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2007/03/31

Vegas, Day 1

Filed under: Travel — claud9999 @ 21:00

Luxor

We got a great deal on the room at Luxor, cheaper than many off-strip places, so we stayed there for the entire week…While the hotel is an architectural masterpiece, it is getting dated (I don’t think they’ve updated much of anything about the hotel space since the place was built but I’m sure the casino and entertainment has been updated.) The room occasionally smelled of cigarette smoke (I guess it’s coming from a room below ours?) but we got used to it after a while. Apparently, the Luxor ventilation problems continue to this day. The casino floor is not terribly smoky but smokier than most casinos nowadays. The arcade is pretty nice though, and the crowds were never outrageous.

Arriving in the early evening, we dined at Fusia. While the food was as good as the last time I went there, the service was excruciatingly slow. Apparently, the restaurant is part of the “dinner and a show” package the hotel offers and they give those patrons priority to get them to their show on time. Whoops, left us spending 2+ hours waiting and waiting. Perhaps avoiding the times before shows might make it a more reasonable restaurant.

2007/03/30

Vegas Trip – Time Warp

Filed under: Travel — claud9999 @ 21:00

Not an exit

This past week, in celebration of our 5th year wedding anniversary, my wife and I tripped our way to Vegas. After blowing a ton of $ going to Hawaii (and a bit of money on Houston), we went mid-level this trip, trying to save money on the hotel and spend it on food and services.

About us: we’re not big gamblers. We’re not into the night club scene. We enjoy a good restaurant, a good drink (~1/night), and a good show. We set a goal of visiting every major casino we hadn’t been to before, plus revisit some of our favorites.

I’m planning on posting a blog entry for each day of the week in Sin City and set the post date as the date it is in regards to.

2007/03/29

File under: “If it ain’t broke…”

Filed under: Travel — claud9999 @ 06:46

KVR

Since our stay at Kona Village Resort, and after hearing that Ty Warner was selling it to Michael Dell (well, to his investment firm, apparently) I’ve been keeping an eye on the news to see if they plan on changing the nature of the resort in any way. Apparently, the deal has finally completed. While the hales are spartan and a bit dated, and while I could certainly think of some improvements, I am concerned that they’ll make the resort more like a modern hotel or resort and remove many of the key features that make it unique.

I note that:

Kona Village was rated among Hawaii’s top 25 hotels by Travel + Leisure Magazine in 2006, was on Condé Nast Traveler’s 2006 Gold List of the world’s best places to stay and was listed by Forbes.com as a top ten luxury family resort in the U.S.

Sure seems that it ain’t broke, in fact how can it be any less not broke? What concerns me is quotes such as this:

Patrick Fitzgerald, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Hualalai Resort and Kona Village Resort, said, “Kona Village Resort is an exceptional property. Over the long-term, there will be great opportunities for us to create unparalleled synergies between Kona Village and Hualalai in the resort marketplace, while maintaining each resort’s unique appeal.

Ulrich Krauer, General Manager of Kona Village, said, “Kona Village is one of the jewels of the Kohala Coast. Under new ownership, Kona Village’s rich heritage will be preserved and enhanced.”

All current Kona Village Resort employees have been retained by the new ownership. Plans to refurbish the resort, a step that would ensure its position as one of Hawaii’s top luxury resort destinations, are under consideration and will be announced at a future date.

Please please please, folks, don’t mess it up! I’d like to go back, but I will be keeping a close eye on the news and reviews of the resort in case they do “fix” a good thing.

2007/03/28

National Disgrace – Space Center Houston

Filed under: NASA,Politics,Rant,Travel — claud9999 @ 18:16

SoyuzSaturday afternoon was punctuated by a trip to Space Center Houston. I had been there before, briefly, and had a reasonably-enjoyable time on the tour. (The pic of the Soyuz for astronaut training was taken by me on this previous tour.) I hoped to take Megan on the tour to show her “where it all happens” (at least from the outside of the buildings where I work with folks).

Returning with my wife to the visitor’s center, we immediately headed for the tour. Waiting in line for 30 minutes (after having our photo taken for “security purposes” [see below]) I couldn’t help but note the TV’s with a continuous loop of commercial spots and propaganda such as a message from the mayor of Webster, TX discussing the impact of JSC on the local community. The tour only visited the old mission control facility (restored to it’s ’70′s-era state) and the guides gave little information to the visitors. I think we were in the mission control room for less than 15 minutes, total.

On the way back, my wife and I decided to hop off the tram to visit the Saturn V (being lovingly-restored by the Smithsonian Institution). We spent a bit of time taking a couple photos, then returned to where the next tram should pick us up. A single employee was waiting there and discussed his (part-time summer minimum-wage) job with another visitor while we waited, and waited. Another 15 minutes of waiting, and a tram came by, but no one was organizing boarding and it was a free-for-all mess that left us without a spot, even though we were the first people to wait for the tram. I could not believe how poorly this was organized and managed, saying some expletives and leading me to go off to cool down (and I’m normally a very calm, level-headed person, but my frustration was mounting.)

