By the co-author of The easy Guide to Your Walt Disney World Visit 2020, the best-reviewed Disney World guidebook series ever.

Available on Amazon here.

(As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.)





Category — zzz. Stuff No One Cares About but Me

“Top Florida Blogger” Award

yourfirstvisit.net named a Top Florida BloggerYesterday I learned that yourfirstvisit.net–well, actually, me–was named a “Top Florida Blogger” by Destinations in Florida.

I’m not entirely certain what the criteria were–although leaden prose, out-of-focus photographs, and not much personality come immediately to mind.

But I’m delighted at the honor.  This site has helped more than four and a half million people since I opened it five-plus years ago, and honestly it’s been an enormous amount of work.

I don’t copy and then re-write other people’s work, and pass it off as my own work–which you’ll see happen on some other Disney World sites. Rather, I do the fact gathering, research and analysis myself, and even show the backup…So the recognition for the help, and the work, is kinda neat!

Me and Aurora at Akershus in Epcot from yourfirstvisit.netOn the other hand, it’s been a lot of fun too! Reporting on Disney World is not exactly the worst way to be spending your spare time!

Thanks to all of you who come here for help, ask questions, and tell your friends about the site.

The real honor is serving you…

Follow yourfirstvisit.net on Facebook or Twitter!

October 16, 2013   11 Comments

FastPass+ and MagicBands: A Report on My Field Trip and Other Stuff, Part Two

Note: this is the second part of the report on my experiences with MagicBands and FastPass+ a couple of weeks ago.  It’s basically a trip report.  The first part—more substantive and about the overall program—is here.

MagicBand and FastPass+ Trip Report from yourfirstvisit.net I’ve been paying attention to MyMagic+ and FastPass+  for years—so far as I can tell, my first post about what we now know as MyMagic+ and FastPass+  was almost three and a half years ago. (Click the link to see how far off I was!)

Invitation-only testing of FastPass+ began late last year, with a particularly large group invited this summer.

I didn’t expect to be lucky enough to be invited—I’d used up most of my luck when I married lovely wife Amy Girl, and the rest at a Stroh’s beer contest at the Pub in Ida Noyes Hall way back in college, where I won 5 raffle prizes, including the Grand Prize, First Prize and Second Prize…

But I really really wanted to test them—the MagicBands and FastPass+, not Stroh’s–both so I could tell readers about the experience, and could form an opinion on information systems readiness.

So I was delighted to read on PortOrleans.org that all September visitors to Port Orleans Riverside with arrival dates after 9/3 would get a chance to test MagicBands and FastPass+!

I immediately booked a later September quick two-night visit to Riverside.  It showed up right away in MyDisneyExperience (I had already linked everything up, including my annual pass, in earlier 2013; you need both tickets and a Disney hotel booked and linked to use FastPass+–see this and this) and I was booking FastPass+ within minutes.

You don’t, by the way, have to wait to be invited.  I’m not even sure invitations are going out anymore—I found out online, then got both email and UPS invites.  See this.

Like an idiot, I did my first round of FastPass+ reservations before I booked my flight, based on the logic at the end of this page. Then I booked my flight, discovering they were unusually lousy and expensive—it turns out a lot of people were going from Northeast Ohio that weekend to a convention in Orlando—then changed up my selections for both Friday (at the Magic Kingdom) and Sunday (at Epcot) to match my arrival and departure times.

The press of the real job and my required professional reading meant I couldn’t stay any longer or get there any sooner, and I was particularly bummed to have to abandon my FastPass+ for Illuminations Sunday—as I would be changing planes in Newark then…

So the way it works is first you pick the people in your party you are selecting FastPass+ for, then pick a date, then a park.  There’s a lot of not-too-obvious “Next” buttons at the top and bottom of the pages, but you get used to these quickly.

You are then presented with a list of FastPass+ you can book in that park that day, and you select up to three—you have the opportunity to prioritize them, but I didn’t test that part.  I (almost entirely) picked stuff that builds heavy lines, especially offerings that aren’t available in the traditional Fastpass program—e.g. Enchanted Tales with Belle, Fantasmic, and the lamented Illuminations.

