Articles in the Travel Category
Posted in Products, Shopping, Technology, Travel on 24 June 2008

Liveluggae (mobile luggage) mention is not an alien subject to me. It’s being there in my fantasies for long and I used to wonder its possibility in a conceptual form. But with LiveLuggage, today I feel fortunate to have a realistic solution to my flying problems.
The LiveLuggage PA Series is the first power-assisted valise that infuses life into your wild yet sensible ideas. Every large wheel features an electric motor that makes the entire exercise of dragging the suitcase quite easy and it may seem as if you are pulling a light backpack. In absence of any ‘throttle’ button on handle, it makes use of sensors to perceive when you’ve initiated the process of pulling the suitcase and eventually the integrated motor starts its job of pushing it. The ‘anti-gravity’ handles allows the suitcase to bend back while you’re heaving it and putting 85% of its weight straight onto the wheels.
The power driver motors are charged via rechargeable 12V NiMH battery that has a life of about two-hours on a single charge. It does come with a built-in charger and wheels behave like a generator when you move downhill.

Respecting security concerns, it has incorporated TSA approved tumbler lock enabling the holder unlock it within no time. Another feature of ‘Live Locator’ bearing a distinctive serial number on every model enables the company identifies the concerned owner by checking its database. Retailed at $1,365.25, it would surely be a feast to many travelers’ relieving them from their worry of loading tones of belongings’.
Via OhGizmo / ComputerWorld
Posted in Aircraft, Luxury, News, Travel, Worlds Most Expensive on 4 June 2008

Very often, we hear about a bundle of complaints attached with flights offering an impression that air travel these days is no less than a hell. Earlier flying used to be a fun activity against its present status where it has crooked into an absolute errand. With long lines, confined seating, you are expected to pay extra dough in the name of amenities. And in return feel fortunate if they happen to ask you for water. I doubt but Newsweek report claims that amidst ongoing scenario and floating bad thoughts about air travel, there is still some good there in skies provided you are ready to spill over the hefty amount.
There are airlines (mostly flying overseas) that propose magnificence like champagne, caviar, private cabins, and lie-flat beds. The eight most opulent airlines in the world enlisted by Newsweek in order are:
· Virgin Atlantic
· Qatar Airways
· Emirates
· Singapore
· British Airways
· Qantas
· Thai Airways
· Swiss International Airlines
Here are few interesting shoots:






Via Gadling
Posted in Shopping, Travel on 2 June 2008

J. Crew unveils its offering of travel luggage christened Globe-Trotter Centenary. The models encompass the craft tradition of British society. The suitcases and vanity bags are handcrafted by Globe-Trotter, the 110 year old British luggage company. It offers a six-piece collection designed using Vulcan Fibre shells that offer it a great level of resistance by bearing a weight of one-ton elephant.
Available in limited edition, the variety of models include small vanity bag up the huge suitcase running on wheels and are customizable. Depending upon the mixing and matching, gamut of sizes include a 13″ vanity case ($1000), a 21″ trolley case ($1800), a 26″ suitcase ($1800), a 28″ suitcase with wheels ($2300), a 30″ extra-deep suitcase with wheels ($2200), and a 33″ extra-deep suitcase with wheels ($2400).
Via Deluxe/ Uncrate
Posted in Elite Find of the Day, News, Travel on 26 May 2008

Call them Botels or floating hotels, these are hotels installed within the boats offering you an interesting stay waterside. It is great way of killing your worry to hunt for a port-to-port stoppage while cruising and hence saving your time. They say the lodging offers a rocking-to-sleep impression and the sound of lapping water but I wonder if one wants similar features, why wouldn’t he go for a complete-service cruise instead. Well, there is no word on its pricing but a clear view at the interiors of the botel would enable you take a call about your visit there. Folks, who wish to stop through Stockholm, Budapest or Prague should certainly look for another staying option as these botels certainly cannot be your run-of-the-mill lodging option.
More interesting pics:



Via TravelMedia
Posted in Entertainment, Travel on 16 May 2008

Redefining the term “Under the sea,†is a Poseidon Undersea Resort located in Fiji. The resort offers you a comfortable stay beneath the waves in a room surrounded by acrylic glass. The resort provides its guests with a private plane transport facility that picks them from Fijian airport and drops at Poseidon Mystery Island. It is here that they can enjoy a healthy stay for long-week counting two nights in submarine hotel. It comes equipped with a three-passenger Triton 1000 submarine at their disposal.
For marine lovers, here is a good scope to explore coral reef and enjoy the beauty. It also features beach bungalows for above-sea level accommodations, an undersea library, wedding chapel, eatery, and much more. If figures make a difference to you then it is 40 under the surface of earth and offers you accommodation at $15,000 or plus.
Via Uncrate
Posted in Architecture, Designer, Entertainment, Health, Travel on 14 May 2008

Want to enjoy spa, massages, saunas, facials, loofah rubs, swimming at a single place? Here you go! Inspa World is a five-story 60,000-square-foot funhouse located in the College Point neighborhood of Queens, N.Y that labels itself as a “spa and water park.†But this description falls too short to define it if you consider Rory real experience or mine virtual. Overlooking Long Island Sound near the Bronx-Whitestone Bridge, it costs only $30 to get in.

While check-in, each visitor is asked for a credit card in return of which a wristwatch-sized electronic bracelet is given (blue for men, pink for ladies). The watertight bracelet mechanically opens individual lockers for one’s shoes and clothes. Visitors then clad themselves in a spa uniform to go upstairs to the co-ed sauna and restaurant floors. The place offers separate changing rooms for the upstairs co-ed pools.

It features two large outdoor pools flooded with water jets and bubble jets aiming at massaging your every body part. You would be glad to know that besides sun bath, it offers you a pool with integrated hot tub. It also offers facility of typical steam rooms and saunas downstairs for men and women.

There is also a possibility of taking a facial in a private booth or a massage with a view of the locality. The food court at sauna floor offers a salad bar, a sushi bar, hamburgers and French fries, Starbucks coffees and Haagen Dazs ice cream. Whilst the top floor of the Korean restaurant serves you with meat and noodle main courses, with countless other dishes for about $12. Developed and designed by architect and owner Steve Chon, almost $25 million was spent upon its construction and is hoping to install another 19 with next one in Dallas.
More Pics:






Via NYT
Posted in Products, Travel on 11 May 2008

Activities like camping and showering are fun for every one but there is something that differs ordinary men from die-hard travel freaks. It is their willingness to unveil hidden territories and experiment with new travel accessories. The latest product to feed their travel hunger is a Pocket Shower from Sea to Summit.
The 2.6 gallon Pocket Shower features a squashed showerhead that functions with slanting on/off regulator. The stream can be monitored by bathers to produce a slow trickle, or opt for open it up entirely for a dousing 8-minute power shower. And if you crave for that one drop of warm water during those chilly winters and camping mornings, then this would surely be your savior. All you need to do is to keep this black fabric in the sun so that the black pack soaks the maximum heat. This multi-purpose device can be used as a dry sack to carry clothes, a sleeping bag, or those aforesaid beauty products.
Posted in Cell Phone, Computer, Designer, Electronic Products, Elite Blogger, Gadgets, Interview, Shopping, Technology, Travel on 1 May 2008

