Weather | Beachcam
Login | Contact Us | Staff | Site Map | Archives | Alerts | Electronic Edition | Subscribe to the paper

HomeBusinessBusiness

Going light on gadgets is a great vacation idea

It was an August day in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, so hot that the pigeons didn't even bother to fly when you walked through them.

An American tourist staggered along ahead of me, almost lost in a haze of heat and slow-moving pigeons. His fancy digital camera and lenses were in a bulging backpack. His cellular phone was clipped to his belt. Earphones were connected to his MP3 player. He wasn't having a stroll — it was more like a death march.

I love gadgets, but vacation is a good time to get away from them, or at least most of them. Today, we'll talk about ways to enjoy a vacation without feeling like a pack animal.

I have a professional digital camera and enough lenses to start a pawnshop. But on vacation, I take a digital camera small enough to fit in a pocket — and cheap enough to be replaced without taking out a loan should it be lost or broken. My vacation camera costs about $100, and it does a good job.

There are plenty of cameras in this category with models from Canon (PowerShot A460, about $115), Fujifilm (FinePix A610, about $115), and Kodak (EasyShare C613, about $130). You'll be fine with any brand-name digital that offers 5 megapixels or more and an optical zoom (as opposed to an electronic zoom) lens.

If you're taking your cell phone along on vacation, you may think that using its camera can save even more space in your luggage. But most folks won't be happy with the pictures. It's bad enough that your friends feel obliged to look at your vacation photos — don't make them strain their eyes to do it.

I'm a terrible navigator. So I depend heavily on mapping services such as MapQuest and those offered by Google and Yahoo.

I still use these services while on vacation but — instead of lugging a computer around — I make paper printouts of obvious routes before leaving home.

My printouts usually include the route from the airport to the hotel. Then I print out directions from the hotel to restaurants and tourist attractions. If an unexpected trip comes up, the hotel staff can furnish directions.

If you can survive the separation anxiety, leave your computer at home. Most large hotels have a business center with computers connected to the Internet. Even cruise ships include a computer room (as well as fairly outrageous prices for using it). Internet cafes are another option, although they are more common overseas than in America.

If you have data you'll need, load it on a thumbnail-sized USB flash drive. You'll pay about $25 for the Kingston Data Traveler 1-gigabyte model. A flash drive with 4 gigabytes of memory will run you just $70 or so. There's an added bonus here — you can use a hotel computer to transfer digital photos to the flash drive, freeing up camera memory.

MP3 players are tiny these days, and they can help relieve boredom on airline flights or in hotel rooms. So taking one along isn't a travel sin.

I'm a big believer in rechargeable batteries. But they aren't welcome on my vacations — the batteries are tiny, the charger is not. If you leave the charger at home, you're at risk of running out of juice for your camera just when a bear eats a small dog at one of our fine national parks.

Do yourself a favor and use regular batteries instead.

That means that you need to select cameras and electronic gear that can use conventional AA- and AAA-sized batteries instead of some weird special purpose rechargeable. Load up with easy-to-find alkaline batteries while on vacation and use rechargeables at home.

If you gather everything on my list — camera, USB drive, paper printouts, MP3 player and a few batteries — you'll find that you can put all your vacation electronics in a pocket or your purse.

Travel light this year and save yourself from the death march through Cabo.

— Bill Husted writes for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. E-mail: bhusted@ajc.com.

Discussions
Discuss this article
(Requires free registration.)

Article discussions on this site are to support community debates of issues related to our stories and editorials.

Discussions should not stray from the subject of the story or editorial.

We do not allow the following:

  • Posts that degrade others on the basis of gender, race, class, ethnicity, national origin, religion, sexual orientation or disability.
  • Disparaging remarks, abusive language or obscene comments.
  • Threats, whether obvious or veiled.

We reserve the right to delete threads and/or ban users for these or other reasons we deem necessary.

Opinions are the sole responsibility of the person posting them. You agree not to post comments that are off topic, defamatory, obscene, abusive, threatening or an invasion of privacy. Violators may be banned. Click here for our full user agreement.

Username:

Password:
(Forgotten your password?)

Your Turn:

Loading videos... If you don't see them shortly, you may need to download the Flash Player.