Me: I live in Silicon Valley with my wife, child and cat. I have worked at Microsoft since I graduated from College, both in the Macintosh Business Unit on products such as Outlook Express, Entourage, IE, and Virtual PC and in Windows Live on Hotmail, Calendar and People. I am currently a Principal Lead Program Manager on the Windows Live Social Networking team. I basically manage a team of Program Managers responsible for delivering features to support our web and client applications. I've been blogging since 2001 and like to play around with .NET in my spare time working on projects such as dasBlog (the blog that powers this site) and Send to SmugMug (an application for uploading photos to SmugMug). I blog about a number of technology and productivity related topics.
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© Copyright 2010, Omar Shahine
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Sunday my wife and I returned from an awesome vacation in Santiago, Chile. It was the first time this year that I went email/internet free for 6 full days. I did bring along my tablet so I could offload the gigantic photos that my Nikon D70 takes, but other than doing that I didn't touch the machine. I did carry my Audiovox 5600 around, but only got 3 phone calls. At $2.99 a minute for international roaming, I didn't want very many.
Not doing email for a few days at Microsoft is a hard decision some times. You are essentially postponing the inevitable. At least one full day going through a couple hundred unread items when you first sync up. Since we had a 2 hour layover in Miami on the way back, I ponied up $6 for T-mobile wifi, watched in horror as Outlook downloaded 35 MB of email, and then spent the next 8 or so hours getting my inbox back down to pre-vacation levels (5 messages or so). Not only that, but this was a very stressful 8 hours as I watched the past week unfold between my eyes.
Anyway, my wife and I were thankful for my time away from email. I think from now on I am going to spend real honest to goodness vacation time (the 3 weeks I get a year) not doing any work e-mail. I think doing e-mail on your vacation sets a bad precedent that basically tells your co-workers that you are always available to respond to issues and problems. I think the same is true for weekends and evenings. For the past few weeks I've tried to not respond to e-mails on Saturday etc.
Back to Chile. What a cool country. This is now the second South American country I have visited (Brazil being the other). Chile is a very modern country, and has a lot in common with California. Excellent wines, rocky and beautiful coastline, and enormous mountains. The Wine is a heck of a lot cheaper though. At the nicest restaurants I never paid more than $11 for a bottle. Furthermore, I never paid more than $55 for a three course meal with wine for two. And this is with a weak dollar (about 10-15% weaker than normal). Pisco Sour's are great drinks, I happen to like the Peruvian variety better. Much like Capirina, the national drink of Brazil.
While we were there, Lora and I roamed the city for 2 full days, visited 2 wineries (Concha y Toro, and Undurraga), visited the beach towns of Viña del Mar and Valparaiso and took a tour up the Andes to see some ski villages (of course it was summer when we were there). Concha y Toro, and Undurraga are both two of the large wineries, and comparable to say Robert Mondavi and Neibalm-Coppola in size and quality. We liked Undurraga a lot more, and they happen to have a really cool wine bottle design that only they are licensed to use in Chile.
Furthermore, we discovered a new wine varietal, Camenere, that is only readily planted in Chile as most of the world population of this grape was killed by Phylloxera.
Overall it was a fantastic trip, and we'll definitely return to Chile to check out the North and South of the country that we didn't get to see this time around.