Categories
Fashion Food & Drinks Gossip & Rumors Kuwait

Shake Shack Fanar and Harvey Nichols

PinkGirlQ8 spotted a Shake Shack coming soon hoarding outside Fanar Mall in Salmiya. I thought the location was a bit odd but I guess they want to drive traffic away from the Johnny Rockets branch that’s just a few shops away.

I also found out the Harvey Nichols launch date at Avenues Phase III is now confirmed to be around end of September early October. This will be their first store in Kuwait.




Categories
Information Kuwait

Air pollution low, noise pollution high

The International Associations of Multidisciplinary Research (IAMURE) measured both the noise and air pollution levels in Kuwait and concluded that the pollutants in the air are reasonably low while on the other hand the measured ambient noise levels were pretty high.

The noise levels were measured in 10 different locations during various times of the day and week but they don’t mention which locations they chose. I live in Salmiya right on the main shopping street and never really thought it was very noisy or at least not nosier than any other city anywhere in the world. I’d be more interested in the pollution levels of the sea now that summer is here.

You can read their full findings on their webpage [Here]




Categories
Kuwait Sports

Jay King – Traceur

Jay King is an American Security Expert and trainer living and working in Kuwait. His real passion though is Parkour and he is a superb Traceur. He is also a funny, loyal and well liked guy. He is close friends with and constantly traines with the PK Jaguars, Kuwait and the Middle East’s premiere Parkour team. Keep your eyes open and you are bound to see him running around Salmiya or Sawaber at any given time.

My favorite shot is the one pictured below. Reminds me of an Alfred Hitchcock movie for some reason. [YouTube]




Categories
Food & Drinks Kuwait

The Cube

Just found out there is another mall/plaza popping up in Salmiya right across the street from Laila Gallery (next to Omnia Mall and Sultan Center) called The Cube. Based on the rendering it looks like it’s going to be another restaurants project similar to Bidaa and The Village but my biggest question is where will everyone park? The street is already heavily congested and the only proper parking spaces nearby are behind Sultan Center and Laila Gallery but those two lots already get super packed. [Link]




Categories
Kuwait

Why are you still here?

Zaydoun hadn’t posted on his blog for over a year but he came back today with a simple and legitimate question aimed towards the expat community… Why are you still here? It’s an honest and curious question and he doesn’t mean it in the if you don’t like it get the hell out kinda way. With all the problems in Kuwait what keeps you here? Here is why I’m still here:

I’m an expat but I grew up here so I don’t see myself as an expat although Kuwaitis do. This is my home. I’ve lived here all my life so even if there are a lot of problems I stay and deal with it. I adapt and I get used to it. Sometimes things really piss me off which is when I come here on the blog and rant but most of the time I just take it all in and try to ignore the problems. There’s always the “hope” that things will get better (although with the way things are going I’m finding it harder to believe that).

I’m not Kuwaiti but I do feel frustrated in the same way many Kuwaitis do. When I see all the trash scattered all around my area in Salmiya its really depressing and frustrating because with all the money available why isn’t Salmiya cleaner? When I see people running red lights in front of the cops I find it frustrating because again with all the money available why don’t we have better law enforcement. I guess it’s unfair to connect everything with money but I believe everything can be solved with money and since we have a lot of it here we shouldn’t have any of these issues.

But, with all these problems, as an expat I have to say one of the most frustrating things is the fact I can’t get a permanent residency. I’ve lived here for over 30 years and my visa still gets renewed year by year. If I want to quit my job and take a break I can’t. No job means no visa and I’m out just like that. I think that’s extremely unfair.

Anyway check out Zaydoun’s post on his blog and tell him why you are still here. I’m curious to read all the answers as well. [Link]




Categories
Photography Shopping

GOLLA Camera Bags

Before getting my Think Tank camera bag one of the brands I was checking online was GOLLA. They had some cool looking bags at decent prices and yesterday while shopping I noticed Eureka in Salmiya carries the brand. Their prices are more expensive than Amazon but if you count tax and shipping it turns out to be around the same or cheaper buying them here. Check out the GOLLA website [Here]




Categories
Information

Sahoud Mall

I can’t believe this place is planning to open down the street from my apartment building in Salmiya. This is the mall that’s replacing the old building that had Family Bookshop, Alamiah and Waleed Toys. [YouTube]

Thanks Othman




Categories
50s to 90s Kuwait

Before they get demolished

There’s a block of very old Kuwaiti houses in Salmiya near my place which I keep passing by all the time. I keep telling myself I should pass by and take pictures but I never did and then today I noticed they put up a fence around them. I figured they’re getting ready to demolish the houses so when I got back home I picked up my camera and went to take some pictures.

