Thursday, November 29, 2012
The insider pointed out the aircraft is only scheduled when enough passengers have signed up, and no
Air China recently flew the country's first-ever, user-planned flight from Beijing Capital Airport to Xi'an Xianyang International Airport, adding the term "wei hang ban" (micro-flight) to the Chinese online encyclopedia . User-generated flights
Although the flight was not solely planned by Weibo users -- the route had been arranged by Air China in advance -- netizens had the power to decide if the Boeing 737-800 would take off at all. The flight would have been canceled if reservations failed to reach a certain number.
reno bus tours from vancouver One passenger on this "wei hang ban" was a 20-something man surnamed Tian, who was the first person to sign up. The self-dubbed "aviation microblog fan" explained to China Netizen News that he considered this a pure experience trip as he had to rush back to Beijing the same night.
He Yun (何云), Air China's senior marketing manager, reno bus tours from vancouver said in an interview with the same publication that Chinese travelers reno bus tours from vancouver regard the carrier as slightly out of touch, and that the campaign is aimed to increase interactions with passengers. Negative sounds
The insider pointed out the aircraft is only scheduled when enough passengers have signed up, and no change is allowed to tickets once payment has been made. Both terms are unacceptable to normal travelers.
China Internet Network Information Center rates Weibo as the fastest-growing Chinese Internet application. The number of China's Weibo users rose from 63.11 million at the end of last year to 195 million in June.
A total of 87 domestic and international airlines, including Air China, JAL, Qatar Airways, Singapore Airlines and KLM, have signed up accounts on various Weibo sites, with most of them using specialists to manage and update the pages.
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