My Side of the Fence

The danger isn't going too far. It's that we don't go far enough.

Category: Andy’s Stuff (page 16 of 104)

Die Facebook Die….maybe.

As I might have mentioned elsewhere, I've been really, really busy this summer.  It reached a crescendo the past couple of weeks when I was working until well into the evening.  When I wasn't working in the evening, I was at City Hall.  I decided that I needed to trim out some distractions so I elected to conduct a bit of an experiment in time saving.  I decided to deactivate my Facebook account.

See, I at least pretend to be honest with myself.  I'm moderately succesful in the undertaking.  From time to time.  After 47 years on the planet, there is one truth about me that has been obvious all along:  I'm a terrible task-switcher.  Women are generally accepted to be good multi-taskers while men are not so good.  I'm so bad that I drag the male average down.  I don't have any problem switching tasks, it's just that, if in the process of switching to a different task I'm at all distracted, it's over with.  And returning to task?  yeah.  So in my version of reality I saw facebook as just another distraction that needed to be cut out.

My other thought about Facebook is that the longer you are on it, the less useful it becomes.  It's boring.  People don't chronicle their lives on Facebook once they've had an account for 6 months or so. Oh sure, you get the usual 3 kinds of updates:

1. Politics: "the president is an idiot", "I hate lib-tards", "ken-kookanelli is an idiot", "Terry is a carpet-bagger", etc.

2. News analysis: "the guy that held those women as slaves should be shot".  

3. Personal: "my kid graduated high-school", "I dropped a wine bottle on my foot", some other significant event.

I really, really don't need 1 or 2.  I know you hate lib-tards.  You have a Gadsden flag as your profile picture.  Yes, that animal who held the women as slaves should be shot.  thanks.  Indeed, it's number 3 that makes Facebook interesting and as time goes by people do less and less of that stuff.  I'm guilty of it too.  I do less of it as well.

However, when I travel by myself, I facebook everything.  It's alot of fun and people seem to enjoy it.  I get many comments and even emails about my experiences as I travel.  The other thing is that once you deactivate your facebook account and you have more than about 2 friends, all hell breaks loose.  Everyone think you de-friended them!  So, safe to say I turned my account back on and faced the music but I'll tell you this:  I didn't really miss it that much when I was off FB.  The first day or so was a bit different but after that it was just gone.  I lalso don't know that it rectified my task switching woes but it did remove a distraction. 

Amtrak

Went on my first Amtrak ride today (I'm actually on the train as I write this).  I've been on the Metro plenty, both here and in other cities and I've even been on Street cars before in NoLa and San Francisco but never a train.  It's an interesting experience.  We're traveling on business and decided to get "Business Class" seats.  They were like $20 more so it seemed reasonable.

First, the good stuff.  It's amazing to me that I can go to the little train depot up the street and take a train all the way up the East coast.  I packed my stuff into a carry-on bag, drove my car up to my office and dragged my carry-on the two blocks to the train station.  Two blocks is a shorter drag than doing the airport thing, that's for sure.  I showed up about 20 minutes early and away I went.  Contrast that to a flight out of Dulles where I'd need to lave my house some 3.5 hours in advance just to make sure I'd catch the flight.  Cost-wise I haven't doped it all out but it appears our tickets were cheaper than flying.  I'm not sure if that has more to do with the days we traveled or what.  Not sure I care all that much as there is likely adjustable pricing on both sides based on days/times, etc, etc.  I'm sure you can find a conspiracy site on the internet to explain it all if you look hard enough.

The other thing that is just all that and a ball of wax is the amount of space available.  Sarah and I bagged our "Biz class" seats and stayed in the Cafe car the whole time.  It's essentially the same as sitting at a booth in a fast-food restaurant.  Just a world different than flying on an airplane where standing up to stretch your legs necessarily involves having your butt in someone's face.  We brought a little lunch bag with a couple of sandwiches and some snacks.  It just wasn't a big deal at all.  Also, for our train there was no checked baggage but there was plenty of space above the seats.  You just stuck your bags up there and away you went.  No drama.

One last good thing: there is Dogfish Head beer on those trains and the food ain't bad.  A beautiful thing.

On to strange things: the train will, from time to time just slow to a crawl.  I suppose the tracks must be screwed up but really?  That kind of stuff has just got to get fixed and it's a long-term problem but if we want transit options….

Now, the lousy things.  These may not, at first blush, seem like much but little things add up to difference-makers:  When you go to get on the train, nobody really helps very much.  As I indicated, we bought "Business Class" tickets and upon boarding the train showed our tickets to the conductor.  We asked "where should we sit"?  He indicated, "turn right and sit anywhere".  Now technically he was correct.  However, the "Business Class" seats were 4 cars up.  That's a long way in train distance and we gave up on those seats when we found the Cafe car.  As I indicated, I was over the moon with the cafe car but others might not be.  If you're going to sell a product that is differentiated by price, your employees have got to be able to support it.  After all, when it comes to transportation, the experience that people are benchmarking you on are the airlines.  Do you think for a second that if you approached a gate with a first-class ticket and showed it to a Flight Attendant that they would glance at it and say "turn right and sit anywhere"?  No, of course not.  It's not a big deal for me but to some it will be.  I will add, however, that overall the Amtrak staff are very friendly and helpful.

As we sat in the cafe car, it became clear that this car is the defacto office for the conductors.  That's fine, everyone needs a place to hang their hat but the conductors sit in the car with the radio's blaring about half the time.  That's a bit more of a big deal to me.  It isn't as though anyone is sleeping in the cafe car but it is very distracting.  It is also loud enough that you can hear it through headphones.  I know that those earphones that plug into the radio don't cost much.

One final bad thing.  Much of the infrastructure you see from the train is a wreck.  The platforms in Union Station look like they've just absorbed a proper shelling and been patched with asphalt.  The columns for the platforms are probably original wrought iron with 20 layers of paint and electrical cable zip-tied to them.  Baltimore is the same way.  Much of the masonry and platforms look to be original.  And by original I mean steel with those big rivets in it and old-school stone masonry or massive brick structures.  If you think the highways are in bad shape, take a look at the rails.  To be fair to my friends in the Railroads, the infrastructure between the cities seems ok so I'm guessing maintaining that stuff in an urban environ is a real bear.  Also, let's face it, they don't normally build million dollar houses right next to the railroad so it isn't a real attractive place to look at. 

Now, you might be asking yourself if I've done any other research to base all of this on.  The answer is this: you've got to be kidding me.  I've been sitting on this train for 3 hours, walked up and down the aisle a few times, got off to look around at Union Station and that's the extent of my "research".  It's really more like "observation" than actual research.  I'm not claiming this is peer-reviewed inquiry but I'm a customer and that's good enough!

At the end of the day the most important question, I suppose, is would I ride the train again?  The answer, for a regional train, is hell yes….as long as I can sit in the cafe car.  I'm not so sure about a 2-3 day train ride.  I think I'd hop a flight for NoLa or points west well before I'd sit on a train for a couple of days.  I've only been on this thing a couple of hours and the sameness of the railroad right of way in between the cities is pretty dull.  Maybe a train through the Rockies…. 

On our return leg, we waited in Penn station for an hour or so.  People often ask "what's happened to all of the regular people?"  I found them in the train station.  It isn't anything like an airport.  Overall, I dig it.

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