Photo of the Day (10.7.08)



I happen to be in Pittsburgh this warm fall Tuesday, sitting in a convention center looking out at the mountains around the Pennsylvanian city. Even since I came to visit my friend Al in Shady Side I've been fond of Pittsburgh, and now that I'm back five years later I still feel the same warm affection for the city. Or maybe that' just the Yuengling I keep drinking.

Flickr user(s) BrettandMariLynn took this tilt shift photo (don't you love them?) of a church nearby here.

Have any cool photos you'd like to share with the world? Add them to the Gadling Pool on Flickr, and it might be chosen as our Photo of the Day.

Undiscovered New York: Naval Brooklyn

When you describe the history of New York, you begin to realize that it is inextricably tied to the sea. Just recently we told you about a boat graveyard in Staten Island that has to be seen to be believed. And in fact, New York Harbor has been witness to some of this country's most important nautical history, from New York's rise as a trading port for the Dutch and the British, to the millions of immigrants who caught their first glimpse of their new country by boat at Ellis Island.

But no area of New York City has a more famous reputation in American naval lore than the borough of Brooklyn. Not only is Brooklyn home to one of the most historically important shipbuilding yards in the U.S., the borough was host to one of the fiercest battles of the Revolutionary War and is also the birthplace of one of history's most famous ships.

If stories of bloody battles, abandoned admirals' mansions and a little Civil War ironclad called the Monitor sound interesting, click below to keep reading...

OpenSkies releases sale fares on new routes to Amsterdam and Paris

Been eyeballing those super fancy fares on OpenSkies for the last few months but too afraid to jump on the tickets? Now's your time to take the bull by the horns and pull the trigger on that vacation to Paris or Amsterdam.

OpenSkies just announced that they put their Prem+ cabin on sale for the first 1,000 passengers on each route. For now, tickets will be $499 one way to Amsterdam, their newest route opening on October 15th, and $599 one way to Paris.

In case you aren't sure what "Prem+" means, that's OpenSkies code for plush, giant leather seats and premium service -- an experience better than many carriers in Business Class. Gadling got to try out Prem + first hand this past summer, and let me tell you, its well worth the dollar spent.

Sound like a good ride? You can take advantage of the Premium fares at flyopenskies.com or if you're feeling lucky, register to win free tickets at Gadling next Friday.

Oktoberfest can be expensive... especially if you take a £2,000 cab to get there

Have you ever missed a flight? It's a stressful and frustrating situation, especially if you have a carefully planned out itinerary that requires your presence in certain places at certain times. When a man named Dave missed his flight from Portsmouth to Munich -- where he was to celebrate his friend's bachelor party by drinking beer at Oktoberfest -- he decided to forgo the airlines. Instead he hailed a cab.

"I thought he was having a laugh to start off with or it was one of my cabbie mates doing a wind-up on me but he was deadly serious," says Mick Hogan, the cab driver who was hailed down by Dave. Hogan explained that the cab ride would cost £1,950 plus £250 for the English Channel tunnel and a hotel for the night, but the high price didn't stop the passenger; it was Munich or bust.

The drive from Portsmouth to Munich certainly isn't a short one, but Hogan didn't find the task so boring after all, "It's not something I'd want to do every day but it beats taking a few pensioners out to the shops."

Could Budget Airlines Unite?

A recent post on Ben Mutsabaugh's Today in the Sky blog focused on statements made by Frontier Airlines CEO Sean Menke. Menke told a Denver newspaper: "I have been very vocal about (low-cost carriers) having to be aligned through some form or fashion...and not necessarily through mergers." That's not a surprising statement from a Frontier exec because of his airline's buddy-buddy relationship with fellow budget carrier AirTran. The two help each other with ticketing, destinations served and promotions.

But the current economy and gas prices may make Frontier's approach to the budget game a model for other LCCs. While some airlines, like Southwest, have the clout to challenge the big boys on their own, most carriers are finding their low-cost business model in jeapordy. Alliances could help when it comes to ticket sales and frequent flier programs, but also with the costs of using airports. A band of small carriers could agree to make a LCC hub at all major airports, sharing gates, ticketing counters, even employees. Helping each other a little could keep them all in the game longer.

Obscure Holiday in the US is a Big Deal in Spain

Try to keep your excitement under control: Columbus Day is coming. While post office employees and history buffs have been waiting, this holiday will pass unnoticed for most people. That is, unless they try to go to the post office or local library, most of which will be closed in memory of Christopher Columbus, first white guy to set foot in the Americas (sorry Leif Ericson, but you didn't write it down).

