Posts tagged tourism
Geeky Tourism Locations: Thomas Edison’s Lab
Apr 1st
Do you know where the phonograph was invented? How about the moving picture? How about the practical light bulb? That’s right it was in… Northern New Jersey! Actually, West Orange, NJ. Seriously.
This series of posts reflects my inner geek. It chronicles a number of information technology (IT) related “tourist attractions” that I would love to visit before I die. Some of them are simply far away locations that I dream of making it to and others will be locations that I would need some assistance obtaining access to. Please feel free to add your own via the comments block below.
Today’s destination is the home and personal laboratory of Thomas Edison. The greatest inventor in modern American history and certainly a worthy idol for technology lovers.
Wikipedia does great justice to this topic.
The web home of this location is the National Park Service. It reports that:
“Imagine your day ending at sunset. Life without music, motion pictures, radio. Life without light itself. Our modern lives began at the turn of the century in West Orange, New Jersey. The Laboratory and home of Thomas Edison, stopped in time, continue to teach a new generation.”
Believe it or not, you can get to this National Park in only 30 minutes from New York City. It is inexpensive to visit and has guided tours! While visiting this location, you can see:
- A collection of his inventions
- His final home
- His personal effects
- The first movie house
- The phonograph
- The first recording studio
- and more!
This is how the park self-describes itself:
The original music recording studio, Thomas Edison’s private laboratory, and photography studio are open to the public for the first time in the history of the park. The original furnishings have been moved back into many rooms and the vast and unique museum collections are available for all to see, hear, and experience. Installation of a new elevator and stair tower adjacent to the main laboratory building allows new public access to the upper floors of the laboratory that now feature new exhibits.
I recommend that you and your family go. It is fun for kids of all ages and can motivate children to dream of huge technology contributions. Highly recommended.
Go to the official National Parks Service website and check it out!
So where do you want to visit that is related to your interest in The Information Age and Information Technology? Do you want to see where people worked, like this article, or where objects are? Together we could make a terrific list. Please add below.
That is my Information Technology Thought of the Day (ITTOD) for April 1, 2010 by Scott Coughlin.
Image Credit: Inventor’s Digest
Geeky Information Technology Places to Visit – The London Eye
Feb 10th
This series of posts reflects my inner geek. It chronicles a number of information technology (IT) related “tourist attractions” that I would love to visit before I die. Some of them are simply far away locations that I dream of making it to and others will be locations that I would need some assistance obtaining access to. Please feel free to add your own via the comments block below.
Today’s destination is the most visited paid attraction in London! It is the London Eye, also known as the Millennium Wheel. This was the largest Ferris Wheel on the planet for the Millennial Celebration and a technology wonder!
Wikipedia does great justice to this topic. It reports that:
“The Merlin Entertainments London Eye (known more simply as The London Eye, and also known as the Millennium Wheel), at a height of 135 metres (443 ft), is the largest Ferris wheel in Europe, and has become the most popular paid tourist attraction in the United Kingdom, visited by over three million people in one year. At the time it was erected, in 1999, it was the tallest Ferris wheel in the world, until it was surpassed by the Star of Nanchang (160 m) in May 2006, and then the Singapore Flyer (165 m) on 11 February 2008. However, it is still described by its operators as "the world’s tallest cantilevered observation wheel" (as the entire structure is supported by an A-frame on one side only).”
Besides always wanting to go to London myself, this attraction is a certified technology and information systems human wonder. Please give the the Wikipedia site a read. It really does describe this attraction very well, especially its glass engineering and fly-by-wire control systems. Considered by many to be an architectural as well as Engineering marvel. It is beautiful, tech heavy, and really high – everything that a true information professional, or geek, would love.
From the official London Eye Website:
“At 135m, The Merlin Entertainments London Eye is the world’s largest cantilevered observation wheel. It was conceived and designed by Marks Barfield Architects and was launched in 2000. It has already won over 75 awards for national and international tourism, outstanding architectural quality and engineering achievement and has now welcomed over 36 million visitors.”
The official site also has a cool learning section with neat facts like:
“The London Eye can carry 800 passengers per revolution – equivalent to 11 London red double-decker buses.”
If you want to see even more pictures, be sure to check out About.com’s London Eye Photo Gallery!
So where do you want to visit that is related to your interest in The Information Age and Information Technology? Do you want to see where people worked, like this article, or where objects are? Together we could make a terrific list. Please add below.
That is my Information Technology Thought of the Day (ITTOD) for February 10, 2010 by Scott Coughlin.
Image Credit: to55er’s Blog
Special Thanks to Dan Sung’s Blog entry, Six excellent ideas for a geek bank holiday weekend, regarding tourist sites in England, that gave me the idea for this article.
