Monthly Archives: September 2008

Opening of Detroit Metro’s North Terminal.

Today, Detroit Metro Airport will be opening its North Terminal. The new terminal will serve 11 airlines, which includes: Air Canada, American Airlines, AirTran, Frontier, Lufthansa, Royal Jordanian Airlines, Southwest, Spirit, United, US Airways, USA 3000. Charter service is also expected to use gate space at the new terminal. 6 out of the 24 gates will be vacant, as airlines struggle financially. It will have 44,000 square feet dedicated solely to concessions, which includes various restaurants and electronic shops / reading material. Parts of the old Smith Terminal will be demolished immediately, pending on whether film production companies decide to use it or not (apparently they’ve been getting many phone calls, says Ben Mutzabaugh)

After speaking with many travelers and frequent fliers, I’ve been told that the Smith terminal was bad enough to keep you from flying any of the non-SkyTeam members (like US Airways, United… etc). Instead, customers flew Northwest Airlines because of the airport and not truly because of the airline. I’m sure that Northwest will be a bit unhappy to see this terminal open, since this is a major hub for them. This also leaves open 6 gates for expansion to any airline. Airlines are in a financial struggle right now, as they continue their battle with the high costs of oil. However, overall this is great for the city of Detroit, and I’m sure many business travelers based in other cities, who fly the non SkyTeam carriers, will appreciate this greatly. 

Note: Image from existing terminals at DTW. 
Image: flickr.com

Ike Halts Operations at Houston.

Hurricane Ike passed over Texas this weekend, tearing some towns and cities to shreds. Among them, was Houston. The city’s airports, one of which is home to Continental Airlines, were left damaged and paralyzed for the weekend. Continental said that they would fly a reduced schedule out of Houston today, as the city cleans up the flooding and wind damage. The hurricane, which effects nearly half of Continental’s 44,000 Houston-based employees, caused damage to the Texan coast as well as surrounding cities. The city does have a curfew in effect, however travelers are an exception.

Other airlines, such as American Airlines, listed flights to Houston Hobby and Bush Intercontinental. All flights aboard Southwest Airlines will be cancelled today, however the airline will resume flights but is expected to operate a reduced schedule on Tuesday and Wednesday. Southwest said that Houston is one of their largest cities and they will operate based on the condition of the airport and security. 

Image: flickr.com

Posting Schedule.

Greetings all.

I know I haven’t been on top of posting as well as I have in the past, and I think it’s time that I address that. As many have read in the “about” section, I am currently in school. Due to a heavy course load and various out of school activities, I will not be writing weekday posts. Starting this week I will try to write 2-3 posts covering: Airlines, Airports, Airplanes. I apologize to daily readers, since I do know that there are quite a few out there who check to see if I’ve written anything. I’d like to follow a Monday-Wednesday-Friday sort of schedule, and hopefully that will work. 

So, check this site on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays for posts. 

Until tomorrow’s post,
Jonathan

Tribune: We Blame Google for UAL Story!

It’s very interesting how the story about United Airlines’ stock falling gets more drama everyday. Today, the Tribune Company blamed search engine giant Google Inc. for treating the outdated story as a new story. More specifically, it blames the tool Googlebot. Googlebot, which searches the web for new stories, is said to have placed the story on Google News by mistake. (This is all said by the Tribune Co.)

Needless to say, there is a long line of people who made mistakes on this. Blaming technology for a human error is not right, and I firmly believe that Google is 100% NOT at fault for this. Googlebot searches for stories written within the past hour / day … etc. It’s the reader’s job to discern the past from the present. When the article says ’2002′ and not 2008, that should hint that it’s not from this year. 

I know this isn’t exactly 100% airline related, but I thought it’s interesting to follow up with this story. 

Image: flickr.com