Out of towners venturing south of San Francisco into "silicon valley" (oooh) looking for photogenic landmarks that scream high tech can be easily disappointed. There is no Statue of Liberty of information technology, no Grand Canyon of wafer deposition, nor a Mount Rushmore of datacenters.
One exception: Stanford University's palm trees on Palm Drive gives a nice welcome-to-California smattering of palm trees, along with the architectural bubble that is Stanford:
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And Palo Alto recently installed a big egg made of printed circuitboards next to Pizza My Heart. Not that it would ever compel anyone to get their camera out.
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While in LA, one can drive by the opulent homes of movie stars by following "Star Maps." Not so in Silicon Valley: only the real estate prices are opulent, while the real estate is nothing more than a quiet neighborhood of Eichler three bedroom homes. The stars of Silicon Valley don't appreciate gorgeous architecture anyway. Geeks prefer low rent, minimalist workspaces, and unassuming dress. So when you come to find a "California Landmark" plaque next to the decrepit shack they sat in while solving differential equations, celebrate instead the lack of aesthetics used in inventing technologies.
Take for example, the mediocre splendor of Palo Alto's 165 University Avenue, famous for hosting such startups as Logitech, Google, PayPal, and Danger:
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Or the old Fairchild Semiconductor building at 844 Charleston Road, where the first commercially practical integrated circuit was invented, later hosting a "Repo Depo":
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And let's not forget the architectural wonders of the Hewlett-Packard garage at 367 Addison Avenue:
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Exquisite.
Wednesday, December 26, 2007
Monday, December 24, 2007
Getting a China Visa in San Francisco
Hello world,
With this blog I'll try to contribute to the body of web information by addressing problems that can take a small burden of web searching to find good information for. Today it's getting a China Visa from the China consulate in San Francisco. It's been years since I did this process, so I'll be fuzzy where I have to.
---
Planning on a week long trip to Beijing, I needed to add a China visa to my US passport. Web searching for China visas turned up plenty of services that will add this to your passport by mail. The risk of losing my passport in the mail creeped me out. Fortunately I'm a medium drive away from San Francisco and could take care of this in person at the China consulate in San Francisco.
China consulate in San Francisco website: http://www.chinaconsulatesf.org/eng/
To get there:
http://www.chinaconsulatesf.org/eng/about/t50487.htm
The China consulate is across the street from Japantown. From the corner of Geary and Laguna it's halfway up the block along Geary, away from the direction of Japantown. Parking is tricky: you can either circle the residential neighborhood, or you might give up and enter the costly Japantown parking structure across the street.
You can see the consulate entrance using google maps and street view:
View Larger Map
Getting forms and waiting (or, lunch in Japantown):
http://www.chinaconsulatesf.org/eng/qianzhen/zgqz/t48485.htm
If you bring your US passport and flight information with you to the consulate you can fill out a form when you get there, submit the information with $100, and return in a few days to retrieve your passport with the new visa. Like waiting at the DMV, you're assigned a number. You may pickup and fill out any of your required forms at tables against the walls, and then sit among the masses until they call your number. Visa forms that are identical to those found in the consulate are found on the consulate website: http://www.chinaconsulatesf.org/chn/qianzhen/t312955.htm
I arrived just before lunch, so I picked up my form and filled it out while getting lunch in Japantown. I returned to the seats, and waited about 15 minutes for my number to be called. After handing the window clerk my information and $100, I was instructed to come back in four days. For this task at the consulate I was in and out of San Francisco in a couple hours, lunch included.
For expedited service, an additional $30 may be added for next day service.
Returning to pickup your passport:
The next week I came in and didn't have to wait for any number to pickup my passport at a separate window. What it is: a US-passport-page sized sticker added to the back of my passport featuring identifying text and a nice illustration of the Great Wall of China. Ooooh. In and out of the consulate in 10 minutes.
With this blog I'll try to contribute to the body of web information by addressing problems that can take a small burden of web searching to find good information for. Today it's getting a China Visa from the China consulate in San Francisco. It's been years since I did this process, so I'll be fuzzy where I have to.
---
Planning on a week long trip to Beijing, I needed to add a China visa to my US passport. Web searching for China visas turned up plenty of services that will add this to your passport by mail. The risk of losing my passport in the mail creeped me out. Fortunately I'm a medium drive away from San Francisco and could take care of this in person at the China consulate in San Francisco.
China consulate in San Francisco website: http://www.chinaconsulatesf.org/eng/
To get there:
http://www.chinaconsulatesf.org/eng/about/t50487.htm
The China consulate is across the street from Japantown. From the corner of Geary and Laguna it's halfway up the block along Geary, away from the direction of Japantown. Parking is tricky: you can either circle the residential neighborhood, or you might give up and enter the costly Japantown parking structure across the street.
You can see the consulate entrance using google maps and street view:
View Larger Map
Getting forms and waiting (or, lunch in Japantown):
http://www.chinaconsulatesf.org/eng/qianzhen/zgqz/t48485.htm
If you bring your US passport and flight information with you to the consulate you can fill out a form when you get there, submit the information with $100, and return in a few days to retrieve your passport with the new visa. Like waiting at the DMV, you're assigned a number. You may pickup and fill out any of your required forms at tables against the walls, and then sit among the masses until they call your number. Visa forms that are identical to those found in the consulate are found on the consulate website: http://www.chinaconsulatesf.org/chn/qianzhen/t312955.htm
I arrived just before lunch, so I picked up my form and filled it out while getting lunch in Japantown. I returned to the seats, and waited about 15 minutes for my number to be called. After handing the window clerk my information and $100, I was instructed to come back in four days. For this task at the consulate I was in and out of San Francisco in a couple hours, lunch included.
For expedited service, an additional $30 may be added for next day service.
Returning to pickup your passport:
The next week I came in and didn't have to wait for any number to pickup my passport at a separate window. What it is: a US-passport-page sized sticker added to the back of my passport featuring identifying text and a nice illustration of the Great Wall of China. Ooooh. In and out of the consulate in 10 minutes.
Labels:
china,
china visa,
consulate,
passport,
san francisco
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