Sunday, July 19, 2009

Vacation hassles? Take a picture!


I'm departing from my usual post on Internet resources today.

Instead, here is an article I wrote about how to survive those vacations that don't turn out quite the way you expected ...

Vacation Hassles? Take a Picture!

Looking for some fiction to read this summer? Try a travel brochure.

Those beautiful glossy pamphlets promise you the time of your life, with nonstop fun. To illustrate their promises, they show pictures of perfect people with perfect bodies and perfect teeth, frolicking and smiling. No one has sunburn, sore feet or indigestion. The children always look squeaky clean, and they never have tantrums. There are no mosquitoes, no flat tires, no thunderstorms . . . and no inner brats!

Meanwhile, back on earth, your actual vacation may look something like this:

1. You've been driving for several hours, when you notice that the "check engine" light on your dashboard is illuminated. You get off the highway at the next exit and find a garage that can fix the car, but it won't be finished til l the next day. And it's going to cost a small fortune.

2. You're on a camping trip. It's been raining for two days straight. The campground is one big mud puddle. And your matches are wet.



3. You splurge for a resort hotel, but when you get there they can't find your reservation, and the hotel is fully booked. You produce your travel agent's confirmation, but the reservations clerk merely says, "I'm sorry. There's nothing I can do."

4. Everything is crowded. You have to wait in line for food, for transportation, even for the bathroom. Other people are loud, pushy and rude.


You'll never see situations like these in a travel brochure. But I'll bet you've experienced at least one of them on your own trips. I know I have. And in retrospect I realize that my inner brat made things seem a lot worse than they were. It blamed and complained, making not only me miserable, but my family as well.

No vacation is perfect. Inevitably something will go wrong. Aside from real tragedies (which, fortunately, are rare) most vacation hassles are about inconvenience, bad weather and minor mishaps -- all temporary, none life-changing.

Predicaments such as delayed flights, sold-out attractions, small injuries and unexpected downpours can ruin your vacation if you allow your inner brat to gripe and grumble over every annoyance.

Instead, try this: Take a picture. Capture the mishaps. They may turn out to be your most precious and amusing memories.

I recall a sweltering summer day many years ago, when we ran out of gas on the highway because my husband was sure we had enough to bypass one rest stop and get to the next. He was right - almost. We made it just past the sign that said, "Fuel, Food: 2 miles."

Instead of yelling at him with a thousand I-told-you-sos, I wish I had taken a picture of him standing in front of that sign, apologetically holding an empty gas can. It would have been the perfect souvenir from our trip.

If you happen to encounter frustrations on your upcoming vacation, get out your camera and take a picture. Looking through the lens will give you a less emotional, more objective view of the situation. Plus, you’ll have a souvenir that will later remind you that crises have a way of working themselves out.

by Pauline Wallin, Ph.D.
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Pauline Wallin, Ph.D. is a psychologist in Camp Hill, PA, and author of "Taming Your Inner Brat: A Guide for Transforming Self-defeating Behavior" (Wildcat Canyon Press, 2004)



Pauline
teachmeinternet.com

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Find bargains in misspellings

Next time you're looking for items on eBay or Craigslist, check for misspelled items as well.

Sometimes these misspelled items go unsold because they don't show up in the search results. For example, if you're looking for an iPod on eBay, you may miss an "i0od" for sale, which is the same thing, except that the seller accidentally hit the key above the p when listing it.

Here are a couple of tools to generate misspellings and search eBay and craigslist:


TypoBuddy - eBay and craigslist. Has advanced search options, as shown in the screenshot below.




FatFingers - ebay only. Has advanced search options.



Auction bloopers - eBay only. But the results automatically open an eBay page with all the misspellings.


Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Better quality search hits

Are you searching for authoritative information online, but getting overwhelmed with irrelevant results from Google?

You can try other search engines, but if you insist on sticking with Google, try using one of these filters:

1. Site filter - Add one of the following to your search term: site:edu or site:gov or site:org
Note - no space between the letters and the colon, and no "dot" needed before the suffix.

Why use this? Think about where authoritative information comes from - educational institutions (websites ending in .edu), government agencies (.gov) and professional organizations and associations (.org)

Here's an example of a regular search for herbal supplements:

























Now here's the same search on sites that end in edu:































And on government sites:



























These screenshots may be a little hard to read, so feel free to go to Google and try these searches on your own. One thing that you CAN easily notice, though, is that the site:edu and site:gov results have no sponsored links (which are ads) while the regular Google search has lots of them along the right-hand side.


2. Filetype filter - Add one of the following to your search term: filetype:pdf or filetype:ppt
... again, no spaces between letters and colon.

Why use this? Journal articles and other educational documents are typically in pdf format. As for ppt (powerpoint) format, these usually originate from educational presentations that have been uploaded online.

Here's what my search results looked like when I filtered by filetype:

PDF:

























Powerpoint (ppt):



























Will the above types of filters guarantee accurate, reliable search results? No.

But you will get better overall quality of your search results.

BTW this works on the Yahoo search engine as well.

Try one or more of these filters. Then leave a comment here on how you made out. ;-)

Pauline

teachmeinternet.com