Friday, December 30, 2005

Re: [traveling online] Mining Local Data for the Digital Maps Race

Digital Maps Going Beyond the Roads



NEW YORK (AP) -- You can pull up satellite and aerial images, discover neighborhood jazz clubs and check the latest traffic conditions. You can even get some rail schedules and, hopefully one day, tips on foot and bike trails through parks.

Digital maps produce so much more than driving directions these days.

And as features get added, mapping companies are having to build better technologies and find better sources of data - including their own users.

Microsoft Corp. is working on a mechanism that would have avid mountain bikers, for example, collectively plot good trails. Yahoo Inc. is appealing to its users to add information on local businesses and places of interest. Yahoo even recently bought Upcoming.org, a collaborative calendar of events.

"More and more data has to become available to provide these kinds of great offerings," said Jeremy Kreitler, Yahoo's senior product manager for maps. "These kinds of information will come from people around local areas contributing."

Online mapping is hot and highly competitive. Nielsen/NetRatings recorded a 28 percent jump in visitors this year, with one-third of Web users visiting at least one mapping site in November.

Microsoft, Yahoo, MapQuest and Google Inc. get their primary data from two companies, Navteq Corp. and Tele Atlas NV, both of which have been aggressively canvassing the nation's highways and byways to keep their databases complete and accurate.

Data companies are typically paid for each map consumers generate. Christian Dwyer, MapQuest's director of operations, estimates that driving directions cost his company a penny apiece and a static map much less - expenses recouped through sales of ads displayed at the site.

To set themselves apart, mapping providers must decide individually which of the various attributes provided by Navteq and Tele Atlas to emphasize: Is speed limit more important than distance? Would it make sense to take a highway for just one exit?

MapQuest, for instance, assigns scores to various route alternatives based on number of turns, distance and other factors and, unless you tell its software engine to avoid all highways, it presents the route with the lowest score.

Mapping companies also must decide how much information to provide. Zoom out, and data on local streets only clutter the map even if the information is readily available.

Yahoo employs consumer focus groups to help it figure out the proper balance. It also dispatches motorist guinea pigs onto the road with driving directions, while employees tag along and watch how they fare.

"This is where it's more art than science," Kreitler said.

The basics have changed little since MapQuest's site opened nearly a decade ago, on Feb. 5, 1996. Where mapping providers differentiate themselves, then, is in the distinct features they offer.

Yahoo provides information on subway stations and is testing multiple-point directions, in case someone wants to stop off to buy a gift on the way to a friend's. Yahoo, along with Microsoft, also provides real-time traffic information for some cities.

Google and Microsoft have satellite imagery from private and government sources. Microsoft also is testing aerial, bird's-eye-view images and is working to create 3-D maps over Web browsers (Google does these through free software called Google Earth.)

The mapping providers also are working to get their products on mobile devices. And to make their services more useful, they've been merging maps with data on local businesses like shops, restaurants and theaters.

All this will require data well beyond what Navteq and Tele Atlas alone can provide.

Microsoft already has bought aerial images from a company called Pictometry International Corp., which provides bird's eye views, taken at 45 degree angles from four directions. As well, Microsoft is shopping around for altitude data required to create models of city buildings in 3-D.

And as Microsoft tries to fill in coverage gaps outside North America and Western Europe, it is looking for potential vendors in China, Japan and other countries, said Tom Bailey, director of marketing for Microsoft's mapping products.

Beyond that, there's talk of making maps friendlier to those who don't drive.

Google recently unveiled a prototype of its Transit Trip Planner. The tool checks bus and subway schedules for Portland, Ore., to plot the best itinerary. Google promises to add other cities, but offers no timetable.

Expanding the planner nationwide will be tough, though.

MapQuest, which Time Warner Inc.'s America Online unit bought in 2000, has considered such an offering for five years but has yet to assemble all the required subway, bus, train and taxi data or develop the right software to make sense of them all, said James Greiner, MapQuest's director of marketing.

Also a big challenge is creating directions for walking or biking. Even though the services are extending their offerings to wireless devices, mobile maps are geared toward driving.

It's simple to tell the computer that it's OK to travel both directions along a one-way street and to avoid highways; more difficult is programming the fact that you can cut through a park or along a path that may connect two dead-end streets.

But engineers still have much work to do on just the driving directions, said Bret Taylor, who oversees Google's mapping products.

For instance, exit numbers are important in some regions, but not in California, where they have been introduced gradually, Taylor said. The challenge, he said, is to figure out what's important where and to tailor directions accordingly.

"Our long-term goal is to have our product give directions that are as good as the taxi driver," he said. "Certainly it's not there yet."

---

Anick Jesdanun can be reached at netwriter(at)ap.org



On 12/30/05, andrew <noreply-comment@blogger.com> wrote:

Associated Press
In the arms race for digital map supremacy, Internet users are now becoming important tools for media firms. Yahoo!, for example, has directly appealed to its users to help them add local business information to its mapping services. Microsoft is asking mountain bikers to help them plot the best trails through parks. As more and more data is becoming available to digital map providers, consumer usage of digital maps seems to be increasing concurrently. According to audience measurement firm Nielsen/NetRatings, visitors to online maps increased 28 percent this year. In its article about the hot and competitive digital mapping business, the Associated Press compares the Web's most popular offerings from Google, Yahoo!, Microsoft, and MapQuest, revealing the various private and government sources they license their data from. - Read the whole story...



--
Posted by andrew to traveling online at 12/30/2005 11:53:30 AM

Mining Local Data for the Digital Maps Race

Associated Press
In the arms race for digital map supremacy, Internet users are now becoming important tools for media firms. Yahoo!, for example, has directly appealed to its users to help them add local business information to its mapping services. Microsoft is asking mountain bikers to help them plot the best trails through parks. As more and more data is becoming available to digital map providers, consumer usage of digital maps seems to be increasing concurrently. According to audience measurement firm Nielsen/NetRatings, visitors to online maps increased 28 percent this year. In its article about the hot and competitive digital mapping business, the Associated Press compares the Web's most popular offerings from Google, Yahoo!, Microsoft, and MapQuest, revealing the various private and government sources they license their data from. - Read the whole story...

Thursday, December 29, 2005

2006 hot spots include Colorado, China, Croatia

NEW YORK (AP) -- While travel to perennial favorites like Los Angeles, Orlando, New York and Las Vegas is always strong, some unexpected destinations -- from Colorado and Arizona to Croatia and China -- are showing up as hot spots for travel as the 2006 season begins.

