HND Slot
1. Assigned by the Japanese government to other nations for airlines of that other nation to fly to HND during either the day or night slot period.
2. Runway slots, assigned to approved airlines to use a runway at a given time through the slot coordination process.
People are talking about 1. You're claiming they are wrong because you assume they are talking about 2.
Point 1: They are not slots. None of the source documents and official documents speak of them as slots. The people involved in the process don't refer to them as slots. Just look at the IASC documents and it refers to daily frequencies. It's also not the day or night slot period. It's simply the night-time period. Haneda's own capacity declarations don't call it day or night slots, rather utilising a series of more granular "time zones". The terminology is specifically used to avoid confusion and because slots have specific definitions and regulatory environment. Ironically, Japan are more pedantic about this than other countries like the US who have used the terms interchangeably, much to the annoyance of other countries.
As many times as I've pointed this out, it's been ignored. You can't simply start making up your own meaning for words and then get upset when people point it out. There are good reasons to use precise terms in this case, just as this discussion shows. You keep asking for proof, so here's the language used. No mention of "slots". This is from IASC, but you'll see the same in the BASA and other official documents. Maybe you should follow your own advice and provide some evidence that isn't just someone's opinion or misreading.

As a humorous aside, in the IASC Japan case, a public submission that was incredibly important and influential (one that specifically got discussed in the decision and likely affected some thinking in the decision) did use the term slots when speaking of frequency allocations. The importance of the submission was such that IASC quoted directed from it to ensure that there was no confusion as to them using the term, such is the importance of not using them interchangably.
Just like you're other claims that airline should do x, "because my blog said they can", despite the airport in question saying no.
You often post your option, then use something you posted on your blog, which you've made to look like news, to back it up and ignore anything that disproves that option while claiming everyone else is wrong.
What claims have I made to say that airline should do X? I'm perplexed since I have actually don't know what you're talking about. If you're going to slander me, can you please actually point out what I've done wrong in your eyes?
My suspicion though i you're referring to the Haneda A380 which I openly state as speculation. I literally make no claim to its credibility, even openly stating that I was going on a wild goose chase for some fun! I don't claim it to be factual.
You've also made factual statements that aren't supported by evidence in this regard. For example, claiming that Haneda doesn't take A380 and saying the airport say no without any "proof". Here's the airport's capacity declaration telling us that A380 can be utilised as well as how and when. What it does state is that ops are only permitted between 6am and 11pm (just for further salt in the wound, you'll see it doesn't refer to that as daytime slot period or even daytime period). So maybe you should follow your own standard and show some "proof"

And I hardly claim everyone is always wrong. In the last 24 hours alone I've agreed with several posters, including yourself. I've not used a link from my blog as proof to support those positions. Other people have and that's up to them, not me.
The last few times I've posted any links it certainty wasn't to support my position, but rather to provide datapoints to discuss, they included:
1) A post which just showed the scheduling of the Finnair A330-300s for the next several months. I simply said people might find it interested/useful. It wasn't part of any debate.
2) A post showing the scheduling of the MEL-SIN routes to show why two daily flights were needed to connect to from QF1/2. I posted it because someone specifically asked the question. What should I have done, copied in the whole analysis with tables/figures?
3) A post with figures showing ABS data trends to two countries which was already being discussed.
And I've engaged in follow-up discussion on these topics. I try not to claim people are wrong over their interpretation or opinion. However, I have pushed back when people make factual statements to support a position, which are wrong. And as others might note, I tend to be quite agreeable and happy to admit when I'm wrong or have misinterpreted what someone says. Just yesterday, I apologised to Doddler because I misinterpreted what he said (and on reflection it was clear and I was being too hasty).