Archived posts from the 'time' Category

a million things and a million places

Anyone who knows me knows that I’m a bit of a hobo, always working on a million things and going a million places. I have loved working with Zillow — they are a dynamic, fun company with tons of potential and I’ve been working with a great team who I hate to leave — but with everything I’m interested in, I just don’t have the time to devote to them as I’d like. So, I’m moving on to my million things and million places.

One thing I have always known about myself is that writing is like breathing to me. I can’t really be without it. So, writing is one thing I’ll be spending a lot more time on. You’ll be seeing much more of me at Search Engine Land as Features Editor. (I wanted to be editor of awesomeness, but Danny stubbornly refused my fantastic title suggestion. Something about how they’re all awesome over there or something.) I’m still writing other places as well, including continuing to write for Information Today magazine. It’s fun to be looking at search from the other side of things and it’ll be great to have more time for that.

My other passion is helping to build the web and working with start ups on innovative, kick-ass ideas. I’ll be doing more of that, particularly as an entrepreneur in residence for Ignition Partners, based here in Seattle.

You’re also likely to see me speaking at the next conference you’re at, wherever that conference may be. Come say hi. I’ll buy you a beer.

Questions and Links. No Cat Pictures.

This is a test of the Vanessa blogging system. This is only a test. If this were a real blog post, it would contain interesting words and witty banter. Maybe some cat pictures. Instead, it merely contains links. And a few questions. Please stay tuned for your regularly scheduled blogging. Tomorrow when I’ve had more sleep. Or at least more caffeine.

Ahem.

First, the questions:

  1. I know a lot of guys who have iPhones, but I don’t know of any girls who have one. I know I haven’t been so nice about the iPhone before, but if you admit to having one, I promise I won’t mock. Much.
  2. What Facebook apps do you find to be the most valuable? I’m thinking Facebook could be much more useful if only I had something installed other than a way for people to send me virtual cocktails. Not that I don’t love the cocktails and I hope everyone who has sent me one knows I’m cashing them in for the real thing the next time we’re in a bar together. But still.
  3. What should I set my DVR to record? Right now, it only records Scrubs reruns, but I’m assuming there must be something new that I’m missing out on.

Now, the links. I’ve done lots of writing at Search Engine Land over the last few days:

Bonus blogging: In a sign that there remains a least a small amount of good in the world, I arrived at the parking garage this morning one minute after 9am. This may not seem of consequence; however, if you arrive before 9am, you pay $12 for one day and if you arrive after 9am, you pay $24. Sadly, my ticket was stamped 9:01. I lamented to the parking attendant that I sadly arrived just a moment too late and he grabbed my ticket and scribbled on it, critically turning back time. I may not have that mythical and longed-for time machine, but at least I have a nice parking guy.

Seeing the World Through the Eyes of Twitter

I’m usually really good about keeping up on what’s going in in the world around me through my RSS feeds. Lately though, with all the travel and work and sitting on the balcony watching the seals, I’ve been getting behind in my reading. I seem to be keeping up OK though, just by skimming Sphinn, Techmeme, and my Facebook newsfeed. And surprisingly, I seem to get a lot of news lately from Twitter.

The Twitter-Only View
So, I wondered, what if I only got news through Twitter. How lopsided would my world view be? I suppose this experiment would be very different for everyone, because unlike a similar experiment with something like Sphinn, the news you get depends very heavily on who you’re following.

As I mentioned the other day, I recently started having some Twitters sent to my phone, but I primarily still keep up using the web interface. Twitter by phone is great for random messages from close friends (”we’re having dinner at my house, who wants to come over?”), but the web seems to work much better for following everyone else. For one thing, it’s much easier to click on links people post when I’m not driving in my car at 60mph.

So what does the world look like through Twitter? Actually, pretty comprehensive! Sure, maybe what people are having for dinner and where they’re shopping isn’t exactly news, but here are things I learned in just the last few days:

All in all, not a bad view of the world. I like that the people I follow aren’t reading the same sites as I am so I get much more variety the types of news than I might if I just read my feeds.

A Facebook Perspective
My Facebook news feed has potential too (particularly if enough people add the new Google News Facebook application). My current feed is:

  • telling me about those ridiculous Dallas Cowboys who thought they were paying $275 rather than $275k for cowboy.com and want a refund
  • showing me new pics from the DMA conference
  • pointing me at this super cool visualization of the Gonzales testimony
  • letting me know that a friend of mine is setting up his slingbox (so maybe I can ask him how it went and get help setting up mine!)
  • breaking the news that it’s not Christmas
  • explaining how I can get site visitors from posting a comment on Reddit
  • describing how to measure user engagement
  • alerting me that a lot of people want me to be a vampire

Augment all that with Sphinn hot topics and Searchcap to keep me up-to-date on search, with a little Techmeme tossed in for good measure, and I’m set.

