November 13, 2014

Why Uber Will Win Its Political Fights: Data on Congressional Use of the App

Readers know that I’m a big fan of Uber, the on-demand car service. You download an app to your phone, request a pickup with the press of a button. You watch your vehicle on a map as it drives to you and shows you how many minutes away the car is. You can stay inside […]


The post Why Uber Will Win Its Political Fights: Data on Congressional Use of the App appeared first on View from the Wing.






from View from the Wing http://viewfromthewing.boardingarea.com/2014/11/13/uber-will-win-political-fights-data-congressional-use-app/

The Worst Case For Restricting TSA Pre-Check. Ever.

TSA Pre-Check is one of the greatest things to happen to the US flying experience in years. For those of you not familiar with TSA Pre-Check, it allows select passengers to go through an expedited security screening whereby they don't have to take off their shoes or light jackets, and don't have to remove liquids or electronics from their bags. You know, it's basically the security screening process minus the theater. ;)


Originally TSA Pre-Check was only open to those in the Trusted Traveler program, which includes those with Global Entry, NEXUS, etc. However, over time they began allowing others in the Pre-Check line as well. I sort of get it from their perspective -- ultimately they can't be pouring a lot of resources into a small percentage of passengers, so by opening it up it was more justifiable.


That really bothered me, not from a safety standpoint, but rather from an experience standpoint. At first the benefit of Pre-Check was twofold:


The post The Worst Case For Restricting TSA Pre-Check. Ever. appeared first on One Mile at a Time.






from One Mile at a Time http://onemileatatime.boardingarea.com/2014/11/13/the-worst-case-for-restricting-tsa-pre-check-ever/

What not to do in Istanbul

Anne Merritt lays out the city's avoidable attractions and what you should do instead.



from Matador Network » Matador Network http://matadornetwork.com/trips/what-not-to-do-in-istanbul/

12 things you must do in New York

A New York native shows you the town, top picks for karaoke, pastrami, movie theaters and long walks included.





from CNN.com - Travel http://www.cnn.com/2014/11/13/travel/new-york-things-to-do/index.html

Thailand lights up the night sky

The Loi Krathong festival has been celebrated throughout Thailand for centuries, usually to mark the end of the rainy season.





from CNN.com - Travel http://www.cnn.com/2014/11/12/travel/thailand-loi-krathong-festival/index.html

Steam safari: African animal-spotting on world's 'most luxurious train'

Rovos Rail's epic trips pamper passengers with fine dining, vintage comfort and even a hot tub.





from CNN.com - Travel http://www.cnn.com/2014/11/12/travel/rovos-rail-steam-safari/index.html

Sabre – lastminute.com progress, TripCase flies, pax up

Sabre‘s Q3 earnings call added a few nuggets of knowledge to the financial release, with its CEO and CFO bullish about how ...



from Tnooz http://www.tnooz.com/article/sabre-lastminute.com-Tripcase/#utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=sabre-lastminute-com-interest-tripcase-flies-pax-boarded

Argentina's black market exchange

Most countries only have one exchange rate, yet the Argentine peso has two -- the official rate and the unofficial rate, or dólar blue.



from Matador Network » Matador Network http://matadornetwork.com/abroad/use-possibly-understand-argentinas-black-market-money-exchange/

30 perfect winter pics of Sun Valley

Like any good hometown boy, the only places on my mind this time of year are the mountains I grew up in. Here's my offering to Ullr and the coming winter.



from Matador Network » Matador Network http://matadornetwork.com/trips/30-images-sun-valley-winter/

What you may not know about Vietnam

Let's step away from familiar images of Vietnam for a moment and look at some facts and figures you probably don't know about the country.



from Matador Network » Matador Network http://matadornetwork.com/trips/11-things-might-know-vietnam/

The Miles Minx: Beware of Jennifer Garner’s Capital One Claims

By now you’ve probably seen the Capital One Jennifer Garner commercial. In it, Garner explains that airlines might have black-out dates on when you can use your miles or they ask for a “ridiculous number of miles” when you try to make a redemption, but Capital One miles earned through their Venture cards can get […]



from Frugal Travel Guy http://www.frugaltravelguy.com/2014/11/do-not-believe-a-word-jennifer-garner-says-about-capital-one-miles.html

November 12, 2014

The Woolworth Building in New York City, New York

Detail of the Tiffany-designed elevators. Economical cast iron, not bronze!


