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Msnbc.com's travel team examines gear and gadgets, provides tips and information and keeps tech-savvy travelers up-to-speed with the latest apps, web tools and services.
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    24
    Apr
    2012
    8:29am, EDT

    Technology in nature: 3 apps for national-park-bound travelers

    National Geographic

    A screenshot of the National Geographic National Parks App, which offers guides to 20 of the country's most visited national parks.

    By Rob Lovitt, msnbc.com contributor

    Most people head to the national parks to gaze at the scenery. This summer, though, don’t be surprised if more of your fellow visitors are staring at their smartphone screens.

    Chalk it up to a proliferation of new apps that offer insights on trails, points of interest and park programs — even as they raise concerns about whether technology enhances or detracts from the experience.

    “My concern is that they can distance people from the parks because they’ll be glued to their phones and won’t notice what’s going on around them,” said Kurt Repanshek, editor in chief of National Parks Traveler. “A smartphone app cannot duplicate a ranger tour.”

    But it can enhance it, counters National Park Service (NPS) spokesman Jeffrey Olson: “We find people are coming to the national parks today with a lot more information so it allows us to get deeper into a particular story that someone’s interested in. Rangers love it when people engage with them on a deeper level.”

    Of course, that assumes people are using their phones to access park information and not to play Angry Birds at the scenic overlook. If you’re among the former, here are three new apps that can help you enjoy the national parks and other outdoor spaces this summer:

    Passport to Your National Parks
    Considering children are among the most tech-savvy of citizens, it’s only fitting that the 26-year-old Passport to Your National Parks program enter the digital age. The free iPhone app is designed to be a complement to the longstanding passport-booklet program in which visitors collect passport-cancellation stamps in the parks that they visit.

    Related: NPS touts green themes and waives fees

    Developed by Eastern National, a longtime non-profit partner of the NPS, the app (free, iOS-only) lets users search for parks by name, state, region or GPS within a 50-, 100- or 250-mile radius. Choose a park and you’re connected to a one-page summary with links to the official NPS site and buttons that let you bring up a map of cancellation stations, record your travels with photos and journal entries and highlight the parks that you still hope to visit.

    Fairly intuitive and fun to use, here’s hoping version 2.0 has a QR code reader so you can forgo the accompanying booklet altogether and get digital “stamps” directly on your phone.

    Sierra Club Trail Explorer
    Up for a hike but not sure where to go? The newly updated Trail Explorer app from the Sierra Club (free, iOS-only) lets users browse more than 40,000 trails from local day hikes to backcountry treks in the national parks. Users can filter searches by nearly a dozen filters (proximity, difficulty, accessibility, etc.) with the results appearing in list or map form.

    Tapping on a specific trail brings up a brief description, along with trail statistics, driving directions (via Google Maps) and, for share-happy hikers, user reviews and photos, links to Facebook and Twitter and a tracking feature that will record your journey. It’s impressively comprehensive with one odd omission for a trail-focused app: In a surprising number of searches, it shows the trailhead — but no trail!


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    National Parks by National Geographic
    Just in time for National Park Week, when parks that typically charge admission waive those fees, this iPhone app from National Geographic offers guides to 20 of the country’s most visited national parks. From Acadia to Zion, the app compiles park statistics, weather reports and maps with points of interest, along with social media features, tips from the magazine’s editors and appropriately awe-inspiring images.

    Related: Confessions of a national park ranger

    And, in true NatGeo fashion, it’s the photos — professional, archival and user-generated — that make the app. The only catch is that the overview app and one more in-depth, park-specific guide are free; once the dazzling images draw you in, additional guides will run you $0.99–$1.99 each.

    More stories you might like:

    • Seattle's iconic Space Needle turns 50
    • 10 most precious places on Earth
    • Video: Airline chefs vie for first-class passengers

    4 comments

    Are there any apps for android phones? Not everyone has or wants an apple..............

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  • 15
    Mar
    2012
    7:40am, EDT

    8 new apps for finding the perfect hotel

    Illustration by Erin McLaughlin

    By Sean O'Neill, Budget Travel

    If you book hotels online, it's time to face facts: Your favorite travel website probably isn't cutting it. In the past decade, some of the best-known travel sites have lost their fastball. They're not as smart and nimble as the new kids on the Web that now have tools for smarter comparison shopping, searches for smaller B&Bs and niche neighborhoods, and access to blocks of rooms reserved for its members.


