TechTrotter: Innovation Happens Everywhere

TechTrotter started as a global investigation into innovation hubs often overlooked by the mainstream press.

After two months in Brazil I relocated to India and my observations now cover technology in daily use, Web trends and weird and wonderful aspects of life in the world's largest democracy

To sumbmit your story ideas or contact the editor, send emails to:
editor@techtrotter.org

Become a fan of TechTrotter

Where Are TechTrotter Readers

TechTrotter on Twitter

Flickr Photostream

photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo

TechtTotter

amanaie argentina Asia Auto rickshaw Bangalore Barack Obama Brazil chikodi chima Cricket Entrepreneurship espn Fabio Akita Facebook gilberto jr global voices IBM India John McCain journalism Marco Gomes Marcos Tanaka Microsoft Music Paulista Rio de Janeiro Samba Sao Paulo sao paulo traffic social media South America Startupi startups nigeria techcrunch techtrotter TechTrotter.org TEDIndia TED Talks the new york times the world is flat thomas friedman Twitter United States VentureBeat venture capital YouTube Brazil (23)
Entertainment (3)
Entrepreneurship (15)
Food (1)
India (19)
Innovation (23)
Investment (2)
Mainstream Media (3)
Music (1)
Rio de Janeiro (6)
Ruby on Rails (1)
Sao Paulo (16)
Social Entrepreneurship (2)
Social Media (15)
Society (4)
Startups (1)
Travel planning (5)
Uncategorized (21)
Video (12)
World Cup (1)

WP Cumulus Flash tag cloud by Roy Tanck and Luke Morton requires Flash Player 9 or better.

Tags

amanaie argentina Asia Auto rickshaw Bangalore Barack Obama Brazil chikodi chima Cricket Entrepreneurship espn Fabio Akita Facebook gilberto jr global voices IBM India John McCain journalism Marco Gomes Marcos Tanaka Microsoft Music Paulista Rio de Janeiro Samba Sao Paulo sao paulo traffic social media South America Startupi startups nigeria techcrunch techtrotter TechTrotter.org TEDIndia TED Talks the new york times the world is flat thomas friedman Twitter United States VentureBeat venture capital YouTube

African Tech

Friends

Share This

Farewell India, I’m going home

I reached into my backpack the other day and found money from six countries. Man, I’ve been everywhere! In coins and bills I had Argentine pesos, Brazilian reais, more pesos from Colombia,  Malaysian ringit, Indian rupees and American dollars. (Somehow the shekels, naira and yuan I’ve collected didn’t make the voyage)
By far the most significant experience has been my time in India, while each trip, on each continent, has impact in myriad ways. Nearly seven months have zipped past since I arrived in Bangalore and today they draw to a close; I’m leaving India and returning home to the U.S.
What awaits me at home is far from certain, but I’ve never been one to shy away from a challenge.
Right now I’m talking through exciting opportunities on both coasts, and I’m going to take some time to think it all through. That said, I’m very much in motion and eager for a new project.
There’s a lot I wish I could have seen and done while I was here–India is a wondrously diverse and, at times, enchanted land,  but I’m not sad to go. One cannot explore what the world has to offer and remain stationary at the same time. While it’s going to take months and distance to sift through all the details of my life here. This experience has changed me and I won’t know the full extent of until I am gone.
In one hour, I will board a British Airways flight #118 for Seattle, I will be heading back to the U.S. more Indian than most friends who claim ancestry. Ask anyone with whom I’ve shared this experience and they will echo my sentiments. Perhaps a part of me lived in India in another life and surely parts of me will stay.
I’ve done lots of reflection and I will share some of those thoughts soon, but right now I have to make a last sweep of my room and get ready for my taxi.
I’m looking forward to my first bites of teriyaki, salmon and Mexican food, something Seattle does very well. There will also be lots of time watching Sopranos reruns with the family and the crisp, clean, delicious air of the Pacific Northwest. Seattle has its magic too!

A rolling stone gathers no moss, now it’s time for liftoff!

Brazil: How to conquer Rio de Janeiro in 33 hours or less

Nightscape from CorcoradoThe girls in Rio De Janeiro don’t wear makeup and the mountains slide straight into the waiting ocean. As if by magic, I had a 30-hour Rio adventure that stirred my soul and restored a sense of childlike wonderment that had been flagging.

Sao Paulo is gargantuan, overwhelming and nondescript. Its packed subway cars, high prices and air pollution have lately been causing me to wonder aloud if I left New York at all. Rio de Janeiro is one of the world’s few special places; passionate and delectable, known for it’s raucous Carnival, iconic beaches and gorgeous people. It is simply unique, a gem in Brazil’s crown.

The hostel where I was staying threw a delightful dance party and afterwards, I went to Lapa with an Australian named Dave. Lapa is a strip of bars just outside downtown Rio bisected by a Roman aqueduct that acts as a bridge for the overhead trolley tracks. By the time we arrived, at half past 4 in the morning, the Lapa crowd, which was in the upper hundreds, or even thousands, was disintegrating into a drunken melee. At home, in the States, these bars would be closing in a matter of minutes, but it’s quite possible patrons here continued to samba and sing on the street until the sun came up after 6.

The long bus into town and the subsequent week of late nights left me content heading home as 5 approached. There’s something about Rio though, with it’s sticky climate, soaring hills and the energy of 6 million souls that could have made me push through the exhaustion to find another thrill.

I have been told that Rio de Janeiro and Cape Town, South Africa were once joined when Africa and South America were a single land mass. The geology of the two areas, Cape Town’s Table Mountain, besides Pao de Açucar in Rio, makes me think that this could be true. But while Rio is unlike any city I’ve visited, it somehow conjures the best: The lawlessness and hedonism of New Orleans, the architecture of Buenos Aires, as well as New York’s addictive cocktail of grit, hustle and filth that one only has to smell to understand.

