Not A Travel Magazine

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Whether we like to admit it or not, most of us visit Wikipedia on a regular basis. Well, now folks interested in travel will have one more reason to squander their time on a Wiki site, because the much awaited Wikivoyage is finally emerging from beta. According to Wikipedia Foundation guru Jimmy Wales, the free travelguide site, incubating since late September, is ready for primetime.

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The Wikivoyage main page will act like a universal travelguide and feature links to sections such as, Desination of the month, Featured travel topics, Off the beaten path, Discover and Getting involved. The Wikipedia Foundation has spelled-out its specific “goals and nongoals” for Wikivoyage:

Wikivoyage articles should be useful for at least the following purposes:

  • ·     For on-line use by travellers on the road, huddled in a late-night Internet café in some dark jungle, who need up-to-the-minute information on lodging, transportation, food, nightlife, and other necessities;
  • ·     For off-line use by travellers on the road sitting in a train with a subset of Wikivoyage on their PDA, laptop, mobile phone, iPod or digital camera.
  • ·     For on-line use by travellers still planning to review destinations, plan itineraries, make reservations, and get excited about their trip;
  • ·     For individual article printouts, that is, for printing a list of museums or karaoke bars and putting it in your back pocket for when you need it – or making a photocopy when someone else does;
  • ·     For ad-hoc travel guides, small fit-to-purpose travel books that match a particular itinerary;
  • ·     For inclusion in other travel books, giving up-to-date information for travel guide publishers.

These are some specific non-goals; things people might think we want to do with Wikivoyage, but we don’t:

  1. 1.  Create a travel essay anthology. Wikivoyage is not a travel magazine. Articles should be directed toward practical information about travelling.
  2. 2.  Create a travel chat board. Wikivoyage has talk pages for each article, but these should be used to develop the article itself, and not as a “comments” area. Anyone can edit a Wikivoyage article; if you have useful information about a topic, put it in the article itself.
  3. 3.  Make an advertising brochure. Wikivoyage of course has listings and information about travel-related businesses around the world. We would be thrilled to have representatives of these businesses keep those records up-to-date. However, blatant advertising is not welcome, and overcompetitive acts (like deleting information about rival businesses) is gravely deprecated.
  4. 4.  Produce a Yellow Pages of restaurants, hotels, or bars for a city. City guides should certainly include information for travel-related companies, but these should be kept at a useful number. Think of a friend from out of town asking you where they should go – you wouldn’t list all 200 possibilities, but 5–10 options for a particular type, budget, or part of town.
  5. 5.  Build a Web directory. Wikivoyage articles should not have in-article links to external resources, with the exception of a link to the official website besides the name of a listing. It’s not a goal to collect links about any destination. External links should support and complement the content of articles; they’re not a goal in and of themselves.
  6. 6.  Make a travel guide supplement. The Wiki technique we use for Wikivoyage makes it possible for us to include information that’s not in other travel guides. This doesn’t mean that we only include information not found in other guides. Wikivoyage aims to be a complete travel guide – not just an additional resource on the side of traditional guides.
  7. 7.  Make an encyclopedia. Wikivoyage aims to tell people how to travel all over the world, not document everything there is on the planet or how it ended up that way. If you find yourself needing references and footnotes on Wikivoyage, whatever you’re writing should probably go to Wikipedia instead.
  8. 8.  Run a travel agency. Wikivoyage does not arrange visas, make bookings for airlines, car rentals, cruise lines, hotels, railways, or package tours.
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Can’t Find My Stop

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According to this handsome metro map, Uruguay‘s capital city boasts an impressive metro system with 12 underground lines, as well as tram lines and elevated train lines. It would be quite impressive for one of South America’s smallest nations if it was not a total fabrication. In fact, the entire Corporación Metro de Montevideo is entirely bogus. The spurious Montevideo metro system is the brainchild of ad agency director Marco Caltieri. If your Spanish is up to it, you can learn all about his surrealist project at the website or you can vist Frank Jacobs’ fabulous site Strange Maps to get the skinny on this elaborate hoax.

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Murder In The Library

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Classic locked-room mysteries, tales of murder and mayhem in quaint villages or gritty adventures on mean city streets. You will find all of that and more at the British Library’s upcoming exhibition titled Murder in the Library: An A-Z of Crime Fiction.