FastPass+ Options from yourfirstvisit.netDisney then offers you four options for these FastPass+ choices—and not all of them may be in all the options.  One is recommended as “Best Match!” and the others are labeled some subset of “Option A” through “Option D”.

Since I wanted late Friday (flight), late Saturday (for a more efficient tour with Fantasmic) and mid-day Sunday (flight) I ended up picking something other than “Best Match” Friday and Sunday.

The offers were pretty tight.  FastPass+ windows are one hour, but there’s no “two hours between Fastpasses” rule when using them.  Typically among the offers two of my three experiences were in consecutive hours, and the third was separated by an hour.

This whole scheduling thing was easy for me, by the way, because it was a solo trip, so I didn’t have to negotiate preferences with anyone. I could focus on my favorites what I thought I needed to test for my readers.  I’m at Disney World 6 or more times a year, and most of those trips are solo. I can’t afford to bring the whole family, and I’m often on so very specific an agenda—like on this trip—that I drive my family crazy anyway…

More boring details on this topic are here… but now that I think of it, I haven’t had all that solo a 2013 at Walt Disney World—

Amy Girl and Little PansyMy January/February trip was solo, but the February/March visit included Amy Girl…

Test Niecelets…and the Test Niecelets…

Lilo and Stitch Best Friends Character Breakfast at ‘Ohana with my son ted… the May visit was partially solo and partially with Son #1…

Me and Son Number 2 and Belle…and the August visit was partially solo and partially with Son # 2.

Maybe as this site matures I’m less of a pain to visit with….no, that can’t be it.

So anyway by this point I had the hotel and lousy air reservations, the cheapest rental car available in the terminal, and my FastPass+ reservations.

MagicBand Colors from yourfirstvisit.netNext was ordering and customizing my MagicBands, which was much easier than I thought it would be.  (FastPass+ was easy but took a lot of screens; the MagicBand was just easy.)

It arrived pretty quickly in a plain brown box, like—I imagine, I have no experience with this—a porn stash.  More details on customizing your MagicBands are here.

Next was on-line check-in.  I went through the screens, asking for a corner room near transportation (most corner rooms at the moderates have two windows).

I got an error message at the end saying that on-line check-in hadn’t worked, and didn’t get the usual confirming email, but when I went back in to try again later, I was warned that “someone else in my party had already done on-line check-in and that if I continued the stored credit card might be changed.”  Or something.  Well, we can’t have that, so I just let it go.   For such a short trip, I didn’t really care where my room was…

First tweetsAt some point in the middle of all this I signed up for twitter for the first time ever (@yourfirstvisit) and promised to tweet my way through my test of FastPass+ and MagicBands.

I had at least 75 followers LOL by the time I arrived!  The best part of tweeting about this—when I remembered to do so—is that I didn’t have to take as many notes…by which I mean I took no notes.

Look, people, with twitter in one hand and the new camera in the other, what more do you want of me? Plus there were Incidents–most involving bathrooms–and even blood. And I printed out all my twiddling as an aide memoire…

The day before departure I checked in for my flight—and there were no free seats available for assignment left, and a notice popped up asking if I could go at another time…

Those together were a bad sign, suggesting that the flight was overbooked.  The worst spot to be in when a flight is overbooked is to have no assigned seats, so I bit the bullet and paid for upgraded seats both ways. This was not a visit where being bumped to a different flight was gonna work! So it was like Universal Express…

Friday morning dawned with thunderstorms rolling across Lake Erie north of the airport. They did not, however, affect the families, conventioneers, and MagicBand testers on the flight.

I was a little bummed that even with the very high starting price and the add of the upgraded seats, I still ended up in Boarding Group Number 5.  Only felons boarded later. But though the flight was full I still found a place for my rolley-bag.

The first ten years of my working life as a strategy consultant at McKinsey, I was on the road 120 nights a year, and airlines and hotels treated me like a god. Lately, not so much.

