The Corner of the Picture
Gerald Vanderleun tells a funny, heartbreaking, beautiful story about old age, museums and Seattle. He tells it so well I had to share.
Gerald Vanderleun tells a funny, heartbreaking, beautiful story about old age, museums and Seattle. He tells it so well I had to share.
This is kind of neat. I've been working on behalf of the new Simpsons Ride at Universal Studios Florida, in Orlando. It's a new roller coaster simulation ride using the latest technology, including some really great Simpsons video. Anyway, there's a preview - a welcome from Krusty the Clown, followed by some video from the start of the ride itself. Just imagine yourself in a ride car...and...
There may be some hope of prolonged life for Windows XP, despite what Microsoft has been saying. The Daily Dog quotes Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer as saying Microsoft may reconsider its decision to stop selling XP at the end of June - though he insists that people really love Vista. Really. No, honestly. Truth. Meanwhile, keep those cards and letters coming...
My friend Peter Shankman travels a lot on business. I mean a lot: he's platinum in several airlines' and hotel chains' frequent flyer programs. So when he posts a scathing blog entry about a really bad experience at a Sheraton hotel in Miami, I tend to pay attention.
Now I don't travel nearly as much - but enough to hit silver level in some of the programs. I'm one of those customers Starwood (Sheraton's parent) tries to reach with its advertising and I even belong to their program. But the next time I'm flying into Miami - or elsewhere - which do you think I'll remember and act upon - their ad about how wonderful the Sheratons are or the first-person complaint of someone I trust?
I've been over this ground before: advertising can't and won't wipe out first-person reports from people we trust. Study after study has shown us that consumers more and more are relying on comments and recommendations from people they know. That represents a challenge - and a huge opportunity - for companies that pay attention to customer service.
I'd add that I have stayed frequently at Starwood hotels and, like Peter Shankman, rarely had reason to voice complaints. But any company that decides it doesn't need to pay attention to customer service these days probably deserves what is likely to happen to it.
With several airlines getting set to launch in-air Wi-Fi service, Online Media Daily is throwing some cold water on the plans. They cite a study from Orbitz for Business that says a majority of business travelers don't want or need to be connected in flight.
I don't know about that. I suspect that in-air Wi-Fi would be a terrific plus - it sure beats those dreadful movies they show in-flight. And while I can understand why travelers say they wouldn't pay extra for a flight with Wi-Fi, I'm willing to bet that the service gets a pretty good workout.
Speaking personally, the service I await with considerable dread is in-air cell phone service. How wonderful - a plane full of yammering idiots braying at the top of their lungs into their cell phones, as they do now on commuter trains, in restaurants, during movies, etc. Looks like we'll all be faced with the difficult choice between acquiring noise-cancelling headsets or buying rolls of duct tape, to be forcibly applied to the mouth of a chattering seatmate...
