Saturday, March 5, 2011

not posting anymore (at least for now)

I won't be posting for a while for personal reasons but I am updating my picasa account regularly:

https://picasaweb.google.com/petrovovitch

Friday, February 4, 2011

Free international calling to PCVs with Google Voice

Why I gladly surrender my digital life to the Google:

I don't how theirs is a profitable business model (probably because they're collecting dividends on my soul) but somehow Google Voice provides all the services of Skype (and more) for free.

The $10.00 is for calls made from the app to outside the US, not to numbers within. See note below.

The most relevant of which is the in-state phone number that can make and receive calls, if you have internet access of course. In-state means it's a US phone number at least and, if available, in your area code. While from the volunteers point of view this is pretty much the same thing as Skype, it's from the US caller's perspective that it's much simpler. The point is people can call you from their own phones, no computer necessary for them, and you can call them, from your internet connected computer, for free.

Note: In the picture there's a conspicuous $10.00 balance on the keypad. This is if you want to make international calls where international here means to phone numbers outside the US. Again making calls to any number in the United States from Google Voice/Gmail is completely free.

How to receive calls in Gmail

In addition to being able to make and receive calls with this number, that Google seemingly gifts to you, one can get and send text messages and receive voicemails. Text messages will be viewable in the Google Voice webapp and can be forward to your Gmail account. Voicemails will also viewable/audible in the Google Voice webapp and can be transcribed (by a computer not stenographer :p ) and sent to your Gmail account. That last feature is kind of gimmicky and doesn't work too well (as my experimental study with sample size 1 shows).

I don't work for, nor am I affiliated, with the Google in anyway (I don't even use Adsense as you can plainly see); just hopefully this helps lots of people stay in closer touch with their family and friends.

P.S. This post assumes you have Gmail. If you don't sign-up is free.

P.P.S. Some might have heard the a google is a number that is equal with 1 with 100 zeros behind it. That is not correct; it is a googol that equal to 1.0 x 10100 .

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Camera for the trip

Bought a compact digital camera for the trip which can do in-camera stitching of photos to create panoramas like this:


A feature uniquely suited for a 2 year stay in a country with picturesque landscapes no?

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Time Travel

Warning: this one will be a little philosophical and indulgent so feel free to skip it if you're like me and don't care for solipsistic bullshit.

1 week until I fly to Philadelphia and then to South Africa 2 days after that. I've gone out and bought up a gang of consumer junk over the past 2 weeks (Amazon Prime turned out to be very useful). I'm bringing more than I originally thought I would and probably more than I need (20 bars of soap?). Simultaneously I probably won't be prepared for most of the problems I'll have. The thought struck me today but it's probably just the coalescence of lots of disparate thoughts (and conversations) I've had throughout the past couple of weeks:

There will be very little infrastructure (e.g. paved roads, electrical grid, street signs).

It will be quieter (or louder).

There will be no clocks and by extension no punctuality.

There will be no grocery or department stores.

Will people be less rational?

A fun exercise is to commit to longterm memory some experience here (e.g. browsing the internet in your air-conditioned and lit room) while simultaneously imagining what the analogous activity in-country will be like. Then when you are in-country you recall that memory. It's like time travel and the only thing you need is a decent imagination!

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A few people I've told about this trip have urged me (semi-seriously) to look for investment opportunities in Uganda. At first it was an abhorrent idea but one can't help but wonder: can you emulate a business that is successful here and had it's beginnings in circumstances similar to those? For example Ford motor company provided cheap reliable motored transportation to a country that had no paved roads, street signs, and few gas stations. Not that I'm going to become Henry Uganda; it's just an example.

It's not as abhorrent an idea anymore because I realized that those magnanimous ideals that business magnates espouse here in the states are plausible there. What I mean to say is that the right business could actually contribute greatly to Uganda's GDP and therefore average standard of living. Something like cheap and reliable transportation for all would greatly increase average productivity (whatever that means). Something like cheap power for all, at least enough for house lights, would similarly enable Ugandans to be more productive and therefore garner higher wages in this quickly becoming global market.

On that note I was looking at prices for solar panels over there and a 65W panel is approximately $600 while here on Ebay I could purchase one for about $150. I imagine (based on almost no investigation) a more efficient business model could mitigate this price disparity. Either that or Ugandans are being taken advantage of. Bringing cheap power to the people; not such an opportunistic idea in the end.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Disclaimer:

I have no clue what 'Baganda' means.

I'm "moving" to Uganda on February 10th, 2010 to start my Peace Corps service. My personal service will consist of teaching high school kids Math. Further than that I don't know any particulars. I'll warn anyone reading this hoping to get an idea about what "enlisting" in the Peace Corps is like: leaving people in the dark is much in the style of the Peace Corps. I wasn't absolutely certain (though I was probably sure) that I was going until January 11th which is a month less a day from the morning of the flight to Africa.
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Some facts about the application process:

It takes a long time. I think I submitted the online application in September of 2009 and like I mentioned earlier I wasn't done until January 2011. Excepting a concern about Tuberculosis I completed all the steps quite promptly (and even the consequent exams) and still everything took over a year.

Advice 1: make sure that your doctors fill in the medical forms completely. My general practitioner did not give me a prostate exam the first time we met and didn't inform me (I only realized it after reviewing all that she had written).

Advice 2: If you are from a former Soviet Republic, like I am, your tuberculosis test will probably give a false positive because you were vaccinated for the disease. Be prepared to get a chest x-ray and have a discussion with the doctor about this. Note this could delay your travel for up to 9 months as that is how long the recommended course of treatment for tuberculosis is and even those who are only suspected of having the disease are encouraged to go through the course. My doctor did not recommend the course for me but don't take that as precedent.


When I was going through the application process (and being interviewed) I was given the impression that it was more competitive than in years prior because the recession forced people to look for non-traditional work. My friend went through the same interviews a year later and apparently was given the impression that it was again non-competitive and even more-so funding had increased. So I can't speak to how difficult it is to get in. I can speak to what I felt they were looking for in a potential volunteer: ambition and temperance.

It was emphasized to me over and over that they want to make certain that one very much "wants to do it." Several times I was made to accept circumstances different from those which I requested (I wanted to serve in South America, I wanted to do development of some sort, I wanted to leave in November of 2010) and each time I quickly acquiesced (I took between 0 and 2 days to "think over" the adjustment). I was each time complimented for my will and my "obvious" desire to serve1. It was also emphasized to me at the first interview that drinking (alcohol consumption) should be kept to an absolute minimum.


If there's anything else they're interested in it's your ability to be sensitive to local custom and your ability to be a fit representative of the United States. This isn't that odd considering that initially the program's intent was "to win hearts and minds" for capitalism and the West. Just be aware of what's expected; I personally have no thoroughly thought out opinions on the implications.

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Anyway right now I'm 2 weeks from departure and my only concern is that I'm woefully underpacked. I've been most concerned with silly things like rechargeable batteries, flashlights, bicycle pumps, and solar panels. I've looked at the packing lists of other people and they're bringing lots of niceties that I haven't even considered; A pillow? Sheets? Towels??? I will be bringing lots (~12) of textbooks to study so at least I'll have lots of raw material for paper mache.

1: I'd like to stress that I do not have a messiah complex nor did I make them believe I did. It was made clear to me that while they do want people who are hardworking and generous, they do understand that selfish motives (like travel and resume bolstering) are completely normal.