January 23, 2015

La Compagnie To Start Newark To London Flights March 29, 2015

La Compagnie is the French airline which launched flights around the middle of last year, offering all business class flights between Newark and Paris. Their launch was a bit hectic to say the least, though I also give them credit for staying true to their mission up until this point -- they're truly offering a (not so great) business class product basically at economy class prices.


So while my review of them wasn't stellar in comparison to other business class products, I think they add a hell of a lot of value to the market. For the fares they're charging, there's simply no other airline that can compete with them. For example, right now they're offering sub-$1,400 roundtrip business class fares between Newark and Paris.


Originally I gave them a few months at most, though I wasn't factoring in fuel prices. It goes without saying that they can survive as long as the economy is doing well and fuel prices are where they are (when either of those factors change, though...).


The post La Compagnie To Start Newark To London Flights March 29, 2015 appeared first on One Mile at a Time.






from One Mile at a Time http://onemileatatime.boardingarea.com/2015/01/23/la-compagnie-start-newark-london-flights-march-29-2015/

Argentina truisms

Large swathes of the under-30s survive on pretty much no sleep whatsoever, it’s OK for Christmas decorations to stay up until Easter, and socio-economic crisis is the default setting.



from Matador Network » Matador Network http://matadornetwork.com/abroad/things-you-learn-when-you-live-in-argentina/

Man Sailing a Makeshift Boat off the Coast of Sao Tome





from Everything Everywhere Travel Blog http://everything-everywhere.com/2015/01/22/man-sailing-makeshift-boat-off-coast-sao-tome/

Subtle but seismic: Thomas Cook and its digital journey

Less than two weeks before Thomas Cook announced the departure of CEO Harriet Green in November last year, the group had announced ...



from Tnooz http://www.tnooz.com/article/thomas-cook-digital-journey/#utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=subtle-seismic-thomas-cook-digital-journey

10 reasons to study abroad in Chile

If you want to spend your semester abroad traveling around South America, there's no better place to base yourself than Chile. Cathy Dean explains why.



from Matador Network » Matador Network http://matadornetwork.com/abroad/10-reasons-to-base-your-study-abroad-experience-in-chile/

Signs you were raised in Houston

Do you hate Dallas but you don't know why?



from Matador Network » Matador Network http://matadornetwork.com/life/12-signs-born-raised-houston/

7 natural wonders being destroyed

Unless things change, say goodbye to the Dead Sea.



from Matador Network » Matador Network http://matadornetwork.com/change/7-natural-wonders-humans-destroy-within-generation/

Trip Report: St. Maarten On a Budget

When my husband and I learned that we would be on our own for our winter getaway this year, we decided to go somewhere we’ve never been. And after pouring through flight itineraries and hotel options, we settled on the half-Dutch/half-French island of St. Maarten, located in the West Indies. Most people probably wouldn’t associate […]



from Frugal Travel Guy http://www.frugaltravelguy.com/2015/01/trip-report-st-maarten-on-a-budget.html

Phrases you need to know in Cornwall

Wasson me cock?



from Matador Network » Matador Network http://matadornetwork.com/abroad/15-slang-phrases-youll-need-know-cornwall/

January 22, 2015

The Last Shell Oil Clamshell Station in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

The Last Shell Oil Clamshell Station


Although Winston-Salem, North Carolina is known more for tobacco than oil, it is home to the last Shell Oil clamshell station in the United States. Located on the quiet corner of Sprague and Peachtree Streets, the station sits abandoned, its two tall pumps now no more than curiosities.


In the 1930s, a local distributor of Shell called Quality Oil built seven stations in Winston-Salem and one in the nearby town of Kernersville. Joe Glenn and Bert Bennett, who had acquired the distribution, erected the clamshells as advertisements; their quirkiness intended to draw customers.


The clamshell stations represented the transformation of a brand into a building, a symbol into a real thing. When Raymond Loewy designed the current Shell symbol in 1971, it had already gone though many incarnations. Although the original 1901 brand for the London-based Shell Transport and Trading Company was a mussel shell, by 1904 the scallop shell was introduced – possibly from the family coat of arms of the company’s founder Marcus Samuel, whose business would merge with Royal Dutch Petroleum Company to form Royal Dutch-Shell Oil. Samuel had a habit of naming his tankers after different kinds of shells, and he had a background importing objects from the Far East, including beautiful shells.



It wasn’t easy to make shell-shaped gas stations. The office and bathroom area were boxed in, surrounded by a bent wood and wire frame, and then covered in stucco. This last station remained open until the 1950s and housed a lawn mower repair business in the 1970s and 80s. In 1976, it became the first individual station in America to be listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Formerly a regional office for Preservation North Carolina, now the clamshell is a shrine to itself. On the walls inside hang framed newspaper articles about its opening and a clamshell station calendar. Antique black-and-white photographs line the shelves, which also display a teddy bear, old Shell signs, a coffee mug, miscellaneous antique cans, and a tin of vintage Monkey Grip Patch. A coffee table book has been left open to a picture of the station. In one corner sits an antique red container labeled Shell.


Preservation North Carolina still holds protective covenants on the property, so the clamshell will be preserved in perpetuity.




















from Atlas Obscura http://atlasobscura.com.feedsportal.com/c/35387/f/665719/s/429dcb7e/sc/10/l/0L0Satlasobscura0N0Cplaces0Cthe0Elast0Eshell0Eoil0Eclamshell0Estation0E2/story01.htm

Making Mistakes at Mount Cook

Night Photography A while ago, I suggested that maybe I could create a night photography tutorial. I must confess that I have never actually done this. It would be a really awesome thing, but I’ve just been too busy I’m afraid! I know that sounds lame, but they actually take quite a long time to […]



from Stuck in Customs http://www.stuckincustoms.com/2015/01/23/making-mistakes-at-mount-cook/

Hey, these aren’t the seats I reserved!





from Elliott http://elliott.org/the-troubleshooter/hey-arent-seats-reserved/

How Starwood Got Hacked Over the Past Week

Several folks had their Starwood Preferred Guest accounts drained over the past week, many of whom have shared their stories with me. Krebs on Security has the story on how it happened. [A] Starwoods-specific account-checking tool that was released for free on Leakforums[dot]org, an English-language forum dedicated to helping (mostly low-skilled) misfits monetize compromised credentials […]


The post How Starwood Got Hacked Over the Past Week appeared first on View from the Wing.






from View from the Wing http://viewfromthewing.boardingarea.com/2015/01/22/starwood-got-hacked-past-week/

American Is Replacing Their Unpopular First Class Chocolate Chip Cookie. Here’s Why That Matters.

I read a rumor in my Facebook feed that American was changing its onboard cookies again, and I reached out to see if that was true. A spokesperson told me, “Rumor confirmed. We’re changing cookies.” That’s exciting news, believe it or not, for an American Airlines frequent flyer — both because the cookie they introduced […]


The post American Is Replacing Their Unpopular First Class Chocolate Chip Cookie. Here’s Why That Matters. appeared first on View from the Wing.






from View from the Wing http://viewfromthewing.boardingarea.com/2015/01/22/american-replacing-unpopular-first-class-chocolate-chip-cookie-heres-matters/

Storms in Bushman’s Kloof

Our first two days in the Kloof, it rained. This was new. Last time, the weather varied from hot to “OMG MY FACE IS MELTING LIKE THAT NAZI FROM RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARC” hot. Now it was colder than it had been in London the week before, which isn’t really saying much, because London […]



from The Everywhereist http://www.everywhereist.com/storms-in-bushmans-kloof/