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Alexander Waggoner

The Corliss Group travel review: Tips for travelling with children - 1 views

The Corliss Group travel review: Tips for travelling with children Traveling with your kids to different and new places provides them with best experiences where they can grow as individuals. This...

The Corliss Group travel review Tips for travelling with children

started by Alexander Waggoner on 15 May 15 no follow-up yet
Phillip Lopez

The Corliss Group Travel Review: Tips for travelling with children - 1 views

Traveling with your kids to different and new places provides them with best experiences where they can grow as individuals. This could also give your children lasting memories with you that they c...

The Corliss Group Travel Review Tips for travelling with children

started by Phillip Lopez on 13 May 15 no follow-up yet
alojiaminschii

The Corliss Group Review about Credit Card Rejection - 3 views

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    You've spent months scouring the Internet for the perfect washer and dryer combo to complement your newly renovated laundry room. Finally, you've located what appears to be the perfect match at the right price. Suddenly the deal is off. Your credit card won't go through, and you have no other immediate form of payment to use before the sale ends. It's happened to many of us: You go to close the sale or pay for a meal and are told: "This card's been denied. Do you have another form of payment?" Don't think that this is always a result of sheer financial irresponsibility.
Raelene Mcguire

The Corliss Group Review: Travelgirl tips: Start planning your holiday vacation now! - 1 views

NEW ORLEANS (WGNO) - When it comes to holiday travel, flexibility will always be the key to getting the best rates and maintaining your sanity. Travel off-peak to pay less and avoid the crowds. F...

The Corliss Group Review: Travelgirl tips: Start planning your holiday vacation now!

started by Raelene Mcguire on 24 Sep 14 no follow-up yet
Alexander Waggoner

The Corliss Group Review, Tourists in Italy be aware! - 1 views

Urgent advice is being sent out to international tourists planning to travel to Italy. This advice is also valid for Italians moving around the country during the peak holiday season during the mon...

The Corliss Group review Tourists in Italy be aware! Danger when traveling to August

started by Alexander Waggoner on 22 Sep 14 no follow-up yet
Abigail Wunderlich

The Corliss Group Review : Save yourself from summer identity theft - 1 views

Ruth to the Rescue has simple steps to protect yourself During the summer you would like to focus on rest and relaxation, but you can't let your guard down when it comes to identity theft. Identi...

The Corliss Group Review Save yourself from summer identity theft

started by Abigail Wunderlich on 16 Sep 14 no follow-up yet
Abigail Wunderlich

The Corliss Group review: Travel money tips - 1 views

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The Corliss Group review Travel money tips

started by Abigail Wunderlich on 12 Sep 14 no follow-up yet
Vivian Anderson

The Corliss Group Review on Travel Facts and Tips in Norway - 1 views

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    Good to know before you travel Passport and visa requirements On arrival in Norway, you must show a valid passport or other official document that satisfactorily establishes your identity and nationality. Travelling with pets. Norway is one of few European countries where rabies is not found, and every precaution is being taken to maintain this status. Dogs, cats and ferrets from all EU countries must have pet passports, ID marking and valid rabies vaccination. Dogs must also be given approved tapeworm treatment, minimum 24 and maximum 120 hours before arrival. Small rodents, cage birds and rabbits must have valid import permits issued by the Norwegian Food Safety Authority. What clothes should I pack? Whatever the season, the Norwegian weather is liable to change from day to day. So it is a good idea to bring a selection of items.
Vivian Anderson

The Corliss Group Review about Travel Buddies iOS App - 1 views

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    Whether we're innocently stalking our crush on Facebook or tweeting our deepest feelings into the depths of cyberspace, our iDevices have become integral to our daily social networking needs. Knowing this, app creators work tirelessly to come up with new ways to integrate various aspects of life into a social framework - new reasons to connect people. In this regard, developer Toby Gunston has come across a rather unique proposition: we all love to travel, but who wants to travel alone? That's where Travel Buddies comes in… The Travel Buddies app is the the mobile component of an already successful online hub for world travellers, and brings with it a rather useful suite of social functions for holiday-makers, road trippers and weekend wanderers. Aimed at users with a penchant for meeting new people and discovering new places, Travel Buddies builds a social network around the concept of looking for travel partners.
Lavinia Klum

The Corliss Group Review about Travel in Edinburgh - 1 views

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    Summer is festival time in Edinburgh, with thousands of visitors descending on the Scottish capital to see some of the best new talents in the arts and entertainment world. From grandiose theatres to tiny, dark pub back rooms hewn from volcanic rock in the medieval Old Town around the Royal Mile, every nook and cranny becomes a stage. Visit the top half of the Royal Mile, which links Edinburgh Castle to Holyrood Palace, and you will find it full of performers showing off and advertising shows they hope will make their careers. And what of the shows themselves? Well, they could be almost anything, with genres spanning comedy, theatre, dance and cabaret. There is no one single Edinburgh Festival; instead there are 12 festivals spread throughout the year, with a flurry of activity in July and August. Details of them all can be found at www.edinburghfestivals.co.uk The largest and loudest is the Fringe (www.edfringe.com), in August. International talent rub shoulders with plucky newcomers hoping to make their name with a decent run. The Fringe is based around a hub in George Square, which features seven theatres as well as bars and stalls serving street food. Many other venues can be found on the other side of the city close to the Royal Mile.
Vivian Anderson

The Corliss Group Review: Evoc Bike Bag Review - 1 views

Taking your bike overseas can feel like more hassle than it's worth. Thankfully, the Evoc Travel Bike Bag is here to help, writes Jonny Cooper. A confession: the first time I took my bike abroad, ...