In a world of information overload, with everyone jumping on the crowdsourcing bandwagon, why not take advantage of others to do the work of sorting through it all for you!

Twitter By Phone, Now With Default Scoble

What’s not to love about Twitter? It’s nowhere near the commitment of a blog. You don’t have to dodge people chucking books and sheep at your head like you do with Facebook, and it captures the brilliant laziness of a Christmas letter — why send personal messages to your friends when you can send an instant message to all of them at once?

Until yesterday, I only used the web version to update my status and browse through what my friends were doing. If I was traveling, I used the mobile web version (which is to say, mostly, I’ve used the mobile version). As with many things, I never used it in the way it was originally intended. I think the idea is that you find out what your friends are doing via text message and then you text back what’s going on with you. I would think this concept falls apart with more than a few friends, not only because you wouldn’t have time to do anything except check your phone, but also because you’d eventually run out of money paying your text messaging bills.

But everyone I know is on the Twitter-by-text bandwagon, and I was feeling a little left out. Natala said that the fastest way to get in touch with her was by Twitter. And I’ll never forget having dinner with a bunch of fellow geeks after Gnomedex, with everyone’s phones on the table, vibrating every few seconds with Twitter updates.

So yesterday, I decided to give it a try. First, I checked over the list of people I’m following. If I was going to start getting text messages about every waking moment of someone’s day, I figured they should be from people I actually know. Then, I hit the switch and on came the texts.

First thing I noticed? That you feel very popular and surrounded by friends when you’re getting texts from them every few minutes. Twitter messages on my phone make me feel warm and fuzzy in a way that scrolling through a web page just can’t measure up to. Yay Twitter. Send me more!

I also noticed that sometimes I would get a Twitter text long before it made it to the web version, and in some cases, the web version didn’t show up at all. I need to keep text messaging on just so I don’t miss anything!

Next, I realized that my phone really doesn’t have much storage space. Things filled up pretty quickly. I have an unlimited text messaging plan, so I wasn’t worried about costs, but I need to hit that delete button more quickly.

And then I found a fatal flaw with the direct messages coming to my phone. It’s difficult enough for me to keep up with and reply to regular email. When someone sends me a direct message via Twitter that then goes to my phone, how can I possibly remember to email that person back if I don’t have time at that very second to reply?

My next problem was that I didn’t actually read the directions and wasn’t sure how to send Twitters from my phone. So, my ability to Twitter each new moment was a bit hindered.

But the biggest problem? Robert Scoble. I was overloaded with Scoble Twitters that piled on like that downpour of salt following around that girl with the umbrella. Ironically, he was Twittering to people who were complaining about his barrage of Twitters.

@jbb tells me I’ve broken Twitter’s unwritten rules again and that I should go back to my blog. Listen: there’s a little unfollow button” in Twitter. Just use it. Why try to make me feel bad? I have a lot to say. If you don’t want to listen, unfollow.

I totally agree. What kind of whiner subscribes to what someone is writing and then complains about the frequency of that writing. Dude, unsubscribe.

Indeed, it’s ridiculous for me to complain about getting his Twitters on my phone.

Except.

I’m not following Scoble on Twitter.

Because he’s so prolific and I have such little time, I much prefer to scroll through his blog or Twitter feed when I have time. His is pull, rather than push, content.

As you can see, when I look at Scoble’s profile, I see the “follow” button.

Scoble on Twitter

Compare that to Baratunde who I am following, whose profile shows a status of “following”.

Baratunde on Twitter

So why am I getting Scoble’s Twitters on my phone? I don’t see them in the web version of Twitter. He is following me, but I don’t get the Twitters of anyone else following me who I’m not following in return.

I turned off phone notifications while I figure it out. I might try following him, then setting his notifications to off, although that seems like a bit of a hack. (I do need a way to get back that feeling of all my friends keeping me company with their texts though, so it might be worth it.)

A while back people were talking about Scoble hijacking the newsfeed on Facebook. I have my account set to “less of the Scoble” and I still get him there too.

Maybe social networks just operate now with default Scoble, whether you sign up for him or not.

Time, Social Media, Crowdsourcing, Being Cranky, and Shiny Things

The trouble with time is that there’s just not enough of it. I would work on a time generation device except that, well… I just don’t have time.

If We’re Drinking Martinis, Surely We’re Not That Geeky. Right?
Particularly in Seattle, all kinds of cool stuff is always going on. Case in point? Thingamajiggr. There’s no “e” so you know it’s all shiny and web 2.0 and stuff. I understand that there will be also martinis in addition to the shiny, so I’m hoping to find some of this elusive time I keep hearing about to stop by.

Another cool event in Seattle that I sadly don’t have time for is Localization World next Tuesday through Thursday. Jeff Howe from Wired is giving a keynote on crowdsourcing translations — engaging communities to translate websites and software apps. Google does this, of course with its translation console and it would be interesting to see how well companies are doing with this — how they’re motivating volunteers and how accurate the results are.