Colorado: Colorado was tied with California and Alaska as top domestic destinations among tour companies surveyed by the U.S. Tour Operators Association, whose members send 11 million Americans on leisure tours around the world each year.

"Because of the year-round opportunities there for leisure, Colorado is very popular," said Bob Whitley, president of USTOA.

While Colorado is best-known for winter sports, some ski resorts are now open year-round for other types of recreation like mountain biking, according to John Metzger, spokesman for the Colorado Office of Economic Development. The state also offers hiking, whitewater rafting, kayaking and plenty of mountain-climbing. "We even have a wine country now -- yet another summer attraction," Metzger said.

Arizona: American Express Vacations reports that bookings to Hawaii are up substantially, but one of the biggest surprises domestically is a demand for spa and golf vacations in Arizona, according to Francesca Bonavita, the company's vice president of product and global brand development. "As a result, we've added this U.S. destination in our portfolio for 2006," Bonavita says.

Welness travel: The appeal of spa, golf and other types of R&R ties into another travel trend -- the rise of "wellness" vacations that combine fitness, yoga, massage, healthy menus and the like. "Wellness centers" are opening in places ranging from the Aerie Resort on Vancouver Island in British Columbia, Canada, to the Cambridge Beaches cottage colony in Bermuda. And tour companies are offering specialty trips, like a "Healing Vacation" in Hawaii from Well Traveled Tours, a new Boca Raton, Fla.-based company whose trips combine sightseeing, spa visits, and health-and-fitness programs.

Justin McNaull, spokesman for AAA, says the term "wellness vacation" might be more appealing to some consumers than a spa vacation, which "might seem a little self-indulgent. The health and wellness side seems a little less decadent. You're investing in yourself as opposed to pampering yourself. It's self-improvement."

Europe: Travel to Europe has grown steadily in the last few years and is expected to continue upward in 2006, Bonavita said, adding that the July bombings in London had little impact on American Express bookings there. However, projections from Britain's Office for National Statistics estimate that U.S. visitors to England were down 4 percent in 2005 between January and October compared to 2004.

Even with the small decrease, however, the United Kingdom will undoubtedly remain one of the most popular European destinations for Americans. In 2004, more Americans visited the U.K. than any other destination in Europe, followed by France and Italy, according to the U.S. State Department's list for outbound travel in 2004, the most recent year for which statistics are available.

But perhaps because Americans traveling to England and France make their own arrangements but need a little advice when heading to Italy, Italy placed first on the USTOA survey for the third year in a row. Rick Steves says it is the most popular destination among the buyers of his guidebooks; and it is also No. 1 among European destinations offered by American Express Vacations, which has expanded its 2006 offerings for the country to include packages in the Lakes Region, Tuscany, Umbria and Liguria.

"It's the food, the people, the culture -- everything," said Whitley.

Americans vacationing in Europe now will also feel less of a pinch than in the past because the dollar has gained some strength against the euro, which is down from its 2003 high of more than $1.35 to around $1.18.

Interest among American travelers in Central and Eastern European destinations like Prague, Krakow, Warsaw, Dubrovnik and Budapest also continues to grow.

"Eastern Europe has been really trendy," said Steves. "Prague is the best-preserved city in the region ... and the best beer in Europe lands on your table there for 50 cents."

The Dalmation Coast beaches of Croatia on the Adriatic Sea are also getting their share of buzz. "It's the cheap alternative to the Italian Riviera," said Steves.

Montenegro, also on the Adriatic, tops the list of Travel + Leisure's up-and-coming destinations for 2006. The magazine recommends the small country for its "untouched white sands and time-capsule medieval villages."

Croatia was the No. 1 destination for 2005 on an annual poll taken by the Lonely Planet guidebook company of its U.S.-based staffers. It's on the Lonely Planet list for 2006 as well, though down at No. 4.

But Lonely Planet's new publications sometimes herald travel trends as well; the company put out its first guide to Croatia in 2005. It's now offering its first guide to St. Petersburg, which may be a bellwether of increased travel there.

"Try standing on the Troitsky Bridge looking downriver to the Winter Palace without your jaw dropping," the book advises. Other must-sees include the Hermitage Museum and ballet at the Mariinsky Theatre.

China: China is No. 6 on the State Department's list of top international destinations for travel by U.S. residents, with 1.8 million Americans visiting China in 2004. Those numbers include visits both to mainland China and Hong Kong, and represent a 72 percent increase over 2003, when travel to the region was dampened by fear of SARS.

Pauline Frommer, of the Frommer guidebooks, said that the message boards at Frommers.com have 10 times more postings from China than any other Asian country. "You hear more and more about people going to China and not just to Beijing, but also to Shanghai," Frommer said. "It's a place Americans should see. They're shaping up to be our big competitors."

"Americans want to see it before it gets to be the dominating Westernized country," Whitley added. "You look at Shanghai -- they want it to be like Paris. There's so much being said about the Chinese culture, and the influence it's going to have on the world. It's very much of interest to Americans."

In addition to Shanghai, Whitley says tourists are visiting historic sites like the Great Wall, the famed terra cotta warriors near Xian and the historic Silk Road route.

Whitley added that concerns about avian flu have not yet dampened interest in the region. "It's too unknown," he said of the disease, citing the lack of official travel warnings from the World Health Organization and other agencies.

Mexico and the Caribbean: Closer to home, because of the impact of Hurricane Wilma on the Mexican coast, "many of the Cancun reservations are shifting to Punta Cana in the Dominican Republic as well as to Jamaica," said Bonavita of American Express Vacations. She said demand is also high for other Mexican destinations like Los Cabos, Puerto Vallarta, Acapulco and Zihuatanejo.

New Orleans: Finally, New Orleans hopes to make a comeback. The Mardi Gras tradition there celebrates its 150th anniversary in 2006, and the city has scheduled a 10-day party -- slightly smaller than the two-week event of past years -- from Feb. 18-28. Laura Claverie, editor of New Orleans Online, a tourism Web site, says 20,000 hotel rooms are expected to be available by then, and about half of the flights into the city will have resumed to pre-Katrina levels. The festivities will include participation by 31 of the 34 parade organizations that existed before the storm, and more than 700 restaurants are expected to be open.

"It's not just a great tradition and a great social event," Claverie said. "It's also a $1 billion industry. So coming to Mardi Gras is also a way for people to endorse our economic development."

Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

 

TRENDY DESTINATIONS
Here are top destinations for leisure travel from various sources.
Lonely Planet: Argentina; China; Nicaragua; Croatia; Mexico; Antarctica; Canada; India; Colombia; Germany. Based on survey of U.S.-based staffers for the guidebook publishing company.
National Park Service: Top 10 national parks by number of recreational visitors in 2004: Great Smoky Mountain National Park; Grand Canyon National Park; Yosemite National Park; Cuyahoga National Park; Olympic National Park; Yellowstone National Park; Rocky Mountain National Park; Zion National Park; Grand Teton National Park; Acadia National Park.
Pauline Frommer: Top 10 up-and-coming destinations for 2006: Amador County, California.; Belem, Brazil; Charleston, South Carolina; Glasgow, Scotland; Goa, India; Kenyan game parks; Margarita, Venezuela; Molokai, Hawaii; Ramah, New Mexico; Tasmania, Australia.
Travel + Leisure Magazine: Five up-and-coming destinations for 2006, from the magazine's January issue: Montenegro; Minneapolis; Mongolia; Gabon; Eleuthera, the Bahamas.
U.S. State Department: Mexico; Canada; United Kingdom; France; Italy; China (People's Republic and Hong Kong); Germany; Jamaica; Japan; Bahamas. Based on figures for outbound international travel by U.S. residents in 2004.
U.S. Tour Operators Association: Most popular international destinations for tours and packaged travel: Italy, followed by France. Most popular international cities: Rome and Paris. Most popular domestic destinations: California, Colorado and Alaska, tied for first place, with the American West and Yellowstone in a tie for most popular region. What's hot for 2006: Croatia followed by China. Based on survey of tour operators.
 

IF YOU GO

AAA Travel: Go to http://www.aaa.com and click on "travel" or contact your local AAA office.

American Express Vacations: http://www.americanexpress.com \vacations or (800) 297-8747.

Guidebooks: Lonely Planet, http://www.lonelyplanet.com; Frommer's, http://www.frommers.com; Rick Steves, http://www.ricksteves.com. All widely available in bookstores and online. A new line of guidebooks by Pauline Frommer will be published beginning in 2006, with the first three editions on Hawaii, New York City and Italy.

New Orleans: Mardi Gras, February 18-28; http://www.neworleansonline.com or (504) 524-4784.

U.S. Tour Operators Association: http://www.ustoa.com/ or (212) 599-6599.

Well Traveled Tours: http://www.welltraveledtours.com/ or (888) 935-5255.

Wednesday, December 28, 2005

Marketers Targeting Captive Airline Passengers

WSJ (paid subscription required)
Airline passengers are a marketer's dream: an audience so captive they are literally strapped in and starved for entertainment. And most of them have a decent amount of disposable income. Marketers have long known the benefits of targeting this group, but it hasn't been easy. For one thing, many airlines have been reluctant to cut deals, fearing it may jeopardize their own brand. But that is changing in an era when airline are fighting off bankruptcy and looking desperately for ways to cut operating costs. As a result, the door is opening a bit wider for marketers. One company taking advantage of the development is MasterCard International, which is providing complimentary snacks, movie headphones and puzzles and games aboard nearly 600 American Airlines flights during the holiday-travel season. Even so, marketers need to be cautious because bombarding consumers with ads as they sit in the crowded coach section might cause a backlash, says David Melançon, president, North America, for Interpublic Group of Cos.' FutureBrand. "It's an opportunity that is fraught with peril," he says, adding that advertisers can avoid passengers' ill feelings by sticking to products or gifts that provide comfort or entertainment.

Saturday, December 10, 2005

"The Other side of this life" -- David Byrne

How tech billionaires live

December 8, 2005 6:41 PM PST

Ever wanted to be a fly on the uber-mansion walls of Bill Gates, Larry Ellison, Steve Jobs or Michael Dell?

Forbes.com has published a little article (plus a slide show and video) on the very big homes of America's billionaires. You can't see inside the digs, but you do get a look at the sprawling exteriors, as well as some details on the way-above-average domestic accoutrements.

Coming in at No. 1 with a net worth of $46.6 billion is Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates, whose 66,000-square-foot compound is built into a hillside on the edge of Lake Washington outside Seattle. The home has a 60-foot-long swimming pool with an underwater music system. There's a domed library with two "secret" bookcase doors and a 1,000-square-foot dining room, according to Forbes.

Oracle CEO Larry Ellison shows up at No. 9 with a net worth of $18.4 billion. He lives about 30 miles south of San Francisco in an estate styled after an imperial Japanese palace. Then there's Michael Dell at No. 9. He lives in a 33,000-square-foot hilltop Austin mansion. Jobs, ranked 194 with a net worth of $3 billion, kicks back in a 17,000-square-foot mansion in Woodside, Calif.

Not too shabby--and not too surprising given that Forbes' list of the richest Americans continues to be quite hospitable to the biggest names in tech.

Tuesday, December 06, 2005

Top 10 Online Travel Destinations

Map sites top the list of online travel sites visited the week ending November 20.

 

Brand or Channel Unique Audience
(000)
Active Reach
(%)
Time Per Person (hh:mm:ss)
MapQuest 12,919 10.08 0:09:38
Google Maps 5,277 4.12 0:05:37
Southwest Airlines 4,891 3.82 0:18:54
Expedia 4,208 3.28 0:08:47
Travelocity 3,464 2.7 0:10:53
Orbitz 3,311 2.58 0:09:51
American Airlines 2,409 1.88 0:15:50
Yahoo! Travel 2,156 1.68 0:02:55
Google Earth 2,058 1.61 0:19:53
Cheap Tickets 1,685 1.31 0:06:57
Source: Nielsen//NetRatings

Monday, December 05, 2005

SmartPages, RealPages Partner For Local Search

by Shankar Gupta, Monday, Dec 5, 2005 6:00 AM EST
ONE YEAR AFTER ACQUIRING THE YellowPages.com URL, SBC and Bell South last week joined forces to launch a local directory and search engine at the site. The venture combines the telephone directory databases of SBC and Bell South, and also offers maps and directions, city guides, and product guides.

Kelsey Group Analyst Greg Sterling said that uniting the SmartPages.com, RealPages.com, and YellowPages.com brands is a good start, but that the search tool isn't yet in shape to compete with the Internet giants now inhabiting the local space--Google, Yahoo!, and MSN. "It's an evolutionary step, and it was a challenging thing for them to integrate all these things," he said. "They've made it more user-friendly, but it's definitely a product that will need to continue to evolve to be competitive."