I hope they consider saving and refurbishing whatever they can from these houses but my guess is they’re planning to demolish them since they might be too damaged to repair. Too bad since I like these old houses.




Categories
Kuwait Photography

Kuwait Meteorological Department Photography Contest Winners

I can’t believe I forgot to submit an entry to the Kuwait Meteorological Department Photography Contest! But, my brother did, and they just released the winners list and looks like he won with his photo pictured above. I was with him when he shot this picture in Salmiya last year during the big black dust storm. You can check out all the winners on the Kuwait Meteorological Department website [Here]

Thanks Colin




Categories
50s to 90s Kuwait Personal

Al Khalid Complex is a hidden gem

Ever since I was a kid I always called this place Salmiya Plaza. Back in the 80s that’s where My Toy was located and that’s where the pastry shop we used to pass by to pick up finger food for birthdays and other events was located.

Today the place is still there but clearly looks like it isn’t being taken care of. I think that’s a shame since I believe this place has a lot of potential.

The plaza has a small parking right in front of it. You park your car and then walk up a few steps up onto a long shaded open corridor that separates the parking from the courtyard. It’s pretty nice since once you sit in the court yard you can’t see the cars. Around the courtyard in an L shaped layout lies all the shops. Each and every one of those shops overlook the spacious courtyard. Other than the parking spots in front of the plaza there is a huge lot behind the plaza where there is a wedding hall.

Imagine if this plaza was refurbished and trendy restaurants opened up over there. Imagine if Slider Station, Burger Hub, Zero, Pink Moon and Prime & Toast where actually all open there instead of their current location in the very tight Seef strip. I think it would have been a pretty cool place which is why I think this little plaza located off of Baghdad Street in Salmiya is a hidden gem.

Update: Here is a link to the location on Google Maps [Link]




Categories
Information Interesting Kuwait

Emergency Medical Service – Kuwait

Kuwait has one of the best ambulance services in the region and today I was invited to pass by the Emergency Medical Service (EMS) Control Center in Subhan for a tour of their operation and a behind the scenes look to how their system operates. Around three years ago Kuwait literally demolished and rebuilt the EMS Control Central from the ground up which how they became to have the most advanced state of the art system in the Gulf.

The EMS Control Center are responsible for dispatching ambulances during emergencies. When you place a call to the emergency hotline 112 and request an ambulance, 112 will forward your call to the EMS Control Center. Their goal is to have an ambulance reach your location in under 8 minutes. This is not a dream goal, this is something they have to do for every call no matter where you are in Kuwait. Even if you’re on Failaka and you request an ambulance you will get it in under 8 minutes. How do they do that? Well I was taken through the whole process and I’ll try my best to explain it below. In summary, it’s one hell of a system!

The EMS Control Center is made up of three groups that sit in the department in three rows. The first row are the Call Takers, the second row the Dispatchers and their are the Supervisors.

Call Taker
When you call the EMS or have your call forwarded to the EMS, the “Call Taker” is the person who will answer your call. Their job is to take all the information from a caller, pass it to the “Dispatcher” and then stay on the line with and pass the callers instructions on what they can do to help (CPR instructions, how to slow down the bleeding etc..). The Call Taker’s have three screens in front of them. One of the screens is basically the phone, it has a number pad, a list of important phone numbers and a call history. The middle screen is where the Call Taker fills in information like the type of event that occurred (accident, heart attack, fainting etc..), event address, and caller information. The third screen has a map of Kuwait which updates live zooming in based on the address being inputted in the previous screen.

This system is all automated and very efficient. Pinpointing your location is one of the most important things since it’s what allows them to get to you so quickly. They have a number of ways of finding out where you are even if you don’t know the exact address. For example they can find you using a landmark. Say you’re in Salmiya and the accident happened near Sultan Center. They can then type Sultan Center in their system and the area Salmiya and they’ll have the location displayed on their map. Say you’re on the highway on the way to Wafra and an accident occurred but there are no landmarks around just an empty desert. Then they will instruct you to find the nearest lamppost and read the numbers on the side of it. Each lamppost has a unique number which the EMS can use to pinpoint your exact location. Once they have your location the Call Taker will send it to the Dispatchers (more on them in a bit) and a new screen then pops up with step by step instructions the Call Taker can pass on to the caller. The step by step instructions depend on the over the phone diagnosis so in case a person is suffocating the following instruction would pop up:

a. (ECHO) I’m sending the paramedics (ambulance) to help you now. Stay on the line
e. (Suffocation) Remove anything covering the face or in the mouth, then tell me if she/he’s breathing
f. (Critical Caller Danger) (If it’s too dangerous to stay where you are, and you think you can leave safely) get away and call us from somewhere safe

The Call Taker ends the conversation after the ambulance arrives. Due to the fact that people who call are usually in a state of panic, only around 25% of them actually listen and follow the instructions.

