Categories
Travel

Travel tales

I added Google Ads into the sidebar towards the top on individual archive pages. We’ll see how they go, but it was fun last night opening up different pages and seeing how the ads change based on the content. The most interesting result so far was with the Elk entry.

I also finished up the book proposal that was one reason for me traveling down to Florida. It’s my first attempt to break into travel writing and because I’m new to the genre, and unknown, I wrote the first three chapters in addition to creating the TOC to send to the publishers. For non-fiction book companies, most don’t want the entire manuscript–just enough to get a good idea of what the book is about and to see if you’re the absolute pits as a writer.

What was an unusual experience for me, as a tech writer, was creating hard copies of the photos and the writing, as most of the travel publishers won’t accept digital submissions. I had almost forgotten about margins for editor markup, and double spacing, not to mention having to tweak the photos to get the color just right in my printer. I’m rather excited about the book, but not expecting a quick result–travel writing doesn’t have the same level of urgency that governs the tech book industry, where new technology becomes old technology in a week or so.

The title of the book is One Ticket, Please, and is about traveling alone. There are other books out on the market on this subject, but most of these are full of facts of safety and about group tours and booking and the like. I focused more on solo travel as a way of opening yourself up to the world and to new adventures and experiences. It’s not Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance; but then, I’m not trying to discover the truth to the eternal struggle between quality and quantity in a society given over to ’supersizing’, all from the back of a two-wheel ride, either.

(Come to think of it, though, I would like to learn how to ride a motorcycle.)

I rather liked the photo I took as a possible book cover. It’s from the patio of the condo studio that I had found through Hotwire.com, and as you can see, had a nice view overlooking a body of water in Orlando called, I think, Turkey Lake. The title could cover the float with the swan boats that sticks out in the view.

The condo was lovely and had a tiny kitchenette and a Jacuzzi in the open space between the vanity area and the bedroom; walking through sliding glass doors took me to a large, screened-in outdoor patio, with walls on either side to provide privacy. I could walk around naked in front of the window and no one would see, unless they used a telescope on the other side of the lake.

As nice as the room was, the experience I had with the resort was less than lovely and actually led to an article idea, which I submitted to a magazine, and we’ll see how that goes.

It was due to this experience that I wanted to give you all a heads up about one particular pitfall with online hotel booking. If you go to certain cities such as Orland or Vegas that have significant timeshare communities, and if you book a ‘condo’, chances are it will be a timeshare, not a traditional hotel or resort. I didn’t know this until after I had made my booking at Hotwire.com, as the company doesn’t differentiate between properties that are timeshare and those that are not. I only found out before the trip because I researched the property, Westgate Lakes and Resorts, after I had made the booking and Hotwire.com had provided the name. Supposedly, though, as was explained to me by the Hotwire people after I gave them a concerned call, the properties are required to treat guests that book through the online sites differently than they treat those who book through a timeshare ‘guest’ program. And, I was reassured, I would not be required to sit through any meeting or be hassled to buy a property.

Whatever the ‘rules’ between property owner and booking agency, they failed in my instance. Badly.

When I got to the resort late in the afternoon, I was tired and there was a bit of a frenzy checking in. I had to sign in at one desk and then go to another to actually check in, but so far no sales (though I did see banks and banks of seats and computers and surly looking folk in the lobby who, I can only suppose, were the sales staff). When I had received my room key and the map of the property, the lady at the desk mentioned that I needed to see some folks at another desk for ‘directions’. I said since she had given me a map, I didn’t really need this and left to go to the room.

The next day I headed to Epcot Center to take photos and was pretty tired when I got home that night. I was getting ready for bed at 9pm when I got a call from the hotel sales staff. The cheerful, heavily accented voice asked if I had received a “tour of the villa” yet and, puzzled, I said no, why would I? He then started into a long spiel about meeting with him for breakfast and getting this tour and filling out a survey. I responded that I was visiting Orlando for a purpose, and my time was very limited and didn’t have any to spare to attend any form of meeting. I also told him I had booked through Hotwire, as I had been instructed to tell any of the staff if they called.

He persisted in telling me I had to meet with him, and I responded negatively each time. He then proceeded to get rather nasty and demanded that I schedule a time with him to fill out a survey that was ‘required’; after all, the unit I was in had dishes and silverware and they had to account for this after I left. I said I had no intention of coming down to the office to fill out this survey and if they don’t trust their own maintenance staff, that’s their problem. He then said I wouldn’t be able to check out until I filled out the survey. I hung up. The phone started ringing, and I ignored it.

