Yes but it was pretty much a whole in the ground nothing major it was prep work then there was no mountain or metal frame.I have pics from the construction in November 2011.
Yes but it was pretty much a whole in the ground nothing major it was prep work then there was no mountain or metal frame.I have pics from the construction in November 2011.
You can change your ride times once your there but it does get risky the day of or hours before you want to go on the ride. Usually a day or two before you have a good range of times. But if you wait until an hour or so before you want to ride then you might be out of luck. Most people that I have heard from say you only have these problems on the major rides. I myself will most likely never plan 60 days out for a ride but a week away thats different.I must not be understanding FP+ then. I thought the entire point was to "reserve" rides you want at a specific time 60 days in advance. Then, from what I've heard, once you're there it's really hard to change anything because FP+'s are not available so close to the actual time. If what you said were in fact the case, it might not be that bad. That's what I hate. While I like to plan ahead, I don't like to commit to something as specific as a ride that far out. Much more stressful than walking around the parks and deciding that day what you'd like to enjoy a little later on. FP- always worked like a charm for us. And just so you know - I have absolutely no desire to go to Toy Story Mania, so I'm going to have to disagree with your thought that it's the only attraction worth planning in advance.
It's still in testing disney has not seen the full out come of its finished product and I think once its finished it will offer more of a service than legacy FP did. The whole mm+ system is to make everything you do on property simpler and easier to use and do. Tap to enter room, tap to enter park, make dining reservations, tap to buy merchandise, book a fastpass weeks in advance, use fastpass for parades, fireworks and shows. All of that is more than there was before, the problem right now is the glitches that haven't been worked out yet.Am I the only one that thinks this plan is horrible? Why continue to pay the high price of a disney vacation when in fact they are offering less of a service. We used to hit the parks running in the morning and keep going all day long, riding as much as we could as often as we could. The new system sounds like you can't do that. It just doesn't sound fun at all.
It's still in testing disney has not seen the full out come of its finished product and I think once its finished it will offer more of a service than legacy FP did. The whole mm+ system is to make everything you do on property simpler and easier to use and do. Tap to enter room, tap to enter park, make dining reservations, tap to buy merchandise, book a fastpass weeks in advance, use fastpass for parades, fireworks and shows. All of that is more than there was before, the problem right now is the glitches that haven't been worked out yet.
I agree with you to an extent I think with the addition of shows parades and fireworks they should add more than three fast passes but I think they have to stick withy the tiered option as well.I want to make this clear, I think the overall project of MDE is fantastic, I love the idea of the magic bands, the ease of use for everything else, and the "key less" entry to your room. I just don't like the FP+ aspect of the entire thing. It's too much planning, but that's my opinion.
I want to make this clear, I think the overall project of MDE is fantastic, I love the idea of the magic bands, the ease of use for everything else, and the "key less" entry to your room. I just don't like the FP+ aspect of the entire thing.
It's too much planning, but that's my opinion.
By their own admission, the bands are simply an easier way for Disney to collect data, get you to spend more money, and control your time and actions. End of story.
The mystery to me is...
What is the big deal of putting a band next to the door lock vs inserting a card. Basically the same motion.
FP+ is a big question since they haven't said anything about passholders and what we will get yet. When we go to the parks, we never get that many fast passes anyway. Line too long, we will get it next time.
The old locks were cumbersome, expensive, and prone to failure...
They may have saved money there.
Personal experience
How does this work? Do you just walk by and see your picture on a poster as surprise pixie dust?They are testing some pretty cool things at the All Star Resorts and Brown Derby with your picture showing up on magazine covers and posters. I know a lot of people will poo poo on those items but I think it is great.
How does this work? Do you just walk by and see your picture on a poster as surprise pixie dust?
I expect this technology is going to let them keep rolling out pixie dust situations. No doubt, they are going to hope to cash in on these pixie dust situation.
One of the old film safe x-ray proof pouches shoud do nicely!No more free data from me.
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The pixie dust really is to Disney's benefit as it's really incentive for guests to keep the bands on our wrists the entire day instead of sticking them in a bag that may have blocking capabilities. They know companies are working on stronger blocking protection though it may not exist yet.
I'm not really one of those people who is overly concerned about tracking and being herded around the park but I don't think we should lose sight of the fact that this is all to Disney's benefit, not for our convenience, enjoyment, or real pixie dust.
Well, technically nothing any company does is for the customer-- everything is geared around making a profit, masked as customer benefits. This idea is not new for Disney-- Walt started it many years ago.