Almost all travel planners suggest that you simply add an object, for example, a hotel. In the best case – from the list.
I.e. before that you should:
1. Make a list of possible candidates for booking.
2. Discuss them.
3. Make a decision.
To do this, you need:
- Memorize possible candidates somewhere (usually this is scrolling through the messenger for a few days ago in search of the link that was sent to you).
- Object research. Is it far from the airport? Are there beaches around? And the restaurants? Is there parking near the restaurant? And ATMs? Is it possible to get there by public transport? And what is the usual weather there during this period? Etc.
- To exchange opinions. Why this restaurant (museum, beach, hotel, flight) some like it, some don't. At the same time, it would be nice to understand what kind of object we are talking about, so that it would not work out “well, you have to remember, I'm talking about that hotel with a green roof on the sea.”
Everything can take longer than the journey itself, and you will do all this outside of the application, which for some mysterious reason is called the travel planner.
In enot66, all this happens inside the application:
1. You have a search in booking systems.
2. "Wishlist" - a list of candidates, i.e. what you transferred from the search and are going to book something from it.
3. In the "Wishlist" you can discuss objects with others, for this purpose the built-in messenger creates a separate hour for each object (the icon on the toolbar of the object description window).
4. You can continue/start exploring the neighborhood. For example, to find a suitable restaurant near the hotel, right there - a parking lot next to the restaurant, an ATM next to the parking lot, etc. All this can be added to the "Wishlist" or immediately to "Selected".
And only after you have discussed the object, made a decision, booked it, you transfer it to "Selected". I.e. from this moment the vast majority of travel planners start working.
We actively use external services: you can open the neighborhood view for any object, open the preset search on the search site to get more information about this museum, open the page on the sites of information providers to learn more about this restaurant, open the navigator to this place and etc.
But all this is done from the application in one touch.
And support can go into planning at any time: what is interesting around me - cities, sights, beaches, shops... What's the weather like there? What is the distance or route? How do I get back to the hotel? Etc.
Our task in developing the application was to create the core of the journey, which, through the mediation of third-party services, forms its complete picture.
It does not require registration, does not have paid functions, does not show ads, and does not engage in mailing.
Have a nice trip with enot66!
I.e. before that you should:
1. Make a list of possible candidates for booking.
2. Discuss them.
3. Make a decision.
To do this, you need:
- Memorize possible candidates somewhere (usually this is scrolling through the messenger for a few days ago in search of the link that was sent to you).
- Object research. Is it far from the airport? Are there beaches around? And the restaurants? Is there parking near the restaurant? And ATMs? Is it possible to get there by public transport? And what is the usual weather there during this period? Etc.
- To exchange opinions. Why this restaurant (museum, beach, hotel, flight) some like it, some don't. At the same time, it would be nice to understand what kind of object we are talking about, so that it would not work out “well, you have to remember, I'm talking about that hotel with a green roof on the sea.”
Everything can take longer than the journey itself, and you will do all this outside of the application, which for some mysterious reason is called the travel planner.
In enot66, all this happens inside the application:
1. You have a search in booking systems.
2. "Wishlist" - a list of candidates, i.e. what you transferred from the search and are going to book something from it.
3. In the "Wishlist" you can discuss objects with others, for this purpose the built-in messenger creates a separate hour for each object (the icon on the toolbar of the object description window).
4. You can continue/start exploring the neighborhood. For example, to find a suitable restaurant near the hotel, right there - a parking lot next to the restaurant, an ATM next to the parking lot, etc. All this can be added to the "Wishlist" or immediately to "Selected".
And only after you have discussed the object, made a decision, booked it, you transfer it to "Selected". I.e. from this moment the vast majority of travel planners start working.
We actively use external services: you can open the neighborhood view for any object, open the preset search on the search site to get more information about this museum, open the page on the sites of information providers to learn more about this restaurant, open the navigator to this place and etc.
But all this is done from the application in one touch.
And support can go into planning at any time: what is interesting around me - cities, sights, beaches, shops... What's the weather like there? What is the distance or route? How do I get back to the hotel? Etc.
Our task in developing the application was to create the core of the journey, which, through the mediation of third-party services, forms its complete picture.
It does not require registration, does not have paid functions, does not show ads, and does not engage in mailing.
Have a nice trip with enot66!
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