I called Hotwire. com and blasted them a new hide, and called the manager of the resort and blasted him a new hide. He assured me that the sales staff should not have called me, and promised they would not call again. However, I was called again, later in the week, but this time I was offered the chance to ‘find out how you can have this vacation for free’, and when I declined, the woman rang off immediately.

When I returned home, I found out this particular resort is infamous even within the timeshare community, for being the worst of the timeshare companies — hard sales and out and out lies. Being curious, I checked out the timeshare community itself, and how it is using the Internet: to buy, sell, trade, and connect with each other. Timeshare properties and owners are even now using eBay to sell units and ‘points’–an interesting new twist on timeshare vacations.

Contrary to my expectations, there are many happy timeshare owners, and there are forums and other online sites focused specifically at connecting them with each other. In addition, there are large numbers of people who do most of their vacationing by visiting timeshares and taking the sales pitches to get cheap lodging and other goodies. These folk provide helpful tips and techniques to shut the timeshare sales staff down, as well as being up on the laws govering timeshares in each state and how to hold the companies to their promises. For instance, if you live in certain states and book a timeshare, you can’t be required to sit through a sales meeting, regardless of how you came to rent the property. It’s a fascinating world, and the focus of the article I hope gets picked up.

However, returning to my own less than happy experience, I had more than one conversation with Hotwire.com about the incident. They refunded half my money from the hotel, as ‘Hotwire dollars’ I can use on my next booking. But when I questioned why they don’t mark that a property is a timeshare, replied that the agreement is between Hotwire.com and the resorts not to ‘act’ like a timeshare with Hotwire customers.

That’s like telling email spammers, “Oh, hey — these people don’t want unsolicited email, so don’t send them any. OK?” In fact, one could call the timeshare intrusion into online booking the equivalent of ‘vacation spam’.

(I also did some research and found that Hotwire.com and Expedia are owned by the same company, InterActiveCorp International, which also happens to own a company that facilitates timeshare swapping, Interval International. This company, in turn, is affiliated with none other than Westgate Resorts. )

I’m not sure about the ethics, or even the legality, of Hotwire not providing information that a property is a timeshare or not–especially since there are different and much more rigorous rules governing timeshares than there are regular hotels and resorts. With sites such as Expedia, you have the name of the property before you book, and even a cursory search in Google shows that Westgate Lakes and Resort is ‘bad news’ for anyone. But for Hotwire.com and Priceline.com, you don’t have this information ahead of time, and you can’t cancel after you book.

A word of advice: if you use Hotwire.com or Priceline.com, be wary of booking condos or rooms with kitches in areas with large timeshare communities. In addition, find out, first, from the company what its policy is about noting if a property is a timeshare. If the company doesn’t differentiate timeshares, and allows timeshares in its bookings, you may want to give the service a pass.

If you don’t mind if a property is a timeshare–as I noted earlier, this can be a very economical way to travel, and some people make this into an adventure–note that many states, such as Florida, have requirements on the so-called ‘presentations’ you need to sit through. For instance, they must be limited to 90 minutes, and you must be given whatever you’re promised by the end of this time. Check out the Timeshare Users Group for more info. And as they say, avoid the ‘maintenance meetings’ (i.e. my ’survey get together), unless, as one TUG member said, …like me, you like to mess with people.

However, if you’re taking a vacation and don’t want to be hassled, or end up with a turkey when you’re expecting a peacock, or want to ‘mess with people’ you may want to just bypass the ‘mystery’ booking agencies and go directly with one that lists the property names before you put your money down. Ultimately the cost savings may not be that big an issue; with Hotwire.com and Expedia, I found that there wasn’t that much of a difference in prices.

Now, though, I have some “hotwire” dollars to spend on some trip somewhere. Hmmm. I wonder if Chicago has timeshares? Or maybe Branson, Missouri…

Categories
Photography

Little Mermaid Dreams

Recovered from the Wayback Machine.

I won’t be posting too many photographs until I’ve finished porting my photo site over to new software, but I did want to share one of my favorite photos from Florida.

Categories
Technology Weblogging

From Press to Form

When I post the Wordform files for download, I’ll provide details of the conversion from WordPress 1.5 to Wordform, but I thought I would provide an overview of the changes, upfront.