The usual at MCO, and around noon I rolled into Port Orleans Riverside. It seemed like my on-line reservation in fact hadn’t gone through—though I was there when I said I would be, the stuff wasn’t already printed out, etc.

But I still got a corner room near transportation—in Building 37, which is in Alligator Bayou near the North Depot bus stop.  So maybe it did work…

As soon as I’d checked in I put on my MagicBand (it was a little tricky at first to put on single-handed…most people won’t have to deal with this problem!) and went off to buy something with it!

Specifically, I went to the concierge desk right there in the lobby and got tickets for the Mickey’s Not-So-Scary Halloween Party that night.

The MagicBand worked like a charm. You hold it up to a reader, wait for the cast member to remember to turn the reader on, hold it up to the reader again, wait for the cast member to remember to tap something on their side, then enter your PIN number (which you will have set before or at the time of check-in).

Everything I  bought at WDW on this trip I bought using the MagicBand. All in it’s faster and simpler than charging to your room and signing the charge slip, even though it doesn’t feel all that fast.  And it’ll get even faster as the cast members get more used to the workflow.

My MagicBand from yourfirstvisit.net In the applications that you care about, it’s the Mickey head on the MagicBand that does the work, and it needs to be pretty close to the RFID  reader—whether the reader is a park turnstile, FastPass+ return reader, cash register reader, room lock, or resort vehicle gate reader.

I never did quite figure out the best place for the Mickey head.  You want the MagicBand on the opposite wrist of the finger you use for the ticket reader (so you can get both read at once) but beyond that you may be twisting it about on your wrist.

For purchases, it seemed to work best to have the Mickey head at the bottom of my wrist—that is, the opposite of where most people wear their watch faces.

But when using it as a room key, and on the readers that let you back into your resort hotel if you are driving, having it in the outside of the wrist “karate chop” position worked better.

Off to the room, which was about as far as from the main services at Riverside as it could be, but right around the corner from both a quiet pool and bus stop.  The MagicBand worked great at getting me in.

Over the past year, room locks have been replaced with RFID readers across WDW, and they are almost done.  (This really threw off Amy Girl during our Old Key West visit last December—while I was off with the boys, she actually took the lock apart looking for the slot to stick her room key into.)

Since I’ve locked myself out of my rooms at all of the large moderates over the years, and only when staying as far as I could be from replacement keys, I was happy to never take the MagicBand off except when I went off property to work at one of the Starbucks I frequent on such visits.

Others will take their MagicBands off except when they are directly using them. And others won’t wear them at all–it works just fine without being on your wrist—you can stick it in a pocket or purse like an oversized watch, and pull it out as needed.

The first thing I did in my room was take all the usual room shots I do.  I’d just stayed in and rewritten my review of the Alligator Bayou rooms from my visit in November 2012, but the new camera gets such better shots that I took more to replace the phone-camera shots in the other review.  Haven’t gotten to that yet.

Old Camera Alligator BayouAbove is an example of Alligator Bayou rooms from the old camera…

Alligator Bayou New Camera…and the new one.

My FastPass+ for Friday were set up as Space Mountain 2-3p, then Peter Pan 4-5, Enchanted Tales with Belle 5-6, and Under the Sea: Journey of the Little Mermaid 6 til park close at 7p.  (The fourth FastPass+ was a bonus offered after I signed up for the other 3; I’d seen it on our December trip, and in Disney’s California Adventure, was underwhelmed, and so planned to skip it.)

Quiet Pool Port Orleans Riverside Alligator BayouSo I got on my laptop and logged into MyDisneyExperience and changed my Space Mountain FastPass+ from 2-3 to 3-4, which created enough time to go do some work reading at the quiet pool!

I had no trouble changing the times of such rides on my visit, but don’t expect that it will be so easy once more people are using FastPass+.

Then it was off to the Magic Kingdom!  By bus, as pretty much always, since driving to MK adds time.  I’d planned the trip to miss the tail of the 3p parade.  I didn’t, but made my way to Tomorrowland mostly through the stores on the east side of Main Street, so had no trouble.

