Next week, I was supposed to be going to China. I’d have been shown the ins and outs of a number of useful new products that Hewlett Packard are keen to show those of us who cover such exciting things as printers and laptops. We’d be told about the research and development that goes into designing such useful business tools and, back in the UK, we’d eventually get to give our take on what we were shown.
Based on previous business jaunts with HP,
the likelihood is that we wouldn’t be allowed to share our thoughts on what
we’ve seen until a week or even a month after our return from Shanghai. I
certainly wouldn’t have been spilling any secrets about the under wraps
gadgetry while I was in China.
Nonetheless, my role as a ‘self-employed
business advisor’ did not meet with the authorities' approval and I’ve been
refused entry to the country on this occasion. I’ll have to keep my thoughts on
printer technology to myself. I'd love to have spent time in such an interesting city as Shanghai, though.
All this gives me a bit of time on my hands
(not something I’m very good with – I keep myself busy at all costs). I’ve done
enough work to keep me busy before I went away and when I got back, but I’ve
suddenly got a full work week to fill.
My first thought was, how about doing some
of the things you couldn’t have done if you were in China.
I could get political and talk about the silent demonstration in Trafalgar Square last weekend by followers of the Falun Gong.
I could talk about some of the services that westerners enjoy and the Chinese are denied, the latest being the Google Drive cloud-storage service. It wouldn’t achieve much and, besides, China has its own version of the internet and its own online services. Its people have far bigger issues than whether they get such generous data storage allowances with Baidu.
I could get political and talk about the silent demonstration in Trafalgar Square last weekend by followers of the Falun Gong.
I could talk about some of the services that westerners enjoy and the Chinese are denied, the latest being the Google Drive cloud-storage service. It wouldn’t achieve much and, besides, China has its own version of the internet and its own online services. Its people have far bigger issues than whether they get such generous data storage allowances with Baidu.
Instead, I thought I’d plan my unexpected
‘free’ week around things that I couldn’t do if I were in China.
There’s no
excuse not to get out on my bike or haul myself down to a local gym and start
sorting out my weak back. My back has been playing me up again of late, but I
never make the time to sort it out.
I can declutter the flat and finally get
some sort of order in the spare room that was originally planned to be my
work-at-home space. Someone else will appreciate those books, those tops and trinkets that have long gone unloved in this home. There's three more tomes beside my bed and I might just be able to read them.
The weather’s turned and the garden is
crying out for attention. It’s not too late to have a second stab at getting some
vegetables to grow.
I can dig out my cameras and start properly
getting to know how to take worthwhile photos without recourse to clever tech tricks. I've officially got time to knit!
And there's a certain cake I've been challenged to bake that requires patience and not a small amount of decorating skill.
I'm beginning to wonder whether I ever had time for Shanghai at all.
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