cellio: (avatar-face)
Monica ([personal profile] cellio) wrote2004-10-10 07:21 pm
Entry tags:

en route

As I write this, I am sitting in Atlanta. I had been under the impression that pretty much all major airports had wireless internet access by now, but I found no evidence of it in either Pittsburgh or Atlanta. Either that or the driver on this borrowed laptop is misconfigured; since I don't have wireless at home and was specifically told not to use it at work with this machine, I had no way to test that. Oh well. If the access in the hotel is wired, as I suspect, then it's not much of an issue. (Added later: it's wired.)

So, wave hi to [livejournal.com profile] dragontdc; sorry I visited your fair city without actually making contact.

My flights today are on AirTran, whose web site would not allow me to print a boarding pass from home. Fooey on them. The first kiosk I tried was broken (the "E" key was broken and was a required component of my confirmation number). But the lines were short, so no biggie.

In Pittsburgh I was the lucky winner of detailed security scrutiny. That hand scanner sure is sensitive. I wasn't all that surprised that it beeped on my belt buckle -- just a minimal buckle, mind, without big ornaments or the like -- but was surprised that it beeped on the (metal) button on my pants and on my (small, thin) necklace. Oh, and there was something in my wallet that it didn't like, though I still don't know what. (No, my wallet does not have a zippered or snapped compartment. It's really just a billfold with some pockets for credit cards.)

There's a new (to me) addition to the takeoff/landing spiel. Seatbelts, blah blah... tray tables, blah, blah... window blinds? They care that the blinds be up? I wonder why. By the time someone standing in the aisle can look out the side windows and see an oncoming plane, it's too late.

Ah, there's no wireless because they sell network access (via a data port) for 50 cents per minute. Ok, that's fair. (Added later: but it's a phone jack, not a network plug.)

Apropos of nothing, I've been reading (over Shabbat and on the plane) Jewish Living: A Guide to Contemporary Reform Practice by Rabbi Mark Washofsky. Very interesting read, emphasizing many of the same points I do about Reform being a serious movement, and giving reasons behind some of the decisions where reform has deviated from the norm (such as the so-called "patrilineal descent" and getting rid of the second day of yom tov). I haven't finished it yet, but so far I would recommend it to anyone who wants to know what Reform is really about.

[identity profile] cahwyguy.livejournal.com 2004-10-10 04:57 pm (UTC)(link)
I've noted the book recommendation. Eventually, it will make its way onto the Reform Reading List.