Crowds at the Magic Kingdom were light, as they usually are on September days when the Halloween Party closes the park at 7p.

The FastPass+ reader on Space Mountain worked like a charm, and I was on and off the ride quite easily! Of course, posted stand-by waits were only 15 minutes, so I didn’t really need a FastPass+…but this was a test!  And in the interests of science, I rode it again, standby.

Then I grabbed a late lunch at Cosmic Ray’s, then off to Peter Pan and Fastpass+ there, and then Splash Mountain!  FastPass+ worked great on Peter Pan! Like on Space Mountain, standby lines were short—ten minutes on Big Thunder and Splash Mountains!  September is really a great time to go for repeat visitors.

I warn first timers off of the month, though—that whole “peak of the hurricane season” thingy. Not much of a hurricane season this year (so far)—but good planning is based on what reasonably might happen, not what in fact does happen, cause you can’t know that when you plan.

For some reason I hadn’t been to the new Tangled area on my May or August trips, so I checked that out.  It really opens up this corner of the park in an almost unrecognizable way!

I also gave the new Tangled bathrooms a look.  The decorations in them include frying pans!   Kerri wanted me to tweet a photo, but I think taking photos in a Disney World bathroom, besides being icky,  is grounds to be banned for life, so I declined.

kerriNext was the FastPass+ for Enchanted Tales with Belle.  I had plenty of time, so decided to check the bathrooms near Gaston’s Tavern for any hitherto-unnoticed cooking implements.

But my crocs were just about tread-less (I’d planned to buy a new set of Mickey crocs on this visit) and I slipped in the Gaston baths, tearing up my upper arm in a spot I couldn’t see (and I didn’t think to look at the wound in the mirror).  So I grabbed some paper towels and used them as a pressure bandage, which didn’t seem to have much effect on the frank bleeding.  So still holding the bandage, with blood dripping down my arm, I started making my way to the first aid station near the Crystal Palace, glum that perhaps my evening was over.

The bleeding stopped around a hundred feet from the aid station, so I turned around and headed back to Belle.  My FastPass+ was about to expire. Though I looked like roadkill, I really wanted to see how FastPass+ worked in Belle…and see Belle again, on whom I have almost as big a crush as I do on Ariel.  Plus I wasn’t gonna be the center of anyone’s attention, right? So it didn’t matter that my arm was a bloody mess…

The FastPass+ line for Enchanted Tales with Belle goes down the left side and along the building—you enter the ride in Maurice’s workshop—the room with the magic door.

The door did its usual magic, and we went into the room where Mrs. Potts is helped out by cast members in recruiting the troupe for the re-creation of Belle’s tale.

I was almost immediately picked by the cast member to play Suit of Armor.  I didn’t see much value to the yourfirstvisit.net brand (I was wearing one of the “yourfirstvisit.net” t-shirts Amy Girl and the boys had gotten me a couple of Christmases ago) from ducking out…so I didn’t.  So much for not being the center of attention.

So there are now a lot of family videos of the darling playlet that’s the heart of Enchanted Tales with Belle that show a Suit of Armor with an oddly bloody arm…. but a great t-shirt!

Helping Out at Enchanted Tales with Belle from yourfirstvisit.netI did not do a very good job in the role—there was a cast member assigned to me seemingly full time to keep me on cue, and I believe Lumiere yelled at me at one point—but I still got to do a photo with Belle!

I was by this point a little shell-shocked and very bummed that MK remains a dry park.  At the other parks I woulda had two or three drinks by now.  Instead I rode Splash Mountain and Big Thunder Mountain again, got my Mickey’s Not-So-Scary Halloween Party wristbands and program, and wandered around taking photos of costumes for the Magical Blogorail Teal post on the topic the upcoming week.

It’d been a tough week on the real job, and I was getting pretty tired. Plus perhaps I was weak from loss of blood 🙂 .  I watched the Boo to You parade, checked out the Woody and Jess dance party, and had myself ensconced in a chair I’d scored at the upper level of the Main Street train station at 8.50p to wait for the 9.30 “HalloWishes” fireworks, which I love and wanted to shoot for the review. I’d never, ever, gotten a chair here before.

