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thaiophilus

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Everything posted by thaiophilus

  1. Our posts crossed - I meant Gaybutton's earlier post starting "In my opinion, the short answer is absolutely no."
  2. I think Gaybutton's post above is the most accurate summary of the situation. As I read it, bars in Bangkok are not fully open but some are pretending to be restaurants until 9pm. (or paying hefty tea money, in which case don't be surprised if some publicity-seeking politician stages a police raid/photoshoot.) 16 January is not a definite reopening date, merely the first possible date the government will consider. TiT so who knows? Phuket appears to have been consistently deader than Pattaya even before lockdown, so it's unlikely that you'll have any luck there either.
  3. A memorable date for the BBC, too: The first-ever episode of Doctor Who appeared on BBC TV at 17:16:20 GMT on Saturday, 23 November 1963; this was eighty seconds later than scheduled, because of the events of the previous day. Consequently the first episode was repeated with the second episode the following week. Rescheduling prime-time Saturday TV at less than a week's notice, to ensure that nobody missed an unknown new sci-fi series was a highly unusual event back then.
  4. Neat bit of out-of-context quoting there, especially as the words you've omitted were "In that context".
  5. (Really? So nobody in the US does any business on the 11th of September? ðŸĪĻ) No, I don't think it's odd. In that context, "9/11" isn't a date, it's a label for a particular event. As the Wikipedia entry for that event says, '"9/11" redirects here. It is not to be confused with November 9 or September 11.' But I don't think it's relevant, either. It doesn't make "12/1" (or "1/12") any less ambiguous.
  6. "12/1" ? In ISO 8601 standard date notation is that 2021-12-01, 2022-01-12 or (TiT, after all) something else?
  7. One special named day (and given the name, how could it possibly fail?) It's not the daily vaccination rate As for Runway 88, what differentiates it from Terminal 21 except for having a larger aircraft outside? Oh, and one of them is open for business.
  8. and then there's Qantas: Queens and Nymphomaniacs Travelling As Stewards and for seasoned Caribbean travellers, LIAT (Leeward Islands Air Transport) better known as Luggage in Another Terminal
  9. Been there done that to most of the places on that list, but MBM?
  10. Don't imagine it's only happening in Thailand... Reichsleiter Patel has plans for England too: Fury at plans that could jail reporters for up to 14 years for stories that embarrass the government How a proposed secrecy law would recast journalism as spying When even the Daily Wail thinks it's a bad idea, something is seriously wrong.
  11. There's an international border to do that (no comment on how effective it is ) not to mention lockdown on the Malaysian side. No, the deep south really does have a high number of cases per capita, which explains the deep red. I was wondering what causes that, if it's not population density. Ineffective or unimplemented government policy, maybe?
  12. Interesting. That list roughly corresponds to the provinces with highest per-capita cases, which are the ones with high population density around Bangkok, as you might expect, but also the deep south, where you might have to dig deeper to find a reason. Pattani is quite populous (to my surprise it has a greater population density than Chonburi) but not the other deep-south provinces.
  13. How do they reconcile that with the FB "real names policy" ? or (I'm not a FB user) is that a thing of the past?
  14. The downside of that is when you arrive at BKK, go through fast-track business class immigration and then find that the carousel due to handle 615 people's luggage is down until Somchai can find the right spanner to fix it. Yes, I too love upstairs on the A380, particuarly the Emirates version. Just thinking EK016 - EK376 gets my spine tingling. Add on the other business-class perks like limousine service (a generous 70 miles as the crow flies in UK), lounge access, priority immigration and it's a happy daydream at the moment.
  15. Their nicknames (in order) are Od, Kem, Kay, Day, Name, Ming, Net, Arm, Suea (Tiger), King using an unsystematic transcription (ignoring aspiration, tone etc.) that may or may not be any help with pronunciation.
  16. Indeed that's the "victory" celebrated by the Victory Monument (1941) in BKK. Shame they had to give it all back in 1946...
  17. 60, it seems. If over 65 you are "entitled' to half fares, but from 60 you are "privileged" to the same (on MRT, but not BTS). Maybe a lawyer can explain. As for the clear and informative (YMMV) announcements, I lip-sync along with them. Doesn't everybody? āđ‚āļ›āļĢāļ”āđƒāļŠāđ‰āļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļĢāļ°āļĄāļąāļ”āļĢāļ°āļ§āļąāļ‡āļ‚āļ“āļ°āļāđ‰āļēāļ§āļ­āļ­āļāļˆāļēāļāļĢāļ– (mind the gap!)
  18. I believe sex toys (and presumably that includes BDSM stuff) are technically illegal in LOS, though you wouldn't think so after a walk through Patpong night market or along Pattaya Beach Road.
  19. Stationary taxis hanging around at tourist-trap locations just after BTS and MRT have shut down ( which is *before* midnight) are the worst offenders. If you walk to a main road and wave at a moving taxi with his "free" (āļ§āđˆāļēāļ‡) sign turned on, there is less likely to be a problem. If he refuses to use the meter, don't argue, just walk away and flag another one. And if your new Thai friend does the negotiating, all the better.
  20. While adding a few locations to my Google Maps saved places, I came across some reviews for the Golden Cock which make entertaining reading. Google has tagged it not "legendary infamous gay sleaze bar" (and I mean that in a good way ïŋž) but "karaoke bar" and so, despite all the external evidence, that's how the reviewers have read it. Incidentally, kudos to the bar for finding Indian music for one party to dance to. I wonder who was the more bemused.
  21. The website still seems active, with updates in September 2019 (or maybe even more recently, I didn't look in detail). As ever, there's no way to verify the accuracy or timeliness of their coverage in any particular area.
  22. Of course. All security is a tradeoff between cost, convenience and time. You have to decide for yourself what attack model you're trying to defend against. In your attack model the pickability of TSA locks is not important but in other circumstances it could matter, and that red TSA logo screams "easy backdoor, try me first" to anyone who knows. Incidentally, if the third comment on the Bruce Schneier article I cited is true, TSA locks are specifically banned as insecure for transporting firearms on domestic US flights Couldn't he just use the master key they keep behind the desk? Or had it been lost/stolen?
  23. From the picture, it appears to have not merely a manual key, but a TSA-approved one. So any criminal with access to the internet can open it in seconds. Indeed, the legend on the lock even tells the thief which key is needed.
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