about the Great Wall is that it is well… a great wall… There’s not really any other way to describe it. At 3,946 miles long it’s about 6 times longer than the height of the UK. However, the second thing you notice is that it is full of people trying to sell things. In our four hour walk we must have been asked if we wanted to buy some water or a t-shirt about upwards of 100 times. It’s not just that but these people follow you along the wall and frequently refuse to go unless you buy something from you. Fortunately we realized this reasonably early on and made sure that they understood we were not going to buy anything at all from them. It’s not just the hawkers that you have to watch out for but also the people setting up toll booths anywhere along the wall. We had to pay to enter and we asked if this would be sufficient to get us up to the Wall itself (using the cable car) and along the wall and were assured that it would be. We then found that we had to pay for the cable car, several stops along the wall we also had to pay to go through and then the bridge across the river. What annoyed me the most was not that they did this but that they didn’t tell us beforehand. In England if you have to pay for something, you would be told beforehand so you could choose to do it or not. In China at least in their treatment of tourists they don’t seem to care about this and keep on adding in extra charges. It’s just decency that you say beforehand how much something will cost. Anyway, the wall itself was amazing but was rather spoilt by these people.

On the last day we spent the day in Beijing central just pottering around the shops and buying things. In the evening we went out to a very expensive restaurant and had Peking duck, the best that Jenny had ever had and so therefore probably the best in the world. After this, we went to an acrobatic show which was simply amazing – see some of the pictures I took. It’s the Chinese idea that if you practise at something long enough (ie from birth) you will be good at it, and in this it seemed very true. A good way to end our trip to China. We had some issues getting back into the house and had to wait outside for about an hour but otherwise it was fine.

On the road again…

Wow, it’s been a long time since I’ve been on a computer long enopugh to write a peroper blog entry and I fear that this will be but a brief sketch of what we’ve been upto in our travels. I’m writing this from a korean internet cafe in Beijing after having met three English people at church this morning, all of whom knew some of my friends from England… Amazing how you seem to have mutual friends with people almost wherever you go.

Anyway, we left Hainan on the morning of the 20th. For a start, the bus to take us to the airport was 30 min late, and the flight wa s30 min earlier than we were expecting so we were in quite a rush. The driver got us to the airport in 20 minutes whereas it would typically take about an hour from our luxurious hotel to get to the airport. Incidentally, Miss World was once held at this hotel.

Upon arrival at the airport, we were confronted with the problem that although we all had tickets, James hadn’t been assigned a seat on the aircraft due to some sillyness on the travel agent’s behalf. Why anyone would think yuou wanted an air ticket without a seat I’m not sure but in ther end for about 30ukp he managed to purchase a seat on the aircraft. We then discovered that of the 9 of us travelling, 5 were in first class whichwas really nice. Because of the bad weather (another typhoonoon had struck ShenZhen) we grounded at the airport at the top of Hainan Island for an hour or two, before finally arriving at SZ a few hours late.

We stayed in ShenZhen on the evening of the 20th with James; brother, Max in a really sweet appartment in the middle of shenZhen. His Chinese girlfriend, Sindy and himself treated us to a really supurb mid-afternoon lunch at the local hotpot resturant. After that we wandered about the shops for a bit – he lives rigfht next to the main shopping district of ShenZhen, specializing in gadgets so I went and drooled over various pieces of electronic equipment whilst Annas and Ruth drooled over bags or hats or whatever it is that they admire. In the evening we said good bye to Anna Oxford and then we all went out and met Daniel Kwong, a friend from 2 years back in Cambridge who came over to SZ from HK specially to see us. It was good to see him again, although getting up at 5am had made us all quite tired so we were not in the most talkative of moods and just went to a KFC. We then went to bed about midnight witht the monsoon rain carrying on through the night (As usual, it seems that whenever we travel with Ben, the day is a total wash-out).

The next day, the weather was fine and the three of us set off on our first proper solo journey – catching a taxi to take us the the airport so we could get to Shanghai. We did this successfully after flying around the pavement and finally resorting to looking the words up in my Chinese dictionary – the cab driver must have been having quite a laugh or been seriously dumb not to realize that we were wanthing togo to the airport when we were standing by the side of the road with our passports, airline tickets and big bags though… The flight was very smooth, although it was very cloudy so we could see nothing of China as we flew the thousand miles up to Shanghai in two hours. There was however, a reallyfunny comedy program on the TVs which we watched as we travelled.