Get Mad Social Media Skilz! Now with Shiny Discount!
I can’t go to that because I’m going to try to make SMX Social Media — which, of course, also will be a bit about crowdsourcing. Particularly if you’re in NY, you should definitely try to stop by to check it out as well as the Best of the Web Internet charity party on Monday night. Speaking of shiny, use code SMX10offSM to register for SMX Social Media to get 10% off. I’m particularly looking forward to the keynote with Joshua Schachter of del.icio.us and Garrett Camp of StumbleUpon. I so don’t get StumbleUpon but it sure can drive visitors to a site. Maybe I can learn more about the magical mysteriousness that is social media traffic.

See Me Be Cranky!
I did find time to be cranky with John Dvorak yesterday. You should definitely check out CrankyGeeks if you want to know how I feel about cars made for women (finally our prayers have been answered and we women no longer have to worry our pretty little heads about complicated things like reverse and what that D means on the gear panel!) and learn how all the world needs to do is wrap itself in glossy paper to eliminate fire and terrorism.

I always have time to rant about glossy paper.

Email Bankruptcy Revisited

USA Today ran an article on Friday that mentioned my conflicted relationship with email that ultimately caused me to declare email bankruptcy. My friends, reminded of my woes, immediately reached out to support me. If only everyone had friends like I have…

So, how has life changed since email bankruptcy? Did the world collapse into burning inferno of email nonresponse? Did bankruptcy hurt my email credit score and force me into one of those high-interest email loan programs you see infomercials for on late-night TV? Have those whose emails I jettisoned started a Facebook group called “those who were shunned by Vanessa’s email bankruptcy and are plotting revenge”?

Amazingly enough, life has gone on. It was much easier to manage incoming mail without the deluge of 15,000 messages threatening to collapse the email system entirely. Anyone who needed a reply emailed me again. And this time, I was actually able to reply.

But I have a long way to go. I can see the email gathering forces, manning battle stations, and attempting to take me over once again. Everyone has a different data management style, and I think I’m learning some things about myself.

  • I do a terrible job of deleting mail. I’m not sure why this is. I am an anti-pack rat with my physical belongings. I am merciless in shedding things I don’t need. And yet I’m unable to delete mail that offers me valuable business opportunties in Nigeria.
  • I need to reply to mail right away. When I don’t, I get so much new mail that it completely pushes that mail that I’ve read and not replied to right off the page.
  • My phone is great for staying caught up with mail, except that if I read something that I really can’t reply to on my phone, it can easily get lost on the email avalanche.
  • I am still terrible at folder management.
  • I have too many email accounts and I should probably consolidate them in some way.

It is better than it was, but I’ve by no means mastered the art of email nirvana. Ironically, the USA Today reporter contacted me while she was writing the story. She sent me an email. So, of course I didn’t see it until after her deadline had passed.

the wonder and beauty of online shopping

It’s quite possible that the greatest breakthrough of our time is online retail. What could be better than sitting in bed with your laptop, in comfy pajamas, browsing around, seeing what you want, then click, click, it arrives at your door? This internet shopping thing is truly a miraculous invention. I admit, I took this luxury for granted. I forgot those days of trudging uphill in the snow both ways, balancing my purchases on my back, at the mercy of the limited in-store selection.

But never again will I treat the privilege of shopping online so casually. I will treasure it like a precious gift, a delicate glass unicorn like Harmony’s minions got her in that one episode when she decided she would be Buffy’s arch nemesis. Before the days when Buffy needed to know the plural of nemesis. Nemeses?

I have learned my lesson and I share it with you so you too, can treat your online shopping options like a unicorn. Or something like that. It’s possible I’ve lost the metaphor.

Yesterday, I decided to purchase a few monitors (OK, three) and a TV at an online site that will rename unnamed. I merrily browsed around, clicked the little add to cart buttons, entered my discount code, then my credit card information and clicked that magical purchase button. The entire process took maybe five minutes. And then it happened. The dreaded error page. The page didn’t make much sense, just vague wording about a temporary error and how calling the 800 number would make things all better.

I foolishly listened to the error message. In retrospect, I realize that what I should have done was run screaming as far away from my telephone as possible. Or just gone to Fry’s. But instead, I dialed the phone. And was sucked into an inner vortex of hell. It was like Dante’s seventh circle only possible with more boiling blood rivers.

First, the initial conversation to even get to the same point I had been at when I clicked that happy little purchase button was 35 minutes. I do not exaggerate. 35 minutes to explain what I wanted and then explain again, and then explain about the discount code, and then, and I am not making this up, I had to go out to my car, fire up my broadband card on my laptop, and read the URL that I ended up on after clicking on the monitor and entering the discount code. It is less fun that you think to repeat into your cell phone, “no, then a slash, then an ampersand, then a p and an equals sign. no, equals, right, then a question mark…”. It’s pain like I hope even my worst enemy never has to experience. OK, maybe my worst enemy.