He added that the online local space is becoming a very tough market to crack indeed. "All these companies are focused on this area. Yahoo!, AOL, MSN, and Google--they're doing some very, very interesting things, so it's a very competitive marketplace," he said. "They [SBC and Bell South] clearly want to be thought of when people think of local information. I think they see very clearly that Yahoo! and MSN and AOL and Google are competitors."

GETTING WARMER

Canadians are visiting Hawaii and staying longer in 2005 than a year ago. Here are year-to-date Canadian visitor numbers through October.

Visitor arrivals: 188,381, up 10.1%
Average length of stay: 12.99 days, up 0.6%
Visitor days: 2.4 million, up 10.8%
Average daily spending: $128 per person, off 0.4%
Average trip spending: $1,656 per person, up 0.2%
Total expenditures: $312 million. up 10.4%

Wednesday, November 30, 2005

indie city websites

 Independent City Sites Compete With MSM [by rafat]  : Our conference contributor Dorian Benkoil has penned an interesting report for Borrell Associates, covering the indie city website competing against local TV and newspaper websites. These low-cost and scrappy competitors shun local news, obituaries and classified ads, focusing almost exclusively on fun and interesting things to do around town.
Many of these independent local sites are reporting revenues well into six figures, and some recently formed their own trade group, Associated Cities. A flurry of acquisitions has begun as well, including a $500,000 acquisition for a "City.com " URL, and a $12 million offer by a newspaper publisher for LasVegas.com. (This reminds me of the New City Network of indie websites back in the late 90s..it is now defunct)
Independent sites tend to have a fraction of the traffic and revenue of competitors who are financed and promoted by traditional-media outlets, but the underdogs offer an interesting lesson: Keep it simple, keep it upbeat, and don't forget the out-of-market traffic. They are focusing on sites that win attention from locals and travelers alike, and are tapping ad revenues from some of the largest spenders on interactive advertising: hotels, casinos, airlines, real estate agents, resorts and restaurants. [Nov.29: Link] | Nanopublishing |

Borrell: Independent Local Sites Threaten Newspapers

by Wendy Davis, Wednesday, Nov 30, 2005 6:00 AM EST
AS IF THE NEWSPAPER INDUSTRY didn't have enough headaches, a new study finds they face growing competition from independent local Web sites that focus on travel and entertainment.

"Locally focused pure-play Internet sites have gained a foothold in many markets," states the report, "Independent City Sites Gain Steam: A New Threat to Old Media," released Tuesday by Borrell Associates.

These independent local sites are growing quickly and "elbowing in on territory that traditional local media properties have been trying to stake out for the past decade," states the report.

Many of these sites use a url that includes the name of their city, like Houston.com and Toledo.com. As a result, they garner traffic even without much marketing, because some people navigate the Web by typing proper names directly into a url field. Toledo.com, for instance, is the tenth most trafficked site in the city, according to the report. For the most part, these sites focus on entertainment, nightlife, and travel, while rarely reporting on local news, according to the report.

Borrell also states that annual revenues at these local sites have "moved into the six-figure range"--and in some cases, surpass $1 million. "As the Internet tide rises, these once-mired local boats have begun to float," states the report. "From Atlanta to Yuma and from the suburbs of Syracuse to the tiny Gulf town of Port Aransas, Texas, small, independently run local sites have begun to pick up significant steam."

So far, however, independent city.com sites have profit margins of around 24 percent--compared to Web sites of local media, which are around 60 percent, according to Borrell. The independent sites also account for less than 1 percent of local online advertising, while media-run Web sites take in between 3 and 18 percent, according to the report.

The newspaper industry, meanwhile, continues to struggle with profit margins and circulation, as well as ad dollars that have been lost to online classifieds like Craigslist. Earlier this week, the Pew Internet & American Life Project and comScore Networks issued a report stating that 26.3 million Web users visited one of the top 15 classified sites in September--marking an 80 percent increase from last year.

Monday, November 28, 2005

Partnerships are key to online travel search survival

 
 
 
 
 

By Kyle Peterson

CHICAGO (Reuters) - The online travel search market is fast filling up with Web sites offering the cheapest bookings, and experts warn that the smaller entrants without partnerships with major service providers are sure to fail.

Unlike full-service online travel agencies such as Expedia Inc. (EXPE.O: Quote, Profile, Research) that sell tickets and make reservations, travel search engines sniff out bookings and direct users to Web sites where they can make purchases. Some travelers use search engines to avoid booking fees that travel agencies charge.

The newest breed of these businesses are the so-called meta-search sites that present users with lists of bookings for comparisons.

The trouble is that too many sites are doing the same thing and too few travelers care, according to Henry Harteveldt at Forrester Research.

"There is a glut. They're not working," Harteveldt said. "Our research indicates these meta-search sites just aren't gaining any traction."

Data from Forrester shows that only 6.5 percent of travelers who planned trips online used travel search engines to plan a trip, compared with 44 percent who used a travel agency.

About 27 percent of travelers researched trips using general search engines such as Google and Yahoo!. And 25 percent looked at sites hosted by travel service suppliers such as airlines and hotels.

"The truth is that meta-search really doesn't matter," Harteveldt said.

An Internet search for "travel search engines" yields dozens of results, including not only well-known brands like Expedia and Orbitz, which is owned by Cendant Corp. (CD.N: Quote, Profile, Research), but also a slew of names like AllCheapFares, Kwikfly and Travel Now.

Experts say the travel search market is reaching a point where competitive pressures threaten to smother start-ups before they can get a toe hold.

"I think it's going to be a lot tougher road for some of the new companies to try their hand at travel search," said Phil Carpenter, vice president of corporate marketing at search engine SideStep. "I think it's getting really challenging for new players to enter the space."

Carpenter said the key to success is in partnerships with big-name travel suppliers and other travel service companies. Only then will users be confident that they are getting access to the best deals possible, he said.

SideStep, a leader in travel search, just this month announced deals with Hilton International, Amazon.com and American Airlines.

SideStep searches more than 100 Web sites for travel bargains. But the company is not alone in that approach and faces competition from search engines like Kayak.com and Yahoo! FareChase. Other competitors include general search engines.

