May 1, 2008 – 11:26 pm, by Lisa Sounio

Mid-2008 Travel Outlook: Where we will be this summer

April was an intense month for the Dopplr team with our Milan release launching both boutique hotel bookings and the ability to calculate the carbon impact of your travels. Many thanks for the all the feedback and improvement ideas we’ve received.

Now we’d like to look forward with the Dopplr Mid-2008 Travel Outlook. Where next? The image above shows where the growing Dopplr community (in the aggregate) will be travelling from May to September this year.

The top 20 city destinations are New York, London, San Francisco, Paris, Las Vegas, Chicago, Berlin, Washington, Los Angeles, Boston, Barcelona, Portland, Seattle, Amsterdam, Rome, Tokyo, Copenhagen, Dublin, Toronto and Stockholm. (To see the city pages you’ll need to sign in to Dopplr.)

Compared to the other months of the year, big movers and new entries in the top 100 destination for Mid-2008 were: Venice (jumping up 47 places), Lisbon (41 places), Budapest (39 places) and Montreal (26 places). Nice, Cannes, Florence, Athens and Black Rock City (home of Burning Man) all enter the top 100 for Mid-2008.

London continues to be the most populated “home city” on Dopplr with other cities closing in. The top destinations Londoners will be visiting in Mid-2008 are: Paris, New York, San Francisco, Dublin, Amsterdam, Berlin, Barcelona, Helsinki, Los Angeles, Stockholm, Lisbon, Singapore, Brussels, Munich, and Rome.

The summer months of the northern hemisphere are clearly a time for international travel. The percentage of international trips is 54% in May-September (compared to 46% during the rest of the year).

Finally a prediction: the Dopplr end-of-year travel outlook will see New Delhi, Bangalore, Shanghai and Beijing rising up in the top destinations!

April 25, 2008 – 12:36 pm, by Dan Gillmor

BusinessWeek Cites Dopplr

Bizweek Apr282008-1We spotted a nice item in BusinessWeek about Dopplr, but unfortunately couldn’t find it online (yet). Click on the image to see it large enough to read the text…

April 23, 2008 – 12:12 pm, by Matt Biddulph

Going Solo: a conference for freelancers and small business owners

Going Solo conference for freelancers, May 16th, Lausanne (Switzerland). Many in the Dopplr community are freelancers or small business owners, with networks that span the globe. If you fit that description, we recommend you take a look at Going Solo, a conference made for you that’s taking place in Lausanne, Switzerland in May.

We’ve created a way for attendees to connect on Dopplr by joining a network of travellers associated with the event. You can read more about it on the Going Solo blog, and don’t forget to add your trip to Dopplr if you’re going.

UPDATE: the organisers have kindly given us a discount code for readers of our blog. Get your ticket now at a 33% discount by using this code: DPLRSG83H

It’s first-come, first-served as the code will only work for the first five registrations to use it.

April 22, 2008 – 4:01 pm, by Matt Biddulph

Calculate the carbon impact of your travels with Dopplr

On a cold winter evening in 2006, the founders-to-be of Dopplr got together in a West London pub to talk about an idea for a new kind of travel website. After much excited discussion about features and ways of working, Matt Jones agreed to participate on one condition: that whatever we made would give travellers a way to understand the carbon impact of their travels.

Today, serendipitously on Earth Day 2008, we’re launching a carbon calculator for your trips. Working with AMEE (”The World’s Energy Meter”) we can automatically build a travel carbon profile for you. Because AMEE are an impartial platform who work with many organisations that collect data or propose solutions, this means that you’ll be able to eventually reuse this profile with other services.

My 2008 carbon calendar looks like this:

Of course, the mode of transport you choose for your trips makes all the difference to their carbon impact. That means an upgrade to our trip form, which now lets you specify how you’re travelling:

trip form with new transport options

Now here’s Matt Jones to give his take on why this matters so much:

One of the aspects of creating social tools that fascinates me is the ability to make the invisible visible, and what effect surfacing these patterns then has on us as individuals and groups.

For a while there have been carbon calculators on airline websites and environmentalist websites, but generally they have been about directly showing the impact of an individual action, rather than the patterns and trends influencing the actions in the first place.

That’s why I thought it was an essential component of from the start of Dopplr as a social tool for intelligent travellers to optimise their path through the world - and I’m delighted the beginnings of this are here now. Particular props to Boris and Tom for pulling off the design, which I’m pleased as punch with.