I woke with a start at 9.10p.  Perhaps I had been snoring.  I never do that at home, but have been known to purr quite loudly. Anyway I punted on the fireworks and headed back to Port Orleans Riverside and went to bed…

Saturday I slept in til 8.30a and worked on the site until it was time to head to the Studios.

I had  FastPass+ for Toy Story Midway Mania from 4.40 to 5.40p, then Rock N’ Roller Coaster from 6.25 to 7.25p, then Fanstasmic—for an 8p show—from 7.25 til 7.45p.

I saw Toy Story Mania—I’d never seen it after 1p before, this FastPass+ stuff is kinda cool—and then sang along to Mulch, Sweat and Shears, somewhat to my astonishment.

There were thousands of oddly dressed people about—the women were dressed most typically as 20’s flappers or as 30’s femme fatales, the men less identifiably so, but with suspenders—and I couldn’t figure out why…the Studios was an odd place for a themed wedding reception, which was all I could think of.  (Though it’s not clear to me where a good place for a themed wedding reception would be…)

Or perhaps it was a protest over Art of Animation replacing Pop Century’s “Legendary Years” buildings?

Mystified, I then I ate at the ABC Commissary (because Backlot Express closed just when I got there).

FastPass+ on Rock 'N Roller Coaster from yourfirstvisit.net Then Rock N Roller, where the FastPass+ reader didn’t work, but they let me into the Fastpass return line anyway, and sitting next to me was one of the oddly dressed.  He told me—before we started screaming–that it was “Dapper Day” at the Studios, and things became clearer.

Or to be more honest, one mystery was replaced with another.

Off Rock N’ Roller I started loitering by Fantasmic, drinking.  Though the Studios weren’t crowded, I’d seen people lining up at 6.30 for the 8p show. My goal—in the service of you, dear reader—was to use my FastPass+ at near the last minute to see what kind of seats I’d get then.   So I went to the return line at 7.40 (my FastPass+ was good til 7.45.)

The Fantasmic FastPass+ seats are in the center section, left, and are just fine (and the Fantasmic Dinner Show seats, just to the right of them, are MUCH better than they used to be). As at Rock N’ Roller, the FastPass+ reader did not read my MagicBand, and as at Rock ‘ Roller, they let me in anyway.

Disney needs to get that fixed…

My seats were just fine, and larger family groups could have easily come in at this time and found good seats, too.

Fantasmic itself was a bit of a disappointment.  The war canoe torches kept going out, the Prince and Princess raft lights did not work—leading to dancing in the dark—and the grand finale found the characters on the island, rather than on Steamboat Willie.  But the crowd was delighted even so.

Back to hotel, and to bed.

Sunday morning I slept in til 6a or so, rescheduled my Soarin FastPass+ at Epcot from 9a til 1p, which moved my other FastPass+ at Test Track and Mission Space (not needed, but I hadn’t ridden it in a while) to 11-12 and 12-1, checked out of the hotel, and worked at the Starbucks in Kissimmee until it was time to go to Epcot.

FastPass+ on Test Track from yourfirstvisit.net My plan was to do Test Track at 11.55a, then Mission Space between noon and 1p,  then Soarin at 1.05p.  This almost worked, but something went wrong at Soarin, and the cast member told me that FastPass waits were in excess of 30 minutes and climbing fast (standby waits went from 80 to 140 minutes at the same time).

I didn’t want to risk my flight, so I bought my new crocs and left the park.  Off to MCO, turned in the rental, plane delayed by thunderstorms, off to Newark to change planes, left my Kindle behind on the Orlando plane, Cleveland plane delayed by mechanical difficulties, new plane, home in Rocky River, Ohio at midnight, somewhat cranky but delighted that I’d had a chance to experience MagicBands and FastPass+!

Follow yourfirstvisit.net on Facebook or Twitter!

