Well I'm back from Disney World. It was a much more pleasant experience than August 2003 which was muggy, hot, and long lines at the attractions.
This time my wife and I did our homework. We got to the parks at the opening (instead of sleeping in late), used the FastPass system efficiently this time around, and were able to cover an entire park by 1:30pm each day and then go back to the hotel and relax by the pool.
I took some GPS coordinates of various Disney attractions. I'll post a link in my blog in a few days. Let me know if you find them useful.
The GPS (Destinator software running on an iPaq) really came in handy when driving the rental car to the parks and back to the hotel.
I saw one car filled with a family of 6 pull over to the median on a highway on-ramp, and I could see the driver (couldn't see if the husband or wife) with a map rolled out onto the steering wheel.
What ever happened to the passenger being the navigator? Maybe the passenger is bad at reading maps, who knows?
In any event, as I passed him on the on-ramp, I could only smile as my trusty GPS was guiding me back to my hotel. I was tempted to pat my trusty GPS like I would one of my two dogs, but I didn't want my wife to think I'm crazy. She already thinks I've got "gadget on the brain".
Now here's a really interesting use of GPS. If you've ever been to Disney World and parked in their parking lots, you know how massive they are and how difficult it can be to find your car.
Well, not for me! I simply parked my car, pulled out my Ipaq, loaded Pocket Streets, and mapped the coordinates. When using Pocket Streets it doesn't give you audio cues so I had to visually navigate myself back to the car, but it sure helped save time!
In fact, one night while my wife was back at the hotel I went to EPCOT. Now, I knew I had to be out of the park quickly after the Illuminations fireworks/laser show. Once that ends, thousands of people make a mass exodus resulting in long delays getting out of there.
Well you should have seen me run holding the iPaq in one hand and the car's remote keyless entry remote in the other. You should have seen the looks I got as I ran as fast as I could with this bright glowing screen being held in front of my face!
As I "honed" in on my "target" using the GPS I was frantically pressing the car remote to set off the car horn so I could find the car quickly. Time was of the essence!
The GPS was only accurate to about 30 feet, so pressing the remote definitely helped. I was one aisle over from the car.
I quickly dashed to the car, hooked up the GPS and was one of the first cars out of the lot! phew, I made it before the mass exodus arrived!
As I am fond of saying - "I'm all about the efficiency!" : )
UPDATE: 08/13/04 I added the Disney GPS Coordinates to this blog entry:
http://blog.tmcnet.com/blog/tom-keating/voip/archives/my-favorite-disney-gps-coordinates.html
I'm running MovableType on a Windows 2000 IIS server and noticed Trackback was giving 404 errors for Trackback urls such as http://voip-blog.tmcnet.com/cgi-bin/mt-tb.cgi/16
Most MT users use Apache running on a Linux box and MT is only "unofficially" supported on Windows IIS --- if you know where to look. I had to install ActiveState's Perl on the IIS server along with a database engine and a few other tricks.
In any event, I spent the latter half of yesterday after returning from Disney trying to get the Trackback feature to work. I found lots of other Windows IIS MovableType users experiencing the same problem. It seemed like everyone had a different solution.
This MovableType.org link suggested modifying two lines in lib/MT/Template/Context.pm from '/' to '?tb_id='
Another site stated that because I needed "mod_rewrite" (an Apache module) which doesn't come included with IIS, that I needed to download ISAPI ReWrite or an equivalent.
Well, I found the fix, and it was much simpler than I thought.
Go to this link:
movabletype.org : Support Forum
Or just read the fix here:
1) In Internet Services Manager, open the properties for the site or directory containing the MT CGI files.
2) Click on the "Home Directory" tab. Toward the bottom, there's info on the application--if none is defined, create one.
3) Click the "Configure" button for the application.
4) On the tab with the script extensions / handlers (I don't recall the exact name), look for ".cgi" and choose "Edit."
5) Make sure the checkbox labeled something like "Verify File Exists" is NOT checked.
6) Apply the changes, press OK, etc.
So simple! I hope this info helps someone with the same problem.

Well, I'm off to Disney World in a couple of days. I leave on Tuesday and will be back the following Wednesday. I'll be packing some serious gadgetry for my trip, including the latest version of Destinator 3.0 GPS software for the iPaq (image above), Destinator GPS adaptor (powered via cigarette lighter) to use with the rental car, a laptop, a CompactFlash TeleType GPS card, one 512MB CF card, one 256MB CF card, a cell phone, and Microsoft Pocket Streets.
I like Microsoft Pocket Streets which comes included with MapPoint 2004, Streets & Trips 2004 and AutoRoute 2004.
I can simply "cut" a section of the U.S. map (in this case the Orlando area) and have a complete listing of gas stations, restaurants, and other POIs (points of interests).
The advantage of using PocketStreets in conjunction with the TeleType GPS CF GPS card over the Destinator GPS car unit, is that I can walk around with GPS access wherever I go. The Destinator software and the Destinator GPS car unit were strictly designed for car navigation.
I've used PocketStreets on the other hand to walk through Disney World and map my favorite coordinates, such as Space Mountain, Mission Space, water fountains (critical in the Florida heat), bathrooms, and other useful locations.
Heck, since I'm renting a car this time to Disney, I may program the rental car coordinates to be able to find my car quickly in the enormous parking lots! (that is if my wife doesn't get annoyed that I'm walking around staring at the iPaq trying to navigate my way!)
I'll post a post-Disney report when I return. Maybe I'll even post some cool Disney GPS coordinates.