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View Full Version : Google + GPS = Game Shopping Road Trip!



Flack
07-16-2005, 12:27 PM
On Friday, my friend The Stranger and I decided to try something we have never done before. We planned a 350 mile (round trip) shopping road trip using only the Internet and my GPS. Our trip would take us through Lawton, OK and Wichita Falls, TX to Archer City, TX and back.

While The Stranger is a used bookstore aficionado, I (of course) was looking for thrift stores for games, and we both like looking at antique malls for toys and stuff. To prepare for our trip, we punched those key words into Google’s “local search” feature for each town and came up with names and addresses of places to hit. With nothing more than cash in our wallets and a list of addresses printed out, we hit the road.

For those of you who have never used GPS before, it’s a really fun tool! GPS uses government satellites to determine your exact location, and superimposes that over maps so you can tell exactly where you are and exactly where you’re headed. The software on my laptop has all the tools of Mapquest and more. It has amazing planning tools. One thing the program allows you to do is punch in a list of addresses and then plan a route on the fly. If you add or remove stops, the route updates itself, and if you get lost somehow, the route will continue to change and try and get you back on route. You can also run little queries, such as “show me every gas station within 10 miles” and they’ll pop up on the map. It’s a little like watching the “road trip planning scene” from the original Vacation movie.

Our first destination? Archer City, TX, population 1,800 and home of Booked Up, Inc.

Booked Up, Inc is a bookstore like no other. Owned by author Larry McMurty, Booked Up, Inc pretty much IS Archer City’s main street. Booked Up’s inventory of over 400,000 books is distributed throughout four separate, disconnected buildings. Want sci-fi books? Check building two. Looking for arts and crafts? Try building four. Everything in Booked Up works on the honor system. Once you’re done shopping, you take your finds back to building one, where you pay for them. Unfortunately The Stranger is a big fan of cheap paperbacks, and since Booked Up specializes in rather expensive hardbacks, so we left empty handed.

Other than Booked Up, there’s not much else to see in Archer City. Two blocks in any direction of the store, the town quickly fades into barren hay fields. There’s a Sonic on one end of town and a McDonald’s on the other, with a couple of gas stations in between. The one antique store had a hand-written sign handing in the window which read, “I went across the street. Be back in a little while.” With the GPS fired up and our list of addresses in hand, we set out to find Wichita Falls, TX.

Wichita Falls has a population of over 100,000 people, and has over two-dozen bookstores, antique malls and thrift stores combined. With the power of the GPS, finding the addresses was not the problem. Our problems were with the quality of our list, and the quality of the stores themselves.

One of the first stores we found, a Salvation Army thrift store, was dripping with gaming goods. I picked up several boxed Commodore 64 games (including Zork I and Scrabble), a book on beating Super Mario Brothers, and a copy of B-17 Bomber for 18 cents. There was a lot of other stuff there as well, like a boxed TI-994a (way overpriced at $8) and lots of PC odds and ends.

From there though, things began to go downhill. One problem was our list. Many of the stores listed under “thrift stores” on Google were not what I was looking for. Unfortunately, we didn’t find this out until we arrived at the stores themselves. For example one store, “New To You” turned out to sell refurbished furniture. No games there! Another store, “Home for Habitat Thrift”, only sold refurbished and cheap building supplies. I figured it was going to be a regular thrift store, like the Pets and People and League of the Blind stores.

Even worse was the quality of some of the stores. I like antique stores like I like garage sales. If you’re trying to make a living off of your prices, I’m probably not going to like your store. If you’re trying to get rid of stuff for pennies on the dollar, I’ll shop there all day long! One store we went to had vinyl records for $10 and paperback books for half their retail price.

At one antique store I found some antique software. Alone in the Dark and Faery Tale Adventure for the PC, along with a trackball which says “MS-DOS compatible” on the side of the box. I picked up all 3 for $10, just because it was a find. The clerk had actually offered to take $25 for the entire shelf, but most of the other programs there were applications and utilities from the same era. $3.33 per title isn’t the greatest deal in the world, but the place had air conditioning (most of the other places we visited didn’t) and so I felt like buying something just to help out with their electricity bill.

One cool thing we found in Wichita Falls was a pamphlet that had the locations of all the other antique malls and thrift stores in town. This was a great opportunity for the GPS to shine, and it led us from location to location with relatively no problems (any errors that cropped into our navigation were usually due to operator error).

Along with all those other stores, Wichita Falls also has a Hastings, a GameStop and a few other gaming stores. Once we had sufficiently pilfered the town and our bellies were full of Applebees grub, we hit the road and headed out to Lawton, OK, home of Fort Sill and many other shopping targets.

Unfortunately since we had spent so much time running back and forth across Wichita Falls, we were running out of time. We were afraid that many of the places we had planned on stopping at in Lawton would close at 5pm and we didn’t arrive in town until 5:30pm. First, we punched in The Stranger’s list of bookstores. Unfortunately, our Internet listing turned out to be a bust. Some of the stores had moved, some had closed down, and one turned out to be an Adult bookstore. I got excited when I saw the word “arcade” on the front window but The Stranger informed me that it didn’t mean what I thought it did.

Lawton, especially near Ft. Sill, turned out to be pretty run down and rough. We did not have the courage to enter “Big Mama’s Thrift” after watching an old drunk black man wearing a lampshade on his head come staggering by and walking into the place. The GameCrazy we stumbled upon was also in a seemingly rough area. I found a loose SNES in a Goodwill store but left it, nodding at the kid behind the counter in the Dead Kennedys shirt on the way out.

