Thursday, November 22, 2007

View from my hotel room in Sayulita, Mexico

Whenever I go on a beach vacation, I get hotel anxiety. Naturally, I always want to be near the beach, but when travelling to a unfamiliar place, you never really know what you are going to get. Is it worth paying a premium to stay on the beach even though staying on the "beach" could easily mean a dumpy piece of sand? Should I spend more as a form insurance that I will be next to a nice beach? Should I play it safe and stay inland and thereby avoid some beach premium cost?

On two visits to Hawaii, my beach hotel didn't exactly live up to my standards (dumpy piece of sand) and on a trip to Pismo Beach, I was right in front of the only beach in California that you are allowed to drive on (read redneck hangout).

I am in Sayulita, Mexico right now and my beach hotel is awesome. There is a patio area with two hammocks that look out onto the ocean. I can literally fall out of my room onto a great beach where i can go surfing or boogie boarding. I did the latter twice today and plan on going surfing tomorrow. The only downside is that it doesn't have hot water but it does have wifi... a trade I would take every day of the week.


Here is a picture from the hammock.


Monday, November 5, 2007

Feature Creep

There was a great article in the New Yorker in May about how consumer electronic products often have too many features and why this happens. The dilemma is that products with lots of features sell well but, at the same time, they are also the products that are most frequently returned. This puts consumer product manufacturers in a tough place because more features=more sales but it also means a poor user experience.

The most interesting part about this article is how people make purchasing decisions and don't seem to know what is in their best interest, or at least have a hard time processing trade-offs. Consumers overestimate how many features they will use and don't seem to take into account the added learning or complexity.