25 October 2013

Useful Travel Tip - Hotel Key Cards

Came across this useful info for frequent travellers. 

Are you travelling? Grab a refrigerator magnet on your way out the door!

Always  take a small magnet on your  vacation , they come in handy at the end of every stop.

HOTEL  KEY CARDS  

Ever  wonder what is on your magnetic key card?
Answer:
a.  Customer's name
b.  Customer's partial home address
c.  Hotel room number
d.  Check-in date and out dates
e. Customer's  credit card number and expiration date!


When you turn them in to the front desk, your personal information is there for  any employee to access by simply scanning the card in the hotel scanner.  An  employee can take a hand full of cards home and using a scanning device access the information onto a laptop computer and go shopping at your  expense. 

Simply put, hotels do not erase the information on these cards until an employee  reissues the card to the next hotel guest. At that time, the new guest's  information is electronically 'overwritten' on the card and the previous  guest's information is erased in the overwriting  process.

But  until the card is rewritten for the next guest, it usually is kept in a  drawer at the front desk with YOUR INFORMATION ON IT!

The  bottom line is: Keep the cards, take them home with you, or destroy them.  NEVER leave them behind in the room or room wastebasket, and NEVER turn them  into the front desk when you check out of a room. They will not charge you  for the card (it's illegal) and you'll be sure you are not leaving a lot of  valuable personal information on it that could be easily lifted off with any  simple scanning device card reader.

For the  same reason, if you arrive at the airport and discover you still have the  card key in your pocket, do not toss it in an airport trash basket. Take it  home and destroy it by cutting it up, especially through the electronic  information strip!

If you  have a small magnet, pass it across the magnetic strip several times. Then  try it in the door, it will not work. It erases everything on the  card.  Hope this proves useful!

Information  courtesy of:  Metropolitan Police Service.







18 October 2013

Tourism In Action Challenge




17 Oct 2013

Yesterday 19 Singapore schools comprising of 34 teams participated in the Tourism in Action Challenge organized by Ngee Ann Polytechnic School of Business.  Teams were tasked to plan an itinerary based on eco-tourism theme.  It was grueling session as teams were given very short deadline to finish the project and present to judges.  ISE Travel is proud to be a supporter of this wonderful and meaningful event.  Well done future tour planners!









01 October 2013


Internet Link – How Facebook Can Ruin Study Abroad
 

I recently came across an article by Robert Huesca in the “Chronicle of Higher Education” that compares studying abroad 20-30 years ago, when the main method of communication was “snail mail” to studying abroad today, where students can be connected 24/7 to their friends and family back home via social media. 

The article reminded me of my first study abroad experience in 1979 in rural USA. I bought stamps by the dozen and waited anxiously by the mailbox everyday hoping for letters or postcards from my friends.  During my year in USA, my mom and I would split the cost of a 15-minute, long-distance call every other week. 

Now, when I travel abroad, I barely even have to tell people that I’m traveling internationally. I have Facebook, email and IM on my cell phone (my main means of communication these days anyway) and, other than the extended international flights and the horrific time difference, I hardly lose contact with any of my friends and family at all. 

It barely even costs any extra; on my last international voyage in June, I paid an extra $15 for the international data I used during the 17-day trip.  However, I definitely don’t feel as connected or even need to try nearly as hard to communicate when I have a translation app on my phone and I can Babelfish translate almost anything I want to say. Social media is great for keeping in contact with the friends I’ve made during my international travels, but it is also removing a key element from the study abroad experience. 

To read the full article, click on the title linked above