On the Road: Business Travel, Fall 2008
I don't travel a significant amount in my current position, but when I
do, it seems to come in chunks. I'm about half way through a round of
travel this fall - mostly business, but with some personal travel mixed
in. Six cities, three countries in less than four months. Some
observations at the halfway point ...
@ the Data Center: The Surreal Life
I'm finishing this entry around 4am - just off my second night in a row
on the "late shift" for our Disaster Recovery (DR) exercise [
Note: final edits and post mid-day, after I got home
]. I've been deep in the "bunker" - a highly secured building with acres
of processors, busily working away for any number of companies. No
matter what city you are in (even
New York
!), the traffic is very light between 1 and 3am! And I'm definitely on a
different cycle than the majority;
yesterday morning, I got off the elevator heading out, and some
late-night revelers were stumbling to their rooms after their own "late
shift" at the local night spots. No fun like that for the IT folks -
gotta keep the brain waves clear, working the checklists.
I've got an easy role; I'm a Shift Manager, just the "manager-in-charge"
for the time I'm on. The techs are doing all the heavy lifting, although
I get to join in the chorus should we need to escalate anything with our
DR hosts. That, and making sure the folks trying to tough it out and go
20+ hours straight are not falling asleep at their consoles.
The general preference is to work in the windowless rooms - time goes
faster when you can't see the beautiful weather outside. Added bonus -
excellent bandwidth to the Internet, which makes it a much better place
to work than the hotel room. There are also less distractions (junk
daytime TV), and plenty of free food. Alas, that's the otherĀ difficult
thing to manage when on the road - gotta watch the calories!
Staying Healthy
I'm getting too old to party much on these business trips. Typically,
I've got some emails, presentations, or other such stuff to work on
during my off time. I can't always count on a decent health club /
fitness room - I don't typically stay at the high price joints, but
every once in a while I'll luck out and find an
elliptical
. However, I do like to walk around in the cities that I visit - big or
small, always good to get a sense of the place.
Healthy eating is the other big challenge - typically, I'm eating in
restaurants, and most American eateries serve up oversize portions that
don't help the cause. In general, I find I don't gain much during most
trips - never out long
enough to develop any seriously bad habits. Unfortunately for this trip,
the data center kitchen is always well stocked - has to be, the DR team
is working a 24x7 task plan with a ton of stuff to get done in the
alloted time. Gotta feed folks well to keep them awake and happy - lots
of water, too.
The Crash of 2008, as seen from the Night Shift
It's a strange sensation, working on a weekend project that really
destroys your regular schedule - makes following the news of the week a
bit disjointed. And what a week - the Dow lost more value than
any other week in history
. As we wait in the airport, rest in the hotel, or stare at the consoles
as tapes load, conversation can wander towards events in the financial
and business world - and this adds to the feeling of disconnectedness.
It's almost too big to comprehend - but the blogosphere is nicely
provides a nuanced, multi-faceted view of the situation,
stuff that really makes you think
.
Staying Connected
I must say, traveling over the last 2 years has been a joy, now that I'm
armed with
my Blackberry Pearl
and the Internet. I've downloaded the
Google Maps
application, and while my Pearl doesn't have
GPS
, it can
swag my location
by triangulating against cell phone towers. I never get lost, and it's
easy to find the right spot to eat, shop, or visit. I
was surprised to find out my current location has no
pancake houses
near the downtown area. Disappointing ...
When you can get a decent connection, the Internet lessens that
disconnected feeling. These days, I get the majority of my news from
websites and blogs, and those stay comfortably constant, no matter where
I'm at. Interesting sensation: the environment has changed considerably,
but you are just as connected as when you are sitting at home.
Soon, it's time to load up the van and head for the airport - and
another round of experimentation with
Ping.fm
. I've been experimenting off and on with
Twitter
again, and since I've recently made the leap and started a page on
Facebook
, I thought I'd also try this
multiple status updater
. Note that I don't send travelogue updates to
LinkedIn
- as I've noted before, the "what am I doing" feature
doesn't seem to be used much by my network
, so I'm sure that the group doesn't care to know when I take off and
land. I assume Facebook will become my semi-professional,
friends-and-family social network, while
LinkedIn stays all business
. Twitter? Well, I'm
still not sure
how
relevant
that is to me, but I'll ping stuff every once in a while. I do like
Ping.fm's ability to quickly toggle parts of your notification list - I
will Ping all (including LinkedIn) when I post to this blog, but the
"social" stuff doesn't go to the business network.