Meanwhile, online travel agencies such as Expedia and Priceline.com (PCLN.O: Quote, Profile, Research), which made their reputations locating cheap fares, are adapting to the new competitive environment by personalizing research and bookings instead of relying solely on finding low prices. The agencies hope to expand their businesses by addressing all travel needs and making recommendations.

"The online travel agencies haven't really felt the pinch," said Lorraine Sileo, an analyst at PhocusWright, a travel research company. She said the newest crop of travel search sites are a bigger threat to each other than to established travel agencies.

Still, the appeal of ad revenue, lucrative partnerships or a buyout remain key motivators for people looking to jump on the travel search gravy train. What's more, e-commerce trends suggest their optimism is not misplaced.

Data from Forrester Research showed that in 2005, travel has been the largest sales category in online commerce with $62.8 billion of the total sales of $172.4 billion. The travel component on Web commerce is expected to account for $119.1 billion of a total $328.6 billion by 2010, Forrester said.

SideStep's Carpenter said there is still money to be made in the online travel industry as long as a company has an innovative approach and the funds to carry out a vision.

Friday, November 25, 2005

Google Space

Google extends searching offline
Google Space at Heathrow airport
Travellers are spending an average of 30 minutes at Google Space
Google may already be dominant on the web but now it is stretching its wings to the physical world as well.

Google Space, at Terminal One of London's Heathrow airport, will allow people to log onto the net and check e-mail while they wait for flights.

For Google, the space will be used to test its myriad product launches on the public.

"We see it as a huge focus group," said Lorraine Twohill, Google's European director of marketing.

"For many of our users, we have always been something in their computers and they have never actually met us," she said.

Core DNA

GOOGLE PRODUCTS AT A GLANCE
Google Earth - allows users to search the planet, via maps and satellite images
Google Toolbar - a search box in users browsers allows them to search from any web page
Google Mail - offers over 2000MB of free storage and allows users to search for any previous e-mail
Google Local - information about local businesses, restaurants, hotels and driving directions
Picasa - picture management service where users can also edit, crop and mail their stored photos to friends
Google Mobile - an SMS service which allows users to ask questions such as how to get from one place to another and get instant answers

With trained Google staff on hand at the booth, it will be a chance to road-test some of its new product launches and get invaluable feedback.

Depending on the success of the Heathrow "pod", Google could become a recognised physical presence in airports, stations and even high streets around the world, said Ms Twohill.

Google has been a phenomenal year of launches, even by the standards of a cutting-edge tech firm.

Desktop search, Google Earth, Google Mail, Google Local, Google Toolbar, picture management store Picasa and Google Mobile have all come online in recent months, as Google continues to expand its search catalogue to all aspects of daily life.

Also out of the labs this month is Google's personalised search, which, alongside a bespoke homepage which can be built to your own personal needs, also offers more personalised searching, remembering what you have previously looked for and selecting things it thinks you want to see.

While it may seem as if Google has its fingers in many pies at the moment, all its products are interlinked, said Ms Twohill.

"It all comes back to our core DNA of search," she said.

As well as moving into a physical space, Google is also likely to make a play for our pockets too, with Ms Twohill earmarking mobile - alongside personalisation - as important areas for the firm in the future.

Google's ever-expanding product portfolio has led some commentators to question whether it is making a bid to be the next Microsoft.

According to Ms Twohill, its ambitions are more modest.

"We are still a tenth the size of Microsoft and are not ready to be compared to them," she said.

It is true though that Microsoft is increasingly vying for a share of the search market and this can only be a good thing, she thinks.

"A space like search needs two or three key players. While search is not Microsoft's heritage, if it sets its mind to something it will do a good job and grow the space for everyone," she said.

Thursday, November 17, 2005

Neighborhood search a boon for real estate

Neighborhood search a boon for real estate

Online services take local search to a new level

Wednesday, November 16, 2005

By Glenn Roberts Jr.
Inman News

Yahoo! Local map Yahoo! Local map

Neighborhoods are taking shape online as Internet companies expand the capabilities of local search.

Neighborhood-specific searches allow users to move beyond the typical geographic parameters of city or ZIP code to find relevant matches, though defining neighborhood names and boundaries can be an imperfect science.

Yahoo! in August announced the launch of a " search by neighborhood" feature for major metropolitan areas, through Yahoo! Local. It is now possible to search for real estate agents in San Francisco's "Lower Haight" or "Marina" areas, for example, or in New York's "Chelsea" or "Soho" neighborhoods.

More stories by Glenn Roberts Jr.

Large brokers gain voice in powerful real estate group

State stalls plans to force real estate brokerage service levels

Advocacy group holds symposium on real estate competition

Real estate market is shifting, says ZipRealty

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Yahoo! Local has divided San Francisco into 31 neighborhoods, and New York City into 24 neighborhood areas.

Other online sites, too, provide neighborhood-specific information to users, and experts say real estate is a natural beneficiary of neighborhood-based search.

As some print advertising dollars shift online, the battle has heated up among online search sites to tailor information and advertising opportunities based on the criteria selected by users. Local online search has grown into an important subset of national search – an estimated 15 percent of all searches on the Web are local – and neighborhood search is an emerging subset of local search.

"There are a lot of people who recognize that the way that people look for things is by neighborhood or by colloquial names that exist," said Greg Sterling, program director for The Kelsey Group, a company that provides research and analysis for yellow pages, electronic directories and local media companies. The end result is more flexibility – and less search time – for users.

"What's at stake? Better ad targeting and the ability for advertisers – especially in the real estate context – to buy keywords aligned with neighborhoods, which is the way people really think about their environments in the real world. Accordingly, this will offer a better local-search consumer experience," Sterling said. "This is definitely the way these things are going to move – (companies) are trying to make these tools conform to the way that people really live."

Sterling also said that Yahoo! is a front-runner in neighborhood-specific searches, and the company's announced plans to acquire Whereonearth, a local online search and advertising technology company, should aid the efforts to expand local search.

Point2 Realty Solutions, a real estate technology company based in Saskatoon, in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan, is working to define neighborhood names and boundaries to provide more property-search options. The company's Point2 Homes site allows users to search properties by neighborhood .

"Our goal is to geographically identify every area in North America, and then eventually the world, by its local neighborhood names," said Jeff Tomlin, manager of market research at Point2. The company started the project this summer.

Local municipalities and real estate professionals have been a solid source of information on neighborhood names and boundaries, Tomlin said. "The solution we are building has two benefits: Number one, we want to create a solution for our members that helps them be more easily found; and we are helping our users to create a better connection to consumers."