    Follow @msnbc_travel

    Before you try these, one word of caution: No single site is the be-all-and-end-of-all of hotel booking. We recommend using at least two search tools, such as your current favorite online travel agency and one of the hotel shopping engines we've named here, to max out your chances of nabbing the perfect room or upgrade. Happy shopping!

    BackBid

    Best for: Travelers who like the idea of hotel owners competing for their business.

    What it does: Hoteliers often hold back a handful of rooms to sell to last-minute guests, but they don't always fill them. You can book one of these rooms as they're released by logging on to BackBid, which enables hotels to sell rooms to travelers who already have confirmed bookings at rival properties.

    How it works: Book a refundable reservation at a hotel through your favorite website, and then create a free account at BackBid. Forward the email with your confirmed hotel reservation to the site, and it will shoot your reservation details — minus your credit card information — to dozens of hotels at your destination. BackBid will then share with you any counter-offers rival hotels may make, such as a comparable room at a lower rate.

    Recent steal: In a test, an editor forwarded to BackBid a confirmation email for his $199 a night reservation at the Courtyard by Marriott in downtown Seattle. A day later, bids poured in from 17 Seattle hotels, which included a pitch from the Hilton Seattle, only 1.5 miles away and with better amenities, for a comparable room with a king size bed for $179 a night rate. All things considered, it's a reasonable inconvenience for a 10 percent or better savings.

    Snags: Launched in November 2011, the site remains limited to a few hundred properties in 20 major U.S. cities.

    DealBase

    Best for: Travelers who want an independent source to vouch for the honesty of vacation package prices.

    What it does: Many hotels tout packages that include perks, such as valet parking and a spa treatment, claiming that the package prices represent deep discounts over buying the components separately. DealBase vets each package for its true value.

    How it works: Use DealBase to pick a hotel package at your destination, then click on the listing for a breakdown of the estimated costs of the package's components. (The site even publishes a list of the "worst" hotel deals.)

    Recent steal: In California, the Ventura Beach Marriott recently showcased a "Ventura Shopping Package" that came with a $50 Visa gift card, breakfast for two at the property's restaurant, valet parking and a welcome gift, bookable any day of the week through 2012. DealBase highlighted the package, which it discovered on the hotel's site, and calculated that travelers could save a third off by booking the package instead of its parts one by one. DealBase showed how it did its math, noting the costs of the valet parking ($15), the breakfast ($60), and the welcome gift (containing a city map, some gourmet candy, and bottles of water) at $30. The site said the overall package represented a 36 percent discount off it's à la carte value.

    Snags: DealBase includes sponsored listings and identifies them as such. Readers have to take on faith that the site reviews all packages impartially, including ones it has been paid to mention.

    HotelSweep

    Best for: Travelers who prefer staying at independently owned properties.

    What it does: Founded this year, HotelSweep lists more than 50,000 U.S. hotels, motels, B&Bs and guesthouses, scraping listings off countless websites. (A British version, hotelsweep.co.uk, does the same thing for lodging in the United Kingdom.) One of the perks of the site is that it lists mom-and-pop properties — places that generally aim to attract budget-conscious travelers, but are too small to afford the costs of being listed with multinational travel agencies.

    How it works: Punch your destination into HotelSweep's "direct hotel search" tool, and the site will fetch a quick list of properties, which you can sort by nightly rate or distance from a particular location. A Google Street View image of the property is provided, but it's up to you to take the next step and contact the managers and book a room. If that is too much work, HotelSweep also has a "live price comparison" tool, which is a standard booking engine powered by HotelsCombined.com, an Australian rival to Kayak, though it doesn't include all of the mom-and-pop listings that turn up in the "direct hotel search" tool.

    Recent steal: In a hunt for New York City lodging, HotelSweep's "direct hotel search" tool dug up more than a thousand properties. The cheapest listing was Hostelling International, a property with rates from $29 a night per person. Surprisingly, the hostel has earned decent user ratings and reviews with TripAdvisor and a review from Lonely Planet, even though Expedia hadn't heard of it.

    Snags: HotelSweep isn't vetting properties. It simply lists any place that has a Web presence. So, it puts you in hardcore "buyer beware" territory. Also, the live comparison tool doesn't include all the properties in the hotel search tool, so you might have to work harder to make a booking.