And then after confirming my address three times and my credit card twice, I thought the pain had ended. But she called back no fewer than eight times. Was the address in fact correct? Yes. Did I want my confirmation code? No, remember how I asked to have it emailed to me because I’m driving? Oh right. And then she couldn’t get my credit card to go through for some unknown reason. And then it went through fine. It was a never ending cycle of misery and torment.

Then I did some online research (the second greatest invention of all time!) and found that my discount code meant that I was still paying about $500 more than average for the TV I had ordered. So I had to call back. You might think I could at least cancel online, but of course I never actually got that email with my confirmation code. The person on the phone then couldn’t find my order. Did I mean the monitors? No, actually I meant the TV. After 12 minutes on hold, she tracked it down. And why did I want to cancel? Well, the whole $500 more thing. That was a factor. And while I was at it, could I also cancel the mounting hardware? But why would I want to cancel that? Well, you know, since I’m not buying the TV now, I don’t really need the hardware. I only had repeat myself three or four times before she agreed to cancel both.

Finally, I was done!

Only not so much. I got another phone call. Why am I canceling my TV order? I said that I had explained this when I canceled. Yes, but I had explained that to customer service, and this was the sales department. They needed to know too! I asked, couldn’t those two departments just talk to each other? No, they had to hear it from me. Of course they did.

So, two days and a total of over an hour on the phone and I may indeed one day get my monitors. At least I can wait and hope.

Oh online shopping. Please never go away from me again. I promise to treat you with care and respect forever. Like a unicorn.

a social networking infusion of hope and joy and requited love

Earlier I ranted about how there are all these social networking sites and they bring us together and are great and joyous and we are all on a mountain top, holding hands, singing songs, and buying each other cokes, except that we are all on different mountains and every three minutes, we have to switch mountains to leave a new status message and by the time we’re done climbing and running around and setting things up just right on every mountain top we can find, our coke is warm and who wants warm coke.

Both in the comments and on twitter, people suggested various solutions for more easily stalking and being stalked, so I started checking them out. Then, I dug around and found more solutions, but none that really did what I was looking for. There are services where you can have a consolidated place for all of your profiles, but I can do that myself. And in fact, these consolidation services let you enter profile details, pictures, and all kinds of other things, so they end up being another social networking service to keep track of! It’s like they act like they are this fantastical magical answer, but in fact, are secretly adding to my coke-drinking, song-teaching, hand-holding dilemma. It’s like being rewarded for peeling a pile of potatoes… with more potatoes. Not that I don’t love me some potatoes, but sometimes, I’d like to stop peeling and eat them already.

First, I should mention that I’m not exactly a social networking butterfly. I don’t have a MySpace account (I mean, actually, I might. I vaguely recalling getting one as to grab the username. But I don’t think I could log in now even if I tried.). I may have a Friendster account, possibly. Not sure. I do have a Facebook account, but I’m so lame there, I can’t even update my status message more than once every two weeks. I do upload pictures to Flickr, but I forget that people can comment and I can’t really figure out how to see if anyone has commented, so I tend to happen upon a question about one of my pictures like a month after someone posts it. Really slick social networking there, huh.

I also have a Linkedin account that I’ve had forever. I never go there, but I was scrolling through it when looking into this social networking stuff. I am convinced that every single person in the world has a Linkedin account. Go ahead. Type in someone’s name. Anyone’s. Or try this. Fill out your profile with your previous jobs and where you went to school and then click on the tiniest, most obscure company you’ve ever worked for. Every single person you work with will be listed. It’s freaky, really. I was talking to someone the other day who said that they were on Linkedin all the time and I said, doing what? And I guess that’s why I’m so bad at these sites. I don’t know exactly what you do there, but apparently you network. Like you might at a cocktail party only you can do it from your couch with your laptop while you watch Buffy DVDs. And you have to mix your own drinks. So, as with everything, there are pros and cons.

As you can see by my sidebar, I have been trying Twitter, and I actually kind of like it because I have a mix of friends that I can keep up with and I can do short little microblogging. Except again, I don’t really update very often. And I don’t really do instant messaging, so I have to go to the website to see everyone’s updates. Which makes it less useful than it could be, I suppose, especially when the website mostly shows the cat with the screwdriver when I know for a fact that cats refuse to do even the easiest of hardware maintenance requests. They will type for you though.

I do have a Digg profile, but does that really count as social networking? I mean, I guess you can see what stories your friends think are interesting and you can check them out too, so it’s a bit like sharing and being social. I have tried to set up del.icio.us, but I’m just not quite that organized yet. It’s on the list though. Right after I read that Getting Things Done book.