Dispatcher
The Dispatchers work behind the scenes and don’t communicate with the callers. Once the Call Taker takes down the problem and address they instantly pass it on to the Dispatchers. While the Call Taker stays on the line with the caller and follows up on the situation, the Dispatcher’s work in the background trying to get ambulances to the callers location. They have a similar set up to the Call Taker’s but with added features. For example the Dispatcher can visually see where all the ambulances are located in Kuwait along with information on each ambulance like their availability or even the speed they’re traveling. When a Call Taker passes an event to the Dispatcher an annoying (an a bit freaky) siren goes off in the whole department alerting the Dispatchers. Once a Dispatcher accepts the event on their screen the siren shuts off. The Dispatcher then does two things, first he sends the event to all the ambulances in the area of the incident, and the second is he sends the event to the “Regional Ambulance Center”. Kuwait is divided into six parts and every part has their own Ambulance Center. All the ambulances are fitted with laptops and once they receive the event on their screens the first one to answer the event in that area takes the mission. If for some reason no ambulance answers the event within 2 minutes, the dispatcher is alerted who then contacts the Regional Ambulance Center to find out why there is a delay. The Dispatcher also has the ability to assign specific ambulances to the events. So say for example an ambulance is needed on the Gulf Road near the Kuwait towers and the Dispatcher notices on his map that there is Ambulance #171 that’s just 0.78km away he could assign the ambulance to the event directly.

This whole process is done practically instantly since to get an ambulance to a scene in under 8 minutes they can’t waste any time.

Supervisor
Supervisors are stationed on a third row behind the Call Takers and Dispatchers in the emergency control room. Their job is to monitor and overlook all the calls that take place. They make sure everyone is performing their duty to their best and they also make sure the diagnosis the Call Taker’s make over the phone are accurate.

This whole system is called Computer Aided Dispatch System (C.A.D) and was developed locally by CyberMAK (Intergraph Kuwait). The system is more advanced then any other in the region (including Dubai). The system is robust and I left extremely impressed. I had no idea how advanced our EMS was. What I wrote above is just the general flow but there are a lot of little things as well that are handled automatically. For example once an ambulance drops a patient off to a hospital they can then set their status as “Ready” or “Not Ready”. If they’re not ready then they have to list a reason (from available pre-sets) like they need to go get petrol or they are heading to the garage. There’s also the gory reason which is the ambulance contains blood and needs to be cleaned. The ambulances also get real time information updates so when a Call Taker gets new information from the caller the ambulances get to see the new information updated live on their screens. Another cool feature is once an ambulance picks up a person the paramedics have a form they fill digitally on the laptop where they list their diagnosis of their patient. That form gets sent to the hospital ahead of their arrival so they can be ready to receive the patient. Then there are other features to make things quicker, I mentioned earlier that the Dispatcher can assign a specific ambulance to an event, to do that all the Dispatcher needs to do is drag the specific ambulance icon on the screen to the event icon and the event gets dispatched to that ambulance. You also have training rooms at the center, another ambulance dispatch room for non emergency cases and even seminars and workshops that take place all the time. While I was there I passed by a seminar that was taking place. The seminar was being given by American doctors to paramedics and I think the subject had to do with radiation effects on pregnancy (I guess they’re expecting something?). Something I forgot to mention, the paramedics are from ALL nationalities not just Kuwaiti.

I always complain about how Kuwait used to be better and how Kuwait needs to fix things and I have to say that Kuwait’s EMS is an example everyone needs to look at. It’s one of the first government services I’ve experienced that has left me impressed.

I’d like to thank Mr Mohammed for inviting me on this tour.




Categories
Events Kuwait Movies

Cinemagic rooftop movie schedule for March 2012

I just got the March schedule for Cinemagic and it looks like I’ve only watched one of the movies showing this month which is Triplets of Belleville. It’s a really strange but cool animation which is definitely worth watching. Check out the full schedule below.

