April 25, 2024

Bucks Blog: Friday Reading: Some Travelers Can Keep Their Shoes On

January 04

Friday Reading: Some Travelers Can Keep Their Shoes On

The Transportation Security Administration is letting some travelers keep their shoes on, why you shrink as you age, more guns were confiscated at airports last year and other consumer-focused news from The New York Times.

Article source: http://bucks.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/01/04/friday-reading-some-travelers-can-keep-their-shoes-on/?partner=rss&emc=rss

Bucks Blog: Friday Reading: No SAT Test in Several States Because of Storm

November 02

Friday Reading: No SAT Test in Several States Because of Storm

The storm cancels SAT tests in several states, Westin hotels lend gear so travelers can exercise, how to keep electronics going with no power and other consumer-focused news from The New York Times.

Article source: http://bucks.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/11/02/friday-reading-no-sat-in-several-states-due-to-storm/?partner=rss&emc=rss

Bucks Blog: An App to Help You Find Parking On the Spot

Courtesy Parking Panda

Parking Panda, an online service that helps you find and reserve parking spaces, has added the San Francisco market to its inventory and introduced a mobile app to help you find parking on the spot.

The app makes it easier to make reservations and pay for them on the fly when you’re away from your computer, said Nick Miller, the company’s chief executive. “With the app, you can locate a space where you are and book one right near you,” he said. The app is now available for the iPhone, and will be available eventually for Android devices, too.

Parking Panda is sort of like a parking version of AirBNB, the site that helps property owners rent out spare bedrooms or vacant apartments to travelers seeking a bargain. Another similar offering is Parkatmyhouse.com, which started in Britain but is trying to expand in the United States.

Parking Panda lists both commercial lots and garages, as well as privately owned, individual parking spaces. Owners upload a description and often a photo of the lot, as well as a schedule of when it’s available. When drivers reserve a space, they enter a description of their car online. Payment is taken care of through the app (or online) by credit card, so there doesn’t have to be any interaction between the owner of the space and the driver.

The start-up was already operating in Baltimore and Washington; this week it moves into San Francisco and Oakland, Calif. and should be available soon in Philadelphia as well. The site has about 20,000 spaces that can currently be reserved through the service. (Parking Panda lists parking in other cities, like New York and Chicago, but doesn’t offer the ability to reserve spaces in advance and pay for them; you have to go there and pay in person.)

In Baltimore, Mr. Miller notes, many homeowners near the city’s football stadium list spaces on Parking Panda. “For events, even if the stadium has parking it sells out, and half the people attending can’t find parking,” he said. “So this adds additional inventory, without driving around for 45 minutes.”

But he also expects the app to be useful in areas like San Francisco’s Nob Hill neighborhood, where restaurants and bars regularly draw crowds but there is limited parking.

If you try Parking Panda, let us know about your experience.

Article source: http://bucks.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/09/17/an-app-to-help-you-find-parking-on-the-spot/?partner=rss&emc=rss

Bucks: Thursday Reading: Measles Cases Spike As Unvaccinated Travelers Return Home

July 07

Thursday Reading: Measles Cases Spike As Unvaccinated Travelers Return Home

Measles cases jump as unvaccinated travelers return home, surgically implanted bombs are latest air travel worry, a $100 weekend in Istanbul and other consumer focused news from The New York Times.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=c0d42af3c372ca4a3a00f0a4d0bd9e59