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Gadlinks for Thursday, 12.24.2009

A Merry Christmas Eve to the Gadling Nation! I hope you're all having a wonderful holiday season and won't be spending too much time stranded in airports. Now on to the Gadlinks...

More Gadlinks here.

Ryanair threaten to drop Italy

Ryanair is saying it might ditch Italy ... and it's not just a publicity stunt. The low-cost airline says that new rules on which forms of identification are acceptable for boarding compromise security. The new reg, from Italy's civil aviation authority, ENAC, makes licenses for driving, fishing and hunting fine for use at the gate, along with government badges and other documents.

This isn't good enough for Ryanair. Michael O'Leary, the company's CEO, said in a statement, "We are really sorry for the inconveniences that this decision will cause." He continued, "It's completely inappropriate for ENAC to introduce measures that reduce security on Italian domestic flights, compared with the security measures successfully used on all Ryanair flights in the EU and all Ryanair domestic flights in every other EU country."

In protest – and, ostensibly, for security concerns – Ryanair is keeping its domestic flights among 10 Italian airports grounded from January 23, 2010 until the issue is fixed to O'Leary's satisfaction.

Hawaii needs your help!

Hawaii needs $1.23 billion and could use your help. Governor Linda Lingle is calling it a "fiscal crisis" and says it won't be fixed with budget cuts alone. Essentially, the fiftieth state wants everyone else to chip in. This year's budget gap is $721 million, which will be followed by $509.5 million next year. The state might not hit pre-recession levels until 2014.

According to Lingle, "The stark reality of continuing declining general fund revenues means the state does not have sufficient resources to cover all expenditures."

The problem is exactly what you've seen here on Gadling for a while – the travel market sucks. Hawaii relies on tourism to bring in the cash; the industry touches 74 percent of the state's jobs directly or indirectly (at least as of 2007).

Georgina Kawamura, the state's director of budget and finance, tells Reuters, "I can only remain hopeful that we are now at the bottom and will start to pick up."

Last minute shopping gifts? Here are 10 ideas

If you're stuck with a last minute present to buy. Here are 10 gift ideas. Most are quick and easy. Some of them don't require that you leave your house.

Two suggestions can be found at your local grocery store. No, you don't have to cook.

For a couple of them, all you need is a phone, the internet to find telephone numbers and your credit card.

Christmas in Minnesota

Holiday lights in South St. Paul
Location:
Minnesota, in the icy northern central USA
Temp: 23°F in Minneapolis as I write, and the 25th has a projected low of 19°F
Snow: Lots of it!
Percentage of population who celebrates Christmas: 64.2 percent here are Christian "adherents"
Are you there right now: Yes.

All's quiet on the northern front. What I love about Minneapolis at Christmastime is that we almost always have fluffy blankets of falling snow, which creates a sound barrier and makes the whole city seem blissfully peaceful. Still, there's lots to do, from munching on doughy, cinnamon and sugar frosted puppy dog tails at Isles Bun & Coffee (trust me) to watching Dickens performed in Star Trek-speak.

Denver airline kitchen full of roaches, ants and listeria

Earlier today, Tom wrote how airport food scores lower on the inspection chart than airline food.

That may be true for most places, but food prepared in the LSG Skychefs kitchen in Denver doesn't match those findings.

When an FDA (Food and Drug Administration) inspection team paid a visit to the Denver kitchens of LSG , it found the kind of mess you'd expect from a big city restaurant with bad management.

Inside a facility in charge of making our airline meals, the FDA found so many insects, that they categorized them "TNTC" - too numerous to count.



It found roaches and ants in the repack area, wash rooms, cart washing stations, silverware station and even in the "hot" kitchen. In addition to this, they observed staff handling food with bare hands, water dripping from the ceiling, standing water and several other pretty serious violations.

The worst part, and the finding that frightens me the most, is that the FDA also found samples of Listeria on the floor in the hot kitchen. With poor results like this, it was only a matter of time before planeloads of passengers got sick from the food prepared by this kitchen. You can read the entire facility report here.

LSG Skychefs has had its classification lowered from "approved" to "provisional", which means they'll have one chance to be re-evaluated, and a failure will force the FDA to shut down the facility.

An LSG Skychefs representative said they can't wait for the re-inspection and that they took immediate and effective action as soon as it learned from the findings. They make the whole incident sound fairly trivial by pointing out that they had not received any reports of illnesses or complaints from travelers.


Daily gear deals - free USB battery charger, $12 Bluetooth headset and more



Here are the hottest gear deals for today, Thursday December 24th 2009. Remember, these deals are often valid for just one day, so act fast before they are gone.

Today's first deal is for a USB battery charger. This device comes with 2 AA rechargeable batteries, and plugs into a spare USB port for recharging. Normal price is $19.99, but you can get it for free, as long as you pay $4.99 shipping. Click here for this deal.