Finally returning to the visitor center building after they finally summoned a second, empty, tram to make up for the extra traffic (total tour time ~2h for ~30m of actual tour time), and blazing past the counter where we could spend $20 to pay for a copy of our “security photo”, we wandered around to see what else there was to see and do. I was amazed, astounded, and shocked to see that there is almost no educational or historical exhibits explaining what NASA does. Most of the exhibits are either cheap amusement-park exhibits, kiddie playground equipment, or rides that cost extra (on top of the $5 parking and $19/adult and $15/child entry fee!)

The few semi-educational exhibits were prominently covered with advertisements, such as the “living in space” exhibit/talk with a large sign mentioning that it was sponsored by Borden foods.

Only other thing that caught our eye was a set of space suits contained within glass displays. Sadly, some of the displays were behind a rope in a waiting area for the movie theater (which, I assume, also cost extra to enter) including an apollo-era suit.

Needless to say, we left fairly quickly after we had returned from the tour. Luckily, I get free entry, but Megan had to pay to get in. I had to wonder what families with 2 kids (costing ~$80 just to get in) must think about this place. It was quite obvious that there was little focus on education, outreach, history, or inspiration. Far more was spent on entertainment, advertising, and making yet more money from the hapless people who came thinking they were going to be experiencing something special with their family.

I’ve been to the visitor center at KSC, and it’s half as bad…Seemed to me that the KSC visitor center had education more prominent and less of the “playground” or “theme park” feel, but there was still a bit of the commercialism aspect to it.

All the frustration has got me to thinking, if it’s broken, how would I fix it? I assume that Space Center Houston is run by a foundation, corporation, or some other private entity that must turn a profit or at least cover costs with ticket sales and concessions. I see four options:

  1. The sponsors (or other sponsors stepping up to the plate) could encourage Space Center Houston to refocus on education and not on advertising and entertainment, perhaps it could be rescued.
  2. NASA could divest their name from Space Center Houston and stop the on-center tours (or run the tours separately from SCH.) As it stands now, SCH is an embarrassment that, to me, would do more harm than good in trying to encourage our next generation of scientists, engineers, and astronauts.
  3. NASA could “in-source” the facility and refocus much of the facility towards education, history, inspiration, and outreach. Sponsorship, in the “public TV” model, might still be appropriate but would not be required to keep the facility operating.
  4. The Smithsonian Institution could take over SCH. Compare SCH to the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum in DC. The latter has a much stronger focus on education, history, and inspiration, and it’s free! Nothing pisses folks off more than giving them less for their money. Charging them nothing means they’ll not be out to get the most out of their entertainment dollars…

flower
I feel NASA needs to seriously reconsider the role of the visitor center in its planning and development of education, outreach, and historical preservation activities. For many Americans (and visitors to the US), visitor centers are the only experience they have of NASA–perhaps it shouldn’t leave them with the feeling they have been taken as rubes by high school-age hucksters.

When will the US realize that we’ve already lost in Iraq?

Filed under: Politics,Rant — claud9999 @ 17:39

Today’s news regarding the extreme violence in Tall Afar, a northern Iraq town that, “[T]he Bush administration touted that effort as a centerpiece in driving al-Qaida out of Iraq” has finally motivated me to write something on my blog regarding the whole conflict.

In 2004-2005, I felt the US had a real chance to bring peace and, more importantly, prosperity to Iraq. Instead of sending money to rebuild the economy, the US (mis-)spent all of the treasury on contractors, military forces, and security forces and almost none ended up actually helping the Iraqi’s and even less went to pay Iraqi men and women to do work towards repairing the country after it was ravaged by the looting and destruction after Saddam’s fall.

The surge is sure to give us a short-term false sense of progress, but one that will soon be dashed as the Iraqi population continues the civil war in which it’s now deeply embroiled. Using a particularly cynical lens to inspect the surge, I posit that perhaps W started the surge expressly to give that false sense of security and he is relishing signing a law that ties his hands at a time when Baghdad falls back into absolute chaos, allowing him and his followers to blame the chaos on the “Democrat Party”.

Rowing our asses off in the bayou

Filed under: Rant,Travel — claud9999 @ 07:21

BayouOn Saturday, my wife and I woke up and went to the Bay Area Park to participate in the canoe excursion arranged by the Armand Bayou Nature Center. The “breakfast on the bayou” trip was booked up, but this sounded like fun:

Come along on a morning of education and adventure paddling canoes on a guided tour down the backwaters of Armand Bayou. Meet at Bay Area Park for a leisurely morning of wildlife watching, wetland education, relaxation and fun. Observe numerous birds, reptiles, deer and other residents who are starting their day at the water’s edge. Travel approximately 2-3 miles round trip. Beginning and experienced canoers are welcomed. Our knowledgeable guides will give a brief orientation. Life jackets are provided. Check the calendar for scheduled canoe trips.

