Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Roomatlas

Roomatlas Makes Finding Hotels a Breeze
Name: Roomatlas

Quick Pitch: RoomAtlas simplifies hotel booking, showing live availability, pricing, reviews, landmarks and pictures on a rich interactive map.

Genius Idea: Remember when mashups were all the rage? Lately, they’re rarely mentioned, but that doesn’t mean a good mashup can’t be a fantastic service, even one that can replace several others.

A mashup called Roomatlas ended up in our inbox, with a fairly simple description: it combines Google Maps (Google Maps) with Expedia’s database of hotels and TripAdvisor’s reviews. Add to that the fact that RoomAtlas reduces the number of steps you need to take to get the information you need, and you get a great, simple way to find and book hotels.
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Stay Like a Rodent in French Hamster Hotel


A hamster-themed hotel in Nantes, France, offers rooms and layouts inspired by hamster-cages. Rooms have hamster wheels, the food is all grains and seeds, the water comes out of hamster bottles, etc.

Hamster Hotel lets you live like a rodent - Boing Boing
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Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Fido Factor

Mashable has written up a profile of the new web site fidofactor.com which allows you to find dog friendly locations in the city you're in. It includes restaurants, bars, parks, hotels, attractions and a lot more. This can make your next trip with Fido a lot easier.
Name: Fido Factor

Quick Pitch: Fido Factor is a dog-specific local search and review site and iPhone app built for dog owners. It’s a “Yelp (Yelp) for dogs.”

Genius Idea: We dog owners love our canines: it’s really that simple. We raise them, feed them, play with them, sleep with them, and fall in love with them. We want to take them almost everywhere we go too, but that’s where you start running into problems.

The problem is also simple: there aren’t a lot of places where you can take your dog. It’s only appropriate to bring your pup to certain restaurants, parks, and hotels, but it’s practically impossible to know which places are OK for your loyal companion.

Read the rest here: Fido Factor Finds Dog-Friendly Places in Your City
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Tuesday, November 17, 2009

routeRANK

routeRANK is a handy new tool for travelers in Europe that searches not just flight information, but public transit and road network to find you the fastest and cheapest route to where you are going. You can book through the site and it also has the capability of telling you which route is the most environmentally friendly. Totally brilliant, go check it out: http://www.routerank.com/

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Friday, November 6, 2009

The Marshall Islands

Bob in his infinite wisdom and benevolence has allowed me to post on this site. So welcome to my first entry.

I’m going to talk a little bit about the Marshall Islands. When people ask where the Marshall Islands are, I tell them that they’re between Australia and Hawaii – but I might as well say that Denver is between Honolulu and London. When people ask what other countries the Marshall Islands are near, and I tell them that they’re a mere 2500 miles from the Philippines, or, if you prefer, just north of Kiribati (but no one has heard of Kiribati), or east of the Federated States of Micronesia (but no one has heard of the Federated States of Micronesia).

Location aside: the Marshall Islands looks like paradise but is something much more interesting than that. If you want to find a place that feels untouched, you won’t be disappointed here. There are more than 1000 uninhabited islands, most of them smaller than a city block, all of them gorgeous. But the feeling of isolation is in some sense an illusion. The US tested nuclear weapons on a few of the islands in the 40s, 50s, and 60s. (The office of the displaced people of Bikini Atoll now sports a mural saying “One Nuclear Bomb Can Ruin Your Whole Day”, which is probably true.) The Marshall Islands is also one of four sovereign nations which might be uninhabitable within the lifetimes of its citizens due to sea level rise and other consequences of global warming. The people are Christian and have been for more than a hundred years. This is no Lost World – but one of the things that makes the country so intriguing is how the people adapt their Pacific Island culture to these foreign influences.

A great way to experience the Marshall Islands is as a volunteer or temporary worker. The Ministry of Education always needs teachers, and American citizens have the right to live and work in the country with no questions asked. (It’s part of the close relationship between the two countries; Marshall Islanders are surprisingly fond of Americans considering that whole H-bomb episode, and they were one of the countries in Bush’s coalition of the willing.) I went to the Marshall Islands as a WorldTeach volunteer, which offers a wide variety of placements. You might be living in the capital city with DVDs, hot showers, air conditioning, and dial-up internet. You might be living on an outer island with no electricity or running water, where your most frequent contact with the outside world is on a communications radio in a, well, radio shack.

The Marshall Islands is not the place to go for a cheap vacation (round trip airfare from Honolulu will cost you more than $1000). It’s not the place to go for fine dining. And if you’re honest about some of the threats facing the country, it’s not a place to go to forget your problems, either. But it is beautiful, safe, friendly, fascinating, and unique – not to mention untouristed.

Peter Rudiak-Gould is a writer and graduate student in anthropology. His book Surviving Paradise: One Year on a Disappearing Island has recently been published. Learn more at www.peterrg.com.