Tag: costarica
Posts
Why does Google get internationalization wrong?
“Internationalization” is, roughly speaking, geek-speak for the process of supporting multiple languages on a website. For a company doing business in multiple countries, it needs to be done - otherwise you’ll risk losing the attention of people who don’t speak your development team’s native language. There are standards defined that specify what language to serve a website in to a particular user. So why do some of the world’s biggest sites get it wrong?
Posts
The Border Run
Road engineers in Costa Rica do not worry about snow and ice. Whereas highway builders in the US might dynamite a chunk of a mountain to provide a road that maintains a reasonable gradient as it climbs, the road engineers of the tropics are happy to run straight upslope if there’s no good alternative. Asphalt was laid surprisingly recently on some relatively important routes; the Costanera, for example, which is the coastal “highway” that connects Jaco to Paso Canoas at the Panamanian border, was only paved in the early 2000s.
Posts
The post office is dead
People Love Institutions Institutions are comforting and predictable. They bring some measure of order to the world, even when that order is rife with inefficiency. When we moved to Costa Rica, one of the surprising differences that we encountered was that there is no postal delivery service. Because there’s no postal service, there was never any need for mailing addresses, and so houses and businesses are often referenced by landmark. I shit you not, we visited a freight importer’s office whose address was “200 meters west of the Firestone”.
Posts
Fedex and the Car Parts
It’s fine! We bought used cars when we moved to Costa Rica. There’s significant import tax on pretty much everything down here, meaning that it’s expensive to bring your car from the states, and also that the price of new vehicles is significantly marked up. I opted for a Toyota FJ - the secondary roads can get quite washed out during rainy season, and I wanted a reliable vehicle that could get me anywhere.
Tag: tech
Posts
6 Months With The Unihertz Atom XL
I bought a Unihertz Atom XL in early 2022, aiming to find a small phone with a long battery life. I wanted a phone that was less obvious in my pocket, was easier to hold and navigate with one hand, and, I hoped, would be a little more utilitarian and a little less addictive. There are almost no Android phones out there under 5", and so very quickly I ended up browsing Unihertz’s catalog, and I settled on the Atom XL.
Posts
Why does Google get internationalization wrong?
“Internationalization” is, roughly speaking, geek-speak for the process of supporting multiple languages on a website. For a company doing business in multiple countries, it needs to be done - otherwise you’ll risk losing the attention of people who don’t speak your development team’s native language. There are standards defined that specify what language to serve a website in to a particular user. So why do some of the world’s biggest sites get it wrong?
Posts
How to set up a blog with Hugo and Cloudflare (and why you should)
The internet is not as good as it used to be. Information is siloed into walled gardens like Facebook, Nextdoor, and so on. Google results are saturated with SEO spam. Wordpress is a mess that keeps on chugging through inertia; Medium, while clean, is behind a paywall; Reddit and Twitter are increasingly hiding their value behind registration and/or paywalls; Substack is fine if you want to be paid, but is yet another commercial enterprise that will take articles offline if and when it goes boom.
Posts
Asus & DD-WRT - don't even think about it
When you search online for lists of recommended routers to run DD-WRT on, Asus comes up frequently, even in non-SEO-driven listicles. This is quite frustrating, because for the past few years Asus have blocked (most) third party firmware from being installed. When you try to upload firmware using the admin UI, you get a message that says roughly “for compliance reasons, we do not permit third party firmware”. That’s not entirely true though, as they do permit the third party Asus Merlin firmware to be installed; when I asked their tech support if they endorsed or recommended it, they said no, and told me to revert to stock firmware if I’d installed it (which I had, as an experiment.
Posts
The post office is dead
People Love Institutions Institutions are comforting and predictable. They bring some measure of order to the world, even when that order is rife with inefficiency. When we moved to Costa Rica, one of the surprising differences that we encountered was that there is no postal delivery service. Because there’s no postal service, there was never any need for mailing addresses, and so houses and businesses are often referenced by landmark. I shit you not, we visited a freight importer’s office whose address was “200 meters west of the Firestone”.
Tag: travel
Posts
The Border Run
Road engineers in Costa Rica do not worry about snow and ice. Whereas highway builders in the US might dynamite a chunk of a mountain to provide a road that maintains a reasonable gradient as it climbs, the road engineers of the tropics are happy to run straight upslope if there’s no good alternative. Asphalt was laid surprisingly recently on some relatively important routes; the Costanera, for example, which is the coastal “highway” that connects Jaco to Paso Canoas at the Panamanian border, was only paved in the early 2000s.
Posts
Fedex and the Car Parts
It’s fine! We bought used cars when we moved to Costa Rica. There’s significant import tax on pretty much everything down here, meaning that it’s expensive to bring your car from the states, and also that the price of new vehicles is significantly marked up. I opted for a Toyota FJ - the secondary roads can get quite washed out during rainy season, and I wanted a reliable vehicle that could get me anywhere.