Tell me more …

‘The Economist’ on doing business in Sao Paulo

deadlockI’ve always been averse to making plans and this is even true when I travel. Wherever the wind carries me is where I’m supposed to be. In China, Israel and India, I never bothered to buy guide books or pocket dictionaries because I figured the people I was with would know more than any book. Needless to say, I haven’t gone missing on any excursions yet, but there is something to be said for planning ahead, whether it’s getting immunizations (which I did), learning a little about the culture, or getting to know more about the language.

In the process of gathering research material, I found this this great audio clip about doing business in Sao Paulo produced by ‘The Economist.’ If I weren’t packing I would do a more in depth summary, but here are some of the key points:

Meetings start 20 minutes after the designated time. Traffic is Sao Paulo is so bad that it can always be used as an excuse. Private individuals maintain an extensive fleet of personal helicopters that allows them to hop over the city’s nightmarish traffic. My aunt was recently in Sao Paulo and told me that traveling 5 km can take an hour or more.

Restaurants are to Sao Paulo what beaches are to Rio. Although the correspondent for the Economist recommended some great Churascarias (Brazilian steakhouse), I don’t think I willl be dining at the high end of the fork this time. While many of her reccomendations were for business travelers, a little on-the-ground intelligence is never a bad thing. but I am certainly excited to sample the cuisine.

Keep $100 bill on you at all times in case you get mugged. Street crime in Sao Paulo is no joke, but you stand a better chance of walking away from a confrontation if you have some cash on the ready to give to your assailant. Although shopkeepers don’t accept US$, your mugger will be more than  happy to exchange your currency at a local bank after he is done holding you up.

I can't verify that any of what was in the report was true. I won't be in Sao Paulo until tomorrow morning, but I will definitely keep my head on swivel and update with my personal experiences of food, crime and traffic.

Esta camisa é mais bonito do que esta

img_0294I’m very much in the process of dismantling my entire life, so it’s hard to get overly excited about embarking on this trip. That said, knowing that I will be in Brazil in just over two days is starting to bring a smile to my face.

I was fortunate that some longtime friends came to my apartment to avail themselves of anything I had of value. My grandfather gave me an awesome courdoroy coat that I gave away, along with house plants, framed pictures (of myself) books, tools and assorted knick nacks.

This week has been about buying stuff in preparation: A new camera, another camera, headphones and lots of gear. Giving stuff away was really nice because not only do I not neet to throw things away, I had a second to take stock of how much stuff I need to live. In short, the answer is very little.

My plan is to take one small suitcase and two bags with me and live out of them for two months. Do you think it’s possible? I certainly don’t need as many changes of clothes as I have to survive. A couple shirts, some clean underwear and socks and I’ll be good to go. I also want to pickup and wear souveniers from the places I visit, so it would be a shame to overpack.

Tomorrow will be a whirlwind of activity from the moment I wake up. Lately I have been savoring the quiet, but I am ready for the electricity and unknown of Brazil.

The Brazilian tourism tax

halfheight_default

My father always says, “If you want to make God laugh, all you have to do is make plans.” Today was  no exception. I intended to file my application for a Brazilian visa at the consular office in New York, but I was naive to imagine such a thing was as simple as handing in a form. To my dismay, the office stops accepting visa applications promptly at noon. I was duly informed at 12:25 after spending the last 15 minutes in line. On the plus side, everyone spoke to me in hurried Portuguese because they assumed I am from Brazil.

Few country’s citizens have more difficulty or expense associated with obtaining a Brazilian tourist visa than the U.S. The application fees paid by American are the highest of any country, $130, and double that of Canada whose $65 fees are the second most expensive. For most countries where a fee is required, a mere $30 will do it, but there is a  list of 60 countries where no visa is required at all. There is a perfectly logical, though spiteful reason why American visitors are getting screwed: the U.S. State Department screws over Brazil’s travelers and president Lula is giving it right back to us.

According to the  the application form for the Brazilian visa, “FOR U.S. CITIZENS THERE IS A PROCESSING FEE OF US $130.00 IN RECIPROCITY FOR IDENTICAL FEE PAID BY BRAZILIAN CITIZENS WHO APPLY FOR A VISA TO THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.” (Their caps)It’s pretty simple tit for tat, but it feels mildly passive aggressive. While they are free to reciprocate our punitive visa fees to visit the U.S., I challenge you to find me a Brazilian who has lost a job because an American illegally entered his country and was willing to work for a lower wage. It is perhaps a primitive argument, but creating barriers to entry helps to protect jobs, and keep out suspected terrorists.

In any event, the experience highlights how lucky Americans are when we travel abroad. Not only will our government send in special ops to rescue us (sometimes), but more importantly, the list of places where we need a visa for entry is relatively short. Although I needed a visa when I visited India last year, the whole process took only 24 hours. Nowhere else on my travel schedule requires me to obtain a visa prior to arrival, including Urkaine, which the U.S. State Department describes as “undergoing profound political and economic change as it moves from its Soviet past toward a market economy [and] multi-party democracy.”

Both Nigeria and the Philippines have travel advisories warning Americans away from certain areas, yet no visa is needed for the Philippines. My dual Nigerian citizenship will allow me to enter the country without a visa as well. Conversely, if I wished to travel to the U.S. as a citizen of another country, the application alone would be downright scary. Looking over the requirements to enter the U.S. as a foreign tourist, I don’t even know where to begin. Furthermore, the hastle and headache my classmates are undertaking to stay in the country for OPT or, to obtain work visas makes me glad that entering Brazil requires just some bufoonery and $130. When it comes to the other options, I’ll gladly pay the Brazilian tourism tax.