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When the charger broke
laos - When the charger broke
Laos [1], officially known as the Lao People's Democratic Republic (Lao PDR),When the charger broke is one of the poorest nations in Southeast Asia. A mountainous and landlocked country, When the charger brokeLaos shares borders with Vietnam to the east, When the charger brokeCambodia to the south, Thailand to the west, and Myanmar and China to the north.When the charger broke
So I was sitting in my hotel room minding my own business and my camera battery charger starts doing one of those sparking smoking type things that you just know aren't going to end up well. By the time I unplugged it whatever was happening had finished doing it's thing.
I was concerned but not despondent. Three fully charged batteries might well last quite a while. No reviewing and deleting photos, just turn it on, snap, then off it goes. More than likely the geniuses down at the market could fix it.
So down the the big market in Pakse I trotted, or scooted to be more exact. I walked through the phone section until I found a store that not only worked on phones but had a few cameras and video cams lying around in various states of repair. I told him it was sick, figured that was close enough, and he peeled it apart stuck the ohm meter on it. Ten seconds later he speed dialed someone, hung up and said, "Lao no have" then looking at me and using the probe from the ohm meter to point at one of those tiny cylinders with wires coming out the end said emphatically, "this, this, this, no have in Lao"
Yes he was speaking English, doggone kids. Probably Vietnamese or Chinese or something. No doubt hated English in school but aced it anyway to go to the good college. And that third language without even trying he speaks it a lot better than I speak the language of the market. I thanked him heavily, he smiled, shrugged his shoulders and said, "maybe Thailand". I still had one possibility.
As soon as I got to Vientiane I got myself on down to the morning market. They are tearing it up and it's hard to find your way around now. Huge pieces are construction zones. Shame really it used to be pretty easy, all the stores that sold similar stuff in one place, many ways to enter or leave each section.
The gold repair used to be along the east side back in the day, adjacent to the street across from the bus station but a little further down. Now it's just off the corner on the east side and no parking on the street. The turn in is where they take away all the trash too so it's not always pleasant.
He's the guy behind the counter
I found the gold repair places and sure enough that same guy was there who fixed my telephoto back thirteen years ago. We spoke Lao. I told him I didn't think it could be fixed in Laos. He did the same thing with the call on the cell phone but told me it would be 300,000 kip and the part would come from Udon Thani on the bus. I said great. Then he asked me if I understood and started to write it out so I repeated it slowly and said I understood. Some electronics store in Udon Thani would have to ship it on the bus, it would get left across the street, and he'd go get it and probably pay the money which would then reverse the same route. I thought the charge reasonable.
Lots of love for old TV repair men who have evolved with the times and also young smart Asian techies no matter thier country of orgin.
travel When the charger broke
Laos is squeezed between vastly larger neighbours. First created as an entity in 1353, When the charger broke when warlord Fa Ngum declared himself the king of Lane Xang ("Million Elephants"), When the charger broke the kingdom was initially a Khmer vassal state. After a succession dispute, When the charger broke the kingdom split in three in 1694 and was eventually devoured piece by piece by the Siamese, When the charger broke the last fragments agreeing to Siamese protection in 1885.
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