Thursday, March 1st at 7:30pm
THE MILK OF SORROW
Fausta is suffering from a rare disease called the Milk of Sorrow, which is transmitted through the breast milk of pregnant women who were abused or raped during or soon after pregnancy. While living in constant fear and confusion due to this disease, she must face the sudden death of her mother. She chooses to take drastic measures to not follow in her mother’s footsteps.

Saturday, March 3rd at 7:30pm
BARTON FINK
In 1941, New York intellectual playwright Barton Fink comes to Hollywood to write a Wallace Beery wrestling picture. Staying in the eerie Hotel Earle, Barton develops severe writer’s block. His neighbor, jovial insurance salesman Charlie Meadows, tries to help, but Barton continues to struggle as a bizarre sequence of events distracts him even further from his task.

Thursday, March 8th at 7:30pm
TRIPLETS OF BELLVILLE
When her grandson is kidnapped during the Tour de France, Madame Souza and her beloved pooch Bruno team up with the Belleville Sisters–an aged song-and-dance team from the days of Fred Astaire–to rescue him.

Saturday, March 10th at 7:30pm
THE SWEET HEREAFTER
This film documents the effects of a tragic bus accident on the population of a small town.

Thursday, March 15th at 7:30pm
NETWORK
A TV network cynically exploits a deranged ex-TV anchor’s ravings and revelations about the media for their own profit.

Saturday, March 17th at 7:30pm
RUSSIAN ARK
A 19th century French aristocrat, notorious for his scathing memoirs about life in Russia, travels through the Russian State Hermitage Museum and encounters historical figures from the last 200+ years.

Thursday, March 22nd at 7:30pm
CAVE OF FORGOTTEN DREAMS
Werner Herzog gains exclusive access to film inside the Chauvet caves of Southern France, capturing the oldest known pictorial creations of humankind in their astonishing natural setting.

Saturday, March 24th at 7:30pm
DOWN BY LAW
The story of three different men in a Louisiana prison and their eventual journey.

Thursday, March 29th at 7:30pm
THE SON’S ROOM
A psychoanalyst and his family go through profound emotional trauma when their son dies in a scuba diving accident.

Saturday, March 31st at 7:30pm
500 DAYS OF SUMMER
An offbeat romantic comedy about a woman who doesn’t believe true love exists, and the young man who falls for her.

Cinemagic Kuwait, is organizing these events as part of its efforts to contribute to the development of an internationally competitive Kuwaiti audio-visual production industry, partly by bringing the filmmakers and audiences together and by Increasing the public’s interest in – and appreciation for – the art of film-making. Cinemagic movies are screened in the old Salmiya, on the roof on top of Alghanim Electronics and LG. Entrance is free of charge and includes refreshments, popcorn and much more. Here is a link to their Facebook group [Link]




Categories
Kuwait

Abandoned at Failaka

I got the following by email but have not verified this:

More than 150 visitors to Failaka Island including small children and women were stranded at Failaka Island on Sunday, 26th Feb. The visitors all of whom went to the island using KPTC’s ferry from Salmiya in the morning were told that the return ferries would arrive at 3:30 pm and the last one would be at 4pm. The people who arrived early to get a seat on the ferry had a surprise. There was no sign of the KPTC boat at either 3:30 or 4 pm. The tired crowd was informed by someone that a boat would arrive at 5 pm. But around 5:30 pm when the boats still had not arrived some one in the crowd contacted the KPTC’s office in Salmiya only to be told that there would be no boat arriving as the boats were blocked from leaving the Salmiya jetty because their licence had expired!!!

The people who had bought return tickets on the KPTC ferry were left high and dry on the island with no other mode of transport available nor any alternative plan made by the KPTC to help the stranded passengers. Someone called 112 and were told that they could not do anything about the situation. Finally at nightfall some of the people managed to contact friends and relatives in Kuwait and managed to get some private boats paying exorbitant prices just to be able to leave the island and reach home. Some including ladies who could not afford the boats were still on the island waiting for the ferry which one report suggested might arrive the next day!

– CD

If this is true then it’s messed up.

Failaka Ferry Photo unrelated and taken by Jafar




Categories
First Impression Geek Internet Kuwait

First Impression: WiMD Internet

Last week I posted about a new internet provider that I found out about. Turns out they aren’t really new and have been in business for some time now but they were catering mostly to companies and certain individuals until they decided to expand their presence and showed up at InfoConnect for the first time this year. I was looking for a new internet provider myself so I got in touch with them and they came over yesterday to install it.

