You get 12+ cities to choose from (go
here for a current list), but your registration number allows you to
unlock only four of them. (An additional one is free when you register)
I think 5 electronic cities for $49.95 is a bit pricey. (And $19.95 for
one is obviously too high. A paperback guide with more information is less.)
First I explored the center of the universe, and my hometown, New York
City. I unlocked it because I really wanted to put the program through
the wringer. I was presented with a well written, slightly humorous overview
of the town. It was a style of writing that pervaded the guide. It made
the guide fun to read and enjoyable to navigate. And the guide is extremely
well organized, allowing several ways to search, navigate, and organize
your information. Its internal logic was easily understood. I read
through the places to eat, to stay, and of course I checked out the sights.
The guide contained a surprising amount of information on places everyone
knows, such as The Metropolitan Museum of Art. The guide called it
New Yorks most popular single-site tourist attraction. Upon entering
the Great Hall, pick up a floor plan and work out what youd most like
to see before fatigue sets in the riches of the Met are quite overwhelming.
It also contained information on Customs House, a place I had heard about
vaguely, but stumbled upon just the other day while prowling about downtown.
Simply one of the most sumptuous beaux arts buildings ever built, [guide-speak
purple prose, yuck] the Customs House has an interior festooned with marine
murals. In the rotunda towards the back right of the building, theres
an uncredited cameo sketch of Greta Garbo
Despite the flowery
guide-speak, some very interesting information was available to a user
-- there was actually enough to get me to go back there. Soon. So I pressed
the info button and got the address, phone number, hours, transportation
information, and admission price. You can also press a datebook bubble
and have the program enter the info into your datebook on the date and
time youd like to go. You can then click the map button and be presented
with a nearly indecipherable jumble of black and green that purports to
give you a hint of local geography. It doesnt.
If theres ever an argument for a color pilot with a larger screen,
this is it. Usable maps on the Palm would be excellent. There may even
be some out there that I just havent seen. What makes these
particular exercises in cartography worse is that the Lonely Planet/Concept
Kitchen folks have insisted upon keying them with triangles and squares
and whatnot with numbers inside them, all in an attempt to give even more
information.
Even as a New Yorker, I could hardly tell where I was. And the subway
map is somehow more atrocious. Enough said!
I have a few other quibbles. Of course, no guidebook can be totally
complete. But no information on the Staten Island Ferry ridiculous!
(At least I couldnt find it.) I read the guide's information
on the Statue of Liberty ferries and some of us who know the quick and
dirty way to see the statue (without waiting in line or paying an admission
fee) should have been consulted. Take the Staten Island Ferry and you get
a free water ride with a great view of the statue. The fact that the Staten
Island ferry isnt mentioned (though several museums on that odious island
are) is simply a mistake.
I also took a gander at both the Chicago and London guides. The same
strengths and weaknesses as New York. Maps, almost useless. Extensive information,
well organized with occasional things missing. There is no simple way to
pull up all of the London theatres and the list (once found through a search)
is remarkably incomplete. And thats the reason many of us go to the darn
city. Restaurants, by necessity, in all of the cities, are only a partial
list. A good list, reviewed and sortable by location, price, and cuisine
is available, but I wonder about some omissions. Where are some of my favorites
in New York: Chat and Chew or Vatan? If you come to New York, check em
out.
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