Foreign Perspectives

Foreign Perspectives
Travel, expat life and foreign politics. As featured on TV and seen on Reuters.

The leaning tower of Belfast

July 22nd, 2007

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Albert Clock

 The Albert Clock is one of many Belfast monuments that were named after aspects of Queen Victoria’s reign, in this case after her late consort, Prince Albert. As you can see there’s a life-size statue of him right there on the west face of the monument which was completed in 1853.

Whilst many would blame the lean of the tower (which is quite noticeable) on too many bomb explosions around it, in fact it’s actually due to it being built on soft marshy land and the passing traffic over the years.

Although presently a little away from the centre of the city, the enormous number of developments currently taking place nearby seem likely to make this a much more central monument in a few years by which time the current regeneration of the centre and the docks area will have been largely completed.

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Sainsbury’s anti-family and anti-customer policies

July 11th, 2007

Sainsburys anti-family signSainsbury likes to portray itself as a customer oriented family-friendly store but one policy that they’ve recently introduced in the Forestside store in Belfast is distinctly anti-family and the implementation of it is very anti-customer.

I spent around an hour shopping in the store with both my two and five year old in the trolley, passing untold numbers of Sainsbury staff and indeed security personnel. Indeed the kids were in the trolley right beside the security guard who threw us out at least 30 minutes before he got around to doing that.

On arriving at the checkout, I was told by the checkout operator that the two couldn’t stand in the trolley. Fair enough, though difficult to enforce on two small kids. I had them sit down.

She immediately got up and went off to her supervisor. It wasn’t good enough: it was a health and safety issue and there was a sign at the front door saying that children couldn’t be in trolleys at all. They had to get out of the trolley. Well, since I had to cross a busy supermarket and then a very busy car park I figured that it wasn’t safe to do that so left after they refused to serve me.

I happened to glance at the sign on the way out. As you can see it doesn’t say that children can’t be in the trolley. In addition to that I was less than pleased at the attitude of the checkout operator.

So, I went into the store again and asked to speak to Customer Service. Pointing out that the sign didn’t say what the Customer Service staff said it did had them call security and throw me out of the store.

Even standing right in front of the sign, the security guy apparently couldn’t read as he said it says that children can’t be in trolleys which, of course, it doesn’t. OK, he went on to say that the children couldn’t have their feet in the trolley as it was a food store. Sound reasonable? Well, this is a store which sells dog food, garden pesticides, rat poison and unwrapped food. They don’t ban people having rat poison in the food trolleys which sounds like a much greater risk to health than two kids sitting in a trolley.

His suggestion? Bring your pram. Now I don’t know about you ladies out there but I for one would find it impossible to push both a trolley and pram round a supermarket. And, no, unlike Tesco they don’t provide trolleys for those with two kids. Oh, that’s not their responsibility: the centre provide the trolleys (nicely labelled “property of Sainsbury”).

If I’d the time to spare, I’d be quite tempted to spend an hour or two walking round the store with both the kids eagerly lifting the products off the shelves. I’m sure it wouldn’t take too long before they managed to drop some and tip over a few displays.

So if you’ve kids, avoid Sainsbury. In fact, if you like customer service avoid them too: shoplifters are treated better than those with the temerity to bring two kids with them.

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Do you really need to post anything to keep the hits up on a blog?

July 8th, 2007

As you’ll have noticed, I’ve posted next to nothing over the last month. A total of seven posts vs what would have been a more normal 30 in fact.

That’s because I’ve been over in Northern Ireland trying to sort out some administration since June 5th and only got back home on Friday evening.

Now, I wasn’t expecting there to be much change in the traffic on my websites but the blog is different. The most commonly held belief is that you need to post at least once a day to keep up the traffic. That seems reasonable: after all, blogs, for the most part, cover “current events” in some fashion so without the regular updates, the traffic on a blog is bound to drop off quite quickly, isn’t it?

Well, the funny thing is that the blog traffic didn’t drop at all by any meaningful amount. The number of hits showed very little change at all nor did the adsense income. The number of subscribers via Feedburner dropped about 10%. The number of incoming links as counted by Technorati went up.

So little was the change that it has me wondering if the best strategy would be to build up a blog over six months or so then start a new one.

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