Judie Lipsett, a proverbial creature of blogosphere eco-system is seen upholding the flag of Geardiary since September 2006. Prior to it she was co-Editor of The Gadgeteer for six long years. Against gamut of online sites that cover launches of electronic products especially gadgets and gizmos, Judie takes pride in moving a step ahead by reviewing a product and providing a second opinion to the prospective customers planning to ink neat deals. And opinion from such an expert is welcomed as she dons into the shoes of customers while reviewing any sundry product. If numbers make a difference then she is known to play 400 plus hardware reviews on Gadgeteer and around 350 at Gear Diary.
Judie is now fully dedicated to Geardiary, which is christened by readers as eclectic awesomeness but to me GearDiary is synonymous to a connoisseur attic that makes a generalized scanning of a product, thereby throwing the possible picks and non-picks attached to the products. And I consider Judie as a true technophile with a difference. She shares the commonality of early adoption of technology but unlike others her review enables inspires less valiant consumers to follow that particular outfit. Technophiles as individuals has a capability to make or mar technology.
Bottom line: Final call for picking a product comes from consumers’ end.
But Judie’s personality didn’t allow her to restrict her magnetism to the world of gadgets and thus to my non-surprise the gadget diva has a soft corner for fashionable accessories. She considers Louis Vuitton handbags and other trendy collection as her weakness. She has been collecting them since she was 18 and says: It’s what I will usually reward myself with when I feel I have reached a particular milestone.
Here are the captivating responses from Judie penned down while getting a pedicure down. Judie’s time is divided between running family’s ranching operation and an eternal pursuit of the critical gadgets. It clearly marks her tight scheduled day and her potential to do multi tasking.
Judie introduce yourself to my readers and take us through your typical day at work.
Hi everyone! I am Judie Lipsett, and I am a consumer product reviecwer with about nine years’ online experience. I got my start at the now defunct smaller.com in 1999, and was co-Editor of The Gadgeteer for six years. Since September 2006, I have been the owner and Editor of Gear Diary - a news, reviews, and opinion site. I also regularly contribute to (and consult with) many other gadget, mobility news and review sites. My goal is to foster a friendly and cooperative community feeling among other like-minded sites.
A typical work day for me can seem like anything but. Some mornings I may not even wake up until around 10, since I sometimes stay up as late as 4:30am when trying to wrap up a really involved review. Other days I have lunch meetings and appointments I need to keep, so my morning will start much earlier. My schedule is odd, but I enjoy it.

How did Gear Diary started? What made you switch completely from The Gadgeteer to your own diary?
Gear Diary started because when I left The Gadgeteer, I planned on using my new site as a continuance of the personal blog I had kept on Julie Strietelmeier’s (editor-in-chief, The Gadgeteer) site. My plan was to freelance for other gadget and PDA sites, while posting about more personal things which interested me on Gear Diary. But my little project soon took on a life of its own when online friends began to volunteer to write articles and reviews many of them offering to cover things that they didn’t feel fit the scope of the sites they regularly wrote for. It was never my goal that Gear Diary be perceived as a strictly mobility or gadget site, but that it also is about all sorts of other things that people use and enjoy. With that said, we’ll always cover gadgets and PDAs, but we’ll also write about cars we like, funny items found on the internet, diary entries about things that have happened to us, human folly, good deals we have found, odd things we have purchased, robots, vacations we take, toys we like literally whatever we felt like writing about.
What should be the ratio of style specks to tech features that manufacturers should consider while developing any gadget?
Good question. I am not sure if there is a specific ratio that should be adhered to, but I do think that style and aesthetic appeal are very important when considering any device that you will use as part of your daily routine. Let’s face it, a particular phone or PDA may have every feature that you need and want, but if it feels cheaply made, if it is dog-ugly, or if it doesn’t feel right when you use it, then it won’t make the cut. Many times our electronic devices are also our fashion accessories; they should look good, work as we need them to, and be durable.
What user-friendly aspects you concentrate on while reviewing a product? How important is the cost justification while reviewing a gadget (it is justifiable or no).
It really depends upon the item. If I am reviewing a phone, I’ll concentrate on how well it operates, for instance: whether it is easy to figure out, whether it works as expected, whether it fits my hand well, whether it feels cheaply made. Most importantly, and especially in the case is a PDA phone, I’ll concentrate on how well the device actually performs as a phone. After all, convergent devices only work well when you don’t have to greatly sacrifice the main reason you purchased the device in the first place.
When I am reviewing a particular accessory, depending upon what the item is I might not care so much about how it looks unless it is an accessory I’ll always be staring at, like a PDA case or a laptop bag. Instead, I’ll concentrate more on whether it works as promised and how durable it’s been over the testing period, which can usually last from one to two months.
As far as cost justification? That is a personal thing. I’ll point out when I think that something is expensive or not, but in the end, only CUSTOMER can decide if the cost of something is justifiable or not.
Your savvy readers have been blessed to witness around 400 plus hardware reviews on Gadgeteer and a good lot of 350 at Gear Diary. How you justify the pedestal of being a renowned consumer product reviewer? How far your reviews have been successful in enabling people take a call on what gadgets to keep their fingers upon?
Well, I can claim all of my reviews and diary entries on The Gadgeteer as my own, but I want to point out that so many of the reviews on Gear Diary have also been written by my fabulous Team.
As far as being on a pedestal, gosh I hope not. I will always want to be known for writing honest and thorough reviews, but I am also very aware of the fact that just because a particular item fits my needs or works well for me, it may not be the answer for everyone. All I can do is give my opinion after putting something through its paces, and hope that at the end of the day my review helps someone decide whether they should also give the item a try or not.
What’s the coolest device you’ve ever reviewed (even if it isn’t cool anymore)?
Oh, that is such a hard question to answer! If we are talking about PDAs, my favorite is probably going to be the HTC Universal, even though that device is several years out of date. I liked my review unit so much that I bought one after sending it back! I really wish that HTC would offer an upgraded version of the same device.
Picking the coolest gadget in general is a tough call, too. But for that I think I would have to choose the Litter-Robot, which I can’t recommend highly enough. One of the things that I disliked about owning a cat before I got it was cleaning her litter box daily. Now that I have the Litter-Robot, I only have to remind myself to empty its bin once a week or so. The Litter Robot has removed the only caveat that I saw to cat ownership.
At personal front, how open are you for inking pricey deals for outlandish gears? (Besides gadgets that reflects the feminism in Judie). List us the soft accessories that you possess and take pride in.
I’ve been known to spend more than I should on gadgets and other items that I really wanted for whatever reason. As long as it won’t hurt me financially and as long as I can justify it, I will generally go ahead and buy myself anything that I want badly enough. I have been known to agonize over spending money on something, but once I make up my mind that I have to have it, or that I can definitely justify it, then I’ll go ahead and get it. If I can’t really justify it, then I will put it on the back-burner until I (hopefully) don’t want it any more.
Hmmm, I’m not sure exactly what you mean by soft accessories, but I’ll admit to having a weakness for Louis Vuitton purses and accessories. I have been collecting them since I was 18, and it’s what I will usually reward myself with when I feel I have reached a particular milestone.
What other areas are you passionate about?