The internet provider is called WiMD which stands for Wireless Mobile Data. They provide you (obviously) with wireless internet to your home using the 5 GHz wavelength which is kinda similar to a wifi connection except it can transmit a lot further (in theory around 70km I think). To setup their connection you require the installation of a small white box that needs to be pointed to one of their towers. This is probably the most difficult and complicated part since the box needs a direct line of sight to their towers. If you’re living in an area like Salwa, Mishref or Bayan where all the buildings are low then you won’t have a problem. But, if like me you live in an area where you’re surrounded by tall apartment buildings and in my case Salmiya, then you’ll most likely NOT be able to get a direct line of sight. But I got lucky.

When they came over they tried installing the box on one of my balconies but it wouldn’t work. One balcony had tall buildings blocking my line of sight to their Hawalli tower while the other balcony wasn’t pointing towards their Ras Salmiya tower. Since the box is tiny I managed to get permission from my building to install it on the roof specially since we were just going to connect it to an existing pipe. Once we got onto the roof we were able to see their Salmiya tower (which is the communications/post office building near Salmiya Coop) and get a strong connection.

The white box is small and light and can be connected to any existing post on top of your building. You then need to run an Ethernet cable from the box down to your apartment and to your router or directly to your computer. There are two different connection speeds you need to know about. The first is the actual connection speed from your apartment to their tower. In my case the connection speed was around 15Mbps. The second connection speed is the one you subscribe to. So say you have a 15Mbps connection to their tower but you subscribe to their 1Mbps internet connection then you get just a 1Mbps internet connection. WiMD uses internet providers like Fasttelco, Zajil etc.. to provide their customers with internet. That is a good thing because it means if one internet provider is congested or having problems their system is smart enough to shift the balance over to the rest of their providers.

Right now I think they have my connection speed unlimited, so I’m getting internet as fast as my connection to their tower can handle. I’ve provided some speed test results below but really they do not do justice to the connection. Ignore the numbers below because in real world use the connection is super fast. Regular browsing which is what I do 90% of the time is very quick with instant page loads and no sort of lag whatsoever. Downloading files varies, I was downloading the 1.3GB Lion update from Apple at around 300kbps but that’s because I had one session open and it’s probably a limit by Apple. By using the software SpeedDownload I opened up a number of sessions and hit 1.2MB/s. I downloaded torrents as well and the accumulated speed of all my torrents was around 2.85MB/s! That’s by far the fastest I’ve ever downloaded torrents. Whats even better is the fact that while my torrents were downloading at that speed I was still browsing as usually not noticing any slowness. Their upload speed is also faster then anything I’ve ever had before.

I had my brother who lives next door and connected to my network try out gaming online and this is what he emailed me back:

The connection is f****** amazing. I always had trouble playing Halo but with this new connection there’s zero lag at all. Literally, no lag. I would have trouble connecting to games, no trouble here. Pretty cool

and later

I just tried FIFA, another game I had issues with, worked really well.

So first impressions, this connection kicks ass. Now I just need to figure out what speed to subscribe to. Originally I was thinking 6Mbps, then moved up to 10 and now really want to go even faster but once you go higher their connection isn’t exactly cheap. Below are their yearly prices again in case you missed my previous post:

1Mb KD130
1.5Mb KD150
2Mb KD180
3Mb KD225
4Mb KD270
5Mb KD320
6Mb KD325
7Mb KD355
8Mb KD390
9Mb KD473
10Mb KD523
11Mb KD590
12Mb KD660
13Mb KD730
14Mb KD800
15Mb KD870
16Mb KD940
17Mb KD1,010
18Mb KD1,080
19Mb KD1,150
20Mb KD1,220

If you’re interested in a connection you can call them on 22475841 and 22475842 or visit their website [Here]




Categories
50s to 90s Kuwait Mags & Books Toys

Family Bookshop Closing Down

Family Bookshop in Salmiya is sadly closing down for good. I previously posted that they had a court case against the owner of the building but it looks like they lost because they currently have a closing down clearance.

It’s worth passing by the store one final time as a farewell to what used to be one of the best bookshops in Kuwait. Bit by bit what’s left of our childhood is being eroded away which is depressing.

On a similar note Waleed toy store which is located in the same strip is also closing down. Like Family Bookshop, Waleed toy store has been there for over 30 years.