"One of my clients booked a flight online in 2010 when he wanted to travel in 2009," Spencer says. "So, on turning up to the airport, he found he was at check-in a year before he had booked and the flight was full."
I think this is most of the article:
How to avoid travel mistakes | News.com.au
However, strangely enough, the online version has no reference to credit card encoding on hotel keys ... Hmm. But then again, it might have been on the opposite side of the page in a different article. Does someone still have Sunday's paper and can check?
Here is the other comment I had big issues with in the article:
Right. So which airline was this??? Can I really book a ticket today for 365+1 ++ days with any airline? If I can, I've never seen it. Another tall tale perhaps?
... I have lost count of the amount of times I have reached my hotel room only to find the magnetic strip no longer functioning - usually when there is an extreme and imminent call from nature. ...
OK. I'll ask :?:RFID cards eliminate this problem.
What are RFID cards :?:
Ta.Cards with chips in them, and an integrated antenna so that you only have to press it against the lock, or wave it close to the lock. Because they don't rely on a magnetic strip, there's no issues with them getting erased.
Think Oyster/Octopus/Go/Myki type transit cards, or those toll road payment devices (same concept, much stronger antenna etc )
Also plenty of corporates (and apartments) use RFID cards for security access to buildings/floors etc.
A similar thing happened to a former work colleague. She put her swipe card (to open the security gate) in her purse and when she went to the ATM to get money her debit card wouldn't work.
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