Perfect Out

 

  • NCL: Lose your job and we'll refund your cruise (USA Today)
    Are worries about losing your job holding you back from booking a cruise? Norwegian Cruise Line is following in the footsteps of JetBlue in offering "job loss insurance" to customers.


  • DineEquity reports wider 4Q loss after write-down (AP via Yahoo! Finance)
    DineEquity Inc., which owns the Applebee's and IHOP restaurant chains, posted a wider fourth-quarter loss on Wednesday after booking a $148.3 million write-down on the value of Applebee's goodwill and intangible assets.


  • AGU 2009 Joint Assembly in Toronto, Canada: News media registration and hotel booking open (EurekAlert!)
    ( American Geophysical Union ) News media registration and hotel booking at special rates are now open for AGU's 2009 Joint Assembly in Toronto, Canada. More than 3,000 scientists are expected to present new findings in the Earth and space sciences at the meeting, which takes place from May 24-27, 2009.


  • The New Nokia E75 now available for booking in the UAE (Zawya)
    Dubai, United Arab Emirates - Nokia Nokia kicked off its booking campaign for the Nokia E75, giving UAE residents the opportunity to be the first to own the new device when it hits the market in March.


  • Great Wolf Resorts predicts 2009 losses (AP via Yahoo! Finance)
    Great Wolf Resorts Inc., which operates a chain of indoor waterpark resorts, forecast first quarter and fiscal 2009 losses on Wednesday after reporting a wider fourth-quarter loss after booking $36.2 million in write-downs.


  • Jet stops booking for Kozhikode flights (Gulf Times)
    JET Airways has stopped booking for Kozhikode flights for March 29 onwards, sources said. However, an official yesterday insisted that the airline hadn't suspended the service. "It is too early to comment. There is nothing official yet," the official insisted.


  • ?The days of the simple online flight-booking engine are numbered? (eyefortravel.com)
    SITA has stated that with the rise of social networking over the Internet the days of the simple online flight-booking engine are numbered. ?Web 2.0 technologies will transform airline websites into travel planning portals that go far beyond date and location.