But the U.S. is not the only nation that celebrates Columbus Day. So does Spain. Only they don't call it Columbus Day. It carries the grand title: Dia de la Hispanidad. The day features parades and celebrations of Spanish culture. The Spanish and Portuguese-speaking Americas and Spain's Iberian kin Portugal get in on the party this year with a celebration of Iberian and American culture called VivAmérica. There are festivals of art and film, concerts and lectures, and little or no mention of the bloody history of the colonization of South and Central America. Most of the festivities will take place in Madrid. The events run until October 12th. Parades also take place in some US cities with large Spanish-speaking populations.

Source

Product review - Tom Bihn Checkpoint Flyer TSA friendly laptop bag



Back in August, the Transportation Safety Administration relaxed its rules for getting your laptop through the security checkpoint.

Essentially, the rules say that a laptop can stay in its bag, as long as the X-Ray machine has a clear and unobstructed view of the computer. There can be no pockets, zippers or items blocking its view of what is inside the laptop.

Several manufacturers immediately announced that they would have their own TSA friendly bags on shelves within a few months.

The first of them to actually deliver on that promise, is Tom Bihn with the new Checkpoint Flyer. Tom Bihn is not your average luggage company. For starters, they still make their bags in the United States, Tom Bihn himself is in charge of designing them, and they are hand made in their Seattle factory. The end result is something unlike any bag I've ever seen.

JetBlue to offer "happy hour" fares in DC this afternoon

JetBlue seems to be kicking up their marketing tactics into high gear. Just a few weeks ago the airline started selling tickets on Ebay, and coming up in the next few weeks will be sponsoring "happy hour fares" in several target cities.

According to JetBlue spokesman Morgan Johnston, the airline will be setting up a happy hour bar-eqsue setting in select locations around the cities where people can mill about and see special last minute fares that will only be available at that location. Tickets will be available on a first come first serve basis for upcoming last minute weekend fares, and as customers see fares they like published on a blackboard, they can jump on the tickets on the spot.

Whether JetBlue will dynamically adjust the price of their last minute fares based on demand is an interesting question. Depending on how many people show up to the events, they may have a hard time selling strange flights at strange times. Or maybe people will just get excited and buy anything.

The overall goal, however, is pretty clear: get a group of dedicated JetBlue customers isolated, fired up about travel and in the spending mood then throw some tickets to the fray -- let the excitement of the moment overtake any reasonable doubts on prices. The same thing applied to the earlier sales on Ebay -- nobody really got a good deal, but in the heat of the moment, winning an auction is much more fun than saving on tickets.

Today's happy hour takes place in Washington DC, between 3:30 and 6:30 PM at the Reston Town Center Pavilion (11900 Market Street at the intersection of Discovery St.) Let us know how the the sales go and if it's a good deal we'll post more dates.

Rude Parisians? Not with Paris Greeter

We all know that Parisians have a reputation for being smug and snooty. Want to order a coffee? Better pronounce café au lait with an impeccable French accent or you can forget about good service. But stereotypes are just that: stereotypes. And not all Parisians have a propensity to rudeness, at least not those part of Paris Greeter.

Created by a group of locals intent on showing the good side of the Parisian nature, Paris Greeter is a service that provides the traveler with free tours in nine different languages. Groups of up to six are led by true Parisians that have a love for their city and a love for sharing it with foreigners; the organization's French name, Parisien d'un jour, Parisien toujours is very fitting.

These aren't trained tour guides working for big companies, they're just regular locals that want to give their city a good name. In the words of one of the volunteers, "I've always heard my American friends say things like, 'Paris is wonderful - except for the Parisians. And I always wanted to do something about it."

[Via World Hum]

Economic woes hit Icelanders especially hard

Considering Iceland's location and climate, perhaps it's no surprise that the country's credit markets are in a deep freeze. During the "boom years" of the '90s, Iceland became one of the richest countries in the world per capita, thanks to economic reform, a booming stock market, and an increased demand for the fish off its coasts.

But as the Guardian points out, "Iceland built its extraordinary wealth on the crest of the worldwide credit boom and now the crunch is sweeping it away, bankrupting a people for whom the past eight years have been, for most of them and by their own admission, one long party."

Iceland's currency is plunging towards the center of the Earth-- almost as weak as the currencies of Zimbabwe and Turkmenistan-- and supermarkets are having trouble paying for more food to be imported.

All of this is obviously terrible news for Icelanders, but travelers might find some unbelievable deals if they want to visit any time soon. Not only that, you'd be helping out the locals by providing some much-needed foreign investment.

More here.

(Photo via ContemplationDC)




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