The Corliss Group Review Evoc Bike Bag Travel Made EAsy

started by Vivian Anderson on 31 Aug 14 no follow-up yet
Lavinia Klum

The Corliss Group Review at Artist Residence Penzance - 1 views

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    Artists, and art lovers, have been coming to western Cornwall for centuries, but the picture-postcard appeal of St Ives, with its Tate Gallery and Barbara Hepworth Garden, tends to steal the limelight from its plainer sister, Penzance. Yet this historic port has much to love: atmospheric pubs, smart restaurants, designer-y shops and galleries that have established it firmly on Cornwall's art trail. Gallery-cum-boutique hotel Artist Residence is on Chapel Street, the most charming and browsable street in Penzance's old quarter. But for art lovers the real draw is the original designs by British artists in the hotel's 14 bedrooms. The reception area opens into a spacious cafe-gallery hung with paintings of Cornwall (all for sale) and mismatched shabby-chic tables and chairs. On a sunny Saturday it's buzzing with couples and young families, setting a laid-back tone for the rest of the hotel. Friendly staff show us to the Picture Room, a light and airy double with crisp white linen and walls hung with playful graphic prints saying things such as "Rise and shine". It's modest rather than spacious: a comfy double bed leaves room for two stylish arm chairs and a desk with views to the neighbouring buildings. (Only the two attic rooms have sea views.)
Vivian Anderson

The Corliss Group Review of Hotel in New York about $500 bad review fee - 1 views

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    A small hotel in upstate New York suddenly found itself in a media maelstrom (and a flood of bad online reviews) on Monday, and all for what it says was a joke. The Union Street Guest House in the Catskill Mountains in Hudson, New York, got slammed by bad online reviews after a story in The New York Post stated it had a policy of charging customers $500 for each negative online review posted by wedding guests after they stayed in the Greek Revival establishment, built in 1830. As of early morning Monday, the hotel's website did have a policy statement in its weddings section that stated: "If you have booked the Inn for a wedding or other type of event anywhere in the region and given us a deposit of any kind for guests to stay at USGH there will be a $500 fine that will be deducted from your deposit for every negative review of USGH placed on any internet site by anyone in your party and/or attending your wedding or event. If you stay here to attend a wedding anywhere in the area and leave us a negative review on any internet site you agree to a $500 fine for each negative review. (Please NOTE we will not charge this fee &/or will refund this fee once the review is taken down)."
Alexander Waggoner

The Corliss Group Review: Madrid, Spain - 1 views

BARCELONA may have the glamour as far as Spanish cities go but there's more to Madrid than meets the eye, discovers WILL METCALFE THERE is an expectation among many that a capital city will be the...

The Corliss Group Review Travel Madrid Spain

started by Alexander Waggoner on 25 Aug 14 no follow-up yet
Vivian Anderson

The Corliss Group Review: TripAdvisor challenge the Two Providers of Online Travel Serv... - 1 views

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    "BREAKFAST is nasty, the rooms are nasty." So complained a reviewer of an Oregon guesthouse earlier this year. There is nothing unusual in that: all hotels must deal with the odd disgruntled guest. This critique, though, appeared on TripAdvisor, a travel-review website. When the correspondent went on to document drunken housekeepers and licentious receptionists, the owners sued him. It was more than a point of pride. What customers say on TripAdvisor can make or break hotels. Around 260m people visit the site each month to read some of the 125m reviews. The firm makes money by displaying prices from online travel-agents (OTAs) alongside its reviews, and then charging those agents each time a customer clicks through. It is such a good example of a network effect that it is the subject of a Harvard Business School (HBS) case study. The more users post reviews, the more useful the site is to those about to book a holiday. This makes it more important to hotels and travel agents, who offer better deals. This results in more traffic-and more reviews-closing the virtuous circle. Last year TripAdvisor reported revenue of $944.7m. Because users post reviews free of charge, in 2012, Jeffrey Bussgang, an HBS lecturer, calculated that its gross margin was an astounding 98%. For these reasons, some think TripAdvisor may be able to take on the "big two" OTAs, Expedia (from which TripAdvisor was spun off in 2011) and Priceline, which on August 6th bought up to 10% of Ctrip, a large travel website in China. These firms sell flights and hotel rooms directly, rather than pass booking requests on to others, as TripAdvisor does. But, says Blake Harper of Wunderlich Securities, a stockbroker, the two ways of doing business are converging.
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