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Al's Morning Meeting

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Al Tompkins
Story ideas that you can localize and enterprise. Posted by 7:30 a.m. Mon-Fri.


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A dozen sites
I'm diggin'


1. You can lay subtitles or text bubbles on video -- any video. I will be using this to teach about storytelling.

2. Canon responds to the Nikon D90 with its own SLR still camera that records HD video.

3. Why do 97 percent of this railroad's workers get disability checks?

4. I now use Utterz to file audio reports. You can use your computer's mic or any phone. It's simple and would be a great reporter's tool.

5. I used Monitter to monitor what people said on Twitter about Ike. Just change the subjects to whatever you want to look out for.

6. I'm reading all about the Nikon D90, which shoots photos and HD video with the same $1K body.

7. Qik streams live video straight from a cell phone.

8. This fall many PBS stations will air this documentary on whether there is a water crisis in the Southwest.

9. This site watches TV and Web mentions of candidates. It also monitors Tweets and more.

10. The first look at the $179 Google phone.

11. Instead of scheduling meetings by e-mail, everybody can work out a time and date online.

12. Here are tons of GREAT tools that will help you find anything on flickr.

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EDITOR'S NOTE: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but depends on the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. We will correct errors and inaccuracies when we become aware of them.


Hotels Want Their Stuff Back
The old joke goes that a guy was leaving his hotel and remarked to the clerk that he loved the hotel's new towels. They were so big that he had trouble closing his suitcase.

USA Today reports that, according to a survey, one out of five guests admit to stealing everything from robes to glasses. Historic hotels especially want their stuff back:

The Mission Inn in Riverside, Calif., operates a foundation and museum to preserve artifacts, some of which have been donated by former guests or sold back by collectors.

In 2006 alone, 400 items came back. In 2007, the management created the Bringing It Home program to mark the hotel's 30th anniversary as a National Historic Landmark. Among the give-backs: seven intricate brass bells with a confessional note saying they were taken from the hotel's underground tunnels in a "not very funny" teenage prank in the mid- to late 1960s.

Repatriation programs aren't strictly the provenance of historic hotels. In 2003, Holiday Inn threw a Towel Amnesty Day, inviting sticky-fingered guests to share their stories about "borrowing" towels and promising absolution and possible inclusion in the resulting book, About the Towels, We Forgive You.

Hotel pilferage is widespread. In an October survey of members of the online travel community TripAdvisor, 22 percent of the more than 2,500 respondents admitted helping themselves to everything from bathrobes to decorative pieces to glassware.

The larceny amounted to an estimated $100 million in 2000, according to the American Hotel & Lodging Association, though that figure also includes employee theft.


Posted by Al Tompkins 9:00 AM Jan 29, 2008
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