    Hipmunk

    Best for: Culture vultures and nightlife fans who want to stay in the buzziest neighborhoods.

    What it does: Previously a metasearch site for airfare, Hipmunk last year added hotels to its repertoire. One of its signature tricks is to allow a traveler to name his or her favorite interest, such as nightlife, shopping and museum-hopping, and the site will filter its listings to only display hotels in neighborhoods with an especially high number of relevant venues, such as bars, boutiques and museums.

    How it works: Run a search for a hotel like you would on any travel site, and Hipmunk retrieves real-time rates from booking sites, such as Orbitz, Getaroom, Hotels.com, HotelsCombined and vacation rental platform Airbnb. Hipmunk also assigns an "ecstasy" rating to each hotel, based on an evaluation of the property's rates, amenities and user reviews on TripAdvisor.

    Recent steal: A recent search for hotels in L.A. turned up dozens of hotels that Hipmunk gave high "ecstasy" scores. A click on a button labeled "nightlife" revealed a map with a downtown district near Pershing Square that has a dense concentration of clubs and bars. Clicking on the neighborhood on the map revealed a few properties with a high "ecstasy" rating, including the Miyako Hotel for $116 a night.

    Snags: The site is primarily map-driven, and people who find maps confusing might find Hipmunk equally off-putting.

    Momondo

    Best for: Travelers booking hotels overseas who have been disappointed by the selection on U.S.-based travel agencies.

    What it does: In 2010, Momondo, moved beyond being a flight metasearch engine and now lists hotels from major overseas hotel booking sites, such as Escapio and Hotelopia, which tend to be overlooked by U.S.-based travel sites like Expedia. It also includes an option to search for hostels.

    How it works: Like Kayak, you enter your search query, and the site draws up a list of rates from various online travel agencies and hotel sites.

    Recent steal: In a search this winter for hotels in Zurich, Momondo uncovered 185 hotels (and about 330 other types of lodging, such as hostels), compared with 133 hotels on Booking.com and 125 on Orbitz. Momondo put at the top of its search results properties with the most central locations, highest star ratings, lowest prices and best user reviews. Its top pick: Hotel Rothaus, on Langstrasse in the city's entertainment district, with room rates from $104. Booking.com had the hotel buried in its search results for $140 a night on the same dates, and Orbitz had it for $139.

    Snags: Compared with American giants, such as Hotels.com and Priceline.com, Momondo wasn't great at finding hotels in the United States.

    Room 77

    Best for: Travelers whose priority is a room with the most amenities.

    What it does: Room 77 is unique in researching room-by-room amenities and floor plans for hundreds of three- to five-star hotels in about 30 North American, European and Asian cities. It then facilitates booking a particular type of room.

    How it works: Room 77 works like a typical hotel search engine, only it goes into much greater detail about the amenities available in individual rooms at hotels, such as what the view might be from any given window. Guests who book directly through Room 77 can take advantage of its free "room concierge" feature, in which it contacts hotel managers on a guest's behalf to request a room matching his or her preferences, such as "connecting rooms" and "distance from elevators." There are no guarantees, but the site claims that its customers have a high satisfaction rate with its concierge service.

    Recent steal: A recent search on Room 77 for a hotel stay in Seattle turned up a list of properties, matched with their rates. One listing was for Courtyard Seattle Downtown Pioneer Square, and Room 77 included specific booking tips, such as the fact that rooms with numbers ending in 3 (i.e., 1003) above the tenth floor are among the most spacious and have some of the prettiest views. Room 77 also reveals blueprints of rooms, overlaid on a Google map. Clicking on the silhouette of room 1105 at the Courtyard Seattle Downtown Pioneer Square, for instance, reveals that it is 28 feet from the elevator, has 300 square feet of space and a view of Puget Sound. Room 77 lists current rates through multiple websites, such as Expedia and Booking.com, including taxes and fees.

    Snags: The site only lists specific details for about 5,000 properties, most of which are from major U.S. chains. Room 77's room descriptions are also fairly generic and positive. For truly warts-and-all insights like "room smells of blow dryer and dead mouse," turn to TripAdvisor user-reviews.

    Room Key

    Best for: Travelers who prefer the consistency and quality control of U.S.-owned chain hotels, and don't want to be distracted with information about other places.

