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        <title>Save your marriage .....Buy a GPS - Politcs  Plus - Mike&apos;s Blog - Victoria Advocate</title>
        <link>http://community.victoriaadvocate.com/home/Blog/Mike/7207</link>
        <description>This past Saturday, my wife and I had the pleasure of revisiting San Antonio after a long absence, because for me this lovely city was difficult to get around, even with a map.&amp;nbsp; My navigator of 40 years would mumble endlessly as she fidgeted with the map.&amp;nbsp; Combine my lack of a sense of direction and her not able to read a map, and you have the makings of a very unpleasant trip. This is why we avoided San Antonio, when we needed a big city,instead we opted for Austin or Houston.
&amp;nbsp;
Two years ago I bought &amp;quot;Microsoft Streets and Trips&amp;quot; packaged with a GPS system for my laptop. I used the system sparingly on our Chicago vacation, because of my laptop&#039;s battery constraint.&amp;nbsp; The GPS got us to the doorstep of our Hotel, but then we put it&amp;nbsp;away, as we relied on city transportation and the L-Train to get us to our destination.
&amp;nbsp;
On October 2007, we decided that our final vehicle,would have GPS installed.
Since then, we have found our grandsons, remote apartment in Austin and to this day I can&amp;rsquo;t tell how we got to Hobby Airport ,and back to Victoria ,because we relied solely on the GPS. Saturday&#039;s San Antonio trip was a pleasure.&amp;nbsp; We got to see everything we wanted ,without the stress of being lost.</description>
        <itunes:summary>This past Saturday, my wife and I had the pleasure of revisiting San Antonio after a long absence, because for me this lovely city was difficult to get around, even with a map.&amp;nbsp; My navigator of 40 years would mumble endlessly as she fidgeted with the map.&amp;nbsp; Combine my lack of a sense of direction and her not able to read a map, and you have the makings of a very unpleasant trip. This is why we avoided San Antonio, when we needed a big city,instead we opted for Austin or Houston.
&amp;nbsp;
Two years ago I bought &amp;quot;Microsoft Streets and Trips&amp;quot; packaged with a GPS system for my laptop. I used the system sparingly on our Chicago vacation, because of my laptop&#039;s battery constraint.&amp;nbsp; The GPS got us to the doorstep of our Hotel, but then we put it&amp;nbsp;away, as we relied on city transportation and the L-Train to get us to our destination.
&amp;nbsp;
On October 2007, we decided that our final vehicle,would have GPS installed.
Since then, we have found our grandsons, remote apartment in Austin and to this day I can&amp;rsquo;t tell how we got to Hobby Airport ,and back to Victoria ,because we relied solely on the GPS. Saturday&#039;s San Antonio trip was a pleasure.&amp;nbsp; We got to see everything we wanted ,without the stress of being lost.</itunes:summary>
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                <title>Apr 23,  2008 at 06:04 PM : Actually, Mike,...</title>
                <description>Actually, Mike, I&#039;m surprised that *anyone* in S. TX - or at least this &quot;Coastal Bend&quot; area - has any semblance of a &quot;sense of direction.
Having been transferred to the fine city of Victoria in &#039;98 (It&#039;s where they said my paycheck would be arriving. I found it somewhat convenient to be in the vicinity.) I came from spending thirty plus years in central and westen OK. The latter twenty years of that tenure was spent at a job that required my driving nearly every freeway, highway, throughway and cow path in a state and area where 99% of the roads run north and south or east and west like God intended roads to run and you could count reliably on there being a roadway exactly one mile north, south, east or west of the one you were on. 
When I worked in OK directions to work sites were given as &quot;turn North on Hwy XX for 5 miles then turn east on blacktop 2 miles then south into location.&quot; I found it somewhat odd at first that when I arrived here, similar directions would state &quot;Take Hwy 59N to FM 447, turn left for 5 miles to CR XX, turn left 5 miles then turn right into location.&quot;  Now &quot;back home&quot; in OK those directions would put you right back where you started. Here, by some manipulation of the time/space continuum, it puts you somewhere east of Houston!
Methinks whoever laid out and named the roads around here was drunk and had a seriously inoperative compass.
Ernie</description>
                <link>http://community.victoriaadvocate.com/home/Blog/Mike/7207/#c_46543</link>
                <guid>http://community.victoriaadvocate.com/home/Blog/Mike/7207/#c_46543</guid>
                <itunes:summary>Actually, Mike, I&#039;m surprised that *anyone* in S. TX - or at least this &quot;Coastal Bend&quot; area - has any semblance of a &quot;sense of direction.
Having been transferred to the fine city of Victoria in &#039;98 (It&#039;s where they said my paycheck would be arriving. I found it somewhat convenient to be in the vicinity.) I came from spending thirty plus years in central and westen OK. The latter twenty years of that tenure was spent at a job that required my driving nearly every freeway, highway, throughway and cow path in a state and area where 99% of the roads run north and south or east and west like God intended roads to run and you could count reliably on there being a roadway exactly one mile north, south, east or west of the one you were on. 
When I worked in OK directions to work sites were given as &quot;turn North on Hwy XX for 5 miles then turn east on blacktop 2 miles then south into location.&quot; I found it somewhat odd at first that when I arrived here, similar directions would state &quot;Take Hwy 59N to FM 447, turn left for 5 miles to CR XX, turn left 5 miles then turn right into location.&quot;  Now &quot;back home&quot; in OK those directions would put you right back where you started. Here, by some manipulation of the time/space continuum, it puts you somewhere east of Houston!
Methinks whoever laid out and named the roads around here was drunk and had a seriously inoperative compass.
Ernie</itunes:summary>     
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