October 9, 2013   31 Comments

yourfirstvisit.net Now on Twitter

…but I haven’t yet read the Twitter etiquette manuals being trucked in…so expect little. @yourfirstvisit

Here’s my first incoming and outgoing tweets:First tweets

Follow yourfirstvisit.net on Facebook or Twitter!

August 29, 2013   No Comments

Going to Disney World Multiple Times a Year

MBTeal Logo 2013
Welcome to those of you joining me from the Magik Mouse and those of you just hopping aboard!

I am the 4th stop on Magical Blogorail Teal. Enjoy the ride as this month we share our favorite Disney World splurges.

GOING TO WALT DISNEY WORLD FOUR TO SIX TIMES A YEAR

So since I started working on this site about eight years ago, and launched it around 5 years ago,   I’ve been going to Walt Disney World from yourfirstvisit.net’s World Headquarters–Northeast Ohio–a lot

Dave's disboards signature from yourfirstvisit.net

…usually four to six time a year–as you can tell from my disboards signature above.

There’s two reasons for this splurge: because I can…and because I must.

GOING TO WALT DISNEY WORLD BECAUSE I CAN

Usually one trip a year is with the whole family, and another is associated with a conference in Orlando related to my general business (I’m a strategist), or to a specific client I’m serving.

Family trips are tied to a big event worth seeing, and also worth reporting on the site–for example, in 2012 it was the opening of New Fantasyland, and in 2011 the Magic Kingdom’s 40th anniversary.  But these are mostly just vacations…even though I will drive my family crazy by how scheduled these visits can get: “We have to get to Epcot now to get Fastpasses for the renovated Test-Track!”

Business trips are typically tied to building my skills as a strategist (e.g. the Disney Analytic and Optimization Summit in 2012), or to a specific subject matter I need to learn more about related to a client I’m serving–hence a visit to a Medical Simulation professional society meeting in January of 2013, and a planned visit to a health care IT conference in Orlando in late February 2014. On these trips I arrive early, stay late…or both…and stay in a Disney World hotel or three…

So a couple of visits a year come became they can, as part of our family vacation plans, or my professional development goals…which oddly enough just happen to synchronize with Orlando meetings!  Go figure…

GOING TO WALT DISNEY WORLD BECAUSE I MUST

The other trips…well, over time, as this site has developed a deep and faithful readership, it’s become pretty clear that people expect pretty quickly news on key changes as they occur at Walt Disney World–reports on new hotels and rides, and on updates and refurbishments.

Keeping up with the hotels is a particular challenge, as there are so many of them, and they are refurbed so often.  Well, it may not seem that often to you, but with 30-ish hotels having, typically, refurbs every 5 years…that’s six hotels a year.

I have stayed in every Disney World owned and operated lodging option, and for those with distinctive room types, all the major room types as well.  I’m not sure anyone else who writes a site like this has done so…This creates a very distinctive body of material for those of you checking out the reviews on where to stay.

But it’s also a lot of time, work, and money!

Luckily you all are kind enough to patronize the sponsors of the site, and find some of the ads on the site of interest too.  These actions by you basically pay for all the visits (and the other expenses of the site as well) and allow me to splurge on making all these trips!

MORE DISNEY WORLD SPLURGES FROM MAGICAL BLOGORAIL TEAL

Thank you for joining me today. Your next stop on the Magical Blogorail Teal Loop is The Many Adventures of a Disney Lovin’ Spectrum Mom

Here is the map of our Magical Blogorail Teal loop should you happen to have to make a stop along the way and want to reboard:

Follow yourfirstvisit.net on Facebook!

August 27, 2013   10 Comments

On My Birthday, My Request of You

So today’s my birthday, and I’m requesting a birthday present from you!

It's My Birthday!!It’ll take less than five seconds, but would be a really neat birthday present to me, and might help millions of other people.

Here’s the task:

  1. Click here to get to the site’s home page
  2. Scroll down until you see the Facebook button on the lower left—circled in the image.
  3. Click it, and say something sorta nice—could be as simple as “helpful site”

WHY I AM ASKING FOR THIS BIRTHDAY PRESENT

I’m asking for this for a simple reason: more Facebook home page “likes” matters to Google and other search engines, and more will mean that this site will be more findable to the people looking for help in planning their Walt Disney World vacations.

