by The Hof

This weekend: Dano in Toronto

May 29, 2007 in Toronto by The Hof

Maybe you used to live in Korea, and now you live in Toronto. Maybe you live in Toronto and you’re interested in going to Korea. Maybe you just want to drink some booze in the sun.

This Saturday is the annual Dano Festival in Toronto’s Koreatown. Held in Christie Pits Park, this is a great event to go to if you want to relive some Korean moments or want to see what it’s really like to live in Korea.

Unlike other “ethnic” festivals, this one makes almost no attempts to engage the non-Korean participant. There are no English announcers or signs. No one will ever explain to you what is going on. While frustrating for some, this is the essence of the Korean experience. Roll with it and have fun.

Last year attendance plummeted when it was announced that vendors would be abiding by local liquor laws and not selling homemade makkoli, or rice wine. This year they’ve worked out the legalities (maybe. who knows?) and have announced that makkoli will be back on sale in the park.

See you there.

by The Hof

Dance Party in Koreatown, New York City

May 26, 2007 in NYC by The Hof

Last weekend there was a massive Dance Parade in NYC that wound it way through Koreatown and up Broadway to 5th Avenue.

Koreatown went nuts for a few hours and then it ended as quickly as it started.

It was a dance dance revolution for real, and a great time.

Chaos in Koreatown dsc01450.jpg dsc01455.jpg

Sexy cop Hoola Hoopers dsc01461.jpg

Now the reason I was there in the first place was to check out the “famous” New York Kom Tang, reportedly the oldest Korean restaurant in NYC and according to numerous reviews a great bowl of kom tang.

New York Kom Tang

Now, I consider myself a connoisseur of Korean food, and when it comes to kom tang I’ve had the best, Naju-style kom tang, back in the old country. So my standards are high. But this was some pretty measly kom tang by any standards.

Best avoided.

by The Hof

Restohof launches: get rich or die blogging

May 9, 2007 in restohof by The Hof

The crazy sumbitches at Creamaid have this wacky idea to rewire the web, one discussion at a time, by creating a doodad that will allow bloggers to have messageboard-like discussions, with no messageboards at all. They’ll just talk through the doodad.

For this the Korean government heralded them as geniuses and gave them startup money, and influential blog Techcrunch said they would “pollute the internet.”

What makes some people angry is that bloggers get paid to write. But for the boys at Creamaid this has always been besides the point. They’re more interested in building online communities than in getting rich.

So am I. Using a widget developed by a Korean startup to get the word out about Restohof is a very natural thing for me to do. And seeing how I still have a LOT of 50 Cent’s money to burn, I figured: why not spread it around?

If you have a blog and a PayPal account, write about Restohof on your blog and I will put $10 into your PayPal account. Those are American dollars. The good ones. Just follow the instructions on the gewgaw so you get it inserted into your blog ok, and watch the money roll in!

by The Hof

Restohof: sponsored (inadvertantly) by 50 Cent

May 7, 2007 in restohof by The Hof

Starting a website like this takes a little money. Not a lot. A little.

I don’t mind. I chalk the whole thing up to being a hobby. But like any hobby I didn’t want it to get out of hand.

Now 50 Cent is a drug-dealing rapper who has a new CD coming out in June. Normally a guy like 50 Cent and a guy like me wouldn’t cross paths very often, but 50 Cent needs a little help with his website. I reckoned I’d help fiddy with his site in my spare time, and then use the money from that to fund Restohof.

So I’m happy to say that 50 Cent is as good as his word, or rather, the machinery around 50 Cent is as good as their word, because what they paid me today easily covers Restohof’s startup costs and then some.

The real question is: spend the remainder on bling or Google adwords?

What would 50 Cent do?

You might be surprised.

by The Hof

How do you know these ratings aren’t rigged?

May 4, 2007 in restohof by The Hof

This is the question I hear most often when I show someone the site, and the one that I spend the most time thinking about.

If the site is driven by ratings submitted by surfers, how do I know that a single surfer with an axe to grind, or a job to sell, isn’t going to skew the ratings?

Well, first off, one user gets only one chance to rate a job. They can’t grudge something 100 times.

Secondly, each user needs to verify their profile through a real email account.

This is a very mild barrier to entry, I admit. So someone who’s determined enough could create 100 accounts with 100 real email addresses and log in and out 100 times to grudge a job 100 times?

Not quite.

While the site may look simple, there’s a lot happening in the programming behind the scenes to prevent someone from doing this. And I’m keeping an eye on how the site is used so I can keep one step ahead of any determined faker.

