Looking for a more powerful way to search for inexpensive flights? - tia more condition_symptoms
FareChase find things missing, such as Yahoo and equivalent instruments at sites like Travelocity to. Anyone who know the power and flexibility of SQL, what I mean.
In particular, I sought a way to make the kind of research to:
Alert me start a new search of 1 or more hits:
For each of the following airports: LGA, NRC, JFK, BDL, search for flights from the following airports: DFW, LAX, NRT, BIM, beginning on Friday and return 3 days after arrival (Sunday below) for less than $ 600 .
What's new New in this quest is the ability of airports geographically independent, and the ability to search for flights or on arrival on a weekday instead of a beach with a specific date or date of the group.
Now I am almost sure there is no search tool to run the example I wrote here. Do you know what? And if there is no way for you to do it now, can that be?
TIA!
Friday, November 6, 2009
Tia More Condition_symptoms Looking For A More Powerful Way To Search For Inexpensive Flights?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comments:
I agree that it would be a really useful service. I am looking for a tool that is overlooking an airport for a period of time (3-6 days maximum, and not very flexible) and a range of prices and provide a list of goals that are consistent. Not think that one or the other!
Any experienced DBA can write this kind of consultation, if you have access to the database. I think it is a matter of cost and return on investment and market potential.
The type of trip you want --- and the guy I want to do --- not very common in the United States. Business people are not too concerned about the cost, but they have the dates and airports, leisure travelers have been fixed at the time, to a certain extent, but may delay his journey to get better price. The mentality of "I want to go to DFW, do not care if they can stop the time JFK and pay less than $ 600" did not match any of these categories. And since these two groups of people in most of the U.S. population, flying trips (not too many people, just because
Post a Comment