    What it does: Seven hotel chains — Best Western, Choice Hotels (Comfort Inn, Quality Inn), Hilton, Hyatt, InterContinental (Holiday Inn, Crowne Plaza, Hotel Indigo), Marriott and Wyndham (Howard Johnson, Ramada, Days Inn, Super 8) — are listing their rooms together in a new search engine. Unlike major online travel agencies like Expedia and Priceline, Room Key limits its selection to chains, eliminating most of the uncertainty about what kind of hotel you might end up with.

    How it works: Punch in your destination and travel dates and the site brings up a list of relevant hotels, which you can winnow using the standard tools, such as distance, price and star rating. When you decide to book, you're sent directly to a hotel-owned website, where you'll need to enter your credit card number to book the room. Booking directly with the hotel cuts out the middleman and earns you customer loyalty points.

    Recent steal: In a recent search, the Hilton Atlanta turned up for $179 a night on Room Key, compared with $219 on Expedia, for the same dates and type of room.

    Snags: Only about 27,000 hotels — with limited international choices — are currently listed, compared with the more than 100,000 posted on the major online travel agencies.

    YourRoomKey

    Best for: Travelers looking mostly for American business-type hotels.

    What it does: Finds the cheapest rooms at major-brand hotels located at America's largest airports and financial districts — and nearly nowhere else.

    How it works: This consolidator has access to rooms at a volume discount with major brands like Hyatt and Marriott at most major U.S. airports (especially Chicago, Denver, L.A., Philadelphia, San Francisco and Washington, D.C.). By only allowing members to see deals, the site is able to offer rates much lower than major chains and websites with lowest-price guarantees offered to the general public.

    Recent steal: A recent search on YourRoomKey for a room near Chicago's O'Hare Airport on less than a week's notice turned up a room at the Holiday Inn with a queen-size bed, free Internet and a free airport shuttle ride, for $52 a night. A comparable room at the same hotel on the same date went for $97 on Kayak and $109 on Travelocity.

    Snags: You have to create an account with the site to be able to see any of its listings. Membership is free, but it can take a day or so to activate. 

    More from Budget Travel

    • 12 elevators you need to see to believe
    • 15 food etiquette rules that might surprise you
    • Secret hotels of Paris
    • 21 girl trips you absolutely love
    • A coffee addict's guide to the world

     

    7 comments

    Thanks Johann. DoHop is a great tool!

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  • 8
    Feb
    2012
    12:52pm, EST

    App teaches you to flirt in 10 languages

    TripLingo

    By Rosa Golijan
    Follow @rosa

    Why limit your chances of finding love by flirting only in English? You could easily multiply your odds by chatting up charming strangers in several other languages. And an iPhone app will help guide you through that process.

    The app in question is the Romance Edition of TripLingo, a popular language-learning application for travelers. It is free and available for download through the Apple App Store.

    TripLingo Romance Edition focuses on the phrases most relevant to seeking out romance, such as compliments, flirty lines, and activity suggestions.

    TripLingo


    Follow @msnbc_tech

    The app includes over a thousand phrases in  Spanish, French, Italian, German, Portuguese, Mandarin, Korean, Japanese, Hindi and Castilian Spanish. The phrases are divided into four categories — formal, casual, slang and crazy — and you narrow down or expand your options using the "Slang Slider." In addition, there are audio examples, flashcards and a plain ol' dictionary — in other words, everything you need to stumble your way through a couple of dates.

    Related stories:

    • In case of snow, alarm app wakes you early
    • This app knows where you were last night
    • This app will help you keep your plants alive

    Want more tech news, silly puns or amusing links? You'll get plenty of all three if you keep up with Rosa Golijan, the writer of this post, by following her on Twitter, subscribing to her Facebook posts, or circling her on Google+.

    2 comments

    Let's say all of this "flashy" flirting works out............ then what............ is there an app that translates "Get your fat ass off the couch and help me with the dishes" ?????

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  • 3
    Feb
    2012
    8:48am, EST

    Winter survival app helps ditched drivers

    The Winter Survival Kit app offers emergency preparedness information, tips for staying alive during a road emergency and a variety of ways to call for help.

    By Harriet Baskas, msnbc.com contributor

    Whether your winter travels involve driving a few miles or hundreds, in your own car or a rental, there’s always the chance bad weather and treacherous driving conditions will keep you from reaching your destination.