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Crime fiction, which currently accounts for over a third of all fiction published in English, holds millions of people enthralled. Murder in the Library will take you on a fascinating journey through the development of crime and detective fiction, from its origins in the early 19th century through to contemporary Nordic Noir, taking in the adventures of Sherlock Holmes, the first appearance of Miss Marple and the fiendish plots of Dr Fu Manchu along the way.

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The show will be on display at the Folio Society Gallery of the British Library from January 18 through May 12, 2013.

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BON VOI AGE

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International ad agency Ogilvy & Mather has created this clever campaign for Expedia UK by combining three-letter IATA airport codes to form pithy travel related phrases. Ultimately, they searched 9,000 airport codes to come up with 36 ads. They’ve released 9 ads so far. By the way, the tags are all facsimiles since the real ones contain security coding.

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No More Lost Luggage

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Last year airlines lost more than twenty-six million pieces of luggage in North America alone. Now there’s a new gadget that will provide flyers with a better chance at being reunited with missing baggage. The Trakdot Luggage Tracker, which will be available in March, is an ultra-light, device that you place in your checked bag. You can then follow the luggage in real-time (as long as it’s in range of a cell phone tower) anywhere in the world using your mobile phone or the company’s website. It’s even programmed to send text alerts when your bag reaches the luggage carousel.

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In The Traveler’s Cup

Developing since 2004, Traveler’s Cup is a fabulous series of digital pigment prints by Boulder Colorado-based artist and educator Joo Yeon Woo. Her fantastical images shrink iconic cultural monuments and architectural landmarks to fit inside of her traveling water glass. Yoo says,”I have addressed creative discourses on issues of blurred boundaries not just in the geographical sense, but also in the virtual and physical sense. My creative works explore the blurred boundaries of today’s nomadic life style. Today’s nomadism is not that of unrestricted wandering; it is based on a global nomadic culture. Our nomadic lifestyle redefines the meaning of ‘home’ as something that one may carry only in one’s mind or in one’s own character. In addition, our experiences are now multi-cultural, transcending geographic locations and the ethnic characteristics of our living environments.”

All images © Joo Yeon Woo

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Berlin : Where Are We Now ?

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Yesterday delivered a special treat for music lovers of all ages. On the occasion of his 66th birthday, David Bowie released his first record in ten years. The video (see below) for the haunting track Where Are We Now ? is a melancholy elegy to Bowie‘s productive Berlin days. Directed by Tony Ousler, the video takes a decidedly old-school tour of Bowie’s 70s Berlin haunts.

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Just 150 Years Ago

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Tomorrow January 9th will mark the 150th anniversary of the first official passenger trip on what would become known as the London Tube. On that momentous occasion, the Metropolitan Railway made its inaugural trip of 3.7 miles between Paddington and 7275_1_348_348_FFFFFF_0Farringdon stations. Over the course of that winter’s day in 1863, the underground steam train carried more than 40,000 passengers and introduced the world to mass transit.

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The London Transport Museum is celebrating with a year of special events. There will be several runs of the historic Metropolitan Railway Steam Locomotive No.1 coupled to Jubilee Rail Carriage No. 353. The museum wll be opening a year-long exhibtion of iconic tube art called “Poster Art 150” in February. And Tube enthusiasts will be able to get up close and personal with historic rolling stock at the Acton Depot on weekends.

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In the Deep End

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Boston-based artist Jake Fried creates mind-blowing short animated films. What’s really impressive is that Fried’s surreal creations are built of layers of coffee, white-out, crayon and ink. My favorite film is the award-winning “Deep End” . You’ll want to view it more then once and then visit Fried’s website to see more of his magical “moving paintings”.

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Are You Having A Laugh

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Liverpool, England has the John Lennon International Airport and now Birmingham is seriously considering a proposal to rename Birmingham Airport after the inimitable Ozzy Osbourne. This unlikely idea for the “Ozzy Osbourne International Airport” comes from Jim Thompson, the director of Big Bear Records and the man who “discovered” Black Sabbath.

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This seemingly farfetched plan actually fits quite well with the city’s destination Birmingham tourism campaign that hopes to increase visits by music fans. Stranger things have happened with airport renaming. After all, Washington D.C. rebranded its airport after another notorious fiend.

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