Entry tags:
air fares
When I flew to Boston in early November, I think my round-trip ticket
was $120 (not on a discount airline). I'm looking at options for my
trip in July and the cheapest tickets are more than twice that, with the
non-sucky ones being over $300. What happened? Is that all
just summer effect? Oof. (Yeah, fuel prices -- but they aren't
that much lower last fall...) JetBlue, by the way, is not
competing all that favorably with old-school players like United. I'm
using kayak.com to find fares.
Direct flights are even more expensive. Does anyone know the most expedient way to find out which connecting airports have free wireless? So far I've seen JFK, DCA, LaGuardia, and Cincinnati among the options.
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The only New England airport I've been in recently is MHT, and they have wireless (but I think you could drive from MHT to Boston).
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But I do love MHT. They have the nicest TSA agents in the country.
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Using Southwest, IIRC, involves a connection in PHL or BWI, I don't know about wireless in either of those airports.
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Personally, I put about a 50 dollar premium on direct flights, and about a $20 premium on going in and out of Logan. If it goes past about $75 round trip, I start making changes...
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It appears that weekday trips are cheaper than ones involving Sundays. I hadn't realized that, but after I saw your comment I explored some of the rates. The old rule about the importance of a Saturday stay doesn't even hold any more; your trip is cheaper than mine.
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(Thanks also for the advice about layover time and airport size. That's a good point.)
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I don't know how to set it up, but I know it's possible. The attack really relies on the fact that most people don't question a network connection in a place where they expect to find one.
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At BOS (Logan), the legitimate network specifically pops up a message warning about "Free Wireless" networks when you connect to their website.
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The catch is that a secured network either means that you have to obtain (and probably pay for) a password.