Archive for the ‘ Travel ’ Category

Matching Principal

There is a concept I learned in accounting called the “Matching Principle”, the idea is that you should pay for short-term costs with short-term financing and long-term costs with long-term financing. It is a pretty common sense principle and everybody in some essence follows it (i.e. you don’t pay for a house with your credit card, you get a mortgage).

As with most of the things I learned from accounting, I have found that they are mostly based on “Real World” principles applied to the recording of business transactions.

So this Financial Matching Principle is a general rule applied to spending money, the more general rule being that you should match short-term problems with short-term solutions and long-term problems with long-term solutions (A cost is a problem where financing is the solution).

This rule, lets call it the problem matching principle, isn’t a hard and fast rule that you can’t break. It is mearly a very solid indication of what the best “Solution” is, and breaking the principle is simply going to cause headaches in the future.

However I find that many people do actually break this rule, probably not on purpose but just because they just let the solution happen rather than actively trying to solve the problem.

So to clarify, if a solution to a problem isn’t sustainable, then it is a short-term solution. For something to “permanently” fix a problem, it has to be possible to envision it there for the rest of your life (Or however long the problem lasts).

I’m going to apply this to working (As usual). There is a difference between working and a career, the difference is in time scope. You “work” in a crappy job you hate to pay for your trip overseas in 6 months time. You find a “Career” to settle down and pay off a mortgage.

So if you have a cost that is a short-term thing, then working to pay it off is alright. If you have to cover something permanently, you need a career.

Similarly your health is a problem that needs to be accounted for. It is a long-term problem, something that you have to think about for the rest of your life (With a high correlation to the actual length and quality of your life). Putting off exercise and healthy eating is a short-term solution to this problem. Which you can do if you want, but it will cause headaches in the future.

If you stop and think about what the outstanding problems in your life are (Everything that can possibly cause you pain) then list them down, you should be able to see what is a short-term problem and what is a long-term problem. Normally short-term stuff, like having a cold, or an annoying neighbour, will go away without any action. But you really should make sure that you are having sustainable solutions to your long-term problems (Or not, its your life)

Travel Plans

On my day off last week I finished booking flights for the trip that I am planning on doing during the second half of the year. The trip will go something like this:

1) Mid June: Fly to the United States and do a month long road trip visiting as much as possible. I am doing this with a few mates from Uni.
2) Late July: Fly from New York to Europe and do a 45 day Contiki tour.

I get that Contiki tours are almost cheating (In regards to travelling) but when I roadtripped around New Zealand I found the whole planning and searching for places to stay and things to do pretty stressful which, among other things, kinda ruined the trip for me. Plus you hear that it is pretty hard to “do” europe as there is so much crammed into such a small space. It makes me glad that a tour will take care of the problem.

I don’t have a return flight booked yet because I am not 100% sure what I am doing afterwards. At this rate I will have have plenty of spending money for these two continents but if I save extra hard I may be able to keep going. Possibly thinking of finding one of those websites that gets you a job in the Canadian Alps, that way I can fly from Europe straight to a job in Canada so I can keep the adventures going.

There is also a slight possibility that I can afford a trip to Papua New Guinea where I can walk the Kokoda track. Which would be sweet.

Pretty excited. But I do have to keep saving pretty hardcore for the next 5 months.

Why I got an Iphone

In short: network towers.

My old phone, a HTC Wildfire was designed for Telstra’s next-G network. This means that the radio towers it picks up are unique to telstra (HSDPA 850/2100). I found this out the hard way when I tried moving to another Australian network and could hardly get reception in the middle of the city.

There are multiple frequencies of 3g radio towers (Four I think, maybe five) and most phones are only designed to pick up a select few (The ones that the network provider uses). However if I am planning on travelling and want to use the local networks I need to have a phone that can pick up as many providers as possible.

The popular phones (Iphones, also the samsung galaxy S) are designed to be homogenous, while the less popular phones try to save costs by making the same phone in different versions (Each version picks up different networks eg the HTC Wildfire A3335 vs the HTC Wildfire A3333). So the popular phones can pick up a greater range of radio frequencies.

Which means I can change between networks easily with an Iphone, while my oldphone was essentially useless on anything but telstra.

Galactic Trader

When I was a younger, my brother and I used to play Gazillionaire a lot. The game is simple, all you do is trade goods on different planets to make money.

I think in a little bit the game influenced my decision in what degree I chose to study.

These days, after playing faster than light, I feel like that it would be my calling. Being a galactic trader! owning my own ship, going to different worlds, living like a space nomad.

