Blogs

Drupal 7!

Converting the blogs over to the 7.x version of Drupal. You'll see changes in templates as I experiment this weekend. Hang on! :-)

CPH-OSL on SAS...take-off cam!

Cafe' Latte at Copenhagen Airport (CPH)

This is a different trip to Europe for me, from a travel perspective. Usually, I'll come over for 2-3 weeks, teaching in different cities. This time, I started in The Netherlands, then Copenhagen. Now I'm off to Oslo, but I'll return to Copenhagen forbanother weeknthere, then head home.

Since the flights here in Europe are to Scandinavian cities, I'm flying SAS. I can get directbflights that are cheaper than Delta's partners, KLM and Air France.

Copenhagen Airport (CPH) is modern and easy to navigate. Rental car pickup and return is in a parking garage about 100 metres from the terminal. The Avis staff here are friendly and efficient. SAS is the dominant airline (like American at DFW or Delta at Atlanta), so the check-in lines can get long. On a Sunday morning, this wasn't a big deal, but CPH can be a hot mess on a Saturday.

There's no passport control on flights from CPH that are within the EU. If you're traveling to the US or other countries outside the EU, you'll have to clear passport control. Danish airport security is efficient and courteous. Amazing how security people outside the US don't feel the need to yell at you and belittle you as you weave through their system.

Once you've cleared security, CPH is a typical airport. Food, drink, coffee, duty-free, lots of other shops. Not as extensive of shopping as Amsterdam's Schipohl, but still, some interesting thing.

I stopped for a cafe' latte and took advantage of the free Wi-Fi offered by the airport. When I'm traveling Delta or KLM, I'll go to the KLM club upstairs.

CPH has an unusual boarding procedure. You stand outside the gate area until the agent calls the flight. You then present your boarding pass and passport. Then you wait 10 minutes or so inside the gate house itself. The gate agent throws open the doors of the jetway, and in you go, no ceremony. Again, it was an intra-EU flight, so that's always got less ceremony than even a domestic US flight.

The aircraft for the flight was an Airbus 321. It's about the size of a B757. I was in 8C, where six rows were set up as First class. I was fortunate to have the row to myself – nobody in 8A or 8B!

This A321 had an interesting feature – cockpit cam! After the safety video, as the plane taxied to the runway, the pilot switched on a forward-looking camera, so the monitors throughout the cabin displayed what he saw. Fascinating. That cam continued until we were up in the air, then it switched to a cam on the bottom of the aircraft! Wonderfully fun to pass the time, more so even than the in-flight map tracker you find on Delta flights.

The only downside to any SAS flight is the nickel-and-dime policies on food and drink. DK30 for a coke? That's between US$3 and US$4. Even a cup of tea is DK20. It just seems so silly.

Copenhagen-to-Oslo is a one-hour flight. The landing, viewed through the external cameras was as much fun as takeoff. Gardermoen Airport is easy to get through, again, since the flight originated inside the EU. No passport control. There's a big duty-free with good prices on wine, so I picked up a bottle there for later this week, while waiting for the luggage to come in. Once I had my bag, it was “nothing to declare” and out into arrivals.

Once in the “outside” part of the airport, I made my way to the train platforms and took the Airport Express train to the National Theater stop. More on the trains in Oslo in a future article.

Overall, this was a pleasant and entertaining flight.

Xbox in Vienna...

Microsoft went all-out in one Vienna location to promote Xbox Kinect. The Metro station at Stephansplatz is a veritable multimedia ad blitz for the company's controller-less game system.The rider is immediately barraged with ads upon descending from the street. Video to (hopefully) slow you down.The ads follow you from the street to the train.Changing from the U3 to the U1? The ads are there as you walk through the station.MS even set up a live demo in-between the U1 and U3 line (the two lines that stop at Stephansplatz).

Coffee!

cross-posted to YatCuisine

While we must give props to certain coffee shop chains in the US for increasing the awareness and appreciation of coffee drinks such as the latte and the cappuccino, the Europeans still kick our ass when it comes to presentation.