    Waiting out a downpour in a highway rest stop is one thing. But would you know what to do if you were in unfamiliar territory and a snowstorm or blizzard left you stranded on a side road or spun out in a ditch? 

    “A lot of people are tempted to get out of their car to try and go get help or to walk across a snowy field to a house in the distance,” said Bob Bertsch, a web technology expert with the North Dakota State University Extension Service in Fargo. “That’s too dangerous. You should stay in your car.”


    Follow @msnbc_travel

    Making the wrong decision in a winter driving emergency can have deadly consequences. And while there are weather apps such as Road Trip Weather and car accident apps such as Help, I crashed my car, Bertsch and his colleagues found no comprehensive winter driving apps on the market. So they used a grant to create a free mobile app for iPhones and Android smartphones that, Bertsch said, “gives motorists peace of mind tools so they’re less apt to leave the vehicle.”

    The free Winter Survival Kit app, which can be launched by tapping a big red button that says “I’m stranded!,” has been downloaded more than 50,000 times since its introduction in late November. The app offers emergency preparedness information, tips for staying alive during a road emergency and a variety of ways to call for help.

    The app includes a list of items to keep in a vehicle emergency kit and stores emergency contact information, phone and policy numbers for insurance and roadside assistance programs. If a motorist needs to call for help, the app can use GPS to identify the car’s location, call 911 and send out a group text message to a pre-loaded contact list.

    “What saves lives is preparing ahead of time. So instead of sitting there typing out a message with cold fingers and draining your battery, this sends your message to everyone at once,” said Jake Joraanstad, chief operating officer of Myriad Devices, the Fargo-based mobile consulting and development company that helped develop the app.

    For travelers unprepared for winter weather or unfamiliar with its hazards, the app offers some unique, potentially life-saving tools. Enter the gas tank size (listed in the manual usually found inside a rental car’s glove compartment) and the amount of gas remaining, and the app will tell you how long you can run the engine to keep warm. To make sure you don’t die of carbon monoxide poisoning while you’re waiting for help, the app’s automatic alarm goes off every 30 minutes to wake you up and to remind you to turn off your engine for a while (to save gas) and to go outside and make sure snow hasn’t clogged the tailpipe.

    “Technology is great when it works,” said Cynthia Brough, a national spokesperson for AAA. “But educating yourself to what to do prior to emergency is the best weapon motorists have.”

    To that end, AAA, which has a GPS-enabled roadside assistance app for members, sends out news releases with tips on preparing for road emergencies and driving in inclement weather. The organization also produces two printed brochures: How to Go on Ice and Snow (PDF) and Get a grip (PDF).

    “I agree with AAA,” said Bertsch, “Preparation is the best thing. But most people don’t do a good job preparing for emergencies. And travelers sometimes don’t even know what they need to be prepared for.”

    More stories you might like:

    • New app makes hotel rooms less icky
    • Lost in translation? Not with these apps
    • New iPhone? Try these apps for travelers

    Find more by Harriet Baskas on Stuck at The Airport.com and follow her on Twitter.

    3 comments

    Simple-use your phone to call in a threat to a politician and Homeland Securiity will be there before you hang up. Well maybe a drone (now that the govt is considering using them) will drop a device on you instead.

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  • 11
    Jan
    2012
    8:45am, EST

    Lost in translation? Not with these apps

    Courtesy my Language

    The Vocre translation app features a split-screen mode that facilitates translated conversations.

    By Harriet Baskas, msnbc.com contributor

    I still cringe at that wasted day in Paris when my fractured French had me instructing my husband to ask shopkeepers for directions to the Bridge Museum (Le musée du Pont) instead of our real destination, the Museum of Bread (Musée du pain).

    If only I’d been toting a smartphone or tablet loaded with one of these real-time translation apps instead of an outdated English-only guidebook.

    Rob Grabarek, a spatial analyst from Seattle who just returned from Vietnam, is among the many travelers who swear by Google Translate. “I have a widget on my Android homescreen and the app on my iPod Touch,” said Grabacek. The free app handles text in 63 languages, voice input in 17 languages and text-to-speech in 24 languages.

    Suzanne Rowan Kelleher, editor-in-chief at We Just Got Back, is intrigued by Word Lens. “You aim your camera at something, such as a sign in a foreign language, and it turns the words into English. It sounds super handy." The app can currently translate signs written in Spanish or French into English and those written in English into Spanish or French. Word Lens is available as a free download, but translation apps are $9.99 each. 