We then went to see Yang’s family in Shnaghai, and what can I say – they were so nice and kind and generous. Yang and Weng live in one two-bedroom appartment and his eldest son, John, and his wife and son live in a neighbouring apartment, also with two bedrooms. The apartments were very plushly decorated. We stayed with John and his son went to live with Yang. On several nights, Weng cooked the most amazing dinners and the whole family was there – it was a really awesome time. However, I will write more about Shanghai and our experiences there later.

On the day when I was ill (I had eaten some dodgie food in centeral Shanghai, I suppose, and vomited several times), Ruth and Anna successfully managed to purchase three sleeper train tickets to get us to Beijing on the morning of the 27th. It was a really good journey; for 35ukp we travelled for 12 hours, arriving at Beijing at about 7am. We then had some breakfast and I had a little explore before we got in the taxi to go to the the place where we are currently staying. There is quite a long story behind this, but basically whilst Ruth and I were in Cambridge last year, we made good friends with a Korean girl called Borah. Her aunt happens to be living in Beijing, and the Korean church which she attends owns two seriously nice appartments for visitors to stay in. We were very shocked by the generosity in letting us have one of these and even more shocked when we arrived.

We arrived by taxi and were met by Borah’s 15 yearold cousin who is fluent in 4 languages, one of which is English. She and her father took us to the appartment which is in part of Beijing unofficially called Korean town, for somewhat obvious reasons. We opened the door to the appartment,and what a sight met our eyes! It is really difficult to explain, you need to see pictures, but the only wors to describe it is ‘pad’ and that does not do it justice. It’s probably larger than my house, having a large sitting room/dining room with several large leather chairs and a sofa. There is one double-bedroom with en-suite and two other bedrooms with two single beds in and a lot of floor space. There are two additional wash-rooms and a large kitchen, and then several other large rooms which seem to have no real purpose. The place could easily hold 20 people sleeping. However, it’s not just a large house, it is exquisitly decorated with wood finishings and in the korean style – it’s simply amazing.

We unpacked and then went into town to meet Jenny, a girl from one of the camps we did. She took us to Tiananmen square to see the flag lowering ceremony (which we missed as we were reading the paper – I thought there would at least be a trumpet fanfare or something of that sort, but apparently they just silently lower the flag. We then walked about Beijing, ate at a fast-dumpling place for 26rmb (1.60ukp) for 4 people – seriously cheap by Chinese standards and then looked at someof the shops. I acquired a set of 10 postcards (at last!) from a street vendor who originally asked for 45rmb. When I offered her 5rmb (about 0.35ukp) she laughed so I tried to walk away, however she clung to my arm lowering the price until it reached the 5 I originally offered. I;’m sure the going rate is about 3rmb anyway.

Haggling is becomign increasingly addictive; I find myself haggling for things which I don’t evenwant just to get the adrenaline kick from getting somethi ng seriously cheap. I bought a set of 10 small kites from a street seller in tiananmen square yesterday for 2rmb, not even wanting them, but for 13pence, how can you loose? I have bought a lot of traditional Chinese stuff like fans and materials and also a few clothes – hopefully more to follow soon.

As we were wandering around Beijing, we were invited to a very random art exhibition by the artist himself and then went down a souviner street with various watches and clocks with Mao’s waving and swastikers and all that stuff. There were also lots of other things to be bought there. Getting the subway back at 9pm was fun althouygh we didn’t realize that one of the lines closed at 9:30 and we only just made this train. The nearest station is about 10 min by taxi from our pad, so we had to get a taxi back which was really difficult because none of the taxi drivers seemed to know any roads or even be awear we were in Beijing. In England, if you get a taxi you expect them to be vaguely awear of the roads around the area but apparently it doesnt matter in China (the same is true of Shnaghai and Shenzhen). There were also a number of locals with cars offering their services and the ubiquitous cycle-taxi holding two people. After asking about 10 taxi drivers if they knew where this road was we finally managed to get home. We waited up a while for Borah to arrive but when it turned out she wouldnt arrive for a while longer, we went to sleep.