First, my decision to make such extensive modifications to WordPress that I decided to fork the code isn’t an indication that I think WordPress is a ‘bad’ tool, or is based on ‘bad’ coding. On the contrary: with this new release, I consider WordPress 1.5 to be one of the best weblogging tools on the market. The new themes design is absolutely brilliant, the user interface is intuitive and easy to use, and the code has been cleaned up very nicely–the developers can be justifiably proud of what they’ve delivered with this release. When the first bug release of the product is available for download, (1.5.1) I can, without hesitation, recommend this tool to any weblogger.

However, my views of what I want from a weblogging tool have been diverging from the WordPress developers for some time; luckily, since WordPress is GPL and I’m also a coder, I can do something about it.

Many of the changes I made to the code to take this tool from WordPress to Wordform are ‘under the covers’. For instance, I pulled all database queries into a separate file so that if I want to make changes to the underlying database I can easily without having to go through individual files looking to see what has broken. Of course, if I add or remove fields, I will have to change code, but in many cases, this additional separation of application and data can mean that even a significant change, such as multi-weblog support, can be made with relatively little impact on the application.

Other changes I made are very apparant to the user. For instance, I pulled all trackback and pingback code. Yup, every last bit of it, including dropping the table columns from the database. The more I looked at pingback and trackback, the more I didn’t like either: the former because it’s nothing more than referrer linking, and the latter because it’s too vulnerable to abuse. Instead of trackback and pingbacks, I’m incorporting the concept of ‘tagbacks’ into the tool, specifically as a focus for either a discussion thread, or as a multi-threaded topic. (More on this in a later post.)

(One side benefit of removing pingback and trackback is that the tool is very fast now. It was fast before I made the change; afterwards, updates and new posts are instantaneous. In addition, I think not having to manage these within the code has also simplified much of it, and simpler code (or more focused code), is easier to maintain.)

Picture of Bam-in-a-CanAnother change I made was to the new WordPress Desktop. Instead of scraping in the WordPress Development weblog and Planet WordPress syndication feeds, I’ve incorporated a page that uses Feed on Feeds, a server-based aggregator that works somewhat like Bloglines. Feed on Feeds is just one of the external applications that can be installed with Wordform, and it allows you to subscribe to various sites. Then, when you access the Wordform Desktop (which has been renamed to “Bam-in-a-Can!”, for no other reason than it’s such a cheerful phrase), you’ll see the updated feeds from all your subscribed sites.

I pulled all implementations of ‘nofollow’ from the tool. I was going to detail how to do this for WordPress users; unfortunately, though, if you want to use WordPress as a tool, you’ll actually have to modify the tool libraries to remove this attribute, not just modify the tool templates. I’m reluctant to provide a ‘how to’ on this, as this will make the tool incompatible with future releases. If you want this information, you’ll need to send me an email.

I also added an option to turn on or off the enclosure functionality. Right now, if you link an MP3 in your post in WordPress, it’s automatically added as a syndication feed podcast. I’d rather give people the option whether to list this as an enclosure or not in their feeds.

I pulled in-page preview from the edit page, and added preview as an option for the main template. With this you can preview a post ‘in context’ –within the page design. I also added spell checking to the edit page, and am pulling the Quicktags in favor of a more sophisticated designer bar (which can be switched out for the existing Quicktags if you prefer the older design bar).

Some other major architectural changes:

  1. Creating a page literally creates a hard page, which can be individually moved. If .htaccess is writable, the page is linked to a virtual directory location; otherwise, you have to move it.
  2. I pulled private posts. The one time I’ve seen this, I didn’t like it. Here you have a weblog with this big “PRIVATE POST” blob in the middle of the page, taunting the readers with what they could not access–the plebians. I figure if a person wants private posts, they should think about having a private weblog. And again, this change nicely simplified the code — the old fewer moving parts, less breakage thing.
  3. I’m incorporating the concept of Wordform Application Modules (WAM) into the underlying tool architecture. These are full featured applications, wrapped to work with Wordform, as compared with plugins, which are bits of code written specifically for Wordform (or I should say, WordPress, as I’m keeping the plugin architecture the same so that Wordform can use most WordPress plugins). The Feed of Feeds implementation in the Bam-in-a-Can page is a example of a WAM.
  4. Comment and post status are pulled from the database and populated in a dropdown box. This allows application module and plug-in developers to add new statuses. I used this myself to add comment moderation on a post-by-post basis.

There are other new changes that I’m still working on, and hope to roll out with the first beta release of the product, some time next week or so.