Point2's real estate customers are accurate in describing the neighborhood location of properties that they list for sale, Tomlin said. "The client knows exactly what neighborhood they're in, even if they're sort of on the edge of two neighborhoods. Our members are the best sources for that – they know the area themselves."

The neighborhood project "is a work in progress – it'll be a work in progress for some time," he said, adding that neighborhoods are continually evolving and forming.

Craigslist, which operates online community sites in major markets across the globe and carries for-sale and rental property listings posted by its users, allows users to self-identify location by neighborhood. A user who wishes to post a property for sale in San Francisco, for example, can choose from a list of 32 neighborhoods, and the neighborhood name appears in the top line of every posting.

The New York Times' real estate site allows users to search for properties by neighborhood areas, and several other property-search sites also offer neighborhood-specific listings.

Keith N. Hampton, assistant professor of the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, said that Internet technologists are struggling with the same questions about neighborhoods that sociologists have been struggling with for decades, adding that it's "fascinating" to see efforts to expand local and neighborhood search capabilities online.

"Defining neighborhoods is certainly difficult and problematic. What are neighborhood boundaries for any given neighborhood? It is almost impossible for outsiders to define boundaries in a way that makes sense (for local residents)." Every person has a mental map of neighborhood areas, Hampton said, so it is typical for people to disagree on neighborhood boundaries.

Hampton is a principal investigator for I-Neighbors.org, an Internet site that allows residents to define neighborhood areas and connect with their neighbors.

It's beneficial for actual neighbors to define neighborhood boundaries, he said, because it is a means to "establish local trust in self and identity – being able to identify what your community really is. The value of the Internet is supposed to be in its ability to cut down the cost of traversing great distances. But it has this localization – the ability to bridge very local distances."

He noted that neighborhood boundaries change, and in some cases some small neighborhoods can potentially be amalgamated or absorbed into a larger neighborhood area, and can lose individual character or identity in the process.

Wikipedia, a free encyclopedia Web site that allows its users to edit entries, features numerous neighborhood descriptions , including rough or specific neighborhood boundaries.

Jimmy Wales, a spokesman for Wikipedia, said he doesn't know how many neighborhoods are defined at the site, though, "Community input would be crucially important to determining where a neighborhood begins and ends, because 'neighborhood' is absolutely a social concept, a social construct, and there's no a priori or algorithmic way to guess at it."

Lockhart Steele Lockhart Steele, Curbed.com

"I think everyone in New York defines neighborhoods in slightly different ways. Some neighborhoods are literally defined by a couple of blocks," said Lockhart Steele, founder and publisher of the Curbed.com blog site.

Curbed.com readers can choose to read postings that are specific to neighborhoods. The site identifies 14 Manhattan neighborhood areas, for example, and also includes information categorized by neighborhood in Brooklyn and Queens.

Earlier this year, Curbed.com hosted a light-hearted neighborhood-naming contest, dubbed "'Hoodwinked." The winner pitched the name "RAMBO (Right After the Manhattan Bridge Overpass)" for a neighborhood stretching between Tillary Street and York Street, north of the Manhattan Bridge.

There is a general trend, Steele said, to provide more focused information online. "You can always get more detailed. There is the question of: 'Do readers want to view everything?'" For editorial purposes, Steele said that he adopted fairly rigid neighborhood boundaries for Curbed.com.

"I think neighborhood-specific search...is going to be a pretty big deal," and real estate companies have already inquired about placing advertisements on neighborhood-specific pages at his blog site, Steele said. "Drill-down search is presumably one of the better ways to find really qualified leads." While neighborhood search is one potential avenue for expanding local search capabilities, Steele said innovation in search technologies is not a one-way street. "I don't believe search is moving in any one direction.

***

Send tips or a Letter to the Editor to glenn@inman.com or call (510) 658-9252, ext. 137.

Copyright 2005 Inman News

Wednesday, November 16, 2005

RealTravel

» Travel Journal Site Gets $1 Million Seed Funding  [by rafat] : RealTravel, an online travel journals site based out of Los Altos, CA, has received $1 million in seeed funding. The funding was bu what it calls "high-profile angel investors in the travel, media and social networking industries", though no names were disclosed.
RealTravel combines travel blogging and social networking... [ Nov.15: Link] | VC/M&A |

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tourism

tour·ism ( tʊr'ĭz'əm) pronunciation
n.
  1. The practice of traveling for pleasure.
  2. The business of providing tours and services for tourists.

Tourism
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun tourism has one meaning:

Meaning #1: the business of providing services to tourists
Synonym: touristry


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tourism
 A  tourist boat travels the River Seine in Paris, France
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A tourist boat travels the River Seine in Paris, France

Tourism can be defined as the act of travel for the purpose of recreation , and the provision of services for this act. A tourist is someone who travels at least eighty kilometres (fifty miles) from home for the purpose of recreation, as defined by the World Tourism Organization (a United Nations body).

A more comprehensive definition would be that tourism is a service industry, comprising a number of tangible and intangible components. The tangible elements include transport systems - air, rail, road, water and now, space; hospitality services - accommodation, foods and beverages, tours, souvenirs; and related services such as banking, insurance and safety & security. The intangible elements include: rest and relaxation, culture, escape, adventure, new and different experiences.

Many sovereignties, along with their respective countries and states, depend heavily upon travel expenditures by foreigners as a source of taxation and income for the enterprises that sell (export) services to these travellers. Consequently the development of tourism is often a strategy employed either by a Non-governmental organization (NGO) or a governmental agency to promote a particular region for the purpose of increasing commerce through exporting goods and services to non-locals.

Sometimes Tourism and Travel are used interchangeably. In this context travel has a similar definition to tourism, but implies a more purposeful journey.

The term tourism is sometimes used pejoratively, implying a shallow interest in the societies and natural wonders that the tourist visits.

Prerequisite factors

"Travel", as an economic activity, occurs when the essential parameters come together to make it happen. In this case there are three such parameters:

  1. Disposable income, i.e. money to spend on non-essentials
  2. Time in which to do so.
  3. Infrastructure in the form of accommodation facilities and means of transport.

Individually, sufficient health is also a condition, and of course the inclination to travel. Furthermore, in some countries there are legal restrictions on travelling, especially abroad. Communist states restrict foreign travel only to "trustworthy" citizens. The United States prohibits its citizens from traveling to some countries, for example, Cuba.

