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You Get What You Pay For: Megabus

In an effort to not sound like a complete dick, i have to preface this post with the fact that yes, i did only pay $23.25 for a four and a half hour bus from New York to Washington D.C  which is a number that doesn’t seem like enough to go anywhere.  I should also mention that my first ride with Megabus was  a  much better ride than that of the second. pleasant almost in comparison.

What exactly went wrong

‘Everything’ might be too broad a term, but save the bus breaking down there wasn’t much that didn’t happen.  In short the bus that should take ‘4 hours 20 minutes’ (from Megabus’ website) took close to 8 hours. Where did 3 hours go? In my opinion half was due to traffic, which was at some points bad, but the other half of the responsibility lands squarely on the first bus drivers shoulders. Startlingly, we left on time.

But it really went downhill from there. within 2 minutes of exiting the parking lot on H Street in Washington D.C. the driver had made a wrong turn. While, admittedly, i was not at the front of the bus and could not see the streets ahead, i had seen other Megabus’ leaving from that area as well as walking extensively around that area over the weekend. When, 50 mins later we were passing the parking lot from which we had departed it was clear that he had gotten hopelessly lost in D.C.’s china town. see the map below for the correct route out and an approximation of the route our driver took.

After that we hit traffic, queuing most of the way out to the Washington-Baltimore parkway and up part of it. During this and the roads after it, the driver showed a lack of commitment to his job. Driving consistently slower than traffic that passed–sometimes on both sides–with no energy, listlessly floating down the highway.

The Bus makes one stop, north of Baltimore, which after departing the bus driver subsequently got lost again (proving that the first was indeed him doing it wrong). After 15 mins of sitting in a parking lot of a housing complex trying to turn around we were back on the road, creeping up the coast.

After getting into Jersey, the bus driver pulled over a claimed that he had run out of ‘driving hours’ while i don’t have a problem with this rule or law (i don’t know what it is exactly), it made the whole situation seem like he was consciously trying to run down his hours by driving slower, thereby putting him closer to ‘home,’ wherever that is. He seemed like a nice guy while we waited for the replacement driver to arrive, but i feel there was something else going on.

45 minutes later the replacement driver arrived, who took off like any other driver would. The remaining two hours went quickly, with a driver who was really dedicated to the job she was doing–or maybe just pissed off that she had to come out and collect us.

Conclusions

Do i have a right to complain? In today’s broken-service economy, probably not (you know the one where airlines charge to lose your baggage). At $23.25 a ticket, you take what comes. In the end they got you there, regardless of how long it took. The problem with the travel industry is that there are so many things that can interfere, weather traffic etc it gets hard to tell it apart from when the company is doing something wrong. while this driver may have “dilly-dallied” his way up I-95, he technically did nothing wrong in the end.

“Sexy Maid Cleaning Service”

This was sitting on my windshield when i got back from work today. I don’t know exactly what my commentary is, but its somewhere along the lines of marketing insight (if theres a need, shes certainly attempting to fill it) and laughing my ass off (“This is not an escort service!!”). I should probably blur out her number, but then again she left it in a pretty public place, and the sign at the entrance says no soliciting…

Apple is Evil.

In the classic and historic Apple Super Bowl advertisement a women runs down an isle of transfixed people, throwing a sledge hammer into the face of a 1984 style big brother. Symbolizing a break from the computer technology that had dominated in years before, Apple has since come to embody the big brother they destroyed in 1984.

It all started off alright. The original Macintosh computer and all the hardware and software innovations that followed were a step in the right direction for computer technology. When the iPod came along the world rejoiced, Apple had perfected the pocket-sized music player that could hold your entire music collection. Apple’s OS X was leaps and bounds better and simpler than Microsoft’s competing products. It was so simple a child could use it.

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Google Pulls out of China

This article was originally written for the Hartford Informer on March 25, 2010.

