The IETF was trying out a different schedule this time, so
we ended up working through what would have been the lunch break in the
interest of ending earlier, so no lunch for me. I went back to Din Tai Fung with
some colleagues for an early dinner, and it was just as good as the previous
time. We fed 4 of us with a huge amount of food for less than $30 apiece.
After
dinner, the weather was “clear” enough to see the top of Taipei 101, so a
couple of us headed for the observation deck. I use quotes there because it was
actually pouring, but that seemed to keep the visibility a lot higher than the
normal drizzle, so we figured it’d be better than nothing. It turned out to be
a great view. This was one of the few times where I really wish I had brought a
better camera than just the one in my phone – it really can’t deal with those
very low-light shots that well.
Taipei 101’s observation deck has elevators
that hit a peak speed of 1010 Meters/minute, and the display in the elevator
said that we ascended to 382 meters in 37 seconds. The elevators have an
aerodynamics capsule complete with a spoiler on the top and bottom, and they
have air pumps to help equalize the pressure for passenger comfort. It works
better on the way up than on the way down, as I only had to pop my ears once on
the ascent, but it happened about 4 separate times on the descent.
One of the
really cool things about the observation deck is that they have made the
building’s tuned mass damper part of the public exhibit, so you can actually see the “Super Big Wind
Dampener” in all of its 5 meter diameter, 660 metric ton glory.
It wasn’t perceptibly
moving when I was there, but they do have a pretty cool video of it serving its
purpose during a typhoon. – click on “Wind Damper Functioning Film” – sorry, it’s all flash and there’s
no way to directly link to it.
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