Posts Tagged Voyage

Bon voyage, travel agents; Google’s taking over travel

Posted by on Saturday, 1 October, 2011

Where Google goes, people follow. So consider Google’s excursion into the travel industry. The move seems a logical part of the company’s strategy to challenge established markets; the recent launch of Google+ to take on the social media behemoth Facebook, Google Offers encroaching on Groupon’s territory — the track record is definitely there.

And then there is Google Hotel Finder, essentially a sophisticated, fully functional online travel agency. The only thing it needs to become a full-scale online travel agency (OTA) is to add a “book-it” button (for now the site leaves final bookings up to the likes of Kayak, Priceline, and Expedia et al).

Book-it buttons aside, Google has been on a “gobble” in recent years. Its new Hotel Finder joins an expanding list of travel-focused services like Google Flights and Google Plus, along with a host of other acquisitions — most recently foodie favorite Zagat for million — to make the search engine (and the anything and everything portal to the web), a formidable player in the online travel industry.

In 2010 in the US alone, the hotel industry generated roughly 0 billion, so I really don’t see Google’s foray as simply an experiment. Google is out to generate some serious profits: OTAs are sophisticated search engines and that is precisely what Google does best.

With 91 percent of web users already relying on Google to perform basic searches, they will likely remain loyal to the Google brand when it comes time to search for hotels, comfortable with using their new services. Considering that level of customer dedication, the most immediate impact on the travel industry would likely be a clamoring by hotels to get noticed by Hotel Finder’s digital spotlight. Using its signature map function allows users to gain an organic, close-up sense of a given hotel’s neighborhood. It also boasts an easy price-comparison to historical averages, both for a specific hotel along with others chosen on a so-called “shortlist.” This is something that’s never been done before.

Google’s gobble is also likely to aid the continued popularity, not to mention profitability, of the entire online hotel-finding and travel industry. In other words, another nail in the proverbial coffin for traditional travel agents (though writing off traditional travel agents may prove premature, as some online travel web users have reverted back to travel agents for their bookings). Even if Google were to remain on the OTA sidelines, Hotel Finder’s web presence will ultimately drive traffic to other OTA sites. Either way, it’s potentially a win-win.

While it’s hard to measure the economic impact of a new hotel search site, the amount of online bookings, (buttressed by sites like Google Hotel) has surged in recent years. The year 2007 marked a watershed moment when for the first time more than half (51 percent) of US travelers booked their travel plans online, according to a 2008 Hotelmarketing.com study. And by the end of last year, more than 45 percent of all hotel bookings were completed online. Moreover, eMarketer and Jupiter, two Internet research firms, predict that 2011 will see online booking revenue to the tune of 5 to 146 billion.

All of this data leads me to the question – will Google Hotel Finder ultimately challenge OTAs directly – especially if there’s so much to gain?

Of course, I cannot say definitively, but I do believe that Google has the potential and capacity to take on the travel industry and become a full-service OTA. It has the infrastructure, it has the desire to control – or at least lead, and it certainly has the desire for revenues. As OTA earnings continue to swell and more travelers rely on them, the earning potential for Google is massive. It has been and continues to be shuttering a series of failed attempts to gain entry into certain spaces, but travel is almost a sure bet.

Regardless of its intentions, Google and its related products have effectively become online institutions. When it comes to the world of web-based hotel hunting, Google has already gone.

Consumers — and hotels — are following their lead.

Bruno Perez is vice president and co-founder of Revpar Guru, which provides a real-time, automated solution to help hotels maximize their revPAR, or revenue per available room. 

Image courtesy of Flickr user Freakland.

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Gundam robot statue returns to Japan, looking worse for the wear

Posted by on Monday, 15 August, 2011
After a brief hiatus, that giant Gundam statue we spotted a couple years ago has once again returned home to Tokyo — though he clearly didn’t make the voyage in one piece. Rather than reconstruct the 60-foot robot in its entirety, Bandai, the company behind the Gundam franchise, has decided to scatter its limbs, weapons and machinery all over an artificial island. For about .50, anime fans and Derrida enthusiasts can view the deconstructed mecha in all its glory, sit in the palm of his hand, or even use a fixed bicycle to make his head glow. Oh, how the mighty have fallen. Storm past the break for an extra pic of the exhibit.

Continue reading Gundam robot statue returns to Japan, looking worse for the wear

Gundam robot statue returns to Japan, looking worse for the wear originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 15 Aug 2011 09:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apollo 18 Is The Space Voyage We Never Knew About [Video]

Posted by on Thursday, 24 February, 2011
Apollo 18 is the latest Hollywood movie to capture an outer space excursion to the moon. But unlike a film such as Apollo 13, which retells a true story in melodramatic fashion, Apollo 18 goes the fictional route and attempts to unravel the mystery behind a alien conspiracy. As far as likeminded films go, Underwire is pretty spot on in comparing it to movies such as Blair Witch Project and Moon. Will you all go see it when it comes out on April 22? [Underwire] More »








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JESUIT – gadget @ TTS -Ep45- Icy Voyage

Posted by on Saturday, 15 May, 2010


www.TheTechStop.net Not that it hasn’t been fun, but the 12 episodes in 14 days thing has pretty much tuckered out the ‘gadget’ crew — Still, we get to end on a high note with the Corsair Voyager — This monster-sized 32GB flash drive also happens to be one of the toughest flash drives on the market. Check out the episode to see some “cool footage” and say goodby to CES 2008. http


JESUIT – gadget @ TTS -Ep45- Icy Voyage

Posted by on Saturday, 15 May, 2010


www.TheTechStop.net Not that it hasn’t been fun, but the 12 episodes in 14 days thing has pretty much tuckered out the ‘gadget’ crew — Still, we get to end on a high note with the Corsair Voyager — This monster-sized 32GB flash drive also happens to be one of the toughest flash drives on the market. Check out the episode to see some “cool footage” and say goodby to CES 2008. http


Voyage To The Heart Of Matter Pop-up Book Featuring CERN’s Large Hadron Collider

Posted by on Wednesday, 11 November, 2009

Voyage To The Heart Of Matter (Images courtesy The ATLAS Experiment)
By Andrew Liszewski

The majority of people who are afraid of what will happen when CERN’s large hadron collider is finally put into operation probably have no idea what it really is, or what it’s designed to do. But what better way to educate the masses on the intricacies of the world’s largest science experiment than through an intricately detailed pop-up book? That’s what made me the amateur surgeon I am today!

Voyage To The Heart Of Matter – The Atlas Experiment At CERN was written by Emma Sanders, though it’s probably the paper engineering skills of Anton Radevsky that will make this a must-have Christmas gift for everyone from amateur physicists to the scientists actually working on the ATLAS experiment. But since it won’t be available until the end of November for about $33, it might be cutting it a bit close for the gift giving season.

[ Voyage To The Heart Of Matter - The Atlas Experiment At CERN ] VIA [ Shiny Shiny ]