Monday afternoon the Internet giant Google announced that it would leave the lucrative Chinese market as censorship issues plagued the dominant search engine.
For sure this was not an easy decision for Google, but it was a result of four years of negotiation, disagreement and hostility. The fiercest of which has been a hotly debated topic since January when Google suffered coordinated cyber attacks to their network. The source of cyber attacks were revealed to be allegedly connected to the Chinese government as part of a larger Internet surveillance operation of e-mail accounts, specifically Google’s Gmail accounts.

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Google Goes ‘Big With A Gig’

This article was originally written for The Hartford Informer on February 18th, 2010.
In a huge announcement this week, Google announced last Thursday the development of a gigabit internet service provider (ISP). The California company and internet search giant is going to places it has never reached. Google provided more than 65 percent of the searches in the United States in 2009 and in recent years Google has moved from its Web based origins in the form of Gmail, Google Maps and Google Docs and has begun developing an operating system. Android, the company’s phone OS, was released in late 2008. Google also plans to release a computer OS, named Chrome later this year. This latest announcement is a clean departure from online and personal computing.
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Vampire Weekend Releases Sophomore Album ‘Contra’

This Article was originally written for The Hartford Informer on January 28, 2010.
Vampire Weekend returned this month with a sophomore effort and follow up to the very unique and deservedly well received self-titled first album.
“Contra” picks up for the most part where their first album, “Vampire Weekend” left off. The clean and melodic music, is something that will get stuck in your head without really knowing it.
Released just shy of two years ago, the first album began with a sound which was at first hard to understand—a perky full sounding keyboard, heavy snare drum beat that left nothing to be desired, a clean guitar, almost ghostly vocal, and symphonic overtone—grew on the listener easily.
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Super Bowl Ads Fail To Impress: Denny’s, Dove Among Winners

This article was originally written for The Hartford Informer on February 11, 2010.
It may have been the most watched Super Bowl ever—even beating the famous M.A.S.H. numbers to become the most watched TV show ever. Unfortunately the advertisements were less than spectacular.
For those who don’t watch the Super Bowl for the football, the tradition is to watch it for the commercials. It’s an ironic twist on the status quo. This year however, the football took precedent. The story of the New Orleans Saints was compelling, and the ads were not so.
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Chatroulette Makes Connections, Headlines

This article was originally written for The Hartford Informer, February 25th 2010.
In a craze that’s sweeping the world, Chatroulette.com connects two strangers from around the world into a video chat.
Whereas applications like iChat, AIM and Skype connect you solely to your friends, Chatroulette connects you to anyone, anywhere. With more than 20,000 consistent users online, the range of users you may run into is diverse and varied.
The basic setup has the “stranger” video on top of your video, with a text box much like an AIM message to the side. The user interface is centered on two simple buttons on the top of the screen.
Next and Stop. Next takes you to the next stranger and stop stops the conversation between you and the stranger. With this you are instantly and randomly connected to a world of bizarre people.
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Better of Ted, Dead?

What’s the point America? It seems like every time I really get into a show it gets cancelled.
Today I learned of the pretty much certain death of one of those said shows. Better of Ted will not return tonight with its counterpart Scrubs (2.0). The show about middle management and office sociology echoes that of NBC’s The Office, except without all the whiney documentary and general downhill slide that that particular show has been experiencing. Don’t get me wrong I love The Office; it was one of my favorite shows. But it doesn’t hold a flame to what Better Off Ted was. For however smart The Office was, Better of Ted was smarter.

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Movie Roundup 2009

so this began as a summer movie roundup, but then i forgot to do that, so here is a yearly roundup for 2009.
20. Taken
You know my thoughts on this one.
19. Final destination 3
Stupid. Just stupid.
18. The InternationalNot thrilling, and not entertaining.

17. Planet 51
Childish but still kind of fun.
16. Fame
Rushed and slightly hard to follow. This musical remake doesn’t live to the same standards as others in recent years.
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