I think I was born a few centuries too early, but i’m still hopeful this kind of stuff will exist during my lifetime.

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It also could be because after playing these games (and reading books) I become slightly obsessed with the crazy ideas they suggest.

Back again

Coming back to Australia after the warm days and nights in Thailand has actually been pretty nice. Thailand is amazing, I definitely feel a little changed from the experience but as usual coming home to nice food and a comfy bed always a good way to end an adventure.

The most interesting perspective I gained came from being the countries definition of “Upper Class”. The attention you receive because you are western results from the assumption that you have money (Which you do), and they have much to gain by giving amazing customer service. The change in treatment really makes you appreciate what you have.

But being back means it is time for me to focus a little on my future. I need a day job so I can work towards my next long-term goal:

1) Having the skills necessary for game development on the Ouya when it is released.

Considering my starting skill set I feel that it is a pretty relaxed goal for the deadline (6 months) but it is at this sort of level where I believe I will be able to call myself an “intermediate”.

I will probably reward myself afterwards with another overseas experience which is something to really look forward to.

Good times ahead

Packing

After my trip to to New Zealand I learned a lot about what you actually use and what gets in the way. So packing for my trip to Thailand has actually been really fun, mostly because of how empty my bag is.

Naturally I went and watched a heap of videos on minimal travel packing.

But it’s amazing how much clearer your head is when you have less stuff, not just when travelling but with life in general.

To Thailand

So it is almost confirmed, my mate from home and I are planning on a trip to Thailand in 2ish weeks. We have heard a lot of good stories about the place (Mixed in with some horror stories) it’s pretty exciting.

It is also making me a little nervous because the plan is for him to return once his uni break is finished, but I am to stay over in South-East Asia.

I think I will check out Vietnam (possibly couch surf); for a relative introvert this is pretty out there because I have no real plans.

All I can think of is to take it one day at a time.

Visa applications

The world is so distrusting. I applied for my first Visa today and the effort required is intense. How the hell are we supposed to start populating new solar systems and planets in the near future if the effort to travel within our own planet is so difficult?

I get the whole security and terrorists thing but hasn’t that argument held us back for too long? I mean if ‘cracking down’ on bad people and increasing security worked then the prisons wouldn’t have illegal substances inside. Prison guards have all the time in the world and are allowed to be as intrusive as possible yet somehow stuff always slips through.

Now if the ‘ideal’ security situation can’t stop the flow then what hope does anything less ideal have.

Eventually we are going to have to be gone with all the crap that is associated with international border crossing and we will have to stop thinking of ourselves as individual countries, rather we need to become a unified planet.

We used to have this stuff when crossing state borders before the Federation of Australia and we look back and say “Why did all that pointless harassment exist over something so little?”  I believe future people will look back on Visa’s and airport security and think the exact same thing.

Moving to Hawaii

I doubt that I will be moving to Hawaii but there was this idea for a new tech company startup I read not to long ago. It centred around the company headquarters being in Hawaii, the employees would go for a surf every morning, enjoy the sun, then work on their project in a stress free environment.

I wonder if this could be applied to a self imposed “University”. Imagine moving to a country with an good exchange rate, and using your savings (Of which you wouldn’t need much) to live. You could enjoy the relaxed environment and read and learn without having to concentrate on working to survive.

In a country where $5,000 will last you a year you could easily take the time off to write that book you have been planning.

Or I guess if you wanted to get away from the rat-race you could just live there permanently.

Commuting

So I spent the greater part of today driving home, after 3 years of studying in city six hours away from my family it was time to come home. Six hours in a car is always really boring and it makes me appreciate the importance of avoiding commuting. I can’t imagine myself driving an hour a day to get to work, and my preference will always be to live closer to work, or work at a different place.

Having a house that is really far away from where you “live” (Where you spend most of your time) is an inconvenient home.

The bit that annoys me is that the time spent commuting is wasted. If you dedicate an hour a day, every day for a year to any activity you will become pretty proficient at it; if this theoretical activity is a marketable skill (Say Poker) the opportunity cost of commuting is huge. There is so much money that future you could be making off the skill you developed rather than sitting in a car.

The only way I can imagine that utilises time spent in the car is to listen to educational podcasts or audio-books. But even that can be done while eating breakfast, so the benefit is negligible.

I guess my adverse taste to commuting is why I am finding it so hard to get a job (I am so damn picky), especially considering that most of the graduate jobs in my industry are concentrated in the capital cities. Irregardless this is not an area that I am willing to compromise in (My ideal is a job walking distance from home).

Commuting really is just detrimental to living.

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