User:Goatchurch/cordoc
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[edit] The flying itinerary
[edit] January
Los Angeles-New York-Los Angeles (~18 January 2007)[1] to attend Google Unbound day in New York public library[2] and NYU Association of Computing Machinery.[3]
[edit] February
Los Angeles-Toronto (1 February 2007) to do a book launch at Bakka books.[4][5]
Toronto-Los Angeles (3 February 2007)[6]
Los Angeles-San Francisco-Los Angeles (~8 February 2007)[7] to do a book launch in Borderlands. This is where he gets finally asked a question about climate change. Also mentions having been a Greenpeace campaigner, as well as his admiration of theyworkforyou.com.[8]
Los Angeles-Durham (North Carolina)-Los Angeles (22 February 2007)[9] to give one of his usual speeches at Duke University.[10]
[edit] March
Los Angeles-Tulsa-Toronto (2 March 2007)[9] flights were diverted on route to Ad Astra SF Convention.[11]
Toronto-Los Angeles (4 March 2007)[12]
Los Angeles-Vancouver-Los Angeles (~7 March 2007)[12] to give a speech at Simon Fraser University.[13]
Los Angeles-Las Vegas-Los Angeles' (~19 March 2007)[14] for a romantic weekend reviewing a fancy hotel. In case the butler is in any doubt, January comes exactly nine months after March.
Los Angeles-San Diego-Los Angeles (29 March 2007)[15] to go for a booksigning and attend the O'Reilly emerging tech conference.[16]
[edit] April
Parental visit from Canada to California (~10 April 2007)[17] presumably travelling by air in a manner that permits numerous brief visits.
Los Angeles-San Diego-Los Angeles (19 April 2007)[18] to speak at 3 universities.
[edit] May
Los Angeles-New York-Los Angeles (6 May 2007)[19] "just got off airplane from weekend on east coast about a book project" probably with chums at Tor Books.
Los Angeles-San Francisco-Los Angeles (17 May 2007)[20] to a author discussion where he gave an excellent reading from his forthcoming book.[21]
Appeared to stay in the San Francisco area, visiting Mountain View (21 May 2007) makes a speech at the Google Campus.[22], Mendicino (memorial day w/end)[23], and Irvine.[24]
[edit] June
Los Angeles-London-Belgrade-Dubrovnik (~20 June 2007)[25] to visit Bruce Sterling and the iCommons-07 summit.[26]
Dubrovnik-Los Angeles (23 June 2007)[27]
[edit] July
Los Angeles-Yosemite-Los Angeles (7 July 2007)[28] for a pre-birthday weekend.
Los Angeles-San Diego-Los Angeles (~15 July 2007)[29] as an instructor at Clarion marveling at the quality of the students -- so it's lucky it wasn't the year I was there.
Los Angeles-San Diego-Los Angeles (~27 July 2007)[30] to attend Comic-Con.[31]
Los Angeles-Portland-Los Angeles (27 July 2007)[30] drove home and flew straight to the tail end of the O'Reilly Open Source Convention,[32] returning home[33] in time for Blizzcon[34]
[edit] August
- Father to be announcement, expecting by end January.[33]
Los Angeles-Melbourne (19 August 2007)[35] booked to do a one day class in Australia on 25 August at the city museum.[36]
Mebourne-Cairns-Melbourne (~21 August 2007)[37] for four days diving on the Spirit of Freedom,[38] the exact same boat as the year before.
Melbourne-Tokyo (29 August 2007)[39] where he attended the 2007 Worldcon in Yokohama.[40] where he had a very chummy interview with one of the main gatekeepers in the SF book publishing business who determines what you learn to like.[41]
[edit] September
Tokyo-Dalian (4 September 2007)[39] invited to a World Economic Forum meeting where he was appointed as one of the Young Global Leaders whom we should look up to.[42]
Dalian-Beijing (12 September 2007)[43]
Beijing-Shanghai-London (17 September 2007) "unpacking boxes since Monday", giving a total of four days for tourism.[44]
London-Amsterdam (27 September 2007)[45] Flew in to speak at the Picnic'07 Conference as a "Hero of the Information Economy"[46] The conference itself was billed as being climate neutral.[47]
Amsterdam-Boston (30 September 2007) Flew directly the the US and passed immigration in spite of visa difficulties,[45] to attend the Viable Paradise, a week long SF writing workshop in Cape Cod as an instructor.[48]
[edit] October
Boston-New York (7 October 2007) Drops in to see the his excited publishers in Manhattan about his new book that is going into print shortly, and which I suspect we are going to get a real earful in the coming months.[49]
New York-Clemson (10 October 2007) Flies down to South Carolina[49] to give a speech in the "Strom Thurmond Institute Auditorium" of Clemson University about IP.[50] This speech finishes at 1:30pm.