As an experiment, I tried a few of these purported magical consolidation sites. How did it go? Well…

SocialURL
Connect all of your social networks with one URL. Sounds fantastic right? Well, it let me enter the URLs of my profiles on the various social networking sites. Although, as I mentioned before, I could set up a page of links myself. I entered my Flickr information, but it didn’t seem to do anything with that. Then came cause for alarm. It prompted me to create a photo album. But I already have a photo album on Flickr! I’m here to consolidate stuff, not create new stuff! I can also write post-it notes to myself, which is OK I guess. But somewhat random. I can see who’s viewed my (non-existent) profile, which is, well, kind of creepy I suppose. I can also leave messages for people, which means that in addition to my email, and other email, and oh right that other email, plus Facebook, those hard-to-find Flickr comments, twitters, and blog comments, I need to remember to come over here to see what people are saying. Also, even with a non-existent profile, I’ve started getting requests for friends.

It’s not bad, as far as consolidation goes. They gave me a badge I can put on my site, like this:
vanessafox SocialURL
Get your own social badge

You can do things like browse the “popular” people, who look exactly as you might imagine.

Jaiku
This seems to be not unlike Twitter, except that you can also add a bunch of feeds to your profile. You can list as many feeds as you’ve got. And then you can get a badge like this, so someone can go see your list of feeds and our mini blogging entries. I think.

It is kind of cool how it (I think) shows a combined feed of everything, but of course, it requires that everything you do has feeds, and I’m not sure if that’s the case. Digg and Twitter both seem to have one though, so maybe it’s just a matter of doing a little investigation and experimentation. (It couldn’t find the feed of my blog until I gave it the Feedburner URL, for instance.)

claimID
This somehow uses OpenID. It also claims to help you rank more highly for your name in search engines, although I’m not sure how that works. It looks like this is another system of compiling all of your identities. But you just add links and descriptions and things manually. I didn’t have the energy to do this. I guess I can do other things like add a contact network and I’m supposed to mark up my contacts with XFN data. Now, I pride myself on being a geek, but XFN data? Apparently, on my blogroll, I can add a rel attribute to the links that specify how I know the blogger. Looking at the documentation, I see that an acquaintance is someone I’ve perhaps exchanged a short conversation or two. Anything more makes that person my friend. I must have a lot of friends. Although a friend is also described as a home (boy|girl) and I didn’t know I was hip enough to have any of those, so maybe I have no friends at all. I can describe someone as my muse, which is awesome. But apparently that has no inverse. And with someone you call a crush, no symmetric relationship is offered as a possibility. Which makes the whole XFN thing somewhat like a sad Shakespearean tragedy, with unrequited love and lonely muses.

“Wilt thou be gone home boy? it is not yet near day:
It was the nightingale and not the lark,
That pierced the fateful hollow of thine inspiring muse-like ear;
Nightly she sings on yon pomegranate tree, which is not yet a geographic location attribute but hopefully will be soon:
Believe me XFN crush, it was the nightingale.

It was the lark, oh you with the non-symmetrical crush, the herald of the morn,
No nightingale: look, acquaintance with whom I have exchanged only a short conversation or two, what envious streaks
Do lace the severing clouds in yonder geographic location of which we do not share an adjacent doorway.

My point is just that claimID seems to be a hell of a lot of work. And I’m pretty lazy, which I describe when trying to make a good impression as “busy”.

Cluztr
Somewhat like del.icio.us except that it just keeps track of every web site you surf to so your friends can see your online path. Um, no thanks. I like to keep my porn surfing to myself.

Wink
You can search for your name and find the profiles that are yours and claim them. It found my Twitter and LinkedIn profiles. Everything else was MySpace accounts for 15 year old girls. Who knew? You can also then add all the profiles Wink didn’t find. I admit, I’m getting a little tired at this point. Especially as most of these services aren’t accepting my profile pictures very easily. And Wink never sent my verification email. And I couldn’t figure out how to edit something if I entered the URL incorrectly. So, I would have to just delete it and start over. It’s also a little unsettling that you have to provide your username and password for each service to claim it and it’s unclear if it’s gathering the information or just passing it through to the service. In any case, Wink gave me a widget for my blog that looks like this:

ProfileLinker
This service links all your profiles. Are you beginning to sense a pattern? It also lets me upload a photo album and set status information, so as with several of the other services, it starts to compound my problem, rather than solve it. This site also lets you add password information for your various services, which will give you extra features from those services. This site has nice embedded help that shows up when you click into a field. You can also create a portable profile, and I’m not quite sure what that means except that it made me a freaky widget that rotates with pictures of people like Rand Fishkin (don’t worry Geraldine! It was this profilelinker service! I’m not keeping pictures of your fiance!) and Mike McDonald. My module looks like this:

There are surely lots of other social networking aggregation services out there. It seems that if what you want to do is have a widget that displays all your network links on your blog, many of these would do fine. If you want to use one of these services as a social networking service, well, you can, but you have more cokes to hand out and songs to sing than I do. And if you’re looking for the fulfillment of my impossible dream, and using one service to push and pull all status information, friends feeds, photo albums into a single gallery, and hope and joy and requited love for all, well, I haven’t found that yet. But I’ll let you know when I do.