History

Wealthy people have always travelled to distant parts of the world to see great buildings or other works of art; to learn new languages; or to taste new cuisine. As long ago as the time of the Roman Republic places such as Baiae were popular coastal resorts for the rich.

The terms tourist and tourism were first used as official terms in 1937 by the League of Nations . Tourism was defined as people travelling abroad for periods of over 24 hours.

The Grand Tour

The word tour gained acceptance in the 18th century, when the Grand Tour of Europe became part of the upbringing of the educated and wealthy British nobleman or cultured gentleman. Grand tours were taken in particular by young people to "complete" their education. They travelled all over Europe, but notably to places of cultural and aesthetic interest, such as Rome, Tuscany and the Alps.

The British aristocracy were particularly keen on the Grand Tour, using the occasion to gather art treasures from Europe to add to their collections. The volume of art treasures being moved to Britain in this way was unequalled anywhere else in Europe, and explains the richness of many private and public collections in Britain today. Yet tourism in those days, aimed essentially at the very top of the social ladder and at the well educated, was fundamentally a cultural activity. These first tourists, though undertaking their Grand Tour, were more travellers than tourists.

Most major British artists of the eighteenth century did the "Grand Tour", as did their great European contemporaries such as Claude Lorrain. Classical architecture, literature and art have always drawn visitors to Rome, Naples, Florence.

The Romantic movement (inspired throughout Europe by the English poets William Blake and Lord Byron, among others), extended this to Gothic countryside, the Alps, fast flowing rivers, mountain gorges, etc.

Health tourism & leisure travel

It was not until the 19th century that cultural tourism developed into leisure and health tourism. Some English travellers, after visiting the warm lands of the South of Europe, decided to stay there either for the cold season or for the rest of their lives. Others began to visit places with health-giving mineral waters, in order to relieve a whole variety of diseases from gout to liver disorders and bronchitis.

Leisure travel was a British invention due to sociological factors. Britain was the first European country to industrialize, and the industrial society was the first society to offer time for leisure to a growing number of people. Initially, this did not apply to the working masses, but rather to the owners of the machinery of production, the economic oligarchy, the factory owners, and the traders. These comprised the new middle class.

The British origin of this new industry is reflected in many place names. At Nice, one of the first and most well established holiday resorts on the French Riviera, the long esplanade along the seafront is known to this day as the Promenade des Anglais; in many other historic resorts in continental Europe, old well-established palace hotels have names like the Hotel Bristol, the Hotel Carlton or the Hotel Majestic - reflecting the dominance of English customers to whom these resorts previously catered to.

Winter tourism

Even winter sports were largely invented by the British leisured classes initially at the Swiss village of Zermatt (Valais) (year?) and St Moritz in 1864.

Until the first tourists appeared, the Swiss thought of the long snowy winter as being a time when the best thing to do was to stay indoors and make cuckoo clocks or other small mechanical items.

The first packaged winter sports holidays ( vacations) followed in 1903, to Adelboden, also in Switzerland.

Organized sport was well established in Britain before it reached other countries. The vocabulary of sport bears witness to this: rugby, football, and boxing all originated in Britain, and even Tennis, originally a French sport, was formalized and codified by the British, who hosted the first national championship in the nineteenth century, at Wimbledon. Winter sports were a natural answer for a leisured class looking for amusement during the coldest season.

Mass travel

Mass travel could not really begin to develop until two things occurred.
a) improvements in technology allowed the transport of large numbers of people in a short space of time to places of leisure interest, and
b) greater numbers of people began to enjoy the benefits of leisure time. A major development was the invention of the railways, which brought many of Britain's seaside towns within easy distance of Britain's urban centres.

The father of modern mass tourism was Thomas Cook who, on 5 July 1841, organized the first package tour in history, by chartering a train to take a group of temperance campaigners from Leicester to a rally in Loughborough , some twenty miles away. Cook immediately saw the potential for business development in the sector, and became the world's first tour operator.

He was soon followed by others, with the result that the tourist industry developed rapidly in early Victorian Britain. Initially it was supported by the growing middle classes, who had time off from their work, and who could afford the luxury of travel and possibly even staying for periods of time in boarding houses.

However, the Bank Holiday Act 1871 introduced a statutory right for workers to take holidays, even if they were not paid at the time. (As an aside, in the UK there is still no obligation to pay staff who do not work on public holidays.)

The combination of short holiday periods, travel facilities and distances meant that the first holiday resorts to develop in Britain were towns on the seaside, situated as close as possible to the growing industrial conurbations.

For those in the industrial north, there were Blackpool in Lancashire, and Scarborough in Yorkshire. For those in the Midlands, there were Weston-super-Mare in Somerset and Skegness in Lincolnshire, for those in London there were Southend-on-Sea, Broadstairs, Brighton, Eastbourne, and a whole collection of other places.

In travelling to the coast, the population was following in the steps of Royalty. King George III is widely acknowledged as popularising the seaside holiday, due to his regular visits to Weymouth when in poor health.

For a century, domestic tourism was the norm, with foreign travel being reserved, as before, for the rich or the culturally curious. A minority of resorts, such as Bath, Harrogate and Matlock, emerged inland. After World War II holiday villages such as Butlins and Pontins emerged, but their popularity waned with the rise of package tours and the increasing comforts to which visitors became accustomed at home. Towards the end of the 20th century the market was revived by the upmarket inland resorts of Dutch company Centre Parcs.

Other phenomena that helped develop the travel industry were paid holidays:

  • 1.5 million manual workers in Britain had paid holidays by 1925
  • 11 million by 1939 (30% of the population in families with paid holidays)

Outside Britain

Similar processes occurred in other countries, though at a slower rate, given that nineteenth century Britain was far ahead of any other nation in the world in the process of industrialisation.

In the USA, the first great seaside resort, in the European style, was Atlantic City, New Jersey .

In Continental Europe, early resorts included Ostend (for the people of Brussels), and Boulogne-sur-Mer ( Pas-de-Calais) and Deauville ( Calvados) (for Parisians).

International mass tourism

Increasing speed on railways meant that the tourist industry could develop internationally. By 1901, the number of people crossing the English Channel from England to France or Belgium had passed 0.5 million per year.

However it was with cheap air travel in combination with the package tour that international mass tourism developed after 1963. For the worker living in greater London, Brindisi today is almost as accessible as Brighton was 100 years ago.

