June 22nd, 2008 by Eddie Sullivan
Air travel is in a downward spiral. Not literally of course, but
clearly and consistently, and everybody knows it. The airlines know
it, the airline employees know it, travel agents found out a while
ago, and consumers sure as Hell know it. There are a lot of reasons
for it, but this post talks about just one: Expedia.com.
Airlines claim the degradation in quality comes from increased
competition. They say they are forced to cut corners and reduce
features in order to stay competitive. Does this make sense?
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in non-software, programming - 1 Comment »
May 12th, 2008 by Eddie Sullivan
This month's contest over at limericks.chickenwingsoftware.com is Basketball: In this, the NBA playoff season, young man's fancy turns lightly to thoughts of hoops. Plus, the Celtics wear green!
A typical entry:
There once was a girl named Christine
Who had gotten the gambling gene
She said with some sadness,
"I lost at March Madness
Before it reached the sweet sixteen."
Sure, it's no masterpiece, but it's fun. That's sort of the spirit of these contests. Head on over to read more, rate them, or write your own.
Posted in non-software - No Comments »
April 9th, 2008 by Eddie Sullivan
We've created an online contest
To see who can rhyme the bestest
So come to our site
And prove you can write
The limerick that rates the highest.
Sorry, that's what happens when you try to write a limerick after four hours of reading technical specification documents. If you think you can do better, come to our limerick contest website and make an entry, read and rate other entries, and waste some time.
For the developers, the contest site is hosted on Django with a MySQL backend.
There will be a new category of limerick writing contest every month. This month's theme is cheese. Enjoy!
Posted in django, non-software, python - No Comments »
February 8th, 2008 by Eddie Sullivan
Anybody who needs to stay in hotels often knows there are certain areas where they could all do better. I tend to look at everything with an eye towards what could be improved. Here are some random thoughts on how hotels could be better. Some of these ideas are a bit far-fetched, but hey, that's why I'm writing a weblog, not a manifesto.
More pricing logic
It sometimes seems like the cheaper a hotel is, the more services it provides. I've stayed in a broad range of hotels, from top of the line luxury suites to eight-cot-to-a-room hostels. Strangely, there are some areas where the lesser quality hotels actually do better. Why is it that when I pay $40 per night for a small family-run inn, there is personalized service and free wi-fi in every room, but in a hotel that charges $375 per night there is either no wi-fi available or it costs $20 extra? What are we actually getting for the higher price? Why do cheap hotels provide breakfast but expensive hotels don't? It's backwards.
Cleanliness
After seeing watching a news report about hotel cleanliness issues, I've been a little bit paranoid about sanitation in hotels. A couple idea:
Get rid of the carpet
Carpeted floors are notoriously hard to clean. I don't want to think about what kind of dirtiness people can leave on carpets that doesn't get picked up by a vacuum cleaner. Get rid of the carpeted floor. Replace it with hardwoods, or if that's too expensive, a synthetic material designed to not be too cold on our toes.
Auto-magically clean
Have you seen those coin-operated public restrooms in public cities that actually clean themselves after each use? Why can't we refine this technology and use it for hotel bathrooms? When the maid comes in, he or she removes all the towels and paper products, closes the bathroom door, and presses a button. Instantly, the whole bathroom is sprayed with disinfecting detergent from a nozzle in the ceiling, rinsed, then dried with high-speed air jets.
Put the bed on hydraulic lifts to make it easy to clean underneath.
Instead of just layering a blanket on top of a sheet, use a large pillow-case-like wrapper for the whole blanket. Design the quilt with drawstrings to make changing the blanket case easy. There is nothing worse than tossing around at night and waking to realize the sheet has slid off the bed and you're now face-to-face with someone else's potential filth.
Conveniences
This should be obvious, but: free wi-fi. For everyone. Everywhere.
Provide an easy to use central control panel for things like the alarm clock, the thermostat, maybe even ordering room-service. Every hotel alarm clock has a different interface, leaving guests with no confidence they will actually wake up on time.
Digital thermostats for the showers. It takes me forever to get the temperature just right in an unfamiliar shower. I want to be able to just turn a dial or press a button for the exact temperature I need and let the electronics do the rest.
And more
The more I think, the more ideas I come up with. I know most of these will never happen, but it can't hurt to dream, can it?
Feel free to add any ideas using the comment link below.
Posted in non-software - 2 Comments »