I like to travel, and my favorite travel companion is my daughter Sarah. We enjoy exploring other cities, countries and cultures. We are pretty adventurous and will try anything once, so we have been known to eat some crazy things, try some crazy things, and we always seem to live to tell about it.
When back at home, I serve as the president of my sorority’s (Sigma Kappa) local alumnae group, and after stepping down as an advisor for the local Sigma Kappa collegiate chapter (I did it for almost 9 years), I have started volunteering for several local organizations. It’s good to have people and offline activities that make you want to step away from the computer.
What is the business model of Gear Diary? From where do you tag monetary innings?
Honestly, the business model for Gear Diary is not very concrete. We only accept direct advertising from companies that I know and trust, because I feel that an endorsement is implied when a company’s banner is on my site. Everyone that writes on Gear Diary, including myself, has another job; none of us are doing this to get rich or looking to quit our day jobs. We write about topics we enjoy, because we enjoy sharing the information with people. The fact that Gear Diary brings in enough to pay for our hosting and associated costs - as well as goodies for all of us along the way - is a nice bonus.
What are your top tips for getting a blog ranking well in the search engines?
That’s a toughie and certainly an answer best left to SEO experts. I have found that a clear and concise post title helps Google index out items quickly, though.
Introduce us to your three gadgetry possessions that you can’t afford to miss while stepping out.
My Canon G9, my Vertu Ascent and my iPhone. I would like to add an HTC Advantage 7510 to the mix as well.
Your views on Traditional Journalism vs Blogging.
I think that the lines are blurred anymore. Bloggers who conduct their business as professionals and who try to be as ethical as possible are now being treated with the type of respect formerly reserved for print journalists. I am sure that it’s frustrating in some ways for hard-core journalists to find that anyone with computer can make as big of a name for themselves as someone with a journalism degree, but these are the times in which we are living.
What do you count as your feats and fouls?
I am probably most proud of winning my sorority’s highest honor - the Colby Award, in 2006. I was on the stage with other women who have made nationally recognized contributions to their chosen fields, so being awarded for my achievements as a technology blogger was just amazing.
I probably most regret passing on the chance to appear on the Ellen DeGeneres show in 2006; that would have been fun. It would have also brought a lot of good attention to the site I was writing for at the time, but for various reasons it just didn’t work out.
How you would like to be known as and Why?
a) Consumer product reviewer
b) Blogger
c) Technophile
d) Entrepreneur
I would most like to be known as a technophile who became a consumer product reviewer. The fact that it is in a blog versus a traditional print magazine is incidental, and I don’t really consider myself an entrepreneur. I am not trying to build a huge blogging network, as several of my friends have gone on to do. I just want to enjoy my corner of the web, spending time with a group of like-minded people who I genuinely enjoy.
Pen down your daily online-reads.
I always check JK On The Run, Mobility Site, Slash Gear and Consumerist to name a few, but I easily have over a hundred truly great sites on my RSS. I probably spend an hour a day just catching up!
Provide my readers with two of your favorite posts from a) GearDiary; b) The Gadgeteer c) Others.
Oh, I honestly can’t pick! I’d like to think that they were all good, and hopefully helped someone.
What can be pointed as GearDiary USP that is now a great success (of course besides reviews)?
I think our readers enjoy the Dear Gear Diary series as well as our GearChats. I think they also love the rants we post and the deals we find and post about.
Seeking tips for the bloggers with running gadget blogs so that they can also make big.
Don’t look to get rich by blogging; write because you enjoy the subject, and because you like sharing your discoveries with your readers. The fact that you are doing it because you enjoy it will always show through your writing. Don’t be afraid of being friendly and supportive of other sites, and never think that the market isn’t big enough for yet another [insert your type blog here] blog. Every single writer brings their own voice and flavor to the blogosphere; there is room for all of us. We should help each other succeed.
One Hidden Truth
I have a very type-A personality; I can be exasperating, and stubborn, and I am working on that.
Where do you see your blog after five years from now?
I hope that we will continue doing what we enjoy, that we will see a steady increase in readership, and that we will continue to add value and entertainment to our readers’ day.
What piece of advice you would have given yourself five-years ago?
Never be complacent, never settle, and listen to what’s really being said.
Give us your honest views on EliteChoice. If you have time, go ahead to review it.
I think that you are doing exactly what I like to see fostering a sense of friendship and community between many blogs; thank you for having that type of site!
Your turn! Can ask me one question.
Can you forgive me for taking so long to return this questionnaire?
Judie, the engrossing flow of responses justify the delay. I am happy to put it on hold for so long as now I have enough meat for my readers to know my dear friend Judie, a level more than they use to know her. And such an honest session of free-wheeling conversation is highly appreciated.