Recent developments

There have been a few temporary setbacks in tourism, the latest being related to the September 11, 2001 attacks and terrorist threats to tourist destinations such as Bali and European cities. Some of the tourist destinations, including the Costa del Sol, the Baleares and Cancun have lost popularity due to shifting tastes and perceptions among tourists. In this context, the excessive building and environmental destruction often associated with traditional "sun and beach" tourism may contribute to a destination's saturation and subsequent decline. This appears to be the case with Spain's Costa Brava, a byword for this kind of tourism in the 1960s and 1970s. With only 11% of the Costa Brava now unblemished by low-quality development ( Greenpeace Spain's figure), the destination now faces a crisis in its tourist industry. Belated attempts to move towards "quality tourism" are difficult given competition from cheaper, unspoilt holiday destinations on the one hand and the legacy of decades of over-exploitation on the other. In many respects, Tenerife provides a paradigm of the negative impact of mass tourism. Organizations like Greenpeace and ATAN (http://www.atan.org/en) are particularly critical of development on the island, arguing that Tenerife's current tourism industry is both economically and environmentally unsustainable.

Receptive tourism is now growing at a very rapid rate in many developing countries, where it is often the most important economic activity in local GDP.

In recent years, second holidays or vacations have become more popular as people's disposable income increases. Typical combinations are a package to the typical mass tourist resort, with a winter skiing holiday or weekend break to a city or national park.

On 26 December 2004 a tsunami 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake hit Asian countries bordering the Indian Ocean, and also the Maldives. Tens of thousands of lives were lost, and many tourists died. This, together with the vast clean-up operation in place, has stopped or severely hampered tourism to the area.

Special forms of tourism

For the past few decades other forms of tourism, also known as niche tourism, have been becoming more popular, particularly:

  • Adventure tourism: Tourism involving travel in rugged regions, or adventurous sports such as mountaineering and hiking (tramping).
  • Agritourism: Farm based tourism, helping to support the local agricultural economy.
  • Armchair tourism and virtual tourism: not travelling physically, but exploring the world through internet, books, TV, etc.
  • Cultural tourism: Includes urban tourism, visiting historical or interesting cities, such as London, Paris, Prague, Rome, Cairo, Beijing, Kyoto, and experiencing their cultural heritages. May also consist of specialized cultural experiences, such as art museum tourism where one visits many art museums during the tour, or opera tourism where one sees many operas or concerts during the tour.
  • Disaster tourism: travelling to a disaster scene not primarily for helping, but because one finds it interesting to see. It can be a problem if it hinders rescue, relief and repair work.
  • Drug tourism (for use in that country, or, legally often extremely risky, for taking home)
  • Ecotourism: Sustainable tourism which has minimal impact on the environment, such as safaris ( Kenya) and Rainforests ( Belize), or national parks.
  • Educational tourism: May involve travelling to an education institution, a wooded retreat or some other destination in order to take personal-interest classes, such as cooking classes with a famous chef or crafts classes.
  • Gambling tourism, e.g. to Atlantic City, Las Vegas , Macau or Monte Carlo for the purpose of gambling at the casinos there.
  • Gay tourism: Tourism marketed to gays who wish to travel to gay-friendly destinations which feature a gay infrastructure (bars, businesses, restaurants, hotels, nightlife, etc.), the opportunity to socialize with other gays, and the feeling that one can relax safely among other gay people.
  • Heritage tourism: Visiting historical or industrial sites, such as old canals, railways, battlegrounds, etc.
  • Health tourism: Usually to escape from cities or relieve stress, perhaps for some 'fun in the sun', etc. Often to "health spas".
  • Hobby tourism: Tourism alone or with groups to participate in hobby interests, to meet others with similar interests, or to experience something pertinent to the hobby. Examples might be garden tours, ham radio DXpeditions, or square dance cruises.
  • Inclusive tourism: Tourism marketed to those with functional limits or disabilities. Referred to as "Tourism for All" in some regions. Destinations often employ Universal Design and Universal Destination Development principles.
  • Medical tourism, e.g .:
    • for what is illegal in one's own country, e.g. abortion, euthanasia; for instance, euthanasia for non-citizens is provided by Dignitas in Switzerland.
    • for advanced care that is not available in one's own country
    • in the case that there are long waiting lists in one's own country
    • for use of free or cheap health care organisations
  • Perpetual tourism: Wealthy individuals always on vacation, some of them, for tax purposes, to avoid being resident in any country.
  • Regional tourism Tourism bundle of few country in the region, using one of the country as the transit point. The country of transit point is usually a country with good transport infrastructure. e.g. Singapore is the base for tourism for South East Asia due to its strategic location and good transport infrastructure.
  • Sex tourism: mostly men from First World countries visiting Third World countries for purpose of engaging in sexual acts, usually with inexpensive local prostitutes. This form of tourism is often cited the principal way that paedophiles can hire child prostitutes.
  • Sport tourism: Skiing, golf and scuba diving are popular ways to spend a vacation. Also in this category is vacationing at the winter home of one's favorite baseball team, and seeing them play everyday.
  • Space tourism
  • Vacilando is a special kind of wanderer for whom the process of travelling is more important than the destination.
    • Trends

      The World Tourism Organization forecasts that international tourism will continue growing at the average annual rate of 4 percent [1] (http://www.world-tourism.org/market_research/facts/market_trends.htm). By 2020 Europe will remain the most popular destination, but its share will drop from 60 percent in 1995 to 46 percent. Long-haul will grow slightly faster than intraregional travel and by 2020 its share will increase from 18 percent in 1995 to 24 percent.

      Space tourism is expected to "take off" in the first quarter of the 21st century, although compared with traditional destinations the number of tourists in orbit will remain low until technlogies such as space elevator make space travel cheap.

      Technological improvement is likely to make possible air-ship hotels, based either on solar-powered airplanes or large dirigibles . Underwater hotels, such as Hydropolis , slated to open in Dubai in 2006, will be built. On the surface of the ocean tourists will be welcomed by ever larger cruise ships and perhaps floating cities.

      Some futurists expect that movable hotel "pods" will be created that could be temporarily erected anywhere on the planet, where building a permanent resort would be unacceptable politically, economically or environmentally.

      See also



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      Dictionary definition of tourism
      The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2004, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. More from Dictionary
      WordNet information about tourism
      WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved. More from WordNet
      Wikipedia information about tourism
      This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Tourism". More from Wikipedia
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      Copyright © 2005, WizCom Technologies Ltd. All rights reserved. More from Translations

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