Friday, June 7, 2024

Tech & Travel, Then and Now

On the 2010 trip that started this blog, I did have an iPhone and a laptop with me, but so much has changed in fourteen years.

  • Then: faxing hotels to make reservations, because it's not safe to send a credit-card number via email.
    Now: online reservation forms
  • Then: limited data (I have an email receipt showing I paid for 20MB of global data for a month)
    Now: I'm pretty certain I use more than 20MB per hour, given my Pokémon Go addiction plus mapping & social media & whatever else I do during the day
  • Then: Internet cafe (in Rome, at least) in order to blog
    Now: would never book a hotel without wifi!
  • Then: navigating by paper map (and in Venice, by signs on the buildings)
    Now: Google Maps with turn-by-turn directions (although walking directions sometimes leave something to be desired: getting from the subway station to the train station in Prague involved finally deciding to ignore what Google was saying and just walking in the right direction until signs appeared)
  • Then: mini paper dictionary/phrase book for each country, and if what I was looking at in a grocery store wasn't in the dictionary, making a best guess as to what kind of sausage I was buying
    Now: Google Translate using phone camera; not always perfect (the pastry on the right must have some sort of colloquial name), but such a big help!


  • Then: laptop, in order to blog and post to social media when on wifi
    Now: phone with Bluetooth folding keyboard and cellular data
  • Then: digital camera, with photos uploaded to the laptop every night
    Now: phone camera, directly uploaded to blog and social media every night
  • Then: taxi, arranged by telephone
    Now: Uber app
  • Then: paper train passes & tickets
    Now: RailEurope app (although I carried printed copies as a backup)
  • Then: buying subway tickets & passes from machines
    Now: buying subway tickets & passes on apps (and sometimes still from machines)
  • Then: paper guidebook
    Now: some paper guidebooks and some on Kindle app. Paper ones are easier to read in the sun, and also easier to flip back and forth between map pages and description pages, but boy they weigh a lot.
  • Then: not knowing where your checked bag was (not that I checked any for the 2010 trip, but I certainly did for other trips in that era)
    Now: stick an AirTag in your luggage and watch it go



  • Then: having no way to contact other members of your party if you were separated
    Now: everyone has a phone with data, so texting, WhatsApp, and location sharing
  • Then: having to email in advance to meet up with friends while traveling
    Now: I didn't manage to see everyone I tried to, but was able to use my phone to coordinate with different people via texting, WhatsApp, Facebook, Facebook Messenger, and Discord.
  • Then: walking into the nearest gelato place and hoping it was good
    Now: looking on Google Maps for the highest-rated gelato place nearby and hoping that the line isn't too long when you get there
     

 

 

Monday, June 3, 2024

Airports x 3

A long, long travel day. After my experience two years ago at the Munich airport, I made sure I arrived three hours ahead of time. Fortunately it went a lot more quickly this time, and I was at my gate within 45 minutes of arriving. (No Covid-document checks this year, and my overall route through the airport was much shorter, possibly because my itinerary went through London, rather than having a direct flight to the US.)

I had ample time to relax in what looked like some sort of popup lounge in Terminal H:


Water fountains are a bit harder to find here than at US airports. I checked near the restrooms I walked past on the way to my gate, but didn't see any. I decided to Google, and of course there's an entire website devoted to finding drinking fountains in airports! Turns out I only had to go one gate further to fill my bottle — thank you www.wateratairports.com !

About 45 minutes before our departure from gate 34, they announced yhat we all had to have our passports checked at gate 33. For those of us with mobile boarding passes, they put the sticker on the backs of our phones.

At Heathrow, we had to go through security again. I think this was the first airport of this trip where I had to go through the whole remove-your-laptop-and-liquids routine, but at least we get to keep our shoes on now.

Since I had three hours to get to my gate, I decided to have a sit-down lunch (I had a light breakfast at my hotel many hours earlier.) Google Maps said the best place near me was a Chinese restaurant, so I settled in for dim sum and a Diet Coke. The dim sum was very pretty.
It was a long hike to my gate (the very last B gate). Along the way there were murals, ample drinking fountains (near each restroom as expected), and Ben & Jerry's vending machines.
During my London layover, I took the time to look at my flight info in the United app, and I clicked on the "change your seat" button out of curiosity. It was a good move: I was able to change my seat to one in another row in which only the window seat was already occupied, and the middle seat remained empty.

The last leg of the trip was long but uneventful. Arrived safely at home, 22 hours after leaving my hotel.

Sunday, June 2, 2024

Art, Boba, and More Dance

After a very late night last night (I left the graduation party around 12:30 am, and it was still in full swing), I still managed to wake up well before anyone else in the family was ready to meet, so I decided to go to a museum.

I ended up only having about a hour to spend at the Alte Pinakothek, but definitely could have spent more time. So many beautiful old paintings; here are a couple that caught my uneducated eye as I zipped through the museum.
Fra Filippo Lippi,Virgin and Child, ca. 1460/65
Raffael, The Canigiani Holy Family,ca. 1506/07
Sandro Botticelli,The Lamentation, ca. 1490/95

Today we met for boba, and unlike yesterday we remembered to take photos!
Emily, me, Jimmy, & Beth
Beth and her friend Anna


I had dinner with my college classmate Robert and his wife tonight:
Tonight's performance was the all-school show (three different levels in each of two tracks), and we were asked to not take photos or videos (there will be professional ones available later), so I'll end this post with a blurry photo of all the students on stage for bows.

Saturday, June 1, 2024

Friends, Family, and a Graduation

I started off today by going to the mall. I met up with a Pokémon Go friend there for a lucky trade, then did a little shopping. When packing for this trip, I checked the weather forecast, and because Munich was going to be cool and rainy, I packed leggings that go with my ankle boots, and socks that also work with the boots. However, I did not try them on together, so when I put on my dress this morning I discovered that the tops of the socks and the bottoms of the leggings didn't meet. My ankles were cold! I also deliberately did not pack an umbrella, because my travel raincoat is enough for most days (that is, when I remember to put it in my bag). The rain was steady today, so in addition to a longer pair of socks, I also picked up a cheap umbrella.

I poked my head into a drugstore to buy some sunscreen and cough drops. At home, I like the sugar-free Ricola cough drops, but I've only been able to find two flavors, and I didn't like one of them. There were many more choices here, and they came in cute little boxes so that I don't have to deal with noisy wrappers during performances.
I had lunch with with Beth & Jimmy, and my sister Emily. We had tasty German food, but did not remember to take any photos of our schnitzels, potato salad, Kasespätzel, and pancake with apple sauce. Or of each other — I guess we were hungry!
Pedestrian underpass

For dinner, I met my high school classmate Kristy and her husband, and had more tasty German food. I opted for a salad with chicken (schnitzel-style), and a sour-cherry spritzer.
And now for the main event, the reason we're all in Munich. Today Beth graduated from Iwanson International, after three years of hard work.