I did incorporate my old comment management system in Wordform, and pulled the existing WordPress whitelisting functionality. I’m not crazy about whitelisting, and I don’t like blacklisting. What I’m doing is providing an option that allows a person to turn off comments older than a certain date. However, the comment itself isn’t turned off until the first comment that post received after this date. That comment is moderated and than the post is turned off. This allows the weblog user to see if the comment is spam, and if it isn’t, to make a decision whether they want to turn comments back on with that post.

I’ve also added in my old throttle, which will keep a person from being crapflooded; and am enhancing the manageability of the pages that display comments and posts — providing NEXT and PREVIOUS page functionality so a person can page through results. People can also search for comments and posts based on dates and post or comment IDs.

The post-comment editing functionality can take multiple tool backends, so you can use this with WordPress, Textpattern, Movable Type or other weblogging tool. In addition, I have a comments.php file that will work with both Wordform and WordPress, and which will enable spell checking, live preview, and post-comment editing.

While this is all going on, I’m also keeping an eye on the WordPress codebase, to incorporate relevant fixes to functions in Wordform, as they occur. And I have a couple of patches for the WordPress folks that I need to drop into the WordPress bug system, soon as I have a spare moment.

I’ll say one thing with all this effort: if you need help with your WordPress weblog, I’m your woman: I’ll probably know the code almost as well as the developers when I release Wordform 1.0a.

Categories
Technology Weblogging

Wordform 1.0a in test

Wordform 1.0a is in development and test at Burningbird. This site has not been updated to most recent version, though I hope to by week’s end.

I also hope to have the first alpha release of the code ready for download next week. Knock on wood.

Categories
Burningbird

Sponsorship and client lists

Recovered from the Wayback Machine.

One result of my ruminations while I was on the road the last few weeks was a decision to accept sponsorship and/or ads for Burningbird and my other sites. I’ve signed up at Blogads, and have put a few feelers out here and there for possible sponsorship opportunities.

In addition, I also decided to create a photo shop at Tinfoil Project, where I’ll sell prints of my photos and merchandise that feature my photos. I know that online photo sales is an iffy proposition, but I figure it would give me more experience combining photo software like Coppermine, with a storefront like OsCommerce.

When I returned from the trip, I found out that Kottke had also made a life changing move by quitting his development gig and deciding to weblog fulltime. He coined the term micropatron to describe folks contributing to his site, and it’s one I decided to also grab and use for own nefarious purposes. I can’t promise the grand goody bag that he’s giving out for those who contribute 30.00 or more a year, but I did put together a few odds and ends, as thank-you gifts.

Based on all of this, I’m in the process of creating a Sponsoring Burningbird page, and if you have time, could you check it out and tell me what you think? In addition, I would like to build up a page containing links and small snapshots to sites that I’ve helped in the past–either with design and/or web development. If I’ve helped you in the past, and you wouldn’t mind being included in this page, could you drop me a comment or send me an email?

I still see myself primarily as a writer, and I am spending time each day, either on current assignments or looking for new writing opportunties. I have two specific books I’m currently shopping around to publishers, and also keeping my options open for others. I’m also submitting article suggestions and ideas here and there. If you have some suggestions, or better yet, contacts, in this regard, I’d love to hear from you.

The reason for all of this activity is that I need to kick myself in the butt and get a life going again. And this includes earning enough income to get by and keep my kitty in kibble, and my car in the driveway. Unfortunately, there aren’t a lot of development jobs in St. Louis that use the technologies that I’m most proficient in at the moment. Most places are J2EE with WebSphere, or .NET, neither of which I’ve worked with for a couple of years now. I don’t want to move, and couldn’t afford to anyway, so I need to be aggressive seeking work and opportunities online (in addition to whatever odd jobs I can find here in town). If you know of any that you think might be a good fit for me, or you have other suggestions, again, I sure would love to hear from you.

It’s going to be a nice Spring this year, followed by a kickass year and I feel positive about the future, thanks in no small part to many of you who have helped me in the past. I managed to lose weight during my road trip, and not all of it had to do with body fat–I also dropped some mental baggage that was slowing me down along the way. (I’d be careful traveling along I24 in Tennessee, if I were you. If you see a puddle of depressing looking ooze alongside the road, just keep on going.)

This year is going to be a good year, but as I’m discovering, good things don’t come to you: you have to go find them, make them, or grab them when they hurry past. This is my start, my new year.