I have the feeling that my blog is slowly becoming just a collection of reports about my trips. Not that there is anything wrong with that, but a bit more of variety would be better. Anyway, here I am once more talking about research and travelling.
During March I had two trips. The first was to Marburg, a little town about one hour train north of Frankfurt, Germany. This trip was not due to a conference, but because I needed to work together with my colleague Adrian—who was spending three months as a visiting researcher at the Philipp University—on a paper which we had to submit for a journal publication. We managed to get finished with the paper and to submit it, and fortunately, we also had time to hang out.
Marburg is a lovely university town; it reminds me a bit L’Aquila, at least the L’Aquila I am familiar with. I stayed one week in a king sized room of a guest house, with furniture from the beginning of the 20th century and a bathroom that was probably bigger than the room I have in Bergen. 🙂 No, I did not have travelling budget to waste, on the contrary, I tried to spare. Nevertheless, this was the cheapest solution available since Marburg was hosting a big conference on Medicine during the same week, and all the hotels were fully booked. I learned something funny while in Marburg: many of the public toilets in Germany have a particular sink specifically designed to… puke. 🙂 A local PhD student commented about this with “We have strong drinking traditions in Germany…” Brilliant!
The second trip was to York, as always together with Adrian, to attend the FASE 2009 conference, part of ETAPS. Here I presented our last paper “A Category-Theoretical Approach to the Formalisation of Version Control in MDE.” I was confident, and I am satisfied with the presentation. Receiving compliments from colleagues and other researchers was a high reward. The same evening after the presentation we had a “gala dinner”, which was delicious, and we continued the celebrations in the pubs of the city centre. The ale beers from the local breweries helped me to forget about the research carried on in the last months. 🙂 The city of York was somehow fascinating, also because of its history. Founded by Romans in the year 71 and captured by the Vikings in 866, it shares a lot with the history of both my home country and the country where I live now.