Archive for the ‘Society’ Category
He’s STILL not speaking French!
James started in the local nursery school in September last year as the only non-French child.
When you look at any of the “moving to France” TV series, no matter what the age, the kids are put into the local school and are fluent in about three months. Over a year down the line, James uses single french words now and again but never a complete phrase. How come?
Ironically, I think it’s an aspect of them being helpful from the start in putting him in a class with the teacher who speaks a little english (they’ve even moved her up to the next class with him). The effect of that was that the children started speaking english which, of course, meant that he didn’t need to speak any french, so he didn’t.
Unfortunately, that’s going to mean that next year they will surely refuse him entry to the primary school and instead will insist that he goes to the CIPPA class in Perpignan. That’s simply not viable as you could hardly expect a six year old to negotiate two buses plus cross a very busy road by himself and besides it’s a class for 16 to 18 year olds who already speak french.
All this, of course, creates something of a problem for us as from September next year.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.Changing domain names: what a hassle!
When Wendy started off her blog we just used the domain wendyreid.org for it as we already had that registered.
That was back in February but by the Summer she was well into writing paid posts and it seemed like a good idea to a) be using a dotcom domain and b) using one that was related to the blog content too.
Why the dotcom? That’s because a number of the paid post opportunities specify that you have a dotcom and therefore moving to one would increase the number available to her. Also, and related to that, for reasons that are far from clear a dotcom is better than a dotorg in terms of search engine positioning (which is why we’re also in the process of moving Our Inns to Inns4U).
Having the blog name related to the content is just a sensible thing anyway but it also helps for those paid posting sites where the advertiser chooses the blog.
Anyway, we registered Cultured Views and aliased it with the existing wendyreid.org domain so you can access the content by using either domain. Then we started telling the various sites that she’s signed up with.
No problem ’til we did PayPerPost. When we did that, the number of available opportunities dropped like a stone. Although nothing had really changed about the blog, they took the current pagerank of the new domain and used that to filter the opportunities. Naturally, that was PR0 therefore there were next to none available. So we asked them to change it back ’til we managed to transfer the pagerank over.
Ironically, just about the same time as the pagerank transferred over, somebody else in ppp noticed that the blog didn’t match the domain and changed it back. Well, tried to because they didn’t do it properly and Wendy’s not been able to post anything with them for days.
Finally, they replied to her support ticket and the guy said he’d changed everything including the URLs quoted in the past…. to culturedreviews.com. So she still can’t post anything! Perhaps they’ll get it 100% this time around.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.Borderless border crossings
The whole idea behind the common market, or European Union as we call it these days, was that borders between the countries participating would gradually cease to exist and, for the most part, that has been gradually happening over the last 20 or 30 years. How come then there’s almost always a queue at the border crossing between Spain and France then?
I used to think that it was just a case of “jobs for the boys” until I saw a number of cars and caravans being pretty much taken apart by the customs guys. Presumably they’re enforcing some import control then? Perhaps, but then anything that you can legally buy in Spain can be legally taken to France.
Whatever they’re doing it certainly causes major problems in the Summer when the queues of cars can reach right back to the toll booth (abour 6 kilometres!) and the hill leading up to the customs post is littered with cars that have overheated and had to pull in off the road.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.Very, very long haul flights are peculiar, aren’t they?
I find that normal long haul flights aren’t too bad in that you get on the plane one day and arrive later the same day if you’re going west or perhaps early the next day if you’re going east.
However, if you’re doing the London to Sydney trip in one hit you get on the plane one day and get off it two days later which is more than a little disorienting I think. OK, there’s a break for refueling in that two days but it’s usually at a peculiar time so it may as well be one continuous flight.
Also very weird is the flight from Buenos Aires to Sydney. That crosses the date line so you lose a day along the way. Or, rather, you don’t because what actually happens is that you leave Buenos Aires in the evening, in the middle of the flight the sun comes up and then goes down again a few hours later and finally you arrive in the evening so your “missing day” is actually a few hours long.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.Cultural differences in the way people book a hotel
We received an interesting e-mail from one of the European offices looking after consumer affairs last night.
They’re writing on behalf of a Spanish couple who booked with us last July but who didn’t turn up.
Ordinarly, that would mean we’d have billed them as a no-show but at the time the booking system had a technical problem so we weren’t receiving their reservation e-mails and therefore didn’t know that they were coming. Anyway, net effect was that we didn’t charge them although under the terms of the reservation system we were entitled to.
They’ve gone to this European office with their booking confirmation that has a note of the two nights booked and EUR 98 charge. Except, that it isn’t a change: it’s just a note of what they would have to pay.
The Spanish guy in the European office doesn’t understand that at all. They quoted their credit card number and they’ve a statement with EUR 98 on it, they didn’t get their accommodation (because they went to the wrong place) but he believes that they’ve paid it as do they.
Usually the Spanish are much more Internet-savvy than the French but in this area they’re just as far behind in that they assume that they’ve paid when they quote a credit card number yet it’s only used for a guarantee.
I suspect that it’ll run for a bit as he sent another e-mail this morning threatening to translate everything and sent it to the French consumer protection authorities to demand the refund of this EUR 98 which they’ve not paid.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.