Monthly Archives: April 2008

Shocked I Tell You

Something that verges on miraculous happened to me on my trip to San Diego:  I experienced a round trip of flying that experienced no significant delays and two uneventful flights.  Sadly that qualifies as miraculous in modern air travel.

I traveled on USAir and the only notable negative was that during the flight to California, which took off at 6:00-ish, they ran out of meal and snack boxes (available for the bargain price of $6-ish dollars) before the stewardesses made it half way through the cabin.  Go figure that a flight that took off at dinner time would have hungry passengers.  I have no problem with them charging for meals if they let the passengers know ahead of time, but good gracious you’d think they would have planned to have a few more meals available on a trans-continental flight that took off at dinner time.  Luckily I’d already eaten on the way to the airport so I didn’t need a meal, and for the return flight I made sure I brought plenty of snacks to sustain me for the flight.

The way I see it the airlines’ primary job is to get passengers to their destinations on time, or close to it, in something approximating comfort.  The fact that when they do so it feels exceptional says a lot about what’s wrong with the airline industry.

Both flights were oversold so they spent a lot of time at the gates trying to bribe passengers to give up their seats in return for free round trip tickets anywhere in the lower-48 states.  That’s why I was glad to read last week that the Feds are raising the minimum rates that airlines have to pay when they bump passengers.  I think they’re going to need as much encouragement as possible to treat us right.

Comparative Real Estate

Front page lead article in the Wed. April 16 San Diego Tribune had this headline: "Median Price Keeps Falling; Home value below $400,000 for first time since late 2003"

It shows how long I’ve been living in the Piedmont Triad that I find that number gulp-inducing. If I still lived in DC I probably wouldn’t be phased bt it, but since the median home prices in the Triad are probably closer to $200,000 the San Diego numbers kind of give me the willies. 

When I get home from California I’m going to look up the median for Northern Virginia to see what’s happened to the values since we moved in ’04.  Probably still high but below their peak a couple of years ago.

Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

Baseball Marathon

The SCIP conference in San Diego ended this evening and Dan of SCIP and I headed to Petco Field to see a Padres game and relax a little after a long, hard week of work. We managed to pick a game that is now in the 22nd inning. We’re now hoping it sets the record for longest game in history but the Rockies just scored to go ahead by a run. It’s past one in the AM and we’re exhausted but we’re not about to leave until the last out.

Update: Game ended right after I posted this.  Official game time of 6 hours and 16 minutes.  I found out later that is was the longest game in the majors since 1993 and it was the longest game in either franchise’s history. 

Loving Mahmoud

I rarely watch Saturday Night Live anymore because I find too much of it un-funny, but every once in a while I’ll catch one of their clips online and get a good giggle.  Below’s a prime example.  Any love song from a Jewish man to Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is gonna be funny and just a little disturbing.

Thanks Versus Network

The Davis Cup is back in Winston-Salem this weekend which is pretty bad luck for me.  Since my client’s conference is next week there was no way I would have been able to take in the matches and prepare for my time in San Diego.  Since I’m flying Saturday evening I could have tried to hit the Friday matches but realistically there was no way I could do it.

Instead I satisfied myself with TiVo-ing the matches so that I could watch them while I packed.  All was well until the second match between James Blake and Paul Henri-Mathieu went into a fifth set and a couple of games into the set the announcers informed the television audience that the network (Versus) was going to switch to NHL playoff hockey at 7:00 p.m. no matter where the match stood.  They also informed the audience that if you were lucky enough to have the Tennis Channel you could catch the match there or you could watch it online at Versus.com.

Sure enough they cut to the hockey pre-game show right at 7:00 and thus I missed a thrilling comeback by Blake.  Apparently at 4-4 his serve was broken, then he was down two match points on Mathieu’s next service game before he broke back, and then he held serve and broke Mathieu again.  But I’m just going by what I heard on the sports report because, you know, I didn’t see it.  I was going to gripe about how Time-Warner doesn’t give me the Tennis Channel but does give me 840 shopping channels, and how my buddy Bobby gets the Tennis Channel because he has DirecTV, but from reading the comments on the article about the match at the Tennis Channel site it seems that they blew the coverage anyway so lots of people besides me didn’t get to see the conclusion of the match.

The good news is that Celeste will get to go with some friends to the doubles match today.  That should be a lot of fun, and boy do I wish I could be there.  Of course I’ll set my Tivo, but let’s hope there aren’t any hockey games to cut to this time.

Scan Me

The "new new thing" these days seems to be bar codes.  Specifically customizable, two dimensional bar codes called QR (Quick Response) Codes that can be scanned by cell phones that have cameras and the QR Code reader software installed.  I’d try to explain the concept, but since I barely understand it myself I’ll have to send you to a PDF that does have an explanation.

Ignorance has never slowed me down before so I won’t let it now.  I’m happy to unveil the official QR Code for http://www.jonlowder.com:

Jonlowdercombarcode

links for 2008-04-10