Frank Winfield Woolworth five-and-dimed his way to the top of the world, and he did it in style.


When the Woolworth Building opened in 1913, President Woodrow Wilson pressed a button in the White House, and 80,000 light bulbs flashed to life on Broadway as Thomas Edison supervised. Then, Edison joined a banquet for 900 other prominent guests that the Tribune called "the highest dinner ever held in New York." During the ceremonies, famed radio pastor Samuel Parkes Cadman made "cathedral of commerce" the skyscraper's nickname for the ages.


Over 100 years later, much of the original glory remains, though the general public wouldn't know it. Master architect Cass Gilbert's Gothic gem still gleams in lower Manhattan, but few tourists have been inside in recent years. The building's owners for the past couple of decades closed it to casual visitors. Post-9/11 security restrictions didn't help, either. But that's starting to change.


Thanks to the efforts of Gilbert's great-granddaughter Helen Post-Curry, the owners allowed private tours in 2013 for the centennial celebration. A great response led to regular paid tours organized at the website below. The tours focus almost entirely on the lobby - in addition to the aforementioned unfortunate closures, the 57th-floor observation deck was shut down during World War II out of fear that enemy spies could exploit its harbor views - but the lobby contains plenty to illuminate the Woolworth's soaring story.


One need only look up at the grand Heinigke & Bowen stained-glass ceiling over the main stairs to grasp F.W. Woolworth's animating vision. Border panels devoted to great empire-builders like Spain and Russia lie alongside others featuring the Woolworth "W" as well as 1913 for the building opening and 1879 for the opening of the first successful "Woolworth's Great Five Cent Store" in Lancaster, PA (a store in Utica, NY failed in 1878, and Woolworth reused its sign in Lancaster).


By 1910, the operation was humming well enough for Woolworth to lay plans for a company headquarters that would be the tallest building in the world, surpassing the 700-foot Metropolitan Life Insurance skyscraper completed in 1909. Woolworth scrapped a more modest $5 million estimate, and the final bill of $13.5 million produced the 792-foot (and one inch) finished structure of 58 stories (or 80 conventional stories, since ceilings range from 11 to 20 feet). The retail baron paid for it all in cash - perhaps in nickels and dimes only, as some say, and perhaps not.


It's also said that Woolworth spared no expense on the construction. Yet despite the gaudy price tag, he couldn't resist a bit of skimping (amusingly enough, Woolworth is counting coins in his lobby gargoyle pictured). The Tiffany elevator ornamentation is cast iron done up like brass, terra cotta masquerades as marble on the exterior, and interior marble touted as "Greek" was actually mined in Vermont. Woolworth hired Cass Gilbert to create a world-class, historic company monument, but he always had business in mind.


"My idea was purely commercial," he said in 1910. "I saw possibilities of making this the greatest income producing property in which I could invest my money."


The building's construction was a media phenomenon, and Woolworth was surely pleased with its critical reception and popularity. Woolworth opened his crown jewel up just like his stores, with counters and eateries alongside plentiful retail outlets. Missteps were minimal, such as the German beer hall shunned by some patriots during World War I, though the war's drain on construction did benefit the building overall - it remained the world's tallest until 1930, when the Chrysler Building and then the Empire State Building were completed.