7 steps to travel of joyousness and light

I’m an occasional traveler. I have been known, every so often, to trudge along with a suitcase and an anti-terrorist ziploc bag. By which I mean that I’m on an airplane or in a hotel more often than I’m at home.

I love to travel; it’s fantastic in many ways. But this post is not about the wonderment and joy of travel, exactly. Because travel can also be stressful and irritating and suck your soul dry, so this post is about how I (sometimes) manage to turn the less-than-ideal parts into, well, not wonderment and joy, but perhaps less soul sucking moments.

These tips are likely not all that useful to the infrequent traveler. If you don’t travel all that much, then you just might want to book a cheap trip, because after all it’s only a few days, and it’ll get you there. Or you might want to go all out and splurge on an extravagant, relaxing vacation, with fruity drinks that feature umbrellas and a view of the ocean, and cabana boys fanning you with palm leaves, and… right. Business travel. Totally different. Rarely features cabana boys. Someone should work on that.

1. Join those annoying loyalty programs.
I was a complete hold out on this for a long time. I remembered Subway and the tiny stamps and how you were supposed to save this card and then paste these stamps on it and then at some point, after keeping track of teeny scraps of paper and licking unappetizing glue, you ended up with a free cookie. Thanks, I’ll buy my own cookie and clear some clutter from my life.

Fortunately, for the most part, loyalty programs have gotten easier to keep track of. And you get more than a cookie in the end. Although sometimes, you also get the cookie. And who doesn’t like cookies?

At some point, it even becomes useful to give in and do what these companies who offer these programs have been trying to get all of us to do all along — be loyal. I don’t think you should do it simply for the sake of the program, but if you find a company (airline, rental car agency, hotel, or whatever) that offers consistently good service, and provides some perks for returning, you’ve already saved yourself a ton of travel hassle. You don’t really have to think about it. If that company is available where you’re headed, just book it.

And by “consistently good”, I mean, of course, that they offer the Starbucks experience. It may not be the best latte in the world, but it probably won’t kill you and it should be fairly similar to what you got in Boston. And Philadelphia. And Washington DC. Sometimes happy traveling is all about avoiding the unexpected surprise of the hotel room of despair with its lack of a working heater and plastic folding desk chair.

Hotel loyalty programs sometimes start offering you perks just because you’ve signed up — free internet, bottles of water and snacks, free gym. The good rental car programs have a fee to join, but sometimes your company or one of your credit cards offers membership for free. I am Hertz gold for free through my American Express card, and whatever Budget’s program is through my work. Sometimes you just have to dig a little. But that extra five minutes of checking into it will be totally worth it the next time you don’t have to stand in line for an hour at the counter. Because then you might kill everyone around you and end up in prison which would totally make you late for that important meeting.

2. Speaking of annoying loyalty programs, be a frequent flyer on Alaska Airlines if you can.
If you fly a lot, you may as well stick to the same airline when you can, just because it really is worthwhile to gain elite status. However, as someone who is MVP Gold on Alaska and Platinum on American, I can tell you that not all elite statuses are the same. Generally, there’s not much you can do about this. You have to fly with whatever airline calls your home its hub. But I began to appreciate Alaska more and more the last time I called American.

Me: I need to change my flight.

Them: OK, that will be several hundred dollars!

Me: Er, do you waive the change fee or anything since I’m platinum? Alaska doesn’t charge me any fees.

Them: No, we don’t waive the fee, but we’re better than Alaska! We will upgrade you to first class!

Me: Right. Can you do that on this flight then?

Them:
Sure, 72 hours before the flight, we’ll let you know if your upgrade went through. And then you’ll need to pay the upgrade fee.

Me: OK. You know Alaska upgrades me when I buy my ticket. For free. I’m just saying.

3. Book your own flights.
I could save some time by having someone else book my travel. But I’m sort of a control freak. And if you consider the number of hours of my life are spent traveling, well letting someone else book my travel would be like having someone else pick out my apartment. It’s worth a little extra time to explore your options sometimes too. Case in point: a few days ago, I was booking a flight from San Jose to Orange County, then from Orange County to Seattle. Alaska doesn’t fly direct from SJC to SNA, so I went to the American Airlines web site. They had lots of flights, so I picked some reasonable times and went to pay. Where I found neither flight was upgradeable. What’s up with that? Does American Airlines suddenly hate me? So I called them.