Next up is the Samsung WEP850 Bluetooth headset. This headset features dual noise canceling microphones and it can connect with several Bluetooth devices at the same time. Its best feature is the price - it retails for $33.99, but comes with a $20 rebate, bringing the price down to just $12.99, with free shipping. Click here for this deal.

Today's third deal is for the Callpod Chargepod multi-device charger. This product can power and charge up to six devices at the same time. Best Buy is selling it in a special Christmas deal for just $29.99. It comes with the charger itself, three power tips, a coupon for a free tip (from the Callpod site) and a carrying pouch. Click here for this deal.

And finally in today's lineup is the Elago S2 "gun metal" iPhone case. Now, iPhone cases are a dime a dozen - but this case is smart, because it comes with a matching dock adapter, allowing you do dock your device, without removing it from its case. On sale for $6.99. Click here for this deal.

Peace on earth, goodwill toward men: two places where it worked

We hear a lot about peace and friendship over the holidays, but the reality is that different religions and peoples are constantly fighting. It seems we can never get along.

Or at least that's what the history books would have you believe.

History focuses on change, and change usually means conflict, but there have been many times in the past when different religions and ethnic groups have lived in harmony. Here are two UNESCO World Heritage Sites you can visit that are testimony to the idea that people can achieve great things by working together.

Toledo, Spain

For most of the Middle Ages Spain was not a country; it was a patchwork of different states fighting amongst themselves and staving off invasions by the Muslim Moors from North Africa. There was a centuries-long war between Islam and Christianity, with the Jews being stuck in the middle as second-class citizens in both societies. But under the Caliphate of Córdoba, which ruled much of the Iberian Peninsula in the tenth and eleventh centuries, the three cultures lived and learned together. Córdoba and Toledo were the two main cultural centers. Many books from ancient Greece and Rome, lost in Europe during the Dark Ages but preserved in Arabic translations in the Middle East, were translated into Latin and Hebrew and helped start a rediscovery of Europe's Classical heritage.
The Christian kingdoms were slowly pushing out the Muslims, however, and in 1085 King Alfonso VI captured Toledo. He realized the relationship among the three cultures, called La Convivencia ("The Coexistence") was a good thing and kept it going. He even established a translation center to copy books from each culture into Latin, Spanish, Arabic, and Hebrew, so everyone could benefit from each other's learning. Philosophy, astronomy, architecture, mathematics, and a dozen other arts and sciences flourished.

  • Puerta del Sol
  • Santa Maria Blanca Synagogue
  • Old mosque
  • Overview of the royal district, Gonder
  • Celebration of Timket at Gonder
  • Another view of the castle of Fasilides

Airport food nastier than airline food

And you thought airline food was nasty ...

Airport restaurants have been spanked hundreds of times over the past year for food safety violations, according to a USA Today review of inspection records. Check it out – close to 800 restaurants in 10 airports had tuna and turkey sandwiches that weren't kept cold enough, raw meat getting a little too chummy with ready-to-eat meals, rat droppings and kitchens that didn't have soap for employee hand-washing.

Blech.

Yea, it gets nastier. Forty-two percent of the 57 restaurants at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport were found to have at least one "critical" violation each. At Reagan National Airport, it was even more disgusting: 77 percent of 35 restaurants. These were violations of a caliber that make the risk of illness common.

JFK, apparently, isn't so bad. According to the New York City health department, "Restaurants at JFK have had relatively few problems with rodents in comparison to restaurants citywide."

That's one hell of a vote of confidence!

[Photo by asplosh via Flickr]

Far West in the Far East: On learning Chinese characters

Ostensibly, I'm in China to learn the language. There are many other reasons for being here, but learning Mandarin gives me both a focus and a distraction, and I've found the most mental stimulation and solace in learning the characters.
Right now, I know about 150 of them. In order to read a newspaper, I'll need to know between two and three thousand, so I've a ways to go. However, I'm learning between eight and ten new ones per day, and slowly the gibberish around me is taking on form and meaning.
The repetition of writing the same characters over and over into thin-papered books with large squares meant for third-graders to practice in is oddly satisfying and meditative. I feel like the characters are a code that I need to crack, and indeed as I learn more of the basics I'm able to understand other characters more rapidly.

There are many brilliant compounds that I delight in: the character for crisis, for example, is a combination of the characters for "danger" and "opportunity." Star is a combination of "sun" and "birth." Of course, for every thought-provoking compound there is an equally puzzling one: the symbol for "sea" is simply the character for "constant" with a water radical added on. I like to think of something poetic-sounding such as "the constant sea" to help me remember it, but how it evolved I don't know.
For now, occasionally when I walk down the street I feel like a series of lights pop on – each light a new character I understand. Pop! "Day." Pop! "Hot." Pop! "Milk." It's like a scene in some grammar nerd's personal musical. Of course, there are other times when I look at the seemingly endless variety of unintelligible characters, and I feel very, very tired.

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