Also, a brand-new user doesn’t have the same weight as a more established user. Again, this is built into the programming of the system so that it can recognize a member of the community as opposed to someone trying to “game” the system. And again, this programming is constantly being tweaked.

The whole idea is to build a site that rewards legitimate participation of its members and create a strong online ESL community, while weeding out the scammers.

Will it work? It should. If it doesn’t I will change it.
I didn’t invent these ideas myself, I learned them from studying social software.

But seeing how these ideas are still new and this technology untried, anything could happen. It’s still very cutting-edge.

Should be interesting to watch.

by The Hof

Tabula Rasa

May 1, 2007 in restohof by The Hof

Ok don’t kill me, but we had to wipe the member’s database clean in this last wave, to jiggle around some tables to get them to how we need them.

The upshot for you guys is that if you want to continue, you’ll have to create new profiles under new names.

I really didn’t want to do this, as I know some of you are quite proud of the history you’ve built up so far, but, well, that’s what testing is all about.

Trust me, the hard part is done and we’re ready to roll.

Sign up again and you’ll be a member for life.

by The Hof

Smashing bugs

April 30, 2007 in restohof by The Hof

The recurring problem with rotten job links has been fixed, but the archives are admittedly a dog’s breakfast. Best to ignore them for the time being, until the roll into oblivion. Right now the site keeps archives for 30 days, which I figure should be enough for anybody.

I find it interesting that when people write comments they tend to be short and snappy. Is that because we’re all so busy? If so, I thank you again for taking the time to test the site out.

by The Hof

Beta testing (slight return)

April 23, 2007 in restohof by The Hof

Thanks to everyone for helping test. Obviously we had some things to work out.

And then I took a vacation.

And then we had some programming issues. Nerdy stuff you probably don’t want to hear about.

Oh yeah, and a death in the family.

But we’ve fixed all the things that needed fixing and are back on track. Thanks to all of you for picking up the ball again and helping me get the site online. Please test some more, and if you see anything alarming, email me at restohof@gmail.com.

by The Hof

Beta testing

February 17, 2007 in restohof by The Hof

If you’re reading this, it means I’ve sent you an email inviting you to “beta test” Restohof.

It’s really not all that exclusive. You can invite anyone else you like, too.

And it’s really not all that complicated. Just create a profile, browse around, and rate some ESL jobs.

Let me know if you come across anything that doesn’t work, or anything that you think I got really wrong. I’m going to be working on the site at the same time, so don’t be alarmed if it changes before your eyes.

Most of all, thanks for helping me out and for taking a little time to test. I truly appreciate it.

by The Hof

About Restohof

February 14, 2007 in restohof by The Hof

You might laugh, but the first time I went overseas to teach ESL the internet wasn’t very popular. In those days you found an ESL teaching job in the newspaper, usually an ad put there by a stateside recruiter hiring for multiple schools. If he didn’t have a job that suited you, you had no job.

Usually, you just took whatever he had.

Since then, of course, the internet has become the place to go for ESL job hunting. Now you have a wealth of choice.

Maybe too much. It’s hard to tell who to trust when you’re on the other side of the earth and can’t see their face. Sorting through it all, choosing a job, and packing up to move to a new country requires a leap of faith that may or may not work out. I get a lot of them, or their parents, asking me “what it’s like over there” and “is this job any good?”

And the ESL job listing sites that exists, exist to serve their clients, the schools looking for teachers. I can’t blame them. The schools are paying the bills.

But the whole idea behind Restohof is to turn that on its head. It’s an ESL job site that exists to serve the teachers and the job hunters, the uni students fresh out of school, looking to go overseas and who don’t want to get fleeced.

It’s the rate my rack of the ESL industry, but it’s also a community building tool. At the simplest level, if a job looks good, you click the + symbol and give it a “GoAhead” for the next surfer. If it looks rotten, you click the + and give it a “Grudge”

But it’s not as democratic as one vote per person, and your account means something besides your username and avatar. The longer you have been a member, the more weight your vote has. The more you vote, the more weight your votes have. This formula is constantly being tweaked, depending on how the site is used.

The idea is that senior, experienced members serve as the wizened veterans that they are, and that new users trying to sway the system have less pull.

As for the meaning of the name Restohof, when I was in Korea, many bars that served food described themselves as a “restohof.” I always thought this was a great word, a mashup of the French word “resto” (restaurant) and of the German word “hof” (literally “yard” or “courtyard,” but used by Koreans as shorthand for “beer-drinking place”).

In the end you have a word made up of French and German that looks like English, but is totally and distinctly Korean, foreign, and new.

Struck me as an apt metaphor.