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Days Inn-Mayfield, Days Inn Warsaw, Days Inn Wadesboro, Days Inn Thomasville, Days Inn Town Hall, Days Inn-York, Days Inn-CLEVELAND-MEDINA, Days Inn University Area, Days Inn Vancouver WA, Days Inn Sumter, Days Inn Winchester, DAYS INN-TELL CITY, Days Inn Virginia Beach Expressway, Days Inn-Jonesboro, Days Inn- Glen Burnie, Days Inn-Seattle Downtown, Days Inn Westminster MD, Days Inn Tuscan Airport, Days Inn-Encinitas Moonlight Beach near Legoland, Days Inn Wayside, Days Inn-Worthington, Days Inn-New Haven, Days Inn Westgate, Pacific Beach Hotel, Days Inn Yadkinville, days inn suites victorville hesperia, days inn-frankenmuth bridgeport saginaw south, pacific beach hotel honolulu Most airlines today choose to make web fares available only on their own websites, because these fares are so low it would be uneconomic to offer them through the higher cost channels. (It is, in fact, very common throughout the retailing world for stores or catalogs to also have a website, and for that website to offer a few prices that are below the prices charged for the same goods in the store or the catalog.) However whether an airline chooses to make its web fares available through CRS''s to travel agents and the websites that rely on CRS''s is strictly an individual airline decision, and will remain so once Orbitz is up and running. Several third party websites (such as intellitrip.com) today take web fares from various airline websites (which they can do, because nothing is more public than a website) and display them in one place for their customers. And of course travel agents can book web fares off an airline''s website for a customer if they wish (although whether they get a commission on that booking is up to the individual airline). Most airlines today choose to make web fares available only on their own websites, because these fares are so low it would be uneconomic to offer them through the higher cost channels. (It is, in fact, very common throughout the retailing world for stores or catalogs to also have a website, and for that website to offer a few prices that are below the prices charged for the same goods in the store or the catalog.) However whether an airline chooses to make its web fares available through CRS''s to travel agents and the websites that rely on CRS''s is strictly an individual airline decision, and will remain so once Orbitz is up and running. Several third party websites (such as intellitrip.com) today take web fares from various airline websites (which they can do, because nothing is more public than a website) and display them in one place for their customers. And of course travel agents can book web fares off an airline''s website for a customer if they wish (although whether they get a commission on that booking is up to the individual airline).
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