Thursday, July 14, 2016

The Perils of Flying Commercial Airlines

Oh boy howdy, do I have some things to say to American Airlines....Beware: long rant coming.

Flight 748 to Madrid was probably the most mishandled flight that I have ever been on. I kept saying, "Well this isn't the worse transit experience that I've ever had." But, i feel like now...it has been! In addition to the flight ultimately being cancelled, there are additional factors that made last night’s experience from 3PM-4AM hellish.

1. Boarding and deplaning 3 times! First when the power failed, second when the power failed again, and third when we taxied out from the gate and returned. This is no 20-person puddle jumper…it was a 747(?) with 200+ people on it: kids, babies, elderly – all going overseas with all their stuff.  I mean, yes, I want to be on a safe and comfortable plane but if you think it’s unsafe, don’t let us board in the first place!

2. Staff unfriendliness – Yes, I get it…people are being irate and your bosses are probably not telling you everything, but at least you can be personable and friendly! You can take the initiative to ask if anyone needs water or a snack since we WERE expecting dinner on the plane.  You don’t have to yell at every patron who complains or asks you a question that you don’t know the answer to.

3. Lying to us about everything. Here are some of the lies the told:
 - When the power went out the first time, “Oh. We are on the airport’s power now and the guys below just unplugged us.”
- When the power went out a second time, “We don’t know anything.”
- When we were boarded the last time and were delayed, “One of the passengers had an emergency and can’t take the flight so we are just waiting for their bags to be unloaded because for security reasons we can’t take them with us.” And then, “Now we are just waiting for air traffic control to clear our route.” And then, “So, we are being rerouted because our emergency airport has such bad weather that we can’t land there. So we are going back to the gate to get more fuel.” And then, “You can choose to get off and try and get a flight for tomorrow but they are all oversold.” And finally, “We have been told that this plane is not the one we’ll be taking, but there’s another one at the gate next door with a new crew that you’ll be on.”
- When we were waiting for the “new” plane (at 11PM):   “We found a captain, just have to wait for him to arrive. It’ll just be a little while.” Then, the AA app told us our flight was leaving @ 1AM.
- When some of the crew arrived, we then got a notification that the flight had been cancelled, “Folks, we have heard that some of you got an electronic notification that the flight has been cancelled. It has definitely not been…we are going!” Followed by, “We were just told that the flight was cancelled.”
- When we heard officially that the flight was cancelled, “Sorry folks all the hotels in this area are sold out. We are trying to find more.” And then,”Actually all the hotels that we can give vouchers for are sold out. We are trying to get you cots.” And then, “sorry we can’t get any cots, but we have blankets and pillows.” NOTE: the hotels were NOT sold out, and when we finally got one @ the Clarion Ramada, the lady at the desk told us that they take airline vouchers all the time.


Conclusion: American Airlines and the staff DID NOT do all they could to ensure that the delay was as painless as possible. They DID NOT  do all they could to reroute people until they started getting angry and pushy.  And they DEFINITELY DID NOT do anything to make me want to fly them ever again (if at all possible). 

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Personal Statement


My name is Lindsay Clark and I am a Linguistic Annotator for the University of Colorado.  I have been working in the natural language processing and social media listening industries for the past six years.  I am well versed in data curation, ontology management and the organization of annotation teams.

I currently work with the University of Colorado’s Linguistics Department on various language annotation projects.  During graduate school, I co-managed the Verb Sense Disambiguation Project in which we created mappings between verbs and their definitions by compiling from several online databases.  I am now participating in multiple projects involving sense mapping and word disambiguation, entity detection, argument mapping, part-of-speech annotation, and sense alignment.
I am also currently working with Appen as a contract linguist assisting with annotation and piloting new NLP projects.  I have experience directing projects and managing teams through CrowdFlower, an online crowd-sourcing tool as well as annotation tools such as Knowtator, WebAnno and Anaphora. To facilitate these projects, I have had training in Python, XML, SQL, Unix command line and C++ programming languages as well as formal linguistic training. My position prior to this was as a senior annotator with J.D. Power working with consumer survey and social media data for market research.  Lastly, I have had training in German, Spanish, and Italian which was my language focus in college.  I also lived in Italy for a year.

I am searching for new opportunities in the field of computational language and natural language processing. I am very interested in using my experience in linguistic annotation, foreign language, social media demographics, market research, and ontology analysis to manage other employees and create successful project timelines. My years as an annotator have given me first-hand knowledge that will allow me lead a team of annotators efficiently and successfully.  These skills can assist companies to further advance their projects in the fields of Analytic Linguistics and Natural Language Processing.

I am looking to be a part of a modern, forward-thinking company that is making great headway in the computer technology industry.  I am highly motivated and enjoy project planning, organization and management.  I am a quick learner and prefer working with new technologies, processes and methodologies.  I am looking for a team of like-minded and motivated individuals, and am able to adapt to changing deadlines and project demands.  I am willing to relocate.

Thank you for your consideration,

Lindsay Clark