For the first flight, they told me that it was a regional jet, operated by American Eagle. So not only does the plane have no first class, but it’s a tiny plane. A plane that bounces around in the wind a lot. I’m not really a fan of bouncing around when high in the air. I asked if any of the other flights were on real jets — perhaps a jet that would more smoothly fly through the sky in a less-roller coaster type fashion. Turns out, a flight just an hour earlier fit this criteria. Excellent! Put me on that one! For the second flight, they told me they were codesharing with Alaska. And they can’t upgrade their elite members on Alaska. Great! I’ll book that separately with Alaska. So, in five minutes, I went from a scary tiny plane, squeezed in, eating peanuts, to drinking wine, playing with puppies, and being served peeled grapes by those cabana boys.

4. Consider your hotel room carefully and make it your home.
If you’re staying in a hotel room for only a couple of days, you might think the room doesn’t really matter. But when you realize that cumulatively, you’re spending more time in hotel rooms than in your house, maybe it does matter after all. I have a set of things I look for in a room and then a set of things I do once I get there.

  • Please God, let the room have a coffeemaker. I mean, really. What the hell is wrong with this world.
  • The hotel really needs room service. Otherwise, I have days like I did a few weeks ago, holed up in my room with my laptop, conference call, followed by email, followed by more conference calls, followed by… well, certainly no food all day. And the mini bar mostly had wax lips. OK, hotel, very whimsical. But when I’m STARVING, I’m not merrily amused by your nostalgic non-edible mini bar food.
  • A comfortable desk chair would be too much to ask, I understand this. After what feels like thousands of painful chairs, designed for torture and cruelty, I have succumbed to the hotel chair directive. I will take the pain, and I will like it.
  • I know I already asked for room service, but can I have a mini bar too? Sometimes I just really need a bottle of water. Yes, I know they are $10 in the mini bar, but you see, I don’t check luggage and I can no longer bring bottles of water with me because, you know, they might blow up the plane. But I pay the price for the the safety of all of you. And our country.
  • Again, due to my great patriotism, I can’t carry on things like shampoo. Hotels should step up the patriotism too and provide me with something that will actually wash my hair and not leave it looking like I’ve been living under a bridge for a week. After all, people take a lot of pictures of the back of my head. My hotel-washed hair gets a lot of exposure!
  • A warm bed. You think this should go without saying. But no. It’s late, you’re tired. You just want to sleep. You get into bed and you’ve got one teeny little comforter that generates no heat whatsoever. And since the heating system in the room is an impossible system of knobs that have absolutely no markings on them and seem to be hooked up to nothing anyway, you need some heat. So, you dig through the room for an extra blanket. You check the closet, the dresser, the mini bar. Nothing. For all you hotel rooms that have blankets stashed away, thank you. Really. Otherwise, it’s good to know you need a blanket long before you are so tired you can barely stand up, much less find the phone and explain about this blanket and wait the 40 minutes it will take to bring it up.
  • Speaking of calling up and waiting for things, I have learned that it’s best to assess the state of the room right away, rather than let the drama unfold like a made-for-Lifetime movie. Too many times, I have been horrified and traumatized by surprise events. For instance, one does not want to discover that the room is stocked with only decaf coffee at 5am, when the email looms menacingly. Or when hungover. Um, not that the latter has happened to me.
  • I know someone who calls and asks for different furniture and then rearranges the room, and while I realize this is a bit extreme, I also completely understand why she would do it. I generally don’t go that far, although there is no reason not to rearrange things a bit if they make the room more comfortable. Sometimes, a well-placed light makes all the difference. Hotels do often have things available if you ask (tea kettle, foam pillows, reading chair). Or are nice to the people who clean the room. The other day, someone brought me a soap dish, unsolicited. She said, “I just thought you might like this soap dish for the bathroom.” Well, thanks!
  • The room does have a hair dryer. Really. Somewhere. Places to check: the shelf in the closet, the desk drawer, under the bed. Be warned they often hide it in a bag to make it even more difficult to find. Someone wants you walking around with wet hair and I’m not sure why.
  • There’s nothing to be done about this, but I’ll whine about it anyway. Why do rooms provide you with an iron and ironing board if they don’t provide an electrical outlet anywhere in the room where you could actually place the ironing board? Why? If I want to iron, I almost always have to rearrange to the room, just to get at an outlet. And speaking of irons, you would think you could just turn it on and get to ironing. Don’t ever do that. Half the time, the iron will leave horrid black spots or otherwise scorch your clothes and make you look like a street urchin. Test the iron first, perhaps on a hotel towel. On anything, really, other than the absolutely only thing you have to wear to an event that starts in 10 minutes. Just a helpful tip from me to you.
  • Power outlets are good. Rooms should have more of them. I stayed at a hotel a few days ago that had a power strip on the desk. I could actually leave the desk lamp plugged in and still charge my laptop, phone, blackberry, and camera. All at the same time! It was a magical moment.
  • A gym, any gym at all, even one I have to pay $15 a visit for, is great. A gym that stays open past 10 is even better. One with both cardio and weights? Almost too good to be true.
  • Do I even have to mention the internet access? Why does it always suck? Fortunately, I now have a Cingular broadband card, so I scoff at the hotel’s attempts to make me cry with its slow connections that drop every 5 minutes and refuse to let me on VPN. But you may not have a broadband card, so just be prepared for the sobbing. And while I’m at it, couldn’t hotels provide phones that actually work and have connections through which you can actually hear the person you are talking to? I’m just wondering. You know, dreaming the impossible dream.