    The newest version of myLanguage's Vocre translation app features a split-screen, table-top mode that will facilitate translated conversations. “You place the phone between you and another person and tap the screen to have it hear you," Damien Dalli, myLanguage chief product officer, told msnbc.com. "Then you hit ‘translate’ and the person opposite you will see the words translated on their side of screen, across from you in the correct orientation, and hear a translation as well.” Dalli says version 2.0, currently in development, will be able to translate text messages and video calls as well.  


    Follow @msnbc_travel

    Once downloaded, Vocre includes free, unlimited translations for the first 24 hours. After that, a week of translation service is $1.99; a month is $4.99.

    Still at a loss for (translated) words? Other apps to consider include Jibbigo, which offers speech-to-speech translation in nine language pairs, including Chinese-English; SpeechTrans, which offers bi-directional speech recognition and translation; and Ortsbo, which promises real-time translation for chats in 53 different languages. (Pricing varies.)

    More on Travel Kit

    • Committing random acts of travel
    • New iPhone? Try these apps for travelers
    • America's best new airport restaurants

     

    4 comments

    George Bush said the French have no word for entrepreneur. Should get app.

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  • 30
    Dec
    2011
    4:53pm, EST

    New iPhone? Try these apps for travelers

    By Harriet Baskas, msnbc.com contributor

    For travelers who received a new tablet or smartphone over the holidays, it's time to begin finding and downloading apps that will be of use on the road.

    In addition to a few basics such as Google maps for driving directions; Gas Buddy for finding the cheapest places to buy fuel; and TripIt for organizing, tracking and sharing an itinerary, here are some others to get you started.

    Forgot to pack underwear?
    No matter how well you plan, chances are you’ll discover you’ve forgotten to pack fresh underwear, a camera battery or something else you’ll really need on your trip. Goodzer helps locate — and price — pretty much anything you’d want or need and includes stores of all sizes throughout the U.S. in its database. Goodzer is available online and as a free iPhone app.

    Where to go when you have to ‘go’
    Tourist bureaus load their websites and brochures with lists of art, history and cultural attractions, but visitors often find themselves flummoxed when they simply need a place to ‘go.’ The Sit or Squat app (you laugh now…) is a free online and mobile database that helps you find the nearest public restroom based on a zip code, address or intersection. In many cases, the site shares information about the hours a restroom is open and includes user ratings.

    Other road-tested apps for travelers
    Sommer Cronck, a Bellingham, Wash., executive director at Technology Alliance Group for Northwest Washington and a mother of three, favors the free MapQuest GPS app with spoken navigation and, for families planning their 2012 Disneyland trip, the free Disneyland wait times app “and a free flashlight app in case they get lost along the way.”

    Sinje Lesemann, the creative director for London-based luxury travel accessories company, KOZA, relies on the free Concierge Insider Guides, Goby and Foodspotting apps during her frequent travels.  

    “Concierge is full of insider recommendations from [Intercontinental Hotel Group] concierges around the globe,” said Lesemann. “I like the videos that show you around the destination and [the] interviews with locals. It’s also divided by things to do in the morning, afternoon and evening.”

    Lesemann finds Goby useful for filtering and finding local attractions — “especially the offbeat ones” — and Foodspotting for getting tips on bars and restaurants. “What I like about Foodspotting is that it is curated by real people, not just food critics. People take pictures of their favorite dishes so you can see what they look like before ordering. And that’s very useful for exotic and unfamiliar dishes.”

    Have a favorite travel app to recommend? Tell us in the comments section below.

    More on Travel Kit

    • Expedia touts verified hotel reviews
    • Get connected at America's techiest airports
    • Ewww! Avoid airplane germs

    Find more by Harriet Baskas on Stuck at The Airport.com and follow her on Twitter.

     

     

    3 comments

    When I travel I use SkySafari. My frequent flier miles are out of this world.

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Rob Lovitt

Rob Lovitt is a longtime travel writer who still believes the journey is as important as the destination. Follow him at Twitter (http://twitter.com/roblovitt).

Rosa Golijan

is a contributing writer at msnbc.com and an all-around nice person. You can can stalk her on Twitter--she's @rosa there--or 'like' her on Facebook.

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Award-winning writer and radio producer, happiest in an airport or an unusual museum.

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