The Woolworth's initial openness was a far cry from today's guarded state. Incidentally, the building finally left Woolworth hands in 1998 with a $155 million sale to the Witkoff Group, which launched a plan a couple of years ago to turn the top 25 floors of the building tower into 34 luxury apartments. Most will cost $7 to $10 million, though two will list at $20 million and one seven-level "Castle in the Sky" penthouse has a city residential record $110 million tag. The tower residences will have a separate lobby and elevators as well as a restored lounge and underground swimming pool.


One wonders what the building's namesake would think of these investment returns, not to mention the stratification of a tower rooted in mass consumption. Woolworth pursued power and status relentlessly, though, and he enjoyed his lofty position from opulent personal spaces on various floors. These included a Renaissance-style apartment on the 40th floor, private suites on the 25th floor that would have been ideal for entertaining mistresses, and a 24th-floor "Empire Room" office inspired by Woolworth's deep Napoleon obsession. Designers there used Napoleonic palace decor, filled it with memorabilia, and made a replica throne chair to await a man who saw his stores as an empire and his staff as a military hierarchy.


Unfortunately enough, Woolworth only reigned from what he called his "imperial capital" for about five years, dying at age 66 in 1919. If he were invited to the "Castle in the Sky" when it opens in 2016, he might marvel that his building is still breaking records and attracting the elite of a new gilded age. But perhaps he'd also insist on more foot traffic in the lobby.




















from Atlas Obscura http://atlasobscura.com.feedsportal.com/c/35387/f/665719/s/406dd189/sc/10/l/0L0Satlasobscura0N0Cplaces0Cthe0Ewoolworth0Ebuilding/story01.htm

Shoes on the Danube in Budapest, Hungary

Shoes on the Danube


In October of 1944, Hitler overthrew the leader of the Hungarian government, Miklos Horthy, and replaced him with Ferenc Szalasi.


Szalasi, whose ideology closely followed Hitler’s, immediately established the Arrow Cross Party - a fascist, anti-semitic organization that brutally and publicly terrorized the Jews in Budapest by beating and killing them. Nearly 80,000 Jews were expelled from Hungary in a death march to the Austrian border and approximately 20,000 Jews were brutally shot along the banks of the Danube River. The victims were forced to remove their shoes at gunpoint (shoes being a valuable commodity during World War II) and face their executioner before they were shot without mercy, falling over the edge to be washed away by the freezing waters.


Shoes on the Danube Promenade is a haunting tribute to this horrific time in history, created by film director Can Togay and the sculptor, Gyula Pauer. Installed along the bank of the Danube River in Budapest, the monument consists of 60 pairs of 1940s-style shoes, true to life in size and detail, sculpted out of iron.


This memorial is simple yet chilling, depicting the shoes left behind by the thousands of Jews who were murdered by the Arrow Cross. The style of footwear - a man’s work boot; a business man’s loafer; a woman’s pair of heels; even the tiny shoes of a child - were chosen specifically to illustrate how no one, regardless of age, gender, or occupation was spared. Placed in a casual fashion, as if the people just stepped out of them, these little statues are a grim reminder of the souls who once occupied them - yet they also create a beautiful place of reflection and reverence.


At three points along the memorial are cast iron signs with the following text in Hungarian, English, and Hebrew: "To the memory of the victims shot into the Danube by Arrow Cross militiamen in 1944–45. Erected 16 April 2005."




















from Atlas Obscura http://atlasobscura.com.feedsportal.com/c/35387/f/665719/s/406dd18f/sc/38/l/0L0Satlasobscura0N0Cplaces0Cshoes0Eon0Ethe0Edanube/story01.htm

Breakfast on a Beautiful River

Most unique breakfast Where’s the place you’ve had the most unique breakfast? I think this little place before must be in my top 3! Daily Photo – Breakfast on a Beautiful River See these amazing boats down there? Tom and I came across this place totally by accident. We were quite confused. It was a […]



from Stuck in Customs http://www.stuckincustoms.com/2014/11/13/breakfast-on-a-beautiful-river/

This “chunk of junk” isn’t what I thought it would be





from Elliott http://elliott.org/problem-solved/chunk-junk-isnt-thought/