There’s lots of great sites out there, that I look at almost every day, and learn a ton from.

But there’s only one site–this one—that Lee Cockerell called “astonishingly helpful for both first time and repeat visitors to Walt Disney World alike.”

And that matters—because Lee Cockerell, as Executive Vice President of Operations at Walt Disney World, used to run the Disney World theme parks and resort hotels (under Al Weiss). And thus he should recognize good help with Disney World when he sees it…

So this site can really help people…but only if they can find it!

And if it’s helped you, then you can help it to help others—by going to the home page, scrolling down,  clicking the Facebook “like” button, and saying something nice!

…and thanks…what you all do could be the nicest birthday present ever.

August 22, 2013   6 Comments

More Clarity, Perhaps

Night at Cars at Disney's Art of Animation ResortWhile this site is known for lots of positive things, there’s also some negatives–among others, leaden prose and out-of-focus images come to mind.

The leaden prose we are kinda stuck with. While I have tried to spark things up (my bus work is highly respected in the right circles), lead seems to run in my veins…

The weaker images, though, are subject to improvement.  While the biggest issue with my photos is the fool behind the view-finder, better tools do help here.

Up until now, 99% all the images on this site have been from my iPhone.  But while the phone is always with me and great for well-lit outdoor shots, it has (or I have, while using it) major issues with control over dynamic range, depth of field, and point of focus.

This has been particularly a problem for my photo-reviews of the rooms in the Walt Disney World resort, which too often turn out with only a narrow part of the room in focus, and real light problems.

So since I’d be shooting five rooms in six nights as part of the resort hop of early August, I went looking for a new camera.  It had to be fully controllable (especially f-stops) while fitting in my pocket.

After doing tons of research (that is, I read two pages on Tom Bricker‘s site–this and  this) I picked the Sony DSC-RX100–the best camera ever made that can sit, barely noticed, in your pocket.

I can now take rooms shots with much better depth of field.

Polynesian from phone cameraCompare the photo above, taken with my phone in a standard room in Samoa in May for my updated review of Disney’s Polynesian Resort, with the photo below of a larger room in Tokelau from last week. (For additional punishment, click any photos to enlarge them.)

Polynesian from New Camera

The second photo is more in focus across the full length of the room, and also, with the RX100’s better dynamic range and heightened control, the room lights aren’t blowing out the sensor–I could even include sunlight!

A common problem I’ve had in baths with the phone is having it pick a mirror or shower reflection to focus on.

Art of Animation from Phone CameraThis has led to comically bad shots like the above, of the master bath in the Finding Nemo suites from my review of the Family Suites at Disney’s Art of Animation Resort after my visit last summer.

Art of Animation from New CameraAbove is a shot of a similar space from the new camera from my visit last week to the Cars Family Suites. Focus at last!

The better level of and control over dynamic range also means better evening and dark ride shots.

Illuminations from I-phoneThe iPhone was pretty flummoxed by fireworks shots–see the image of Illuminations above–the best of hundreds of lousy such shots from my phone.

Illuminations at Epcot 3With the Sony, I’ll be able to get great night shots.  See the Illuminations shot from it above–not a great composition, but a hint at what I’ll be able to get eventually. See also the Cars shot at the top of the page for more of what I can now do in the evening.

Now, all evidence on this site to the contrary, I’m not the worst photographer in the world.  For years I had a darkroom, developed my own film, and printed my own photos–some of which have been published (though not recently enough for me to be able to link to them).

Tigger at the Crystal Palace from yourfirstvisit.netI also can tell a great composition when it slaps me in the eye. The shot of Tigger and a child on the right (from the RX100) would have been wonderful if I’d had 6 more inches of the kid on the right side to balance out Tigger on the left.

So with those core skills and a great new tool, my hope is that the photographs on this site improve sharply, from the third to the second-rate!

Follow yourfirstvisit.net on Facebook!

August 18, 2013   No Comments