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06-23-2010, 09:58 PM | #421 (permalink) | |
The Music Guru.
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Beyond the Wall
Posts: 4,858
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It costs $3 for each ride, but there are passes and tickets available, and the price is lower. Passes and tickets are good if you use the system everyday or for the better part of a week. Oh yeah, it is also MUCH cheaper than a car, for which you have to buy gas and pay for maintenance, etc. I have a car that I use almost everyday because it's pretty good on gas and my uncle is a mechanic who gives me good deals on maintenance, but I sometimes like to take the bus or whatever. And public transport here is a good way to pick out all the weirdos in the city, just as long as you keep yourself safe! Cable and satellite? It's pretty good here. Though most of the stuff on TV is garbage! There's basic cable packages, in which you get an analog signal and about 40 channels. I think that's about $100/month, but I'm not sure because I don't have it. I have digital cable. Digital cable is a major step up from basic and it's basically equal to satellite, except you don't need a dish. That package offers (well here anyways) up to 500 channels. Most of the programming is repeated though because the majority of channels are networks that broadcast the same shows at different times across the country. That costs almost $200/month. Satellite offers pretty much the same thing for roughly the same price, and sometimes you can get a radio package (like XM or Sirius) for an additional fee. Both digital cable and satellite offer specialty channels that show only movies for example. In Toronto, the channels are mostly Canadian, but we do get a lot of American channels that broadcast from Buffalo or Rochester (the networks like Fox, NBC, CNN, CBS, etc). With the digital cable and satellite, you get all of that plus the channels that come from other parts of Canada or the US. What's so great about that is, if you know you're going to miss your favourite TV show you can either record it to PVR or catch it later from a more western time zone. Lateralus, thanks for telling me what netball is! I sort of had an idea but I wasn't really clear on the dynamics of it. |
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06-24-2010, 06:14 AM | #422 (permalink) | |
Mate, Spawn & Die
Join Date: May 2007
Location: The Rapping Community
Posts: 24,593
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As far as TV goes, I don't have cable so it's free for me. And I get maybe 12 or so channels that anyone would actually want to watch, plus probably another 12 with crappy local programming, infomercials, religious crap, etc. When I had cable, it cost $40 or $50 a month and I had maybe 20 or 30 channels that might be of potential interest and then probably an equal amount of filler. That was one of the really low end packages. Higher end packages I believe run somewhat over $100 a month an give you a couple hundred channels. |
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06-24-2010, 08:16 AM | #423 (permalink) |
thirsty ears
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Boulder
Posts: 742
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public transport in Budapest is great. i don't have a car, i rely on it exclusively. a month pass is around $50 USD.
downtown is covered by a small subway system (3 lines), a much larger tram system, plus an enormous number of buses and trolleys. The trams and trolleys extend to the edges of the city, where suburban railways take over to help commuters get to the nearest villages. the bus system is very pervasive, covering the whole city very efficiently. the subway is the only place where tickets are checked on entry. buses, trams, and trolleys get infrequent, random checks by plain clothes enforcers. that's the one bad thing about the system - it's too easy for bums to ride free, so there are often smelly folk taking up 20 seats because nobody wants to sit near them! no idea about television, i just pay for internet and download the shows i want to see. incidentally, i have one of the best internet connections in the world. i pay about $15 USD per month for a 30/20 line with no cap. a hell of a deal!
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my flac collection |
06-24-2010, 08:59 AM | #424 (permalink) | |||
Sir Spamalot
Join Date: May 2010
Location: South Africa Posts: 9,999,999
Posts: 205
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Fastest we've got in South Africa is only 4meg. What makes it worse is the ridiculous prices. The costs with the country's main ISP (Telkom) is about $51 p/m just for the 4meg connection (plus additional for line rental, which is about another $16 p/m). Then comes the installation costs (which can be avoided if you do it yourself), costing you about $75. They're nice enough to throw in a major 3GB's worth of browsing p/m. Want more? "Pay up" (more shabby costs) Phones have it much worse. About $0.25 per megabyte ($253 per gigabyte)
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06-25-2010, 09:53 AM | #425 (permalink) |
Freeskier
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Istanbul was Constantinople now it's Istanbul not Constantinople...
Posts: 1,536
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Public transit in Istanbul is really good, it's one of the things I love about this city. IDO, the company that runs most of the ferries here is the largest ferry transportation company in the world. My commute to work is a nice relaxing 25 minute ferry ride down the bosphoros, and I go past Aya Sofia, Blue Mosque, Topkapi palace, the galata tower, all these thousand year old historical buildings are just along the way to work (ok I'll stop bragging about my awesome commute.)
Buses run all over the place, and dolmuses (shared taxis) run services between many different fixed points around the city. The metro has two lines that access the majority of the major centres, and the metrobus is a really fast way to get around without having to be stuck in traffic. Many areas also have cable cars running a circuit around the neighborhood. The metro, ferries, metrobus, trams, and public buses are all only 1.50TL, and if you have an akbil (an electonic key) you simply load it up and then pay with that every time you use transit, no need to buy tickets ever. You also get a discount each time you use successive forms of transit, like taking the metro, then a ferry then a bus. The only drawbacks are that it's usually very crowded, and the transit system can be insanely complicated. It takes most people a few months to really work out all the intricacies, but after that it's really great.
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What you've done becomes the judge of what you're going to do -- especially in other people's minds. When you're traveling, you are what you are right there and then. People don't have your past to hold against you. No yesterdays on the road. William Least Heat Moon, Blue Highways Your toughest competitor lives in your head. Some days his name is fear, or pain, or gravity. Stomp his ass. HOOKED ON THE WHITE POWDER |
11-30-2010, 12:33 AM | #426 (permalink) |
FUNky
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Midland, MI
Posts: 2,482
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Does anybody know how the weather in oh say... Luxembourg compares to North America?
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http://www.last.fm/user/ohio0808 sometimes I don't thrill you sometimes I think I'll kill you just don't let me fuck up will you 'cause when I need a friend it's still you |
11-30-2010, 01:19 AM | #427 (permalink) |
Slavic gay sauce
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Abu Dhabi
Posts: 7,993
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Depends on what part of north America you're talking about. Google can help you with the forecast for Luxembourg.
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“Think of what a paradise this world would be if men were kind and wise.” - Kurt Vonnegut, Cat's Cradle. Last.fm |
11-30-2010, 02:46 AM | #428 (permalink) |
FUNky
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Midland, MI
Posts: 2,482
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Well, what I meant was which part of North America is Luxembourg's climate most similar to? But yeah, I'll just google it instead......
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http://www.last.fm/user/ohio0808 sometimes I don't thrill you sometimes I think I'll kill you just don't let me fuck up will you 'cause when I need a friend it's still you |
11-30-2010, 03:33 AM | #429 (permalink) |
"Hermione-Lite"
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: New York.
Posts: 3,084
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WHO HAS SNOW?! not meeeee
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