It’s a first step, and as with everything we do part of the bigger, beautiful jigsaw of the web. As MattB’s said it’s plugged into AMEE, and you might be already be subscribed to things like WorldChanging or EdenBee that can help you decide what to do about it.

It’s not enforcing any particular course of action - it’s the weighing scales, not the diet.

What we all do with this information is up to us.

April 16, 2008 – 11:06 am, by Lisa Sounio

Dopplr Milan release: boutique hotels and insider knowledge from Mr & Mrs Smith

We’ve launched a new partnership to help you find and book excellent lodging during your travels. We’re working with the boutique hotel experts at Mr & Mrs Smith, and you’ll now have direct access from your Dopplr itineraries to their unrivalled insider knowledge, global hotel collection and booking services.

Mr&Mrs Smith Guide to London

If you’re familiar with Mr & Mrs Smith, you know that they’re known for deep research into high-quality accommodation. They offer the best room rates on everything from quirky city stays and romantic boutique retreats to stylish country manors and luxury spa hotels. And they tried every place they recommend, to be sure it meets their standard.

Here’s a quick screencast that shows you what you can expect to see when you add a trip to a city covered by Mr & Mrs Smith:

And thanks to TechCrunch UK for their kind words: “It looks like it’ll be right up the Dopplrati’s street”

April 9, 2008 – 11:30 am, by Matt Jones

Dopplr “Badgegeist” Physical Prototype

Tom mocked this up really quickly this morning.

It’s a dynamic version of our logo showing the city colours of where people are on trips to right now. It’s our equivalent of that LED sign that Google used to have on their wall showing current search queries… except a lot slower…

Currently it’s mocked-up using the crystal-case packaging of a Jawbone headset and an iPod Touch that’s connected over wifi to the script that generates the logo.

Here’s a Flickr video (or “long photo”) showing the componentry…

We’re going to try and make a bigger version for our office wall with RGB leds and an arduino as a summer project… Stay tuned!

April 8, 2008 – 1:00 pm, by Dan Gillmor

New: Use Apple iCal Calendar to Update Dopplr

Everyone hates to enter data twice. A few weeks ago we added a feature that lets you update Dopplr from a Google calendar. Now we’re happy to help you update Dopplr via your Apple Macintosh desktop iCal calendar. Here’s how:

In your iCal calendar, create a new calendar and name it something such as “Travel” or “Dopplr travel” or whatever you like:

Ical Create Cal-1

Now create a new event in that calendar:

Ical Create New Event

Double click (or click Command-I) the event that now shows up in your calendar and fill in the appropriate information:

Ical Create New Event2

This part is important to get right. It helps a great deal if you enter the location information precisely, or Dopplr may guess wrong and create the wrong location on the Dopplr site (which would be bad for serendipity with your trusted friends and colleagues). Remember that Dopplr works with the place names of cities and towns, so make sure you don’t put in a full street address or other details.

In the example above, we’ve created a marketing meeting on June 2-4, 2008, in the windy city of Chicago, which is in Illinois in the U.S. Notice that we wrote “Chicago, IL, United States” — not because Dopplr would be likely to get that particular city wrong but rather to illustrate how we recommend you enter the place name. (If you enter a simple city name and we get it wrong in Dopplr, don’t worry — you can fix it, and we’ll tell you how below.)

Also in this example, we’ve put in a note, “Make sure ad rep is there” as a reminder to ourselves. It and the title of the event “Marketing meeting” will be published on Dopplr, but only in your private trip notes there. In other words, nothing you create in your personal calendar — apart from the dates and places — will be viewable by your Dopplr fellow travellers.

OK, click “Done” and the trip will show up in your calendar. Then go to the menu and select Calendar-Publish:

Ical Create New Event4

You’ll see the box below. Select “Publish on: a Private Server” from the pull-down item.

Ical Create New Event5

Of the options in Publish calendar, Dopplr cares only about one: “Publish titles and notes.” While you may have selected the others, and may well use them in your desktop calendar, they won’t have any effect in Dopplr. You may also want to check “Publish changes automatically” so you won’t forget to update; the only disadvantage is that Dopplr may first record a trip to “New Event” before you finish entering the details, but that’s ok, because when you do finish it’ll update.