Clemson-San Francisco (11 October 2007) Flies[49] to the Zend/PHP conference in time to give his keynote speech at 8:30am the following day.[51] He can see the last five hours of the four day conference which was conveniently held on the grounds of the San Francisco Airport. There is no evidence that Cory writes much PHP code, or any other programming code at all. He also reports doing a little bit of consulting work there for Ideo,[49] a company which does a lot of corporate design work, such as better steering wheels for Caterpillar bulldozers,[52] and brand packaging the high-end beauty experience.[53]
Second parental visit to London from Canada (25 October 2007) for a week of visiting and buying baby clothes.[54]
[edit] November
London-Berlin (8 November 2007) Flies to Berlin[55] to give speech at the highly corporate infested "Web 2.0 Expo Berlin 2007" where he gives one of his usual talks.[56]
Berlin-London (10 November 2007) Arrives back in London and reports having written six newspaper columns while sitting around the hotel room.[57]
London-San Francisco (12 November 2007) In his words: "I would be going to look at an office tomorrow. Unfortunately I am off to San Francisco for a BoingBoing meeting; I'm literally flying 14 hours, having a six hour meeting, and then flying 14 hours back again, getting home on Thursday morning. I know that this is crazy, but when you have a pregnant person at home you are taking care of, you really want to stay home and not traipse around the world."[57]
San Francisco-London (15 November 2007) In his words: "I had the stupidest long haul flight this week: flew from London to San Francisco, 12 hours on Monday, landed, had dinner, slept, had a meeting all day on Tuesday, had dinner, slept, had lunch, got on a plane, 12 hours, got of in London on Thursday. So basically a day, plus a couple of nights in San Francisco, and like 24 hours in the sky. This sounds dumb, but we needed to do it. We have two face-to-face meetings a year more or less for BoingBoing, and they make a big difference. So I did it."[58] No evidence of this meeting shows up in the BoingBoing archives.[59]
London-Vienna (22 November 2007) Flew in to give the usual speech about the at a festival for cocktail robots.[60] This speech began:[61] "So Science Fiction writers and to a lesser extent Futurists, when they write about the future, they're really talking about the present...", and continues with a proof of the philosophical inevitability of the Singularity. During the Q&A no one asks him about climate change, possibly because it's a question about the future, and Science Fiction writers don't want to think about that when it is inconvenient.
Vienna-London (23 November 2007) Flies back to London and rants:[62] "Air travel is not fun any more. Air travel has not been fun for some time. Never going to travel again until the baby is due. I was doing the math, and I think this is the longest no-fly period since at least 1997, maybe as far back as 1995. Getting the the end of 10-12 years of non-stop air tavel. Taking my first hiatus from it, and I could not be looking forward to it more. I know lots of people who tell me you should travel less. That's an interesting and useful bit of advice. I wish I could travel less. But the fact is, the way I earn my living, and the way that I fight for the causes I fight for, and the way that I stay in touch with people who care about my work means that I got to get on an airplane now and again. And every now and again turns out to be pretty frequently."
[edit] writeup
http://www.freesteel.co.uk/wiki/index.php/Doctorow_2007_flights
[edit] References
- ^ Cory Doctorow (16 January 2007). Eastern Standard Tribe, Part 002 (mp3).
- ^ Google Unbound @ New York Public Library (21 January 2007).
- ^ State of the Copyfight 2007: Looking up, not out of the woods yet. (19 January 2007).
- ^ Cory Doctorow (26 January 2007). Eastern Standard Tribe, Part 003 - fixed (mp3).
- ^ Upcoming - Cory Doctorow Book Launch (1 February 2007).
- ^ Eastern Standard Tribe, Part 004 (mp3) (3 February 2007).
- ^ Eastern Standard Tribe, Part 005 (7 February 2007).
- ^ Audio from last night’s launch at Borderlands (9 February 2007).
- ^ a b Eastern Standard Tribe, Part 008 (mp3) (25 February 2007).
- ^ Cory Doctorow at UNC - Feb 22 at 2 (31 January 2007).
- ^ Ad Astra 2007 - There and Back Again (4 March 2007).
- ^ a b Eastern Standard Tribe, Part 009 (mp3) (7 March 2007).
- ^ Cory Doctorow: Iconoclast of the blogosphere (27 February 2007).
- ^ Cory Doctorow (21 March 2007). Eastern Standard Tribe, Part 011 — CONCLUSION (mp3).
- ^ Peter Gutmann’s A Cost Analysis of Windows Vista Content Protection, Part 1 (mp3) (1 April 2007).
