Categories
Blog Philosophy

Happy Fourth Birthday, Dear Blog

Balloons for bloggy birthdays (Courtesy daniel.he at Flickr CC)Today is the 4th anniversary of the Family Travel blog here on the BootsnAll Travel Network.  True story – this blog is here because of books.

I first heard about BootsnAll from Stephanie Elizondo Griest on a travel writer’s panel at the stupendously great annual Texas Book Festival in Austin.

The very first post on February 10, 2006 said hello to everyone, the second was some random screed about traveler’s checks, but hey, I started a blog and wrote something, then kept at it, and boy am I grateful.

Categories
Asia Blog

I’m thinking about the future, not the rotten economy, and that’s why I’m going to China

(This is cross-posted on the Perceptive Travel blog and Every Dot Connects.)

I know that I’m a very fortunate freelance writer and social media/Web 2.0 trainer; I have a military pension and health insurance from my 22+ years in the US Navy. I can ride out the current economic storm (with a lot of belt-tightening) so it’s somewhat easier for me than for others to set fiscal angst aside and go to China next week….to meet a bunch of Chinese bloggers.

That’s probably what the China 2.0 Tour might seem like from a distance, and you might well ask; what is the ROI (business Return on Investment) from getting to know “a bunch of bloggers and tech types?” Is that how I should be spending my limited funds?

Here’s why — as a good friend once said about me, I’ve never been about looking back. I’ve always been about looking ahead to the future.

Unless I’m sorely mistaken, 245 million Chinese Internet users might be rather important to someone like me who mostly publishes online, and who consults and teaches entry-level workshops in all of this heavily-connected Webby stuff.  Travel writing is only one activity supporting my overall life philosophy, which is to attempt to understand how things work and how people tick.

That’s why Christine Lu and Elliott Ng asked me to join China 2.0….from the Web site, here is what they’re trying to accomplish:

“Led by The China Business Network and co-organized by Web2Asia and CNReviews, the inaugural China 2.0 Tour is sponsored by Edelman Digital China and represents a unique opportunity for companies and individuals to gain a deeper understanding of China. Unlike a typical business conference or large trade delegation, we seek to go ‘one-level deeper’ by creating a series of small-scale, exclusive meetups where people can share more openly about their business successes and challenges, and provide a deeper view into the nature of building a successful venture in China.

We also are taking an interdisciplinary approach by looking at social media, clean technology, gaming, wireless, and other areas where trends in China will affect markets around the world.

We also seek to provide informal opportunities to go off-message and off-the-record, so that long-lasting relationships can be built….”

Not only will I meet all sorts of key people in China, including many directly related to my travel and social media work, but I’ll also get to know my fellow Tour attendees — people like:

How much I’ll be able to post here while in China will depend upon Internet connectivity and more importantly, time available.  I’ll certainly do my best, although this is more of a tech visit than a travel visit.

I’m not going to be able to make the Guangzhou leg of the Tour (and will miss the Chinese Blogger Conference where Shel is a featured speaker – phooey) because finances wouldn’t allow it, but I will spend extra days in Shanghai and will have more pure-play travel goodies from there, I would think.

Thanks very much to my sponsors Every Dot Connects and UpTake – Your First Step to a Great Trip, and the support I’ve gotten from BootsnAll’s Cheap Air Tickets in order to get me there and back.

Categories
Site reviews Tips

One-stop travel research: the BootsnAll Traveler’s Toolkit

Sometimes, too much of a good thing can be overwhelming.

BootsnAll is a very comprehensive Web site, with all sorts of information for the independent traveler, but it can be hard to know where to start looking for those information nuggets.

Enter the Traveler’s Toolkit (it’s almost better than a totally reorganized garage, or having all the clothes in your kid’s closet sorted by type and color.)

We’ve got your Transportation Guide – everything from how to sleep in airports to American rail travel (yes, we still have some trains, thank goodness) to some thoughts on space travel.

We’ve got your Budget and Money Travel Guide, your Travel Guidebooks and Online Resources (including free, downloadable travel guides – yay!) and a comprehensive Women’s Travel Guide (including a helpful guide to packing.)

That’s just a sampler (and of course, don’t miss the Family Travel Guide section) so dive right in to the BootsnAll Traveler’s Toolkit and rummage around!

Categories
Blog Tips

When Your Blog Blows Up.

There’s nothing like sitting down at the ol’ laptop, clicking on the Favorites link to your family travel blog, and finding that the last month has disappeared; posts, links, comments and all.

Apparently, the BootsnAll folks had some server crashes and backup problems, and the last backup they could salvage was 17 August.  I was absolutely horrified, and a little confused as to how their daily backups could have failed so badly.  The recovery guidance was to go to Google, find the cached articles and copy/paste them back onto the blog. 

It is a free service to have my blog hosted here, and I suppose that I get what I pay for.  I’ve also suffered this “Whoops: Lost Data” fate twice while in the Navy, even with some pretty high-powered tech help.

It happens.

I’m sure the BootsnAll folks will put measures in place to prevent this from ruining my day again. 

The good news is that I’d been feeling terribly guilty about my lack of posts this summer because of our move from Florida to Texas, but this writerly sloth on my part meant that I didn’t have to do as much work to rebuild. It is obviously time to start backing up my posts myself, perhaps on a thumb drive.

Procrastination wins again!

Other blogs like Escape Wisconsin and Killing Batteries are logging online and screeching in agony about their lost posts; I feel your pain, fellow writers. 

Meantime, I’m busy this weekend wearing my sportswriter hat in Ennis, Texas (south of Dallas) blogging about NHRA drag racing for Fast Machines, the motorsports blog, at the O’Reilly Fall Nationals.