Well, we arrived at the 8am arranged time and loaded up. Each canoe held two folks, so it was my wife and I in one. The weather couldn’t have been better, cloudy but warm (low ’70′s, I’d guess.)

After some flailing by most/all of the canoe teams, we headed out. The scenery was very nice (as illustrated by my photo) but…

The guides (two guys in one canoe) really moved quickly, forcing us to row 90% of the 2.5 hours. I have little upper-body strength (geek physique) and my wife has less, and we spent half the time fighting to move forward and not in some off-angle direction.

Let me remind you, the guides moved quickly, leaving us in the dust. At one point it was my boat and one other canoe, rowing along apace, wondering where our guides went and considering returning to the starting point from frustration. The breakfast boat came by and directed us towards where the rest of the pack went.

It would have been nice to have actually spent time enjoying nature, and not trying to keep up with the crowd. We did not see deer, reptiles, but no biggie. Let’s see, it was not relaxing, fun, educational. I cannot emphasize that point enough. The guides only talked briefly about the state of the bayou and a bit about the fish, not discussing anything about the bird life or much anything else.

I wish I could have my $50 back. I’m still sore.

2007/03/27

Zoo Friday

Filed under: Travel — claud9999 @ 05:49

chameleonOn Friday of last week, we went to the Houston Zoo for the day. What a neat zoo!

The place is huge, larger than the zoos in the SF Bay Area by a sizable margin. Almost all of the exhibit spaces were nicely built, giving most/all of the animals a natural environment and reasonable room to spread their wings or stretch their legs or whatever they had to stretch or spread. The weather was perfect (note to travelers, winter is the time to visit the gulf coast.)

Highlights included the two collections of bats (both of which seemed to be in spaces a bit small), an excellent tropical bird aviary, a large number of bird exhibits and a pacific giant octopus that was active during the time the keeper was talking with visitors. (Usually, at aquariums, cephalopods are as exciting as a loaf of bread, being nocturnal and shy.) Oh, and a toucan and I had a dance-off. Very funny!

Only problems were iffy cuisine (when will zoos offer the high quality food available at museums?) and many of the exhibits lacked signs identifying the animal contained within. (The toucan that I danced with was one of the unidentified, I believe it was a red-breasted toucan.)

The evening wrapped up with an amazing dinner at Gabacho’s Mexican Grill on NASA Road 1, which I cannot recommend enough. I had pollo maresco (grilled chicken topped with a spicy cream sauce and seafood) and Megan had pollo gabacho (grilled chicken topped with a cream sauce and bacon bits). Decadent and artery-clogging! Live music, gracious staff (a huge number of staff for the size of the restaurant) and local flavor made for a pleasing dinner.

Oh, did I mention that everything is NASA this and NASA that at JSC? My favorite is a sign for a mall with “NASA Liquor” and “NASSAU Postal” (apparently, the area is called “Nassau Bay”…which came first?)

I’m sorry, Mr. Bin Ladin, your home loan has been rejected…

Filed under: Politics,Rant — claud9999 @ 05:05

Kennedy TerrorThe Washington Post has an article today that folks who happen to have names on the publicly-available terrorist watch list are being refused jobs and loans. Nice! I wonder if Ted Kennedy can get a loan…

2007/03/26

More travel fun

Filed under: Art Galleries and Museums,NASA,Travel — claud9999 @ 15:44

Vultures

Just returned from the Seabrook, TX area, punctuated by a couple great meetings with co-workers at JSC followed by my wife flying down. Thursday we spent a couple hours at the MFAH, but she was exhausted from not sleeping the night before so we headed back to the hotel earlier than expected. On the way to the hotel, a teenager got us in a fender-bender, but luckily the rental had insurance so we have paperwork to do but little/no impact to us beyond taking time away from our vacation. More travel details in later posts…

2007/03/20

Men-Jaro

Filed under: Artsy Fartsky — claud9999 @ 05:30

Vincent MantsoeFriday evening, after much consideration, Megan and I went to see Men-Jaro at the Stanford Memorial Auditorium. We’re not much into contemporary dance, but we’re definitely into ethnic dance. Men-Jaro was a wonderful combination of live music and contemporary dance with a strong African (primarily South African) influence. The talk after added more background into the inspiration and the collaboration between Anthony Caplan (musical director) and Vincent Mantsoe (leader of the troupe).

I do have to comment, though, that the venue left MUCH to be desired. I’m a 6’4″ man, yet when a woman with muppet hair (not particularly tall hair, just wide hair) sat in front of me, I lost visibility of 1/3 of the stage. Luckily I could see the band and most of the dancers most of the time. I blame the venue, as properly sloped seating would have made it impossible for someone to block my view without wearing a hat or wearing their hair “up”. Consider this when booking seats at the Stanford Memorial Auditorium, you would be best served by choosing an aisle or front-row (or balcony front row) for anything that would benefit from seeing the stage.

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