- ^ About ETech (26 March 2007).
- ^ Peter Gutmann’s A Cost Analysis of Windows Vista Content Protection, Part 2 (mp3) (10 April 2007).
- ^ Peter Gutmann’s A Cost Analysis of Windows Vista Content Protection, Part 3 (mp3) (14 April 2007).
- ^ There’s a Great Big Beautiful Tomorrow/Now is the Best Time of Your Life, Part 01 (mp3) (7 May 2007).
- ^ There’s a Great Big Beautiful Tomorrow/Now is the Best Time of Your Life, Part 02 (mp3) (12 May 2007).
- ^ Rudy Rucker, Terry Bisson and me in San Francico last night (mp3) (17 May 2007).
- ^ Authors@Google presents Cory Doctorow (21 May 2007).
- ^ There’s a Great Big Beautiful Tomorrow/Now is the Best Time of Your Life, Part 04 (mp3) (29 May 2007).
- ^ There’s a Great Big Beautiful Tomorrow/Now is the Best Time of Your Life, Part 05 (mp3) (3 June 2007).
- ^ Cory Doctorow (15 June 2007). There’s a Great Big Beautiful Tomorrow/Now is the Best Time of Your Life, Part 07 (mp3).
- ^ The iCommons harvest (25 June 2007).
- ^ The Hacker Crackdown, Part 001 (23 June 2007).
- ^ The Hacker Crackdown, Part 003 (9 July 2007).
- ^ The Hacker Crackdown, Part 004 (14 July 2007).
- ^ a b The Hacker Crackdown, Part 006 (29 July 2007).
- ^ Comic-Con 2007.
- ^ OSCON Speaker: Cory Doctorow.
- ^ a b The Hacker Crackdown, Part 007 (7 August 2007).
- ^ Blizzcon, Anaheim Convention Center.
- ^ The Hacker Crackdown, Part 008 (13 August 2007).
- ^ Generation next: A masterclass with Cory Doctorow (25 August 2007).
- ^ The Hacker Crackdown, Part 009 (mp3) (19 August 2007).
- ^ Cabin Rates for Spirit of Freedom.
- ^ a b The Hacker Crackdown, Part 010 (mp3) (29 August 2007).
- ^ Nippon 2007.
- ^ Podcast with Patrick Nielsen Hayden on the future of SF, copyright and tech (mp3) (31 August 2007).
- ^ A Surreal Summit (5 September 2007).
- ^ Cory Doctorow at the Bookworm, Beijing (video).
- ^ The Hacker Crackdown, Part 011 (mp3) (20 September 2007).
- ^ a b The Hacker Crackdown, Part 013 (mp3) (2 October 2007).
- ^ Heroes of the Information Economy - the Makers. Picnic'07 (28 September 2007).
- ^ Make your business Climate Neutral.
- ^ Viable Paradise, 7-day bootcamp for sf/f/h writers (23 April 2007).
- ^ a b c d The Hacker Crackdown, Part 015 (mp3) (15 October 2007).
- ^ From International Standards to Web Practices, IP Mania Has Undermined the Idea of Real Property, of Freedom, of Creativity (10 October 2007).
- ^ Stay Free! How Open Source Affects Culture (11 October 2007).
- ^ [http://www.ideo.com/portfolio/re.asp?x=12276 Command Control Steering for Caterpillar] (1998).
- ^ Hera skincare packaging for AmorePacific (2006).
- ^ The Hacker Crackdown, Part 016 (mp3) (21 October 2007).
- ^ The Hacker Crackdown, Part 018 (mp3) (4 November 2007).
- ^ Europe's Copyright Wars - Do We Have to Repeat the American Mistake? (8 November 2007).
- ^ a b The Hacker Crackdown, Part 019 (mp3) (11 November 2007).
- ^ The Hacker Crackdown, Part 020 (mp3) (20 November 2007).
- ^ BoingBoing week of 11/11/2007 (11 November 2007).
- ^ Singularity.Cory Doctorow: A Singular Metaphor (24 November 2007).
- ^ Audio from cocktail robotics festival speeches in Vienna (29 November 2007).
- ^ The Hacker Crackdown, Part 021 (mp3) (25 November 2007).
[edit] Notes
For all the million fans of boingboing.net and tens of thousands of readers of his books and listeners to his podcast, it falls on me the job of piecing together the details of this Science Fiction writer's amazing carbon excess. On point of reference, the scientists of this world state that one tonne of carbon emissions per person per human is probably too much. CD's consumption from aviation alone is XX tonnes.
Things will get better and better until we pop.
Not foot-print. Better hand-prints.