About Gary Leff

Gary Leff is one of the foremost experts in the field of miles, points, and frequent business travel - a topic he has covered since 2002. Co-founder of frequent flyer community InsideFlyer.com, emcee of the Freddie Awards, and named one of the "World's Top Travel Experts" by Conde' Nast Traveler (2010-Present) Gary has been a guest on most major news media, profiled in several top print publications, and published broadly on the topic of consumer loyalty. More About Gary »

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New Loyalty Programs

It seems like you can earn miles and points everywhere these days — and not just for spending on your affinity credit card, either. Brand spanking new programs include Benihana Emporer’s Club, Pizza Hut VIP Program (previously mentioned here), and Ruth’s Chris Steakhouse Friend of Steve Card.

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Finally a United offer for Washington, DC

Earn 2,500 miles per domestic roundtrip (or Canada) to or from Washington-Dulles. This bonus can be earned 6 times and is applicable for travel completed between June 15 and September 30, 2004. Valid on United/United Express/Ted only, not on codeshare flights. Registration required.

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Mercenaries and Private Contractors

There’s an ongoing discussion amongst several blogs about whether contracting for private security forces is a good idea. Mark Kleiman argues that hiring people at higher contract prices to deliver skills developed at government expense is a bad idea, amounting to competing with ourselves. Eugene Volokh offers up commercial pilots as a counterexample. [M]any Air Force pilots get better-paying jobs with the airlines when they leave the service. They’re selling to private airlines skills that were acquired at public expense. Some of them might leave the service earlier because of these job opportunities. Should we be worried about that? Should we try to keep the airlines from hiring them away? I realize the situation isn’t completely analogous — the government generally doesn’t do much hiring of private airlines for military transport (though I vaguely recall…

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Random and Unrelated Cool Stuff

Sprint will give you a free ear bud for your cell phone. If you sell things on eBay, you will want to check out BidBot which will analyze past eBay auctions and help you get the best price for your merchandise. Google has a new shopping tool called Froogle. If you think data protection is cool, you may want a free “Backup for the Future” t-shirt. Or maybe you’d like a free book, 151 TIPS FOR MATURE TRAVELERS.

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Private Eyes, They’re Watching You

The Transporation Security Administration is examining the use of RFID-tagged airline boarding passes that could allow passenger tracking within airports. Katherine Albrecht wonders whether the TSA will time how long she spends in the ladies room.

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Inside the Mind of a Hotel

This 2002 article tells Utell properties (e.g. ANA, Sofitel, Jurys) how they should set up their Priceline rates and how they should treat Priceline customers.(Hat tip to a post at BetterBidding.com.)

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Additional Slots Awarded for Reagan National

Washington, DC’s Ronald Reagan National Airport is currently limited both in the number of takeoffs and landings permitted (slot controlled) and in the distance that flights make travel to and from the airport (1250 miles). There are some exceptions to the 1250 mile ‘perimeter rule’ that have been carved out by Congress, for example Alaska Airlines currently flies one daily flight to Seattle and America West flies to Las Vegas. More flights are coming to National, including flights beyond the perimeter. The department awarded United Airlines with two daily flights to Denver; Frontier Airlines with four flights to Denver; Alaska Airlines with one daily flight to Seattle and one to Los Angeles; and America West Airlines with two flights to Phoenix. The Transportation Department awarded a number of short-haul slots, including two daily flights each…

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