“Highway” on back side of Haleakala (i.e. on southern coast of Maui, gotten to on the road from Kula (upcountry), not from Kihei.
I just like how this road with signs stretches towards the ocean…

Also, I recently added photos to previous blog entries: metro (subway) notes and DMZ
Interesting notes from the Dec issue of United’s Hemispheres inflight magazine (appeared early on Nov 30):
I experienced 2 very different airport lounges in Tokyo, one in each direction, as a Star Alliance gold member).
Frankly, I was disappointed that I didn’t get to go back to the Asiana lounge on my 6 hour layover coming back westbound.
Here are the front and back of the most common bills and coins I ran across.
Bills: W10,000/$9, W5,000/$4.50, W1,0000/$0.90
Coins: W500/$0.44, W100/$0.09, W50/$0.045 (ok, this last one wasn’t actually that common)
Read more about the South Korean Won on Wikipedia.
One more short flight from ORD to YYZ, can’t wait to be done with flights. Until Tuesday that is 
I actually met a United Global Services member (that’s United’s top elite tier that is invite-only) in NRT lounge – he was flying the same ICN-NRT-GUM-SFO flights, and then I coincidentally sat next to him on the NRT-GUM flight. He gave me some good tips regarding the perks I’ll be receiving as my elite level increases.
On my SFO-ORD leg, the lady next to me (in first class) is a 1K member, who coincidentally flew out of Istanbul on Turkish Airlines the very same morning I did two weeks ago (albeit to Toronto instead of my flight to Chicago)! It’s a small world after all…
Korea, and Seoul in particular, is one of the most wired places on earth. Or should that be most wireless places on earth?
Internet access is very fast (speedtest.net showed 30/10 Mbps down/up at my hostel, about 10 times the speed in North America).
Many cafes, restaurants and bars have free wifi (though Starbucks does not).
There is wi-fi across much of the city, though not free. I didn’t need it enough, but I think it was $2-3/day.
Around town (and especially in metro stations), they have large touch screens with area information, including google satellite map of the area. Very cool.
Surprisingly my GSM phone did roam in Seoul (and Tokyo airport), though I didn’t make calls. (Tip: if you call your phone from Skype in order to check voicemail, turn off your phone first or you may be hit with roaming fees; also, you might need to wait an hour for the phone to be unregistered from the roaming network).
“Seoul Subway” Android app by Sungpil Jang (probably an IPhone version too) – way cool, even offline. Even offline (i.e. no data plan nor wi-fi connection), it will calculate a route between 2 stations including times of the next train(s), and tell you the car and door number for quickest transfer between lines (i.e. where the stairs/hallway to the next metro line is exactly).
The Metro (subway) reminded me of the one in Taipei, i.e. efficient and easy to use:
Small negatives:
Sitting in lounge in SFO, catching up on Seoul blog.
Managed 2.5 hours of light sleep in lounge in Guam.
Also slept lightly most of the way on the 5 hour overnight HNL-SFO leg.
So I’m feeling ok, despite having been travelling for 41 hours already.
Side note on upgrades:
I didn’t get upgraded HNL-SFO, though surprisingly there were no 1K status folk above me on the list – with one exception, they were same level as me (Star Alliance Gold) but must have been travelling on higher fare classes (not surprisingly, given my cheap ticket). So there is hope yet for when I hit 1K status.
I did get upgraded on both SFO-ORD-YYZ legs a few days ago, which is surprising (though it was an expensive ticket). Now I see there at least 11 people on the upgrade list for SFO-ORD and only 2 seats left in first class for them.