Torrent Lonely Planet Vietnam Pdf

Lonely Planet Country Guide has 186 entries in the series. Planet Country Guide (Series). Lonely Planet Author (2014). Cover image of Vietnam Travel Guide. If you're looking for a Lonely Planet pdf free download or a Lonely Planet ebook. To Lonely Planet Spain (or Greece, Thailand, Bali, Vietnam.

Lonely

Great article Matt, I recently bought the latest edition of the LP guide to Mexico & wish I hadn’t bothered. As guides book go, for me, Rough Guides is a much better option. I prefer the style much better. But the real disappointment is that there are little to no budget accommodation recommendations for many places. Which as an experienced traveller you know is BS, but if you are new to travelling I think it’s really unfair because you could end up skipping somewhere due to presuming – on LP’s reputable advice – that you can’t afford those prices. Wow, I haven’t thought about the thorn tree message board for years! Back when I took my first RTW trip in 2002, the TT was THE place to go for information.

I just looked at it again for old times sake, and it’s a sad shell of what it used to be. Unfortunately I don’t even know where to go anymore for real time discussions about destinations.

Thorntree used to be for budget travelers, Trip Advisor seems to be full of package and cruise ship travelers, blog comment sections aren’t real time enough. I miss that community for sure.

7d drivers manual massachusetts rmv. Thanks for an interesting article documenting the downfall of a once great company. I haven’t bought a LP guide since collegenot so much because I noticed a decline in quality at the time, I think it just became easier to do research and find up to date info on cool spots online. Ironic that their website seems to be providing an abbreviated version of what you can find on Google.

I do think there’s still a gap to be filled that they’re missing out on, though. While it is easy to find a lot of info with a Google search, it’s the curation that’s lacking. Even if I find a popular blog post with a “guide” to the city or country I’m visiting, very few are really authorities (i.e. The blogger only spent a week there). This article explains so much! For a few years now I’ve harbored growing doubts about LP. It’s so horribly obvious when a brand goes into bland profiteering mode.

Their look and feel lost all it’s soul when they were taken over. And you’re right about the increasing lack of organisation in the way the guides are structured and worse still, the recycling of old information. I feel quite cheated to hear these guides are being written from an office rather than on location, although it doesn’t surprise me. I’ve often gone out of my way to stay or eat at one of their recommendations and then spent my time there suspiciously contemplating whether the author had perhaps been bribed. I still buy Lonely Planet guides to plan my trips but they’re more like a book case souvenir now than an actual resource. I lost faith in them when they started to sell PDF chapters for destinations.