Another verrrrry long day. I got up about 0630 and started packing, then got a call from Louis van Noordyk, the Microsoft speaker who was going to do the event keynote. He wanted to know if I’d mind doing a unified messaging demo during the keynote. “Sure, why not?” I said. I rushed over to the event venue and found that the phone I was going to be using was a cellphone with a headset– not exactly ideal for a demo, but certainly reflective of how Exchange UM will be used in the real world.
After the keynote, the rest of my sessions went very well, and I got lots of questions. As with the events in Lisbon and Oslo, many of the attendees had been thinking about how to deploy unified messaging, but they were surprised– and pleased– with the mobility and calendaring improvements. The max bandwidth available to the home is about 1024Kbps, and even that isn’t common, so anything that improves bandwidth efficiency or time usage is of strong interest.
After the events, we took a cab back to the hotel. This seems odd, since it’s less than a block’s walk. However, both Louis and Isabel (the event planner) strongly cautioned us against walking, since part of that block is an industrial car park that’s normally empty at night. Empty apparently means bad, thus the cab. From the hotel, we walked next door to Ocean Basket, a local seafood chain. I had a plate of grilled butterfly prawns, Nile perch (a relative of good ol’ Lake Erie perch, with a similar flavor), and calamari. It was quite good, although by that point I was so tired I would have eaten almost anything.
Then it was off to the airport. JNB is a huge airport, but it wasn’t at all crowded either time I was there– I guess midday is their busy time. It’s also a “quiet airport”: there are no flight or boarding announcements, even at the gates. This really cuts down on the background noise, as does the lack of public phones. I wanted to call Arlene to let her know I’d made it to the airport, but with no phones, I had to resort to Skype and holding my laptop up to my ear.
Once aboard, I settled in and read the local papers until takeoff, then I went to sleep– and slept until about 45 minutes from Amsterdam! I missed breakfast, dinner, movies, and who knows what else. Now I’m in Amsterdam at the overcrowded KLM lounge, trying to clean up my accumulated inbox junk and getting ready for my flight home.
Summing up: everyone I met in South Africa, from taxi drivers to hotel maids to the event attendees, was friendly and open. I got to try some new foods, including Hertzoggies, melktart, and kingklip (a really sweet, soft-fleshed fish; Glenn kept asking people “what kind of fish is kingklip?” I think he was hoping it would turn out to be catfish in disguise.) Our event was very successful, and though it was a very tiring trip I’d love to go back and see some of the famous sights (like the Kruger wildlife reserve and Cape Town).

We have many relatives who are rock musicians. Brain surgeons too!