5. Pack lightly. But well. In good luggage.
I have always been a terrible packer. But I’ve had to buck up and figure it out, because when you’re on the road half the time, you really need the right stuff. And I always need more socks. Some people have an extra toiletry bag, always packed and ready to throw into the luggage. I have that too, although it doesn’t consist of much — just the ziploc bag of peace and freedom with a little toothpaste and a few other tiny terror-free items. But what I do have always packed and at the ready is a bag of electronics. It became ridiculous for me to unplug all my random chargers and things and pack them up every time I needed to take another trip. I’d be unplugging all day! So, instead, I have a set of chargers just for traveling. My little electronics bag has a few other things I might need: usb storage, ethernet cable (courtesy of Yahoo), card reader, spare headphones. It’s hard to see, but it looks a little like this:

Electronic travel

You should also bring a CD or two if you’re renting a car. It’s doubtful you’ll be driving around in an area with good radio stations. For one thing, good radio stations don’t really exist.

I used to have crappy luggage, with broken zippers and uneven wheels. I finally splurged on some better luggage. Can you be in love with your luggage? I think I am living proof that you can be. Every time I fit everything into it and wheel it around with no fear of anything breaking or falling apart, I love it just a little more. I don’t pack much in the way of clothes. I figure if I have jeans, I can always grab an extra t-shirt somewhere if I need one. And hotels have same-day laundry service that can be handy. You can always get clothes if you need to. It’s the electronics you really can’t forget to bring.

And so as you can see, I don’t need checked luggage, because my bags consist of the following:

  • socks
  • more socks
  • jeans and a t-shirt or two
  • CDs
  • phone, blackberry, chargers for same, usb cable, ethernet cable, digital camera, reader for same, charger for same, usb storage, ipod, ipod charger, usb light, bluetooth headset, charger for same, headphones, laptop, charger for same (I would have a travel mouse, but sadly, it doesn’t seem to work), ninento ds lite (obviously, and charger), ds games (um, I’ll stop now to avoid looking like an insane person)

All that stuff totally fits in a carry on.

6. Don’t forget to take pictures.
It’s nice to have photographic proof of where you’ve been. Each city has a unique personality and charm. I’ve begun documenting my own travels this way, as seen by my flickr photo essay: views from hotel rooms.

7. Stay connected
I have the aforementioned Cingular broadband card that works pretty well. I also have a blackberry for those times when I just can’t have the laptop out (those are sad times indeed). A guy sitting next to me a few weeks ago saw my blackberry and jumped on the chance to share his fanatical love with a fellow blackberry addict. He showed me his super-special battery that makes the phone twice as thick but apparently actually lasts more than 5 minutes, unlike the normal battery of crappiness that I have. So, that might be good to get if you use your blackberry a lot. I told him that I just charge it from my laptop with a usb cable and he was shocked and amazed. (This is particularly useful when you need to charge it while on a plane, although that does run down the laptop battery, so you have to choose your powered device, which is sort of like in the Bible when Solomon had to cut that baby in half. Or something like that. I forget the story exactly).

I was using my laptop with my Cingular card on the plane earlier this week (before we took off! I was not in any way jeopardizing the plane’s sensitive electronics with my need for being online! Although to be honest, I would totally try to get online while in the air if I weren’t so terrified of the falling to the ground.). The guy next to me was barely getting a wireless signal from the terminal, but it was working OK. I told him about iPass (which I also have), which lets you get on most airport, hotel, and T-Mobile hotspot wireless spots at no charge. It looks like it’s about $30 a month, which is totally worth it since one day in a hotel can be like fifteen bucks. It even works at McDonald’s. Who knew McDonald’s had wireless?

I’m sure there’s lots more that can make all the difference in traveling, but I have to stop writing now because they’re calling my flight. What are your trips for making travel something other than a walk through the burning inferno of painfulness?

getting things done

After my post about how I dumped all my email and started over before it could suck the life entirely out of me and drag me into the murky depths of insanity and despair, several people commented that I should check out Getting Things Done. I read those comments and thought to myself. Huh. That sounds really interesting. Maybe I should order that.

Not long after, I happened to glance over at my bookshelf. Where I noticed this book. Called Getting Things Done. And vaguely recalled that a colleague suggested I try it months ago. I don’t even think I was complaining about my inbox at the time. I think he just observed my general state of being.

So, apparently I am too busy to remember that I ordered a book about dealing with being busy. And obviously, I was too busy to read it. I mentioned this to said colleague.

He said, “I can’t sharpen my axe right now, I’m too busy chopping wood with this dull blade!”

Indeed.

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