Are Airlines Intentionally Overbooking Their Flights? (popularmechanics.com)
"if you sell one seat to two different people, and only one of them shows up, you get extra money," explains an article in Popular Mechanics shared by schwit1. Citing a recent TED-Ed video, they argue that the airlines' strategy for booking flights "makes perfect sense, just not for you."
The most frustrating part? This math could be tuned to ensure the maximum number of tickets sold with a near zero percent chance too many people show up. Instead, the most profitable solutions often involve a decent chance a few passengers getting screwed, because the extra ticket sales outweigh having to put someone up in a hotel now and then.
They've been under-building their airplanes.
rewriting history since 2109
Next you're going to try and convince me that ISPs oversell bandwidth, hardware stores don't actually give me boards that measure 2"x4" in the cross section, that hard-drive manufacturers don't label drives as their formatted capacity, and printer cartridges don't let you utilize 100% of the ink inside.
"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
This is why I get most of my hotel rooms with American Express concierge service.
I use AirBNB. I have never been bumped. When I rent a sofa bed in spare bedroom for $18, it is all mine.
I watched such a drama unfold before me. It turned out that those seated were in the wrong theatre.
blog.sam.liddicott.com
There was that one time about 2000 years ago. Fortunately there was a stable available so others didn't have to deal with a mewling, puking newborn in the foyer while they were trying to sleep on the chairs.
"Wait. Something's happening. It's opening up! My God, it's full of apricots!"