And that is how I spent twelve hours yesterday – driving, navigating, shopping and (of course) singing along to 80’s tunes (a staple of every road trip). Lawton and Archer City were kind of a bust but Wichita Falls was pretty cool. More than the game finds, we learned that we could plan and navigate ourselves from anywhere to anywhere with the help of the GPS unit and a few addresses. Who knows where our next trip will lead us!

McBacon
07-16-2005, 12:51 PM
Haha, thats a cool story. We need to make a list of shops and places in lots of areas, for these, to reduce the amount of furniture stores and lampshade hat boutiques.

And you didn't come home empty handed ;)

maxlords
07-16-2005, 01:04 PM
Yes, arcade has MORE than one meaning. Beware!

Lothars
07-16-2005, 01:09 PM
Great Story

that actually sound like a really good plan to do that,

but i don't have a gps and not really planning to get one,

o well it's all good

Mr.FoodMonster
07-16-2005, 01:34 PM
Cool story.

I just went to google maps, and did a local search. I just found quite a few new possible places that might have games. Awesome.

Flack
07-16-2005, 07:37 PM
Cool story.

I just went to google maps, and did a local search. I just found quite a few new possible places that might have games. Awesome.

We've done that on a couple of trips and it's worked out reasonable well. However, the addition of a GPS to the mix adds two new variables.

One, you can add new places to the route reasonable easy. Just like when we got those new addresses, I was able to simple punch them in and alter the route.

But more importantly, I can now never, ever get lost. I am the world's worst at directions. With the GPS I can now wander around any city and not worry that I'll never find home again. At any given point in time I can click on "back on route" and it'll instantly figure the quickest and simplest way to get me back on my way.

BTW, the GPS I got came with the unit that connects to my laptop and the software and was $79. They have comparable hand held units.

AFGiant
07-16-2005, 11:13 PM
Cool story.

slownerveaction
07-16-2005, 11:42 PM
You have a friend called the Stranger? Do you actually refer to him as that in person, a la the Dude in the Big Lebowski? If so, that's freakin' awesome.

Cool story... I'd like to try out something like this some day.

Qixmaster
07-17-2005, 01:12 PM
nice story rob :)

I've been wanting to do something like that for the longest time... just not in texas. Oregon has SOOOOO many goldmines, i just have to get some free time and a dependable car.

Hope your next venture is a little more sucessful!
-Josh

ubikuberalles
07-17-2005, 06:06 PM
Excellent story Flack! Excellent use of your GPS too!

I have a portable GPS but my use has been limited to when I go hiking or Geocaching. Nevertheless it is still quite fun.

The GPS is accurate to less than 20 feet but that sometimes is no help when the Geocache site says the cache is in a rock crevice and, when I take a look around, there's about a hundred big rocks within twenty feet of my position. :hmm: However, after a few minutes of looking for the cache, I realize that I'm having fun since I'm on the last stage of a treasure hunt. :)

Using the GPS for hiking can be a little humbling, especially the first time. After nearly two hours of hiking and huffing and puffing up the foothills, I stopped to look back on my progress. Far below me I can barely see my car, a tiny dot in the mesa below and I thought, "Wow! I must of hiked three or four miles!" I look at the GPS and discover, to my dismay, that I only hiked a mile and a half! :/ My confidence returned quickly, however, when I also discovered that I also gained about 3,000 feet in elevation! :)

I'm pretty handy with a map and haven't had a need for a GPS on my road trips (thank AAA for their Trip-Tiks!). However I wish I had my GPS with me on the final miles of my trip to CGE last year. I got within two miles of the hotel and became totally lost. The instructions from the hotel website were worthless and, after following them, I ended up in some small neighborhood instead of the hotel. If I had my GPS handy then I would have made it without any problems. Instead I ended up calling Pantechnicon, who was already at the Hotel, for help.

Sorry about my babbling but I think GPSes are cool. 8-) Flack, I really REALLY like they way you used your GPS. I should try that sometime myself whenever I'm out of town (no point of doing it in town since I already know the location most of the bookstores and thrift stores here).

EDIT:


Other than Booked Up, there’s not much else to see in Archer City. Two blocks in any direction of the store, the town quickly fades into barren hay fields. There’s a Sonic on one end of town and a McDonald’s on the other, with a couple of gas stations in between.

What? No Dairy Queen? It's not a proper Texan town without a Dairy Queen! ROFL Well, at least they had a Sonic.

Flack
07-17-2005, 06:16 PM
I think both laptop-based and handheld GPS units have their advantages and disadvantages. I would imagine the software based ones have many more options, but are a bit more cumbersome to bring with you (and downright impossible to use in a hiking scenario).

I am the absolute worst at directions and maps. I still have to say "never ... eat ... sour ... watermelon" when reading a map and I usually have to rotate and flip them around so I can figure out if I'll be turning left or right at a particular intersection. My spacial skills are non-existant. The reason I am so afraid of getting lost and/or turned around is because it's happened to me so many times. :) If I stop off in a town on a road trip I will usually try and keep the interstate in view just so I can find it again. So for me, the GPS is more than just a tool, it's my freedom and the confidence to wander about knowing I'll always be able to find my way back (think hi-tech bread crumb trail!).

Oh, and I don't call my friend "the stranger" in real life. I call him "the f'in stranger". It's a long story (or sometimes I call him Stephen).

§ Gideon §
07-18-2005, 05:14 AM
Haha. I've learned from your articles that I'll basically enjoy anything you write, and your road trip story is no exception. Thanks for sharing. :)

I probably would have taken my chances in Big Mama's thrift, though. I mean, there could be a great deal just waitin' there!