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Great escapes for geeks

Great escapes for geeks

By:  Melissa Riofrio-Pete Babb and Steve Fox  On: 02 Jul 2007 For: InfoWorld (U.S.) 

What makes a great geek vacation? Well, high-speed access from even the most obscure locale is a given. Then throw in some activities to stimulate the brain cells, maybe a dose of electronic entertainment, possibly a bit of techie history, and you're most of the way there.

What makes a great geek vacation? Well, high-speed access from even the most obscure locale is a given.

Then throw in some activities to stimulate the brain cells, maybe a dose of electronic entertainment, possibly a bit of techie history, and you're most of the way there.

Of course, it also helps if your chosen location is frequented by similarly techie folks and has some out-of-the-mainstream cred, meaning it would make your non-alpha geek friends roll their eyes.

Our readers weighed in with their choices, and here's what InfoWorld editors came up with as the favorites.

Bangalore, India

Why should Thomas Friedman have all the fun? Bangalore readily appeals to geeks with exotic tastes, given its dual status as both the Garden City and the Silicon Valley of India. While you couldn't actually visit the local offices of tech giants such as Intel, Sun, or HP, you could explore the Visvesvaraya Industrial and Technological Museum, with its exhibition halls that cover engineering, biotech, space travel, and the like.

Check out the view from the southern hemisphere at the Jawaharlal Nehru Planetarium. Internet cafes and Wi-Fi hotspots are everywhere; get your fix between visits to the 240-acre Lalbagh botanical gardens or the 300-acre Cubbon Park. Ulsoor Lake offers boat rides among its many small islands.

Tipu Sultan's palace and the Raj-era Bangalore palace offer a dose of lush architecture. Hindu monuments abound: The Bull Temple is dominated by a massive, monolithic sculpture of said beast.

Another bull figures prominently in the main event at the Sri Gavi Gangadhareswara Temple: Every Jan. 14, a ray of sunshine aims through the horns of a bull statue to illuminate another statue, of Shiva Linga. Buy a gadget or a sari on Brigade Road or Commercial Street, and your South-Asian geek experience is complete.

Dinosaur dig

Digging up dinosaur fossils: It's not just for stuffy paleontologists anymore! If you've ever been awed by dino-skeletons at a museum, wanted to reconnect with a youthful (or not-so-youthful) love of dinosaurs, or just wanted to see if that whole Jurassic Park thing could work for real, then are you ever in luck. You can, in fact, get right down into a real dig site.

And it isn't some sort of fantasy camp-style interpretation of digging where all the hard work is done for you and the fossils are teed up for you to "discover," either -- these camps are the real deal. You get to do the actual dirty work yourself, side by side with scientists and experienced diggers.

Who knows -- you might be a part of the next major fossil discovery!

There are dig vacations of all sorts of durations across the United States and all over the world. A sizable list of options can be found here.

CeBIT, Hanover, Germany; and Munich, Bavaria

Mark your calendars: March 2008 will see the next incarnation of the world's largest computer-technology show. If you manage to tear yourself away from the exhibits, the Laatzen Museum of Aviation offers a less crowded dose of technology. The History of Energy Museum blasts you back to a past of radio, lightbulbs, and other electrical devices.


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Melissa Riofrio-Pete Babb and Steve Fox Melissa Riofrio-Pete Babb and Steve Fox is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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