I wish luck to Judie, her daughter Sara, colleague Matthew Miller (The Mobile Gadgeteer-ZDNet) and team for their future endeavors. And many thanks for accepting to be at EliteChoice under our elite blogger series.
P.S.: Most blogger under this series are the ones captured at 2007-round-up of 125 Elite Bloggers. Besides that, i would be welcoming other worthy names.
Posted in Estate, Fashion, News, Travel on 30 April 2008

It’s a great day for us as Elitechoice post is being handpicked by Adam P. Schneider, a blogger from NYTs themomentblog, a daily blog that captures the world of fashion, design, food and travel. I am an avid reader of round-up section maintained and updated frequently by Adam at Themomentblog. He pulls in all the must-know pieces of news and strings them well here.
The post in lights at NYT Themomentblog is The Orchid: Eco-House Inks £7.2 mn Deal, Sets World Record.
Good thought Adam!
Posted in Luxury, Travel, Yacht on 28 April 2008

Ask travel freaks: What gives immense pleasure to their soul? And obvious repartee would be undergoing a cruise and exploring the hidden geographies. But little were they aware that they would get a chance to enjoy a luxurious trip at the Amazon until a company called Aqua Expeditions came up with one. A province was formerly impervious to the trinkets of 280-thread-count sheets and en-suite air conditioning. The company’s boat dubbed as the M/V Aqua looks like a suspended boutique lodge with a dining room, indoor and outdoor reclines and a surveillance deck and boutique.
Developed and designed by Peruvian architect Jordi Puig, this vessel has eight groups and four master suites that feature huge windows, thereby offering its inhabitants a 180-degree view of the waterway landscape.

Voyages on this yacht are typically planned around the swamped season that fall between June-November and dry season between December-May. These tours are for three, four and seven nights and begin in Iquitos, Peru.
It offers a pre-dinner cocktails fun to its customers in the under-sky lounge followed by a Peruvian food cooked by one of Lima’s hottest chefs! It would cost you $1950 per person or more depending upon the facilities asked for.
More pics:




Via Luxist/ UrbanDaddy