When you select “a Private Server” you’ll see this input box:

Ical Create New Event6

OK, now go to your Dopplr page and be sure you’re logged into your account. Click on “Your account” at the top and then on “Import trips from external calendars” on the page where we have various account settings. (direct link)

Near the end of that page you’ll see a paragraph that says:

Alternatively, you can publish a calendar from iCal to the following private server URL (no username or password required):
https://www.dopplr.com/upload/[and a long set of letters and numbers]…./

Copy that link into the Private Server address in the iCal form (we smudged the url but you get the idea):

Ical Create New Event7

Apple insists on a username and password. Make something up; you don’t need to put in your Dopplr username/password, as we don’t require it for this step. But you do need to type in something.

Click “Publish” and you’re done. You’ll see a note before you get back to iCal telling you how to let people know if you want them to be able to subscribe to this calendar outside of Dopplr (though we confess we’re not sure why you’d want to do that).

Now you’re set. In iCal, make sure to “Refresh” the exported calendar — right-click on the travel calendar you’re exporting and choose “Refresh” to update our server. (Remember, you can also tell iCal to “Publish changes automatically”.)

Now go back to your Dopplr page. Voila, the trip(s) should be there, as below:

Ical Create New Event8

When you click “More details on this trip” you find, in the private note — not the one seen by fellow travellers — the notes you put into iCal when you created the trip. You can still add a note for them to see in the “Add note” box at the bottom of the trip page.

Important: We strongly recommend that you edit trip dates and places only in iCal (or other external calendar). If you edit in Dopplr you’ll break the link back to the external calendar, and there’s nothing we can do to fix that.

If Dopplr does bring in the wrong place name, we recommend that you fix it this way:

Click the “Edit this trip” link (on the right in the above image). Let’s imagine we really intended to go to a different Chicago (and had put it in the original iCal trip as just “Chicago,” which Dopplr would interpret to be the big Illinois city as the most likely candidate. Type “Chicago” (without the quotes) in the Destination: field and wait a couple of seconds. You’ll see some activity followed by this screen:

Ical Create New Event9

This invites you to see other places called Chicago, and gives you a link to click to see them. Click it and you’ll see this:

Ical Create New Event10

Copy the name of the city you actually intended — in this case we’ll choose Chicago Heights, IL, United States — into your clipboard. Copy just the text, not the hyperlink. Now — very very important — cancel your edit. Do not click the “Done” button.

Next, go back to iCal and paste in the correct city name. Like this:

Ical Create New Event11

Click “Done” and the iCal trip event will be updated. So will Dopplr:

Ical Create New Event12

We wish we could make this part easier. But iCal and other external calendars tend to publish in one direction only.

Let us know how it works for you. We’ll be adding tweaks and fixes.

April 7, 2008 – 2:21 pm, by Matt Biddulph

Import your contacts from Windows Live Hotmail

Windows Live Hotmail logoWe’ve just added the ability to import your contacts from your Hotmail address book and use them to find travellers on Dopplr to share your trips with. As with our existing Gmail import, you won’t have to reveal your password to us, and we won’t send email to anybody without your explicit permission.

– 11:39 am, by Dan Gillmor

Mobile Phones on EU Flights

AP: EU Allows Mobile Phones on Airplanes. Under the plan approved Monday, cell phone users could make and receive calls through an onboard base station. They will be allowed to turn their phones on after the plane reaches 10,000 feet, when other electronic devices such as portable music players and laptops are permitted. But a host of issues remain, from the cost of mid-flight phone service, to backlash from those who dread the thought of being trapped for hours listening to one-sided conversations.

Uh, oh…

I have no issue with someone making a mobile call in a quiet and unobtrusive way, preferably turning away from me and others so that we’re not bombarded with information we really don’t want to hear. Even a quick call to let someone know that the plane has landed is fine with me. It’s the loud, long, and ultimately selfish mobile callers who raise my ire.

To make the point that the chatter is intrusive, I sometimes visibly listen to the person who’s talking, and even take notes if obviously listening doesn’t work. Amazing how quickly these folks wrap up their calls.

This also works when people around me are having a loud conversation and ignore requests to lower the volume. (Most people in my experience simply don’t realize they’re bothering others, and are glad to tone it down when asked politely.)

Of course, my ultimate defense is listening to music with my noise-canceling headset. That should not be necessary in a halfway civilized world.

April 6, 2008 – 4:02 pm, by Dan Gillmor

Some Good Heathrow News (for a change)

Heathrow’s one-bag carry-on restriction has been lifted, thank heavens. Now you can carry on your roller bag plus your computer case or other small bag separately.

Also, you no longer have to remove the computer from the bag. Seems that Heathrow has new gear that inspects it inside the case.

Anyway, small progress at an airport that has had its share of traveller woes…

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