A "Cafe Latte," properly presented, at the cafe in the Julius Meinl store in Wien Mitte (Vienna city center).

a cappuccino from Italic, a restaurant in Vienna center.

and here's a latte from the Seggafredo cafe in Gasometer City

enjoy!

The blogger wears Prada? (shoes for @daisyjd and @soulprncs3)

Went to my favorite Italian restaurant near Stephansplatz in Vienna tonight, and did some window-shopping at places around the cathedral.

Prada boots? Don't show Greta or Wendy these...

I like the shoes on the right.

The flats made me think of @DaisyJD...not sure why, but they do... :-)

Overbooked flight-@Delta taking bids for volunteers...neat!

Checked in on-line at Delta for my flights to Chicago tomorrow...first flight is overbooked, and the check-in process hit me with a fascinating feature. Delta asked me to bid on what I'd take to give up my seat and take a different/later flight.

I'm guessing this saves them some time and potentially money. If they're willing to pay $400, and I bid $300, win for them, plus they can line up some potential volunteers before putting out the cattle call. That invariably ties up the gate agent with people who really aren't serious anyway, wasting everybody's time.

Bolero!

This flashmob is just so many different kinds of awesome:


I love Copenhagen Central. When I teach in Naerum, Denmark, I stay at a hotel in Vedbaek, and often take the train in from da burbs to downtown for the evening. What a cool way for an orchestra to promote itself and bring its music to the people! Ravel's Bolero is so well-suited for this, too, since it's so easy for more and more musicians to step up and join in.

Bravo! :-)

Eight Days Homeless...in an airport?

I'm just not sure what to make of this story:

As ABC News explains it, Weissinger checked one bag too many and incurred a $60 fee that she couldn't pay on the spot. She hadn't expected the fees because her itinerary failed to mention them. For security/terrorist-related reasons her airline, U.S. Airways, wouldn't let her abandon one of her bags at the airport, and they also wouldn't let her pay the fees once she got to Idaho. So she missed her flight, which resulted in another fee. Then U.S. Airways told her she had to buy a brand-new ticket, which cost $1,000. And this is how she became trapped in the airport.

I'm not sure how one gets "trapped" in an airport. Surely she came to the airport from some place. Could she not return there?

It all sounds like a case of mental illness:

For eight days Weissinger wandered the corridors, slept on the floor, and generally felt like the star of a remake of The Terminal—minus the peanut can (we assume) but with some extra Kafkaesque elements (for example, she was nearly arrested for vagrancy...like being there was her choice!).

EIGHT DAYS? I dunno, when I miss a flight, I make arrangements to stay somewhere. While I'm willing to believe that airline gate agents are douchebags enough to give this woman no hope, still, eight days?

Window Shopping in Salo, Finland

There are several boutiques in the area around my hotel...Like the rest of Scandinavia, you see a LOT of black and dark grey in the winter here.Nice!I've noticed a number of women wearing knit dresses like the one on the left, with heavy tights, and even "skinny" jeans underneath.Like Oslo, no Victoria's Secret in the mall, but lingerie boutiques...

Marriott Hotel Chateau Champlain, Montreal, Quebec, Canada


View from the 15th floor of Marriott Chateau Champlain

I was assigned a class for Hitachi Data Systems in Montreal a couple of weeks ago. The training was to be conducted at the ExitCertified office in the Sun Life Building downtown, so I chose this hotel. The Marriott Chateau Champlain is only two blocks from the office. It's also two blocks away from Centre Bell, the arena where the Montreal Canadiens of the NHL play.

The rooms are a bit smaller than newer Marriotts, but not as bad as some of the "boutique" hotels, like the Courtyard on E34th in Manhattan, where a king bed fills the room. The building you see through the window is the office building where I taught.

Workstation space pretty much what you expect from a Marriott. The wi-fi at this hotel was adequate.

Because of my Platinum status with Marriott, I was given access to the concierge lounge on the 31st floor. Similar view to what I had from the room, just a bit higher up. I didn't eat in any of the hotel restaurants on this trip, but the bar/grill appeared to be busy most of the time I was there. Five elevators service the rooms, and I didn't experience any major waits.

Overall, a comfortable, non-complicated experience.

Pages

Subscribe to RSS - blogs