I was awoken at 7:30 in the morning by 2 elderly Korean ladies, a middle-aged couple and a 2 year-old baby at the foot of my bed and trying to communicate with my in Korean and Chinese. When that failed they finally realized that I could probably speak English and so explained that they were expecting to live in this house. We spoke to the people who look after the house, and they were not expecting these people either. We’ve been out since then and met up with Borah at Korean church and then the international serive, so I wonder what the situation is like now…

Anyway, I really out to go and I will update more about Shanghai at another time. Hopefully Ellie will be arriving at 5:30am tomorrow morning, and then we’ll spend some time togeather before the three of us come back to England on the evening of the 1st.

Quick update

Hello there, sorry for the absence of bloggidge for the past few days, there was a typhon warning on the night of the 12th so we stayed up all night phoning parents and cleaning the classrooms. The camp was meant to finish on the 14th but the ShenZhen government ordered that all children at summer camps must be evacuated home to their parents. More about the typhoon to follow with some pictures as well but it was very exciting.

We spent a day in Shen Zhen after the typhoon hit and went shopping in the center, it’s amazing to see the shops there, almost like the middle of London or some other big city but with lots of indoor electronics markets where you could but any electronic device in the world. I bought a tripod for my camera (70rmb, 5ukp), a 128mb usb memory card for the same price and some memory for my camera for 10ukp – all very good deals compared to the prices in the UK.

The day after, we spent the day with the American team, catching up on old friends and had a Meeting which was really good. We then went to the airport and flew to Hainan which is a tropical island on the south of China with wonderfully sandy beaches where we have spent an eventful few days and had much fun on the beaches and in the city nearby. I will write more about this when time permits. Tomorrow we fly back to Shen Zhen (only 9 of us remain here, the other 20 or so left at 6am this morning). Myself, Ruth and Anna will then be staying in Shen Zhen for a night with our friend James’ brother and then flying to Shanghai to meet Yang and family on the 21st. There is much more to write but right now I need to go and pack before our wakeup call at 5:30 am tomorrow morning.

Another day in China

We had a “day off” today which means that we didn’t teach but took the children to the same water park aswe did just over 2 weeks ago. It was good fun and everyone got a little sunburnt and very wet. The day was not particularly relaxing, however we spent some time having fun with the children. We’re just generally tired at the moment, however this camp finishes on the 14th and then on the 15th we’re meant to be jetting off as a team to Hainan island for debriefing. This is some tropical island on the south of China which is a popular resort for tourists from all over the world. We’ll be going there with the American team for 4 days and then back to Shenzhen to go off to Shanghai and start our tour of China. We’ve met several people from Beijing at this camp and they’re very keen to meet up with us when we go there. We watched the Bourne Supremacy tonight, which was as brilliant as I remember it to be.

The hour-long bus journey to the water world, which is in the same district of Shenzhen as the school is, reminded me about the pace at which China is developing. I recall the same bus ride about 17 days ago and several areas had been totally changed in the process. This district of shenzhen was non-existant as little as 8 years ago, and yet it is probably 10 times the size of Cambridge. Everywhere you go, you see builders, although like most builders you never actually see them do any work; they just sit there but somehow the work progresses at a tremendous rate. The school which we are now teaching at houses 7000 pupils and has all the facilities they would require including a full indoor basketball stadium seating maybe 1000. The first student arrived in 2002 and yet this is classed as a relatively old school by Shenzhen standards. The 20 year old school we were at before was considered ancient. A similar rate of development is occuring all over China, fueled, I susspect by the cheap labour which is caused by the vast labour market avaliable here. It really is impossible to describe – perhaps China should be labeled “Under Construction”.

Because China is one vast building site, it has quite a bad reputation amongst those people living close to it, specifically those from Hong Kong. Ask anyone from Hong Kong what they think of China, and in a word most will say “dirty”. This is true to some extent, beauty is seldom given much consideration compared to speed of construction, at least in the suburbs of Shenzhen, and also there are many muddy building sites which tend to spill dirt onto the roads leaving quite a few muddy puddles around. It doesn’t really give China the nicest look, however it is not as bad as most people from Hong Kong, would make it out to be.

Should have another Meeting tomorrow although Books are quite hard to come by – hopefully have another two dozen arriving in a few days, as those we got before were already taken by people on this camp. There is great hunger here and not just because the canteen is not very good.