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NetTravel: How Travelers Use the Internet (Songline Guides)
 
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NetTravel: How Travelers Use the Internet (Songline Guides) [Paperback]

Michael Shapiro (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

Songline Guides April 8, 1997

The Internet has thrown open travel resource channels that were previously accessible only to professional travel agents. Airlines, hotels, and tour companies are all moving onto the Web as a more direct way to connect with their customers. Author/Journalist Michael Shapiro explains how travelers using the Internet can save money by cutting out the travel services middlemen. The Net allows business and vacation travelers to get personally involved in their own travel. It gives them the freedom to learn more, choose wisely, and save money by searching for the best deals.

NetTravel features:

  • First-hand accounts of how people discover hard-to-find information, get good deals, discover exotic destinations and find information their travel agents might never have provided. (For example, one man tells how his motorcycle trip through Europe was planned and arranged using Internet newsgroups. Another traveler tells how he and his wife were able to prepare an entire itinerary for a two-week train trip through Italy using rail schedules on the Net.
  • The book emphasizes how empowering and exciting it is to have direct access to the information and plan one's own trip. Travelers are no longer at the mercy of travel agents -- they can now put their trip planning into their own hands.
  • NetTravel highlights some of the best travel Web sites on the Net and how to make most effective use of these sites.
  • Most importantly, Shapiro tells how researching and planning your trip on the Net enriches the entire experience. Advance research about the destination teaches you things you never knew about the places you will visit, history of the area, art and cultural information and more. Knowing ahead of time about modes of transportation, schedules, cost etc. takes the pressure off and allows travelers to fully enjoy their travels.
  • And the Net often leads to personal connections with other who have similar interests, for example the American cyclist who, through Net newsgroups, met a British rider that he later connected with for bike trips through England.

Who will this book appeal to. Simply everyone who's ever stood at a reservation counter and wished they could turn the screen around and see what the agent is seeing.

All the tools necessary to arrange entire journeys are now available on the Internet. Airline reservations and ticket purchases, train schedules, hotel reservations, car rentals agencies... they are all there at the user's fingertips. Whether travelers need a flight schedules for the L.A.-N.Y. corridor, rail schedules for France, or rent-a-car information for Japan, the Net is the first place to look.

This allows travelers to compare prices for tickets and services and to find obscure deals that travel agents would either miss or have not vested interest in offering.

NetTravel Road Map

Shapiro draws a virtual road map to travel resources on the Net and shows how travelers are already using them. He tells how to distinguish good travel bargains from travel scams, how to find last-minute deals on air fares, home-swaps worldwide, and how to mine Internet newsgroups for tips and advice from fellow travelers.

NetTravel also discusses the travel resources found on gated online services such as America Online and CompuServe. While these proprietary networks don't offer the variety found on the lWeb, Shapiro explains that online services tend to be easier to use and better organized. For those new to the Net, these services are a good place to start.

Shapiro says that using the Net to research and plan a trip enriches the journey. Besides commercial travel considerations; tickets, accommodations and car rentals, most destinations also are extensively featured on various Web sites. Chambers of commerce and tourist agencies post information about local attractions. Governments post lists of regional agencies, travel advisories, and other useful information. Universities and museums post local historical, archeological and artistic information. "Boning up" on the areas to visited on the Net before leaving on a trip, Shapiro says, gives the traveler a deeper and richer appreciation of their destination when they arrive.

Travel Agents

While many travel agents see the Internet as the enemy, a growing number of enlightened agents are embracing the Net and using it to supplement their services. By setting up their own homepages on the Net, agents are able to feature travel specials. Some are installing Internet terminals in their offices allowing their customers to surf travel opportunities and then help them make final travel arrangements when they find what they want. And by using email travel agents are finding it easier to stay in touch with their regular customers regardless where they may be in the world.

And lastly, Shapiro explains how veteran travelers use the Net while on the road. Business travelers use the Net to stay in touch via email and Intranets with the home office. Vacationers and trekers can connect via laptop to the Net to research a trip in progress or make changes in their itinerary.

NetTravel is the first book to offer more than hype, platitudes and out-dated travel site links. NetTravel is a virtual toolbox of online travel advice readers can put into action the day they begin reading. Readers can follow in the tracks of those who tell their stories in the book, or use the advice to blaze their own trail.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Michael Shapiro wrote this book for "people who always wanted to turn the travel agent's computer screen around." He accomplished more--he created a resource for those who'd also like to grab a big piece of a good travel agent's expertise. Beyond showing how to book your own travel reservations, Shapiro demonstrates how to get the best deals and how to find the information that will lead you to either painless business travel or to your dream vacation. He even explains how to use the Net as you travel to get the most from wherever you are.

From Library Journal

In the past year I have booked four flights using the web. I know I can use a travel agent, but I like the idea of finding my own way and just browsing around various sites looking for low fares. The problem is that my way depends upon a certain amount of serendipity. Shapiro puts those of us just hunting and pecking on the straight and narrow to information on a surprisingly wide array of topics. This easy-to-use book/CD combination covers the obvious, such as dream destinations and deals and how to stay wired while traveling as well as the more unique resources of the web, like how to use newsgroups to reach folks with similar interests and, perhaps, previous experiences.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 312 pages
  • Publisher: O'Reilly Media (April 8, 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1565921720
  • ISBN-13: 978-1565921726
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 8.5 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #8,384,600 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars You don't need to surf for hours. Just use this book., October 29, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: NetTravel: How Travelers Use the Internet (Songline Guides) (Paperback)
This book is strong because it picks out the best travel sites and offers an intelligent, thorough description of each one. While so many other Net books simply list an overwhelming enormous bunch of sites, Shapiro's book grabs only those that stand out and really serve travelers. He's picked the ones that you want to use.

Whenever I refer to it, I can depend on each site he describes as high quality. And since he describes the advantages and disadvantages of each one, I can pinpoint which site has the features closest to what I'm looking for.

We don't have to spend hours searching. Shapiro has done the research for us.

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