
Phonatic
I got a bit lost on a jog (slog, run, trudge…) around Brown University in Providence RI today. As I was walking back to the hotel, I saw the best.Vietnamese.restaurant.name.ever….”Phonatic”
Phonatic
I got a bit lost on a jog (slog, run, trudge…) around Brown University in Providence RI today. As I was walking back to the hotel, I saw the best.Vietnamese.restaurant.name.ever….”Phonatic”
Handy Travel Tip #207: If your bag is ten rows behind your seat, avoid the urge to barge past 40 people when the plane lands. You’ll get stuck trying to come back and just clog things up. Try waiting patiently until the intervening passengers have deplaned and stroll back casually to pick up your stuffs.
Handy Travel Tip #416: Don’t text at the urinals in the DFW airport Men’s room. Just don’t.
Handy Travel Tip #847: Don’t piss off the flight attendants by trying to put 22″ roller bags in the short overheads on the port side (at least on American). Editors note: Port is left, but always relative to the front of the airplane, so that’s to your RIGHT as you are boarding. In other words, over the seats labeled A, B, C or A, C. And don’t ask what happened to B.)
Handy Travel Tip #264: When you get to your row and there’s someone in the aisle seat blocking your access, don’t stand immediately in their way blocking them from moving into the aisleway. Where exactly do you figure they are going to go?
Handy Travel Tip #914: If the revolving door leaving the secure area has a recording that says “Only two people per revolving door opening, please. Touching the door will cause it to stop.”, it probably means that five people in the door opening is going to cause a delay.
Collect them all!
I was poking around in Flickr (sorry, forgot to note whose profile I noticed it in) and discovered WalkScore, a website that assesses walkability of where you live. WalkScore uses Google Maps and generates a score based on what’s nearby.
My results:
Update: According to the “How It Doesn’t Work” section, WalkScore only considers distances as the crow flies and does not understand pedestrian friendliness, bodies of water (and other impediments), and so forth. That’s too bad since it heavily skews the results. For example, our old house with the ’60’ score had no decent walkable destinations. There were plenty of closeby amenities, but driving was a necessity due to freeways and busy roads. OTOH, I walked to the grocery store, video store, and restaurants several times at week at the house with the ‘6’.
WalkScore is teaming up with Zillow and a number of realtors to promote their rankings. That’s great and I’m all for walkability, but I really do have some reservations about their rankings. I hope people are just using this as a starting point.