facejournal and sleep
Sep. 8th, 2010 01:53 pm(There's also a side trip through the creepiness of Facebook's new "Stalk this person" feature. Which just ick no. I anticipate that by this time next year I'll have done what I can to purge my Facebook account as well.)
Still tired. Still writing up Key West (it was awesome). Likely to go home and faceplant for eight hours and wake up around two in the morning. Sleeping on planes works better when you can lean back in your seat, and when the guy next to you doesn't insist on trying to ram his elbow into your ribs, and when the flight doesn't arrive 45 minutes early thus shorting you out of three-quarters of an hour of uneasy but still much missed sleep. Bleh.
(Lessons learned: first, stay the hell away from Airtran. Second, with transit costs BWI may not actually be all that much cheaper than National. Third, do not rely on transit to get home from BWI.)
no subject
Date: 2010-09-09 02:07 am (UTC)The last time I booked through a service, the airline canceled the flight I'd chosen and rebooked me on another set of flights. But (we'll say) Orbitz also noticed the cancellation and then "helpfully" changed my itinerary again. This time with an extra plane change. There were, however, much better itineraries available, but Orbitz wouldn't give me that without charging a change fee. I had to call up the airline to switch to it. Orbitz then switched it _back_ to the bad itinerary, and I had to get it fixed again. I finally got them to explain _why_ they kept giving me the weird flight plan. They said this was the only way to ensure that I'd still be going through Salt Lake City. It took a surprising amount of effort to explain that I didn't give a good goddamn which airport I changed planes at; I really only cared about the origin and destination.
It worked out and everyone was _trying_ to be helpful, even if they failed. The real problem is the booking agency and the airline not communicating and overriding each other. By booking with the airline, I reduced the number of people that can screw things up.
I've also had issues with my employer's travel agent (whom we're required to use for business travel). They booked my flight twice last year and canceled the duplicate ticket. However, they wouldn't refund the extra payment, and gave me an unusable credit on the airline. Our travel office eventually ate the cost and reimbursed me, but I'm sure we wasted more money in staff hours sorting this out than the ticket was worth.
no subject
Date: 2010-09-09 01:20 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-09-09 01:48 pm (UTC)